Howard Fox (10 December 1836 – 15 November 1922) was a shipping agent and played a large part in the economic and cultural development of the town of Falmouth, Cornwall. He was a member of the influential Fox family of Falmouth.
Business interests
The Fox family had built up a diversified set of interests beyond the original shipbroking office. Howard Fox led the central board of the company.
Consular roles
He was Consul for the United States of America in Falmouth from 1874 until 1905, in succession to his father.[1][2][3] In April 1870, he was appointed Vice-Consul for the Republic of the Ecuador.[4] He was appointed Consul for Sweden and Norway in 1896.[5] He became Consul for Denmark in 1909.[6]
Harbour and Dock development
He was also chairman of Falmouth Docks Company for 45 years, succeeding his father.[7]
Along with many other members of the Fox family, he was a Quaker,[15] and engaged with them in various philanthropic projects. He was a founder of Falmouth County School for Girls.
In 1878, he seconded a motion at a public meeting of Falmouth Chamber of Commerce, urging the Government "to maintain in the present crisis [The Russo-Turkish War] the principles of strict neutrality".[16]
Birth, marriage and family
He was born on 10 December 1836 at Wodehouse Place, Falmouth, the third son of the twelve children of Alfred Fox (1794–1874) and his wife, Sarah Lloyd (1804–1890).
He married Olivia Blanche Orme (1844–1930) in 1864.[17] They had four children, two boys and two girls. His son, Charles Masson Fox, was a timber merchant and a director of the family shipping broking company, G. C. Fox. His son, Howard Orme Fox (17 August 1865 – 7 June 1921) was an Imperial Civil Servant.[18] His daughters, Olivia Lloyd Fox (born 1868[19]) and Stella (Born 1876[20][21]), gave Rosehill Garden to Falmouth Town Council.[22][23]
He died 15 November 1922 at Rosehill, Falmouth.
Publications
Observations in further illustration of the history and statistics of the Pilchard Fishery (1879).
"The flying squid or calamar", Falmouth : Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society, 1879
"Further Killigrew Mss. Relating to the Killigrew Pyramid or Monument at Falmouth and Other Matters" Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall. No.42.
"Notes on some coast-sections at the Lizard : On a radiolarian chart from Mullion Island" by Howard Fox and J. J. H. Teall. The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, Vol.49 (1893) pp. 199 and 211.
"On a well-marked horizon of radiolarian rocks in the lower Culm Measures of Devon, Cornwall and West Somerset" by George Jennings Hinde and Howard Fox. The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 1895; v. 51; issue.1–4; p. 609-NP;[24]
"On Some Nodular Concretions, Resembling Fossil Wood and Fossil Fish : Treworden Wood, Launceston." Transactions of the Royal Cornwall Geological Society, 1894.
"On the gneissic rocks off the Lizard; with notes on the specimens" by Howard Fox and J. J. H. Teall, The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London. Vol.44. 1888 p519-544
"Supplementary Notes on the Cornish Radiolarian Cherts and Devonian Fossils" Transactions of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall, Vol.12, Part 4, 1899.
On a soda feldspar rock at Dinas Head, North Coast of Cornwall, Cambridge University Press, 1895.
^British Government approval of U.S. appointment: The Times, Saturday, 2 January 1875, p7, col A
^The Times, Thursday, 19 November 1885, p5, Issue col E: U.S Consuls in Europe confirmed in Office, including Howard Fox at Falmouth.
^Vice-Consul: EcuadorThe Times, Saturday, 9 April 1870, p5, col A
^Sweden & Norway Vice-Consul: The Times, Wednesday, 8 January 1896, p10, col C
^Howard Fox appointed Consul for Denmark: The Times, Tuesday, 26 January 1909, p11,col A
^Alfred Fox is shown and Howard Fox as a Director of the Falmouth Dock Company in the advertisement in The Times, Monday, 28 October 1861, pg. 3, col A. when further shares of £144,700 was offered for sale.
^K. F. G. Hosking & G. J. Shrimpton, ed. (1964). "Patrons and presidents". Present Views of Some Aspects of the Geology of Cornwall and Devon. Penzance: Royal Geological Society of Cornwall. pp. iii.
^K. F. G. Hosking & G. J. Shrimpton, ed. (1964). "The William Bolitho Gold Medal". Present Views of Some Aspects of the Geology of Cornwall and Devon. Penzance: Royal Geological Society of Cornwall. pp. iv.
^On 1909-01-09, Howard Fox wrote to the Editor of The Times. It was published under the heading "Cornish Gardens" on 14 January 1909. p4, col B.
Sir,
The recent cold snap must have spoiled the floral beauty of most English gardens but did not reach the south west of Cornwall, so here they remain in very exceptional winter luxuriance.
We have, for instance, at Falmouth the following trees, shrubs and herbaceous plants flowering in the open air:-
^Fox, Charles (2004). Glendurgan: a personal memoir of a garden in Cornwall. Newmill, Penzance, Cornwall: Alison Hodge. ISBN0-906720-35-4. by a great grandson of Alfred Fox. Note of Howard's daughters on p119.
^Blanche was seriously ill, following Stella's birth, according to a note found in Howard Fox's papers, dated 13/12-1876 and signed CF