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  1. William Bateman Leeds (September 19, 1861 – June 23, 1908) was an American businessman. He dominated the tin plate industry, [1] becoming known as the "Tin Plate King". Together with William Henry Moore, Daniel G. Reid and James Hobart Moore, he became known as one of the 'big four' or 'tin plate crowd' in American industry.

    • Tin Plate King
    • June 23, 1908 (aged 46), Paris, France
  2. 25 de mar. de 2014 · The more I started researching William Bateman Leeds, however, the more fascinated I became with his life. Interchangeably heralded by the press as, “The World’s Richest Boy” or “Poor Little Rich Boy,” Leeds managed a small army of servants by the time he was nine and topped it off by marrying a Greek princess at the age of 19.

  3. 3 de ene. de 1972 · William B. Leeds, the tinplate heir who became a model of the yachting rich in America's pre‐Depression salad days, died Friday at Wintsberg Peak, his estate in St. Thomas, the Virgin Islands...

  4. 24 de may. de 2018 · Age 68. Death of William Bateman Leeds, Jr. at Charlotte Amalie. Charlotte Amalie, St Thomas, Virgin Islands, U.S. Genealogy for William Bateman Leeds, Jr. (1902 - 1971) family tree on Geni, with over 255 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • New York, NY
    • New York, NY, United States
    • NY
    • Private User
  5. 16 de jul. de 2006 · John Russell Pope’s mausoleum for William Bateman Leeds, an industrialist, in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. The cemetery’s rich collection of archives contains blueprints for this and other...

  6. At age 18 she married William Bateman Leeds Jr. (19 September 1902–31 December 1971), the son and heir of the American tin magnate William B. Leeds Sr. and the stepson of Xenia's maternal uncle Prince Christopher of Greece and Denmark, through his marriage to William’s mother, the former Nonie Stewart Leeds.

  7. 14 de jun. de 2023 · William Bateman Leeds was a Richmond native who joined with his childhood friend, Daniel Reid, to create a domestic tin plate industry, first in Elwood, Indiana, and ultimately becoming super wealthy along with Reid and his associates after their company was incorporated into United States Steel in 1901.