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  1. Hoare died at Hendon on 6 January 1719. A monument to his memory stands in the church of St Dunstan-in-the-West and was designed and created by Thomas Stayner. Family. Hoare married Susanna Austen; they had 17 children (one of whom was Henry Hoare I). References

  2. Feb 17, 2022 · Venetia Hoare became a partner in 1996 and was the first woman to do so / Photography: Christopher Doyle. In 1690, the bank moved to Fleet Street and it has done business there, under the famous sign of the golden bottle, ever since. Today, it remains under the watchful eye of Sir Richard’s descendants.

  3. Trustworthiness was the defining trait of Richard Hoare’s business and character. It was a genuine commercial asset, more real and reassuring than any of the padlocked strongboxes in his cellar. His banking activities had made him wealthy by the turn of the century, and he became well-known and respected in the City.

  4. C. Hoare & Co., also known as Hoares, is a British private bank, founded in 1672 by Sir Richard Hoare; it is currently owned and led by the eleventh and twelfth generation of his direct descendants.

  5. Jul 3, 2019 · The London firm was started in 1672 by Richard Hoare and has tended to the affairs of diarist Samuel Pepys, poet Lord Byron and novelist Jane Austen.

  6. May 6, 2018 · Britain’s oldest bank is replacing two of its octogenarian owners with a 32-year-old partner to inject some “millennial thinking” into the venerable family-controlled institution.

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  8. Jan 18, 2019 · Sir Richard, an only child, was baptised at St Giles’ Cripplegate on 8 September 1649. He began an apprenticeship in 1665, the year of the Great Plague, before qualifying as a goldsmith in 1672. He married Susanna Austen three weeks later, on 30 July 1672. In 1702, he was knighted by Queen Anne.

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