- Simeon Gannett Reed
Infobox Person
name= Simeon Gannett Reed
caption=
birth_date=April 23 1830
birth_place=Abington, Massachusetts
death_date= 1895
place_of_death=California
occupation= Businessman
spouse=Amanda Reed Simeon Gannett Reed (
April 23 1830 –1895) was an American businessman andentrepreneur inOregon . A native ofMassachusetts , he made a fortune primarily in the transportation sector in association withWilliam S. Ladd . Reed is the namesake forReedville, Oregon , andReed College inPortland, Oregon Early life
Simeon Gannett Reed was born on
April 23 1830 in East Abington,Massachusetts .Terry, John. Oregon’s Trails: Reeds’ desires, riches yield premier legacy of learning. "The Oregonian ",July 6 2003 .] He was born into a wealthy family and received his education at a private academy, graduating when he was 13 years old. After working and training as an apprentice in several vocations, he married Amanda Woods at the age of 20, with the couple not having any children. Woods was 18 at the time andJohn Quincy Adams distant cousin.When he was 22, he collected supplies to sell in
California and sailed there, setting up a store in a tent in Sacramento, while Amanda remained back east. Reed sold his goods and grain to the gold miners, but decided to relocate to what was then theOregon Territory after a few trips there to purchase supplies.Oregon
Late in 1852 Reed starting a mercantile in
Rainier, Oregon , along theColumbia River downstream from Portland. After a short time he relocated to Portland and became friends withWilliam S. Ladd , a local merchant. In 1854, Amanda sailed to San Francisco to reunite with Reed, and accompanied Caroline Ames Elliott, Ladd's sweetheart who he would marry in San Francisco. In 1855, Reed became a clerk for Ladd, and in 1859 he became a partner in the company, which was then known as Ladd, Reed, & Co.In May 1860, Reed,
Jacob Kamm , andJohn C. Ainsworth founded theOregon Steam Navigation Company , a conglomerate of several river shipping companies plying the Columbia and Willamette rivers. Reed held 128 shares in the company, which even during the economic depression of 1873 produced $300,000 in dividends. Reed was also vice president of the firm. He built a mansion at First and Harrison streets in 1868, where the other wealthy residents were also constructing large homes.In April 1880, the Oregon Steam Navigation Company merged with the companies of
Henry Villard andBen Holladay to form theOregon Railway and Navigation Company . This created a single transportation conglomerate encompassing river shipping,stagecoach , andrailroad ventures. Reed focused his energy now on meeting the demand forsteel he anticipated due to Villard'sNorthern Pacific railroad. But Reed'siron factory at Oswego suffered a lack of investment and never started production of the steel rails Reed expected; Reed lost half a milliondollar s in the venture.Later life
Reed and Ladd also operated an 8,000 plus acre hobby farm in the area where they raised livestock and held harness races, where
Reedville, Oregon now stands, with Reed as namesake. In 1895, Simeon Reed died while in California at his retirement home. His estate was worth millions of dollars was left to Amanda, with some instructions to use it to assist in the cultural and intellectual development of Portland. Amanda would die in 1904 without much progress towards the instructions of Simeon.In 1908, Amanda's estate established
Reed College in Portland. William M. Ladd (son of Reed's former partner William S. Ladd) provided the lands on which the college stands today, and almost all of Reed's estate was passed on to the college, Reed having left no heirs. Simeon and Amanda Reed are buried near the family plot of Jacob Kamm in Portland's River View Cemetery.References
* [http://home.europa.com/~heritage/principals.html Portland principals in Oregon iron production]
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