Edward Francis Hutton

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Edward Francis Hutton (September 7, 1875, New York City - July 11, 1962, Westbury, Long Island, New York) was an American financier and co-founder of E. F. Hutton & Co..

Edward Hutton was born to James Laws Hutton, who left an Ohio farm to work in New York City. James died at the age of 37 when Hutton was only ten years old, leaving Edward to be raised by his mother. As a schoolboy, Hutton attended the New York Latin School before transferring to P.S. 69. During his adolescence, he worked in a gear factory at age fifteen and then two years later in the mailroom of a securities firm. He completed his studies by taking classes at Trinity Chapel High School and Packer's Business College.

He married his first wife Blanche Horton (b. Dec.6 1884) on October 9, 1900. Blanche was the daughter of investment banker Henry Lawrence Horton. They had one son named Halcourt Horton Hutton, who was born in New York City on May 7, 1902. Blanche died in December, 18, 1917 in the [[Influenza epidemic]. Their son Halcourt was killed in a horse riding accident on Long Island on September 25, 1920.

His second wife was General Foods heiress, Marjorie Merriweather Post, whom he married in 1920. During their marriage (which ended in divorce in 1935) they built several famous houses including Hillwood a Tudor revival style mansion on Long Islands North shore, Mar-A-Lago (now owned by Donald Trump and operated as the Mar-a-Lago Club) in Palm Beach, Florida, and the largest privately owned sea-going yacht of the era, the "Hussar IV", which is best known as the Sea Cloud. Their only child, actress Dina Merrill (born Nedenia Marjorie Hutton) for years served as the only female director on the board of the E. F. Hutton & Co. her father founded in 1914. The Huttons divorced in 1935 after evidence of Hutton's affairs with other women became known to Marjorie.

In February 1936 he married twenty eight year old Dorothy Dear Metzger, who had just divorced her husband, Homer, the previous October. Dorothy originally met E.F. through Marjorie's daughter Adelaide. Adelaide had invited Dorothy and Homer to spend a weekend with her and other friends at the Hutton's Long Island estate, Hillwood. Dorothy and Homer P. Metzger had one daughter, Nancy Joan Metzger, who was born in 1927. They had resided in South Orange, New Jersey. Also in 1937, Homer remarried to Catherine Dale Owen, the movie actress. They had one son, Robert Owen Metzger, and they resided in New York City.

In 1963 Dorothy sold the couples Old Westbury estate Hutfield to Long Island University. In 1950 Long Island University purchased Marjorie's Hillwood estate and created the C.W. Post College. Today Hutfield is the Fine Arts Center of the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University. On March 3, 1973, Dorothy married Viscount Weir, the Scottish industrialist, in Scotland.

Hutton's younger brother, Franklyn Laws Hutton (1877-1940), married Edna Woolworth, the dime store heiress and was the father of Barbara Hutton.


[edit] References

  • "Edward F. Hutton, Financier, 86, Dies" (July 12, 1962). New York Times, p. 29.

[edit] Personalities of Wall Street

See List of personalities associated with Wall Street.

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