SECTION III—CURTAILMENT OF
FOREIGN
CONNECTIONS
In reviewing the history of Pollok, Gilmour and Co.,
and its off-comes, the question naturally arises why, after so many years
of auspicious trading, the junior partners in 1861 did not continue to go
ahead, or at any rate assume the partnership interests in the foreign
concerns. Well, cycles arrive, seasons and tides come in regular rotation,
and so it is with generations of men. It must be remembered that William
Strang, George W. Hoghton, and Robert Rankin II were mostly past middle
age. George Sheriff, the oldest of the partners after the retirement of
Mr. Gilmour and Mr. Rankin, had long been accustomed mostly to clerical
work, and was practically without finance. It is true that Mr. Gilmour and
Mr. Rankin were not retiring in 1861, but whether from course of nature or
from their own desire, their withdrawal might be anticipated at any
moment, and as the withdrawal or death of the one would naturally induce
the withdrawal of the other, the junior partners would, when that event
occurred, have a stiff stone wall to surmount. They would have to pay the
senior partners out in the reasonable time provided for in the partnership
articles, and while doing so would have had to carry on the ordinary
routine business, requiring considerable capital to enable them to do the
advancing and banking business for the constituents
abroad. Many Colonial shipbuilders got their outfits and much material
shipped out practically altogether on credit, the hulls in due time coming
home for realization. Store-keepers similarly got their supplies in spring
and autumn—diversified, indeed, were the indents. These accounts at some
part of the season were expected to come to credit—as time wore on they
less frequently did so. Especially in Liverpool there were many accounts
running, besides those of the foreign concerns, which were akin to banking
accounts. Then there were the timber stocks, ships, and other assets to be
taken over and paid for. The prospect of having to assume the foreign
concerns, and thereby to incur yet greater responsibilities and liability
to the outgoing partners, may well have acted as a deterrent.' Even with
the home concerns under reduced canvas I have reason to know that the
matter, when it did arrive, taxed to the utmost the by no means small
financial ability of Robert Rankin ii. The foreign concerns were not, in
1861, by any means dry bones, but their position afterwards certainly did
not improve. Some of them were in 1861 essentially rotten ; others were
inefficiently or ineffectively managed, but on a proper valuation and with
proper management, some were capable of excellent results.
It was the custom for the foreign
partners to come home practically every second year to submit their work
to Glasgow and Liverpool, to assist to vend their lumber, and to meet the
purchasers. There were interviews from time to time with the senior
partners, Mr. Rankin and Mr. Gilmour, but the field day was reserved till
the day before they sailed again from Liverpool. Mr. Gilmour came up, and
his remarks were, I fear, more frequently than not of the pungent order,
and far less pleasant to face than the critical and painfully logical ones
of Mr. Rankin. I have seen these partners come out of the private office
perspiring, and the happiest moment of their visit, I believe, was often
that on which they stepped aboard the outgoing steamer. I do not think
that at these meetings they ever rose beyond the position of boys before a
head master. I of course refer only to the years after 1861.
I feel it almost a sacrilege to
criticise the action of these two men, who in the distance appear to me as
business giants; but if an attempt is made to write history the writer
should state his deductions as well as facts and dates.
Excepting these periodical visits
from the foreign partners there had for a long period of years been
practically no return visits of Mr. Gilmour and Mr. Rankin abroad, and no
periodical visits abroad by men whose conclusions and reports would have
had weight with these home partners. The course of business naturally
alters, and clever men as they were, I think that Mr. Gilmour and Mr.
Rankin, knowing the methods and practice by which they had succeeded so
well when abroad, did not readily listen to alterations of methods 1/ such
were suggested, which possibly they were not, and I feel assured there was
not in certain quarters the capacity to give such advice. At any rate,
they did not go out and see for themselves what changes might have been
advantageously introduced. Perhaps it was natural that this should be so,
as they felt they knew the conditions so well; but they did not even send
emissaries. With advancing years generally comes intolerance of change,
and the rest-and-be-thankful spirit grows strong.
Robert Rankin II, it is true,
went out early in 1861 to inspect and make a full report for the guidance
of the seniors, and to aid the juniors in determining the extent the new
Company's partnership should go. But his selection was, perhaps, not a
fortunate one. In justice to himself he could not report favourably, and
if his report were to the contrary the fact of his being interested as a
buyer stood in the way. As a matter of principle he knew too well that it
was impossible for a man to be buyer and seller at one and the same time.
He reported just what he saw, and counselled the other junior partners not
to go on with any purchase.
These junior partners made no
effort to depart from the customs and usages as they found them. The
visits of the representatives of the foreign houses went on as before, but
none were made from this side; no changes were instituted; no young men
were brought along, either at home or abroad. James Rankin and John
Gilmour, the only sons of the home partners, elected to adopt a country
life, and therein they have lived as useful and strenuous lives as did
their fathers.
My good fortune it was to have
dropped in about this period, and without undue humility I cannot profess
having assisted towards regaining the magnitude of the old firm. The old
business worked out or was allowed to lapse—R., G. & Co. have strayed into
new fields. The evidences of the departure may be best understood when I
say that when I entered the office the business was entirely with British
North America. The U.S. Southern ports were then closed by the War, and
the New Orleans and Mobile houses were inoperative. To-day our business is
practically only that of steamship owners, and practically the only
warranty in the steamers insurance policies runs:-' No British North
America' (this on account of the dangers of the St. Lawrence) which means
that we have a worldwide range of ports where we may trade to, except the
ports of British North America. The irony of it!
As regards this country, it might
have been a wise course to have admitted to partnership Edward G. Price,
who was in the London office, and my senior, a nominee there of Messrs.
Price Bros., of Quebec and Saguenay. This firm, when taken in hand, needed
considerable financial assistance, but their timber limits and facilities
for shipping were such that after a few years nursing they were in an
excellent position, with ample funds at their credit. Messrs. Price Bros.
were anxious for such an arrangement, but it was not conceded —Edward
Price left G., R., S. & Co., taking with him naturally the Agency, which
was a very fine business.
Three men in this history stand
out as great—Allan Gilmour senior, Alexander Rankin, and Robert Rankin.
To the first-named the firm
undoubtedly owed what it afterwards became. Rough, uncouth both in form
and nature, of dogged determination, brooking no interference with
whatever was his will, he initiated great things. As I have said
elsewhere, a powerful but not a pleasant man.
Alexander Rankin, gentle of
disposition, of infinite tact, ever thoughtful of others, possessing a
considerable insight into character and of the possibilities for business
development, he could, when the occasion required, be very firm. His was
the strongest influence with the members of the various firms abroad, most
of which he may be said to have, in effect, created. No doubt Allan
'Gilmour senior often entrusted him with his views, but he had within
himself that which makes for- greatness, and needed little inspiration to
big efforts.
Of Robert Rankin senior, I
consider his was the greatest brain of all the partners at any period.
Though at one time he had cherished the idea of retiring to the country
and to the land he loved, his sense of duty led him at the hour of the
Company's need to renounce any such personal view. The occasion passed—'tis
pity that a life of selflessness kept him thenceforth tied to the desk and
away from interests dear to him which probably, too, would have prolonged
his life. I am unable to write exactly as to the place he occupied in the
firm's affairs so long as the Polloks remained. I believe it was long
before 1861, and I know that thereafter he was the guiding, I may say the
sole, initiating factor. Mr. Allan Gilmour of that period was the critic.
His letters to the foreign firms were eminently censorious ones,
fault-finding to a degree, but affording no useful directions. Those to
Liverpool were not so couched, but afforded neither light nor support.
They gave little more than a résumé of pros and cons. True, in the Quebec
days he must have done strenuous and possibly originating work. Wisely he
recognised the greater brain lay with Mr. Rankin, the friend of his youth
and co-worker throughout life. No doubt the shooting and country pursuits
he allowed himself prolonged his life beyond the years which Mr. Rankin
attained.
I say the three I have named were great. They were
initiators, wise initiators. Some men can keep the wheels of an erstwhile
sound business running; some cannot even do that. Certainly without the
acumen to recognise at the proper time the changes that inevitably come in
business, or without the activity to snatch the opportunities that occur,
no concern can succeed or even survive beyond a certain period.
After Mr. Rankin's retirement, R., G. & Co.
continued in a modest way for some years the merchant business that had so
long and ably been carried on by him. Ultimately we confined this to
purchasing produce to fill the warehouse rooms above the office, with the
view of earning the rent and a profit and also to pay the warehouseman— a
highly-paid official for the work he did. We had not adopted the newer
methods of business, and generally failed to achieve our purpose; indeed,
after 1871 or thereabouts, profits proved rare, and on an average the net
losses were many times the rent; so after due trial for many years our
warehouse was emptied, and so remained. Then one or two big cotton crops
created a demand for warehouse room, and it has since been rented to
outsiders. The tendency, amounting to practice, with all produce now is to
sell to arrive, or to sell direct to the consumer from the quay, not from
the warehouse. Every firm of repute doing anything
approaching merchant's business then maintained a warehouseman. The custom
was a relic of an older period. When Mr. Rankin built the block of offices
65 to 69 South John Street, he made two stories warehouse rooms, the whole
length and depth of the block—no one would think of such a course to-day.
In times further back the dwelling- house, office, and warehouse of the
merchant used to be one and the same building, or contiguous. An 'example
of this practice still stands where Leyland and Bullins' Bank used to be
in York Street. I am informed that when the Holts built India Buildings
they were so dubious of the block entirely of offices letting that the
structure was so arranged that the upper stories of offices could, and can
to-day, be readily altered into warehouse rooms.
Mr. Thomas Irvine told me he
remembered when all the offices in Water Street were in the old
dwelling-houses, only slightly converted; further, that his firm was the
only surviving original tenant of India Buildings, the first buildings in
Liverpool designed for offices only, and now even they have had to get out
to make room for the increased requirements of their landlords, the
Messrs. Holt.
No firm of any pretensions but
had its warehouseman; he was as inevitable as was the now almost discarded
brass name-plate. His functions were to engage outside warehouse-room when
required; to hire and supervise the men collecting at the docks, and
housing the goods or delivering them; to master-porter ships' cargoes; and
to accept private commissions. This, when he engaged room from an outside
warehouse-owner, generally amounted to the first fortnight's rent. He had
little or nothing to do with the classification of the goods —here the
broker's warehouseman stepped in. It must have been about this time that
the story obtained of the warehouseman putting forward his oft-repeated
request for a higher wage, being informed 'If ever you ask again I'll make
you a partner!' It was a wasteful system in every way. There is no doubt
the broker's man drew unnecessarily large samples, and during the American
War the cotton broker counted on paying his rent, salaries and all
expenses out of the moneys realised on the sale of samples when they were
done with. But all that is altered, and to-day there are in the old sense
no merchants and no merchants' warehouseman. The broker combines the
merchant's business in his own, or as is less frequently the case, the
merchant has become his own broker. The brokers tell me that even now the
private commission from the warehouse-keeper to their warehouseman
continues with only this difference, that they recognise it as they cannot
help it. The Corrupt Practices Act is in force, but apparently it does not
prevail over human nature of the baser sort.
|