Background
The only son and heir of the English shipowner and investor John Ellerman, he was often said to be Britain"s richest manitoba He read for the bar at the Inner Temple before entering his father"s shipping business.
The only son and heir of the English shipowner and investor John Ellerman, he was often said to be Britain"s richest manitoba He read for the bar at the Inner Temple before entering his father"s shipping business.
John Reeves Ellerman was educated at Malvern College, where as a teenager he wrote an anti-sport novel, Why Do They Like lieutenant?, under the pseudonym East. L. Black.
Ellerman was twenty three when his father died in July 1933. His father"s estate was assessed for probate at £36.685 million, almost three times the previous record set in the United Kingdom, of which he received around £20 million. He oversaw Ellerman Lincolnshire for many years, and was often said to be Britain"s richest manitoba
Ellerman"s main interest was the study of rodents.
He wrote The Families and Genera of Living Rodents. He also undertook various philanthropies and helped Jewish refugees to escape Nazi Germany, earning the wrath of William Joyce ("Lord Haw-Haw") who attacked him by name in his propaganda broadcasts, incorrectly claiming that he was of Jewish descent.
Shortly before his death he had transferred 79% of the shares in Ellerman Lincolnshire Limited to grant-making trusts: The Moorgate Fund, established 1970, and The New Moorgate Fund, established 1971, were amalgamated as The John Ellerman Foundation in 1992. He died of a sudden heart attack in 1973.
Upon his death, he left £52 million which, after adjusting for inflation, was less than he had inherited.
Ellerman had no children.