Joseph Harvey Ladew Sr. (April 10, 1865 – February 16, 1940) was one of the largest leather manufacturers in the world with Fayerweather & Ladew, and he was a yachtsman.[1][2]
On November 27, 1901, he married Jennie Bennett House.[8] They had two children: Joseph Harvey Ladew Jr. (1905-?) and Oliver Ladew (1906-1979). Ladew died at LeRoy Sanitarium in Manhattan.[2]
Yachts
He had two yachts, both named Columbia built, the first built by Cramp Shipbuilding launched from Philadelphia on August 23, 1893.[9][10] Turned over to the United States Navy for the Spanish–American War in 1898, the yacht was renamed the USS Wasp and was used in the blockade of Cuba. In 1909 the ship began a nine year long loan to the New York Naval Militia.[11] The yacht was brought back into active naval service 7 April 1917 for World War I service and continued in naval service until decommissioned at Norfolk on 1 December 1919.
^The National cyclopedia of American biography. 1910. When the senior Ladew died in 1888, a brother, J. Harvey Ladew, acquired an interest in the business and became a member of the firm. ...
^"Mrs. Rebecca K. Ladew". The New York Times. April 27, 1905. Retrieved 2009-12-05. Mrs. Rebecca K. Ladew. Ladew, the widow of Harvey Smith Ladew, who was for many years one of the ...
^ abGeorge Graham Lake. America's Successful Men of Affairs: An Encyclopedia of Contemporaneous Biography. Joseph Harvey Ladew, tanner, son of the late Harvey S. Ladew, a young man of good ability, was born in New York April 10, 1864 [sic].
^Naval History And Heritage Command. "Wasp VII". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Naval History And Heritage Command. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
^"J. Harvey Ladew's Columbia Can Be Used as a Cruiser". New York Times. August 27, 1899. Retrieved 2009-11-29. J. Harvey Ladew, a member of the New York Yacht Club has had constructed at the Crescent shipyards, at Elizabethport, N. J., a yacht which is almost a duplicate of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey steamer Pathfinder. The name of the new yacht is Columbia, and the cost $200,000.
^Railroad Gazette (1899). "The Crescent Shipyard". Railroad Gazette. 43 (June 30, 1899). New York: 467–468. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
^"Ladew Yacht Released". The New York Times. June 15, 1913. Retrieved 2009-11-29. As was expected, the so-called seizure by the Japanese authorities of the yacht Columbia, owned by J. Harvey Ladew of New York, has proved to be less alarming than newspaper accounts at first made it appear. The yacht has not been detained and the prosecution of its Captain has been dropped.