John Brown Francis Herreshoff (February 7, 1850 – January 30, 1932) was second winner of the Perkin Medal.[1][2] He was also the president of The General Chemical Company.[3][4]
Biography
Herreshoff was born February 7, 1850, Bristol, Rhode Island, to the marriage of Charles Frederick Herreshoff III (1809–1888) and Julia Ann Lewis (maiden; 1811–1901). Herreshoff was a metallurgical chemist affiliated with the firm of Herreshoff Manufacturing Company, builders of yachts and torpedo boats.[5] Herreshoff was also the president of The General Chemical Company, which was founded in 1899 and merged in 1920 with Allied Corporation.[3]
Recipient of the Perkin Medal
Herreshoff, in 1908, received the Perkin Medal,[2] an award conferred annually by the American section of the Society of Chemical Industry to a scientist residing in America for an "innovation in applied chemistry resulting in outstanding commercial development." It is considered the highest honor given in the U.S. chemical industry.
John Brown Francis Herreshoff was married four times.
He first married – on February 9, 1876 – Grace Eugenia Dyer (maiden; 1851–1880), with whom he had a daughter, Louise Chamberlain Herreshoff (1876–1967), who went on to become a painter.
After Grace's death, he married – on October 25, 1882, in Philadelphia – Emaline Duval ("Mildred") Lee (maiden; 1863–1930). From that marriage, he had two sons and a daughter. One of the sons, Frederick Herreshoff (1888–1920), became a noted American amateur golfer. By way his daughter from that marriage, Sarah Lothrop Herreshoff (1889–1958), a grandson, Guido Borgianni (it)[6] (1914–2011), became a noted Italian painter.
Herreshoff and Mildred divorced June 4, 1919, in Manhattan, and five days later, on June 9, 1919, Herreshoff married Carrie Lucas Ridley (maiden; 1878–1924), her second.
On October 5, 1924 (six months after Carrie's death), Herreshoff married Carrie's sister, Irma Grey Ridley (1872–1946).
^Florino, L. (July 25, 1972). "Parte Prima: Giurisprudenza Costituzionale Ecivile" [Part One: Civil Constitutional Jurisprudence]. Il Foro Italiano (Sezione I civile; sentenza 25 luglio 1972, N° 2532; Pres. Giannattasio P., Est. Brancaccio, P. M.Sciaraffia (concl. conf.); Borgianni G. (Avvocato Mauro, Nicolò) c. Masnada (Avvocato Porzio, Monti,Corti), Boncompagni (Avvocato Capano), Luporini, Eredità giacente Borgianni R.F.) (in Italian). Vol. 95. Societa Editrice Il Foro Italiano ARL. pp. 3035–3044. ISSN0015-783X. JSTOR23166410. Retrieved February 15, 2021 – via JSTOR(the text pertains to heirship for the purpose of inheritance, and, in doing so, mentions dates of marriages, births, divorces, and deaths of subjects in this article – in one case, it links Guido Borgianni to John B.F. Herreshoff) {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)