Sneha Girap (Editor)

Andrew Miller (publisher)

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Cause of death
  
Heart disease


Name
  
Andrew Miller

Born
  
1857
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Died
  
December 31, 1919 Manhattan, New York, United States

Residence
  
850 Park Avenue, Manhattan

Education
  
Exeter College, Harvard University

Occupation
  
Magazine publisher, Racehorse owner/breeder

Known for
  
Co-founder of Life magazine & owner of Roamer

Andrew Miller (1857 - December 31, 1919) was an American magazine publisher and Thoroughbred racehorse owner/breeder who was a founding partner and Secretary/Treasurer of Life magazine.

Born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, Andrew Miller studied at Exeter College before graduating in 1880 from Harvard University where he was a classmate of Theodore Roosevelt.

Andrew Miller began his career in the publishing industry as an employee at the Daily Graphic, a New York City newspaper that was the first with daily illustrations. He left a year later to found Life magazine with John Ames Mitchell. Miller would hold a twenty-five percent interest in the magazine with Mitchell the remainder. Both men would retain their holdings until their deaths. [1] The success of Life magazine allowed Miller to indulge his passion for horse racing.

Thoroughbred racing

Andrew Miller owned racehorses for more than thirty years, starting with trotters and steeplechase runners before becoming heavily involved with racing Thoroughbreds on the flat. His most famous horse was Roamer, the 1914 American Horse of the Year and a U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee. Among his other racing successes, Andrew Miller's filly Lady Rotha won the Amsterdam and Travers Stakes in 1915. His colt, Ticket won the 1916 Tremont Stakes at age two and finished second as the favorite in the 1917 Kentucky Derby.

Miller served in various positions in the horse industry. He was President of the Driving Club of New York which operated the Fleetwood Park Racetrack harness racing track in Westchester County, New York, he was a Steward with the Jockey Club, Secretary and Treasurer of the Saratoga Racing Association, and a Steward at Morris Park Racecourse. [2] [3] [4] [5]

Andrew Miller died on December 31, 1919 at his home in Manhattan at age 62.

References

Andrew Miller (publisher) Wikipedia