Ernest Terah Hooley

"Papworth"
Hooley as caricatured by Spy (Leslie Ward) in Vanity Fair, December 1896

Ernest Terah Hooley (5 February 1859 – 11 February 1947) was an English financial fraudster. He achieved wealth and fame by buying promising companies and reselling them to the public at inflated prices, but a prosecution exposed his deceitful practices. He was made bankrupt four times and served two prison terms.[1] He was the developer of the world's first industrial park, Trafford Park on the outskirts of Manchester.[2][3]

Early life

Hooley was born in Sneinton, Nottinghamshire, the only child of Terah Hooley, a lacemaker, and his wife Elizabeth. He joined his father's lace business and in 1881 married baker's daughter Annie Maria, with whom he had four daughters and three sons. Possibly with the assistance of an inheritance from his mother, Hooley bought Risley Hall in Derbyshire for £5,000 in 1888, and in the following year set himself up as a stockbroker in Nottingham.[2]

Business career

Hooley moved his business to London in 1896 and began to affect "a lavish lifestyle".[2] The rise in his fortunes coincided with the boom in bicycles that year, and until the 1898 slump in that business he had promoted 26 manufacturers with a total nominal capital of £18.6 million;[4] to impress investors he populated the boards of his companies with members of the aristocracy.[2] One of his most profitable deals was the purchase of the Trafford Park estate from Sir Humphrey Francis de Trafford in 1896. Hooley's original plan was to convert the park into a high-class residential area containing 500 grand villas, a racecourse, and an industrial fringe along the banks of the Manchester Ship Canal, but he was persuaded instead to develop the site as an industrial estate,[5] the first in the world[6] and still the largest in Europe.[7]

In 1895 he purchased Papworth Hall in Cambridgeshire.[2] He was appointed High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire for 1897.[8]

In 1896, he purchased the 2,000 acre Anmer Hall estate in Norfolk for £25,000 which he later resold to the Prince of Wales at cost. The Prince of Wales had attempted to purchase the property prior to Hooley buying it, but it has been suggested his subsequent effort to secure it may have been to avoid the possibility of Hooley's business promoter Alexander Meyrick Broadley, whom he had earlier forced from Society, from becoming a constant guest and neighbour.[9] In the later prosecution of Hooley, Broadley was denounced by Sir Robert Wright, Justice of the Court of the Queen's Bench, as the real author of Hooley's schemes.[9]

In 1897 Hooley was selected by the Conservative Party as their candidate to contest the parliamentary constituency of Ilkeston, Derbyshire at the next general election.[10] His bankruptcy the following year made him ineligible to stand however.[2][3]

Hooley's bankruptcy was also a fraudulent affair. He had made over his estates to his wife, and life on them went on very much as before – the press terming him 'The Splendid Bankrupt'. Hooley also continued his deceitful business activities, although on a smaller scale. He was made bankrupt again in 1911, 1921, and 1939, and jailed for fraud in 1912 and 1922.[11]

Hooley estimated that during his career over £100,000,000 had passed through his hands, and he remained unrepentant: "my spirit remains uncrushed....Conscious that if I had done a certain amount of harm to my fellow-beings, any rate I had also done a very considerable amount of good....Seemingly all the English people on the Rivera lunched and dined my expense, and some of them even came to breakfast."[12]

Despite his crimes, he also had admirers. The public prosecutor Sir Richard Muir, considered him the most attractive personality he encountered in his professional career, writing in his memoirs: "He might have made the greatest Chancellor of the Exchequer this country has ever known…'The Splendid Bankrupt' certainly had a wonderful way with him.[13]

However, Hooley's legacy was a string of ruined companies and firms floundering through overcapitalisation and shrunken share values, with the consequent losses for their investors.[11]

Companies floated by E T Hooley and the gross profits of each promotion

£5,000,000
£1,250,000
£2,500,000
£100,000
£250,000
£375,000
£650,000
£900,000
£100,000
unknown
unknown
£200,000
£800,000
£200,000
£ 75,000
£100,000
from the statement prepared by the Official Receiver of his estate.[14]

By 1911 he was in serious legal and financial difficulties. He spent a month in Brixton Gaol for contempt of court and later in the same year received a twelve-month sentence for obtaining money on false pretences as part of a land deal. In the following year he was judged bankrupt for the second time.[2] He re-entered business as an estate agent, but by 1921 was again bankrupt, and in 1922 was convicted of fraud and sentenced to three years imprisonment.[3] Following his release, Hooley returned to the business of property sales, continuing to work until his eighties. He was made bankrupt for a fourth time in 1939.[3]

Hooley died at Long Eaton, Derbyshire, aged 88.[3]

References

Notes

  1. Stratmann, Linda Fraudsters and Charlatans: A Peek at Some of History's Greatest Rogues (The Crooks Who Conned Millions), The History Press 2010
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Oppenheimer, P. M.; Ryan, Janette (rev.) (2004), "Hooley, Ernest Terah (1859–1947)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, retrieved 4 October 2010 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Death Of Mr. E. T. Hooley", The Times, p. 2, 13 February 1947
  4. Farnie (1980), p. 120
  5. Farnie (1980), pp. 120–121
  6. Nicholls (1996), p. xiii
  7. "Trafford Park Masterplan", Trafford Council, October 2008, retrieved 4 October 2010
  8. The London Gazette: no. 26828, p. 1238, 2 March 1897, retrieved 22 February 2009
  9. 1 2 La Marquise de Fontenoy (pseudonym of Marguerite Cunliffe-Owen), Chicago Tribune, 8 May 1916 http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1916/05/08/page/6/article/la-marquise-de-fontenoy
  10. "Election Intelligence", The Times, p. 6, 4 March 1897
  11. 1 2 Robb, George White-Collar Crime in Modern England: Financial Fraud and Business Morality, 1845-1929, Cambridge University Press, 1992, pp105-107
  12. Hull Daily Mail, 27 February 1925
  13. Derby Daily Telegraph, Saturday 9 April 1927
  14. page 5 Coventry Herald, 13 May 1904 (findmypast.com The British Newspaper Archive)

Bibliography

  • Farnie, D. A. (1980), The Manchester Ship Canal and the rise of the Port of Manchester, Manchester University Press, ISBN 978-0-7190-0795-8 
  • Nicholls, Robert (1996), Trafford Park: The First Hundred Years, Phillimore & Co, ISBN 978-1-86077-013-5 
  • *Stratmann, Linda (2010), Fraudsters and Charlatans: A Peek at Some of History's Greatest Rogues (The Crooks Who Conned Millions), The History Press 
  • Vallance, Aylmer (1955), Very private enterprise: an anatomy of fraud and high finance, Thames and Hudson 
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