Sir Fazalbhoy Currimbhoy Ebrahim, 1st Baronet was a mid 19th centuryGujaratiKhoja businessman of the Nizari Ismailifaith based in Bombay. He is credited with founding E. Pabaney & Co, a family held trading and ship owning company whose trading interests extended as far as the Arabian peninsula, the African coast and China. The Khoja family was based in Bombay, and had been active in Canton before the Opium War. They had a virtual monopoly on India's overseas merchandising. They continued to maintain a considerable stake in the opium trade through E. Pabaney & Co, with branch offices springing up in Hong Kong and Shanghai during the latter half of the 19th century.
Fazalbhoy Currimbhoy Ebrahim was born in a Gujarati Muslim Khoja family in Bombay on 25 October 1839. His father was an established ship owner and their family had been active traders for generations. At the age of 16, Currimbhoy started E.Pabaey, a trading company, with the help of his father and extended family. He married twice, and had 10 children through his first marriage with Bai Foolbai Gangji and 11 children through his second marriage to Bai Foolbia Sajan.
Career and E.Pabaney
Currimbhoy established E.Pabaney in 1856 in Bombay as a trading company. In In 1857, it opened an office in Hong Kong on Duddell street for trading in opium, yarn, cotton, silk and tea, and soon set up offices all over the far east. Ships belonging to their company E.Pabaney & Co. traded between India, Africa, China, Hong Kong and the far East. In Shanghai, the company was listed as the "8 Bali Foreign company. In 1903, the company established itself in Singapore for the trading of opium and yarn.
Honours and Philanthropy
Currimbhoy was knighted during the Prince and Princess of Wales's Indian tour of 1905 and created a baronet in 1910 and further granted lands to support that dignity by the Currimbhoy Ebrahim Baronetcy Act 1913 following the precedent set by the Cowasji Jehangir Baronetcy Act. The 'Currimbhoy Ebrahim Khoja Orphanage trust' started by him, continue to own large pieces of land in / around Mumbai. including the Currimbhoy manor and the Poona bungalow. Between 1947 and 1949, due to the partition of India, this descendants, namely the third and fourth baronets migrated to Pakistan. An orphanage started by him in 1895 on Altamount road, Mumbai was sold to the Mukesh Ambani in 2005 for the building of a 28 storied residence for the Ambani family, called Antilia.