Pierre Lorillard III


Pierre Lorillard III was the grandson of Pierre Abraham Lorillard, the founder of the P. Lorillard and Company. Heir to a great tobacco fortune, Lorillard owned no less than of undeveloped land in New York's Orange and Rockland counties, across the Hudson River and about an hour's train ride from the city. His son Pierre Lorillard IV developed Tuxedo Park on the family property in the 1880s.

Early life

Pierre Lorillard III was the son of Pierre Lorillard II and Maria Dorothea Schultz. His father was a very prominent tobacco manufacturer, industrialist, banker, businessman, and real estate tycoon, for whom the term "millionaire" was first used in America for his father's obituary in 1843. His grandfather, Pierre Abraham Lorillard, was the founder of the P. Lorillard and Company, which provided the family fortune.
Through his sister Dorothea Anne Lorillard, who married John David Wolfe, a real estate developer, Lorillard III was the uncle of philanthropist Catharine Lorillard Wolfe. Another sister, Eleanora Eliza Lorillard, was married to William Augustus Spencer, son of Ambrose Spencer and brother of John Canfield Spencer.

Career

In 1866, Lorillard built the Italianate commercial building at 827 Broadway in New York City.

Personal life

Lorillard was married to Catherine Anne Griswold. Her 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." Together they were the parents of:
Lorillard died on December 23, 1867.

Descendants

Through his daughter Mary, he was the grandfather of Hélène Barbey who married Hermann Alexander, Graf von Pourtalès, who both competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics, with Hélène becoming the first woman to win a gold medal.