Benjamin Winthrop
Benjamin Winthrop was Governor of the Bank of England from 1804 to 1806. He had been Deputy Governor from 1802 to 1804. He replaced Joseph Nutt as Governor and was succeeded by Beeston Long.[1]
See also
References
- ^ Governors of the Bank of England. Archived 2012-02-12 at the Wayback Machine Bank of England, London, 2013. Archived here. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
External links
Media related to Governors of the Bank of England at Wikimedia Commons
- v
- t
- e
Governors of the Bank of England (1694–present)
(1694–1707)
- J. Houblon (1694–1697)
- W. Scawen (1697–1699)
- Tench (1699–1701)
- Ward (1701–1703)
- A. Houblon (1703–1705)
- Bateman (1705–1707)
(1707–1801)
- Eyles (1707–1709)
- Heathcote (1709–1711)
- Gould (1711–1713)
- Rudge (1713–1715)
- Delmé (1715–1717)
- Conyers (1717–1719)
- Hanger (1719–1721)
- T. Scawen (1721–1723)
- Heathcote (1723–1725)
- Thompson (1725–1727)
- Morice (1727–1729)
- Holden (1729–1731)
- Bellamy (1731–1733)
- Townshend (1733–1735)
- Benson (1735–1737)
- Cooke (1737–1740)
- Carbonnel (1740–1741)
- Brooksbank (1741–1743)
- Fawkener (1743–1745)
- Savage (1745–1747)
- Longuet (1747–1749)
- W. Hunt (1749–1752)
- Sheafe (1752–1754)
- C. Palmer (1754–1756)
- M. Beachcroft (1756–1758)
- Burrell (1758–1760)
- Burton (1760–1762)
- Marsh (1762–1764)
- J. Weyland (1764–1766)
- Clarmont (1766–1769)
- Cooper (1769–1771)
- Payne (1771–1773)
- Sperling (1773–1775)
- S. Beachcroft (1775–1777)
- Gaussen (1777–1779)
- Booth (1779–1781)
- Ewer (1781–1783)
- R. Neave (1783–1785)
- Peters (1785–1787)
- Darell (1787–1789)
- M. Weyland (1789–1791)
- Bosanquet (1791–1793)
- G. Thornton (1793–1795)
- Giles (1795–1797)
- T. Raikes (1797–1799)
- S. Thornton (1799–1801)
(1801–1922)
- J. M. Raikes (1801–1802)
- Nutt (1802–1804)
- Winthrop (1804–1806)
- Long (1806–1808)
- Whitmore (1808–1810)
- Pearse (1810–1812)
- Manning (1812–1814)
- Mellish (1814–1816)
- Harman (1816–1818)
- Dorrien (1818–1820)
- Pole (1820–1822)
- Bowden (1822–1824)
- Buller (1824–1826)
- Richards (1826–1828)
- Drewe (1828–1830)
- J. H. Palmer (1830–1833)
- R. M. Raikes (1833–1834)
- Pattison (1834–1837)
- Curtis (1837–1839)
- Reid (1839–1841)
- Pelly (1841–1842)
- Cotton (1842–1845)
- Heath (1845–1847)
- Robinson (1847)
- Morris (1847–1849)
- Prescot (1849–1851)
- Hankey (1851–1853)
- 1st Baron Addington (1853–1855)
- Weguelin (1855–1857)
- S. Neave (1857–1859)
- Dobrée (1859–1861)
- Latham (1861–1863)
- Hodgson (1863–1865)
- Holland (1865–1867)
- T. N. Hunt (1867–1869)
- Crawford (1869–1871)
- George Lyall (1871–1873)
- Greene (1873–1875)
- 1st Baron Aldenham (1875–1877)
- E. H. Palmer (1877–1879)
- Birch (1879–1881)
- Grenfell (1881–1883)
- Gilliat (1883–1885)
- Currie (1885–1887)
- Collet (1887–1889)
- Lidderdale (1889–1892)
- David Powell (1892–1895)
- Sandeman (1895–1897)
- Smith (1897–1899)
- Gladstone (1899–1901)
- Prevost (1901–1903)
- 1st Baron Hollenden (1903–1905)
- Wallace (1905–1907)
- Campbell (1907–1909)
- Johnston (1909–1911)
- Cole (1911–1913)
- 1st Baron Cunliffe (1913–1918)
- 1st Baron Cullen of Ashbourne (1918–1920)
- 1st Baron Norman (1920–1922)
(1922–present)
- 1st Baron Norman (1922–1944)
- 1st Baron Catto (1944–1949)
- 1st Baron Cobbold (1949–1961)
- 3rd Earl of Cromer (1961–1966)
- O'Brien (1966–1973)
- Richardson (1973–1983)
- Leigh-Pemberton (1983–1993)
- George (1993–2003)
- King (2003–2013)
- Carney (2013–2020)
- Bailey (2020–present)
This English business-related biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e