Thomas Fortune Ryan

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Thomas Fortune Ryan

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Lovingston, Nelson County, VA, United States
Death: November 23, 1928 (77)
Manhattan, New York City, New York County, New York, United States
Place of Burial: Arrington, Nelson County, VA, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of George A Ryan and Lucinda Tenilla Ryan
Husband of Ida Mary Ryan and Mary Townsend Lord (Nicoll)
Father of Leo J. Ryan; John Barry Ryan; Thomas Fortune Ryan Jr; William Keane Ryan; Allan Aloysius Ryan, Sr. and 3 others

Managed by: Richard McKay Cryan
Last Updated:

About Thomas Fortune Ryan

About two miles east is Oak Ridge, a 4,800-acre estate first patented in the 1730s. Robert Rives (1764-1845), a tobacco planter and international trader, built his house there in 1802. In 1867, William Porcher Miles (1822-1899), a former Confederate congressman, acquired the plantation. Nelson County native and Wall Street financier Thomas Fortune Ryan (1851-1928) purchased Oak Ridge in 1901 and transformed it into a country estate. He remodeled Rives's Federal farmhouse into a Colonial Revival mansion and built some 80 structures, including schools, a telephone company building, a movie theater, and stables for Ryan's 200 Thoroughbreds. A Crystal Palace-style greenhouse, a racetrack, and a private railroad station are among 50 surviving structures.

Additional, biographical information from unknown source:
Thomas Fortune Ryan-He was a U.S. tobacco, insurance and transportation magnate. Although he lived in New York City for much of his adult career, Ryan was perhaps the greatest benefactor of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Richmond in the decades before the Great Depression. In addition to paying for schools, hospitals and other charitable works, Ryan's donations paid for the construction of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Richmond, Virginia. Ryan also made significant donations to Catholic institutions in New York City and Washington, D.C. Thomas Fortune Ryan was born on October 17, 1851 near Lovingston, Virginia, the county seat of Nelson County. Despite a myths promulgated by Cleveland Amory regarding his background, Ryan was neither orphaned nor penniless as a youth, nor did his ancestors flee the Potato Famine as did many who worked on or rode his streetcars. Rural Virginia where Ryan grew up attracted few of those emigrants. Ryan's father was a tailor and managed a small hotel. He traced his ancestry to Protestant Anglo-Irish settlers who came to North America in the seventeenth century. Ryan's mother, Lucinda Fortune Ryan, died in 1856 when he was five years old. His father remarried and moved to Tennessee two years later. Ryan was raised as a Protestant by his mother's extended family in Lovingston, south of Charlottesville in Virginia's Piedmont. Local Baptist ministers taught the youth to read and write, but Ryan did not attend college. Before the American Civil War, Ryan and his younger brother owned three slaves. Aged 17, three years after the war ended, Ryan fled the lack of economic opportunity for post-war Virginia and so moved to the nearest big city, Baltimore, Maryland with $100 in his pocket. En route, Ryan converted to Catholicism, purportedly after long discussions with the conductor. In Baltimore, John S. Barry, a prosperous dry goods merchant and Catholic, hired young Ryan. By 1872, Barry helped Ryan secure a brokerage assistant position on Wall Street where he would be tutored by William Collins Whitney. Ryan opened a brokerage firm with two partners, Lee, Ryan & Warren, the following year. In 1873 Ryan married his former boss's daughter, Ida Mary Barry, whose family were devout Roman Catholics. They had seven children. In 1874, his firm purchased Ryan a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. At the same time, Ryan became active in politics, especially the Tammany Hall machine that controlled much of the city's operations, giving him political and industrial contacts across the city. Ryan's fortune began in public transit. In 1883, he founded the New York Cable Railroad and bid on the proposed route from lower Manhattan to Midtown. After numerous legal and financial problems, in 1886 Ryan reorganized his cable railroad as the Metropolitan Traction Company. By 1893, construction of Ryan's rail system was underway on Broadway. Metropolitan continually acquired additional lines so that by 1900 it controlled 3,000 cars and 300 miles of track the majority of New York's streetcar operations. Ryan's most profitable investment was tobacco. Having invested in its stocks throughout the 1890s, Ryan joined tobacco assets in 1898, forming The Union Tobacco Company. Shortly thereafter, he merged Union Tobacco with his greatest competitor, James Duke of North Carolina, forming the American Tobacco Company. Together Ryan and Duke developed the British-American Tobacco Company to protect American tobacco trade in Europe. Upon his death, Ryan also had major holdings in R. J. Reynolds and Liggett & Myers. In 1905, amid public outcry, Ryan purchased the $400 million strong Equitable Life Assurance Society, a major factor in the insurance industry. Although Ryan strove to make Equitable more responsive to its policy holders, public reaction to his purchase was overwhelmingly negative. His reputation for cutthroat business dealings in the streetcar and subway businesses made the public distrustful. In 1909, Ryan sold his Equitable stock. Also in 1905, Ryan's Metropolitan street car system was threatened by New York's increasingly popular subway system. He merged Metropolitan with August Belmont, Jr.'s Interborough Rapid Transit Company. But the joint company's finances were shaky, and Ryan pulled out. Meanwhile, some $35 million that Ryan had raised in a bond issue were misappropriated. Ryan was investigated for corruption in 1908, but the grand jury brought no charges. Meanwhile, Ryan was making fortunes with coal mines, banks, public utilities and railroads. He owned Royal Typewriter and backed the maker of the Thompson submachine gun. At one time Ryan had controlling interest in 30 corporations.

As her husband's wealth grew exponentially, Ida Barry Ryan began making large benefactions to Catholic charitable organizations in New York, Virginia, and across the country. The Ryans funded churches, convents and hospitals in Manhattan, including the architecturally important St. Jean Baptiste Catholic Church on the Upper East Side. In Washington, D.C., they paid for a gymnasium and dormitory at the Jesuit-founded Georgetown University. In 1901, the Ryans funded the construction of Sacred Heart Church and Sacred Heart School on Perry Street in Manchester, Virginia (now part of Richmond). In the same year, the Ryans donated $250,000 to build a new cathedral in Richmond, and soon doubled that donation to ensure that the interior would be of the highest workmanship. The Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, whose cornerstone was laid by the apostolic delegate on June 4, 1903, was dedicated by the same nuncio on November 29, 1906, and remains one of the metropolitan area's architectural landmarks. Other Ryan gifts in Virginia included the Cathedral High and the Cathedral Primary schools in Richmond. In October 1903, Ryan and his wife donated a two story brick and steam heated building near the Newport News Shipyard to the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth so they could start a Catholic girls school (to be named St. Vincent's de Paul School and later renamed Peninsula Catholic High School). In June 1904, they donated a new building for the Sisters and their 104 students in their charge. The Ryans also financed construction of Catholic churches in Harrisonburg and Charlottesville. Pope Pius X recognized the couple's generosity by naming him to the papal nobility and giving Ida Ryan the cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice for her work in the Diocese. The couple's lifetime contributions to Catholic charities around the country totalled $20 million. However, Mrs. Ryan refused to allow any funds to be used for "colored work" (including schools and hospitals for Virginia's freed blacks, despite diocescan missionary priorities of the time). The Ryans' philanthropy also extended to Southern history, the fine arts and exploration. Ryan financed and selected Charles Hoffbauer to create a series of paintings, "The Four Seasons of the Confederacy", commissioned for a major gallery in what is now the Virginia Historical Society. For Jamestown's 300th anniversary in 1907, Ryan donated a collection of portraits of key players in Virginia's settlement. Thomas Ryan also helped finance Virginia explorer Richard E. Byrd's flight to the South Pole. In 1887, the Ryans bought the Groesbeck mansion near Suffern, New York, a major town on the Erie Railroad, and rebuilt it into a summer home they called "Montebello". During the three decades before her death, Ida Barry Ryan funded the construction of the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, as well as the Good Samaritan Hospital.

Ryan announced his intention to retire in 1912. Re-establishing his roots in his native state of Virginia, he had since 1901 maintained "Oak Ridge" in Nelson County, formerly the estate of tobacco trader William Rives and later of former Confederate and U.S. Congressman William Porcher Miles. Ryan also became as a Virginia delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912, which selected fellow Virginian Woodrow Wilson as the party's presidential candidate. On October 17, 1917, on his 66th birthday, his wife Ida died from heart disease. Twelve days later the widower Ryan married widow Mary Townsend Lord Cuyler.

On November 23, 1928, Thomas Fortune Ryan died, the South's wealthiest native son and the nation's 10th wealthiest man. He left a fortune of more than $200 million. He was buried on his Oak Ridge estate, as was his second wife, Mary. Although a place had been reserved for Ida Barry Ryan in the crypt of Richmond's Sacred Heart Cathedral, she was ultimately interred in the cemetery at St. Andrews-on-Hudson Seminary in Hyde Park, New York (now The Culinary Institute of America).

Gravesite Details
He is buried in the Ryan Mausoleum adjacent to the cemetery.

From the Virginia Historical Society

http://www.vahistorical.org/exhibits/headstales_inventory.htm#ryan

Thomas Fortune Ryan (1851–1928)

Thomas Fortune Ryan's career was tainted by the greed and corruption of the Gilded Age; he came to epitomize the "robber barons" that employed unethical means to amass fortunes in business or banking. Nearly as accomplished as John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, or J. P. Morgan, Ryan is less remembered today, probably because he diversified. At one point he held controlling interest in thirty corporations.

Ryan's early life was an American success story. Fourteen years old at the close of the Civil War, he was an orphan under the care of his mother's family and seemingly destined to suffer the postwar poverty of the southern Virginia piedmont. At seventeen, however, this lanky country boy found opportunity in John S. Barry's dry-goods commission house in Baltimore. Four years later Barry financed Ryan's move to New York City, where he prospered for a decade in a Wall Street brokerage firm that he co-founded. He bought a seat on the New York Stock Exchange (the youngest member ever) and married Barry's daughter.

In 1883, when a streetcar system was proposed for New York City, Ryan bid for the first line. By the expected bribery and political influence, and unexpected creation of the nation's first holding company, he managed to conglomerate franchises for nearly the whole operation. In 1905, when his above-ground railway was threatened by a subway system, Ryan was able to consolidate with his competitors. When he retired the next year from his several traction companies, they collapsed. Among the other ventures that put to use Ryan's political savvy and cutthroat tactics, the most profitable involved tobacco and insurance. The most sensational was his development of the gold, copper, and diamond industries in the Congo at the invitation of Belgium's King Leopold, who scandalized the world by ruthless exploitation of his African colony. Ryan's collaborator, William C. Whitney, called him "the most adroit, suave and noiseless man" that American finance had ever known. Whitney once predicted that his friend would become one of the wealthiest men in the country. Indeed, at death in 1928, Ryan was said to be the nation's tenth richest, and his estate was estimated at somewhere between one and five hundred million dollars.

In 1901 Ryan and his wife Ida Barry Ryan funded construction of the only Roman Catholic cathedral ever built by a single family—the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart. In 1913 Ryan financed the Confederate murals in the Confederate Memorial Institute or Battle Abbey (now the Virginia Historical Society).

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Thomas Fortune Ryan's Timeline

1851
October 17, 1851
Lovingston, Nelson County, VA, United States
1874
September 7, 1874
Brooklyn, NY, United States
1876
1876
1878
August 25, 1878
New York City, NY
1880
May 5, 1880
Hyde Park, NY
1882
September 13, 1882
Brooklyn, NY
1884
May 13, 1884
Brooklyn, NY
1890
November 4, 1890
Hyde Park, NY