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Philip L. B. Iglehart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philip L. B. Iglehart (1913 – February 9, 1993) was a Chilean American polo player.[1][2]

Biography

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Philip Iglehart was born in Chile in 1913.[2] He was educated at the Lawrence School in New York City, the Aiken Preparatory School in Aiken, South Carolina, St. Paul's School in New Hampshire and Yale University.[1][2]

During the Second World War, he served as Vice President for operations in the Pacific Ocean of Grace Lines, a shipping company.[2] He then operated a cattle ranch and orange groves near Lake Okeechobee, Florida.[2] From 1964 until 1974, he owned a farm near the Baltimore Country Club in Baltimore, Maryland.[2]

He established the Gulfstream Polo Club in Lake Worth, Florida.[1][2] He helped find a new location for the Meadowbrook Polo Club after it was taken by the construction of a highway.[1][2] In 1988, he founded the Museum of Polo and Hall of Fame alongside H. Jeremy Chisholm, Leverett S. Miller, and George C. Sherman, Jr.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

He had two sons and one daughter.[2] His brother was Stewart Iglehart.[2] He lived in Lake Worth, Florida.[2]

References

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