James G. Batterson

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James G. Batterson
Born(1823-02-23)February 23, 1823.
Bloomfield, Connecticut
DiedSeptember 18, 1901(1901-09-18) (aged 78)
Hartford, Connecticut
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Designer and builder
Known forOwner of New England Granite Works from 1845

James Goodwin Batterson (February 23, 1823 – September 18, 1901) was an American designer and builder, the owner of

Travelers Insurance Company, both in Hartford, Connecticut. He introduced casualty insurance in the United States, for which he was posthumously inducted into the Insurance Hall of Fame (1965).[2]

Biography

Batterson was born in

Egyptian Exploration Fund. While in Europe he studied art and wrote poetry. In England he was impressed with the record and success of the Railway Passenger Assurance Company, and resolved to gather a group of progressive men to launch a similar venture in the United States, the Travelers Insurance Company.[4]
He remained in charge until his death in 1901.

Before the Civil War he designed and built the monument to Gen. William J. Worth, New York City (1857). after the war Batterson supplied many cemetery and civil monuments.

As chairman of the Connecticut State War Committee in the Civil War he served as a construction consultant for the Union.

As Batterson was a leading supplier of granite and other construction stone, President

William K. Vanderbilt residence Marble House, Newport, Rhode Island. He had granite quarries at Westerly, Rhode Island, and at Concord, New Hampshire, and introduced mechanical granite polishing.[6]

Batterson traveled to Italy to find talented sculptors to work on his designs for bronze and stone sculptures for national cemeteries and

Alexander Hamilton, in Central Park, New York City (Carl Conrads, sculptor); the Thayer Monument at West Point, New York (Carl Conrads, sculptor); the Texas Heroes Monument in Galveston, Texas (Louis Amateis, sculptor); and the Halleck Monument at San Francisco (Carl Conrads
, sculptor).

He joined forces with Elizabeth Colt to make the Wadsworth Atheneum a free public institution; on 16 October 1880, he was honored at the Atheneum by ex-President Ulysses S. Grant for his contributions to historic preservation. He founded Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford, where he is interred and where many of his granite monuments may be seen.[7]

He married Eunice Elizabeth, daughter of Jonathan Goodwin, of Hartford.[citation needed]

He died on September 18, 1901, in Hartford, Connecticut.[8]

Batterson Hall at the University of Connecticut commemorates his name.[9]

Notes

  1. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, 1896, s.v. "Batterson, James Goodwin, insurance president"
  2. ^ Insurance Hall of Fame: James G. Batterson
  3. ^ Society of Architectural Historians website: "James G. Batterson"
  4. ^ The Insurance Almanac 1917:149.
  5. ^ Batterson had hired George Keller, who became Hartford's leading late-19th-century architect, and submitted a Batterson-Keller plan for the new Capitol; he managed to modify Upjohn's plan during construction, 1872-79 ("Connecticut's New state Capitol" Archived 2006-03-06 at the Wayback Machine); Ransom, David F. "James G. Batterson and the New State House." Connecticut Heritage Society Bulletin no 45 (January, 1980) 1:1-15.
  6. ^ American Cyclopedia 1896.
  7. ^ "Cedar Hill Cemetery: James Goodwin Batterson". Archived from the original on 2009-09-22. Retrieved 2010-03-18.
  8. ^ New York Times, 19 September 1901
  9. ^ "The UConn Story: Yesteryear Archives: Who Is That Building Named For? "

External links