P_10433_2699 – William Annand
Owner of a single voyage of the Mary Ann from London the Sierra Leone estuary and then to Grenada in 1775. He has not been further traced with certainty but was probably the William Annand merchant of St Alban Wood Street whose will was proved in 1802.
Title: /
First name: William
Middle name: /
Last name: Annand
Aliases: Annand, Wm
Primary cohort: London
Sex: Male
Religion: /
Social background: /
Primary outcome: /
Political Affiliation: /
Relations
No information
Political Offices Held
No Information
Bankruptcies
Geographic experiences
No Information
Internal migrant: No
Foreign born: No
Supplier to slave trade voyages: No
Creditor to slave trade voyages: No
Philanthropy: No
Plantation owner: No
Sources: PROB 11/1380/287 London Gazette 25 June 1771Issue:11156Page:3 https://www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/commercial/view/2146005838 The William Annand in the Dictionary of Canadian Biography appears unconnected, http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/annand_william_11E.html.
Other Individuals
No information
Organisations
No information
Crossings (1)
78181 - Mary Ann (1775 - 1775)
Role: Owner
Birth
Date: /
Location: /
Death
Date: /
Location: /
Burial
Date: 01/09/1802
Location: /
Memorial details: /
Christening: /
Knighthood: /
Baronetcy: /
Peerage: /
Residencies
No information
Occupation: /
Schools
No Information
Universities
No Information
Inns of Court
No Information
Military training
No Information
Imperial positions
No Information
Apprenticeships
No Information
Livery company affiliations
No Information
Other business activities
No Information
Was slave trading profitable: No
Will
Value of Total Personalty: /
Value of Known Legacies (where material to total estate): /
Occupation: /
Town/City: City of London (Middlesex)
Courts: PCC
Will of William Annand (made in 1797 with codicils of 1800) merchant of Little Love Lane in the parish of St Alban, Wood Street, was proved 24/09/1802. He left real estate in the City of London to his nephews Alexander and William, sons of John Annand of Aberdeen, with the intention that they should continue in business as his successors, and £7500 to his nieces Helen (£3000), Margaret, Christian and Eliza (£1500 each). Under a separate deed he had disposed of his Scottish property, instructing his executors to sell it for his residuary heirs, his nephews Alexander, William and Adam. In a codicil of 1800 he raised his legacies to his three younger nieces to £2000, £2000 and £1750 and added a legacy of £500 to a great-nephew.
Legacies
No information
No information