The Guardian Assurance Company was a British insurance company based in London and formed in 1821 to offer both life and fire insurance. Through a combination of organic growth and acquisition it became one of the leading insurance companies. It operated as a mutual organization, meaning that it was owned by its policyholders rather than by shareholders. In 1968 it merged with Royal Exchange to form Guardian Royal Exchange.

Guardian Assurance Plc
Company typePublic
IndustryInsurance
Founded1821; 203 years ago (1821)
Defunct2018; 6 years ago (2018) re-launched in that year
FateMerged with Royal Exchange Assurance
SuccessorAXA and then Gryphon Group Holdings Limited
HeadquartersLondon, UK

History

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The first hundred years

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There ae no records of the original meetings or the motivation of the promoters, but it is believed that there was a substantial involvement by bankers. The chairman, Stewart Marjoribanks, was an East India merchant; and the deputy chairman, Richard Mee Raikes, later became Governor of the Bank of England. A notice in The Times in November 1821 stated that the court of directors of Guardian Fire and Life announce that a general meeting of the subscribers would be held at the City of London Tavern on 10th of December when the deed of settlement would be submitted for approval.[3] The following February the directors announced that "the principles upon which this Institution have been founded have been adopted" and the subscribed capital was £1,500,000.[4] One of the unexplained "principles" of, to use its full name, the Guardian Fire and Life Assurance Company, was that no shares were to be granted to persons resident in the metropolis (London) or within ten miles, except by permission.[5]

Unlike most insurance companies at the time, the Guardian offered both fire insurance and life assurance from the outset, but it was life that made the greater contribution to profits. The important task of constructing mortality tables was entrusted to Griffith Davies; along with Benjamin Gompertz, Davies was considered one of the pioneers of life tables.[6] The first task of the fire department was to establish its own fire brigade, but it was soon looking further afield. As early as 1822, foreign business was being considered. The directors resolved to avoid risks in America and the Levant, but did accept a proposal to insure a church in St Petersburg.[5]

After the seven-year life fund valuation, the first dividends were paid in 1829. In the period from 1821 to 1860, fire profits of £79,000 compared with the £652,000 transferred from the life account. Life business grew rapidly, and by 1842 there were 4,079 policies in force, assuring £4.6 million. After that, new business declined rapidly "and apparently little effort was made". This malaise lasted until about 1880 when a branch and agency system introduced. In 1883 the Guardian bought the London and Provincial Law Assurance Society: the number of policies rose from 4,518 in 1879 to 7,192 in 1884; and by 1914 these had risen to 15,750. However, in the early 1860s, as the life business languished, the fire department began an active overseas expansion. In 1863, agencies were appointed in Canada and in 1868 agencies were opened in Colombo, Penang, Montreal, Nova Scotia and Russia. The first United States agency was opened in New York in 1869 but in 1894 the Guardian withdrew from that market. Acquisitions featured, and between 1890 and 1892 the Guardian bought three businesses in South Africa, one in France and one in Canada.[5]

By the close of the 19th century, the Guardian was expanding the range of its non-life business. Following the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 the Guardian opened an accident department. In 1907-8 it bought two plate glass insurance companies to enter the glass market. The one important area missing from the Guardian portfolio was marine insurance, but this was rectified in 1917 with the purchase of Reliance Marine – the only acquisition financed by the issue of shares.[5]

Guardian Assurance Company Act 1893
Act of Parliament
 
Citation56 & 57 Vict. c. xiii
Dates
Royal assent29 April 1893
Text of statute as originally enacted

In 1893, an act of Parliament, the Guardian Assurance Company Act 1893 (56 & 57 Vict. c. xiii), allowed the Guardian to register as a company under the Companies Acts.[5] It was renamed Guardian Assurance in 1902.[7]

Recent mergers and acquisitions

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In 1967 it acquired Union Insurance Society of Canton Ltd. In 1968 it merged with Royal Exchange Assurance to form Guardian Royal Exchange Assurance.[8]

In February 1999 the Guardian Royal Exchange was purchased by AXA, who subsequently sold the Life and Pensions business to AEGON NV, later that same year. Aegon then sold the business to Cinven in 2011. The Guardian Assurance and Guardian Financial Services brands continued to operate under Cinven until January 2016, when Guardian Financial Services was acquired by Swiss Re's closed book holding company, Admin Re.

The Guardian Financial Services brands were acquired by Gryphon Group Holdings Limited in December 2017, with "Guardian" being the brand for their new challenger protection business, which was due to launch in 2018. Guardian Assurance Limited was due to be acquired by Gryphon.

Further reading

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Tarn and Byles [comp.], A Record of the Guardian Assurance Company 1821-1921, London, 1921.

References

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  1. ^ "The Andersons in the City". Claxity. 15 October 2021.
  2. ^ "An interior view of the Boardroom in the new Guardian Assurance Company offices at 68 King William Street". Historic England.
  3. ^ Times 30 November 1821: https://go.gale.com/ps/start.do?p=TTDA&u=bro_ttda
  4. ^ Times 22 February 1821: https://go.gale.com/ps/start.do?p=TTDA&u=bro_ttda
  5. ^ a b c d e A W Tarn and C E Byles, A Record of the Guardian Assurance Company 1821-1021, London, 1921
  6. ^ "Davies, Griffith (1788–1855)". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales.
  7. ^ Guardian Financial Services: http://guardianfs.co.uk/about_us/index.html[permanent dead link].
  8. ^ "Guardian Financial Services: About us". Archived from the original on 7 February 2009. Retrieved 1 March 2009.
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