Mary Grissell (four children) Sarah Ainsworth Kelsall (11 children)
Children
15
Sir Samuel Morton Peto, 1st Baronet (4 August 1809 – 13 November 1889) was an English entrepreneur, civil engineer and railway developer, and, for more than 20 years, a Member of Parliament (MP). A partner in the firm of Grissell and Peto, he managed construction firms that built many of London's major buildings and monuments, including the Reform Club, The Lyceum Theatre, Nelson's Column and the replacement Houses of Parliament - commissions which brought him great wealth.[1] The scale of his operations, and that of the workforce needed to undertake them, made him the world's largest employer.[2]
As a partner in Peto and Betts, he then became one of the major contractors in the building of the rapidly expanding railways of the time. Along with a small group of other Master Builders in London he is credited as a founding member of the Chartered Institute of Building in 1834.[3]
Early life
Samuel Morton Peto, normally called Morton Peto, was born on 4 August 1809, in Woking, Surrey. As a youth, he was apprenticed as a bricklayer to his uncle Henry Peto, who ran a building firm in London.
Another project, in 1848, was the Bloomsbury Baptist Chapel, the first Baptist church with spires in London. Tradition has it that the Crown Commissioner was reluctant to lease the land to nonconformists because of their "dull, spire-less architecture". Peto is said to have exclaimed, "A spire, my Lord? We shall have two!" The church had twin spires until 1951, when they were removed as unsafe.[4]
Railway works
In 1834 Peto saw the potential of the newly developing railways and dissolved the connection with his uncle's building firm. He and his cousin Grissell founded a business as an independent railway contractor. His firm's first railway work was to build two stations in Curzon Street, Birmingham. Next, the firm built its first line of track, the Hanwell and Langley section of the Great Western Railway, which included the Wharncliffe Viaduct.[5]
Grissell became increasingly nervous about the risks taken by Peto, and in 1846 dissolved the partnership.[6]
In 1848 Peto and Edward Betts (who had married Peto's sister Ann) entered into a formal partnership and together they were to work on a large number of railway contracts. Frequently, they also work in partnership with Thomas Brassey.
In 1844, Peto bought Somerleyton Hall in Suffolk. He rebuilt the hall with contemporary amenities, as well as constructing a school and more houses in the village. He next built similar projects in Lowestoft.
In 1846, Peto became co-treasurer of the Baptist Missionary Society. From 1855 to March 1867, he was sole treasurer, resigning after personal financial difficulties.[10] In 1855 took over the lease of The Diorama, Regent's Park and paid for its conversion into a Baptist Chapel.[11]
Peto served for two decades as a Member of Parliament. He was elected a Liberal Member for Norwich in 1847 to 1854, for Finsbury from 1859 to 1865, and for Bristol from 1865 to 1868. During this time he was one of the most prominent figures in public life. He helped to make a guarantee towards the financing of The Great Exhibition of 1851, backing Joseph Paxton's Crystal Palace.[12]
In 1855 Peto was made a baronet; but in the 1860s his businesses ran into trouble, so that in 1863 he sold Somerlyton Hall and in 1866 became bankrupt.[13][page needed]
After his involvement with the insolvency of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway in 1866, and the failure of the Peto and Betts partnership, Peto's personal reputation as a trustworthy businessman was badly damaged and never fully recovered.
Between 1863-65 the current Embassy of Nepal in Kensington Place Gardens, London W8, designed by the architect James Murray, was built for Peto.
In 1868, he had to give up his seat in Parliament, despite having the support of both Benjamin Disraeli and William Ewart Gladstone. He exiled himself to Budapest and tried to promote railways in Russia and Hungary.
When he returned he became the main contractor for the Cornwall Minerals Railway which opened in 1874, but the failure of the related Cornish Consolidated Iron Mines Corporation meant that he sustained heavy losses when iron ore traffic on the CMR failed to live up to expectations. The CMR itself survived and began to recover after it had introduced passenger services in 1876 and was then leased by the Great Western Railway in 1877, but this improvement came too late for Peto.
An extremely unfavourable portrait of Peto is included in the appendix to George Borrow's Romany Rye, where he is described as "Mr. Flamson". When Peto promoted the Lowestoft Railway and Harbour Company in the 1840s, the railway split Borrow's estate at Oulton Broad, just outside Lowestoft. Borrow deeply resented this and bore a grudge against Peto thereafter.[16]
Peto is commemorated by a portrait bust at Norwich railway station by John Pooler.[17] Morton Peto Road, a road in Great Yarmouth, was named after him. There is a road in Lowestoft called "Peto Way" that connects Lowestoft railway station (via Denmark Road, again in connection with Peto's legacy in Denmark) to Normanston.
In Ashford. Kent, Samuel Peto Way is a residential road built upon the old Newtown Railway Works site and was named in his honour.[18]
A portrait of Peto hangs outside the library at Regent's Park College, Oxford, in commemoration of his assistance with the college's move from Stepney to Regent's Park.[20]
Family
In May 1831 Peto married Mary Grissell, one of the sisters of his later partner, Thomas Grissell. They had four children before Mary's death in 1842:[21]
Henry (1840–1938) who succeeded as the 2nd baronet in 1899
Annie
Sophia
Mary, who married Penruddocke Wyndham, a grandson of Colonel Wadham Wyndham, in 1852 and had two daughters.
Peto then married Sarah Ainsworth Kelsall, the daughter of Henry Kelsall of Rochdale. Peto and Sarah had many children. Of these:
Harold Ainsworth (1854–1933), the celebrated landscape architect. (Source: Mowl, TimothyHistoric Gardens of Wiltshire, London: Tempus Publishing, 2004.)
Frank Kelsall (b. 1858)
Basil Edward Peto (1862–1945), created a baronet in his own right in 1927. His grandson Christopher Peto, 3rd Bt. was a Conservative politician. (Source: 107th edition of Burke, Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, London: 2004).
Brooks, Edward C. (1996). Sir Samuel Morton Peto Bt: eminent Victorian, railway entrepreneur, country squire, MP. Bury Clerical Society. ISBN978-0-9502988-4-9.
Cooke, Brian (1990). The Grand Crimean Central Railway. Knutsford: Cavalier House. ISBN0-9515889-0-7.
Cox, John G. (2008). Samuel Morton Peto; the achievements and failings of a great railway developer. The Railway and Canal Historical Society. ISBN978-0-901461-56-8.
Faith, Nicholas (1990). The world the railways made. London: The Bodley Head. ISBN0-370-31299-6.
Francis, John (1851). A History of the English Railway; its social relations & revelations, 1820-1845, Volume 1. London: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans. ISBN1-144866-90-1.
Joby, R.S. (1983). The Railway Builders: Lives and Works of the Victorian Railway Contractors. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN0-7153-7959-3.
Stacey, Tom (2005). Thomas Brassey: The Greatest Railway Builder in the World. London: Stacey International. ISBN1-905299-09-5.
Sparkes, Douglas C. (2013). Hitting the buffers, Samuel Morton Peto, 1809–1889, railway builder extraordinaire. Didcot: Baptist Historical Society. ISBN978-0-903166-41-6.