Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Co Ltd

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Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Co Ltd

The founder of the 'British India Steam Navigation Company' (BI) was William Mackinnon (b.1823-d.1893) who, in partnership with William Mackenzie (ca.1810-d.1853) operated as a general merchant near Calcutta. In the mid- 1850s Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Company secured the East India Company's mail contract between Calcutta and Rangoon and founded the Calcutta & Burmah Steam Navigation Company Ltd, registered in Glasgow in 1856, with a capital of £35,000 [1].

Within five years of its foundation, the company had expanded considerably: from Burma, its ships were serving Penang and Singapore, while dozens of small ports along the Indian coast were being opened up to large-scale traffic by its service between Calcutta and Bombay. A mail contract to cover the whole of this route was being negotiated, and a similar contract up and down the Persian Gulf was being contemplated by the Government. In 1861 Mackinnon raised £400,000 to establish the 'British India Steam Navigation Company Ltd', and ordered six larger ships. The new company, which absorbed the Calcutta & Burmah Company, was registered in Scotland in 1862 [1].

The original 'Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Company' in Calcutta continued to exist and operate as BI’s managing agents, a function which they were to fulfil for nigh on a hundred years. BI secured a network of mail contract services – Bombay/Karachi, Bombay/Gulf, Bombay/Calcutta and Madras/Rangoon – which became the backbone of its operations until the opening of the Suez Canal[1].

On 27 February 1912 'Apcar & Co', ships, workshops and mines, were sold to the 'British India Steam Navigation Company' and the coal mines were managed by Mackinnon, Mackenzie & Co Ltd until 1951 [2].

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 PO Heritage "British India Steam Navigation Company"; Retrieved 26 August 2017
  2. Wikipedia “Apcar Family”; Retrieved 26 August 2017