Edward R. Bacon

Edward R. Bacon
Zorn's 1897 portrait of Bacon
Born(1848-11-22)November 22, 1848
DiedDecember 2, 1915(1915-12-02) (aged 67)
Baltimore, Maryland
Other namesE.R. Bacon
Occupation(s)Lawyer, financier

Edward Rathbone Bacon (born in Le Roy, New York, on November 22, 1848) was president of a railroad, lawyer and financier. His father was David Rinaldo Bacon and his mother was Elizabeth Rathbone. He had four siblings, Walter Rathbone, Lathrup Rufus, John Ganson, and Mary Sibley Bacon. Bacon never married or had children. Bacon served as the vice-president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and as the president of the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad. He also worked as a lawyer and financier.[1][2] Bacon died on December 2, 1915, in Baltimore, Maryland, as a result of an appendicitis operation he had a week earlier.[3]

Bacon's main residence was 247 5th Avenue, New York, where he lived with his brother Walter and his sister-in-law Virginia P. Bacon.[3] He is also reported to have lived in Buffalo for a time.[4] Bacon worked out of an office at 2 Wall Street in New York.[5] He traveled often to Europe, which is where he purchased many of the works that made up his extensive art collection.[6][7] He was included in the list of notable people arriving from Europe to New York City in the New York Times on October 13, 1895.[8]

  1. ^ Railway Age Gazette. Railway Age Gazette, Incorporated. 1915. p. 1110.
  2. ^ New York Times December 12, 1915
  3. ^ a b New York Times December 3, 1915
  4. ^ "American Art News". American Art News. December 11, 1915. JSTOR 25588752.
  5. ^ Herringshaw's American Blue-book of Biography: Prominent Americans of ... American Publishers' Association. 1914. p. 45.
  6. ^ Memorial Catalog of Paintings by Old and Modern Masters, Collected by Edward R. Bacon, Prepared by James B. Townsend and W. Stanton Howard (New York: The Devinne Press, 1919).
  7. ^ Memorial Catalogue of Chinese Art Objects, Including Porcelains, Potteries, Jades, Bronzes, and Cloisonne enamels, Collected by Edward R. Bacon, Prepared by James B. Townsend and W. Stanton Howard. Introduction by John Getz (New York: The Devinne Press, 1919), xi.
  8. ^ New York Times October 13, 1895.