Czarnikow moved to England in 1854,[4] and he became a British subject in 1861.[5] He resided in Effingham Hill House and Eaton Square (1901 census), London. He married Louisa Ellen Ashlin (1840-1911), with whom he had 2 children : Horace (1864 -1933), and Louisa Ada (1867-1948).
Career
Czarnikow founded a sugar brokerage firm, Czarnikow & Co., in 1861, which now trades as Czarnikow Group Ltd.[5] Its first office was at 18 Philpot Lane, London,[6] and the company later had offices in Liverpool, Glasgow and New York City.[1] He partnered with Manuel Rionda of Cuba, who admitted to Czarnikow in 1909 that he struggled to find the right chemist for sugar manufacturing.[7]
Czarnikow was an investor in a sugar shipping company from the West Indies to Central Europe.[8] By 1872, he was also the largest investor in the South Carolina Phosphate Company.[9] Additionally, by 1888 he was an investor in the London Produce Clearing House,[8] and he served as its deputy chairman.[5]
Death
Czarnikow died on 17 April 1909 in London.[10] By the time of his death, "he was said to be the biggest sugar broker in the world",[10] with an estimated wealth of £1 million.[8]
At Probate in 1909 his executors included Julius Charles Ganzoni (born 1852 in Austria, died 1949 in Cambridgeshire); the 1911 census stated he was a partner in a firm of colonial brokers, and his son Francis J Childs Ganzoni (born 1882) was a barrister.
References
^ ab"OBITUARY". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts. 57 (2944): 465. 23 April 1909. JSTOR41338589.
^Tischendorf, Alfred P. (October 1955). "A Note on British Enterprise in South Carolina 1872–1886". The South Carolina Historical Magazine. 56 (4): 196–199. JSTOR27566023.