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Robert Seaman

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Name
  
Robert Seaman

Role
  
Industrialist


Died
  
March 11, 1904

Spouse
  
Nellie Bly (m. 1895–1904)

Robert Seaman httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
1822
Catskill, Greene County, New York

People also search for
  
Nellie Bly, Michael Cochran, Mary Jane Cochran

Robert Livingston Seaman (1822 – March 11, 1904) was an American millionaire industrialist who was the husband of investigative journalist Elizabeth Jane Cochran (better known as Nellie Bly).

Robert Seaman httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons66

Born in Catskill, Greene County, New York to William and Ellen Seaman, Robert made his fortune in the wholesale grocery business and in 1869 started the Ironclad Manufacturing Company, manufacturing cans for shipping milk on trains, riveted boilers, tanks, and “The Most Durable Enameled Kitchen Ware Made.”

Marriage to Elizabeth Cochran:

In March of 1895, Robert met journalist Elizabeth Jane Cochran at a dinner party and on April 5, 1895 married her. An article announcing their marriage called him one of the most carefully dressed men in New York. Seaman's loved ones were suspicious, sure that she had married him for his money. One magazine even wondered if it was an example of her "stunt reporting" in which Nellie would pretend to be married and then write about it. After their marriage, they resided in his home on West 37th Street in New York City. In 1896, they traveled to Europe, returning to New York in 1899 to take care of problems with his business.

Death:

On February 6, 1904, Robert was struck by a horse and wagon while crossing a street and on March 11, 1904, he died of heart disease brought on by his injuries .

Roberts Business prospered during his lifetime and for a number of years after his death under his wife's management. At the 1901 Pan-American Exposition, Iron Clad factories were promoted as being, “Owned exclusively by Nellie Bly – the only woman in the world personally managing industries of such a magnitude.”  After his death in 1904, his wife became the energetic and innovative president of his Iron Clad Manufacturing Company. Later, however, embezzlement on the part of employees destroyed the company. At its peak, Iron Clad employed 1,500 and could produce 1,000 steel barrels daily, but then charges of fraud led to bitterly contested bankruptcy proceedings, beginning in 1911.  The Iron Clad Manufacturing Company eventually succumbed to debt, and Bly returned to newspaper reporting, covering women’s suffrage events and Europe’s Eastern Front during the war.

References

Robert Seaman Wikipedia