Ramsden was
lord of the manor of
Huddersfield, and, through the
Ramsden Estate, owner of a large proportion of the town as well as a total of 11,248 acres of the West Riding. In addition he acquired in the 1870s a 138,000 acre deer forest at Ardverikie,
Laggan, Inverness-shire (where he built
Ardverikie House), and 800 acres of
Lincolnshire. In the 1850s Ramsden's brother-in-law,
Edward Horsman developed the Penang Sugar Estates in
Malaysia's
Province Wellesley. Horsman was an absentee landowner and his enterprise was not successful, but Ramsden provided financial backing for a number of years. Ramsden paid off the creditors when Horsman became
bankrupt in 1874 and as part of the final settlement he took title of the estates. Like Horsman, Ramsden never visited Malaya but he did develop the estates there and he established Penang Rubber Estates in a shift to growing rubber instead of sugar. By the mid 1880s Ramsden's Malayan business was generating more income than his business interests in Huddersfield. When he died Ramsden owned more than 44,000 acres of cultivated plantation land in Malaya. He served as
High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1868/69. ==University of Huddersfield==