Sir William Paterson (born April, 1658 in Tynwald, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland - died in Westminster, London, on January 22, 1719) was a Scottish trader and banker.
Paterson returned to London and made his fortune with foreign trade (primarily with the West Indies) in the Merchant Taylors' Company. From 1691 onwards he was the principal driving force in the establishment of the Bank of England (1694), the central bank of the Kingdom of England, of which he was one of the founding directors. However, poor relations with his colleagues forced him to withdraw from management within a year of the bank's establishment.
Paterson relocated to Edinburgh, where he was able to convince the Scottish government to undertake the Darién scheme, and was influential in the establishment of the Bank of Scotland (1695), the central bank of the Kingdom of Scotland. Paterson accompanied the disastorous Scottish expedition to Panama (1698), where his wife and child died and he became seriously ill. On his return to Scotland in December 1699, he became instrumental in the movement for the Union of Scotland and England, culminating in his support of the Act of Union 1707. He spent the last years of his life in Westminster, and died in January 1719.
1658 births | 1719 deaths | Natives of Dumfries and Galloway | Scottish bankers | Scottish business people | Scottish economists | Scottish non-fiction writers
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"William Paterson (banker)".
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