Daniel Ludlow (banker)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Daniel Ludlow | |
|---|---|
| President of the Manhattan Company | |
| In office 1799–1808 | |
| Preceded by | Inaugural holder |
| Succeeded by | Henry Remsen |
| Personal details | |
| Born | August 2, 1750 |
| Died | September 26, 1814 (aged 64) Skaneateles, New York, U.S. |
| Spouse |
Arabella Duncan
(m. 1773) |
| Relations | George Duncan Ludlow (half-brother) Gulian Verplanck (cousin) |
| Children | 11 |
| Parent(s) | Gabriel Ludlow Elizabeth Crommelin Ludlow |
Daniel Ludlow (August 2, 1750 – September 26, 1814) was an American merchant and banker who served as the first president of the Manhattan Company, which, after a series of mergers became JPMorgan Chase.
Ludlow was born on August 2, 1750, in New York City to a long-established and wealthy New York family.[1] He was the son of Gabriel Ludlow (1704–1773), a merchant, and Elizabeth (née Crommelin) Ludlow (1715–1760).[2] His sister, Elizabeth Ludlow,[3] was the wife of Francis Lewis Jr. (brother of Gov. Morgan Lewis).[4] From his father's first marriage to Frances Duncan, he had an elder half-brother, George Duncan Ludlow, who was appointed the first Chief Justice of New Brunswick in Canada in 1784.[5] Another half-brother, Gabriel George Ludlow, was the first mayor of Saint John, New Brunswick (and the grandfather of Edward Hunter Ludlow).[1]
The first Ludlow in America from his line was his grandfather, also named Gabriel Ludlow (1663–1736), who was born at Castle Cary and left Frome around 1694 to settle in New Amsterdam, and became a prominent and influential merchant, shipowner, landholder and longtime clerk of the New York General Assembly.[6][7] He obtained a patent from King George II for a tract of 4,000 acres of land in what became Orange County, New York, on the west bank of the Hudson River.[8] His grandfather's grandfather, Thomas Ludlow, was the brother of both Gabriel Ludlow, Receiver of the Duchy of Lancaster during the reign of King Charles I, and Roger Ludlow, Deputy Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.[9] Through his maternal aunt, Mary (née Crommelin) Verplanck, he was a first cousin of Gulian Verplanck, Speaker of the New York State Assembly who became president of the Bank of New York and in 1792 helped found the Tontine Association (a precursor of the New York Stock Exchange).[8]
The wealth and status of the Ludlow family gave Daniel and his elder half-brothers "several advantages, including education in a private school."[5]