Henry F. Atherton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Francis Atherton (August 3, 1883 – February 10, 1949) was an American business executive, lawyer and Harvard alumnus. He was a member of the New York State Bar Association from 1909.[1]

Atherton was born on August 3, 1883, in Nashua, New Hampshire, the son of Captain Henry B. Atherton (1835–1906) and Abbie Louise Armington (1840–1896) of Ludlow, Vermont. His father was 48 years old at the time of his birth, and had been severely wounded in the Peninsula campaign of the American Civil War. Although his father was an attorney, he was also editor-in-chief of The Telegraph of Nashua.

Atherton lost his parents whilst young. His mother died when he was just 12 years old. By the age of 23 his father had died. His widowed father remarried in 1898 to a celebrated British born physician, Ella Blaylock Atherton M. D. (1860–1933).[2][3] Atherton had two half siblings, Blaycock and Ives.

He was educated in local schools in Nashua. His correspondence with his father whilst attending Harvard (1902–1906), forms part of the Henry B Atherton papers in Dartmouth College.[4]

He received an A.B. degree from Harvard in 1905. Whilst he was studying law at Harvard, his father died of pneumonia at the family home in Fairmount Heights, Nashua. In 1908 he received his LL. B. degree from Harvard Law School.[5] He practiced law until 1919.

Career

Atherton went to work for Jacob F. Schoellkopf Jr., an American business executive and industrialist, as a legal representative.

After a period of war service in the United States Army (1917–1919), he joined the National Aniline & Chemical Company (est. 1917) and became a Secretary within the company in 1919. The 1920 merger with four other chemical companies: Barrett Paving Materials (est. 1852), General Chemical Company (est. 1899), Semet-Solvay Company (est. 1895), and the Solvay Process Company (est. 1881) led to the formation of the Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation. He served as its president from 1934 to 1946.[6] He was elected as chairman of the Board of Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation in 1935; a position he held right up to his untimely death whilst on vacation in Florida in 1949.[7][8]

Awards and recognition

He was a member of the chemistry visiting committee of the Board of Overseers of Harvard University.[9]

Atherton received a certificate of appreciation from the US Secretary of War in 1945 for his contributory role

“in the establishment of important policies leading to an adequate supply of military chemicals”

[10]

Personal

Ancestry

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI