Thomas Cartter Lupton

Thomas Cartter Lupton (1899–1977) was an American businessman.

Biography

Early life

He was the only child of John Thomas Lupton, founder of the Coca-Cola Bottling Company, and Elizabeth Patten.

Philanthropy

A philanthropist, he founded the Lyndhurst Foundation, formerly known as The Memorial Welfare Foundation. The Lupton Library at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga is named for him and his wife.

Personal life

He was married to Margaret Rawlings Lupton.[1] They had a son, John T. Lupton II. They lived in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Unlike his father or son, he was known for being a recluse.[2]

At the time of his death, his $200 million (USD) estate was the largest ever probated in the South.[3]

gollark: Meanwhile, AMD has perfectly functional in-kernel open source drivers.
gollark: They use them to do artificial market segmentation (limited transcoding and stuff on consumer cards), so they can't really open-source them without (*the horror*) being more consumer-friendly.
gollark: No sense buying a more expensive product which performs the same, and Nvidia's Linux driver support is *evil*.
gollark: Though people will inevitably buy Nvidia anyway because who knows.
gollark: As long as they can make something which is better perf/$, I don't see the problem.

References

  1. Ned L. Irwin (1998). "Lyndhurst Foundation". The Tennessee Encyclopedia.
  2. John Wilson (1982). "Elizabeth Patten and John Thomas Lupton". The Patten Chronicle. Roy McDonald.
  3. Dean Arnold (2006). "The Spirit of the Fathers" (PDF). Old Money, New South. Chattanooga Historical Foundation.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.