- Paul Tulane
Paul Tulane (
May 10 ,1801 –March 27 ,1887 ), an Americanphilanthropist , was born near Princeton,New Jersey , the son of Louis Tulane, a French immigrant, and Maria Tulane. He was educated in private schools, including Somerville Academy of New Jersey, until he was fifteen years of age. He clerked briefly in a store in Princeton and thereafter spent three years touring the southern United States with a well-educated male cousin, who was a member of the bar in France. It was from this tour that Tulane developed a keen interest inNew Orleans .In 1822, he established Paul Tulane and Co. in New Orleans, a retail and wholesale dry goods and clothing business. Later, he invested in real estate in both New Orleans and New Jersey. By 1828, he had amassed a fortune of over $150,000. His business operated for nearly 40 years. He retired with a large fortune in 1857. About this time he bought the Stockton place in Princeton, where he subsequently resided.
For many years he gave liberally to the charitable institutions and
Presbyterian churches of Princeton and New Orleans. In 1882 he donated $363,000 (1882 value) to improve higher education in the city of New Orleans. Tulane's Act of Donation ultimately resulted in the renaming Tulane University of Louisiana, formerly the University of Louisiana (founded as the Medical College of Louisiana), in his honor and turning the once public institution into a private one. He died near Princeton, and is buried in thePrinceton Cemetery on Witherspoon Street.References
*"Collier's New Encyclopedia" (1921).
*"Paul Tulane," A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. 2 (1988), pp. 799-800.
*John P. Dyer, Tulane: The Biography of a University, 1834-1965 (1966).
*John Smith Kendall, "Paul Tulane," Louisiana Historical Quarterly, XX (1937).
*Dumas Malone, ed., Dictionary of American Biography.
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