William Bateman Leeds Sr.

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William Bateman Leeds Sr.

Birth
Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana, USA
Death
23 Jun 1908 (aged 46)
Paris, City of Paris, Île-de-France, France
Burial
Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 5, Lot 23
Memorial ID
View Source
William Bateman Leeds, Sr. started working for his father as a florist in Richmond, IN. He first married (1883) Jeanette Irene Gaar, a relative of the General Superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad. After quickly moving up the ranks of the railroad system, Leeds, along with J.H. Moore, W.H. Moore, and Daniel G. Reid, purchased a tin-plate plant in Richmond. This group of individuals became known as the "Big Four."

Leeds, became known as the "Tin Plate Magnate." The Big Four helped consolidate the tin-plate industry into a single corporation which they sold to the US Steel Corp. This was then invested into the Rock Island Railroad system.

Already successful on Wall Street and affiliated with the Pennsylvania railroad system, around December of 1901 he was elected President of the Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad. He remained involved with the Rock Island system until 1906 when he sold all of his stock in the system, removed himself as President, and retired from all Rock Island committees he was part of.

In 1900 W.B. Leeds divorced his first wife. She won a $1,000,000 settlement which is believed to be the largest in the US at that time. He immediately married Mrs. Nonnie May Worthington (nee Stewart), a recent divorcee herself. In 1906 W.B. Leeds and his second wife bought Rough Point, Frederick Vanderbilt's Newport, RI estate.

In 1907 and 1908 he suffered from a series of paralyzing strokes. He went to Paris on a couple of occasions to be "treated" for his condition. He passed away in Paris a day before returning from one of his rehabilitation trips.

Originally, W.B. Leeds was interred in a tomb at the Bronx's famous Woodlawn Cemetery. His remains were later moved to Richmond, IN. As of 2010, the empty mausoleum, designed by famous architect John Russell Pope, was on the market for over $3 million dollars.

(above information compiled primarily from NY Times articles)
President of the Tin Plate Trust who died at the Ritz Hotel in Paris.
William Bateman Leeds, Sr. started working for his father as a florist in Richmond, IN. He first married (1883) Jeanette Irene Gaar, a relative of the General Superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad. After quickly moving up the ranks of the railroad system, Leeds, along with J.H. Moore, W.H. Moore, and Daniel G. Reid, purchased a tin-plate plant in Richmond. This group of individuals became known as the "Big Four."

Leeds, became known as the "Tin Plate Magnate." The Big Four helped consolidate the tin-plate industry into a single corporation which they sold to the US Steel Corp. This was then invested into the Rock Island Railroad system.

Already successful on Wall Street and affiliated with the Pennsylvania railroad system, around December of 1901 he was elected President of the Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad. He remained involved with the Rock Island system until 1906 when he sold all of his stock in the system, removed himself as President, and retired from all Rock Island committees he was part of.

In 1900 W.B. Leeds divorced his first wife. She won a $1,000,000 settlement which is believed to be the largest in the US at that time. He immediately married Mrs. Nonnie May Worthington (nee Stewart), a recent divorcee herself. In 1906 W.B. Leeds and his second wife bought Rough Point, Frederick Vanderbilt's Newport, RI estate.

In 1907 and 1908 he suffered from a series of paralyzing strokes. He went to Paris on a couple of occasions to be "treated" for his condition. He passed away in Paris a day before returning from one of his rehabilitation trips.

Originally, W.B. Leeds was interred in a tomb at the Bronx's famous Woodlawn Cemetery. His remains were later moved to Richmond, IN. As of 2010, the empty mausoleum, designed by famous architect John Russell Pope, was on the market for over $3 million dollars.

(above information compiled primarily from NY Times articles)
President of the Tin Plate Trust who died at the Ritz Hotel in Paris.