Thomas Dreier

Thomas Dreier
Born May 5, 1884
Durand
Died September 4, 1976 (aged 92)
Saint Petersburg
Citizenship American

Thomas Dreier (May 5, 1884 – September 4, 1976)[1] was an American editor, writer, advertising executive, and business theorist. The Thomas Dreier Reading Room at Peter H. Armacost Library, Eckerd College is named in his honor.

He was born in Durand, Wisconsin in 1884[2] and edited and published his own short-lived paper, The Menomonie Badger, in Menomonie in 1903 and 1904.[3] He subsequently moved to the Boston area. He built the Frank Chouteau Brown-designed "Snug Gables" in Winchester, Massachusetts, where he lived from 1920-1933, and later settled in New Hampshire on a 500-acre farm named "Sunny Meadows" in Melvin Village, Tuftonborough. In 1935 he and his first wife, Blanche Nowell Dreier, moved to St. Petersburg, Florida.[4] Blanche died in 1960 and in 1961 he married Mary Baker.[1]

He died on 4 September 1976 at his home in Saint Petersburg.[1]

He was the first editor of the New Hampshire Troubadour magazine.[5]

Selected works

References

External links

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Thomas Dreier