Henry J. Steere
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Henry Jonah Steere (1830-1889) was a prominent American philanthropist and industrialist from Rhode Island.
Henry J. Steere was born in Providence, Rhode Island on April 11, 1830 to Alice Smith (1789-1863) and Jonah Steere (1788-1871), a manufacturer, saddler and harness maker. Henry was their only surviving child. Steere was a Yankee, whose ancestor John Steere immigrated to the Providence from Britain before 1660. Henry J. Steere was educated at home and in the public schools, eventually graduating from Providence's high school. Steere then became a clerk in in the Merchants Bank.
Steere eventually entered the textile manufacturing business, acquiring mills in the towns of Providence, Burrillville, Smithfield, and Glocester. Steere was also president or a director of Northern Bank, Globe National Bank, Fifth National Bank, Washington Insurance Company, Economical Insurance Company, and City Savings Bank. Among his business concerns was the Waskuck Mills which Steere founded with Jesse Metcalf and Stephen Olney. Because of the mills’ rapid success, expansions were made by Steere on Wild Street in 1884 and on Douglas Avenue by the company in 1893. The mills were named Steere Mills and Geneva Mills. The company later expanded its operations outside of Providence, building both Mohegan and Oakland Mills. Steere died on October 28, 1889 of sudden kidney problems with no children or surviving siblings.
Henry Steere left his $1.139 million fortune (about $22 million in 2006 dollars) to many individuals and charities. $654,000 was given to individuals in sums ranging from $100,00 to $10,000, including bequests of money and real property to the children of his first cousin Seth H. Steere, including Senator Arthur Steere. Other individuals receiving bequests and trusts included: Mary Ann White, Lydia Jane Westcott, Charles H. Atwood, Horace Steere, Job Steere, Asa Westcott, Charles S. Westcott, Frances Irons, Smith Salisbury, Daniel Salisbury, Joseph Salisbury, Jesse H. Metcalf, Stephen Metcalf, Marton Metcalf, Eliza Radeke, Sophia Baker, Alfred Metcalf, Emily Arnold, Thomas Holden, Thomas Steere, Julia Miner, Charles H. Steere, Edward Knowles, Lee Salisbury, Nelson Steere, Albert Steere, . Steere donated $340,000 to charities including: Steere House (Home for the Aged Men and Home for Aged Women), Beneficent Congregational Church, St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, Rhode Island Historical Society, Roanoke College, and Tabor College in Iowa. Steere was buried at North Burial Ground in Providence.
Throughout his life Steere had been active as a member of the Franklin Society of the Rhode Island Historical Society and as a trustee of Rhode Island Hospital. Steere built Beneficent Congregational Church as a memorial to his father with a donation of $30,000. Earlier in his life, Steere served as a lieutenant in the First Light Infantry where he served at Portsmouth Grove, Rhode Island near the Lowell General Hospital. A descendant of Arthur Steere, one of Steere's heirs currently runs the Henry J. Steere Orchards in Greenville, Rhode Island.
[edit] References
- John Steere Family Album, (Chepachet: Steere Family Association, 1981).
- James, Root, Steere Genealogy, (Providence: Riverside Press, 1890) (created at Henry Steere's request)
- The Providence Journal, "The Will of Mr. Henry J. Steere in Detail," November 1, 1889, pg. 3.
- The Providence Journal, "Obituary: Henry J. Steere," October 29, 1889, pg. 8.