Edward Hamlin Everett (May 18, 1851 – April 26, 1929) was a noted American businessman and philanthropist, and a founder of the Bennington Museum in Bennington, Vermont.
Early life
Everett was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on May 18, 1851. He was a son of Dr. Henry Everett (1819–1854), a urologist who died when he was only three years old, and Mary (née Hamlin) (1830–1890). After his mother remarried to Henry W. Putnam, a businessman, inventor, manufacturer, and philanthropist, she moved to New York City and young Everett stayed in Cleveland with his uncle, Sylvester T. Everett. Sylvester was a financier who began his career at Cleveland's oldest banking house, Brockway, Wason, Everett & Co., which had been co-founded by Edward's father, Dr. Henry Everett. His uncle married a granddaughter of Jeptha Wade as his second wife.[1] Through his mother, Edward was related to Hannibal Hamlin, Abraham Lincoln's first vice president.[1]
Edward lived with his uncle in Cleveland for five years and spent summers in Bennington, Vermont, with his mother and stepfather. In 1866, Edward enrolled at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. However, he left Phillips at the end of one year, and enrolled in Bennington High School, where he graduated two years later in 1869.[1]
Career
He began his career as a bottle salesman for his stepfather, Henry W. Putnam, the inventor of the Lightning fruit jar (a predecessor to the Mason jar). In 1870, he returned to Cleveland, where he took a job as a bank clerk, staying there for another seven or eight years during which he learned about glass manufacturing. He moved to Chicago sometime around 1877.[1]
In September 1880, Everett purchased the Star Glass Works in Newark, Ohio, and five years later, in 1885, Everett renamed his company the E.H. Everett Company, capitalized at $100,000, of which he held 96% of the shares. Everett continued to acquire companies and expand his holdings before forming the Ohio Bottle Company, valued at $4 million, in 1904. A year later, he merged the Ohio Bottle Company with the Adolphus Busch Glass Manufacturing Company in St. Louis and a number of smaller Illinois and Ohio firms to form the American Bottle Company. The American Bottle Company later merged with Corning to eventually become Owens Corning.[1]
In 1887, one of his workers in Ohio struck natural gas and, by 1906, Everett owned 50 gas wells in Licking and Knox County, later drilling over 400 wells. He expanded his investments later extended to cattle, real estate, orchids and apple orchards, and large stockholdings the Anheuser-Busch Co. His orchard of 70,000 trees at Old Bennington was once the largest one-man owned orchard in America. He was also one of the first manufacturers of automobiles. Between 1914 and 1924, his fruit orchard businesses in Vermont and Ohio suffered operating losses of over $600,000. In late 1919, he sold his Texas enterprises and properties near Port O'Connor for a loss of $133,000. In mid-1921, Everett was forced to cash out of his $3 million share of a $40 million New York syndicate that was to build two commercial buildings adjacent to Grand Central Terminal in Midtown Manhattan.[1]
Personal life
On July 8, 1886, Everett was married to Amy Webster King (1863–1917), the daughter of Oren Granger King, a business associate. Together, they were the parents of three daughters:[1]
Amy King Everett (1887–1964), who married Dr. Lucius Arthur Wing, a son of Charles Mayhew Wing.[2]
Mary Putnam Everett (1892–1961), who married Luigi Guilio Turri and lived in Italy.[3][4]
Anne Holton Everett (1897–1948), who married James Kirtland Selden of Methuen Mills.[5][6][7]
Sarah Everett (1922–2006), who married Horace D. McCowan Jr., a lawyer and chairman of the E. H. Everett Company, an oil and gas production company in Newark, Ohio[11] in 1950.[12][13][14]
In 1922, Everett was diagnosed with prostate cancer. Everett died at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston on April 26, 1929, of complications from prostate cancer surgery. He was buried in the Everett mausoleum in Park Lawn Cemetery in Bennington, Vermont (purportedly modeled after the Theseion at the Acropolis of Athens). Prior to the 1929 stock market crash, Everett's wealth was estimated to be between $40–50 million.[15] However, it was greatly reduced due to the depression and poor business decisions in his later years.[1] His last will left most of his estate to his second wife, Grace; however, his daughters from his first marriage contested the will. A legal battle ensued that would last for several years.[16] In April 1936, Grace sold their Washington residence, and all its furnishings and interior decorations, to the Turkish government for $402,000.[1]
In June 1911, Everett purchased the venerable Richmond Hotel at 17th and H Streets, and several adjoining properties for $275,000. The Richmond, which was diagonally across from the Metropolitan Club had been built in 1883. Beginning in the summer of 1912, he extensively renovated and refurnished the hotel to make it more upscale and appealing to an affluent clientele.[1]
^Harvard Alumni Bulletin. Harvard Bulletin, Incorporated. 1921. p. 205. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
^of 1916, Harvard College (1780-) Class (1922). Secretary's Third Report. p. 402. Retrieved 16 September 2020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Chessman, Wallace G. and Curtis W. Abbott, Edward Hamlin Everett: The Bottle King, Grandville, OH: The Robbins Hunter Museum, John David Jones Educational Fund, 1991.