William L. Clements
William L. Clements | |
---|---|
Portrait of William Clements | |
Born |
William Lawrence Clements April 1, 1861 Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S. |
Died |
November 6, 1934 Bay City, Michigan |
Cause of death | Heart attack |
Resting place | Forest Hills Cemetery, Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S. |
Education | University of Michigan |
Occupation | Financier, Banker, Engineer |
Known for | Philanthropy |
Political party | Republican Party |
Website | http://clements.umich.edu/ |
William Lawrence Clements (1861 - 1934) was a collector of historical works, founder, and donor to the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan. In addition, Mr. Clements donated more than twenty-million-dollars throughout his life to the University, oversaw a successful business career in the manufacturing and banking industry, and served as a regent of the University of Michigan for twenty-four years.
Early Life and Schooling
William Clements was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan on April 1, 1861[1] to James and Agnes (Macready) Clements. His father James was a professor at the University of Michigan during a time of great expansion and as such, young William witnessed the University’s early development. James Clements rented the family’s State Street home from the University, which existed next to the Michigan Union. William Clements grew up on the Ann Arbor campus and attended the Ann Arbor public schools. He later matriculated into the University of Michigan in the year 1878[2] when he was 17. He studied Mechanical Engineering through the College of Literature and Arts due to the fact that the engineering college had not yet been created. Clements also joined Chi Psi Fraternity, Alpha Epsilon chapter at University of Michigan. Clements graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering and was later bestowed with an Honorary Doctorate in Law (LL.D.) in 1934.[3]
Family
William Clements was married on February 7, 1887 in Pittsburg to Jessie N. Young, a daughter of one of the prominent families of that city.[4] Together they had three children— two sons and a daughter. Their eldest son, Wallace William Clements was born on September 2, 1889 and followed his father's footsteps and graduated from the University of Michigan. Their daughter Elizabeth M. Clements born on September 9, 1891 went on to marry Harry S. Finkenstaedt and lived in Detroit. Their last son, James R. Clements, born on November 2, 1897[5] died in France while serving in the U.S. Air Force during World War I. William Clements additionally had four grandchildren.
Clements had one sister, Ida (Clements) Wheat, who later lived in Detroit with her husband. The two went on to have one son, a nephew of William who admired him very much and spoke fondly about William at his funeral.
Clements married a second time on April 22, 1931 to Florence Kathryn Fischer and then sailed to and honeymooned for an extended amount of time in Europe shortly before his death.
Business Career
Upon his undergraduate graduation in 1882, William Clements moved to Bay City, Michigan to work as an engineer with his father who was also a partner at Bay City Industrial Works (now the Industrial Brownhoist Corporation of Bay City), a business that designed and manufactured hoists, cranes, and steam shovels. Although the business wasn’t very successful, Clements worked to improve the efficiency of the products and was awarded several patents for improvements to the railway cranes and steam shovels. In 1886, Clements and an associate bought out the stakeholders, and re-established the business. William Clements eventually became the president of Bay City Industrial Works in 1898. Under his management, Industrial Works became one of the most profitable institutions in Michigan as the company manufactured the construction equipment for the creation of the Panama Canal, [6]and as such the company profits skyrocketed between 1904 and 1915. In addition, Mr. Clements saw a career in the banking industry having served as the president of First National Bank of Bay City. Clements made a fortune throughout his career, which allowed him to fund his personal passion of book collecting.
Affiliations
When William Clements was asked what his chief recreation was he simply stated, “book collecting.”[7] As such, he was a member of numerous societies that focused on his passion of historical artifacts and books including his appointment to the Michigan Historical Commission by Michigan Governor Fred W. Green on August 29th 1927. Additionally Clements was a member of the American Antiquarian Society, the American History Association, the Club of Odd Volumes in Boston, the Mississippi Valley Historical Association, the New England Historic Genealogical Society, and the Grolier Club.
Notable Collections
By the 1890s, William Clements started collecting rare books and works of early Americana. Fortunately, Clements was able to make many of his purchases in the “golden age” for collectors as the decades of the 1880s through the 1920s saw the break up of aristocratic British estates which contained many great libraries. In the United States many large private libraries were also sold which allowed Clements to make a series of major purchases. Among these purchases were the collections of Aaron J. Cooke, a good friend of Clements who sold him over 1,000 volumes of Americana in 1903. Clements concentrated on two periods of early American history— the colonization of America from the 15th through the 17th centuries and the late 18th century colonial period and revolutionary America. Among some of his notable purchases were Christopher Columbus’s letters and reports to the king and queen of Spain describing the first voyage to discover a world that did not then exist on any map. He also purchased John Smith’s “True Relation of Virginia,” one of the six copies of Thomas Hariot’’s “A Briefe and True Report of Virginia of 1588,” and also Jefferson’s notes on the State.[8]
William L. Clements Library
In 1921 Clements started donating his collection to the University of Michigan and started plans to build a library to house his collection. Seeing the opportunity to create a memorial for himself, his envisioned this library to be exclusively for him, his close friends, and the advanced scholars and researchers in the country. This library would rival those on the east coast, which belonged to Ivy League schools and would be a leading source of history in the Midwest. Clements provided a suitable home for his collections in the style of Italian renaissance, based on Vignola’s casino for the Villa Farnese in Caprarola, Italy. This building designed by famous architect Albert Kahn for the cost of $200,000 would also serve as the building Kahn wanted most to be remembered for. The Library was officially dedicated the William L. Clements Library on June 15, 1923 and at the time of its completion had over 20,000 volumes of rare books, 2,000 volumes of early newspapers, and several hundred maps. Between 1925 and 1930, William Clements acquired the papers of British generals Thomas Gage and Sir Henry Clinton, Cabinet Minister Lord George Germain, and the Hessian General Von Jungkenn, creating the largest archive in the United States of manuscripts and maps relating to British conduct of the American War. On the American side of the conflict, Clements purchased the papers of Continental Army General Nathanael Greene, as he believed there was value in examining the history of both sides of conflict and holding the physical documents created much more intellectual value than a copy. Clements also collected song sheets, newspapers, magazines, cookbooks, sermons, school primers, and slave documents all of which could be examined together to adequately study the past.[9]
University of Michigan Board of Regents (1909-1933)
Later in his life, Clements was elected to serve as a Regent of the University of Michigan as a Republican succeeding Frank W. Fletcher of Alpena in 1909. Clements was continuously re-elected until his retirement in 1933. Clements enjoyed golfing with his good friend, fellow University of Michigan regent Junius Beal. During his tenure as a regent, his knowledge of engineering and business made him a leader in rebuilding the central campus as part of the “committee of five.” This committee, composed of President Burton, Professor John Shepard, Regent Benjamin Hanchett, Albert Kahn, and William Clements, oversaw a great expansion to the Michigan campus after World War I. They were appointed to make decisions of all new buildings on campus, most notably the University of Michigan Hospital, the Simpson Memorial Institute for Medical Research, the Museums Building, the Burton Memorial Carillon Tower, and the Clements Library where he additionally served on the Committee of Management for the remainder of his life.
Legacy and Death
William Clements died of a heart attack in his home on Tuesday, November 6, 1934. [10]Fellow University of Michigan graduates and Chi Psi Fraternity brothers served as his pallbearers. They were George Duffy, John Fischer, William Davis, Robert Hill, Donald Nichols, and William Oliver. Clements’s left an estate of about half a million dollars as well as invaluable books, maps, and manuscripts. He was said to have “Unstinted labor, his broad vision and prudent counsel.” Clements is buried at Forest Hills Cemetery in Ann Arbor. The William Clements Library underwent a massive $17.5 million restoration effort beginning in 2015 and reopened in the Spring of 2016.
Clements was responsible for the 1922 building of the Bay City Public library, "through both personal donations and activities to obtain supplementary funds from the Carnegie Foundation."[11]
References
- ↑ DB Clements, William Lawrence, Vertical File Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
- ↑ DB Clements, William Lawrence, Vertical File Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
- ↑ DB Clements, William Lawrence, Vertical File Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
- ↑ The Michigan Alumnus Volume 16.
- ↑ The Michigan Alumnus Volume 16.
- ↑ http://bay-journal.com/bay/1he/bus/industrialworks.html. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ DB Clements, William Lawrence, Vertical File Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
- ↑ Dann, John C., comp. A Modest Exhibit, Documenting The Growth and Evolution of the Clements Library at the University of Michigan, 1903 to 2007. Ann Arbor, MI: Mosaic Foundation, 2007. 2007. Web.
- ↑ Dann, John C. One Hundred and One Treasures from the Collections of the William L. Clements Library: A Celebration of Seventy-Five Years, 1923-1998. Ann Arbor, Mich: Clements Library, University of Michigan, 1998. Print.
- ↑ DB Clements, William Lawrence, Vertical File Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
- ↑ Compiled by workers of the Writers’ Program of the Works Projects Administration of the State of Michigan, Michigan: A Guide to the Wolverine State, Oxford University Press, New York, 1941 p. 201
DB Clements, William Lawrence, Vertical File Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
Mixed Material A-Mi, William L. Clements Library Records 1923-1964, Box 1 William L. Clements Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
Mixed Material Mi-Sw, William L. Clements Library Records 1923-1964, Box 2 William L. Clements Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
Mixed Material Sw-Z, William L. Clements Library Records 1923-1964, Box 3 William L. Clements Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan
Nesbit, Joanne. "Clements Exhibition Highlights History of Panama Canal."Clements Exhibition Highlights History of Panama Canal. The University Record, 13 Dec. 1999. Web. 05 Apr. 2016.
Dann, John C., comp. A Modest Exhibit, Documenting The Growth and Evolution of the Clements Library at the University of Michigan, 1903 to 2007. Ann Arbor, MI: Mosaic Foundation, 2007. 2007. Web.
Dann, John C. One Hundred and One Treasures from the Collections of the William L. Clements Library: A Celebration of Seventy-Five Years, 1923-1998. Ann Arbor, Mich: Clements Library, University of Michigan, 1998. Print.
The Michigan Technic, Volumes 42-43. N.p.: n.p., n.d. Print.
http://bay-journal.com/bay/1he/bus/industrialworks.html.