Bio | School |
1802 – 1876 Industrialist in Indiana, Dry good supplier to Union army, and the primary original benefactor | |
1820 – 1905 Tobacco industrialist and philanthropist who fought in the American Civil War | |
1801 – 1887 Leading local philanthropist and real estate donor. Owner of a prospering dry goods and clothing business | |
1816 – 1900 Capitalist with investments in land, real estate, lumber, railroads and cotton. Was found to have died under peculiar circumstances | |
1793 – 1873 Ordained Baptist minister, district judge, and US House Representative | |
1745 – 1830 American Revolutionary War hero, New York philanthropist and an early benefactor of the school | |
1794 – 1877 Named in honor of preeminent shipping and rail magnate who provided the school its initial $1 million endowment | |
1807 – 1888 American politician and statesman, Ambassador and the United States Superintendent of Agriculture. Served in the Confederate States Army | |
1868 – 1884 Son and only child of American tycoon, industrialist and politician | |
1755 – 1835 Fourth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States | |
1801 – 1877 American leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and a settler of the Western United States | |
1850 – 1955 Industrialist and philanthropist brothers, who established a glass manufacturing business in New York and Indiana in the 1880s | |
1850 – 1955 Industrialist and philanthropist brothers, who established a glass manufacturing business in New York and Indiana in the 1880s | |
1793 – 1873 Ordained Baptist minister, district judge, and US House Representative | |
1807 – 1888 American politician and statesman, Ambassador and the United States Superintendent of Agriculture. Served in the Confederate States Army | |
1820 – 1905 Tobacco industrialist and philanthropist who fought in the American Civil War | |
1755 – 1835 Fourth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States | |
1802 – 1876 Industrialist in Indiana, Dry good supplier to Union army, and the primary original benefactor | |
1816 – 1900 Capitalist with investments in land, real estate, lumber, railroads and cotton. Was found to have died under peculiar circumstances | |
1745 – 1830 American Revolutionary War hero, New York philanthropist and an early benefactor of the school | |
1868 – 1884 Son and only child of American tycoon, industrialist and politician | |
1801 – 1887 Leading local philanthropist and real estate donor. Owner of a prospering dry goods and clothing business | |
1794 – 1877 Named in honor of preeminent shipping and rail magnate who provided the school its initial $1 million endowment | |
1801 – 1877 American leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and a settler of the Western United States | |
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