- Oakes Angier Ames
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Oakes Angier Ames (April 15, 1829 - September 19. 1899) was a wealthy industrialist and philanthropist in the Ames family of North Easton, Massachusetts. His brother Oliver Ames was Governor of Massachusetts.
Ames was the oldest son of Oakes Ames, a major force behind the Union Pacific Railroad, and Eveline O. Gelman. He became a partner in the family's shovel factory in 1856, and in 1877 became its president.
Ames' legacy to North Eason can still be seen in Queset House, his home beside the Queset Brook. Noted architect Andrew Jackson Downing designed the house's front portion in 1854 and John Ames Mitchell designed the rear in 1872. The famous landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted planned its grounds and also, in consultation with Ames, created The Rockery nearby.
Together with his family, Ames commissioned Olmsted and architect H. H. Richardson to create a remarkable set of buildings and landscapes in North Easton, including:
Selected works
- Oakes Ames and the Credit mobilier, Boston, F. Wood, printer, 1880.
References
- John N. Ingham, Biographical Dictionary of American Business Leaders , Greenwood Press, 1983, page 16. ISBN 031323907X.
- Dell Upton, Architecture in the United States, Oxford University Press, 1998, page 95. ISBN 019284217X.
- Forest Systems: Queset House
Categories:- American philanthropists
- 1829 births
- 1899 deaths
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