Barney Barnato
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Barney Barnato (born Barnet Isaacs; 21 February 1851 – 14 June 1897) was a British Randlord and diamond magnate who was one of the entrepreneurs who gained control of diamond mining, and later, gold mining in South Africa from the 1870s up to World War I. He was known as a rival of Cecil Rhodes.
Early life
Barnato was born Barnet Isaacs in Aldgate, London, on 21 February 1851,[1][2] to Isaac and Leah Isaacs.[3] He and his siblings, Harry,[4] Kate, Sarah and Lizzie, grew up in Whitechapel. Their mother died in 1852 and their father made a living by selling second hand clothing and fabric remnants.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Barnato was educated by Moses Angel at the Jews' Free School,[3] but left school with Harry in their early teens to join their father's business.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The brothers performed on stage in the music halls as the Great Henry Isaacs "and Barnett too". They became known as Bar-na-to, or the Barnato, Brothers.[4] Barney also become a prizefighter.[3]
Career
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In 1873, Barnato joined his brother Harry in the Cape Colony during the diamond rush. The pair eventually bought four claims in Kimberley. The French mining company Compagnie Française des Mines de Diamants du Cap de Bonne Espérance, owned by Jules Porgès, held a large block of claims that split the Kimberley Mine in two. Barnato telegraphed Porgès to express interest in bidding if he was to sell. Cecil Rhodes bid £1.4 million to acquire the company and Barnato countered with £1.75 million. Before receiving a response from Porgès, Rhodes contacted Barnato and requested he withdraw his offer. In exchange, Rhodes suggested he purchase the company at his original bid price and sell it to Barnato for £300,000 plus a twenty percent holding in Barnato's Kimberley Central Diamond Mining Company (DMC). After several days of consideration, Barnato agreed to withdraw his offer, and a month later, he owned Porgès' company. Shares in Kimberley Central DMC surged from £14 to £49.
Rhodes' next proposal was to merge the De Beers Diamond Mining Company (DMC) into Kimberley Central DMC to form De Beers Consolidated Mines. Barnato emerged as the largest shareholder, with 6,658 shares in the new company. A group of shareholders from Kimberley Central applied to the Supreme Court of the Cape to stop the merger, and the judge ruled in favour of the applicants. Kimberley Central was liquidated and De Beers Consolidated purchased the company. The Barnato brothers' shares were bought out for the sum of £5,338,650 in 1889. By the time they made it to Johannesburg in 1888, a dozen gold mining companies were already present in the London Stock Exchange and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. With his nephews Woolf and Solomon Joel (Solly), Barnato spent more than a million pounds in one year, including investments in Johannesburg's infrastructure. Early in 1889, he floated his first gold mining company on the stock exchanges. After the formation of his Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Company that year, he went on a major acquisition plan.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Barnato doubled his fortune in the boom in South African gold mining shares of 1894–95 before losing most of it in the 1896 share collapse.
Death
Barnato died in 1897; records state that he was lost overboard near the island of Madeira while on a passage home to England.[5] A crew member gave evidence at the inquest that Barnato had been walking round the deck with his nephew Solly Joel at the time and, as he fell overboard, his last word was "murder!" Solly was suspectedTemplate:By whom? to have been stealing money from the company, which he inherited on Barnato's death.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". SomeScript error: No such module "Unsubst". have suggested that witnessing the Jameson Raid had left Barnato severely depressed and that he died by suicide as a result, though his family have dismissed this as being out of character.[6] Another suggestion is that he had been killed by conman Karl Frederick Kurtze, who in 1898 went under the name Ludwig von Veltheim.[7] Barnato's nephew Woolf Joel was shot dead in Johannesburg by a blackmailer in 1898,[8] suspected to be von Veltheim. At the murder trial, von Veltheim claimed that Barnato and Joel had hired him to kidnap Paul Kruger, and that he had simply been seeking payment, an explanation that saw him acquitted.[7]
His fortune was divided up among his family, among which were his sister Sarah and her husband Abraham Rantzen, great-grandparents of TV presenter Esther Rantzen.[5] Another beneficiary was his son, Woolf Barnato, who used part of the multimillion-pound fortune he inherited at the age of two to become a racing driver in the 1920s, one of the so-called Bentley Boys.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Personal life
Barney married Fanny Christina Bees. Together, they had three children:Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Leah "Lily" Primrose Barnato (1893–1933)
- Isaac "Jack" Henry Woolf Barnato (c. 1894–1918)
- Woolf "Babe" Barnato (1895–1948)
He was also the father of Isabel Louisa Barnato (born 5 June 1891,[9] died 19 June 1891),[10] daughter of Isabella Barnato (born Isabella Clarke 30 November 1865, died 30 October 1891).[11]
Barnato built, but never lived in, a vast house on the corner of Park Lane and Stanhope Gate in Mayfair, London, which was bought after his death by the banker Sir Edward Sassoon.[3]
Cultural depictions
- Barnato's life was the subject of a South African television mini-series, Barney Barnato, made in 1989 and first aired on SABC in early 1990.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
See also
- Joel family
- John Hays Hammond – a mining engineer, diplomat and philanthropist whom Barnato brought to Africa
- List of unsolved deaths
References
Notes
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- ↑ a b c d Stephen Inwood (2005). City of cities: The birth of modern London. London: Pan Books. p. 33. Template:ISBN
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b Who do you think you are? — Esther RantzenScript error: No such module "Unsubst".Template:Cbignore on BBC.co.uk. Accessed 3 September 2008.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b Brian Roberts, The Diamond Magnates. London: Hamilton, 1972. pp. 232–244. Template:Catalog lookup link
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". See also Joel family.
- ↑ General Record Office Births Jun 1891 Barnato, Isabel Louisa B, Christchurch, 2b 679
- ↑ General Record Office Deaths Jun 1891 Barnato, Isabel Louisa B, 0, Christchurch, 2b 483
- ↑ General Record Office Deaths Dec 1891 Barnato, Isabella, 25, Christchurch, 2b 422
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Sources
- Barney Barnato, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Accessed 28 April 2006
- Brief biography of Barney Barnato
- Rhodes and Barnato in Cecil Rhodes by Ian D. Colvin
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External links
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".. Further details regarding Barnato's death (and possible murder), including witness statements from the inquest held at the South Western Hotel on Friday 18 June 1897 before the Coroner, Mr W Coxwell.
- Pages with script errors
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- Barney Barnato
- 1851 births
- 19th-century English businesspeople
- Cape Colony businesspeople
- 1890s missing person cases
- 1897 deaths
- British businesspeople in mining
- Burials at Willesden Jewish Cemetery
- Formerly missing British people
- Diamond dealers
- English Jews
- Joel family
- Kimberley, South Africa
- Missing person cases in Portugal
- People educated at JFS (school)
- People from Aldgate
- People from Kimberley, South Africa
- People lost at sea
- Randlords
- South African Jews
- South African businesspeople in mining
- South African people of English-Jewish descent
- Unsolved deaths