This article explores the widening ownership of stocks and shares in Great Britain between 1870 and 1935. It demonstrates the extent of that growth and the increasing number of small investors. Women became more important in terms of the number of shareholders and value of holdings. Factors that encouraged this trend included the issue of less risky types of investments, and legal changes relating to married women's property. We examine the ‘deepening’ importance of stocks and shares for wealth holders, arguing that the growing significance of these kinds of financial assets was as important as the growth in the investor population
There is considerable scope for increasing the understanding of the history of share ownership. Exis...
Studies of wealth-holding in nineteenth-century Britain focus either on establishing aggregate measu...
This article offers a new perspective on what it meant to be a business proprietor in Victorian Brit...
There is a growing literature on the history of investment in Britain. However, the role played by w...
Modern historians infrequently acknowledge that women were financial investors before the twentieth ...
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed significant developments in the structur...
Who financed the great expansion of the Victorian equity market, and what attracted them to invest? ...
Who financed the great expansion of the Victorian equity market, and what attracted them to invest? ...
The early twentieth century saw the British capital market reach a state of maturity before any of i...
This paper investigates the role of women as shareholders in joint stock companies, and how far they...
This paper investigates the role of women as shareholders in joint stock companies, and how far they...
After the introduction of limited liability, a growing number of individuals in Britain from a widen...
A major ESRC-funded study of women and wealth in England and Wales 1870 to 1930 suggests that over t...
In recent years, there has been a notable increase in the amount of scholarship on the history of sh...
At the start of the twentieth century the sociologist, Georg Simmel, suggested that the emergence of...
There is considerable scope for increasing the understanding of the history of share ownership. Exis...
Studies of wealth-holding in nineteenth-century Britain focus either on establishing aggregate measu...
This article offers a new perspective on what it meant to be a business proprietor in Victorian Brit...
There is a growing literature on the history of investment in Britain. However, the role played by w...
Modern historians infrequently acknowledge that women were financial investors before the twentieth ...
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed significant developments in the structur...
Who financed the great expansion of the Victorian equity market, and what attracted them to invest? ...
Who financed the great expansion of the Victorian equity market, and what attracted them to invest? ...
The early twentieth century saw the British capital market reach a state of maturity before any of i...
This paper investigates the role of women as shareholders in joint stock companies, and how far they...
This paper investigates the role of women as shareholders in joint stock companies, and how far they...
After the introduction of limited liability, a growing number of individuals in Britain from a widen...
A major ESRC-funded study of women and wealth in England and Wales 1870 to 1930 suggests that over t...
In recent years, there has been a notable increase in the amount of scholarship on the history of sh...
At the start of the twentieth century the sociologist, Georg Simmel, suggested that the emergence of...
There is considerable scope for increasing the understanding of the history of share ownership. Exis...
Studies of wealth-holding in nineteenth-century Britain focus either on establishing aggregate measu...
This article offers a new perspective on what it meant to be a business proprietor in Victorian Brit...