Harris Charles Fahnestock (February 27, 1835 – June 4, 1914) was an American investment banker.[1][2]
Early life
Fahnestock was born on February 27, 1835, in Harrisburg in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. He was a son of Adam Konigmacher Fahnestock (1806–1887) and Sibyl Thompson (née Holbrook) Fahnestock (1811–1851), who owned a store in Harrisburg. Among his siblings was Edward Morris Fahnestock and Louis Fahnestock. He was a direct descendant of Johann Diedrich Fahnestock, who came to America from Germany in 1726, settling near Ephrata, Pennsylvania.[3]
He was formally educated at the Harrisburg Academy through age 16, while working for his father, before he began at the Harrisburg National Bank as a teller.[4]
Fahnestock & Co. was founded on May 11, 1881, by his son William Fahnestock, Joseph T. Brown and H. C. Fahnestock as special member.[8] In 1936, the firm took over the business of H.L. Horton & Co.,[9] and eventually led to creation of Oppenheimer & Co. in 1950.[6]
Philanthropy
Fahnestock donated $50,000 towards the construction of the west arch or "crossing" of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Upper Manhattan. In addition to serving as a trustee and treasurer of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and a member and patron of the American Museum of Natural History, he was a benefactor of the Post-Graduate Hospital, to which he donated a significant amount after the death of his wife in 1898, including $100,000 for a Nurses' Training School in 1899.[4]
Personal life
Fahnestock married Margaret A. McKinley (1835–1898), a daughter of Isaac G. McKinley, also of Harrisburg. Together, they were the parents of five boys and a girl.
Harris Fahnestock (1869–1939),[14] who married Mabel Estelle Metcalf (1870–1930) in 1896.[15] After her death, he married Georgette (née Gérard-Varet) Hyde (1897–1968), daughter of Louis Gérard-Varet (head of the University of Rennes), in 1937.[16]
Helen Fahnestock (1872–1955), who married Dr. Clarence Gordon Campbell (1868–1956) in 1896.[17] They divorced in 1922 and she married John Hubbard (1870–1933) in 1928.[18][19]
Clarence Fahnestock (1873–1918), who married Marguerite Sawyer, a member of the Lodge family of Boston, in 1906.[20] His estate in Cold Spring, known as Clear Lake, was considered one of the finest in America.[21]
Ernest Fahnestock (1876–1937),[22] who married Georgette Henriette (née DeGrove) Perry (1873–1957), the widow of merchant Edward Perry, in 1905. His estate was valued at $3,613,625 in 1941.[23]
In 1929 Dr. Ernest Fahnestock, donated about 2,400 acres (9.7 km2) as a memorial to his brother Clarence, who died in the post-World War IInfluenza epidemic of 1918 while treating patients with the disease. Today, the 14,337 acres (58.02 km2) park is known as the Clarence Fahnestock State Park in Putnam and Dutchess Counties in New York.
Through his son Harris, Harris C. Fahnestock was a grandfather of Ruth Fahnestock (1908–1974), who married A. Coster Schermerhorn in 1926.[24] They divorced (he married and divorced romance novelist Ursula Parrott) and in 1937, Ruth married Count Alfred de Marigny.[25] They also divorced and Marigny married Nancy Oakes in 1942. In 1943, he was arrested, tried, and acquitted of murdering his father-in-law Sir Harry Oakes.[26]