Norton was born on March 12, 1871, in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.[1] He was a son of the Rev. Franklin Burroughs Norton (1833–1895)[2] and Harriet Arvilla (née Dyer) Norton (1846–1921).[3] Through his mother, he was a direct descendant of Mary Dyer, the Quaker martyr, and of Roger Williams, founder of Rhode Island.[3]
He graduated from Amherst College with the class of 1893.[1] His father had graduated from Amherst in 1856.[2]
Career
Norton spent several years with Scribner's Magazine before becoming associated with the Northwest Mutual Life Insurance Company, eventually becoming general agent for the company in Chicago. He stayed with Northwest Mutual until 1909 when he became Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under President Taft's Secretary Franklin MacVeagh, replacing Louis A. Coolidge who served under President Roosevelt's Secretary George B. Cortelyou.[4] In 1910, Norton left the Treasury Department (and was succeeded by A. Piatt Andrew)[5] to become Secretary to President William Howard Taft, where he "organized the Commission on Economy and Efficiency which prepared the Government estimates on a budge basis for the first time." He worked for Taft for one year and was succeeded by fellow former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, Charles D. Hilles.[1][6]
In 1911, he left the White House to become Vice President of the First National Bank of New York (which later became Citibank).[7] He replaced Thomas W. Lamont, who left to become a partner at J. P. Morgan & Co.[7] In 1918, Norton retired as vice president of the Bank, and became president of the First Security Company, an affiliated institution, succeeding George Fisher Baker who became chairman of the board.[8]
While at the Treasury, Norton became a member of the Executive Committee and Treasurer of the American Red Cross as well as a trustee. In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson appointed him one of the five members of the Red Cross War Council, which assumed the management of the Red Cross in its war work. He also served as a trustee of the Russell Sage Foundation and was chairman of the Special Committee on Plan of New York and its Environs as well as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Academy in Rome, and a trustee and treasurer of the American Federation of Arts.[1]
Lucia Garrison Norton (1902–1992), who married Alan C. Valentine in 1928.[10][11]
Charles McKim Norton (1907–1991),[12] who married pianist Martha Chipman Hutcheson (d. 1988) in 1939.[13]
Norton died of complications from influenza on March 6, 1923, at 4 East 66th Street, his home in New York City.[1][14] At the time of his death, his eldest son was a senior at Harvard, his daughter was a senior at Smith, and his younger son was at Groton.[1] He was buried at Rosedale Cemetery in New Jersey. His widow, who never remarried, died in New York on February 8, 1948.