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  1. Joseph Marryat (8 October 1757 – 12 January 1824) was an English West India merchant and banker, serving as an MP for Sandwich from 1812 until his death in 1824. He was a slave-owner and a strong opponent of abolitionism .

  2. assets.lloyds.com › media › 260b5731/5997/4223-af09Joseph Marryat (1757-1824)

    The portrait of Joseph Marryat in Lloyd’s Collection is a half-length oil on canvas, attributed to the artist John Hayes (British, 1786 - 1866). Hayes was a portrait painter, especially of military and naval officers, who first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1814. Hayes possibly exhibited this portrait at the Royal Academy in 1826.

  3. 2 de oct. de 2023 · Joseph Marryat (1757-1824) was an underwriter and banker who served as Chairman of Lloyd’s 1811-1824. He was also a West Indian merchant, slave owner, ship owner, and a prominent committee member of the Society of West Indian Planters and Merchants.

  4. Joseph Marryat became a member of Lloyd’s between 1791 and 1798. He features more prominently after he acted as parliamentary spokesman for Lloyd’s in the 1810 parliamentary inquiry into marine insurance. From 1811, Marryat led the administrative and constitutional reform of Lloyd’s.

  5. Joseph Marryat (7 October 1790 – 24 September 1876) was a British politician. The son of Joseph Marryat, he was born in Grenada, where his father owned plantations worked by slaves. He followed his father in becoming a shipowner, banker and merchant, and inherited his father's estates and slaves.

  6. MARRYAT, Joseph (1757-1824), of Sydenham, Kent and Wimbledon House, Surr. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1790-1820, ed. R. Thorne, 1986. Available from Boydell and Brewer. Constituency. Dates. HORSHAM. 26 Feb. 1808 - 1812. SANDWICH. 1812 - 12 Jan. 1824. Family and Education.

  7. 31 de dic. de 2014 · Frederick Marryat was born in Great George Street, Westminster, London on 10th July 1792. His father, Joseph Marryat, was descended from Huguenots who had taken refuge in England following the St. Bartholemew’s Day massacres in 1572, two centuries previously, and his mother was an American from Boston, with the maiden name of Geyer.