Russell & Co. (1818-1877)

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Russell & Company (Chinese: 旗昌洋行; pinyin: Qíchāng Yángháng) was the largest American trading house of the mid-19th century in China. The firm specialised in trading tea, silk and opium and was eventually involved in the shipping trade.

In 1818, Samuel Russell was approached by Providence merchants Edward C. Carrington, Cyrus Butler and Benjamin and Thomas Hoppin to be an employee of their new resident commission firm in Canton (now referred to as Guangzhou) under the name of Samuel Russell & Company. The contract would expire after five years and the profit accumulated would be split between all parties. Russell arrived in Canton in 1819 and established Samuel Russell & Co. By 1820 the company was experiencing financial difficulties as a result of an economic depression, the Panic of 1819, which lasted until the mid-1820s. Due to these circumstances, Butler and Carrington left Samuel Russell & Co. in 1823 whilst the Hoppin brothers and Russell continued to do business in Canton. After the five-year contract expired in January 1824, Russell entered into a partnership with factory owner and former agent of Brown & Ives, Phillip Ammidon, to establish Russell & Company. Russell and Company’s ventures into the opium trade began shortly after with Ammidon who set sail for India with the intention to deal in Indian opium.

In its first year of operating, the company worked exclusively as a commission firm for China and America with either Russell or Ammidon traveling elsewhere to increase their connections. The two partners would spend two years in different locations with one of them residing in Canton and in 1827, instead of replacing Russell at his post at their main headquarters, Ammidon returned to the United States from his ventures in India and contracted William H. Low and Augustine Heard to relieve him of his duties. In 1830, Russell began a three-way partnership with Low and Heard excluding Ammidon from the new contract and forced him to resign from the company.

In August of 1829, Thomas F. Cushing died in a typhoon near Macao leaving the position of resident partner Perkins & Co. vacant. Prior to his death, Forbes had written in a letter that Russell was to replace him if complications were to arise and John Perkins Cushing, who was Forbes’s cousin and also the founder of Perkins & Company, accepted these conditions which lead to the decision to merge Perkins & Company and Russell & Company. Heard was appointed by Cushing to be a partner of the newly combined commission firm to manage the Perkins ships and Forbes’s younger brother, John Murray Forbes would replace Heard’s position as a clerk at Russell & Company. Russell and Cushing left Canton for Boston in August 1831, leaving the management of Russell & Co. to Heard and Low.

Following the acquisition of Perkins & Co. in 1829, Russell and Co. inherited Cushing’s extensive opium trading connections from across the globe. Their illegal trade at that time in Turkish opium via the island of Lintin in the Pearl River estuary was particularly lucrative. In 1831, son of theatre actors William B. Wood and Juliana Wood, William W. Wood was employed by Russell & Co. to be Low's secretary in February before leaving the company in July. Joseph Coolidge was then hired as a clerk to increase interest in trading opium in Parsee and Calcutta while Low was forced to leave in 1833. John C. Green was brought in as the new head of the firm and agent after Heard left Russell & Co. in January of the following year. In the same year, the East India Company's monopoly on the British China Trade came to an end and Russell & Co. entered into an unofficial partnership with two British firms, Jardine, Matheson, & Co. and Whiteman & Co., to further expand the opium trade in India.

Under Green's leadership, the firm underwent major changes to offset the influx of commissions and increase in workload, after a clerk, William C. Hunter fell ill and was not able to return until March 1833 and John M. Forbes was advised to set sail for America by his doctors. Forbes would only return in 1835 to find that he was contracted as a partner of Russell & Co. since the beginning of the year, an offer which he accepted. In 1836 Russell's nephew, Abiel A. Low, became a partner despite only having three years of experience as a clerk at Russell & Co., while Hunter was only given a share of Russell & Co. once Green relinquished one-sixteenth of his shares. From 1834-36, the company saw a net profit of over $400,000 with an average of approximately $133,000 per year.

With Green announcing his retirement in 1838 and the expiration of their partnership in the beginning of 1840, John Forbes formed a new partnership with Robert B. Forbes and Warren Delano Jr. in 1839. In 1842, John Forbes made an attempt to hire his cousin Paul S. Forbes, a decision that was vetoed by the other partners until 1846 when Paul S. Forbes took over Robert Forbes's position as a partner of the firm. By the early 1840s, Russell & Co. had become the largest American trading house in China and maintained that position for decades.

In August 1846, W.P Peirce opened a branch in Shanghai and by 1852 the main headquarters of Russell & Co. was moved from Canton to Shanghai. To further expand their operations in the tea trade, a firm was set up in Fuzhou in 1853 and a branch was formed in Hong Kong in 1855. From 1861-64, the company established multiple branches in Ningbo, Tianjin, Zhenjiang and Hankou. Briton Nichol Latimer, resident of Shanghai and the publisher of the North China Herald, the most influential British newspaper in China, was the manager of Russell & Company’s Shanghai Steam Navigation Co. until his death in 1865.

Russell & Co. debuted a subsidiary, Shanghai Steam Navigation Company (Shanghai S. N. Co.), under the guidance of partner Edward Cunningham in 1862. They began operations with 5 steamships which eventually expanded to 18 steamships by the 1870s. For the next 15 years, Shanghai S. N. Co. would average 12% in profit with their best year seeing a 50% return. With $1.35 million in initial capital, Shanghai S. N. Co. became the largest joint-stock company in China losing the title in 1865 to the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, to which they took second place. In 1866-67, Russell & Co. came to a quid pro quo agreement with competitors Jardines, Dent & Co., who owned Hong Kong, Canton & Macao Steamboat Company (HCMSB), and Augustine Heard & Co., where the former would abstain from trading on the Canton River and the latter would no longer trade on the Yangtze River. By February of 1967, Shanghai S. N. Co. had arranged plans to purchase rival steamships that were operating on the Yangtze River. From then on SSNC would hold a monopoly on the river and two coastal routes, Shanghai and Ningpo and Shanghai and Tientsin. This monoply was disrupted in 1871 with the arrival of China Navigation Co. Ltd (CNC) and China Coast Steam Navigation Co. (CCSNC), both founded by prominent British firms John Swire & Sons and Jardine, Matheson & Co., respectively.

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Forbes family. Forbes family business records, 1753-1968 (inclusive). Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
referencedIn Alsop family. Alsop family papers, 1734-1986 (inclusive). Yale University Library
creatorOf Russell & Co. records, 1820-1891 Baker Library, Harvard Business School
referencedIn King family papers 1844-1901 1844-1895 King family papers William L. Clements Library
creatorOf B. Raimann (Firm). Trade catalogs of woodworking,f1884-1941. University of California, Santa Barbara, UCSB Library
referencedIn J. Howard Nichols papers, 1856-1905 Baker Library, Harvard Business School
referencedIn Thomas Hunt & Company business records, 1860-1869 Baker Library, Harvard Business School
referencedIn D.G. & W.B. Bacon & Co. (Boston, Mass.). Ledger, 1857-1867. Sturgis Library
referencedIn King family. King family papers, 1844-1901, bulk 1844-1895. William L. Clements Library
creatorOf China. Yue hai guan. 880-01 Yun yang huo ru nei di zhi shui dan. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Macondray, Frederick W., 1840-1885. Frederick W. Macondray letter book : ms, 1865. California historical society
creatorOf Russell & Co. Russell & Co. records, 1820-1891 (inclusive) [microform]. Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
creatorOf Dana, R. S. (Richard Starr), 1836-1904. R.S. Dana letter book, 1867-1869. Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
referencedIn Forbes, James Murray, 1845-1937. James Murray Forbes papers, 1868-1957. Massachusetts Historical Society
referencedIn Alsop family papers, 1734-1986 Yale University. Department of Manuscripts and Archives
creatorOf A.B. Farquhar Co. Trade catalogs of agriculture, 1884-1930. University of California, Santa Barbara, UCSB Library
creatorOf Russell & Co., Guangzhou, China, Records, 1812-1894, (bulk 1819-1840) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn Dexter, Franklin Gordon, 1824-1903. Papers, 1840-1870. Massachusetts Historical Society
referencedIn Forbes, John Murray, 1844-1921. Correspondence, 1880-1899. Massachusetts Historical Society
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Alsop family family
associatedWith Alsop family. family
correspondedWith Alsop, J. W. 1804-ca. 1878 person
correspondedWith Alsop, J. W. (Joseph Wright), 1804- person
correspondedWith Alsop, Richard, 1761-1815 person
associatedWith American Colonization Society. corporateBody
correspondedWith Ammidon, Philip person
correspondedWith Astor, John Jacob, 1763-1848 person
correspondedWith Baring Brothers & Co. corporateBody
correspondedWith Benjamin & Thomas C. Hoppins (Firm) corporateBody
correspondedWith Butler, Cyrus, 1767-1849 person
associatedWith China. Yue hai guan. corporateBody
correspondedWith Clarke & Company corporateBody
correspondedWith Claude Daniel Crommelin & Sons corporateBody
associatedWith Cunningham, J. B. person
associatedWith Dana, R. S. (Richard Starr), 1836-1904. person
associatedWith Dexter, Franklin Gordon, 1824-1903. person
associatedWith D.G. & W.B. Bacon & Co. (Boston, Mass.) corporateBody
correspondedWith Edward Carrington & Company corporateBody
associatedWith Forbes family. family
associatedWith Forbes, James Murray, 1845-1937. person
correspondedWith Forbes, John Murray, 1771-1831 person
associatedWith Forbes, John Murray, 1813-1898. person
associatedWith Forbes, John Murray, 1844-1921. person
correspondedWith Forbes, R. B. 1804-1889 person
correspondedWith Forbes, R. B. (Robert Bennet), 1804-1889 person
correspondedWith George Douglas & Company corporateBody
correspondedWith Heard, Augustine, 1785-1868 person
associatedWith Houqua (Trading company) corporateBody
correspondedWith Hubbard, Gurdon Saltonstall, 1802-1886 person
correspondedWith Hubbard, S. D. 1799-1855 person
correspondedWith Hubbard, S. D. (Samuel Dickinson), 1799-1855 person
correspondedWith Hull & Griswold corporateBody
associatedWith James Purdon and Company. corporateBody
associatedWith J. and T.H. Perkins and Company. corporateBody
associatedWith J. Howard Nichols, 1838-1905 person
associatedWith John P. Cushing, William Perkins & Company corporateBody
associatedWith John P. Cushing, William Perkins & Company corporateBody
associatedWith King family family
associatedWith King family. family
correspondedWith Low, William Henry, 1816-1845 person
associatedWith Macondray, Frederick W., 1840-1885. person
correspondedWith Newberry, W. L. 1804-1868 person
correspondedWith Newberry, W. L. (Walter Loomis), 1804-1868 person
associatedWith Nye Brothers and Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Perkins and Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Perkins, James, 1761-1822. person
associatedWith Perkins, Thomas Handasyd, 1764-1854. person
correspondedWith Russell, Edward Augustus, 1797- person
associatedWith Russell family. family
associatedWith Russell family. family
correspondedWith Russell, George O. person
correspondedWith Russell, George O. person
correspondedWith Russell, John A., fl. 1838-1846 person
associatedWith Russell Manufacturing Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Russell, Samuel, 1789- person
associatedWith Russell, Samuel, 1789-ca. 1862. person
associatedWith Thomas Hunt & Company corporateBody
associatedWith Town, Ithiel, 1784-1844. person
correspondedWith Ward & Bartholomew corporateBody
associatedWith Wetmore, Samuel, ca. 1813-1885 person
associatedWith Wetmore, William, b. 1776 person
associatedWith William Perkins & Company. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Republic of Turkey 00 TR
United States 00 US
Guangzhou 30 CN
Subject
Architecture
Architecture
Banks and banking
Cotton manufacture
Epilepsy
Export marketing
Land speculation
Marketing
Medicine History 19th century
Monetary policy
Opium trade
Occupation
Activity
Merchant

Corporate Body

Americans

English

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