Louis Lasher Lorillard


Louis Lasher Lorillard was a prominent American clubman.

Personal life

Louis was born on November 26, 1849 in New York City. He was the son of Pierre Lorillard III and Catherine Lorillard. In 1760, his great-grandfather founded P. Lorillard and Company in New York City to process tobacco, cigars, and snuff which, today, is the oldest tobacco company in the U.S. His mother's family owned "the great New York mercantile house of N. L. & G. Griswold, known to their rivals as "No Loss and Great Gain Griswold," importers of rum, sugar, and tea."

Career

Upon his father's death in 1867, eighteen year old Louis, and his siblings, inherited a large fortune and was "regarded as one of the wealthiest young men in New York." Like his brothers, he was an "ardent sportsman, and his fancies in this direction seemed to turn especially to yachting. His first yacht, the Eva" was named after his younger sister. He later owned The Wanderer, a larger and faster yacht that was the "most up-to-date type of keel ocean-going schooner."
He was a member of the New York Yacht Club, the Knickerbocker Club, and the Newport Reading Club.
In 1896, Lorillard sold his Vinland Estate at Ochre Point in Newport, Rhode Island to Hamilton McKown Twombly and his wife, Florence Adele Vanderbilt Twombly. He had inherited Vinland, which was built in 1882 by Peabody & Stearns, from his aunt, Catharine Lorillard Wolfe.

Personal life

In 1874, Lorillard was married to Katherine Livingston Beeckman, sister of Rhode Island Governor Robert Livingston Beeckman. Together, they were the parents of four sons and a daughter:
Lorillard died at the Mercedes Hotel in Paris on October 22, 1910. He was buried at Saint Marys Episcopal Churchyard in Portsmouth, Rhode Island. In his will, his wife received one-fifth of the income from the estate he inherited from his father, but only one-tenth if she remarried, with the remainder of the estate split between his living sons.