He was educated at Mount Airy College in Germantown, Philadelphia, from 1809 to 1813, when he left school to work with his father in Delaware.[1]
Professional career
In 1815, the textile manufacturing company of Du Pont, Bauduy & Co. ended acrimoniously. Pierre de Bauduy de Bellevue [fr], a Frenchman who had invested in the business in 1803, eventually sued the du Ponts over various disagreements. (The lawsuit was decided in the du Pont's favor in 1924.[2])
After de Bauduy's departure, Charles and his father formed the partnership of Victor & Charles I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. After Victor's death in 1827, the firm continued to operate as Charles I. du Pont & Co., with the U.S. Army as a major client for its cloth. Charlies retired in 1856, at which point E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co. purchased his company.[1]
He was elected a director of the Farmers' Bank of Delaware in 1830, and served as president of the bank from 1865 to 1868. In 1853, he was made director of the Delaware Railroad Company, and was also a director of the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad Company and the Columbia Insurance Co. of Philadelphia. He was also of the Brandywine Manufacturers' Sunday School and vice president of the Delaware Improvement Association.[1]
In 1824, du Pont married Dorcas Montgomery Van Dyke (born 1806), daughter of U.S. Senator and Representative Nicholas Van Dyke III and granddaughter of Delaware Governor Nicholas Van Dyke Jr. Their wedding was attended by the Marquis de Lafayette.[3] They had three children: Victor, Mary Van Dyke and Charles Jr.
After Dorcas' death in 1838,[4] he married Ann Ridgely (born 1815). Like his first wife, Ridgely was the daughter of a U.S. Senator and Representative from Delaware, Henry M. Ridgely. They had two children: Amélia Elizabeth (who married her cousin Eugene du Pont) and Henry Ridgely.