- Collection Overview
- Collection Description & Creator Information
- Access & Use
- Collection History
- Find Related Materials
Collection Overview
- Creator:
- Blair, John Insley (1802-1899)
- Title:
- John Insley Blair Family Papers
- Repository:
- Manuscripts Division
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/9880vq99x
- Dates:
- 1843-1961 (mostly 1891-1910)
- Size:
- 13 boxes, 1 folder, and 12.5 linear feet
- Storage Note:
- Firestone Library (scamss): Box 1-13
- Language:
- English
Abstract
Consists primarily of travel diaries, scrapbooks, and photograph albums composed by railroad industrialist John Insley Blair and his family. There is also a small selection of letters of Clinton Ledyard Blair regarding a fight over Woodrow Wilson's reforms at Princeton University and Blair's relationship with the University's Board of Trustees.
Collection Description & Creator Information
- Scope and Contents
This collection consists of travel diaries, scrapbooks, and photograph albums compiled by various members of the John Insley Blair family, as well as a small selection of correspondence of Clinton Ledyard Blair.
- Collection Creator Biography:
Blair
John Insley Blair was born near Belvidere, New Jersey, on 22 August 1802, the fourth of ten children of Scottish immigrants John Blair and Rachel Insley. His schooling was limited to a few months every winter until age 11, when he began working in his cousin's store; after this introduction to commerce, he never returned to formal education. By the young age of 18 JIB established his own general store in Gravel Hill, New Jersey. To honor his later success and contributions to the town, it was renamed Blairstown on 24 January 1839. JIB would call Blairstown home for the next sixty years, managing his businesses from this small corner of New Jersey.
Only nine years after opening his first general store, JIB owned a chain of five stores and four flour mills in northern New Jersey. On 20 September 1828, JIB married Nancy Ann Locke, and together they had four children: Emma Elizabeth (later married to Charles Scribner, founder of the publishing house Charles Scribner's Sons), Marcus Laurence, DeWitt Clinton, and Aurelia Ann.
In 1833 JIB developed an interest in the mines of Oxford Furnace, and in 1846 helped found Lackawanna Coal and Iron Company. Soon after his interests turned to the enterprise that would eventually make his fortune: railroads. His first railroad was built in 1849 and ran from Owego to Ithaca, New York. The following year he built a line from Scranton to the Delaware Water Gap, Pennsylvania. In 1852 JIB organized-and named-the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. He was its principal stockholder and maintained the position of director until his death.
In 1860 JIB was inspired by railroad development in the western United States, and within two years he founded, in collaboration with Oakes Ames, the Union Pacific Railroad beginning in Omaha, Nebraska. Eventually JIB's railroads were located throughout the west in Iowa, Wisconsin, Kansas, Nebraska, Dakota, Missouri, and Texas. He was concurrently the president of 16 railroads, as well as the largest private owner in the world of rail miles. JIB also owned vast quantities of western land abutting the railroad lines, along which he planted trees that both acted as a windbreak and provided lumber for ties. After his 85th birthday, he cut back his travel to only 20,000 miles a year; previously he would annually traverse 40,000 miles.
JIB was a generous philanthropist who supported various institutions throughout his lifetime, principally the Presbyterian Church, of which he was a devout member. In 1848 he constructed a building for Blair Presbyterian Academy in Blairstown, since renamed Blair Academy. Later he continued donating land and buildings to the school, and endowed 15 free scholarships. JIB combined his religious beliefs with his western railroad development by building over 100 Presbyterian churches in the towns through which his rail lines passed. Other beneficiaries included Lafayette College (Easton, Pennsylvania), Grinnell College (Grinnell, Iowa), and Princeton University (at the time know as Princeton College). In 1864 he endowed a geology professorship at Princeton, and served as a trustee for 13 years (1886-1899). He later gave funds to Princeton to construct the Blair Hall dormitory (1897). In his hometown of Blairstown, JIB built many buildings as well as its central infrastructure. It is estimated that in total he gave away $5,000,000.
On 2 December 1899, JIB died at home at the age of 97, owning assets worth $70,000,000.
JIB's younger son DeWitt Clinton continued his father's varied business interests and philanthropy. These included serving as a Princeton trustee (1900-1909, Princeton Class of 1856), expanding Blair Hall to its current proportions (1907), and expanding the campus and buildings of Blair Presbyterian Academy. On 21 April 1864, DCB married Mary Ann Kimball, with whom he had two sons, Clinton Ledyard and James Insley. DCB died on 12 February 1914; he was 80 years old.
JIB's grandson, DCB's son Clinton Ledyard, continued the family legacy by following his father to Princeton, graduating in 1890. But unlike his father and grandfather, CIB would later be denied election to Princeton's Board of Trustees as a result of a dispute over reforms proposed by Woodrow Wilson (1910). With his brother James Insley, CIB founded the investment banking firm Blair & Company (1 Wall St., New York, New York). CLB was also the governor of the New York Stock Exchange, as well as the director of Lackawanna Steel, the Green Bay & Western Railroad, and other corporations. He married Florence Osborne Jennings, and together they had four daughters: Marjory Bruce, Florence Ledyard, Edith Dodd, and Marie Louise. In 1898, workers began construction on CLB's opulent 38-room, Louis XIII style mansion in Peapack-Gladstone, New Jersey. Blairsden, as he named the home, was finally finished in 1903 at a cost of $2 million. In February 1949, CLB died at the age of 82. The following year Blairsden and 50 acres of property were sold for $60,000 to the Sisters of St. John the Baptist. Recently, the estate was purchased by the non-profit organization Blairsden Association which is working to preserve the buildings and ground and eventually open them to the public.
For the names and relationships of family members, refer to the family tree: Family tree.
The collection was formerly referred to as the Blair Family Papers.
Collection History
- Acquisition:
This collection was made a gift to the department by a relative of the Blair family.
- Appraisal
No appraisal information is available.
- Processing Information
This collection was processed by Karla J. Vecchia in 2003. Finding aid written by Karla J. Vecchia in 2003.
Access & Use
- Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research use.
- Conditions Governing Use
Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
- Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
- Credit this material:
John Insley Blair Family Papers; Manuscripts Division, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/9880vq99x
- Location:
-
Firestone LibraryOne Washington RoadPrinceton, NJ 08544, USA
- Storage Note:
- Firestone Library (scamss): Box 1-13
Find More
- Bibliography
The biographical sketch was written by consulting the following sources: Johnson, Allen, ed. Dictionary of American Biography, vol. II. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1929. Leitch, Alexander. A Princeton Companion. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1978. Metzler, Jim. Burr and Metzler Family Genealogy. Online. Internet. December 2002. http://www.metzler.us/. Stefano, Tom and Joe Stefano. The Lost Playground. December 2002. Online. Internet. January 2003. http://www.lostplayground.com/blairsden_history.htm. The family tree was compiled in part with information from the following resource: Metzler, Jim. Burr and Metzler Family Genealogy. Online. Internet. December 2002. http://www.metzler.us/.
- Genre Terms:
- Account books -- New Jersey.
Diaries.
Photograph albums.
Scrapbooks. - Names:
- College of New Jersey (Princeton, N.J.). Class of 1890.
Wilson, Woodrow (1856-1924)