Charles Gilbert Francklyn (April 18, 1844 – January 11, 1929) was an American capitalist and industrialist who was based in New York society during the Gilded Age.
Early life
Francklyn was born near Newcastle in England on April 18, 1844.[1] He was the son of Colonel Gilbert William Francklyn and Sarah Jane (née Cunard) Francklyn (1821–1902).[2][3]
At the age of 16, he began working for his grandfather's Cunard Line in Halifax, Nova Scotia.[1] After the death of his uncle in 1868, Francklyn became the Line's agent in New York, staying in the role until the agency was incorporated in 1880 and taken over by Vernon H. Brown & Co.[10]
In 1878, he organized the Municipal Gas Light Company, of which he was the first president. In 1884, Francklyn and Harrison E. Gawtry led the merger of six gas companies (including his Municipal Gas Light Company, the New York Gas Light Company, the Manhattan Gas Light Company, and the Metropolitan Gas Light Company) which combined into the Consolidated Gas Company, of which he was a member of the first board of trustees.[1] Consolidated Gas later purchased Thomas Edison's Edison Illuminating Company and became known as the modern day firm of Consolidated Edison. Before his retirement, he would also serve as president of the Central Union Gas Company.[1]
Francklyn also commissioned one of the first residential gas ranges in the United States, built to his specifications for $275 in Baltimore, Maryland.[1]
In 1882, he purchased 637,440 acres (2,579.6 km2) of railroad lands for $887,000 in Carson County, Texas and adjoining counties to form the Francklyn Land and Cattle Company, not far from Cornelia Adair's JA Ranch.[13] The lands were later sold to the White Deer Lands Trust of British bondholders in 1886 and 1887.[14][15] By January 1886, a ferocious blizzard, in addition to overspending on livestock, fencing, and living quarters, forced the ranch into bankruptcy.[7]
In 1887, Francklyn was arrested at his home in New York on charges of fraud by his cousin, Sir Bache Cunard, who alleged that Charles had embezzled $3,000,000 that Francklyn was to have invested on behalf of Cunard.[16] The litigation, which lasted for several years (Francklyn was represented by John Notman of Butler, Stillman & Hubbard[17]) resulted in the sale of his Elberon, New Jersey residence[18] and a libel lawsuit by Francklyn to The Times.[7] Eventually in 1889, Cunard withdrew his lawsuit,[19][20] when the parties reached an agreement, the terms of which were not publicly revealed.[21]
After they sold their New Jersey cottage, they built another summer home in Southampton, New York on Ox Pasture Lane, originally known as Red Croft, in 1897.[7] They had the home for thirty years, helping to make the beach town a fashionable resort among wealthy New Yorkers.[1]
Gilbert Francklyn (1870–1957), an executive with the Consolidated Gas Company who did not marry.[33]
Doris Francklyn (1887–1959),[34] a poet and teacher who lived in Southampton and who did not marry.[35][36]
Francklyn died at his home, 160 East 91st Street in New York, on January 11, 1929.[1] His funeral was held at St. George's Chapel in Stuyvesant Square and he was buried in Southampton.[37]
^"THE CUNARD'S JUBILEE YEAR. A RETROSPECTIVE GLANCE AT ITS PROSPEROUS CAREER"(PDF). The New York Times. July 4, 1890. Retrieved 8 December 2018. To-day completes the fiftieth year since the establishment of the Cunard Steamship Line, during which period of half a century its wonderful immunity from disaster entitles it to the proud record of having never lost the life of a passenger.
^Anderson, H. Allen (2010-06-12). "Francklyn Land and Cattle Company". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 16 December 2010.