1838 FREE letter, Major James Anderson, Havering Grange, Romford, Essex, to Scotland. The FREE franking addressed and signed by George Palmer. Posted in London to Falkirk, Scotland.

George Palmer (1772–1853) was an English businessman, politician, and philanthropist.

Early life

Born on 11 February 1772, he was the eldest son of William Palmer (1748?–1821), a London merchant, descended from the Palmers of Wanlip, Leicestershire, and his wife Mary (born 1747),[1] only daughter of John Horsley the rector of Thorley, Hertfordshire, and sister of Samuel Horsley. John Horsley Palmer (Governor of the Bank of England),[2] William Jocelyn Palmer and Sir Ralph Palmer were younger brothers. He was a nephew of Roundell Palmer, 1st Earl of Selborne.

He was educated at Charterhouse School.

Naval service

After leaving school, he entered the naval service of the East India Company[2] at the age of 14.

Palmer made his first voyage in the Carnatic in 1786.[2] Commander of the Boddam in 1796, he received a complimentary letter from the court of directors for his conduct in an encounter with four French frigates. His last voyage was made in 1799,[2] after which he resigned owing to ill-health.

In business

In 1802 Palmer entered into partnership with his father and brother, Horsley Palmer, and Captain Wilson, as East India Company merchants and shipowners at 28 Throgmorton Street, London.[2] In 1831 he was master of the Mercers' Company,[6] and 1832 he was elected chairman of the General Shipowners' Society,

He and his brothers had property interests in Grenada, which used slaves on their Springs, Mount Aire and Upper Latante estates.

New Zealand Company

Further information: New Zealand Company Palmer was on the founding board of the New Zealand Company in 1825, which was the earliest organised attempt to colonise New Zealand. The board included chair John George Lambton Whig MP and later 1st Earl of Durham), political economist Robert Torrens Senior, Edward Ellice, Edward Littleton, 1st Baron Hatherton, and others, including other East India Company merchants.

National Lifeboat Institution

In 1788 a near-drowning near Macao[4] directed his attention to the equilibrium of boats, and the means of preventing them from sinking. He first became connected with the recently founded Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck (now Royal National Lifeboat Institution) in 1826, and his plan of fitting lifeboats was adopted. He designed a new lifeboat, built in the shape of a whaleboat, narrow and pointed at both ends, with special pockets of air built in for buoyancy, which was officially adopted by the Institution in 1828.[4] The design was used for rescue lifeboats placed by the Institution at more than twenty ports, and was used until 1858, when it was superseded by the system of self-righting lifeboats.

Palmer was deputy chairman of the society for over 25 years, and required his own ships to go to sea with the means of saving life.[2] His role was crucial in getting Algernon Percy, 4th Duke of Northumberland appointed as president of the Institution (an office he held from 1851 to 1865, during which he undertook a reorganisation[9]). In February 1853 he resigned his office, when the committee voted him the Gold Medal. In September 2008 this Gold Medal, with unique pendant in the shape of a lifeboat, was sold at auction for £3,200.[4] Public life Palmer served as Sheriff of Hertfordshire in 1818. In 1821 he held the office of master of the Mercers' Company, and in that capacity he attended the Lord Mayor at the coronation of George IV on 19 July 1821.[2] In 1832, when South Shields became a parliamentary borough, Palmer was a candidate for the Conservative Party, but was not elected.[2] After winning an 1836 by-election for South Essex, Palmer raised the matter of deaths at sea caused by shipwrecks, in Parliament. In April 1839, He chaired a select committee looking at the regulation of timber trading ships crossing the Atlantic Ocean to British North America. The resulting report led to the recommendation that these ships should be barred from carrying loads on their decks. As the Timber Ships Bill, it was discussed first in the Commons (2nd reading, July 1839)[10] and then the House of Lords (July 1840).[11] Changes were first introduced in the Timber Ships, British North America Act 1840, then the Timber Ships, America Act 1842, and then finally the Timber Ships Act 1845, which expanded and finalised legislation which prohibited timber ships from carrying cargo on deck.[4] Although he had not had experience in agriculture, he vowed to his constituents that he would defend the Corn Laws, and publicly rebuked the Prime Minister Robert Peel when he repealed them.[4] Palmer sat in Parliament from 1836 to 1847, successful in three strongly-contested elections.[2] Death Palmer died at Nazeing Park, Essex, on 12 May 1853.[2]

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