Nisha Rathode (Editor)

F W J Hurst

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Occupation
  
Businessman

Spouse(s)
  
Caroline Eliza Jaffray

Name
  
F. J.


Born
  
February 13, 1840
St. John's, Antigua and Barbuda

Children
  
3 daughters, including Florence Jaffray Harriman

Relatives
  
J. Borden Harriman (son-in-law)

Died
  
July 21, 1902, New York City, New York, United States

Francis William Jones Hurst (February 13, 1840 – July 21, 1902), a native of the British West Indies, was a major figure in the cross-Atlantic shipping business in the 19th century. During the American Civil War, he captained ships that ran the Union blockade of Confederate ports. From the War’s end to his death, he was the New York-based manager for the National Steam-Ship Company (also known as the National Line). The National Line brought goods and thousands of emigrants from ports in the British Isles to New York.

Contents

Early life

Francis William Jones Hurst was born in St. John’s, Antigua (then in the British West Indies) on February 13, 1840. He completed his education in Bermuda.

Career

Hurst relocated to London, where in 1856 he began his mercantile career. Three years later, he joined Guion & Co. of Liverpool, and also became a member of the Fifth Lancashire Rifle Volunteers. The American Civil War began in 1861, soon after states in the southern United States created the Confederate States of America. The War immediately threatened the thriving trade between cotton plantations in those states and markets in Europe, especially after the Union Navy established a blockade of Confederate ports. That year Hurst returned to Bermuda and became managing clerk and agent for Edward Lawrence & Co., where his work included captaining ships seeking to “run” the Union naval blockade, carrying in guns, ammunition and medicine and carrying out cotton. One such ship, the “Banshee,” was the first steel-built vessel to cross the Atlantic. The Banshee made eight successful runs between the Bahamas and Wilmington, North Carolina, before being captured on its ninth voyage in November 1863. Throughout this time, Hurst remained a member of the Lancashire Rifle Volunteers, becoming a lieutenant in 1864.

In 1866 –one year after the War ended with the Confederacy’s surrender – Hurst settled in New York, where he became United States manager for the British-based National Steam-ship Company. Using six to ten ships, the company ran weekly voyages between Liverpool and New York via Queenstown (now known as Cobh), Ireland (and to a lesser degree, between London and New York). Emigrants from Europe to the United States made up a significant part of the National Line’s business, along with freight. In testimony to a congressional committee in 1888, he described the company’s emigrant passengers as English, Irish, and Scots, with some from Germany and northern Europe.

Personal life

On June 2, 1868, Hurst married Caroline Eliza Jaffray, daughter of wealthy New York dry-goods merchant Edward Sommerville Jaffray. Two years later, Caroline gave birth to their first daughter, Florence. She would be known as “Daisy,” and marry J. Borden Harriman in 1889 before undertaking a long career in social work and public and political service. In 1873, however, after the birth of second and third daughters (Caroline Elise, and Ethel), Caroline Hurst died at age 29. Caroline’s parents then assisted Hurst to raise his three daughters. Hurst and his daughters would spend their winters in a Fifth Avenue mansion, while spending their summers in an Irvington, New York estate. In April 1894, daughter Caroline Elise wed George H. Mairs of New Jersey,(who would become a banker and teacher).

He was the longstanding treasurer of the New York Yacht Club, and was a three-time president of the St. George’s Society of New York (from 1880–81, 1889–91, and 1895–96).

Death

In July 1902, he suffered an appendicitis, at a point when he was already weakened by intestinal problems. He died soon thereafter, on July 21, 1902.

References

F. W. J. Hurst Wikipedia