Joseph G. Butler, Jr.

Joseph G. Butler, Jr.
Born (1840-12-21)December 21, 1840
Mercer County, Pennsylvania
Died December 20, 1927(1927-12-20) (aged 86)
Youngstown, Ohio
Occupation Industrialist
Known for Butler Institute of American Art
Title Director, American Iron and Steel Institute

Joseph Green Butler, Jr. (December 21, 1840 December 20, 1927) was an American industrialist, philanthropist, and popular historian. He is remembered primarily for establishing the first museum in the United States dedicated solely to American art.[1]

Early years

He was born in the industrial town of Temperance Furnace, Mercer County, Pennsylvania,[2] the son of Joseph Green and Temperance (Orwig) Butler.[3] His family's presence in the country traced back to the period preceding the American Revolution. Joseph G. Butler, Jr.'s Anglo-Irish ancestors emigrated from the vicinity of Dublin to colonial America in 1759.[4] According to Joseph G. Butler, Jr.'s obituary, his father, Joseph Green Butler, was a "widely known iron manufacturer and blast furnace expert". His grandfather, Joseph Butler, established the first blast furnace in central Pennsylvania.[2] When Butler was still a child, his family relocated to Niles, Ohio, where he attended a village school along with future president William McKinley.[5]

Industrial career

Butler became involved in the iron business at the age of 30.[2] In time, his industrial activities centered on Youngstown, Ohio, where he became a pivotal figure in the community's transition from iron to steel production.[6] In 1892, he joined local industrialist Henry Wick in the organization of the Ohio Steel Company, which built two Bessemer plants along the Mahoning River, just northwest of Youngstown.[7] The company went into production in 1895, only to be sold four years later to the Pittsburgh-based National Steel Company.[7] In 1901, the local plant became the Ohio Works of the Carnegie Steel Company, part of the U.S. Steel Corporation.[7]

Butler's influence extended well beyond Ohio, however. By the early 20th century, he was a nationally known industrialist who served as director of the American Iron and Steel Institute, president of the Portage Silica Company, and a director of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company, Pennsylvania & Lake Erie Dock Company, Youngstown and Suburban Railway Company, Pennsylvania and Ohio Power & Light Company, and Commercial National Bank of Youngstown.[2][3] Among American industrialists, he was known affectionately as "Uncle Joe".[3][5]

Civic contributions

Butler Institute of American Art

Butler's most celebrated legacy is the Butler Institute of American Art, located near the modern-day campus of Youngstown State University. He established the institution in 1919, to house his personal collection of American art. The industrialist's commitment to this groundbreaking museum was reflected in his last will and testament. According to contemporary news accounts, Butler left the bulk of his $1,500,000 estate to the Butler Institute.[8]

Scarcely more than three decades after Butler's death, Time magazine published a feature story which described the art museum as "booming". In a passage that praised the late industrialist's vision as well as its realization, the magazine's editors wrote: "To set the strictly American tone of the place, he planted a befeathered bronze Indian in front of the $500,000 colonnaded building designed by the Manhattan firm of McKim, Mead & White. With Youngstown University nearby, the two blocks surrounding the museum soon developed into the cultural strip of the U.S.'s third biggest steel center".[1]

As a philanthropist and community leader, Butler was also instrumental in the conception and realization of other civic projects, including Niles' National McKinley Birthplace Memorial, a monument to the memory of his personal friend, President William J. McKinley.[2] In addition, Butler was the author of several well-received historical works, including an overview of the development of the U.S. steel industry, a history of the Mahoning Valley, and a biography of President McKinley.[2] His published works also include a volume titled, Presidents I Have Seen and Known. Butler was personally acquainted with every U.S. president from Abraham Lincoln to Calvin Coolidge.[3]

Death

Joseph G. Butler, Jr., died on the eve of his 87th birthday.[9] A memorial service held at the Butler Institute of American Art featured a eulogy delivered by Youngstown educator O. L. Reid. The speaker highlighted Butler's rare combination of pragmatism and artistic sensibility when he stated, "His fathers were iron masters and surely in some of them must have been a keen rush of joy before the sheer beauty of the white flame of their furnaces".[10] Butler's funeral services were held at St. John's Episcopal Church, in Youngstown, and his remains were interred at Belmont Park Cemetery, in nearby Liberty, Ohio.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 "Summer Refresher". Time. July 28, 1958.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "City's First Citizen Sleeps Peacefully Away". The Youngstown Daily Vindicator. December 20, 1927.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Stewart, John Struthers (1935). History of Northeastern Ohio (In Three Volumes). Indianapolis, IN: Historical Publishing Company. pp. 559561.
  4. Pallante, Sally; Scotty Hanahan; Jim Dunn; Ted Miller; Martin Pallante; Terry Dunn (2004). Irish in Youngstown and the Greater Mahoning Valley. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 17.
  5. 1 2 "Milestones". Time. January 2, 1928.
  6. Blue, Frederick J. et al., Mahoning Memories: A History of Youngstown and Mahoning County (Virginia Beach, VA: The Donning Company, 1995), p. 94.
  7. 1 2 3 "Mahoning Steel History". Mahoning Valley Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2012-02-10. Retrieved 2007-03-31.
  8. "Art Institute Gets Bulk of $1,5000,000 J. G. Butler Estate". The Youngstown Daily Vindicator. December 29, 1927.
  9. "J. G. Butler Jr., Ironmaster, Dies; Youngstown Manufacturer and Philanthropist Stricken on Eve of 87th Birthday". The New York Times. December 21, 1927.
  10. "Great Civic Leader Dies". The Youngstown Sheet and Tube Bulletin. January 20, 1928.

External links

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