Ben Harper (politician)

Benjamin “Ben” Harper (1817–1887) was an American businessman and politician.

Ben Harper

Life and career

Harper was born February 12, 1817 in Philadelphia. He was the son of the mariner Peter Harper[1] and lived in Ohio and Missouri before he settling in Illinois in 1850.

From 1854 until 1855 Harper was Mayor of Rock Island, Illinois. He was a Republican. A wealthy hotel owner, he was the builder of the Harper House (1871)[2] and Harper′s Theatre (1878). The Harper House “has been described in superlatives, such as the ‘finest hotel between Chicago and the Pacific coast’” (George W. Wickstrom). The hotel occupied the site of the former Rodman House that burned down on October 22, 1869.[3] It is not to be confused with his private home also known as “Harper House”.[4]

Besides real estate, Harper was involved in the Coal Valley mines, Rock Island Gas Works and the Rock Island & Moline Railway Company. Ben Harper died April 3, 1887 in the city of Rock Island. He is buried at Chippiannock Cemetery.

One of his sons Ben Harper, Jr. (1861–1884) was a prominent building contractor in Illinois.[5] In 1907 another son, Stuart Harper (1872–1910), build a prairie style mansion with stucco covered walls at a cost of $35,000. This building is part of “Rock Island's 100 Most Significant Unprotected Structures.”[6]

Sources

  • George W. Wickstrom: The Town Crier. Rock Island, IL: J. W. Potter, 1948. (p. 84-87)
  • Historic Rock Island County. Rock Island, IL: Kramer & Co., 1908. (p. 85-87)

References

  1. Peter Harper (1767–1868) was an American mariner, veteran of the First Barbary War and the War of 1812. “Death of a Centenarian”, Van Wert Weekly Bulletin, Oct. 16, 1868.
  2. "Diane Oestreich, "Harper House Hotel, 2nd Avenue and 19th Street"". Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2018-06-26., Rock Island Preservation Society, published on April 14, 2002.
  3. The hotel was named after Lt. Col. Thomas Rodman at the Rock Island Arsenal. “Destruction of the Rodman House, Rock Island”, New York Times, October 23, 1869.
  4. Harper House (Ben Harper), 2810 5th Avenue. The “earliest Greek Revival house in Rock Island and perhaps the oldest documented residence in the city limits.”
  5. Commemorative Biographical Record of the Upper Lake Region. Chicago: Beers, 1905.
  6. Harper House (Stuart & Grace Harper), 1600 20th Street.
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