About: Mary Hayley

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Mary Hayley née Wilkes (30 October 1728 – 9 May 1808) was an English businesswoman. She parlayed an inheritance from her first husband into a sizeable estate with her second husband. Upon the latter's death, she took over the business and successfully operated a shipping firm from 1781 to 1792 before living out her life in Bath. In 1786, Hayley married a Scottish merchant in Boston, Patrick Jeffrey. In 1792, she left him and returned to England with the stipulation that he never again appear in her presence. After a brief stay in London, she lived out her days in Bath.

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  • Mary Hayley née Wilkes (30 October 1728 – 9 May 1808) was an English businesswoman. She parlayed an inheritance from her first husband into a sizeable estate with her second husband. Upon the latter's death, she took over the business and successfully operated a shipping firm from 1781 to 1792 before living out her life in Bath. Hayley was born in 1728 in London to the prosperous distiller Israel Wilkes junior and was a sister to the politician John Wilkes. Kind-hearted but opinionated, she lived an unconventional life and was known for her astute observation and discussion, based upon her wide reading. Refusing to bow to custom, she attended trials at the Old Bailey and travelled throughout Britain to satisfy her wide-ranging curiosity. Marrying a widower, Samuel Storke junior, in 1752, she became a widow within the year with a young step-son. As her husband's sole heir, she inherited his business and soon after his death married his chief clerk, George Hayley. He turned out to be a shrewd businessman, increasing her inherited wealth tenfold during his lifetime. Their business established extensive trade relationships with the American colonies, supplying the tea which gained infamy in the Boston Tea Party. After her second husband's death and the end of the American Revolution, American merchants owed Hayley a large debt and she became one of the few Britons who successfully recouped their losses after the war. In 1784, she purchased a frigate used by both the Continental Navy and the Royal Navy and had it refurbished as a whaling and sealing vessel. She rechristened the frigate the United States and moved to Boston, where she lived for eight years. Unusually for women at the time, she became a benefactor, donating money and goods to charitable endeavours, and ran a whaling business. Her first venture, a voyage to the Falkland Islands, resulted in a shipment of whale oil, which was seized by the British government in 1785. She successfully recouped her losses from the Crown, as it was unable to prove that she owed duty, as British merchants were exempt if one-third of their crew was also British. In 1786, Hayley married a Scottish merchant in Boston, Patrick Jeffrey. In 1792, she left him and returned to England with the stipulation that he never again appear in her presence. After a brief stay in London, she lived out her days in Bath. (en)
  • Mary Hayley, född 30 oktober 1728 i Clerkenwell, död 9 maj 1808 i Bath, var en engelsk affärsidkare. Hon var dotter till destillatören Israel Wilkes och syster till John Wilkes och gifte sig 1752 med Samuel Storke, 1753 med makens sekreterare George Hayley (1722–1781), och 1786 med den skotske köpmannen Patrick Jeffrey (1748–1812). Hennes andre make utvecklade hennes första makes firma till ett stort och betydelsefullt handelshus med flotta och framgångsrik handel med de tretton kolonierna och Brittiska Västindien. Det var deras firma som försåg Boston med den last te som förstördes under den berömda tebjudningen i Boston 1773. Vid sin andre makes död 1781 övertog hon företaget och drev det med framgång. Hon var en av få brittiska köpmän som lyckades ta sig igenom amerikanska frihetskriget utan förluster och med framgång kräva det nybildade USA på ekonomisk kompensation. Hon reste 1784 själv till Boston i USA, där hon sedan bodde i åtta år. Hon gifte sig en tredje gång i Boston med Patrick Jeffrey, men behöll trots lagen om gifta kvinnors omyndighet kontrollen över firman (möjligen genom ett äktenskapsförord), och då hon återvände till England 1792, lämnade hon honom kvar. (sv)
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  • 1792-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • 1781-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • Mary Storke, Mary Haley, Madame Hayley,Mary Jeffery, Mary Hayley Jeffrey, Mary Jeffries (en)
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  • 1728-10-30 (xsd:date)
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  • Mary Wilkes (en)
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  • 1728-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • 1808-05-09 (xsd:date)
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  • 1808-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • 1728-10-30 (xsd:date)
dbp:birthName
  • Mary Wilkes (en)
dbp:birthPlace
  • Clerkenwell, London, England (en)
dbp:caption
  • Engraving by Samuel William Reynolds of "Mary Wilkes " by Sir Joshua Reynolds (en)
dbp:deathDate
  • 1808-05-09 (xsd:date)
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  • Bath, England (en)
dbp:name
  • Mary Hayley (en)
dbp:nationality
  • English (en)
dbp:occupation
  • Businesswoman (en)
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  • Mary Storke, Mary Haley, Madame Hayley, Mary Jeffery, Mary Hayley Jeffrey, Mary Jeffries (en)
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  • File:Mary Hayley, signature 1783.jpg (en)
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  • 1781 (xsd:integer)
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  • Mary Hayley née Wilkes (30 October 1728 – 9 May 1808) was an English businesswoman. She parlayed an inheritance from her first husband into a sizeable estate with her second husband. Upon the latter's death, she took over the business and successfully operated a shipping firm from 1781 to 1792 before living out her life in Bath. In 1786, Hayley married a Scottish merchant in Boston, Patrick Jeffrey. In 1792, she left him and returned to England with the stipulation that he never again appear in her presence. After a brief stay in London, she lived out her days in Bath. (en)
  • Mary Hayley, född 30 oktober 1728 i Clerkenwell, död 9 maj 1808 i Bath, var en engelsk affärsidkare. Hon var dotter till destillatören Israel Wilkes och syster till John Wilkes och gifte sig 1752 med Samuel Storke, 1753 med makens sekreterare George Hayley (1722–1781), och 1786 med den skotske köpmannen Patrick Jeffrey (1748–1812). Hennes andre make utvecklade hennes första makes firma till ett stort och betydelsefullt handelshus med flotta och framgångsrik handel med de tretton kolonierna och Brittiska Västindien. Det var deras firma som försåg Boston med den last te som förstördes under den berömda tebjudningen i Boston 1773. Vid sin andre makes död 1781 övertog hon företaget och drev det med framgång. Hon var en av få brittiska köpmän som lyckades ta sig igenom amerikanska frihetskriget (sv)
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  • Mary Hayley (en)
  • Mary Hayley (sv)
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