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[Bookplate for Vincent Stuckey]
[Bookplate for Vincent Stuckey]
Title[Bookplate for Vincent Stuckey]
Date Created[between 1900 and 1929]
Sort Date1929
DescriptionIn black in, this bookplate consists of and escutcheon divided per pale. The dexter half is divided per bend sinister, or (gold), azure (blue) and dove-tailed, and charged with a lion, rampant and ermine with a tail queue fourché. At the dexter chief of the half is an azure canton charged with a mascle, or. The sinister half of the escutcheon is identical to the dexter, except that at it also contains a crescent at middle chief. The escutcheon is crested by a straight crest wreath and a demi-lion with tail queue fourché, ermine and charged with a mascle, azure. Below the escutcheon is a banner containing the Latin motto.
Extent1 bookplate : steel engraving ; 6.5 x 9.2 cm
SubjectHeraldry
Subject - GeographicLangport (England)
Personal NamesStuckey, Vincent
GenrePrints
TypeStill Image
Formatimage/jpeg
LanguageLatin
NotesAccording to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Vincent Stuckey (1771-1845) was a member of the Stuckey family of bankers and merchants who came to prominence with Stuckey's uncle Samuel George Stuckey (1740-1812). Born on 24 March 1771 at Langport, Somerset, he was the youngest of the eight children of George Stuckey (1731-1807), banker and merchant, and his wife, Edith (1742-1793), daughter of Thomas Beedal, of Langport, Somerset. He had four brothers and three sisters, though he was the only surviving son. His father, George, Samuel Stuckey's elder brother, was not only a prominent member of the bank and merchant house, but was also mayor of the town on no fewer than four occasions. After an early career in the Treasury, Stuckey resigned from the Treasury in 1801 and returned to the family business at Langport. On 16 April 1801, he married his first cousin Julia (1781-1861), the youngest daughter of his uncle Samuel. By 1807 he was made a partner in the bank, though with the death of his father, George, and his uncle Samuel in poor health, Vincent Stuckey became de facto head of the firm and became senior partner in 1812 upon the death of Samuel. Following the financial crisis of 1825-6, Stuckey was the first private banker to take advantage of the new legislation which removed the Bank of England's monopoly of joint-stock organization, by converting the Langport Bank to Stuckey's Banking Company in 1826. Stuckey was widely regarded as the leading country banker of his generation, and is often quoted for his phrase 'bankers are mortal, but banks should never die'. While he continued to be involved in the management of the bank, he also expanded his family's mercantile interests, and also served as mayor of Langport on three occasions, in 1810, 1823, and 1833, and served as a magistrate, churchwarden, and trustee of the local grammar school. Vincent Stuckey died at Langport on 8 May 1845 and was buried there shortly afterwards in All Saints' Church. Of ten children birthed by him and his wife who died 15 February 1861, only two daughters survived into adulthood. Their considerable fortune was passed to Vincent Stuckey Wood, second son of their daughter Julia Wood, who took the name and arms of Stuckey in 1861 and subsequently became the third chairman of Stuckey's Banking Company between 1876 and 1900.
References:
1) Iain S. Black, "Stuckey family, " Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2008. Accessed at: http://www.oxforddnb.com/ (26 March 2008).
Access IdentifierBP MUR ENG P S783
Digital IdentifierBP_MUR_ENG_P_S783
Is Part OfRBSC Bookplates
SourceOriginal Format: University of British Columbia. Library. Rare Books and Special Collections. Thomas Murray Bookplates Collection. BP MUR ENG P S783
Date Available2008
Publisher - DigitalVancouver : University of British Columbia Library
RightsImages provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from Rare Books and Special Collections: http://rbsc.library.ubc.ca
TranscriptFORTITUDINE ET FIDELITAE Vincent Stuckey.
TranslationFortitude and Fidelity
DOI1.0215409
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