Percy Rivington Pyne | |
Office: | President of National City Bank |
Term Start: | 1882 |
Term End: | 1891 |
Predecessor: | Moses Taylor |
Successor: | James Jewett Stillman |
Birth Date: | 8 March 1820 |
Birth Place: | England |
Death Place: | Rome, Italy |
Children: | Percy Rivington Pyne II Moses Taylor Pyne Albertina Taylor Pyne |
Percy Rivington Pyne I (March 8, 1820 – February 14, 1895) was a migrant from England to the United States. He was president of City National Bank, a director of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, and a director of the New Jersey Zinc Company.
Percy Rivington Payne was born in England on March 8, 1820, to Anna Rivington and Thomas Pyne. He was a collateral descendant of James Rivington, famed Loyalist publisher in New York during the American Revolution.
Pyne was educated at Christ's Hospital boarding school in West Sussex before emigrating to the United States in 1835.
Upon arriving in the United States, Pyne joined his father-in-law's business Moses Taylor & Co. as a clerk, becoming a partner in 1842. Moses Taylor & Co. specialized in the importation and sale of sugar, focusing on the Cuban trade. Pyne managed the sugar business while Taylor expanded the company into finance, iron, coal and railroads.
After the death of his father-in-law in 1882, Pyne became president of National City Bank, which was founded by Taylor in 1865, serving in that role until 1891 when he was succeeded by James Stillman.
In 1855 he married Taylor's daughter Albertina. Their children included two sons and a daughter:
Pyne died in Rome, Italy on Valentine's Day, February 14, 1895.[3]
Through his son Percy, he was a grandfather of Grafton Howland Pyne (1890–1935);[4] Herbert Rivington Pyne (1892–1952),[5] who married Florence Ledyard Blair (daughter of banker C. Ledyard Blair);[6] Mary Percy Pyne (b. 1893), who married Oliver Dwight Filley (a grandson of Oliver Filley and cousin of Dwight F. Davis);[7] [8] [9] Percy Rivington Pyne Jr. (1896–1941), a flier with the 103rd Aero Squadron during World War I;[10] and Meredith Howland Pyne (b. 1898).[11]