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  1. Oliver Hazard Payne (July 21, 1839 – June 27, 1917) was an American businessman, organizer of the American Tobacco Company Trust, assisted with the formation of U.S. Steel, and was affiliated with Standard Oil.

  2. Oliver Hazard Payne, his father Harry B. Payne, and William Collins Whitney were lifelong Democrats, somewhat of an oddity in the milieu of the late 19th century rich of New York. Harry B. Payne was a perpetual office seeker, and Oliver helped him get elected as a representative from Ohio for several terms.

  3. January 19, 2024. Col. Oliver Hazard Payne Estate is a historic 60-acre (24 ha) estate, also known as Omega and Wiltwick, [2] located on the west bank of the Hudson River at Esopus in Ulster County, New York, United States.

  4. PAYNE, OLIVER HAZARD (21 July 1839-27 June 1917), businessman and philanthropist, was born in Cleveland to Mary Perry and HENRY B. PAYNE. He was educated at Phillips Academy and Yale, leaving the latter in 1861 to serve in the CIVIL WAR , earning the brevet of brigadier-general.

  5. 5 de mar. de 2020 · Reclusive millionaire Oliver Hazard Payne was as wealthy as he was enigmatic. The eight years this bachelor lived in West Park left a legacy that lingers today. This is a reprint of an article that we published in 1992. Monasteries, apartment complexes and ranch houses line Ulster County’s west bank of the Hudson today.

  6. Description of Thomasville, Georgia, location of Payne's winter estate. In his later years, Oliver Hazard Payne maintained a winter home in Thomasville, Georgia, a town that gained a reputation for winter retreats for hunting and fishing for many of the barons of the gilded age, including John D. Archbold of Standard Oil and Harry Davidson of ...

  7. Oliver Payne was a major stockholder in Tennessee Coal and Iron Company. During the 1907 panic, several banks were shaken and Moore & Schley, a speculative brokerage house was $25 million in debt. This was Payne's major stockbroker. Moore & Schley had used a gigantic majority stake in Tennessee Iron and Coal as collateral against loans.