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Henry Phipps, Jr

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Religion
  
Episcopalian

Role
  
Entrepreneur

Name
  
Henry Jr.

Spouse(s)
  
Anne Childs Shaffer


Henry Phipps, Jr. httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
September 27, 1839 (
1839-09-27
)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Residence
  
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, New York City (1901)

Known for
  
Co-founder Carnegie Steel Co., Philanthropy

Net worth
  
USD $60 million at the time of his death (approximately 1/1506th of US GNP)

Board member of
  
Carnegie Steel Co. United States Steel Corp.

Died
  
September 22, 1930, Great Neck

Children
  
John Shaffer Phipps, Henry Carnegie Phipps

Grandchildren
  
Ogden Phipps, Michael Grace Phipps, Hubert Beaumont Phipps, Margaret Phipps Boegner

Great grandchildren
  
Ogden Mills Phipps, Henry Ogden Phipps, Robert Lansing, Cynthia Phipps

Similar People
  
John Shaffer Phipps, Ogden Phipps, Margaret Phipps Boegner, Michael P Grace, Ogden L Mills

Organizations founded
  
Bessemer Trust

Henry Phipps, Jr. (September 27, 1839 – September 22, 1930) was an American entrepreneur known for his business relationship with Andrew Carnegie and involvement with the Carnegie Steel Company. He was also a successful real estate investor who after selling his stock in Carnegie Steel, devoted a great deal of his time and money to philanthropic works.

Contents

Biography

Henry Phipps, Jr. was born on September 27, 1839 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the son of English born Hannah Frank and Henry Phipps, an English shoemaker who emigrated to Philadelphia in the early part of the 19th century before settling in Pittsburgh in 1845. He was educated at public schools in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania. He had a brother, John Phipps, who was also friends with Carnegie and who died in youth.

Career

Phipps began working as a young man as an office boy and later a bookkeeper with Dillworth & Bidwell. In 1861, he became a partner in Bidwell & Phipps, which was an agent for the du Pont Powder Company, and a partner in Kloman & Phipps, a small iron mill.

Involvement with Carnegie

In 1865, he became a partner in childhood friend and neighbor's Andrew (1835–1919) and Thomas Carnegie's (1843–1886) Union Iron Mills, which was created from a merger between Phipps' Kloman & Phipps and Cyclops Iron Company, an iron company which the Carnegies had acquired an interest in. Kloman and Phipps at first refused, but Thomas made an offer of all the shares in Cyclops plus an additional payment of $50,000 (equivalent to $782,000 in 2016). Therefore, on May 1, 1865, the new Union Iron Mills Company was formed.

For the next year, Phipps and Carnegie went to Europe on tour, and when they returned in 1866, went to work. Phipps toiled for the next 20 years and proved a capable financier, becoming Carnegie's business partner in Carnegie Steel Company, founded in 1892, which would make him a very wealthy man as the company's second largest shareholder. In 1901, Carnegie Steel Company was sold to the United States Steel Corporation; a newly formed organisation, set up by Pierpont Morgan. It sold for $400 million (approx. $13.3 billion today), of which $226 million went to Carnegie himself, and $48 million went to Phipps.

In 1907, Henry Phipps established Bessemer Trust Company to manage his substantial assets that would be shared by his offspring following his death.

Real estate

In 1909, Phipps expanded his Cape Cod holdings to the entire 800 acre Great Island on Cape Cod, purchasing the remaining 50 acres from Charles B. Cory (1857–1921). The Cape Cod estate was next to Aberdeen Hall (which burnt down in September 1924) and was near Andrew Carnegie, Henry M. Flagler, and Henry Clay Frick's estates.

In 1912, Phipps divided $3,000,000 (equivalent to $74,452,000 in 2016) worth of real estate in Chicago, Illinois realty among his three sons. Later in the same year, he also gave his sons $10,000,000 (equivalent to $248,172,000 in 2016) worth of property in Pittsbugh.

In 1916, he purchased property in Great Neck, Long Island in the Village of Lake Success and in 1917, began construction on a thirty-nine-room Georgian mansion summer home, which was completed in 1919. He named the home, Bonnie Blink, which is Scottish for Pretty View. After his death, the mansion and property were donated to the school district and have since become William A. Shine Great Neck South High School.

In 1926, he bought Island Beach, which was sold by his heirs in 1953 to the State of New Jersey. Now known as Island Beach State Park, it is the last remaining stretch of undeveloped barrier island on the central New Jersey coast.

Phipps was one of the pioneer investors in Florida real estate. At one time, he and his family owned one-third of the town of Palm Beach, 28 miles (approximately 45 kilometers) of oceanfront between Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale, prime bay front property in downtown Miami, and 29,653 acres (approximately 12,000 hectares) of land in Martin County. The Phipps family donated to the town of Palm Beach one of the most significant gifts in county history: an ocean-to-lake frontage property that is now known as Phipps Park.

Philanthropy

Phipps believed that those who have achieved great wealth should give back for the public good and create institutions dedicated to that purpose. As such he was involved with a number of philanthropic causes, the best known of which is the Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens in Schenley Park, an 1893 gift to the city of Pittsburgh. Among his many benevolent works, he also funded the Phipps Institute for the Study, Treatment and Prevention of Tuberculosis at the University of Pennsylvania and The Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at Johns Hopkins Hospital which in 1913 made possible the first inpatient facility in the United States for the mentally ill constructed as part of an acute care hospital.

Phipps was also an advocate of decent housing for the poor and in 1905 Phipps funded the non-profit Phipps Houses to build affordable housing in New York City. He gave $1,000,000 (equivalent to $26,656,000 in 2016) to build tenement houses for "working people." Phipps Houses still operates to this day; Henry Phipps's great-grandson, Stuart S. Janney III, sits on its Board of Trustees.

Personal life

In 1872, Henry Phipps married Anne Childs Shaffer (1850–1934), the daughter of Margaret and John Shaffer, a Pittsburgh wagon builder. Since their estate Bonnie Brink was completed in 1919, they spent their summers in Great Neck, Long Island. The couple had two daughters and three sons:

  • Amy Phipps (1872–1959), who in 1905 married Frederick Edward Guest (1875–1937), the grandson of John Spencer-Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough and Winston Churchill's first cousin.
  • John Shaffer Phipps (1874–1958), who in 1903 married Margarita Celia Grace, daughter of Michael P. Grace (1842–1920).
  • Helen Margaret Phipps (1876–1934), who in 1904 married Bradley Martin in Scotland, brother-in-law of William Craven, 4th Earl of Craven (1868–1921).
  • Henry Carnegie Phipps (1879–1953), who in 1907 married Gladys Livingston Mills (1883–1970).
  • Howard Phipps (1881–1981), who in 1931 married Harriet Dyer Price, daughter of Theodore Hazeltine Price and granddaughter of Alexander B. Dyer (1815–1874).
  • Phipps died in Great Neck, New York on September 22, 1930, and his wife, Anne died in October 1934.

    At his death, Phipps' estate was worth $3,121,810.32 (equivalent to $44,756,000 in 2016), according to a transfer tax appraisal documents, of which $2,212,002 (equivalent to $31,713,000 in 2016) was in stocks and bonds, $926,679 (equivalent to $13,285,000 in 2016) was in properties, notes, cash and insurance bonds, and $375 in jointly owned property. His wife was the sole beneficiary of his estate according to his June 1, 1915 will.

    References

    Henry Phipps, Jr. Wikipedia