Harry Bates Thayer Explained

Order:5th
Office:President of American Telephone & Telegraph
Term Start:1919
Term End:1925
Predecessor:Theodore Newton Vail
Successor:Walter Sherman Gifford
Birth Date:17 August 1858
Birth Place:Northfield, Vermont
Death Place:New Canaan, Connecticut
Education:Norwich University
Alma Mater:Dartmouth College
Children:3
Signature:Signature of Harry Bates Thayer.png

Harry Bates Thayer (August 17, 1858 – September 3, 1936), was an American electrical and telephone businessman.

Early life

Thayer was born on August 17, 1858, in Northfield, Vermont. He was a son of James Carey Barroll Thayer (1824–1897) and Martha Jane (née Pratt) Thayer (1824–1869), a daughter of John A. and Sarah Pratt. His father, a son of Samuel White Thayer and Ruth (née Packard) Thayer,[1] owned a clothing store and was a founder of Northfield Savings Bank.[2]

He was a descendant of Alden Thayer, Governor Brewster, and other early New England settlors.

He was educated at Northfield High School in Northfield, Vermont. He then attended Norwich University (the Military College of Vermont) for 2 years before attending Dartmouth College, from which he graduated in 1879.

Career

After six months working in the Station Agent's office at the Bellows Falls railway station, he became a shipping clerk at $10 per week at Western Electric Company. He was the International department manager in 1897. He traveled to Japan in 1896 and subsequently initiated Western Electric's participation in the forming of Nippon Electric Company, Ltd., where his assistant, Walter Tenney Carleton became a founding director. Thayer soon became the general manager in New York City and later vice-president.

He served as the 4th President of Western Electric from October 1908 to July 1919. He became vice-president at AT&T, American Telephone & Telegraph. He left Western Electric Company in July 1919 to succeed his close friend Theodore Vail as president of AT&T. In 1920 the telephone system was de-nationalized by the Willis-Graham Act, freeing AT&T to acquire independent telephone companies.[3] Under Thayer, AT&T flourished as a regulated monopoly and spread into radio broadcasting. In 1925, the research activities of AT&T and Western Electric were consolidated into Bell Labs.[4] In 1925, Thayer resigned the presidency and became board chairman at AT&T, continuing in that role until he resigned in 1928.[5]

Personal life

On April 26, 1887, Thayer was married to Carrie Motte Ransom (1864–1916) in Porter, New York. Carrie was a daughter of Eliza Jane (née Estes) Ransom and William Henry Harrison Ransom, a founder of Ransomville, New York (a hamlet in Porter). After living on Staten Island and then Kingsbridge, the Thayers settled in New Canaan, Connecticut, in 1903. Together, they had three children:

Carrie Thayer died in New Canaan in May 1916.[12] After a long illness, Thayer died at his home in New Canaan on September 3, 1936.[13]

From 1937 until 2011 the primary dining facility at Dartmouth College was named Thayer Hall in honor of his service to the College, which included serving on the Board of Trustees.[14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cutter . William Richard . New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of Commonwealths and the Founding of a Nation . 1913 . Lewis historical publishing Company . 1916 . 23 March 2020 . en.
  2. Book: Acts and Laws Passed by the Legislature of the State of Vermont . 1851 . J. Padock & A. Spooner, printers to the General Assembly . 23 March 2020 . en.
  3. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28175 Ward, Robert C. Jr., The Chaos of Covergence: A Study of the Process of Decay, Change, and Transformation within the Telephone Policy Subsystem of the United States, chapter 7
  4. http://www.referenceforbusiness.com/history2/15/AT-T-Corporation.html AT&T Corporation – Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on AT&T Corporation
  5. Book: Thayer. Harry Bates. Autobiography. June 1933. Not published. privately held.
  6. News: Mrs. Floyd C. Noble . 21 January 2020 . . 21 March 1946.
  7. News: Miss Dorothy Thayer's Wedding. . 21 January 2020 . . 4 May 1913.
  8. Book: The National Magazine: An Illustrated monthly . 1921 . Bostonian Publishing Company . 21 January 2020 . en.
  9. News: Miss Scudder Weds on Friday. . 23 March 2020 . . 14 August 1917.
  10. News: TIMES . Special to THE NEW YORK . DIVORCES JOHN A. THAYER; Former Dorothy Scudder Gets Reno Decree on Cruelty Charge . 23 March 2020 . . 8 December 1939.
  11. News: Times . Special to The New York . DARTMOUTH GIVEN JOHN ALDEN BIBLE; Volume Dating at Least to 1633 is Contributed by a Descendant of Pilgrim . 23 March 2020 . . 15 December 1957.
  12. News: Died . 23 March 2020 . . 27 May 1916.
  13. News: H. B. THAYER DEAD; EX-HEAD OF A.T.&T.; President and Chairman of Telephone Company Retired. on 70th Birthday in 1928. . 19 . 23 March 2020 . . September 4, 1936 . en.
  14. Web site: Dartmouth Class of 1953 gift will revitalize dining and social space . August 2, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100309051229/http://www.dartmouth.edu/~news/releases/2010/01/15a.html . March 9, 2010 . dead .