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User:RalphOnTheRailroad/Sandbox/My David B. Jones

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David B. Jones (1848 – August 23, 1923) was president and chairman of the board of directors of the Mineral Point Zinc Company and considered a founder of the Zinc industry in America. When ill, he chartered a special train whose speed rivaled the time of the Scott special.

Biography

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"He founded the Mineral Point [Zinc] Company in Wisconsin, which owns the whole town in Wisconsin, about thirty years ago and merged it with the New Jersey Zinc Company in a nation-wide organization in 1897."[1]

David Benton Jones had a winter home near Los Angeles, California, at "Pepper Hill" in Montecito, California.[2] He had a townhouse at 1435 Astor Street in Chicago, Illinois, and a summer house at Lake Forest, Illinois. When he was ill, he chartered a [1] between Los Angeles, Chicago, and Lake Forest which was a few minutes faster than the Scott Special. David B. Jones also had a house in Florida.[3]

"Mr. Jones was born in Pembrokeshire, North Wales, in 1848. He came to this country as a boy and received his education here, graduating from Princeton University in 1874. He was a close friend of ex-President Wilson."[4]

David B. Jones had two daughters: Gwethalyn Jones and Catherine (Mrs. Edward H. Bennett) Jones and two sons: Owen B. and Herbert Jones.[5]

Notes

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  1. ^ "David Benton Jones Dead...".
  2. ^ Wilson 2002: 13
  3. ^ David B. Jones' homes are mentioned in "Zinc Industry Founder Dead...".
  4. ^ "David Benton Jones Dead. Prominent Capitalist Was Founder of Zinc Industry in America".
  5. ^ "David B. Jones, Zinc Capitalist, Passes Away".. "Catherine" is mentioned in Social Register summer 1919. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

References

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"David B. Jones, Zinc Capitalist, Passes Away". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 23, 1923. p. 3.

"David Benton Jones Dead. Prominent Capitalist Was Founder of Zinc Industry in America". The New York Times. August 24, 1923. p. 11.

Social Register summer 1919. XXXIII (75). Bowling Green, [KY?]: Social Register Association: p. 436. June 1919 http://books.google.com/books?id=9RQJAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA436. Retrieved 7 September 2009. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)

Wilson, Richard Guy; Thorne, Martha (ed.) (2002). "The Styles of David Adler". David Adler, architect: the elements of style. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press. pp. 13–33. ISBN 9780300097023. {{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)

"Zinc Industry Founder Dead. D. B. Jones Passes Away at Lake Forest. Magnate Becomes Ill Here Last May. Was Rushed East on Train That Cost $11,000". The Los Angeles Times. August 24, 1923. p. 16.

See Also

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Fiedler, George (1997). Mineral Point: A History. Mineral Point, Wisconsin: Memorial Pendarvis Endowment Trust Fund.

Put in categories {{US-business-bio-1840s-stub}}