Herbert L. Pratt

Herbert L. Pratt

Pratt in 1918
Born Herbert Lee Pratt
(1871-11-21)November 21, 1871
Brooklyn, New York
Died February 3, 1945(1945-02-03) (aged 73)
New York, New York
Nationality American
Occupation Oil industrialist
Known for Head of Standard Oil

Herbert Lee Pratt (November 21, 1871 February 3, 1945) was an American businessman and a leading figure in the United States oil industry; from 1923 he was head of Standard Oil - his father Charles Pratt was a founder of Astral Oil Works which later became part of Standard Oil. He lived and worked in New York City, as well as having a country estate, The Braes, in Glen Cove, Long Island, and a hunting preserve and estate, Good Hope Plantation in Ridgeland, South Carolina. He was an art collector and philanthropist.[1]

Early life

Pratt was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1871, the fourth of six children of Mary Helen (née Richardson), his father's second wife, and Charles Pratt, the Standard Oil industrialist. (His father's first wife, Lydia Richardson, had died young in 1861.) He was brother to Frederic B. Pratt, George Dupont Pratt, Helen Pratt, John Teele Pratt and Harold I. Pratt. Their older half-siblings were Charles Millard Pratt and Lydia Richardson Pratt.

He took a degree of Bachelor of Arts at Amherst College in 1895.[2]

Personal life

On 28 April 1897, Pratt married Florence Balsdon Gibb (daughter of John Gibb), and they had five children:[2]

Career

Like his father, who was a pioneer in the independent oil industry and accepted a merger with Standard Oil, Pratt was a leading figure in the US oil industry. He became head of Standard Oil Company of New York in 1923. This company eventually became Mobil.

Pratt was on the front cover of Time on 11 June 1923, when he replaced Henry Clay Folger as head of Standard Oil Company of New York. Pratt was also a director of Bankers Trust Company from 1917–38, and Asia Banking Corporation.[2]

Death

His wife died in 1935.[4] Pratt died in Manhattan, New York City on February 3, 1945, at his home at 834 Fifth Avenue at the age of 73.[2][1]

Residences and philanthropy

The Braes, now Stevenson Taylor Hall, Webb Institute, Glen Cove, New York (c. 2001)

His country estate, "The Braes", in Glen Cove, Long Island was built in 191214, and designed by James Brite in the neo-Jacobean style. It was the largest of the six Pratt family mansions at Glen Cove.

In 1910, Pratt bought the 9,000-acre (36 km2) Good Hope plantation and hunting lodge in South Carolina (about five miles (8 km) from Ridgeland) from Harry B. Hollins, also of Long Island.[2]

Pratt also spent summer months at his Japanese themed "camp," Pine Tree Point, on Upper St. Regis Lake, NY, which he purchased from Frederick William Vanderbilt in the early 1900s.

In 1916, the 12-story 907 Fifth Avenue building, designed by J. E. R. Carpenter, was completed. It was the first building developed to replace one of the mansions previously fronting on Central Park. Pratt, then vice president of Standard Oil, rented the largest apartment, 25 rooms and eight baths, occupying the entire top floor, at an annual rent of $30,000.[5]

Pratt soon outgrew this residence and moved to the central of three beaux-arts mansions at 84th and Fifth Avenue. He sold the building in 1936 to the Marymount School who combined the building with its neighbors but preserved all the exteriors and much of the interiors.

Pratt was an art collector, particularly of portraits and miniatures. When Rotherwas Court, Herefordshire, was dismantled and auctioned in 1913, Pratt purchased the dining room for his neo-Jacobean mansion "The Braes," then under construction as a country estate in Glen Cove. His bequest to Amherst College included the Rotherwas Room and more than 80 American portraits and miniatures, as well as an extensive collection of decorative arts. Rotherwas Room was incorporated into the Mead Art Museum when it was built at Amherst College in 1949.[2]

The Webb Institute of Naval Architecture acquired The Braes in 1945 for use as its campus. After renovation, it held its first classes there in 1947. Additions have included a library, model facility and other features.

External links

References

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
John L. Lewis
Cover of Time magazine
11 June 1923
Succeeded by
Edward M. House
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