Early life Antony Gibbs was born in
Exeter,
Devon; he was the third son of Dr. George Abraham Gibbs (1718–1794), from
Clyst St George, Devon, Chief Surgeon at the
Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital. After leaving
Exeter Grammar School, Antony Gibbs was apprenticed to merchant Nicholas Brooke, whose firm exported locally made woollen cloth to
Spain. Brooke sent Antony to
Madrid, where he became fluent in Spanish. After his apprenticeship ended in 1778, Antony set up in business exporting cloth to Spain, Italy and elsewhere with his brother Abraham (1754–1782). After Abraham's early death in 1782, in 1784 Antony married his brother's former fiancée Dorothea Barnetta Hucks (Dolly). With money borrowed from his father, in 1786 Antony established a cloth factory at
Exwick in the outskirts of Exeter – Gibbs, Granger & Banfill. However by 1789 Antony Gibbs had over extended himself, borrowing from his father and others, and both he and his father were declared
bankrupt in 1789, leaving them with debts of £40,000.
Spain and Portugal Following his business failure in Exeter, in 1789 Antony Gibbs moved to
Madrid with his wife and children, where he spent nearly 20 years acting as an agent for several
merchant houses in England (including the Exwick factory) and trading in his own right. His son
William was born in Madrid in May 1790. Antony wished to clear his name and repay his creditors, and whilst in Spain he formed a business network, and began exporting cloth from England to the
Iberian peninsula, and exporting Spanish wine and fruit back to England. Driven out of Spain by war in 1797 he conducted his business in
Lisbon from 1798 to 1801, but in 1802 returned to Spain and became established as a merchant in
Cadiz. In 1804 with the likely outbreak of
war between Spain and Britain, Antony needed a new market for his goods, and he realised that he could trade with the Spanish
colonies in
South America. In 1806 he chartered the
Hermosa Mexicana with a shipment of textiles for the round trip from Lisbon to
Lima; on the return journey importing produce from
Peru into London. This was the start of the family's trade with South America which would go on to make the Gibbs fortune. In September 1808 he founded the firm of Antony Gibbs & Son with his eldest son (George) Henry Gibbs (1785–1842) who, although christened George, was always referred to by his second name, Henry. Another son,
William Gibbs (1789–1875) who had been working for
George Gibbs and Sons in Bristol, moved to London to act as clerk to the Commission and to his father's firm. By 1813 Henry had been made a partner managing the London office, and William was in Spain, running the office there. This same year the firm was renamed Antony Gibbs & Sons when William joined the
partnership. == Gibbs family members' continuation in the business ==