POLLOK, GILMOUR and Co.
Opened 1804
Closed 31 December, 1873
John
and Arthur Pollok, brothers, and Allan Gilmour (to avoid confusion
hereafter referred to as Allan Gilmour senior) passed their boyhood's days
together at the Mearns school, in the eighties and early nineties of the
eighteenth century. To judge by his correspondence, Allan Gilmour senior
may not have been as proficient, or at any rate not as diligent, a pupil
as the Polloks. For some time thereafter they seem to have gone on
different ways. Allan Gilmour senior carried on a small timber business in
the Mearns, but when we next meet him in 1804, he has blossomed into a
timber merchant, trading in Glasgow, and there is some ground for
supposing that before this date he had made a trip to Norway, and had
conceived the idea of importing timber thence.
Meanwhile the Polloks
seem to have been bound apprentices to their uncle in Glasgow, who, on the
expiry of their indentures, sold the business to them. It would appear
that already before this date
the Polloks, or Arthur Pollok alone, had done some timber business at
Grangemouth. Certainly, after the firm of P., G. & Co. was founded at
Glasgow, a business was for many years continued at Grangemouth under the
style of Arthur Pollok & Co. Perhaps it was through their mutual interest
in the timber trade that the Polloks were led to renew their old
connection with their schoolfellow, Allan Gilmour senior.
In 1804, Allan Gilmour being
then twenty- nine, John Pollok twenty-six, and Arthur Pollok twenty-four,
the three young men from the Mearns joined in co-partnership as Pollok,
Gilmour & Co. Their office was at 119 Stockwell (now Stockwell Street),
Glasgow, and here it remained until in 1824 they removed to 6 (afterwards
renumbered 19) Union Street. This property, consisting of the street flat
and sunk storey with cellars, was purchased by the Company, and held until
its re-sale, after the dissolution of the firm in 1874. It is now occupied
by a branch of the British Linen Company's Bank.
Some years ago Mr. William
Ritchie—the heir of Mr. William Ritchie herein named—lent me, for
transcription, a copy of the first articles of partnership of Pollok,
Gilmour & Co. The articles. read :-
John and Arthur Pollok, Grocers
in Glasgow, and Allan Gilmour, Timber Merchant there, having agreed to
Trade in Company, at Glasgow under the Firm of Pollok, Gilmour & Co., and
at Grangemouth under the Firm of Arthur Pollok & Co., here bind themselves
to observe the following resolutions, viz.
1st. That their Joint Stock
shall amount to Three Thousand Pounds, One Thousand of which to be
advanced by J. Pollok, One Thousand by A. Pollok, and One Thousand by A.
Gilmour, and on no account shall any of them draw out any part of their
stock, but if it is thought advantageous, they shall have it in their
power to advance their Stock equally to whatever sum they may find
convenient.
2nd. That a proper Sett of Books
shall be kept (of which this is Day Book A/c) in which shall be narrated
every Transaction of the Concern, and the Said Books shall be regularly
Balanced on the 31st day of December annually.
3rd. That they shall all pay
their whole attention to this business, and none of them shall be
concerned in any other, either directly or indirectly, without the consent
of the other Partners, and they shall receive equal Shares of the Profit,
or sustain equal proportion of the Loss that may arise from their
dealings, but none of them shall draw out any of the profit that may
appear at Balancing untill the next Balance following, and if at that
Balance there is again a profit (and not otherwise) the former profit may
then be taken out. It being understood that Subsisting money shall be
allowed, but that this shall not exceed the Sum of One hundred pounds to
each Partner per Annum.
4th. That this Contract shall
continue for Six Years from this date, but any of the Partners shall have
it in his power to withdraw from the same at the end of Three Years from
this date, upon his having given intimation in writing to the other
Partners Twelve Months before, in the event of which two-thirds of his
Share of Stock and profit shall be paid him in 3 equal moities at Three,
Six, and Nine Months after said Balance, and whatever part may be
collected of his remaining one-third at the following Balance shall then
be paid him, and so on, at every succeeding Balance.
5th. That in the event of the
Death of any of the Partners before the expiry of this agreement, the
Stock and Share of profits of said Partner, as appeared at the preceding
Balance, with Interest thereon from the date of said Balance, shall be
paid at the following Balance, the two-thirds in Three, Six, and Nine
Months, and the remaining one-third as above stated in case any of the
partners shall withdraw from the Concern.
6th. That if any difference
shall arise during the Term of this Copartnery between any or all of the
Partners, the same shall be adjusted according to the opinion of Men
uninterested and experienced in business, mutually chosen.
We hereby promise in the
transacting of this business most pointedly to adhere to the above Six
Resolutions, and upon the request of any one of us, these with whatever
others that may be thought proper by us all, shall immediately be extended
on a proper Stamp in a Legal Manner, and untill then we consider ourselves
as completely bound to observe the above as though it was extended in a
Legal Manner on proper Stamped paper. Signed this first day of January,
One thousand eight hundred and Six Year.
Signed: JOHN POLLOK, ALLAN
GILMOUR, ARTHUR POLLOK
It will be noticed that the date
of these articles is 1 January, 1806. In this narrative I have given the
date of the foundation of the firm as 1804, on information received from
numerous sources. This date is supported by the evidence of John Pollok in
Gilmour v. Gilmour (1852), in which he says, 'The company (P., G. & Co.)
was formed about the year 1804.' Note the Scottish caution of 'about,' a
self-guarding caution apparent in other parts of his evidence ; the
possibility of his being challenged as to the date 18o6 in the articles of
co-partnership may have presented itself to his mind. But two dates would
be firm in John Pollok's memory as in any other business man's—the date of
his first going into business, and the date of his first partnership. He
had not to trouble himself about any marriage date, for he never married.
I take the view that the three men were from 1804 to i8o6 working together
and practically in partnership, yet not under any formal agreement. How
else could these canny Scots have got the mutual confidence which led them
to hotch-potch their savings under so informal an agreement? Though they
had been at school together, they would scarcely have come at once into
binding partnership without the mutual experience which two such years
would give them. I prefer, therefore, to adhere to the date 1804 as the
date of the foundation of the firm. In any case, there are only two years
in doubt.
I have spoken of the agreement
as informal. They seem not to have been afraid of being their own lawyers,
and the agreement was evidently home-drawn (vide clause 4, '3 equal
moities '), and merely an unwitnessed writing on the front page of their
day-book. And there is no evidence of there being any subsequent agreement
of a more formal kind. It was under the terms of this document that Allan
Gilmour senior was paid out when the partnership was dissolved, as will be
seen below, and under its terms that he quarrelled with his partners for
going to live during the summer months some four miles distant from the
office as being a breach of the agreement.
In the original firm, thus
humbly started with a capital of £3,000, Allan Gilmour senior seems to
have been the traveller, the investigator, and not a little of a pioneer.
It was he who made journeys to North America (an enterprise not lightly
undertaken in those days) and to Norway, to open out new lines of trade.
One does not hear of the Polloks having been abroad at any time. John
acted generally in the markets of England, Scotland, and Ireland, vending
the Canadian, Norwegian, and Baltic produce imported by the firm, or
(later) shipped by their branches under contracts with home consumers.
Arthur Pollok was an office man, controlling the finances, and
restraining, so far as he could, the somewhat ambitious enterprises of Mr.
Gilmour.
As to the methods of the office,
it may be noted that the partners—at any rate, Messrs. John and Arthur
Pollok—sat in a box-like arrangement in the vestibule, something like a
porter's lodge, in order that anyone going in might have an opportunity of
putting his business before the partners —or, as is equally probable, in
order that the partners might see all that was going on. It was and is an
unusual course; but for long it was adopted by all the concerns, with this
modification, that instead of the senior it was the junior partner who sat
in the outer office, and was thus enabled to take part or not, as he
pleased, in anything that was passing at the counter.
Of Allan Gilmour senior's very
daring enterprises in America something will be said later. When at home
he lived with the two Polloks at a house which still stands (or stood on
the occasion of the writer's last visit to Glasgow), 24 Carlton Place,
near Jamaica Street Bridge, which remained the property of the firm till
sold in 1855. Across the road there was a smooth stretch of greensward
down to the river carefully protected, or was so recently. In the river in
front lay the firm's timber-rafts, sent up from Port Glasgow for the local
supply at Glasgow—the Clyde was then a mere stream. The house has become a
machine-shop, but it still bears traces of having been a stately,
dignified terrace- house, and could have claimed relationship with the
'mansion' of to-day. In this house the partners lived a very retired, but
a pleasant and kindly life. Though they spared little time from their
business, they could relax and have their little functions. In an old
letter before me from an Irish client of P., G. & Co. I read 'I often
think of the quiet, pleasant little dinner parties at 24 Canton Place, of
the three old gentlemen with their solicitor, Mr. Young,' who lived at No.
22, next door; and, doubtless, the port, if not the toddy, would pass
merrily. But long hours of business, hard work, toddy, and even the smoke
of Glasgow did not diminish the longevity of the partners, though Glasgow
is not exactly the place to attract anyone in search of long life. The
resident partners in P., G. & Co. must have been Fortune's favourites, or
owed much to the healthy simplicity of the Mearns; for Allan Gilmour
senior died in his seventy-fourth year, John Pollok in his eighty- second
year, Arthur Pollok in his ninetieth year, Allan Gilmour junior in his
eightieth year, and George Sheriff in his eightieth year; and I might
fairly add that Daniel Carmichael, disappointed of his partnership, was
prematurely cut off in his seventy-third year. This gives an average of as
near eighty years as makes no matter.
It is evident that the three
partners, during the years of their association, lived in a relation of
singularly intimate and cordial friendship. Their sharing a single house
would be enough to prove this, but there is further proof both of their
friendship and of their kindly memory of the country parish whence they
sprang. They seem to have arranged for and prepared their burial-places,
corresponding in size and position on either side of the Mearns church
burial-ground. They appear also to have erected their monuments
beforehand, differing in form, ample in size, and of the period
sufficiently stately. Allan Gilmour senior's heir, however, seemingly
forgot to make any record of his birth, death or virtues, although three
ample tablets were provided for the purpose; they stand to-day entirely
free of the mason's art.
To return to the early progress
of the firm, P., G. & Co. early obtained control over a large import
business from the Baltic in such articles as tar, hemp, and flax, but
their chief staple was wood— in the early days from the Baltic, and later
from British North America. The development of the latter business was the
chief work of Allan Gilmour senior. After he had made one or more voyages
to Canada, and had seen the potentialities of the lumber trade there, the
decision was made to open a house at Mirarnichi, and in the year 1812
James Gilmour (the brother of Allan Gilmour senior) and Alexander Rankin,
both of whom had been educated at the Mearns school, and had some
experience in the Glasgow office, were as cadets despatched there. When it
was found that these gentlemen had satisfactorily acquitted themselves at
Miramichi, and that there were prospects of still further developments,
other young men, mostly relatives, mostly connected with the Mearns
parish, and mostly after some probation in the Glasgow office, were sent
to be under tutelage at Miramichi. Among these I would mention :-
John Rankin (Mearns), went out
about 1814. Robert Rankin (Mearns), went out 1818. Allan Gilmour (Mearns),
went out 1821. William Ritchie (Mearns), went out 1822. Arthur
Ritchie (Mearns), went out 1825. Robert Ritchie (Mearns), went out
1825. Richard Hutchison (Mearns), went out about 1825. Francis
Ferguson (Dunlop), went out 1829. John Ferguson (Dunlop), went out
about 1832.
In due time these were again
drafted out from Miramichi to form or take their parts in the various
firms enumerated above (p. 4). In this way were founded the houses of
Gilmour, Rankin & Co., Miramichi (1812); Robert Rankin & Co., St. John
(1822) ; Allan Gilmour & Co., Quebec (1828); William Ritchie & Co.,
Montreal (subsequently Gilmour & Co.), (1828); Arthur Ritchie & Co.,
Restigouche, New Brunswick (1833); Ferguson, Rankin & Co., Bathurst, New
Brunswick (about 1835). The capital for these concerns was largely
provided by the parent firm, and so far as the personal element went the
control fell principally to Allan Gilmour senior. It was he who mainly
selected the young men, and he had indited a special 'Letter of
Instructions' to them, of which he was very proud. He frequently crossed
and recrossed the Atlantic, to inspect the branch houses, and before he
returned always left precise instructions as to the work to be done by the
foreign partners before the next season. Till 1839 all matters, including
domestic, concerning the foreign houses and their stores, fell to be dealt
with at Glasgow. Spring and autumn orders for these stores would be a
heavy matter; except absolute provisions, everything had to come from this
side to meet the wants of small communities on the other. When the foreign
houses began shipbuilding (as will be recorded below), all but the wood
itself for the various shipyards had to go from this side. The store
requisition sheets would literally cover everything from a needle to an
anchor.
The development of this very
varied business, and the connection with the foreign houses, involved the
gradual building up of a large fleet of ships. P., G. & Co. early entered
upon shipowning - true, in a very modest way—in what year I cannot tell;
but before Allan Gilmour senior retired from the firm its fleet, I have
heard, had become the biggest in the United Kingdom, and that in the
thirties and forties it numbered over 100 vessels. One informant states
130. No doubt the latter number would include vessels which had been sent
home for sale, but which, from absence of market, would from time to time
have to be sailed.
The first thirty years of the
firm's existence thus saw a very rapid growth in wealth and importance. I
like to think of these three stalwarts, born in comparative obscurity,
making for themselves a position in the front rank of commercial life by
the remarkable strength of their characters, and at the same time
inspiring others with intense enthusiasm.
But with wealth came the breaking
up of the old close friendship between the partners. The breach may have
come about gradually, but it showed itself in a marked way in 1837. The
Polloks had bought an estate named Broom, about four miles outside
Glasgow, where they went to live during the summer months. To this Allan
Gilmour senior demurred very strongly. He took his stand on Clause 3 of
the articles of partnership, which required that the partners should 'pay
their whole attention to the business,' and forcibly asked how it would be
possible for them to do this at such a distance from Glasgow! He also
asserted (and perhaps this was a principal cause of bitterness) that the
Polloks had purchased the property of Lochlibo, in Mearns, over his head.
His letters show that in this matter he was very irate, and from what one
hears of his temperament, one can understand that his irritation was ever
an increasing quantity. The following year (5 January, 1838) he retired
from the firm.
The basis for paying him out was
the balance sheets of the foreign concerns as on 30 June, 1836, and the
balance sheet of P., G. & Co. as on 30 June, 1837. On this basis he
received, in accordance with the articles of partnership, on 24 January,
1838, the sum of £150,000. This was a good return on the £1,000 he had
invested thirty-two years before, and it must be remembered that he had
been buying some properties meantime. His subsequent correspondence gives
very clear and terse intimation that he did not feel he had got out of the
concern all he ought to have.
Though feeling between the former
partners must have been pretty strained, he had continued to live with the
Polloks till shortly before his retirement from the firm. Then, for a
short period, he took a house for himself in Glasgow, and finally, having
purchased the property of Hazledean in the Mearns, he removed there. For
some time previously he appears to have been nursing a scheme for the
disruption of the firm, which, however, to his annoyance, survived his
withdrawal. He either believed, or professed to believe, that the timber
trade was going to ruin, and did his best to persuade the foreign
partners, other than the Polloks, especially his nephew, Allan Gilmour, to
come out 'while there was yet time.'
The retirement of Allan Gilmour
senior involved the reconstruction of the firm, and Allan Gilmour, of the
Quebec house, who now came to Glasgow, Alexander Rankin, of the Miramichi
house, and Robert Rankin, founder of the Liverpool house of Rankin,
Gilmour & Co., which had been established in 1838, were also admitted to
partnership in P., G. & Co. as from 1 January, 1839.
The following succinct statement
of the later history of the firm has been supplied by Messrs. A. & G.
Young :-
Messrs. John Pollok and Arthur
Pollok retired from business as at 31 March, 1853, and the notice of their
retiral shows that besides the original Glasgow firm of Pollok, Gilmour &
Co., there were then in existence the following firms, viz.
(1) Rankin, Gilmour & Co., at
Liverpool. (2) Allan Gilmour & Co., at Quebec. (3) Gilmour & Co., at
Montreal. (4) Gilmour & Co., at Ottawa. (5) Gilmour, Rankin & Co.,
at Miramichi. (6) Robert Rankin & Co., at St. John. (7) Ferguson,
Rankin & Co., at Bathurst. (8) Hoghton, Rankin & Co., at New Orleans.
(9) Pollok, Hoghton & Co., at Mobile. Mr. John Pollok died at Broom
House, Renfrewshire, on 14 February, 1858. Mr. Arthur Pollok died at
Lismany, County Galway, on 30 January, 180.
The partners of the firm, after
the death of Mr. Alexander Rankin and the retirement of the Messrs.
Pollok, would thus be Mr. Allan Gilmour, of Glasgow, and Mr. Robert Rankin
senior, of Liverpool. A Contract of Copartnery executed in 1861 shows that
in the interim between the retirement of the Messrs. Pollok and that date,
Mr. George Hoghton, merchant, of Liverpool, and Mr. William Strang,
merchant, in London, had been admitted as partners of the firm. The terms
of the contract are a little vague as to whether Messrs. Hoghton and
Strang were partners of the Glasgow house before the contract in question,
but the inference is that they were. They certainly, if not previously
admitted, did become partners by the contract of 1861, and at the same
time there were admitted Mr. Robert Rankin junior, merchant, in Liverpool,
and Mr. George Sheriff, merchant, in Glasgow. The contract deals inter
alia with the Glasgow, Liverpool and London houses, and it is provided
that Mr. Gilmour, of Glasgow, and Mr. Sheriff only should be entitled to
use and subscribe the name of the Glasgow firm of Pollok, Gilmour & Co.,
that Messrs. Rankin senior, Hoghton, and R. Rankin junior, only should be
entitled to use and subscribe the name of the Liverpool firm of Rankin,
Gilmour & Co., and that Mr. String alone should be entitled to use and
subscribe the name of the London firm of Gilmour, Rankin, Strang & Co.
On the retirement of Mr. George
William Hoghton, and the death of Mr. Rankin senior, the partners left
were Mr. Gilmour, of Glasgow, Mr. Strang, Mr. Robert Rankin (formerly
known as junior), and Mr. Sheriff.
Mr. Gilmour, of Glasgow, retired
from the concern on 31 December, 1870, and he survived until 18 November,
1884.
Mr. Gilmour, of Glasgow, was thus
a partner of the firm of Pollok, Gilmour & Co. from 1 January, 1839, to 31
December, 1870, but his connection with the concerns dates from 1821, when
he went to St. John, New Brunswick. He was transferred to Quebec in March,
1828, and returned to Glasgow in 1838-39 at the time of his admission as a
partner of the Glasgow house.
At the time of the retirement of
Mr. Gilmour, of Glasgow, viz., 31 December, 1870, Mr. John Rankin,
Liverpool, was admitted a partner of the Glasgow house as well as of the
Liverpool and London firms.
Mr. George Sheriff retired on 31
December, 1873, and the concern of Pollok, Gilmour & Co. was then wound
up, and the firm ceased to exist, having, as has been seen, carried on
business continuously from 1804.
From the time of the retirement
of Allan Gilmour senior, the control exercised by the parent firm over its
offshoots became less close, and the work of dealing with the foreign
houses came to be divided between P., G. & Co. and the Liverpool firm of
R., G. & Co. When Mr. Allan Gilmour came to Glasgow, and Mr. Robert Rankin
to Liverpool, the work of supplying the foreign houses was divided, to
meet the special facilities of the respective places. The business of
bankers for the general traders, who had outgrown the stage of being
supplied from the firm's stores abroad on wholesale terms, and the
supplying of a number of shipbuilding clients, nearly all came to
Liverpool. The ship management and ships' accounts, so long as the wooden
ships lasted, fell to Glasgow—Mr. Allan Gilmour having special
capabilities therefor. He and Mr. Robert Rankin were altogether opposed to
abandoning wood for iron ships, and it was only after much persuasion that
they were induced to consent to the building of the iron ship St. Mungo.
With the management, however, they would not identify themselves, and this
went to Mr. Strang, London, so long as they remained in business;
thereafter it came to Liverpool.
Owing to realizations, the wooden
fleet once the biggest in the United Kingdom—had been reduced to eight or
ten at the time that Pollok Gilmour & Co. ceased to exist, and these were
taken over by R., G. & Co. and G., R., S. & Co., and managed from
Liverpool.
Indeed, after Mr. Gilmour's
retirement, the Glasgow house ceased to have any effective existence.
Whether Mr. Sheriff had capabilities I doubt—at any rate he initiated
nothing. Mr. Strang and Mr. Robert Rankin junior were very unwilling to
continue him as partner, but Mr. Gilmour's influence and firmness
prevailed.
At the expiration of the
partnership in 1873 Mr. Sheriff elected to retire from business, and the
house, after years of honourable and successful l dealing, ceased to
exist. Mr. Sheriff's eldest son John, and James Hunter, son of the Mearns
schoolmaster, who had both been in the Glasgow office for some years, then
joined in partnership as Hunter, Sheriff & Co. to conduct the old timber
business. James Hunter had up till then been right-hand man in the office.
They conducted a fairly successful business for several years, but
misfortunes overtook them, not altogether through their own fault. James
Hunter died shortly afterwards. Mr. John Sheriff died io September, 1908,
suddenly, whilst on a visit to Arran.
The following is an extract from
an article in the Scottish Field of 10 November, 1910:-
'The firm of Pollok, Gilmour &
Co. took part in the rise and development of the Canadian lumber trade,
and also saw the culmination and decline of the wooden shipbuilding
industry. The extent of the firm's operations is indicated by the
inscription on the frame of an oil painting at Woodbank of the good ship
Marchioness of Queensberry: "The property of Pollok, Gilmour & Co.,
Glasgow. Built at St. John, New Brunswick, 1824, by themselves. The
largest ship in the lumber trade, and of the 78 vessels composing the
fleet of Pollok, Gilmour & Co. the only one that made three voyages in one
season." The firm at first traded only with Norway and Sweden, but soon
diverted their business to America, where extensive forests were acquired,
and sawmills erected on a scale previously unknown. Their tonnage of
shipping exceeded that of any contemporary firm in England or Scotland.
Upwards of 6,000,000 cubic feet of timber were annually shipped, to
prepare which required over 15,000 men and 600 horses and oxen. It is
worthy of remark that the firm introduced the novelty into their fleet of
sending most of their vessels to sea upon the total abstinence principle,
a system which was found to work well for all concerned.'
JOHN AND ARTHUR POLLOK
John—Born 1778 Died 14 February,
1858, at Broom Arthur—Born 25 December, 1780 Married 1818 Barbara
Thomson Died 30 January 1870, at Lismany
John and Arthur Pollok were the
sons of Thomas Pollok, of Faside, Mearns. The farm of Faside had been
bought by Thomas' father, Allan Pollok, of Craigton, about 1707, and
passed' first to Thomas, and then successively to John and Arthur. It was
sold when all the Scottish properties of the family were disposed of, as
will be seen hereafter. Meanwhile the original family place, Craigton, had
gone to Allan Pollok's second son, from whom it has descended in the
direct line to James Pollok, of Blackhouse. He recently rebuilt the
Craigton house; but until then there could be seen over the door the
initials, 'A. P.' (Allan Pollok) and 'M. W.' (his wife, Margaret Warnock),
with the date 1666.
Thomas Pollok was a captain of
volunteers during the French Revolutionary War, and John and Arthur
Pollok, as young men, were also members of the corps, and used to walk the
eight or nine miles from the Mearns to Paisley, and back, every day for
their drill. Thus early they showed the keenness about anything that they
undertook which marked them in later life. Some years after leaving school
they went to Glasgow to work under their uncle. On this point Captain J.
A. Pollok, of the 42nd Highlanders, writes me:-' Messrs. John and Arthur
Pollok must have come to Glasgow before 1799. My great-grandfather was a
"home-trader," which (as far as I can make out) meant that he conducted a
grocer's business, in King Street, Glasgow. John and Arthur Pollok were
apparently apprentices with him, and lived in his house. King Street was
where the Municipal Offices now are. My grandfather sold the business to
Arthur Pollok in 1804.'
For 'Arthur Pollok' in the last
sentence we shouldprobably read, 'John and Arthur Pollok,' for John, as
has been already stated, seems to have continued the grocery business in
Glasgow under the style of John & Arthur Pollok, while Arthur developed a
timber business at Grangemouth. This, at least, is the view suggested by
the opening clause of the P., G. & Co. articles of partnership.
I have dealt elsewhere with their
share in the foundation and organisation of Pollok, Gilmour and Co., and
with the firm's business routine. Here I am concerned mainly with their
personal history and characters. But I find the subject somewhat difficult
to deal with. In the first place I do not find it easy to realise them as
separate personalities, for they present themselves to my vision as
forming jointly one side, while Allan Gilmour formed the other, of a house
once in perfect harmony, but ultimately divided. And in the second place
they have left behind them no such documented record as their partner. No
doubt they had their lawsuits ; but they do not seem to have indulged in
any case involving the unfolding of private affairs and the delineation of
character, as their partner did. There is no Pollok lawsuit which compares
with the case of Gilmour v. Gilmour for the light which it sheds on the
customs and characters of those concerned in it.
John Poilok never married. Arthur
Pollok married Miss Barbara Thomson, of Edinburgh, in 1818. She died in
1821 at the birth of her first child, a daughter, who ultimately married
her cousin, Allan Pollok, son of Allan, a third brother of the above, who
was laird of some properties in the Mearns. Of this daughter and her
husband I shall have more to say.
During his brief wedded life
Arthur Pollok lived at Grangemouth. But on the death of his wife he came
to live at Glasgow with his brother and Allan Gilmour senior. The close
companionship of the trio, thus begun, was only interrupted when the
brothers went to live at Broom in 1837. But whether at Canton Place or at
Broom, their life was alike simple and uneventful. Regularity and
punctuality governed all their actions. In Glasgow, they regularly
attended St. Enoch's Church, but I do not think they accepted any church
office. So methodical were they that I have heard that as they daily went
home from the office to 24 Canton Place to dine, at the old-fashioned hour
of four o'clock, the gutter-snipes at the Broomielaw (place dear to all
Glaswegians!) would range themselves and chant in bellman fashion, 'Four
o'clock, four o'clock, the Polloks (pronounced Pokes) going to their
denner! ' They visited little, and never travelled more than business
necessitated. Their relaxations were few. John 'compounded' for another
weakness' he was inclined to,' ' by damning' cards, which 'he had no mind
to,' because they involved gambling. Arthur, on the other hand, was
uncommonly fond of a game of whist, and neither John's deprecatory
remarks, nor the possibility of losing a modest shilling or two on an
evening's play, would daunt him. Broom had the reputation of being a
hospitable house. In winter there were little whist parties, and toddy in
moderation; for despite the period in which they lived they were both very
abstemious men; and of a summer evening there not infrequently were strong
contingents for bowls. The brothers bred a greyhound or two, and now and
then coursed, but only at impromptu friendly meetings of the lairds and
farmers of the neighbourhood. John, but not Arthur, also shot a little;
and this ends the list of their relaxations.
They early began to invest their
savings in land, partly owing to a land-hunger natural to men who came
from a race of farmers, partly because they were keen politicians, and
wished to control voting qualifications. Their first purchases were
naturally in the Mearns. The purchase of Broom and of Lochlibo (their
largest holding in Scotland) has already been recorded. Over both of these
purchases they came into conflict with Allan Gilmour senior. They also
acquired other smaller estates in the Mearns. In 1847 the estate of
Ronachan in Argyllshire was bought, whether by the two brothers jointly,
or by Arthur alone, I do not know; it is immaterial, for, as John died
first, all his property came to Arthur. But the largest, and in the event
the most unfortunate, of all these purchases was made shortly after the
brothers retired from Pollok, Gilmour & Co., in 1853, out of the profits
of their long partnership. This consisted of the Irish estates of Lismany,
Glinsk and Creggs, in Galway, formerly the property of the Eyres of
Eyrescourt. The purchase was a very large one, how large I have no
accurate means of knowing, but first and last over £1,000,000 must have
been spent upon it. It was made, I believe, to meet the vaulting ambition
of the son-in-law, Allan Pollok, and it led his father-in-law into many
difficulties. The land was good, though it included a good deal of bog,
and the tenantry were in a wretched state.
Allan Pollok, on taking
possession, at once determined to change entirely the previous methods of
cultivation, and to manage the estate on the most advanced principles. In
particular, he resolved to amend the existing condition of small and
squalid holding by creating a series of large, indeed immense, farms. To
this end he made a clean sweep of the existing tenants, in some instances
burning their houses. Though he gave ample— and indeed
generous—compensation, he inevitably drew upon himself the enmity of the
country folk —and their shooting-irons; at that time landlord- shooting
had not become the popular sport- it afterwards became. Little Allan
Pollok cared; he had a nerve of iron. He went on farming large farms,
improving the land, and building houses for the large farmers he intended
to instal. He built handsome steadings, corn-mills, wood-mills, dairies,
etc., on a princely scale. But on the capital required to enable a man to
work one of these large farms he could afford to be a landowner on a
fairly large scale himself, and so avoid subjection to a somewhat
capricious and overbearing landlord such as Allan Pollok was. The farms,
consequently, nearly all remained unlet most of the property under paid
management yielded little return; Allan was no financier, and Arthur
Pollok, now an old man, had to go over to the rescue. Once at Lismany,
there was no escape; he remained until his death, surviving his daughter
by four years.
Lismany was but a modest mansion,
but provided offices and out-buildings that to-day might satisfy the
requirements of a meet of the Automobile Club.
It was at Lismany that, with Mr.
Thomas Pollok, of Liverpool, I saw Mr. Arthur Pollok for the first and
only time, about the year 1860. I cannot believe that the shrewd and able
old man had ever contemplated such a wild scheme as his headstrong and
ambitious son-in-law had drawn him into. Doubtless need had followed need,
and extension extension.
The old man was endeavouring to
unravel the tangle that things had got into, and the last years of his
life must have been the bitterest. It was too much for his failing vigour;
valiantly till his death in January, 1870, he addressed himself to
redeeming the position. He could only put the brake on. With the exception
of the jointures (of £30,000 each) which he had previously set aside for
each of his granddaughters, the immense joint fortunes of his brother and
himself had practically been expended on the venture. At the date I have
spoken of, 1860, Allan Pollok was already discussed by the country-side as
'a distressed man.'
A change in the plan of campaign,
and a curtailment of expenditure was needed. The new policy was
successful, and now a handsome income is obtained from the estates, though
very inadequate to the original expenditure.
I had, in 1908, the following
communication from an old gentleman of eighty-three—a relative and near
neighbour in Ireland, and therefore well acquainted with the Polloks and
the Irish properties:-
'I remember Mr. Arthur Pollok
told me the first craft they bought was a 90-ton coaster, and he, at the
same time, said that the largest vessel that could come up to the
Broomielaw in those days was 150 tons.
'John and Arthur retired from
business in the early fifties. They desired to invest the money they had
made in landed property; and at the time property was supposed to be
selling very cheap in the Encumbered Estate Court in Dublin. Misfortune
led Allan and his wife to go to Ireland, and they bought a pretty large
property in County Galway, formerly part of the estates of the Eyres of
Eyrecourt Castle, who had once held very large properties in that and
King's County. The Polloks got a Government title with their purchase,
stating the names and number of the tenants and their interest in the
holdings, nearly all being represented as yearly tenants subject to a six
months' notice to quit. This was simply a misrepresentation of the facts;
when Allan Pollok served them with notices to quit, the tenants fought him
in the Courts, and put him to endless trouble and costs. The Authorities
repeatedly warned him, whenever he and his wife were known to be coming to
Ireland, that their lives were not safe. They saw there were only two
courses—either to acknowledge that they had made a mistake in coming to
Ireland and sell again, or to face the difficulties before them.
Unfortunately, they adopted the latter course, and took the plan of buying
all the stock, crop, etc., of the tenants at a great deal more than they
were worth. In that way they managed, only in some degree, to satisfy the
tenants, some of whom went to America, while others refused to quit their
holdings, and others stayld and worked on the property, assisting in
making the improvements. Allan Pollok's idea was to make the farming like
that of the Lothians, so he built large steadings, and turned the country
into large fields, levelling the great bulk of the fences. The times
favoured him, as grain then brought good prices, and cattle and sheep
became very dear. But though he was a very good farmer, and a great
improver of land, he was not a good man of business. As it has turned out,
a great deal of the money spent was wasted, for the great importation of
live and dead meat has changed the style of farming very much, while, as
for the grain crops, it does not pay to grow them except where the straw
can be well sold near a city.
'Allan's wife died, a
comparatively young woman, 3 May, 1866, and he died 22 March, 1881, aged
sixty-five. His son lived an extravagant life, and died in 18gi. To pay
off encumbrances, all the Scotch properties were sold, and some of the
Irish also, to the Estate Commissioners, who, of course, re-let to the
present tenants. I often wonder what Allan Pollok would think, bad as
things were in his day, if he could come back and see the state the
country has come to; his idea of large farms completely tabooed, and the
grass land being bought by the Estate Commissioners and divided into ten
to forty acre farms, and given to small tenants.
'I think the first outlay in
Ireland by the Polloks was about 600,000, and their incomes followed into
the land, so that they had both given all their money to Allan and his
family before they died. What the present rental of the Irish property is
I have no means of knowing, but quite apart from the extravagant and
unremunerative improvements initiated, all Irish property is much
depreciated.
'The two properties of Lismany
and Glynsk with Creggs were nearly of the same acreage, and I was told on
good authority each of them included over 20,000 acres, but there is a
great deal of bog in both, especially on Glynsk and Creggs, on which there
are a great many small tenants on very bad land. There were some small
properties purchased adjoining them, but I don't think their names are of
importance.
'Mr. Pollok built large flour and
meal mills, which he carried on himself, and he put up threshing mills on
many of the farms—ten or eleven in all I think—and large steadings
attached, which I may say are now put to very little use. The present
owner's name is Allan Bingham Pollok; he is the great-grandson of Arthur
Pollok.
'The largest property in Scotland
was Lochlibo; next to it came Ronachan. They also had Broom in the Mearns,
with some adjoining and several outlying farms, for the old gentlemen were
keen politicians, and bought them for the votes connected with them. But
the property that I most regretted to see sold was the farm at Faside.'
Mr. James Pollok, of Blackhouse,
writes me:
'I never knew two finer men than
Mr. John and Mr. Arthur Pollok, so kind and natural in manner, and very
superior to anything like purse-pride. Mr. John was very outspoken, would
give you a growl when you deserved it; would stand up for his own way, and
not be easily daunted, even on the prospect of a lawsuit. His sports were
coursing and shooting. Mr. Arthur was quieter, and not so outspoken; more
of a thoughtful reader. He was intimate with Mr. Murray, the publisher. I
never knew him to lift a gun. His amusements were bowling, curling, and
whist.'
ALLAN GILMOUR SENIOR Born
1775, Retired from P., G. & Co., 24 January, 1838 Died 4 March, 1849
Allan Gilmour was the son of
Allan Gilmour, of South Walton, Mearns, who had married Elizabeth Pollok.
His sister married David Ritchie; of their issue more anon.
From what one can learn—and in
1908 he was still just remembered by a few in the Mearns parish—he was not
without kindliness of disposition; but he must have been odd-tempered,
susceptible to flattery, irritable and litigious, yet far-seeing and of
untiring energy. In his latter days he was undoubtedly vindictive, and
with feeble health came at times feeble mind; but in the main he was able
to exercise his strong will to the last. In his parish and on the mart he
was spoken of as A. G. (pronounced 'Ah G.')—a distinction such as one
might expect to attach to some potentate.
At his best he must have been a
strong man; an active-minded, able-bodied, and enterprising man. As the
history of the succeeding firms shows, he had a rare capacity for
selecting his young men. They received their early training under his
partners, John and Arthur Pollok, in the Glasgow office, and were later
drafted abroad. The senior of all these was Alexander Rankin, who was
early established at Miramichi, and to whom were sent out in rapid
succession John and Robert Rankin, and Mr. Gilmour's nephews, Allan
Gilmour and William, Arthur and Robert Ritchie. In sending the young men
to Alexander Rankin, Mr. Gilmour showed sound perception, for, perhaps, no
one could have better trained them in the business methods of the Company,
wherein the keenest attention to detail was combined with an
all-prevailing sense of business probity. Allusion has already been made
to Mr. Gilmour's 'Letter of Instructions' to the young men, of which he
was rather proud.
Mr. Gilmour himself often crossed
and recrossed the Atlantic to inspect the houses already established, and
to exploit new fields. From these journeys he would send home as
opportunity offered in returning vessels a diary, which, if not a literary
production, conveyed his business impressions of the moment. But, as he
made his progress, his conclusions, runningly recorded, were, I have been
told, apt to be altered and realtered, and they thus afforded little
guidance to his partners. Still he thought highly of them, and,
Gladstone-like, was able on most occasions to point to the day and date on
which he had advised in a sense different from the manner in which the
Polloks had acted. Unhappily, none of these diaries have been preserved.
Before Allan Gilmour left for
home each partner abroad would have his work for the coming winter
allotted to him; certain things were to be done, certain grounds were to
be investigated, and reports must be sent home for his partners'
information, or produced to Mr. Gilmour on his arrival out next spring.
The foreign partners must have indeed lived strenuous lives; for nothing
was too small to escape the lash of Mr. Gilmour's tongue, hardly anything
too big for him to adventure. One year—it cannot have been long after the
Quebec office had been established—he carried out a most successful
operation, an absolute corner in lumber. Report has it that, excepting the
small remnant stock from the previous season, he succeeded in securing in
advance all the supply that was coming down the St. Lawrence for summer
shipments. This he did by sending his agents up that river and the Ottawa
to intercept and purchase rafts on the way down. His plans were carried
out so quietly and successfully that. the other shippers in Quebec were
completely taken by surprise, and to fulfil their contracts for shipments
to the United Kingdom or elsewhere had to come to him, for he alone could
supply. This kind of enterprise (and there was certainly at least one
other similar transaction in Norwegian timber) gave the Polloks a most
uneasy time in financing the unlooked-for transactions, which, however,
ultimately swelled their coffers considerably.
The Report of the Select
Parliamentary Committee on Timber Duties records that Mr. Gilmour senior
in his examination on 21 July, 1835, stated :-
'That he had been eight seasons
in America (or part of eight seasons); that previously he had had four
seasons in Norway, Sweden, and Russia; that Pollok, Gilmour & Co.'s mode
of business was, in Canada generally, to purchase from the lumberers (who
made it) their produce as it arrived at Quebec, but that in New Brunswick
they first had to pay a stumpage to the Crown Lands Office, then to
furnish the lumberers, sent in August and September, with provisions and
goods; that he estimated they amounted to 5,000 persons annually in the
Company's employ, with the use of 1,500-2,000 horses and oxen, also
belonging to the Company; that they were paid the current price at time
of, and of the port of shipment that the Company had shipped over 300
cargoes in the year 1834 from British North America; that as regards
shipbuilding he considered the cost of a New Brunswick-built vessel £8 ros
per register ton, whilst the Quebec-built ship of white oak and rock elm
would cost £12 to £14 per register ton, though inferior ships could be
built at Quebec at about £9 per register ton. He speaks of Russian and
Norwegian sailors getting 15s per month, whilst English owners paid 50s to
60s; that the Norwegian sailors were provisioned on black rye-bread and
stock fish at a cost of 4d to 5d per day, but that the English ship cost a
shilling per day. He had been well over the Swedish lands, but could not
get above Memel, for, as he says, it was in Buonaparte's time, and he
could not get from the French the pass to go further north which was
accorded to him by the Swedish Authorities.
For many years he lived with the
Messrs. Pollok in close fellowship at Canton Place. It would almost seem
that it was merely the increase of his infirmities and temper that led to
a rupture. Friction between them grew slowly, but steadily, until
undoubtedly Mr. Gilmour had conceived an intense dislike to the Polloks,
and, worse still, a desire to do them harm. He decided to retire, and to
make his retirement shake the foundations of the concern. He laid before
the foreign partners his views as to there being troubles ahead in the
timber trade; it was going to ruin, he asserted; and while there was yet
time he urged them to come out from the firm along with himself. His
greatest desire was that his favourite nephew, Mr. Allan Gilmour (then of
Quebec, but subsequently of Glasgow) should do so. The latter would not
conform to such wish, which much irritated the old man still in many ways
his fondness for this nephew continued to show itself. Throughout the
correspondence that ensued, Mr. Allan Gilmour maintained his attitude, and
while manifesting alike the respect and gratitude due to his uncle,
conceded nothing that was derogatory to the position he occupied.
Apparently the uncle acquiesced, if reluctantly. After a time he sought
interviews with another nephew, Allan Gilmour of Ottawa (Shotts Allan).
But he also declined; and I have heard that, forgetting hospitality's
laws, old Mr. Gilmour absolutely turned his nephew out into the night, and
this in the country.
About this time very many strange
acts on the old gentleman's part would seem to indicate softening of the
brain, yet it was hardly so, for as often as not his old will retained the
mastery, and his actions were clear and determined. In 1849, however, he
had something more than a threatening of paralysis, and the fear of death
was before him. Further appeals to his favourite nephew were still
unsuccessful. About this time he was frequently visited by his brother,
James Gilmour, of Polnoon, formerly of Miramichi, and his sons, James and
Allan. With this brother there had existed a coldness, James Gilmour
having made a marriage at Miramichi of which Allan Gilmour senior
disapproved. With him Allan Gilmour senior was more successful. I
understand his offer to each of them was that he would see that they who
followed his lead and withdrew would escape the doom he was preparing for
the parent firm, in fact, be secure of their capital interest. Eventually
the services of solicitors, other than those Mr. Allan Gilmour senior
usually employed, were called in to make a fresh Will, under which James
Gilmour of Polnoon, and his son Allan, were made heirs. To make the Will
valid in event of his early demise (which did occur) it was necessary,
according to Scotch law, that he should attend 'Kirk and Market' within a
reasonable time of its execution. This was carefully attended to, and in
no very fit state the old gentleman was got to attend in Glasgow on market
day, and there before witnesses to purchase a cheese. Likewise he put in
some appearances at church.
Many stories were current at
Mearns as to what had been the state of Mr. Gilmour senior's mind and
capacity before and at the time of this alteration of his Will. A suit to
invalidate the new Will was very naturally entered by Mr. Allan Gilmour,
of Quebec, in whose favour the original Will ran; but with a high sense of
what was fitting, if not just, he, on the evidence adduced in Court by the
other side, withdrew the action. Undoubtedly there was ample ground for
its being undertaken. Old Mr. Gilmour did, however, leave the West Walton
farm to his nephew. With what truth I know not, but I sometime heard that
he only did so to comply with the then Scotch law requirement in view of
previous Will. Be that as it may, Mr. Allan Gilmour refused to recognise
the legacy, and never lifted the rent. The tenant, I understand,
conscientiously paid the rent to a legal factor, and it was only when Sir
John Gilmour inherited that the legacy became operative.
Besides the property of Hazeldean,
where he lived and died, he owned Fingalton, Kirkhouse and several farms,
and he had acquired the estate of Eaglesham at a cost of about £200,000
from the Eglinton family.
Mr. Gilmour senior was a keen
sportsman and an excellent shot, and nothing gave him greater pleasure
than to snatch some hours with his gun. The Twelfth at that period was a
solemn function. Daylight would see him on the moor; there was no greater
dallying than the muzzle-loaded gun called for, and only darkness drove
him home.
Could he revisit the glimpses of
the moon it would be interesting to hear his comments upon the Telegraph
and the Telephone, the Submarine and the Suffragette, the Turbine and the
Territorial, the Steel girder sky-scraper building wherein wood has little
part, the Motor car and the Aeroplane, the Daylight Bill, the Woman Voter,
and the fashionable hour for Dinner, Old age pensions and the Land
question, the Ground Game Act and the Breech-loader, and much else.
GEORGE SHERIFF Born 1807,
Became partner 1861, Died 1 September, 1887
I propose connecting the history
of individual partners with the firm which they founded, or with which
they immediately acted. Hence I write of Allan Gilmour, whose place
otherwise should come here, under Allan Gilmour & Co. I proceed to Mr.
Sheriff, the only resident partner of P., G. & Co. who was not primarily
concerned with one or other of the branch houses.
Before entering the office of
Pollok, Gilmour & Co. Mr. Sheriff was in the office of Messrs. J. & A.
Scott & Co., timber merchants, Glasgow. In 1833 he had been successful in
obtaining an appointment in the Excise Service, but immediately afterwards
he was offered an engagement with Pollok, Gilmour & Co., which he
preferred. He was fortunately able to transfer the Excise appointment to
his brother. Mr. Sheriff married in 1837, and had, I think, a family of
sixteen children. Some time before his admission as a partner in Pollok,
Gilmour & Co. Mr. Sheriff was offered the position of manager, or
secretary, to a new steamship company then being formed. He decided,
however, to remain where he was, and Mr. Allan Gilmour, then in charge of
the firm, and esteeming his services very greatly, was much gratified with
his decision. When Mr. Sheriff became a partner in 1861 there was
considerable friction with Mr. Carmichael, who was his senior in the
service. Mr. Carmichael thought that he should have got a partnership
also, but this Mr. Gilmour would not agree to. The difficulty was
ultimately smoothed over by the increase of Mr. Carmichael's salary to
£I,000 per annum. He did not, however, remain long in the service of the
firm after Mr. Sheriff became a partner. Assiduous and unobtrusive, Mr.
Sheriff does not appear to have made any special mark in the
concern—indeed, such was Mr. Gilmour's individuality that it would have
been difficult for even a stronger man to do so. In a subsidiary way he
would have many strings to tend. Eminently respected, conscientious, and
of placable temper, he went about his duties, not originating, but
carrying out.
Mr. Strang, of the London house,
and Robert Rankin ii, of the Liverpool house, had no desire to continue
the connection after 31 December, 1870, when Mr. Gilmour retired; but Mr.
Gilmour felt so strongly that his wishes prevailed, and the partnership
continued for three years more. Then Mr. Sheriff retired, and the firm was
closed. He continued to reside at Glasgow (13 Atholl Gardens) till his
death, which took place at Crieff, 1 September, 1887. |