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Darius Ogden Mills

Darius Ogden Mills (September 25, 1825 – January 3, 1910) was a prominent American banker and philanthropist. For a time, he was California's wealthiest citizen.[1]

Darius Ogden Mills
Darius Ogden Mills
Born(1825-09-25)September 25, 1825
North Salem, New York, United States
DiedJanuary 3, 1910(1910-01-03) (aged 84)
Millbrae, California, United States
Resting placeSleepy Hollow Cemetery,
Sleepy Hollow, New York
EducationMt. Pleasant Academy
Occupation(s)Banker, investor, mining & railway executive, philanthropist
Spouse
Jane Templeton Cunningham
(m. 1854)
ChildrenOgden Mills
Elisabeth Mills
RelativesOgden L. Mills (grandson)
Ogden Mills Reid (grandson)
Gladys L. Mills (granddaughter)
Jane B. Mills (granddaughter)
Jean T. Reid (granddaughter)
Signature
Darius Ogden Mills and family (c. 1890) with Whitelaw Reid and J. P. Morgan at the Millbrae estate—present-day Millbrae, California
Millbrae estate (1869–1954), image from c. 1895

Early life edit

Mills was born in North Salem, in Westchester County, New York, the fifth son of Hannah Ogden (1791–1850) and James Mills (1788–1841), a supervisor, postmaster and justice of the peace for the town of North Salem.[2] His maternal grandfather was William Ogden (1767–1815),[3] who was from Dutchess County and a member of the prominent Ogden family of New York and New Jersey.[4] He was educated at North Salem Academy and Mt. Pleasant Academy.[2]

Career edit

Shortly after his father's death in 1841,[5] he began working as a clerk in a small general store in New York City at the age of 15.[4] At age 21, he moved to Buffalo, New York, at the invitation of his cousin, Elihu J. Townsend (the son of Malinda Ogden Townsend, his mother's sister),[2] and became the cashier of the Merchants' Bank of Erie County,[6] and later a one third owner.[3][7]

In December 1848, he took an exploratory trip to California, through the Isthmus of Panama, where he joined the California Gold Rush, following two of his brothers, James and Edgar Mills. By November 1849, he had made $40,000 (~$1.16 million in 2023) and decided to make California his permanent home.[2] Therefore, in 1850, he returned to Buffalo where he sold his interest in the Bank and returned to Sacramento, where he founded his own bank, the "Gold Bank of D. O. Mills & Co."[3][8] This was helped significantly by a cousin from the English branch of the Mills family, Charles Mills, 1st Baron Hillingdon, who ran the Glyn, Mills & Co. bank in London. He never invested in gold mining or silver mining directly, as he considered mining to be too speculative.[5] He rather started ancillary businesses that supported the mining industry, such as banks and railroads. He was a part owner of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad, which was the only link from the Comstock Lode to the Central Pacific Railroad. The major shareholder in the railroad was William Sharon, whom William Ralston had sent to Virginia City as representative of the Bank of California.[2]

In August 1884, Mills, Alvinza Hayward, a San Francisco mining tycoon, and several other investors purchased 720 acres encompassing a mineral spring in Saratoga, California the chemical content of which was almost identical to Saratoga Springs, New York for a reported $2,000. In 1866, they opened the 14-room Congress Hall to great local acclaim, and in 1872 sold the property to Lewis P Sage and son for approximately $25,000.[9] Also in 1864, with other investors, he founded the Bank of California, which grew large in the 1860s and 1870s, but collapsed due to financial irregularities involving its chief cashier, William Chapman Ralston. Mills used his personal fortune to revive the bank, along with Sharon, and attract new investment, and within three years, the bank was again strong.[2]

Later life edit

In 1880, two years after resigning from his second term as the president of the Bank of California, Mills returned to New York, where he participated in the development of a number of buildings in Manhattan, including 160 Bleecker Street, or "Mills House No. 1".[3] He also invested in the Niagara Falls Power Company, one of the first large power companies organized in the United States.[3][10] His devotion to philanthropy involved sitting on the boards of a number of charitable and cultural institutions.[2] He was a trustee of the Carnegie Institution from 1902 to 1909.[11]

Millbrae estate edit

 
The mausoleum of Darius Ogden Mills, in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery

Mills bought part of Rancho Buri Buri from José de la Cruz Sánchez and built an estate named Millbrae (also known as the Mills estate and the Mills mansion), which gave its name to the present town that grew up around it.[12] The estate took three years to build and was an imposing three-story structure featuring 42 rooms, a conservatory, a carriage house, a gatekeepers house, three artificial lakes, a dairy farm, 37,000 acres of land (at its peak), and various manicured gardens.[13][14] Due to a large fire, the estate burned down in June 1954.[13][14]

After the fire the estate was subdivided and sold, with the bulk of the land going to the Paul W. Trousdale Construction Company in 1953 and eventually becoming Mills High School, Spring Valley Elementary School, and Peninsula Hospital.[13][14] The 150 acres (0.6 km2) of the original estate bordering San Francisco Bay were leased by his grandson Ogden L. Mills to be used for Mills Field, now known as San Francisco International Airport.

Personal life edit

On September 5, 1854, he married Jane Templeton Cunningham (1832–1888), the daughter of Elizabeth Griffiths (1809–1869) and Scottish born James C. Cunningham (1801–1870), who was a pioneer and shipowner.[3] Together, they had a son and a daughter:[15]

Death and legacy edit

He died of a heart attack in 1910 at his Millbrae home, leaving an estate worth $36,227,391 (~$857 million in 2023).[18][19][20] His remains were returned to the East Coast for burial in the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow, New York.[19][21]

A number of local institutions are named for him, include Isabella I of Castile Mills Hospital, the Mills Estate housing subdivision, San Francisco's Mills Building,[22] and Mills High School. The city of Millbrae, California, is named after his estate.[4] The San Francisco airport was formerly named Mills Field, after him.

The California State Capitol rotunda houses a statue donated by Mills that depicts Queen Isabella financing Christopher Columbus's initial voyage.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ Pecuniary Emulation 2007-02-06 at the Wayback Machine by Gray Brechin.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Harrison, Mitchell C. (1902). Prominent and Progressive Americans: An Encyclopædia of Contemporaneous Biography. New York Tribune. pp. 230–235. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Carson, Samuel (1917). The Overland Monthly, Vol. LXVIII. Samuel Carson. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c "Darius Ogden Mills". The Successful American. 2, Part 1. Press Biographical Company: 14–15. January 1, 1899. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Gordon, John Steele (June 1, 2002). The Business of America: Tales from the Marketplace - American Enterprise from the Settling of New England to the Breakup of AT&T. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 9780802776358. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  6. ^ Hamersly, Lewis Randolph (1906). First Citizens of the Republic: An Historical Work Giving Portraits and Sketches of the Most Eminent Citizens of the United States. L. R. Hamersly & Company. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  7. ^ Ramirez, Salvador A. (2007). The Inside Man: The Life and Times of Mark Hopkins of New York, Michigan, and California. Salvador A. Ramirez. ISBN 9780615283159. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  8. ^ Bradford, Brad (August 30, 2011). Information Age Tales: From Adam's Apple to the Apple II and Beyond. iUniverse. ISBN 9781462030484. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  9. ^ Cunningham, Florence (1967). Saratoga's first Hundred Years. Panorama West Books. ISBN 0913548057.
  10. ^ Jonnes, Jill (August 19, 2003). Empires of Light: Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse, and the Race to Electrify the World. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 9781588360007. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  11. ^ Carnegie Institution of Washington. Year Book No. 47, July 1, 1947 – June 30, 1948 (PDF). Washington, DC. 1948. p. vi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ "Darius Ogden Mills". burlingamefoundingfamilies.wordpress.com. Peninsula Royalty: The Founding Families of Burlingame-Hillsborough. January 26, 2012. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  13. ^ a b c "Millbrae History Walk". Millbrae Historical Society. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  14. ^ a b c Niekerken, Bill Van (October 10, 2017). "When the Peninsula's most lavish 19th century mansion went up in flames". SFChronicle.com. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  15. ^ "D.O. MILLS DIES SUDDENLY IN WEST | Heart Disease Unexpectedly Ends Life of the Aged Capitalist and Philanthropist. | BUILT THE MILLS HOTELS | Gained Riches in California During the Gold Rush and Later by Wide Business Activities Here" (PDF). The New York Times. January 5, 1910. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  16. ^ "Ogden Mills Dies At His Home Here. Financier Is the Victim of Pneumonia After Three Weeks Illness. He Was 72 Years Old. Active in Many Philanthropies and Long a Leader in Social Affairs. A Native of California. Interested in Racing" (PDF). The New York Times. January 29, 1929. Retrieved December 18, 2013. Ogden Mills financier and father of Ogden L. Mills, Under-Secretary of the Treasury, died at 1:30 A.M. today at his home, 2 East Sixty-ninth Street, following an illness of more than three weeks. ...
  17. ^ "Reid Sails for Mills Funeral" (PDF). The New York Times. January 6, 1910. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  18. ^ . Hartford Courant. January 5, 1910. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved May 10, 2011. Darius Ogden Mills, the financier and philanthropist and father of Mrs. Whitelaw Reid, wife of the United States ambassador to Great Britain, died of heart disease at his winter home near this city last night, aged 84 years. Mrs. Reid, who came to California with her ...
  19. ^ a b "Mrs. Reid and Ogden Mills Inherit All Save $400,000 Left to Public institutions" (PDF). The New York Times. January 18, 1910. Retrieved May 10, 2011. The will of Darius Ogden Mills was filed yesterday in the Surrogates Court. It was a comparatively short document, and with the exception, of six bequests to public institutions, divided the estate, which has been estimated at between $50,000,000 and $60,000,000, equally between his two children -- Ogden Mills and Elisabeth Mills Reid, wife of Ambassador Whitelaw Reid.
  20. ^ "Fix Mills estate Total $36,227,391; Son and Daughter Receive $17,509,901 Each After Deductions Are Made" (PDF). The New York Times. April 18, 1914. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  21. ^ "D.O. Miles Buried; Mr. Reid Too Late – Ambassador, Who Crossed Ocean for Funeral, Still Stormbound on the St. Louis" (PDF). The New York Times. January 15, 1910. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  22. ^ Times, Special To The New York (October 15, 1908). "D.O. MILLS GIVES BUILDING.; Presents $2,500,000 Structure In San Francisco to Son and Daughter" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  23. ^ Biennial Report of the Board of State Capitol Commissioners to the Thirty-Ninth Session of the Legislature of California. Sacramento, California: W. W. Shannon, Superintendent State Printing. 1911. Retrieved April 24, 2017.

External links edit

  • November 27, 1898 The New York Times feature article on Darius Ogden Mills
  • January 4, 1910 Los Angeles Times obituary for Darius Ogden Mills November 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine

darius, ogden, mills, september, 1825, january, 1910, prominent, american, banker, philanthropist, time, california, wealthiest, citizen, born, 1825, september, 1825north, salem, york, united, statesdiedjanuary, 1910, 1910, aged, millbrae, california, united, . Darius Ogden Mills September 25 1825 January 3 1910 was a prominent American banker and philanthropist For a time he was California s wealthiest citizen 1 Darius Ogden MillsDarius Ogden MillsBorn 1825 09 25 September 25 1825North Salem New York United StatesDiedJanuary 3 1910 1910 01 03 aged 84 Millbrae California United StatesResting placeSleepy Hollow Cemetery Sleepy Hollow New YorkEducationMt Pleasant AcademyOccupation s Banker investor mining amp railway executive philanthropistSpouseJane Templeton Cunningham m 1854 wbr ChildrenOgden MillsElisabeth MillsRelativesOgden L Mills grandson Ogden Mills Reid grandson Gladys L Mills granddaughter Jane B Mills granddaughter Jean T Reid granddaughter Signature Darius Ogden Mills and family c 1890 with Whitelaw Reid and J P Morgan at the Millbrae estate present day Millbrae California Millbrae estate 1869 1954 image from c 1895 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Later life 3 Millbrae estate 4 Personal life 4 1 Death and legacy 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editMills was born in North Salem in Westchester County New York the fifth son of Hannah Ogden 1791 1850 and James Mills 1788 1841 a supervisor postmaster and justice of the peace for the town of North Salem 2 His maternal grandfather was William Ogden 1767 1815 3 who was from Dutchess County and a member of the prominent Ogden family of New York and New Jersey 4 He was educated at North Salem Academy and Mt Pleasant Academy 2 Career editShortly after his father s death in 1841 5 he began working as a clerk in a small general store in New York City at the age of 15 4 At age 21 he moved to Buffalo New York at the invitation of his cousin Elihu J Townsend the son of Malinda Ogden Townsend his mother s sister 2 and became the cashier of the Merchants Bank of Erie County 6 and later a one third owner 3 7 In December 1848 he took an exploratory trip to California through the Isthmus of Panama where he joined the California Gold Rush following two of his brothers James and Edgar Mills By November 1849 he had made 40 000 1 16 million in 2023 and decided to make California his permanent home 2 Therefore in 1850 he returned to Buffalo where he sold his interest in the Bank and returned to Sacramento where he founded his own bank the Gold Bank of D O Mills amp Co 3 8 This was helped significantly by a cousin from the English branch of the Mills family Charles Mills 1st Baron Hillingdon who ran the Glyn Mills amp Co bank in London He never invested in gold mining or silver mining directly as he considered mining to be too speculative 5 He rather started ancillary businesses that supported the mining industry such as banks and railroads He was a part owner of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad which was the only link from the Comstock Lode to the Central Pacific Railroad The major shareholder in the railroad was William Sharon whom William Ralston had sent to Virginia City as representative of the Bank of California 2 In August 1884 Mills Alvinza Hayward a San Francisco mining tycoon and several other investors purchased 720 acres encompassing a mineral spring in Saratoga California the chemical content of which was almost identical to Saratoga Springs New York for a reported 2 000 In 1866 they opened the 14 room Congress Hall to great local acclaim and in 1872 sold the property to Lewis P Sage and son for approximately 25 000 9 Also in 1864 with other investors he founded the Bank of California which grew large in the 1860s and 1870s but collapsed due to financial irregularities involving its chief cashier William Chapman Ralston Mills used his personal fortune to revive the bank along with Sharon and attract new investment and within three years the bank was again strong 2 Later life edit In 1880 two years after resigning from his second term as the president of the Bank of California Mills returned to New York where he participated in the development of a number of buildings in Manhattan including 160 Bleecker Street or Mills House No 1 3 He also invested in the Niagara Falls Power Company one of the first large power companies organized in the United States 3 10 His devotion to philanthropy involved sitting on the boards of a number of charitable and cultural institutions 2 He was a trustee of the Carnegie Institution from 1902 to 1909 11 Millbrae estate edit nbsp The mausoleum of Darius Ogden Mills in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery Mills bought part of Rancho Buri Buri from Jose de la Cruz Sanchez and built an estate named Millbrae also known as the Mills estate and the Mills mansion which gave its name to the present town that grew up around it 12 The estate took three years to build and was an imposing three story structure featuring 42 rooms a conservatory a carriage house a gatekeepers house three artificial lakes a dairy farm 37 000 acres of land at its peak and various manicured gardens 13 14 Due to a large fire the estate burned down in June 1954 13 14 After the fire the estate was subdivided and sold with the bulk of the land going to the Paul W Trousdale Construction Company in 1953 and eventually becoming Mills High School Spring Valley Elementary School and Peninsula Hospital 13 14 The 150 acres 0 6 km2 of the original estate bordering San Francisco Bay were leased by his grandson Ogden L Mills to be used for Mills Field now known as San Francisco International Airport Personal life editOn September 5 1854 he married Jane Templeton Cunningham 1832 1888 the daughter of Elizabeth Griffiths 1809 1869 and Scottish born James C Cunningham 1801 1870 who was a pioneer and shipowner 3 Together they had a son and a daughter 15 Ogden Mills 1856 1929 16 who married Ruth T Livingston 1855 1920 granddaughter of Maturin Livingston Elisabeth Mills 1857 1931 who married Whitelaw Reid 1837 1912 the U S Ambassador to Great Britain 17 Death and legacy edit He died of a heart attack in 1910 at his Millbrae home leaving an estate worth 36 227 391 857 million in 2023 18 19 20 His remains were returned to the East Coast for burial in the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow New York 19 21 A number of local institutions are named for him include Isabella I of Castile Mills Hospital the Mills Estate housing subdivision San Francisco s Mills Building 22 and Mills High School The city of Millbrae California is named after his estate 4 The San Francisco airport was formerly named Mills Field after him The California State Capitol rotunda houses a statue donated by Mills that depicts Queen Isabella financing Christopher Columbus s initial voyage 23 References edit Pecuniary Emulation Archived 2007 02 06 at the Wayback Machine by Gray Brechin a b c d e f g Harrison Mitchell C 1902 Prominent and Progressive Americans An Encyclopaedia of Contemporaneous Biography New York Tribune pp 230 235 Retrieved April 24 2017 a b c d e f Carson Samuel 1917 The Overland Monthly Vol LXVIII Samuel Carson Retrieved April 24 2017 a b c Darius Ogden Mills The Successful American 2 Part 1 Press Biographical Company 14 15 January 1 1899 Retrieved April 24 2017 a b Gordon John Steele June 1 2002 The Business of America Tales from the Marketplace American Enterprise from the Settling of New England to the Breakup of AT amp T Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 9780802776358 Retrieved April 24 2017 Hamersly Lewis Randolph 1906 First Citizens of the Republic An Historical Work Giving Portraits and Sketches of the Most Eminent Citizens of the United States L R Hamersly amp Company Retrieved April 24 2017 Ramirez Salvador A 2007 The Inside Man The Life and Times of Mark Hopkins of New York Michigan and California Salvador A Ramirez ISBN 9780615283159 Retrieved April 24 2017 Bradford Brad August 30 2011 Information Age Tales From Adam s Apple to the Apple II and Beyond iUniverse ISBN 9781462030484 Retrieved April 24 2017 Cunningham Florence 1967 Saratoga s first Hundred Years Panorama West Books ISBN 0913548057 Jonnes Jill August 19 2003 Empires of Light Edison Tesla Westinghouse and the Race to Electrify the World Random House Publishing Group ISBN 9781588360007 Retrieved April 24 2017 Carnegie Institution of Washington Year Book No 47 July 1 1947 June 30 1948 PDF Washington DC 1948 p vi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Darius Ogden Mills burlingamefoundingfamilies wordpress com Peninsula Royalty The Founding Families of Burlingame Hillsborough January 26 2012 Retrieved April 24 2017 a b c Millbrae History Walk Millbrae Historical Society Retrieved August 14 2020 a b c Niekerken Bill Van October 10 2017 When the Peninsula s most lavish 19th century mansion went up in flames SFChronicle com Retrieved August 14 2020 D O MILLS DIES SUDDENLY IN WEST Heart Disease Unexpectedly Ends Life of the Aged Capitalist and Philanthropist BUILT THE MILLS HOTELS Gained Riches in California During the Gold Rush and Later by Wide Business Activities Here PDF The New York Times January 5 1910 Retrieved April 24 2017 Ogden Mills Dies At His Home Here Financier Is the Victim of Pneumonia After Three Weeks Illness He Was 72 Years Old Active in Many Philanthropies and Long a Leader in Social Affairs A Native of California Interested in Racing PDF The New York Times January 29 1929 Retrieved December 18 2013 Ogden Mills financier and father of Ogden L Mills Under Secretary of the Treasury died at 1 30 A M today at his home 2 East Sixty ninth Street following an illness of more than three weeks Reid Sails for Mills Funeral PDF The New York Times January 6 1910 Retrieved April 24 2017 D Ogden Mills Dies Suddenly Financier and Philanthropist Father of Mrs Whitelaw Reid Fortune Estimated at 60 000 000 Mr Reid to Attend Funeral Hartford Courant January 5 1910 Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved May 10 2011 Darius Ogden Mills the financier and philanthropist and father of Mrs Whitelaw Reid wife of the United States ambassador to Great Britain died of heart disease at his winter home near this city last night aged 84 years Mrs Reid who came to California with her a b Mrs Reid and Ogden Mills Inherit All Save 400 000 Left to Public institutions PDF The New York Times January 18 1910 Retrieved May 10 2011 The will of Darius Ogden Mills was filed yesterday in the Surrogates Court It was a comparatively short document and with the exception of six bequests to public institutions divided the estate which has been estimated at between 50 000 000 and 60 000 000 equally between his two children Ogden Mills and Elisabeth Mills Reid wife of Ambassador Whitelaw Reid Fix Mills estate Total 36 227 391 Son and Daughter Receive 17 509 901 Each After Deductions Are Made PDF The New York Times April 18 1914 Retrieved April 24 2017 D O Miles Buried Mr Reid Too Late Ambassador Who Crossed Ocean for Funeral Still Stormbound on the St Louis PDF The New York Times January 15 1910 Retrieved April 24 2017 Times Special To The New York October 15 1908 D O MILLS GIVES BUILDING Presents 2 500 000 Structure In San Francisco to Son and Daughter PDF The New York Times Retrieved April 24 2017 Biennial Report of the Board of State Capitol Commissioners to the Thirty Ninth Session of the Legislature of California Sacramento California W W Shannon Superintendent State Printing 1911 Retrieved April 24 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Darius Ogden Mills November 27 1898 The New York Times feature article on Darius Ogden Mills January 4 1910 Los Angeles Times obituary for Darius Ogden Mills Archived November 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Darius Ogden Mills amp oldid 1181156416, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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