E. H. Harriman

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E. H. Harriman
Edward Henry Harriman 1899.jpg
Born Edward Henry Harriman
(1848-02-20)February 20, 1848
Hempstead, New York, US
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Orange County, New York, US
Resting place St. John's Church Cemetery, Arden, New York
Occupation Railroad executive
Known for Harriman Alaska Expedition
Spouse(s) Mary Williamson Averell
Children Mary Harriman Rumsey
Henry Neilson Harriman
Cornelia Harriman Gerry [1]
Carol A. Harriman
William Averell Harriman
Edward Roland Noel Harriman
Relatives Herbert M. Harriman (cousin)

Edward Henry "Ned" Harriman (February 20, 1848 – September 9, 1909) was an American railroad executive.[2][3][4]

Biography

Early years

Harriman was born on February 20, 1848 in Hempstead, New York, the son of Orlando Harriman, Sr., an Episcopal clergyman, and Cornelia Neilson.[3] He had a brother, Orlando Harriman, Jr.[5] His great-grandfather, William Harriman, emigrated from England in 1795 and engaged successfully in trading and commercial pursuits.

As a young boy, Harriman spent a summer working at the Greenwood Iron Furnace in the area owned by the Robert Parker Parrott family that would become Harriman State Park. He quit school at age 14 to take a job as an errand boy on Wall Street in New York City. His uncle Oliver Harriman had earlier established a career there. By age 22, he was a member of the New York Stock Exchange.

Career

Harriman's father-in-law was also president of the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad Company, which aroused his interest in upstate New York transportation. In 1881, Harriman acquired the small, broken-down Lake Ontario Southern Railroad. He renamed it the Sodus Bay & Southern, reorganized it, and sold it to the Pennsylvania Railroad at a considerable profit. This was the start of his career as a rebuilder of bankrupt railroads.

File:Will you walk into my parlor - U. Keppler 1907.jpg
A 1907 cartoon depicting Harriman and his railroads as subject to federal law and the Interstate Commerce Commission

Harriman was nearly fifty years old when in 1897 he became a director of the Union Pacific Railroad. By May 1898 he was chairman of the executive committee, and from that time until his death his word was law on the Union Pacific system. In 1903 he assumed the office of president of the company. From 1901 to 1909, Harriman was also the President of the Southern Pacific Railroad. The vision of a unified UP/SP railroad was planted with Harriman. (The UP and SP were reunited on September 11, 1996, a month after the Surface Transportation Board had approved their merger.)

At the time of his death Harriman controlled the Union Pacific, the Southern Pacific, the Saint Joseph and Grand Island, the Illinois Central, the Central of Georgia, the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, and the Wells Fargo Express Company. Estimates of his estate ranged from $70 million to $100 million. It was left entirely to his wife.

Harriman estate

In 1885 Harriman acquired "Arden", the 7,863 acres (31.82 km2) Parrott family estate in the Ramapo Highlands near Tuxedo, New York, for $52,500. Over the next several years he purchased almost forty different nearby parcels of land, adding 20,000 acres (81 km2), and connected all of them with forty miles of bridle paths. His 100,000 sq ft (9,300 m2) residence, Arden House, was completed only seven months before he died. In the early 1900s, his sons W. Averell Harriman and E. Roland Harriman hired landscape architect Arthur P. Kroll to landscape many acres. In 1910, his widow donated ten thousand acres (40 km²) to the state of New York for Harriman State Park.

Personal life

In 1879 he married Mary Williamson Averell, daughter of William J. Averell, a banker in Ogdensburg, New York.[6] Together they had:

Harriman died on September 9, 1909 at his home, Arden, at 1:30 p.m. at age 61.[2][3]

Naturalist John Muir, who had joined him on the 1899 Alaska Expedition, wrote in his eulogy of Harriman, "In almost every way, he was a man to admire." He was buried at the St. John's Episcopal Church cemetery in the hamlet of Arden, near his estate.[8]

The Harriman Alaska Expedition

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In 1899, Harriman sponsored a scientific expedition to catalog the flora and fauna of the Alaska coastline, which he himself accompanied. Many prominent scientists and naturalists went on the expedition, aboard the luxuriously refitted 250-foot (76 m) steamer George W. Elder.

Interest in ju-jitsu

Harriman became interested in ju-jitsu after his two-month visit to Japan in 1905.[9] When he returned to America, he brought with him a troupe of six Japanese ju-jitsu wrestlers, including the prominent judokas Tsunejiro Tomita and Mitsuyo Maeda.[10] Among many performances, the troupe gave an exhibition that drew six hundred spectators in the Columbia University gymnasium on February 7, 1905.[11]

Notable quotations

"Much good work is lost for the lack of a little more."

"Cooperation means 'Do as I say, and do it damn quick.'" [12]

Legacy

File:Edward H Harriman bust.jpg
Bust of Edward H. Harriman by Auguste Rodin
  • The Union Pacific Harriman Dispatch Center in Omaha, Nebraska is named for Edward H. Harriman. In 1913, his widow created the E. H. Harriman Award to recognize outstanding achievements in railway safety. The award has been presented on an annual basis since then.
  • Inheritance taxes from Harriman's estate in the amount of $798,546 paid by his widow on March 1, 1911 to the State of Utah helped fund the construction of the state's capitol.
  • His estate, Arden, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1966.
  • Harriman Glacier in Alaska's Chugach National Forest located in Whittier, Alaska was named for him by the Harriman Alaska Expedition
  • Harriman is mentioned in the movie Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, as the commercial baron whose agents become the title characters' nemeses. In the film's second train robbery, a railroad employee ascribes his refusal to cooperate with the robbery to his obligations to Harriman personally, and one of Butch and Sundance's intimates describes Harriman's hiring of famed outlaw-hunters to track down the gang's leaders.
  • In the movie The Wild Bunch, a railroad official named as "Harrigan" takes the same strategy.
  • Two post offices in Oregon were named for Harriman, including the one at Rocky Point, where he maintained a summer camp for several years.[13]
  • Financial and business publisher Harriman House is named after Harriman.
  • Harriman founded the Tompkins Square Boys’ Club, now known as The Boys’ Club of New York. The original club, founded in 1876, was located in the rented basement of the Wilson School in Manhattan’s Lower East Side, and began with three boys.[14] Harriman’s idea for the club was to provide a place "for the boys, so as to get them off the streets and teach them better manners."[15] By 1901, the club had outgrown its space. Harriman purchased several lots on 10th and Avenue A, and a five-story clubhouse was completed in 1901.[16]
  • The city of Sparks, Nevada was known as Harriman during its early existence.

See also

References

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  8. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=450
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  12. attributed to Harriman by Delos F. Wilcox in "Co-operation Between State and Local Authorities in the Control of Public Utilities", Minnesota Municipalities Vol V Number 1, February 1920, page 12
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  15. Kennan, p. 26
  16. Kennan, p. 39

Further reading

  • Haeg, Larry, Harriman vs Hill: Wall Street's Great Railroad War, University of Minnesota Press, 2013
  • Kahn, Otto H., Edward Henry Harriman (1911), reprinted as "The Last Figure of an Epoch: Edward Henry Harriman," in Our Economic and Other Problems (1920)
  • Klein, Maury. The Life & Legend of EH Harriman. Univ of North Carolina Press (2000), The standard scholarly biography online
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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Also see Northern Securities Co. v. United States.
  • Muir, John, Edward Henry Harriman (1911)
  • Myles, William J., Harriman Trails, A Guide and History, The New York-New Jersey Trail Conference, New York, N.Y., 1999
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  • "In the Matter of Consolidations and Combinations of Carriers," Interstate Commerce Commission Reports, XII (1908)
  • Articles and estimates of his life and work in Cosmopolitan, Mar. 1903, July 1909; Moody's Mag., Oct. 1906, Oct. 1909; Am. Rev. of Revs., Jan. 1907, Oct. 1909; McClure's Mag., Oct. 1909, Jan. 1911; N. Y. Times and N. Y. Sun, September 10, 1909; Railway World, September 17, 1909.

External links

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