Person    | Male  Born 3/8/1850  Died 28/11/1929

Leo Bonn

Categories: Commerce, Social Welfare

Countries: France, Germany

A merchant banker. Aged about 70 he started to lose his hearing. Founded what is now the Royal National Institute for Deaf People at his London home.

Leopold Bernhard Bonn was born on 3 August 1850 in Frankfurt, Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany, the ninth of the ten children of Baruch Bonn (1810-1878) and Betty Bonn née Schuster (1806-1877). His father was a prominent Jewish banker.

He was privately educated and after the annexation of Frankfurt by Prussia in 1866, he went to work for the banker S. Kann in Paris, France. He moved to England in 1870 at the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War where he joined the firm of G. and A. Worms. In 1871, he became the manager of the German Bank and is shown on the 1871 census as a banker, lodging at the home of Augustus and Elizabeth Berman at 40 Conduit Street, Westminster. 

On 14 June 1876 he applied for British Naturalisation claiming to be "a native of Frankfurt-on-the-Maine in the Empire of Germany, a foreign banker residing at 5 Angel Court in the City of London". This was granted on 11 December 1876 when he swore an Oath of Allegiance to H.M. Queen Victoria in front of Thomas White, Lord Mayor of London, at the Mansion House.

It was in 1877 that he joined Speyer Brothers, the London bank that provided the lion’s share of the finance for the new Metropolitan District Railway Company.

In 1880 he married Ida Amelia Eltzbacher (1859-1945) and they had two daughters and a son.

The 1881 census shows him as a merchant living at 7 Queens Gate Gardens, Kensington, with his wife, a maid, a housemaid, a cook and man-servant.

In 1895 he established his own merchant bank, the Bonn Bank, that in 1921 merged with Herbert Wagg & Co.

In the1901 census he is recorded as a banker living at 22 Upper Brook Street, Mayfair, with his wife, daughters Lily and Elsie, a cook, two lady's maids, two housemaids, a kitchen-maid and a footman.

The 1911 census confirms that he was a retired banker residing at Cranfield Court, Cranfield, Bedfordshire, a 41-roomed house that included 31 bedrooms and 7 reception rooms, together with his wife, son, both daughters, a son-in-law, a grandson, 4 visitors that included a sister-in-law, a governess, a cook/housekeeper, 5 lady's maids, 4 housemaids, a kitchen-maid, a scullery maid, a butler, 2 footmen and a hall-boy. 

He died, aged 79 years, on 28 November 1929 at Newbold Revel, Stretton-under-Fosse, Rugby, Warwickshire a property he had acquired in 1911 and probate records show that his London address remained as 22 Upper Brook Street. Probate was granted on 10 February 1930 jointly to his widow; to his son Walter Basil Louis Bonn, a retired officer in H.M. army; to his nephew Sir Max Julius Bonn, KBE; and to a banker Louis Fleischmann. His effects totalled £220,779-0s-6d.

Credit for this entry to: Andrew Behan.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Leo Bonn

Commemorated ati

Leo Bonn

City of Westminster Leo Bonn (1850 - 1929) founded what is now the Royal Nat...

Read More

Other Subjects

C.W.S.

C.W.S.

The Co-operative Wholesale Society (CWS) began in Manchester. It was a pioneer in improving working conditions for its employees. The name was changed to the Co-operative Group in 2001.

Group, Commerce

1 memorial
Finlays

Finlays

From Finlays we learn that: James Finlay (d. 1790) began his career in Glasgow in the family textile business selling cotton goods. He moved into embroidered muslins and also manufacture. His son K...

Group, Commerce, Food & Drink, Gardens / Agriculture, Africa, Scotland, Sri Lanka

1 memorial
South Suburban Gas Company

South Suburban Gas Company

Founded as the North Surrey Gas Company, it became the Crystal Palace District Gas Company before changing to its final name in 1904. It amalgamated with various other companies and was nationalise...

Group, Commerce

1 memorial
P. J. Fowler

P. J. Fowler

Trader at Covent Garden Market at its original site.

Group, Commerce

1 memorial
Galen Weston

Galen Weston

Businessman Willard Gordon Galen Weston was born in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, his father being a Canadian businessman. Having studied business Weston went to Dublin and set up his own grocery store ...

Person, Commerce, Philanthropy, Canada, Ireland

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Elias Davy - Church Street

Elias Davy - Church Street

CR0, Church Street, Elis David Almshouse

These alms houses were built 1875 (north range) and 1887 (south range), and the site has the remains of a Second World War air raid shelt...

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
British Empire Exhibition

British Empire Exhibition

The exhibition was held in Wembley Park. It was a showcase of aspects of many of the British colonies at the time. It had 18 million visitors in 1924, but failed to break even. The main stadium was...

Event, Museums / Libraries

1 memorial
May Fair

May Fair

The annual 15 day May Fair used to be held at the Haymarket but in 1686 it moved to the site of Curzon Street and Shepherd Market. About 100 years later it was suppressed by the local residents, ...

Event, Commerce

1 memorial
Chessum

Chessum

A firm of builders and contractors active in 1880. From British History Online: "Jesse Chessum, a builder who lived in Paradise Place in 1871, Holly Bush Lodge, Green Lanes in 1877, and Amhurst Pa...

Group, Property

1 memorial
St George West London Ltd.

St George West London Ltd.

Property developers within the Barclay Group.

Group, Property

1 memorial