This article's lead sectionmay be too short to adequately summarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article.(June 2020)
Henry Thompson Sloane (December 1, 1845 – September 18, 1937)[1] was an American businessman during the Gilded Age.
Early life
Sloane was born in New York City on December 1, 1845. He was the fourth son of William Sloane (1810–1879) and Euphemia (née Douglas) Sloane (1810–1886). Among his siblings was John Sloane, who married Adela Berry;[2] Douglas Sloane; Mary Elizabeth Sloane; William Douglas Sloane, who married Emily Thorn Vanderbilt;[3] and Euphemia (née Sloane) Coffin, who married Edmund Coffin and was the mother of Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin and William Sloane Coffin Sr.[4]
His parents were emigrants from Kilmarnock, Scotland. His paternal grandparents were John Sloane and Jane Mary (née Lammie) Sloane,[5] and his maternal grandparents were David and Margaret Douglas.[6]
Sloane entered Yale College with the class of 1866, but left at the close of the first term of his senior year due to ill health. In 1869, Yale awarded him a degree.[1]
Career
Beginning at the age of fifteen, Sloane started working for the family carpet and furniture firm which was started by his father in 1843. In 1852, his uncle John W. Sloane joined the firm and it was renamed W. & J. Sloane.[7]
He later became a member of the firm,[8] and in 1870 was sent west to San Francisco to establish the California branch of the firm. When the company was incorporated in 1891, Sloane became a director and remained on the board until his death.[3] He later served as a senior director and treasurer of the company.[1] In his father and brother's memory, Sloane donated $515,000 to Yale for a large physics laboratory known as the Sloane Physics Laboratory.[1][9]
In 1880, Sloane was married to Jessie Ann Robbins (1858–1935).[10] Jessie was the daughter of Matilda Louisa (née Frost) Robbins and Daniel Cook Robbins, a partner in the wholesale drug firm of McKesson & Robbins. Together, they were the parents of two daughters:
Emily Eleanor Sloane (1890–1981),[17] who married Baron Amaury de la Grange [fr] (1888–1953),[18][19] a French Senator, Under-Secretary of State of France, and Vice-President of the International Aviation Federation.[18] He was held prisoner for five years during World War II by the Nazis.
On April 28, 1899, his wife divorced him. Five hours later, she married Perry Belmont, a U.S. Representative and former U.S. Minister to Spain.[20] While Sloane was rumored to have been engaged, he never remarried.[21]