Albert George Sandeman

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File:Albert George Sandeman Vanity Fair 1895-09-12.jpg
Caricature of Sandeman by "Spy" in Vanity Fair, 1895

Albert George Sandeman (21 October 1833 – 6 January 1923) was an English businessman and the 100th Governor of the Bank of England.

He was born the eldest of the 9 children of George Glas Sandeman, head of the Sandeman wine importing company, and his wife Elizabeth Forster. [1]He entered the family business at the age of 16 and at 20 was sent to work at the Oporto office in Portugal. [2]

He later became a director of the London Dock Company and in 1866 a director of the Bank of England. He was appointed High Sheriff of Surrey for 1872–73.

On his father's death in 1888 he became chairman of the family business of Geo. G. Sandeman & Sons Ltd. In 1894 he was made Deputy Governor of the Bank of England, becoming Governor the following year until 1897. He also served as a Commissioner of Income Tax for the City of London and as President of the London Chamber of Commerce (1898).

He died in 1923 at his home, "Greylands", in Bexhill, Sussex. He had married Maria Carlota Perpetua de Moraes Sarmento in Portugal in 1895 and with her had at least six children, including at least two sons and four daughters.

References

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Government offices
Preceded by Governor of the Bank of England
1895 - 1897
Succeeded by
Hugh Colin Smith