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Whipple Van Buren Phillips

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Nationality
  
American

Grandchildren
  
H. P. Lovecraft

Name
  
Whipple Buren

Occupation
  
businessman


Whipple Van Buren Phillips photosgenicomp135d1fd6a75344483bf7a3f19dw

Full Name
  
Whipple Van Buren Phillips

Born
  
November 22, 1833 (
1833-11-22
)
Moosup Valley, Foster, Rhode Island

Cause of death
  
"paralytic shock" (stroke)

Known for
  
businessman, grandfather of H. P. Lovecraft

Died
  
March 28, 1904, Providence, Rhode Island, United States

Children
  
Sarah Susan Phillips Lovecraft

People also search for
  
Sarah Susan Phillips Lovecraft

Resting place
  
Swan Point Cemetery

Whipple Van Buren Phillips (November 22, 1833 – March 28, 1904) was an American businessman from Providence, Rhode Island who also had mining interests in Idaho. He was most notable as the grandfather of H. P. Lovecraft, whom he raised with his daughters and encouraged to have an appreciation of literature, especially classical literature and English poetry.

Life

At the age of 14, he was orphaned when his father Jeremiah was killed in an industrial accident. He ran a store in Moosup Valley. He invented a fringe-trimming machine and made a good deal of money from it.

Phillips married Robie (or Roby) Alzada Place on January 27, 1856, and left to seek his fortune. He operated a successful sawmill in the village of Greene, named by him for a hero of the American Revolution, Nathanael Greene. In 1874, he sold out and settled in Providence. He served in several public offices and joined every organization in Providence, including the Masons.

The two had five children,

  • Lillian Delora Phillips (1856–1932)
  • Sarah Susan Phillips (1857–1921)
  • Emeline Estella Phillips (1859–1865)
  • Edwin Everett Phillips (1864–1918)
  • Annie Emeline Phillips (1866–1941)
  • Whipple ran the successful Owyhee Land and Irrigation Company. In 1900, however, a dam built by his company on the Snake River in Idaho failed, as did a replacement dam. He was forced to sell off personal property to avoid complete ruin.

    On Sunday evening, March 27, 1904, while he was visiting the home of a crony, Alderman Gray, he was seized by a “paralytic shock,” likely a stroke. He died the following day, near midnight at his home at 454 Angell Street.

    References

    Whipple Van Buren Phillips Wikipedia