Life and Times of William John Matheson
Page 2
These pages by Jerry Wilkinson
- Off to work -
It appears that he returned to
New York City about 1873 to begin a commercial career with the same or
more determination and tenacity as he exhibited in school. Pursuing his
ambition as a chemist he accepted whatever work was available; however,
he soon found an opening with a chemical house representing a French manufacturer
(A. Porrier, Paris, France) of organic products. In a short time William
J. became the American agent for the French company, A. Porrier.
France and more so Germany were the
leaders of producing pigments for all forms of artificial coloring. This
of course includes textiles, paints and ceramic glazes, which are of worldwide
importance. Some assume that William J. realized the importance of synthetics
in the role of manufacturing. At the time the world depended on vegetable
products such as the indigo plant (blues and reds), annatto (bright orange),
barberry (yellow), Brazilwood (crimsons), madder (red-browns), cochineal
(purples), logwood (greens and olives), fustic (yellow and orange),
etc. Many colors can be made by mixing the above with themselves. A vast
array of colors can be made when combined with the basic chemical and mineral
elements and their oxides.
Synthetic pigments began with Perkin’s
mauve in 1856 (the year that William was born) and evolved into thousands
of hues. More important than the number of hues, the expanding industrial
revolution of the 1800s could mass produce them artificially. William’s
knowledge of this chemistry, applied manufacturing techniques and the later
acquired knowledge of patent law would make him a world industrial leader.
About 1876 he became the American
registered agent for Leopold Cassella & Company, the giant German chemical
company. Quoting from the William J. Matheson portion of Who’s Who in New
York City and State, “Began business in 1876 as a chemist in application
of coal tar dyes, forming a connection with a large German firm of mf’rs
[sic] of coal tar , of which he is now resident partner.”
Germany had become the foremost leader
of dye manufacturers and Cassella was the “tiffany” of Germany. Germany
dominated pigment manufacturing and controlled it through international
patents until World War I . William moved swiftly and formed the William
J. Matheson & Company to import and distribute Cassella products to
the western world. William J. continued to form various and many other
companies to support his industrial concepts.
It was downhill from then on;
he maintained leadership in the aniline industry. Aniline (AN-i-lin) is
entirely commercially produced from benzene by synthetic methods. It is
a chemical used extensively in the dye, pharmaceutical, explosives, rubber,
and many other industries. The aforementioned William Perkin was first
to apply it to commercial use.
- To raise a family -
The details are not known, but in the
flurry of business William J. found time to meet and marry Harriet Torrey
of East Aurora, New York in 1881. Also not known is the reason for the
wedding to take place in Geneva, Ohio on October 12, 1881.
Shortly afterwards their first child
was born – Anna (Nan). Anna married Willis Wood at the Fort Hill House,
the county home of her father. The two lived at 635 Park Avenue, New York
City and used the Manor House on her father’s Long Island Estate for their
country home. After her father’s death they moved to the Fort Hill House.
Quoting from the book Huntington-Babylon, Town History “The Manor House
is a part of the estate of the late William J. Matheson, as is also the
Fort Hill House, the residence of Mr. Matheson’s daughter, Mrs. Willis
D. Wood.” Willis Wood was a partner in the stock brokerage firm of Wood,
Walker & Co. and he died in 1957 at the age of 84.
More information of the Long Island
estate is found in The Origins of the Fort Hill Beach Association obtained
from the Huntington Historical Society and explains the significance of
the above quotation. It reveals that “William John Matheson, founder of
Allied Chemical [Actually J. P. Morgan was the founder and William J. sold
a company to it.], bought the Fort Hill estate in 1900 from the estate
of Anne Coleman Alden. . . . In the 1880s she had also purchased the 215
additional acres attached to the Joseph Lloyd Manor House. . . . In all,
the southwest corner of Lloyd Neck purchased by Matheson came to almost
330 acres, with close to a mile of waterfront on Cold Spring Harbor (including
the causeway and the beach to the south) and a half-mile of waterfront
on Lloyd Harbor. . . . Anna Matheson Wood, after her marriage to Willis
D. Wood in 1905, modernized the Joseph Lloyd Manor House….Nan and Willis
Wood lived with their three children in the Manor house until her father
died. In 1930 they moved to Fort Hill and began to lease the Manor House
to various tenants….” to almost 330 acres, with close to a mile of waterfront
on Cold Spring Harbor (including the causeway and the beach to the south)
and a half-mile of waterfront on Lloyd Harbor. . . . Anna Matheson Wood,
after her marriage to Willis D. Wood in 1905, modernized the Joseph Lloyd
Manor House….Nan and Willis Wood lived with their three children in the
Manor house until her father died. In 1930 they moved to Fort Hill and
began to lease the Manor House to various tenants….”
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This was his summerhouse. There was
a city address, which could have been a business address, listed as “184
Front Street, N.Y. City.”
Shortly after Anna was born William’s
father, Finlay, passed away in 1883.
The refore, needless to say William was quite
successful to afford his 1900 purchase of the Fort Hill estate. By 1901,
his business had become so diverse as to include the manufacture of wood
dyes, extracts and a large plant for the production of white lead, that
it was decided to divide into separate companies. The outcome was the Matheson
Lead Company for white lead, the Hemolin Company for wood dyes and The
Cassella Company for the distribution of synthetic hydrocarbons.
In 1906, William J. was instrumental
in organizing the Corn Products Manufacturing Company, which became a world
factor in producing corn derivatives. One of the corn derivatives was karo
or corn syrup. He was associated with factories in Canada, Great Britian
and four in Germany. When the Department of Agriculture tried forcing them
to change the name to glucose it was William J. who took it to the White
House for a favorable verdict. President Theodore Roosevelt had his summer
house, Sagamore Hill, just down the Long Island Sound from William’s Fort
Hill. Principal Irvine of St. Andrews made reference to his pure
crystalline glucose process when honoring William J. as an American chemist.
From this incident came food product controls that were part of the Pure
Pure Food and Drug Act.
Stepping back in years to 1886,
his first of two sons were born – Hugh Merritt Matheson. Like father like
son, time come for Hugh to prepare for college. For Hugh this was to be
Yale University. For a preparatory school, Hugh chose the Adirondack School
that happened to have a winter campus (Adirondack-Florida) at Coconut Grove,
Florida.
From 1895 to 1902 the campus was known
as Pine Knot Camp. In 1903, Headmaster Paul Ransom officially established
the southern campus of the Adirondack-Florida School to include Pine Knot.
It was the first migratory school in the United States, students spent
the winters in Coconut Grove and the fall and spring in the Adirondack
Mountains of New York. It was renamed as Ransom School in 1949 and merged
with the Everglades School for Girls in 1955, hence the present name Ransom
Everglades School.
Continued on page 3
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