displayed at
Westminster College, Cambridge Hugh Mackay Matheson was born in
Edinburgh on 23 April 1821. He was the second son of
Duncan Matheson, an advocate at the Scottish bar and Deputy Sheriff of Edinburgh. Educated at the
Royal High School, Matheson then served a seven-year commercial apprenticeship at the
Glasgow firm James Ewing & Co. During his time in Glasgow, Matheson was an active lay member of the
Church of Scotland and the St. Enoch's Sabbath School Society. He played an important role in developing early trading relations with
Meiji-era Japan. In 1843, Matheson declined an offer from his uncle
James Matheson to join
Jardine Matheson in
Hong Kong due to the company's extensive links with the
Chinese opium trade. He nonetheless took a new London based corresponding agent role serving the interests of the firm working at Magniac-Jardine and Company to arrange and negotiate the sale of tea, silk and other commodities shipped to England from the Far East. In 1845, Matheson undertook an 18-month tour to India and China in order to be better acquainted with commercial and trading opportunities in those countries. == Links with Japan ==