John Hanger was born around 1656. His family were associated with the hundred of Bray.[1]
Hanger married Mary Coles. His eldest daughter, Anne (or Ann) (died 1754, aged 53), married Henry Hare, 3rd Baron Coleraine, in 1718. She was accompanied by a dowry of nearly £100,000. The couple separated only two years later, without issue, and the barony of Coleraine became extinct upon his death in 1749.[1][2][3] The title was revived though in 1762 for Hanger's nephew, Gabriel Hanger, who became the 1st Baron Coleraine of the second creation.[4] John Hanger's second daughter, Mary, died in 1739 aged 35 and his youngest daughter Elizabeth in 1744–45 aged 38.[1] The monument to Mary was sculpted by Peter Scheemakers.[5]
He was governor at the time when the Bank of England was intimately involved in the financing of the South Sea Company (known for the South Sea Bubble).[8] In November 1720, he and a party of bank officials visited the company and after enquiring into the security it could give, Hanger read a letter informing them that the bank would only provide the first £400,000 of its agreed rescue subscription of £3m, the future proceeds of which had underpinned the share price.[9] Afterwards, the company's share price collapsed to a new low, the bank's inaction causing, it was said, more families to be ruined than all the actions of the directors of the South Sea Company.[8][9] In 1871, Hanger featured as a character in W. Harrison Ainsworth's novelisation of those events.[10]
^"Coleraine". Peerage of the United Kingdom. Archived from the original on 8 June 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) Retrieved 26 October 2018.
^Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Peter Gunnis