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'Collis Potter Huntington' (
April 16[1][2] or
October 22[3][4][5][6][7][8][9] 1821 –
August 13 1900) was one of
the Big Four of western railroading (along with
Leland Stanford,
Mark Hopkins, and
Charles Crocker) who built the
Central Pacific Railroad as part of the first U.S.
transcontinental railroad. Huntington then helped lead and develop other major interstate lines such as the
Southern Pacific Railroad and the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. In
Virginia, he was responsible for the development of
Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company and the incorporation of
Newport News, Virginia into an
independent city. Another
railroad town, the city of
Huntington, West Virginia was named in his honor.
Education and railroad career
Collis Potter Huntington was born in
Harwinton, Connecticut, USA in 1821; while some references state his birth date as
April 16, others list
October 22. In 1842 he and his brother established a business in
Oneonta, New York, selling general merchandise. Their business was successful.
When he saw opportunity blooming in America's West, he set out for California, and established himself as a merchant in
Sacramento at the start of the
California Gold Rush. Huntington succeeded in his California business, too, and it was here that he teamed up with
Mark Hopkins selling miners' supplies and other hardware. He was becoming a wealthy man. In the late 1850s, he and Hopkins joined forces with two other successful businessmen,
Leland Stanford and
Charles Crocker, to pursue the idea of creating a rail line that would connect the America's East and West. In 1861, these four businessmen (sometimes referred to as
The Big Four) pooled their resources and business acumen, and formed the
Central Pacific Railroad company to create the western link of America's transcontinental railway system. Of the four, he had a reputation for being the most ruthless in pursing the railroad's business and the ouster of his partner, Stanford.
[10]
On
May 10 1869, at
Promontory, Utah, the tracks of the Central Pacific Railroad joined with the tracks of the
Union Pacific Railroad, and America had a
transcontinental railroad. The joining was celebrated by the driving of the
golden spike.
He was later involved in the establishment of the
Southern Pacific Railroad. The railroad's first locomotive, ''
C. P. Huntington'', was named in his honor.
Beginning in 1871, he oversaw construction of the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway across
Virginia and
West Virginia to reach the
Ohio River. He established the planned city of
Huntington, West Virginia, as well as the
coal piers in
Warwick County, Virginia at a location which became the
City of Newport News in 1896. He also founded
Newport News Shipbuilding, the largest privately owned shipyard in the world.
He died in 1900 and is buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery in
The Bronx,
New York.
Family relationships
Collis Huntington was the son of William and Elizabeth (Vincent) Huntington; born
October 22 1821, in Harwinton, Connecticut; he married, first, on
September 16 1844,
Elizabeth T. Stoddard, of
Cornwall, Connecticut. She died in 1883. He remarried on
July 12 1884,
Mrs. Arabella D. Worsham. He died at his camp, Pine Knot, in the Adirondacks,
August 13 1900.
The children of William Huntington and Elizabeth Vincent were
# Mary Huntington, born
17 February 1810; married
2 June 1840, Daniel Sammis of
Warsaw, New York.
# Solon Huntington, born
13 January 1812.
# Rhoda Huntington, born
13 October 1814; married
10 May 1834, Riley Dunbar of Wolcottville.
# Phebe/Phoebe Huntington, born
17 September 1817; married
4 October 1840, Henry Pardee of
Oneonta, New York.
# Elizabeth Huntington, born
19 December 1819; married
5 April 1842, Hiram Yaker of
Kortright, New York.
# Collis Potter Huntington, born
22 October 1820 or
1821 (sources differ on the year).
# Joseph Huntington, born
23 March 1823; d.
23 February 1849; never married
# Susan L. Huntington, born August 1826; married
16 November 1849, William Porter, M.D., of
New Haven, Connecticut
# Ellen Maria Huntington, born
12 August 1835; married Isaac E. Gates of
Orange, New Jersey
Collis Huntington was the adopted father of Clara Elizabeth Prentice, born in Sacramento, in 1860. She was a niece of the first Mrs. C. P. Huntington, and was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Huntington. Clara Elizabeth Prentice-Huntington (1860-1928), as she was called, married
Prince Francis Edward von Hatzfeldt of
Wittenburg,
Germany, on
October 28 1889. They made their home in
England.
Collis Huntington was also the adopted father of renowned hispanist
Archer M. Huntington, son of Collis P. Huntington's second wife, by her first husband, who founded a Spanish museum and rare books library
The Hispanic Society of America in upper Manhattan, which is still free and open to the public.
Collis was also uncle to another California railroad magnate,
Henry E. Huntington, founder of the
Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens in
San Marino, California and the main force behind the
Pacific Electric system in
Los Angeles, California.
He was also related to
Clarence Huntington, who was a president of the
Virginian Railway.
Charity
He acquired a substantial collection of art, and was generally recognized as one of the country's foremost art collectors. He left most of his collection, valued at some
$3 million, to the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York.
Places named for Collis P. Huntington
★ Collis P. Huntington Building -
Hampton University Museum,
Hampton, Virginia.
★
Huntington, West Virginia.
★
Collis P. Huntington High School,
Newport News, Virginia.
★
Huntington Park, and Huntington Avenue, Newport News, Virginia.
★ Huntington Hall - U.S. Navy enlisted housing and USO 3100 Huntington Avenue, Newport News, Virginia
★ The
Huntington Hotel - San Francisco, California
★
Huntington Free Library and Reading Room - Bronx, NY
★ Collis P. Huntington State Park, Redding and Bethel, Connecticut
★ Tugboat Huntington - retired 1994, now a floating exhibit and classroom at the
Palm Beach Maritime Museum, Florida
Collis Huntington in popular culture
For reasons that are unclear, he was referred to in ''Black Beetles in Amber'' by
Ambrose Bierce as "Happy Hunty".
[11]
Sources
★
Nothing Like It In The World; The men who built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869, Ambrose, Stephen E., , , Simon & Schuster, 2000, ISBN 0-684-84609-8
References
1. Collis P. Huntington
2. Collis Potter Huntington Huntington Family Association
3. Collis P. Huntington
4. Collis Potter HUNTINGTON & Elizabeth Stillman STODDARD & Arabella Duval YARRINGTON Matthiesen, Diana Gale shows research notes from 1900 US census listing his birth as October 1820.
5. Collis P. Huntington Cristalen
6. Biographies of the Leaders of the Central Pacific Rail Road Company Emord, Dawn, and Bushong, David
7. Collis Huntington
8. Collis Potter Huntington
9. Nothing Like It in the World: The Men Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad, Ambrose, Stephen E., , , Touchstone, 2000, ISBN 0-7432-0317-8 A footnote within this book cites the data to "Collis Huntington Memoir, Bancroft Library, U.C. Berkeley."
10. ''The Builders of the Central Pacific Railroad'' @ CPRR.org as retrieved January 13 2007.
11. Black Beetles in Amber Bierce, Ambrose
External links
★
Huntington Hall, Newport News
★
Huntington Hotel, San Francisco