Henry Keswick: the plutocrat who fell for China

Henry Keswick, a scion of the Jardine Matheson trading company, rebuilt the firm's fortunes after the upheavals of the 1990s. He died aged 86.

Lady Tessa Keswick, Sir Henry Keswick, Sabrina Ho and Angela Leong attend Sabrina Ho's birthday party
(Image credit: David M. Benett/Dave Benett / Getty Images for Sabrina Ho)

In 2014, Henry Keswick wrote to the Financial Times to voice his opposition to Scottish independence. “I am a humble Scottish merchant trading in the China Seas. My family has followed this profession for almost 200 years,” he wrote. “When we are bearing the sticky heat of China’s Pearl River Delta or the tropical rainforests of equatorial Borneo, we dream about the cool, soft mist of the green Galloway hills where we were bred.”

Keswick, who has died aged 86, was “an almost extinct type”, says Charles Moore in The Spectator: “the patrician plutocrat – grand, usually benevolent, occasionally autocratic”. As a scion of the Jardine Matheson trading company – co-founded in 1832 in Canton (now known as Guangzhou, China) by a Jardine forebear to trade tea, silk, rhubarb and opium – he became the Hong Kong firm’s youthful “taipan” (leader) in 1970, and “therefore rich”.

Five years later, aged 36, he returned to Britain, “almost like Clive of India”, seeking a “country house, a wife and a seat in parliament”. The latter ambition went awry when, shortlisted for a Conservative seat in Wiltshire, he was asked if he’d buy a house in the constituency. “Madam,” he replied, “my arboretum is in the constituency… If you insist, I shall buy a house in every village in the constituency.”

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Jane writes profiles for MoneyWeek and is city editor of The Week. A former British Society of Magazine Editors editor of the year, she cut her teeth in journalism editing The Daily Telegraph’s Letters page and writing gossip for the London Evening Standard – while contributing to a kaleidoscopic range of business magazines including Personnel Today, Edge, Microscope, Computing, PC Business World, and Business & Finance.

She has edited corporate publications for accountants BDO, business psychologists YSC Consulting, and the law firm Stephenson Harwood – also enjoying a stint as a researcher for the due diligence department of a global risk advisory firm.

Her sole book to date, Stay or Go? (2016), rehearsed the arguments on both sides of the EU referendum.

She lives in north London, has a degree in modern history from Trinity College, Oxford, and is currently learning to play the drums.