Samuel Enderby Junior
Samuel Enderby Junior (1756–1829) was one of three sons of Samuel Enderby (1717–1797) and his wife Mary, née Buxton, a daughter of Enderby's partner at St Paul's Wharf, London.[1] The senior Samuel Enderby founded the Samuel Enderby & Sons company in 1775, when he assembled a fleet of whaling vessels on the Greenwich Peninsula, in the London Borough of Greenwich.[2] Samuel Enderby & Sons was a prominent whaling and sealing firm between 1775 and 1854.
When Samuel Enderby II died in 1797, he left the company to his three sons Charles, Samuel III, and George.
Charles married Elizabeth Goodwyn, sister of Mary, and had an orphanage in Coombe Hill, Blackheath. This couple had no children of their own but they raised Maria King, daughter of Gov. King, until she married Hannibal Hawkins Mac Arthur on 14 February 1813. Mrs. Charles Enderby left her money to a niece, Caroline Hawkins.
George Enderby married Henrietta Samson. They lived in Coombe House near Croydon, Surrey. They had no children.
Samuel Enderby Junior married Mary Goodwyn. They had eight children. Their daughter Elizabeth (1792–1873) married Henry William Gordon (1786–1865) and became the mother of 12 children, one of whom was Gordon of Khartoum. Their three sons, Charles, Henry and George, inherited the firm on his death in 1829. Sons Samuel IV & William were cut out of the firm all their life. Charles became a member of the Royal Society and died in poverty in 1876. Charles, Henry, and George never married and had no legitimate children, Samuel IV is reputed to have been married four times. He had a daughter, Georgina Mary, who inherited through her mother Mary (née Whyte), his third wife, the estates of the Whytes of Redhills in County Cavan. William Enderby is the only one to have male children.
In 1800, with his partner Alexander Champion, Enderby successfully petitioned that his whalers should be allowed to take provisions for the New South Wales colony to compete with American merchants. He sent cargoes 'well adapted for the inhabitants' in the Greenwich, which reached Sydney Cove in May 1801, and then in the Britannia. Enderby's friend, Governor Philip Gidley King, was instrumental in facilitating the whaling and trading activities of the Enderby Brothers firm.[1]
The vessels of the Enderby Brothers company were among the first to explore and chart the Southern Ocean. The Enderby captain Abraham Bristow discovered the Auckland Islands in 1806, naming one of the islands Enderby Island.[1]