Frederick Ferris Thompson

Frederick Ferris Thompson (1836–1899) was a prominent American banker.[1]

Biography

Born in New York City on June 14, 1836 to John and Electa Thompson, Frederick grew up in a life of luxury. He attended Williams College from 1852 to 1854, and was a member of St. Anthony Hall, but left to go abroad at his father's request. In 1857, he married Mary Lee Clark, daughter of then governor of New York Myron Holley Clark.

That same year, Frederick, his father and his brother Samuel founded their first bank. In 1863, the trio opened their third bank, called the "1st National Bank of the City of New York". The bank survives as part of Citibank.

In 1873 John and Samuel Thompson left the 1st National Bank to form the Chase National Bank, named after their friend and U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase. The bank survives as part of JP Morgan Chase.

An amateur photographer, strong supporter of education, and noted philanthropist, Thompson and his wife donated large sums of money to numerous organizations, including Williams Alumni Association, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Geographical Society, and the Union League. Thompson also served on the board of trustees of Williams College, Vassar College, and Teachers College (now Columbia University).

Thompson died on April 10, 1899, in New York City. He is buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in Canandaigua, New York.[2]

His wife Mary built F.F. Thompson Hospital in his name, which began accepting patients in September 1904. [3]

gollark: I wonder how many bizarre quoting issues the shell-script-driven infrastructure for all these things has.
gollark: It's internally generated and happens to involve another server. Merely stop branding it as the "next round".
gollark: You should brand it as "a next round" or a "replacement event".
gollark: The new one is done somewhat against the intentions of the original owner, who is also running an event, and cannot reasonably be exclusively considered the "next round".
gollark: You realize that things don't cease to exist because you refuse to acknowledge them, right?

References

See also

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