Everything about Thomas Lipton totally explained
Sir Thomas Johnstone Lipton Bt KCVO (born
May 10,
1848 in
Glasgow; died
October 2,
1931 in
London) was a
Scotsman of
Ulster-Scots parentage who was a self-made man, merchant, and yachtsman. He created the famous
Lipton tea brand and was the most persistent challenger in the history of the
America's Cup.
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Parentage and childhood
Lipton's parents, Thomas Lipton senior and Frances Lipton (nee Johnstone), were Ulster-Scots, who came from
County Fermanagh. The Liptons had been smallholders in Fermanagh for generations, but by the late 1840s, Thomas Lipton's parents had decided to leave
Ireland and return to the land of their roots (
Scotland) in search of a better living for themselves and their young family. By
1847, the Liptons had settled in
Glasgow. Lipton's father would hold a number of occupations throughout the 1840s and 1850s, including working as a labourer and as a printer.
Although Thomas Lipton would later state that he was born at his family's home in Crown Street in the
Gorbals in
1850, there's no record of this in the parish register for that period. However, in the
1851 census, the family were recorded as living in the north of Glasgow, with young Thomas being listed as being aged 3 years old. It would appear that he was therefore born in
1848.
Thomas Lipton was educated at St. Andrew's Parish School close to
Glasgow Green between
1853 and
1863. By the early 1860s, his parents were the proprietors of a shop at 11 Crown Street in the Gorbals, where they sold ham, butter, and eggs. It was with the aim of supplementing his parents limited income that Thomas Lipton left school at the age of thirteen and found employment as a printers errand boy, and then as a shirtcutter. He also enrolled at a night school, the Gorbals Youth's School, during this period.
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Grocer and Lipton's tea
In
1865 Lipton signed up as a cabin boy and sailed from Glasgow to the
U.S., where he'd spend five years working and travelling all over the country. Lipton had a number of jobs during this time: at a tobacco plantation in
Virginia, as an accountant and bookkeeper at a rice plantation in
South Carolina, as a door-to-door salesman in
New Orleans, a farmhand in
New Jersey, and finally as a grocery assistant in
New York.
He returned to Glasgow in
1870, initially helping his parents run their small shop in the Gorbals. The following year he opened his first provision shop - Lipton's Market - at 101 Stobcross Street in the
Anderston area of Glasgow. This enterprise proved to be successful and Lipton soon established a chain of groceries, first across Glasgow, the rest of Scotland, until finally he'd stores throughout Britain. While Lipton was expanding his empire, tea prices were falling and supply was growing among his middle class customers. In 1888, when his empire had grown to 300 stores, he entered the tea trade and opened his tea-tasting office. He started bypassing traditional trading and wholesale distribution channels (most UK tea-trading was focused in London's
Mincing Lane) in order to sell teas at unprecedented prices to the untapped poor working class market. In order to provide his shops with goods Lipton bought plantations and in doing so - amongst other things - he established the famous
Lipton tea brand which is still in existence today.
Thomas Lipton visited
Sri Lanka in the 1890s and made business deals with
James Taylor the man who introduced tea plantations to Sri Lanka (
Ceylon). Lipton's company purchased good quality tea from Sri Lanka and distributed it through Europe and the USA.
Sportsman
King
Edward VII and King
George V both shared their interest in yachting with Lipton and enjoyed his company. Between
1899 and
1930 he challenged the American holders of the
America's Cup through the
Royal Ulster Yacht Club (Lipton was of
Ulster-Scots descent) five times with his yachts called
Shamrock -Shamrock V. His well publicised efforts to win the cup, which earned him a specially designed cup for "the best of all losers", made his tea brand famous in the
U.S. As a self-made man Lipton, however, was no natural member of the British upper class and the
Royal Yacht Squadron only admitted him shortly before his death.
Before the first
Football World Cup was held in
1930, Thomas Lipton donated the
Sir Thomas Lipton Trophy which was contested in two international tournaments in
Turin in
1909 and
1911.
Private life
Thomas Lipton died at his home, Osidge, in Southgate, London on
October 2,
1931. He bequeathed the majority of his fortune to his native city of Glasgow, including his yachting trophies, which are now on display at the
Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum. Sir Thomas Lipton was buried alongside his parents and siblings in Glasgow's
Southern Necropolis.
Further Information
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