- Edward T. Stotesbury
Edward Townsend Stotesbury (1849-1938) was a prominent
investment banker and partner atJ.P. Morgan & Co. and itsPhiladelphia affiliateDrexel & Co. for over fifty-five years. Stotesbury was born in Philadelphia onFebruary 26 ,1849 ofQuaker parentage.Mr. Stotesbury was married twice, his first wife the former Miss Frances Berman Butcher. There were three daughters born of that marriage. The first daughter Helen Lewis Stotesbury (
August 21 ,1874 -September 4 ,1874 ) died young. The second daughter Edith Lewis Stotesbury (April 3 ,1877 -1935) married, onDecember 25 ,1903 , Sydney Emlen Hutchinson. The third daughter Frances Butcher Stotesbury (November 7 ,1881 -October 14 ,1950 ) married, onJanuary 5 ,1909 , John Kearsley Mitchell.Stotesbury got his start going to work for Drexel & Co., the well-known Philadelphia banking house of which
Anthony Joseph Drexel was founder and directing head. He was always punctual, never absent. He kept meticulous records of every penny he spent. When Drexel went into partnership withJ.P. Morgan , Stotesbury received a lucrative post. Proof of the fashion in which he made himself a valued junior employee of the firm was instanced in 1882, when he was made a partner. Years later he often told the simple story of his success, which, boiled down to: "Keep your mouth shut and your ears open."One of the significant services which he performed in the course of his business career was that of assisting in the floating of the International Chinese Loan of 1909.
On
January 18 ,1912 , Stotesbury married Eva Roberts Cromwell (Mrs. Oliver Eaton Cromwell) ofChicago . He had been awidower for thirty some years. Stotesbury and his second wife, Eva, built three palatial estates: "Whitemarsh Hall " outside of Philadelphia; "El Mirasol " inPalm Beach, Florida ; and "Wingwood House " inBar Harbor, Maine .In 1927, Stotesbury's fortune was estimated at $100 million. At the time of his death in 1938, it was down to an estimated $4 million. The stock market did crash in the years of the decline of his fortune. In the last five years of his life (a rate of withdrawal of more than $10,000,000 a year), while the
Great Depression raged, the banker withdrew $55 million out of his account at J.P. Morgan.He was also a director of the
Reading Railroad , theLehigh Valley Railroad , thePhiladelphia Fidelity Bank , theGirard Trust Company , theCambria Iron Company ,Pennsylvania Steel Company ,Latrobe Steel Company ,Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company ,Keystone Watch Company , and theJesup and Moore Paper Company .His stepdaughter, Henrietta Louise Cromwell, married
Douglas MacArthur , onFebruary 14 ,1922 . She had two children from a previous marriage. They were divorced in 1929.His stepson,
James H.R. Cromwell , who was then married toDoris Duke , had become a devoted New Dealer. One day in 1936, Stotesbury told him, "It’s a good thing you married the richest girl in the world because you will get very little from me. I made my fortune and I am going to squander it myself; not your friend Roosevelt."Stotesbury died at eighty-nine on
May 21 ,1938 and was buried inThe Woodlands Cemetery in Philadelphia.Every year since 1927, the annual
Stotesbury Cup Regatta, named for Edward T. Stotesbury, has been held in theSchuylkill River in Philadelphia. The Stotesbury Regatta is one of the oldest and largest high school rowingregatta s in theUnited States .Stotesbury, West Virginia , a coal mining town in Raleigh County, was named for Stotesbury. The town was the former home of eight-termU.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd .References
* [http://stotesbury.com Biography of Edward T. Stotesbury]
* [http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/stories/2000/01/10/story6.html Article about Stotesbury in 2000]
*External links
* [http://www.boathouserow.org/rega07/scr07.html The Stotesbury Cup Regatta]
* [http://www.uchs.net/Woodlands/woodlandshome.html Woodlands Cemetery]
** [http://www.uchs.net/Woodlands/woodlandscemetery.html Cemetery map]
** [http://www.uchs.net/Woodlands/woodlandscemetery.html#q25 Grave location]
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