Joshua Waddington
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Joshua Waddington | |
|---|---|
| Born | May 20, 1755 Walkeringham, England |
| Died | March 6, 1844 (aged 88) New York City, United States |
| Occupations | Founder of H. & J. Waddington & Co, Director of the Bank of New York (1787), and later President of the St. George's Society of New York[1] |
| Known for | Defendant in Rutgers v. Waddington trial |
| Spouse |
Gertrude Gouverneur Ogden
(m. 1804) |
| Children | 10 |
| Relatives | Samuel Waddington (brother) Abraham Ogden (father-in-law) David A. Ogden (brother-in-law) James Henry Monk (nephew) |
Joshua Waddington (20 May 1755 – 6 March 1844)[2] was a British-American who was one of the founders of the Saint George's Society, the Bank of New York,[3] and was the defendant in the case Rutgers v. Waddington before New York City Mayor's Court.[4]
Waddington was born in 1755 to Rev. Joshua Waddington of Harworth and Walkeringham and Ann Ferrand of Messingham, who married in 1740. His mother was the daughter of Rev. Thomas Ferrand, Vicar of Bingley, Yorks. His father was a 1732 and 1752 graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge[5] and was the Vicar of Walkeringham and Harworth and the Vicar of Mattersey in 1752.[6]
He was one of eight sons born to Joshua and Ann, the others being Thomas (1742–1790),[7] John (1744–1770), Benjamin (1749–1828),[7] William (1751–1818), George (1753–1824),[8] Samuel Ferrand (1759–1829), and Henry Waddington (1761–1938).[6][7] His brother William was the grandfather of William Henry Waddington, who served as Prime Minister of France in 1879 and was the French Ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1883 to 1893.[9] His sister Sarah, who married Charles Monk,[10] was the mother of James Henry Monk, the Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol.[11]