William Grigsby McCormick | |
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About 1896 |
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Born | June 3, 1851 Chicago |
Died | November 29, 1941 | (aged 90)
Occupation | Businessman |
Known for | Kappa Sigma Fraternity |
Parents | William Sanderson McCormick Mary Ann Grigsby |
William Grigsby McCormick (1851–1941) was an American businessman of the influential McCormick family in Chicago. He was a co-founder of a college fraternity.
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William Grigsby McCormick was born June 3, 1851 in Chicago.[1] His father was William Sanderson McCormick (1815–1865) and mother was Mary Ann Grigsby (1828–1878) of the Hickory Hill estate in Virginia. His father managed finances for the family agricultural machinery business which became International Harvester until he died in an insane asylum in 1865. His mother then moved the family back to Baltimore, Maryland near her Virginia family estate.[2] He attended the University of Virginia in 1868 and 1869, where he founded the Kappa Sigma Fraternity with four other friends on December 10, 1869. A plaque was later affixed to his 1869 room, which was numbered 46 East Lawn, where the first Kappa Sigma meeting was held.[3][4]:341
When she was widowed, his mother had sold her share of the family business to his better-known uncle Cyrus McCormick, but he acquired a fortune of his own. First, he left the university of Virginia in May 1870 and traveled with brother Robert to Europe, returning to Baltimore in November. He worked for two years as a banker for John S. Gittings, and then married Eleanor Brooks on October 23, 1873 at the Brown Memorial Presbyterian Church in Baltimore. His wife was daughter of former railroad executive Walter Booth Brooks. After the couple took another year of travel and a few months in Baltimore, they moved to Chicago in February 1875.[4]:353–356
He first worked for McCormick Brothers & Findlay, and then started his own business selling insurance and real estate, with offices in Chicago and New York. He was elected to the Chicago City Council as alderman representing the 18th ward in 1880 for one term. In 1884 he formed the partnership Smith, McCormick & Company to trade commodities on the Chicago Board of Trade.[5] He became a member of the New York Stock Exchange in 1885. The business became part of the Schwartz, Dupee & Company stock trading firm (with partners Gustavus Schwartz and John Dupee, Jr.).[6] He worked for them until the panic of 1893.[4] He then formed a partnership of Price, McCormick & Company with Theodore Hazeltine Price on March 18, 1895. After some initial success, the firm ran into trouble in a failed attempt to take over Hanover Insurance in 1899.[7] He retired after that firm failed on May 24, 1900, due to a steep drop in the prices of cotton futures contracts.[8] Besides losing his own money, it was reported another backer was George Crocker, son of San Francisco banker Charles Crocker.[9]
He was a guest at the fraternity house named for the family in 1916.[10] The area is now a complex known as the McCormick Road Residence Area.[11] He died on November 29, 1941 at the family estate known as St. James Farm near Wheaton, Illinois.[12][13] At the time Kappa Sigma was the fourth largest fraternity in the country.[14]
He and his wife had seven children:[1]
The Stone family had founded the Chicago Daily News.[16] McCormick's brother Robert Sanderson McCormick (1849–1919) married the daughter of the founder of the Chicago Tribune.[2] Their son Chauncey Brooks McCormick with their nephew Robert R. McCormick purchased the Hickory Hill estate of Reuben Grigsby in 1929.[17]
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Robert McCormick (1780–1846) |
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Mary Ann Hall (1780–1853) |
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Nancy Fowler McCormick (1835–1923) |
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Cyrus McCormick (1809–1884) |
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Mary Ann Grigsby (1828–1878) |
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William Sanderson McCormick (1815–1865) |
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Leander J. McCormick (1819–1900) |
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Cyrus McCormick Jr. (1859–1936) |
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Harold Fowler McCormick (1872–1941) |
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Joseph Medill (1823–1899) |
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L. Hamilton McCormick (1859–1934) |
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Robert Sanderson McCormick (1849–1919) |
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Kate Medill (1853–1932) |
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William Grigsby McCormick (1851–1941) |
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Ruby McCormick (1860–1882) |
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Joseph Medill McCormick (1877–1925) |
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Ruth Hanna McCormick (1880–1944) |
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Robert R. McCormick (1880–1955) |
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Chauncey Brooks McCormick (1884–1954) |
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William McCormick Blair (1884–1982) |
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Brooks McCormick (1917–2006) |
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William McCormick Blair, Jr. (born 1916) |
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The family tree shows Ruby McCormick (1860-1882) as being the mother of William McCormick Blair (b. 1884). The father can die and a child can be born nine months later but if the mother dies ....!