Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Gerard Lee Bevan

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Education
  
Eton College

Parents
  
Francis Bevan


Name
  
Gerard Bevan

Occupation
  
Banker

Great-grandparents
  
David Bevan

Spouse(s)
  
2, including Sophie Kenrick

Relatives
  
Silvanus Bevan (paternal great-great-grandfather) David Bevan (paternal great-grandfather) Robert Cooper Lee Bevan (paternal grandfather)

Died
  
April 24, 1936, Havana, Cuba

Alma mater
  
Trinity College, Cambridge

Grandparents
  
Robert Cooper Lee Bevan

Gerard Lee Bevan (9 November 1869 – 24 April 1936) was a British financier, the man "most responsible for the entire City Equitable debacle", and "a daring and unprincipled scoundrel".

Contents

Early life

Gerard Lee Bevan was born on 9 November 1869. He was the fourth son of Francis Bevan, chairman of Barclays Bank from 1896 to 1916.

He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.

Career

Bevan had "magnetic charm" and became a stockbroker with Ellis & Co, an old-established and reputable City firm. He was very successful and highly respected until his "crash" in the 1920s.

He was chairman of the City Equitable Fire Insurance Co. In a major 1925 court case, Re City Equitable Fire Insurance Co, the company lost £1,200,000 in failure of investments and the large scale fraud of the chairman, ‘a daring and unprincipled scoundrel’. The liquidator sued the other directors for negligence. The auditors were sued too, but the Court of Appeal held they were honest and exonerated by provisions in the company’s articles.

The story has been written up in Martin Vander Weyer's 'Fortune's Spear: The Story of the Blue-Blooded Rogue Behind the Most Notorious City Scandal of the 1920s'. 2012. Elliott & Thompson.

Personal life

He married Sophie Kenrick, also from a wealthy family, Midlands industrialists related to the Chamberlains. They bought a house in Upper Grosvenor Street, and Bevan collected Chinese porcelain. He was also a "serial adulterer, treating glamorous mistresses ostentatiously".

He married twice, had issue and died in Havana, Cuba on 24 April 1936.

References

Gerard Lee Bevan Wikipedia