Edward Knight Collins

Edward Knight Collins I (5 August 1802 – 22 January 1878) was an American shipping magnate.[1]

The trans-Atlantic shipping competition between Collins and UK shipping magnate Samuel Cunard as caricatured by Frank Bellew in 1852
Edward Knight Collins

Early life

He was born on August 5, 1802 in Truro, Massachusetts to Israel Gross Collins (1776–1831) and Mary Ann Knight (c.1780-c.1802). His mother was a niece of Sir Edward Knight and she died shortly after Edward was born. His aunts then raised him. His father moved to New York City. At age thirteen in 1815, Collins left Truro for New Jersey to attend school. He then went to New York City as an apprentice clerk in the counting house of McCrea and Slidell. Within a few years, Edward moved to Delaplaine and Company.[1]

Shipping career

In 1821 he joined his father's company and in January 1824 he became a partner in I. G. Collins & Son. In 1827 they started the first regularly scheduled packet service between New York City and Veracruz, Mexico. In 1826, Collins married Mary Ann Woodruff, the daughter of Thomas T. Woodruff. They had a son, Edward K. Collins II, as well as a daughter and at least one other child.[1]

After his father's death in 1831 he became involved with the cotton trade between New Orleans and New York. He bought his first shipping line in 1831. In 1836, he launched the Dramatic Line of sailing packets, which quickly became a major presence on what was then the world’s most important shipping route, between New York and Liverpool.[2] He received a government subsidy in 1847 to carry mail on that same route, for which purpose he formed the New York and Liverpool United States Mail Steamship Company (the "Collins Line") to compete with Britain's Cunard Line. The new Line’s inaugural voyage took place in April 1850, and for the next six years its steamships were the biggest, fastest and most luxurious on the Atlantic. They were hugely expensive to operate, however, and in 1852 Collins was forced to go back to Congress to secure a major increase in his subsidy for carrying mail. This left him in a very vulnerable position when the increase was canceled in 1856 after two of the Line's four steamships sank: the Arctic had sunk in 1854 while carrying his wife and two of his children.,[3] and less than two years later the Pacific disappeared without a trace on her way back from Liverpool to New York. The Collins Line struggled on for another couple of years, using the insurance payouts for its two lost ships to build an even bigger steamer called the Adriatic. But after its subsidy was reduced it simply could not make ends meet, and in February 1858 the Line finally folded.[2]

Later life

Collins moved to his summer home, "Collinwood" in Wellsville, Ohio, where he engaged in coal mining and oil drilling. He remarried, to Sarah Browne, and by 1862 he had moved back to New York City, where he died on January 22, 1878. He was buried in an unmarked grave in Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx.

References

  1. "Edward Knight Collins". Harper's Magazine. 1892. Retrieved 2011-11-15. Edward Knight Collins was a great naval architect as well as shipping merchant, whose career was, on the whole, more noteworthy than that of any man engaged any where in similar pursuits. This public - spirited citizen, son of Captain Israel G. Collins, the owner and commander of a ship that traded between the United States and England, was born on 5 August 1802. His mother, Mary Allan, a niece of Admiral Sir Edward Knight, of the British navy, dying ten days after the birth of her only child, the infant was reared by his aunt, Mrs. Elizabeth Small, of Truro, Cape Cod, whose kindness and affection Mr.
  2. Miles, Vincent (2015). The Lost Hero of Cape Cod: Captain Asa Eldridge and the Maritime Trade That Shaped America. The Historical Society of Old Yarmouth, Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts.
  3. "The Arctic". The New York Times. October 14, 1854. Retrieved 2011-11-15. Thirty-five more of the passengers and crew of the Arctic reached this City at 6 o'clock last evening, from Halifax, by way of Boston and New-Haven. ...

Further reading

  • Folsom, Burton W. The Myth of the Robber Barons: A New Look at the Rise of Big Business in America (2010) ch 1. excerpt
  • The New International Encyclopædia. 1917. pp. vol 21 p 31. "Shipping subsidies" in New International Encyclopædia (1921) v21 p 31
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