Thomas Rickard | |
---|---|
Born | August 28, 1866 France |
Died | March 25, 1911 |
Occupation | Mining engineer |
Spouse | Alice Whitmore |
Children | 4 |
Parent(s) | Reuben Rickard, Mary E Humphereys |
Thomas Rickard (1866–1911) was a mining engineer,[1] an early resident of Berkeley, California,[citation needed] and served as the last President of the Town Board of Trustees from 1903 to 1909,[2] before the new city charter went into effect, creating the office of Mayor.[citation needed]
Rickard was born in France on August 28, 1866, to Reuben Rickard and Mary E Humphreys.[2] Both of his parents were English-born.[3] He immigrated to the United States with his family in the 1875.[2] In 1889 he married his wife Alice Whitmore.[2] They had four children: Leontine (b. May 1889), Helen (b. June 1891), Donald (b. August 1894), and Thomas, Jr. (b. January 1899).[2][3]
Rickard had a cousin whose name was also Thomas,[1] but regularly used his middle initial "A" (for Arthur).[citation needed] Thomas A. Rickard was a prominent writer on the subject of mining,[4] who, in 1896, was appointed by the Governor to the position of State Geologist of Colorado. He served in that position until 1901.[5]
Rickard graduated from the University of California in 1887,[1] with a degree in mining engineering.[2] From 1901 until his death, he served as vice president of the San Francisco mining firm of Harron, Rickard and McCone.[2] He also served as a trustee of the California Institute for the Deaf and Blind,[2] located in Berkeley.[citation needed]
Rickard's father Reuben Rickard[1] also served as President of the Town Board of Trustees in Berkeley from 1891 to 1893[citation needed] and again for about a month in 1895.[6] He was also a mining engineer, having worked throughout the western United States.[2] Thomas' brother Edgar Rickard[1] was the editor of a mining newspaper in London and a close acquaintance of Herbert Hoover.[7]
Thomas Rickard died on March 25, 1911.[1][8]