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George Peabody


 

This article is about George Peabody, a dry goods merchant and philanthropist in the northern United States, founder of the Peabody Institute. For information about George Peabody, the banker and philanthropist in the southern United States associated with Peabody College and the Peabody Award, see George Foster Peabody.

Related Topics:
Peabody College - Peabody Award - George Foster Peabody

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George Peabody (February 18, 1795November 4, 1869) was an entrepreneur and philanthropist who founded the Peabody Institute. He was born in Danvers, Massachusetts to a middle class family.

Related Topics:
February 18 - 1795 - November 4 - 1869 - Entrepreneur - Philanthropist - Peabody Institute - Danvers, Massachusetts

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While serving as a volunteer in the War of 1812, Peabody met Elisha Riggs, who, in 1814, provided financial backing for the wholesale dry goods firm of Peabody, Riggs, and Company.

Related Topics:
War of 1812 - Elisha Riggs - 1814

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In 1816, Peabody moved to Baltimore, where he would live for the next 20 years.

Related Topics:
1816 - Baltimore

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The town of South Danvers, Massachusetts changed its name to The City of Peabody, Massachusetts in honor of its favorite son. Peabody is a member of the Hall of Fame for Great Americans sponsored by the City University of New York.

Related Topics:
Peabody, Massachusetts - Hall of Fame for Great Americans - City University of New York

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In the 1830s, Peabody moved to London, where he would spend the rest of his life. There the irrepressible American patriot started a bank and entered into a partnership with Junius Morgan; today's assorted financial businesses with the name Morgan trace their roots to Peabody's bank. (Chernow: The House of Morgan)

Related Topics:
1830s - London - Bank - Junius Morgan

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In London, Peabody established the Peabody Donation Fund, which continues to this day, as the Peabody Trust, to provide subsidized housing in London. In America, Peabody founded and supported numerous institutions in New England and elsewhere. At the close of the American Civil War, he established the Peabody Education Fund to "encourage the intellectual, moral, and industrial education of the destitute children of the Southern States." His grandest beneficence, however, was to Baltimore; the city in which he achieved his earliest success.

Related Topics:
Peabody Trust - New England - American Civil War - Peabody Education Fund

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George Peabody is known to have provided benefactions of more than $8 million, most of them in his own lifetime. Among the list are included:

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:1852 The Peabody Institute, Peabody, Mass: $217,000

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:1856 The Peabody Institute, Danvers, Mass: $100,000

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:1857 The Peabody Institute, Baltimore: $1,400,000

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:1862 The Peabody Donation Fund, London: $2,500,000

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:1866 The Peabody Museum, Yale University: $150,000

Related Topics:
Peabody Museum - Yale University

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:1867 The Peabody Museum, Salem, Mass: $140,000

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:1867 Peabody Education Fund: $2,000,000

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George Peabody died in London on November 4, 1869. At the request of the Dean of Westminster and with the approval of the Queen, Peabody was given a temporary burial in Westminster Abbey. His will provided that he be buried in the town of his birth, Danvers, Massachusetts, and Prime Minster Gladstone arranged for Peabody's remains to be returned to America on the Monarch, the newest and largest ship in Her Majesty's Navy.

Related Topics:
Dean of Westminster - Westminster Abbey

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