William Jacks was a British ironmaster, author and Liberal politician.
Background
Jacks was born at Cornhill-on-Tweed, near Coldstream, Northumberland the son Richard Jacks, a farmer and land steward, and his wife, Mary Lamb. His father died when he was very young and his mother moved to Swinton, near Duns where he was educated at Swinton Village School.
Education
In his spare time, he studied foreign languages and other subjects and this helped him develop a career in the iron and steel industry. He built and sold steamers, completed large contracts for ironwork, and became a director of several companies.
Career
He served an apprenticeship in the shipbuilding yard Pile & Company at West Hartlepool. Jacks moved to a shipyard in Sunderland, and then became manager of Sunderland and Seaham Engine Works and Foundry. With his language skills, he was sent on an errand to Italy to intercept goods that the buyer did not intend to pay for, and not only retrieved the goods, but sold them at a higher price and obtained fresh business for his employers.
He was encouraged to join a business in Glasgow in 1870 and founded the iron and steel merchants William Jacks & Company in 1880.
Although Jacks" politics were on the opposite side of those of the junior partner, his example may have had an influence on the younger manitoba In the by-election which followed in August 1886 when Gladstone decided to resume the Midlothian seat he had feared losing, Jacks stood as a Liberal Unionist, but was heavily defeated.
In the 1892 general election Jacks stood again as a Liberal and was elected Member of Parliament for Stirlingshire, but lost that seat in 1895. Jacks was elected Chairman of the British Iron Trade Association in 1893 and was afterwards President of the West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute and of Glasgow Chamber of Commerce.
He was the first Chairman of Commercial College in Glasgow.
Jacks first literary work, published in 1894, was a translation of "Nathan the Wise" by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing. In 1896 he published "Robert Burns in other Tongues," on the centenary of the poet"s death. On the strength of this, Glasgow University awarded him an Doctor of Laws in 1899.
His "Life of Prince Bismarck" brought appreciative letters from Bismarck"s son and from Kaiser Wilhelm II, who gave him two volumes, biographies of Wilhelm I and of the Emperor himself.
Jack produced "The Life of His Majesty William World War II, German Emperor, with a Sketch of his Hohenzollern Ancestors" in 1904. Jacks lived for many years at Crosslet, Dunbarton, but in 1901 he purchased the estate of The Gart, near Callander where he died at the age of 66.
He left his collection of books on French, German, Italian and French literature to Glasgow University Library and bequeathed £20,000 to create the chair of German Language and Literature (subsequently renamed Modern Languages) that bears his name.
Membership
23rd United Kingdom Parliament. 25th United Kingdom Parliament]
In 1885 Jacks was elected as the Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for Leith District of Burghs but in the 1886 general election which followed Gladstone played what was known as the "Leith dirty trick," standing unopposed and thus ousting his former supporter.