William Fane de Salis (businessman)


William Andreas Salius Fane de Salis was a British businessman, colonialist, and barrister.
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Early life

De Salis was the third son of Jerome, 4th Count de Salis-Soglio, by his third wife, Henrietta Foster. Peter, 5th Count de Salis-Soglio was an elder half-brother; Rodolphus was an elder brother and Henry was his youngest brother.
Born in St. Marylebone, Westminster, brought up in County Louth he was educated at Eton ; Heidelberg University ; and Oriel College, Oxford. He was called to the Bar, 30 January 1836; and was at 3 Brick Court, Inner Temple, by 1840. He was appointed a revising barrister for Northamptonshire, Nottingham and East Retford.

Career

Fane de Salis visited Australia in 1842, 1844 and 1848 to pursue business opportunities in the Australian wool and other industries, then rapidly expanding. His younger brother Leopold Fabius Fane de Salis had migrated there in 1840. William became, with John Thacker, a partner in Thacker & Co, Jardine Matheson's affiliated house in Sydney, but resigned from 1 July 1847. By 1848 he owned with Robert Towns a 345-ton barque, the Statesman. This they sold, in March 1854, for $16,500, she having had an accident 'on her passage up to China from Sydney'.
On his return to England, de Salis joined the Grand Junction Canal Company in 1850 and held the following appointments:
In the early 1850s Fane de Salis lived between the Jerusalem Coffee House; Dawley Lodge ; 1 Upper Belgrave Street; 24 Wilton Street, and 107 Eaton Square. From the late 1850s he lived at Dawley Court, near Hillingdon, and Harlington, Uxbridge, Middlesex and also at Teffont Manor, Teffont Evias, Wiltshire, the home of his wife Emily Harriet. She was the eldest daughter of John Thomas Mayne, whom he married on 12 March 1859.
Fane de Salis was a Fellow of the Geological Society and of the Royal Geographical Society, JP for Middlesex, and JP for Wiltshire.
With J. D. Allcroft he co-founded the Harlington, Harmondsworth and Cranford Cottage Hospital in 1884. He left Dawley Court to his youngest brother's second son, Cecil Fane De Salis, one of whose younger brothers was Charles Fane de Salis. At his death Fane de Salis left effects valued at £147,382 6s 7d. His nephew Rodolph was executor. His wife Emily had died only ten days earlier, leaving £1,930. Vice-admiral William Fane de Salis was another nephew.

Works

Ancestors