- Ben Holladay
Infobox Person
name= Ben Holladay
image_size= 130px
caption=
birth_date= birth date|1819|10|14|mf=y
birth_place=Kentucky
dead=dead
death_date= death date and age|1887|7|8|1819|10|14|mf=y
death_place=
occupation= Transportation
spouse=Benjamin "Ben" Holladay (
October 14 ,1819 –July 8 ,1887 ) was an American transportation businessman known as the "Stagecoach King" until his routes were taken over byWells Fargo in 1866. A native ofKentucky , he also served in the1838 Mormon War inMissouri before starting his transportation empire that later included steamships and railroads inOregon .Early life
Holladay was born
October 14 1819 , inNicholas County, Kentucky . His fatherWilliam Holladay (born in what is nowSpotsylvania County, Virginia ) was a third generation American, descended fromJohn "The Ranger" Holladay . William migrated toBourbon County, Kentucky , where he was a guide for wagon trains through theCumberland Gap . Benjamin's mother was Margaret "Peggy" Hughes. Benjamin Holladay learned the freight business at an early age and left home in his late teens for a road trip to Santa Fe in what was thenMexico . He then settled inWeston, Missouri , where he worked as a store clerk before serving as courier during the 1838 Mormon War for the state militia.Allen, Cain. [http://www.bizjournals.com/portland/stories/2005/01/03/focus4.html?page=2 Holladay built W. Oregon railroad.]Portland Business Journal ,December 31 2004 .] After working at the store for a few years he opened a tavern and hotel in 1840, as well as starting what would become theMcCormick Distilling Company , which claims to be the oldest distillery still operating in the same location. Business boomed with his supplies for GeneralStephen Watts Kearney during theMexican-American War .Transportation
He moved to
California in 1852 where he was to operate 2,670 miles of stage lines.Holladay acquired the
Pony Express in 1862 after it failed to garner a postal contract for its owners,Russell, Majors and Waddell . He then operated seven routes with government subsidies totaling nearly $6 million dollars over a four year period. [ [http://www.wyomingtalesandtrails.com/stagelines.html Overland Stage] ] Holladay sold his stage routes toWells Fargo Express in 1866 for $1.5 million and moved toOregon , where he organized the construction of a railroad along theWillamette River . In 1868, construction started on lines along both the sides of the river. Holladay's "Eastsiders" completed 20 miles of track before the competition, which subsequently sold out to him. He won a federal subsidy and built theOregon and California Railroad as far south as Roseburg before thePanic of 1873 financial crisis stopped the effort. Holladay lost most of his fortune in the stock market collapse on September 18, 1873. So, in 1876Henry Villard took over the railroad. Villard described Holladay as "illiterate, coarse, boastful, false, and cunning." Ben Holladay died inPortland, Oregon , onJuly 8 1887 , [http://www.linecamp.com/museums/americanwest/western_names/holladay_ben/holladay_ben.html linecamp.com] ] and buried at Mount Calvary Cemetery in that city.Legacy
Holladay had a reputation for lavish living.
Ophir Hall (named for hisOphir Silver Mine inVirginia City, Nevada — part of theComstock Lode ) is now the defining landmark (now called Reid Hall) ofManhattanville College inPurchase, New York . Two reclining bronze lions attributed toAntonio Canova that once graced his K Street residence inWashington, DC now guard the main entrance of theCorcoran Gallery .Seaside, Oregon is named for his elaborate "cottage."References
* Ben Holladay: The Stagecoach King, JV Frederick, Arthur C. Clark, 1940
* The Holladay Family, Alvis Milton Holladay. 1994
* Dictionary of Oregon History 2/2005
* The Expressmen, Time-Life Books, 1974External links
* [http://bluebook.state.or.us/notable/notholladay.htm Ben Holladay] from the
Oregon Blue Book "Notable Oregonians"
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=5954271 Ben Holladay at Findagrave.com]
* [http://www.linecamp.com/museums/americanwest/western_names/holladay_ben/holladay_ben.html Ben Holladay biography from linecamp.com]
* [http://www.ohs.org/education/oregonhistory/Oregon-Biographies-Ben-Holladay.cfm Oregon History Project]
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