He was treasurer and general manager of the Beatty Starch Company in New Haven from 1899 to 1902, and subsequently was involved with mining, banking, and manufacturing firms, including the Bingham-New Haven Mining Company, Alvarado Mining and Milling Company, the New Haven Hotel Company and Factory Products Export Company, the William P. Bonbright & Company banking firm; the Fowler and Union Horsenail Co., the Marlin Arms Co., the Red River Valley Company, and the Southwest Lumber Mills.[1]
Personal life
He married Rebecca McCullough Darlington on November 9, 1904, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[1] They had two daughters, Elizabeth ("Betty") Stoddard in 1907, eventual wife of Fraser M. Horn,[1] and Barbara Stoddard in 1912, eventual wife of William Reed Kirkland,[1][5] and a son, Louis Ezekiel Stoddard Jr., who like his father was also prominent as a horseman and polo player.[1][6] Rebecca died of complications from childbirth on December 13, 1913.[1][7]
On April 29, 1915, in New York City, he married Mary Andrews, daughter of Samuel and Mary (Cole) Andrews. They had no children. Mary (Andrews) Stoddard died on February 22, 1945.[1][8]
^"Louis E. Stoddard Seeks to be Administrator of $2,000,000 Property". New York Times. 9 January 1914. Retrieved 29 March 2011. Major Louis E. Stoddard, a member of the international polo team that defeated the English players last year, made application in the Probate Court to-day to be declared administrator of the estate of his wife, Rebecca Darlington Stoddard, who died last month leaving three children, including a son two days old. ...