The Lauder Greenway family is a Scottish-American family whose influence on, and involvement in, American political and economic affairs dates from the 1640s through the contemporary era. Their primary contributions have been in the sciences, government, and intelligence. The most notable members are George Lauder and his "cousin-brother" Andrew Carnegie. They co-created the Carnegie Steel Corporation, the forerunner to U.S. Steel, and subsequently became two of the richest men in the world.[1]
History
George Lauder Sr. was a 19th-century Scottish businessman and political radical in Dunfermline who raised and educated George Lauder and Andrew Carnegie.[2] After the two younger men moved to the United States, Lauder married Anna Maria Romeyn Varick, a patrician Old Dutch New Yorker. She was a direct descendant of many prominent New Yorkers of history including Joris Jansen Rapelje a founder of the colony of New Amsterdam in 1624 who was a member of the Council of Twelve Men, the first democratic body in the history of the United States (1641). Also, Colonel Richard Varick, the private secretary to George Washington and the first mayor of New York City after independence from 1789 to 1800.[3]
George and Anna Lauder had three children, including George Lauder III, Elizabeth Storm Lauder, and Harriet Lauder. Harriet married Dr. James C. Greenway in 1903 connecting the two families. Dr. Greenway was descended from several prominent generations of Americans since the Revolutionary War including two signers of the Fincastle Resolutions (General Evan Shelby and General William Campbell) and GovernorIssac Shelby, the first Governor of the state of Kentucky.[4] His great-grandfather was Dr.Ephraim McDowell the pioneer surgeon who was the first person to successfully remove an ovarian tumor. He has been called "the father of ovariotomy"[5] as well as founding father of abdominal surgery.[6][7]
Business activities
Engineering
The Lauder Greenway family made an enormous impact on the Industrial Revolution in their contributions to metals, mining, and mechanical engineering industries which is the source of their modern wealth. George Lauder was a mechanical engineer who studied under Lord Kelvin and lead the scientific arm of the Carnegie Steel Corporation.[1] He was the second largest shareholder of the company, behind Andrew Carnegie when they sold Carnegie Steel to J.P. Morgan and created U.S. Steel which Lauder sat on the board of. This was the first corporation in the world with a market capitalization exceeding US$1 billion ($51.3 billion today).[8]
John Campbell Greenway, a former Rough Rider with Theodore Roosevelt,[9] was a mechanical engineer like Lauder who helped revolutionize the iron ore and copper mining industries in America at the turn of the century. He developed the first large-scale iron ore benefication plants in the world and would later build large copper mining concerns in Arizona including the New Cornelia mine which became the first large open pit mine in Arizona. Greenways Calumet and Arizona Mining Company would then be purchased by the Phelps Dodge Corporation consolidating almost total control of copper mining in the United States.[10]
Purchased by Harriet Lauder Greenway and Dr. James C. Greenway after they were married in 1903, they would greatly expand the house and outbuildings after the purchase. At its peak, the estate was over 100 acres. Then the family began donating large parcels of land for various causes. In 1918, James and Harriet gifted one of the islands to the town of Greenwich; the property, located about two miles south of Greenwich Harbor, now serves as the popular Island Beach. The couple donated the first ferry providing transportation to the beach for town residents two years later.[20] Considered "...Greenwich, Conn.'s last Great Estate, an opulent robber baron-era property enveloping 50 prized acres along the tony New York suburb's waterfront." It is the largest surviving Gilded Age mansion in Connecticut.[21]
Harriet Lauder Greenway and James Greenway Sr. (married 1903), whose marriage linked the Lauder and Greenway Families together and purchased the Lauder Greenway Estate. They also gifted the endowment that created the Yale School of Public Health
George Lauder Jr. (1878–1916), philanthropist and yachtsman whose schooner, the Endymion, held the record for fastest transatlantic crossing.
George V. Lauder Sr. (1924–2012), Chief of Latin American Division for the CIA, Director of Public Affairs for the CIA, Deputy Inspector General of the CIA.
^ abLeslie Thomas Morton, Robert J. Moore, 2005, A Bibliography of Medical and Biomedical Biography. Ashgate,. p. 238
^ abJames Ramage, Andrea S. Watkins (2011). Kentucky Rising: Democracy, Slavery, and Culture from the Early Republic to the Civil War. University Press of Kentucky