Jump to content

Thomas Owen (Launceston MP)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Owen
Member of Parliament
for Launceston
In office
4 July 1892 – 10 July 1898
Preceded bySir Thomas Dyke Acland
Succeeded byJohn Fletcher Moulton
Personal details
Born1840
Died1898
Political partyLiberal

Thomas Owen (15 September 1840-10 July 1898) was a British Liberal politician who represented Launceston, Cornwall in the House of Commons from 1892 until his death in 1898.[1] He was the second son of the marriage of his father Owen Owen (c.1816-1872) to Susan nee Jones, who died in 1843. His father`s second marriage (in December 1846) was to Esther Elizabeth Evans (1821-1855). One of the children of that second marriage was Owen Owen, who built up a substantial drapery enterprise in Liverpool.[2]

In 1873 Thomas Owen and his uncle Samuel Evans (c.1817-1885) provided substantial financial backing for Albert Edwin Reed to buy the Trevarno Paper Mill at Bathford. At that stage Thomas Owen and his uncle Samuel Evans were partners in a successful drapery business in Bath. In 1877, Evans and Owen bought the Ely Paper Mills in Cardiff, and appointed Albert Reed as manager of those works. Evans and Owen also purchased Paper Mills at Ripponden, near Halifax, and at Ramsdunk in the Netherlands.[3]

Samuel Evans died 25 April 1885,[4] and Thomas Owen then became the sole partner in the Messrs. Evans and Owen enterprise. The assets of the drapery business were converted into a limited liability company (authorized capital of 100,000 pounds) in September 1889, with Thomas Owen as chairman, his half-brother Owen Owen of Liverpool as a director, and W. Tonkin as managing director.[5] The Ely Paper Mills were converted into a limited liability company ("Thomas Owen and Company Ltd") in March 1892, with Thomas Owen as chairman; and six other "first directors" including his son Charles Todd Owen, and Robert William Perks.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Mr Thomas Owen (Hansard)". api.parliament.uk. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  2. ^ The Cambrian News, 15 July 1898, p.3.
  3. ^ Bemrose, Christopher (1986). "Bathford Paper Mill". Bristol Industrial Archaeological Society Journal (19): 6.
  4. ^ Western Daily Press, 28 April 1885, p.3.
  5. ^ The Financial Times, 2 September 1889, p.4.
  6. ^ The Financial Times, 14 March 1892, p.3.
[edit]