James Howard (agriculturalist)
James Howard | |
---|---|
Born | 1820 |
Died | 1889 |
Education | Bedford Modern School |
James Howard (1821–1889), was an English agriculturalist, Liberal politician, manufacturer, and Bedfordshire landowner.[1] In respect of his business acumen, Sir Bernard Burke wrote that James Howard had 'by his inventive genius and business talents restored the family to its former position and wealth'.[2]
Life
Howard was one of the sons of John Howard, of Cauldwell House, Bedford, and was educated at Bedford Modern School where he excelled and taught Junior School classes whilst still a pupil.[3][4]
With his brother Frederick (later Sir Frederick Howard Kt) he founded James & Frederick Howard, a company which made agricultural machinery at the Britannia Works in Bedford.[5][6][7] In respect of his business acumen, Sir Bernard Burke wrote that James Howard had 'by his inventive genius and business talents restored the family to its former position and wealth'.[2]
In 1862, Howard bought a large part of the Clapham, Bedfordshire, estates of Bertram Ashburnham, 4th Earl of Ashburnham, and established a model farm there, farming his land under new scientific methods.[8] Howard was Mayor of Bedford in 1863 and 1864[9] and, in 1868, he was elected as one of the two members of parliament for the Bedford constituency, but he lost the seat to a Conservative in 1874. In 1872, he built Clapham Park, a new Victorian country house in an Elizabethan style standing on high ground to the south of Clapham Wood.[8] In 1880, he returned to the House of Commons as member for the Bedfordshire county constituency, which he represented until it was abolished in 1885.
In 1885, Howard was one of the two vice-presidents of the National Pig Breeders' Association, which had been founded in 1884 and which would later become the British Pig Breeders Association.[10] He wrote in 1881 that over twenty years he had bred thousands of pigs, trying the Large, Middle, and Small Whites and the Berkshires, and had crossed the Whites with the Berkshire. For rapid growth and profitability his preferred breed was the Large White, but he was "far from decrying the Berkshires".[11]
Visit of Garibaldi
On 15 April 1864, while Howard was Mayor of Bedford, Giuseppe Garibaldi visited the town and was entertained by Howard. In the morning, he visited the Howard brothers' Britannia Works and planted a Giant Sequoia (then known as the Wellingtonia gigantea) on the lawn there as a memento of his visit. After hearing speeches from the town's Corporation, Garibaldi proceeded to James Howard's Clapham Park Farm, where he saw a steam-powered plough. Howard then hosted a luncheon for Garibaldi at his house in Caudwell Street, Bedford, the guests including Samuel Whitbread MP, Lady Antrim, the 3rd Duke of Sutherland, Lord Albert Leveson-Gower, Lord Alfred Paget, Menotti Garibaldi, and Mr and Mrs Frederick Howard.[12][13] Garibaldi toasted the Howard brothers: "I am quite happy to be here today and I thank you much for your great kindness I give my thanks to this family of Howard who have done so much for agriculture; and I give thanks also to this good company. I shall never forget you and my visit here: and I will now drink to you". The Giant Sequoia planted by Garibaldi in Bedford was later hit by a lightning strike and now only a stump remains. A local councillor petitioned in 2005 that this remnant be sculpted into a bust of Garibaldi.[12][14][15]
References
- ^ "Who's Who". ukwhoswho.com. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
- ^ a b History of the Landed Gentry, by Sir Bernard Burke, CB, LLD. Published by Harrison & Sons, London, 1894
- ^ The Borough of Bedford: Introduction in A History of the County of Bedford Volume 3 (1912), 1–9 at british-history.ac.uk (accessed 17 April 2008)
- ^ James Howard-obituary, Bedfordshire Mercury 2 February 1889, p. 7
- ^ Bedford Modern School Roll of Honour at roll-of-honour.com (accessed 16 April 2008)
- ^ Farrar, George Herbert[permanent dead link] at angloboerwar.com (accessed 15 April 2008)
- ^ Cambridgeshire Genealogy Scrapbook – Page 15 at ancestry.com (accessed 15 April 2008)
- ^ a b Clapham, in A History of the County of Bedford, Volume 3 (1912), pp. 128–132 at british-history.ac.uk, accessed 16 April 2008
- ^ Civic and Ceremonial Mayors of Bedford 19th Century at bedford.gov.uk (accessed 17 April 2008)
- ^ The History of the BPA: The Foundation of Pedigree Pig Breeding at britishpigs.org.uk (accessed 16 April 2008)
- ^ Pig Breeding, from the Waikato Times, Volume XVII, Issue 1435, 13 September 1881, Page 3
- ^ a b The Bedford Times: GARIBALDI’S VISIT TO BEDFORD Archived 19 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine, extract from The Bedford Times Special Edition, Tuesday 19 April 1864, online at linkitaly.org (accessed 17 April 2008)
- ^ Burke, Edmund, The Annual Register for 1864 (London, Rivington's, 1865) page 52 at books.google.com (accessed 24 April 2008)
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/beds/bucks/herts/4157445.stm Accessed 18 April 2008
- ^ Visit of Garibaldi to the Britannia Iron Works, 1864 Archived 25 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine at bedfordshire.gov.uk (accessed 17 April 2008)
External links
- Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by James Howard
- Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .