Samuel Enderby Junior
Samuel Enderby was a British whaling merchant, significant in the history of whaling in Australia.
Family background
His father, Samuel Enderby, founded the firm named after him in 1775, when he assembled a fleet of whaling vessels on the Greenwich Peninsula, on the south bank of the Thames just downstream of the City of London. Samuel Enderby & Sons was a prominent whaling and sealing firm between 1775 and 1854. He was in partnership with a man named Buxton at St Paul's Wharf, i.e. near the cathedral of the City of London. Samuel junior, like his father, was apprenticed to a cooper as a young man.The senior Samuel Enderby married Mary Buxton, a daughter of his partner, and they had three sons, Charles, Samuel, and George, to whom he eventually bequeathed his estate. The younger Samuel Enderby was baptised, as recorded in the protestant Dissenters Registry, on 4 June 1755.
Charles married Elizabeth Goodwyn, and had an orphanage in Coombe Hill, Blackheath. This couple had no children of their own but they raised Maria King, daughter of Philip Gidley King, until she married Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur, a prominent early colonist of Australia, 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.
Career
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.The vessels of the Enderby Brothers company helped 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.