vertical_align_top

Humphry Morice (Governor of the Bank of England)

(1671-1731)
British merchant
more_vert
favorite

About

edit

Humphry Morice (c.1671 – 16 November 1731) was a British merchant, MP, Governor of the Bank of England who was involved in the Atlantic slave trade. He inherited his father's trading business around the age of eighteen, and learned finance and speculation from an uncle. Placed in Parliament through a cousin's interest in 1713, his Whig politics ultimately provoked a breach with his Tory cousin, and he had to be given another seat in 1722 by Robert Walpole's administration. He rose to be Deputy Governor and then Governor of the Bank of England in 1727, but unknown to his contemporaries, his fortune was largely fictitious and he was embezzling from the Bank and his daughters' trust fund. He died suddenly in 1731, perhaps having poisoned himself to forestall the discovery of his frauds, and left behind enormous debts.

Key details

edit section
Born
1671
Died
16 November 1731 (aged 60)
Zodiac
Tags Add tag

Family members

add
Please set Gender for this person to allow access to this feature.

Romantic interests

add
Partner's name
Relationship type
Relationship status
Relationship start date
+add end date
   to      close
You can enter many date formats here (e.g. 2009, Jan 2009, October 2011, 1 Feb 2009, 4/4/2012, etc)
Description
Relationship sources (on the internet)
close
Rumor only

Friends & associates

add
Please set Gender for this person to allow access to this feature.

Scholars

expand_more
0
Please be the first to contribute to this page!

Missing information for Humphry Morice (Governor of the Bank of England)

edit

Activity

expand_more
0
Community menu
  • Edit
  • Websites
Couplepedia · about
terms of use · copyright · privacy
loaded in 0.09 secs
arrow_drop_down
photo_library