Trenor W. Park
Trenor W. Park | |
---|---|
Born |
Woodford, Vermont | December 8, 1823
Died |
December 13, 1882 59) Aboard ship "San Blas" between New York City and Aspinwall, Panama | (aged
Occupation |
Attorney Businessman Philanthropist |
Trenor William Park (December 8, 1823 – December 13, 1882) was an American lawyer, political figure, businessman, and philanthropist.
Early life
Trenor William Park was born in Woodford, Vermont on December 8, 1823.[1] He was raised in Bennington and began working at an early age, including selling candy and carrying letters to and from the Bennington post office.[2]
At age 15 Park became the proprietor of a candy store on Bennington's North Street, and at age 16 he began to study law with Bennington County State's Attorney A.P. Lyman, attaining admission to the bar as soon as he was legally eligible in 1844.[3] Park began a practice in Bennington, and maintained it until 1852, also becoming active in lumbering and other business ventures. On December, 15, 1846 he married Laura Van Der Spiegle Hall, the daughter of Congressman and Governor Hiland Hall. They had three children Eliza, Laura and Trenor Luther Park.[4][5]
Career in California
In 1851 Hall was appointed Chairman of the U.S. Land Commission empowered to settle Mexican land titles after the annexation of California, and Park traveled to San Francisco with him.[6] He practiced law successfully, soon becoming a partner in the state's leading firm, Halleck, Peachy, Billings & Park.[7] In 1855 Park played a key role in San Francisco's political reform movement by establishing the San Francisco Bulletin newspaper.[8] He also became active in several commercial enterprises, including real estate and mining, and managed the Rancho Las Mariposas gold mine owned by John C. Frémont. Park lost some of his investments in the Panic of 1857, but eventually became very wealthy.[9][10]
At the founding of the Republican Party, Park became an active member, serving as a delegate to several state conventions. In the late 1850s he served as Chairman of California's Republican State Central Committee.[11][12] In 1863 he was a Unionist candidate for the U.S. Senate, narrowly losing election in the California legislature.[13] In 1864 he was a California delegate to the Republican national convention that nominated President Abraham Lincoln for reelection and named Democrat Andrew Johnson as its vice presidential candidate.[14]
Return to Vermont
In 1864 Park returned to Vermont, where he incorporated the First National Bank of North Bennington, was an original investor in the Central Vermont Railroad, and again speculated in several successful business ventures, including timber and mines.[15] He also established a second residence in New York City. In 1868 he was a Vermont delegate to the Republican National Convention that nominated Ulysses S. Grant for President and Schuyler Colfax for Vice President.[16] The same year, he was elected as Vermont's member of the Republican National Committee, serving until 1870.[17][18]
In 1870 he was one of the founders of Rutland, Vermont's Baxter National Bank, and he often continued to invest in partnership with the bank's President, Horace Henry Baxter.[19] In 1871 Park's daughter Eliza married John G. McCullough, former Attorney General of California, who became active in several of Park's business ventures and later served as Governor of Vermont.[20][21] Also in 1871, Park was an owner and promoter of the supposedly depleted Utah Emma Silver Mine. Unsuspecting English citizens invested millions of pounds in the mine. In 1876 and 1877 his partners and he were accused of defrauding the group that purchased the mine from them, and they were acquitted in a nationally publicized trial.[22]
Park was a candidate for the 1874 Republican nomination for Governor, but withdrew in favor of the eventual nominee and general election winner, state Supreme Court Justice Asahel Peck.[23] The same year, Park purchased controlling interest in the Panama Railway and was elected its President, succeeding Russell Sage.[24] During the rest of the 1870s he engaged in a well-publicized contest with rival financier Jay Gould for control of Pacific Mail, the company that shipped cargo between the eastern and western United States by moving it overland across the Isthmus of Panama.[25]
Active in civic affairs, Park served in the Vermont House of Representatives,[26] was a member of the committee that oversaw design and construction of the Bennington Battle Monument,[27] and was a Trustee of the University of Vermont.[28] His philanthropic donations included the Bennington Free Library (with Seth B. Hunt),[29] and the building and land for the Vermont Soldiers' Home (again in conjunction with the Hunt family).[30][31] He also donated the University of Vermont's Park Gallery of Art, the exhibits of which were later incorporated into the university's Robert Hull Fleming Museum.[32]
Death and burial
Trenor Park died on December 13, 1882, while aboard the ship "San Blas" between New York and Aspinwall, Panama while en route to San Francisco.[33] His funeral took place at New York City's Collegiate Reformed Church, and he was buried in Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery.[34] He was later re-interred at Bennington's Old Cemetery.[35]
Legacy
His Bennington home, the Park-McCullough House, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972 and is open to the public.[36]
Trenor Luther Park
Trenor Luther Park (1861-1907) studied at Harvard University and was a successful businessman, yachtsman and golfer. He was married to Julia Hunt Catlin (1864-1947). Trenor L. Park died during surgery for an intestinal ailment, and his friends and family believed his decline had been hastened by despondence over the death of his nine-year-old daughter Elliott, who had been killed in an accident earlier that year.[37][38]
Julia Park married twice more, first to C. Mitchell Deprew, a nephew of Chauncey M. Depew, and then to French General Emile Adolphe Taufflieb (1857-1938), who commanded the 37th Army Corps during World War I and later served in the French Senate.[39]
Julia Catlin Taufflieb received the Légion d'honneur to recognize her support of the Allied effort during World War I, when she turned her mansion in France into a 300 bed hospital near the front lines. She is the first American woman known to have received the award.[40]
Laura Hall Park
Laura Hall Park (1858-1939) married Frederic Beach Jennings (1853-1920), a Bennington and New York City lawyer and businessman. They donated the site of their Vermont home to become the location of Bennington College.[41]
References
- ↑ Cecil Gage Tilton, William Chapman Ralston: Courageous Builder, 1935, page 252
- ↑ Henry Clay Williams, American Encyclopaedia of Biography, 1893, page 108
- ↑ Henry Clay Williams, American Encyclopaedia of Biography
- ↑ Abby Maria Hemenway, editor, Vermont Historical Gazeteer, Volume 5, 1891, page 92
- ↑ Oscar Tully Shuck, editor, History of the Bench and Bar of California, 1901, page 594
- ↑ Henry Clay Williams, American Encyclopaedia of Biography
- ↑ The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Hon. Frederick Billings, October, 1891, page 259
- ↑ Rossiter Johnson, John Howard Brown, editors, The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, 1904
- ↑ Richard Jay Hutto, Their Gilded Cage: The Jekyll Island Club Members, 2005, page 90
- ↑ John Hannavy, editor, Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography, 2007, page 1478
- ↑ Robin W. Winks, Frederick Billings: A Life, 1998, page 126-127
- ↑ Franklin Tuthill, The History of California, 2010, page 519
- ↑ Wallace Emerson Lamb, The Lake Champlain and Lake George Valleys, 1940, page 569
- ↑ Horace Greeley, et al., editors, Proceedings of the First Three Republican National Conventions of 1856, 1860 and 1864, 1893, page 248
- ↑ Clark C. Spence, British Investments and the American Mining Frontier, 1860-1901, 2000, page 140
- ↑ The Presidency: List of Delegates to the Republican National Convention, New York Times, May 19, 1868
- ↑ Republican National Convention, Official Proceedings of the National Republican Conventions, 1903, page 113
- ↑ Ely, Burnham & Bartlett, Proceedings of the National Union Republican Convention Held at Chicago, May 20 and 21, 1868, 1868, page 58
- ↑ Bennington Banner, Gen. H. Henry Baxter, Death of a Well Known Millionaire, February 22, 1884
- ↑ Christina Tree, Rachel Carter, Explorer's Guide to Vermont, 2012, page 128
- ↑ Tyler Resch, Glastenbury: The History of a Vermont Ghost Town, 2008, page 91
- ↑ The Emma Mine Case Ended, New York Times, April 29, 1877
- ↑ Railway Gazette, General Railroad news: Elections and Appointments, May 23, 1874
- ↑ Railway Age, General Railroad News: Elections and Appointments, Volume 6, December 19, 1874, page 496
- ↑ Maury Klein, 1986,The Life and Legend of Jay Gould, 179 to 180
- ↑ Vermont General Assembly, Journal of the Vermont House of Representatives, 1867, page 4
- ↑ Charles Spooner Forbes, The Second Battle of Bennington: A History of Vermont's Centennial, 1877, page 13
- ↑ Vermont General Assembly, Vermont Public Documents, 1867, page 56
- ↑ Vermont. Board of Library Commissioners, Biennial Report of the Board of Library Commissioners of Vermont, Volumes 1-6, 1895, page 52
- ↑ National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Report of Inspection of State Soldiers and Sailors' Homes, 1889, page 36
- ↑ Bill Morgan, Bennington and the Civil War, 2013, page 112
- ↑ Art and Architecture, University of Vermont web site
- ↑ Death of Trenor W. Park: He Dies at Sea On His Way to Aspinwall New York Times, December 21, 1882
- ↑ Hiram Carleton, Genealogical and Family History of the State of Vermont, 1903, page 12
- ↑ Tyler Resch, The Meticulous Advocate: Hiland Hall of Vermont; A Biography, 2009, page 70
- ↑ Park-McCullough House web site
- ↑ New York Times, Trenor L. Park Dead; Head of the American Yacht Club Expires After an Operation, October 24, 1907
- ↑ New York Times, T.L. Park's Daughter Killed; 9-Year-Old Girl Fell Six Stories from Her Garden on the Roof, January 6, 1907
- ↑ New York Times, Mrs. J. C. Park Wed to French General; Divorced Wife of C. Mitchell Depew Marries Gen. Taufflieb, March 2, 1918
- ↑ Town & Country magazine, Town & Country Calendar, Volume 79, September 1, 1922, page 19
- ↑ John J. Duffy, Samuel B. Hand, Ralph H. Orth, editors, The Vermont Encyclopedia, 2003, page 55
Sources
- The Hoosac Valley: Its Legends and its History, by Grace Greylock Niles, 1912, page 464
- Trenor Park: A New Englander in California, by Virginia Bell, California Historical Society, 1981,
- Biography of Trenor W. Park, History of Bennington County, Vermont, edited by Lewis Cass Aldrich, 1889
- Proceedings of the First Three Republican National Conventions of 1856, 1860 and 1864, published by Charles W. Johnson, Minneapolis, 1893, page 248
- National Register of Historic Places web site, Vermont state listings,
- Genealogical and Family History of the State of Vermont, edited by Hiram Carleton, 1903, Volume II, pages 12 to 14
- Men of Vermont: Illustrated Biographical History of Vermonters & Sons of Vermont, Jacob Ullery, 1894, Transcript Publishing Company, Brattleboro, pages 296 to 298
- Vermont: the Green Mountain State, Walter Hill Crockett, 1921, Volume 4, pages 65 to 66
- One Thousand Men, by Dorman B. E. Kent, published by Vermont Historical Society 1915, page 123
- The Vermont Encyclopedia, by John J. Duffy, Samuel B. Hand, and Ralph H. Orth, 2003, pages 53 to 54, 228
- Letter as Chairman, Republican State Central Committee, Trenor William Park, September 2, 1856, University of California Berkeley archives
- The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, published by James T. White and Company, 1892, Volume II, page 135
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