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Biography:

James Rutherford Fair, Jr.

James Rutherford Fair (born 1920) focused his education and career on chemical engineering, and was particularly interested in heat transfer and chemical reactor design. He worked in the industry for many years and later taught chemical engineering at the university level.

James Rutherford Fair was born on October 14, 1920 in Charleston, Missouri, to James Rutherfold and Georgia (Case) Fair. Prior to college he studied at the Citadel between 1938 and 1940. Fair earned a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1942, a master's degree in chemical engineering from the University of Michigan in 1949, and a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Texas in 1954. He was married on January 14, 1950, to Merle Innis and fathered three children: James Rutherford III, Elizabeth, and Richard Innis.

Fair worked for Monsanto Company in Marshall, Texas as a chemist and research engineer (1942-1943), research and design engineer (1943-1945), and development associate (1945-1947). He was transferred to Texas City as a project leader and engineer (1947-1952) and St. Louis, Missouri as a research group and section leader (1956-1961), engineering manager (1961-1969), engineering director (1969-1979), and director of engineering (1969-1979). Fair also worked for the Shell Development Corporation of California as a process design engineer (1954-1956). He taught at the University of Texas in Austin as a professor of chemical engineering beginning in 1979.

Related Activities

Fair supplemented his career with related memberships and extracurricular involvement. He served as the McKetta Centennial Energy Chair at the University of Texas in Austin beginning in 1979. Fair was an affiliated professor with Washington University from 1964-1979. He held membership in the American Chemical Society, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Society of Engineering Education, the National Academy of Engineering, the National Society of Professional Engineers, and the Faculty Club of the University of Texas. Fair's research focused on areas including chemical reactor design, physical separation, heat transfer equipment, and hydrocarbon pyrolysis operations. In his leisure time he enjoyed collecting books and traveling.

Authored Books and Articles

Fair authored several books including The North Arkansas Line (1969), Distillation (1971) and Advanced Process Engineering (1979). He contributed more than 100 articles to professional journals and books on chemical engineering. His research focused on physical separation methods. Heat transfer, chemical reactor design, and hydrocarbon pyrolysis operations.

Further Reading

American Men and Women of Science, 1998-99, 20th edition, R.R. Bowker, 1998.

Contemporary Authors Online, The Gale Group, 1999.

Who's Who in America 1999, 53rd edition, Marquis Who's Who, 1998.

Who's Who in Engineering, 14th edition, edited by Gordon Davis, American Association of Engineering Societies, 1991.

Who's Who in Technology, 7th edition, edited by Kimberley R.McGrath, Gale Research, Inc., 1995.

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Fair, James Graham,
1831–94, American financier, b. near Belfast, Ireland. He emigrated to America as a child, grew up on an Illinois farm, and went to the West in 1851 in search of gold. In partnership with J. W. Mackay, J. C. Flood, and William S. O'Brien, he made a large fortune from the silver of the Comstock Lode. He was U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1881 to 1887.

Bibliography

See O. Lewis, Silver Kings (1947).

 
Wikipedia: James Graham Fair
James Graham Fair
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James Graham Fair

James Graham Fair (December 3, 1831San Francisco, December 28, 1894) was the overnight millionaire part-owner of the Comstock Lode, a United States Senator and a colorful real estate and railroad speculator.

Biography

Born to a simple family near Belfast, Ireland, Graham emigrated to the United States in 1843 and grew up on a farm in Illinois. There he received an extensive education in business before moving to California in 1850, where he prospected the Feather River country for gold embedded in quartz rather than pan for placer gold. His attention shifted to Nevada, where he operated a mill on the Washoe River and landed various mine superintendent positions in Angels and other places in the Mother Lode region He became superintendent of the Hale and Norcross mine in Virginia City, Nevada in 1867.

He formed a partnership with three fellow Irishmen, John William Mackay, and the San Francisco saloon owners James C. Flood, and William S. O’Brien. The company was formally Flood and O'Brien, but popularly known as the "Bonanza firm". The four made large fortunes in shares in silver mines working the Comstock Lode, struck in 1859. It was the first major silver discovery in the United States, producing over five hundred million dollars in twenty years' operation. Although Fair was acknowledged to be a capable mine superintendent and a shrewd businessman, he was not well liked, and carried the nickname "Slippery Jim."[1] He invested much of his income from the Comstock in railroads and San Francisco real estate. Fair and Mackay owned the Nevada Bank of San Francisco, the rival to William Chapman Ralston's Bank of California; after the collapse of Ralston's financial empire, the Nevada Bank was for a time the largest bank in America at the height of the silver boom.

In 1876 he conceived the daring plan of extending his narrow-gauge South Pacific Coast Railroad down the east side of San Francisco Bay, through San Jose and Los Gatos and southward through a mountain route that entailed a 6200-foot tunnel another 5,000-foot one and six shorter tunnels, during which some six hundred Chinese workers were employed, among whom thirty-one lost their lives in explosions of coal gas. After Fair's death the Southern Pacific took over his line and converted it to standard gauge.

In 1861 he married Theresa Rooney, who had been keeping a boarding house. She divorced him in 1883 on grounds of "habitual adultery" and brought up their four children on her own, with a very considerable settlement.

He was appointed by the Nevada legislature to the U.S. Senate in 1881. He was not much interested in Washington, where he promoted silver issues in the Senate at a time when a movement was afoot to demonetize silver. Fair only served one term due to his defeat in the 1886 election. Following the end of his term, he moved back to San Francisco, where, when his daughter, Theresa "Tessie" Alice Fair was married in 1890 to Hermann Oelrichs of Norddeutsche Lloyd shipping lines, in the grandest wedding San Francisco had seen, he remained in his hotel suite[2] without an invitation. He gave her a million dollars as a wedding gift nevertheless (Ferguson 1977 p. 2)

His will left $40 million in trust to his daughters, nee Theresa "Tessie" Alice Fair, Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs, and Virginia Graham, later Mrs William Kissam Vanderbilt II and his surviving son, Charles Fair. After his death, Mrs. Nettie Cravens came forward claiming to be his wife. She brought plenty of evidence to the court trial, but lost the case. She moved to Iowa and lived in obscurity, spending her last days in a mental institution.

Later, another woman, Phoebe Couzins, a women's-rights advocate, also claimed a relationship with Fair.

Fair is the Fair of Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco which was begun in 1902 by his daughters who were determined to construct a grand monument to their father, but sold their interests in 1906, days before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.


Preceded by
William Sharon
United States Senator (Class 1) from Nevada
1881–1887
Served alongside: John P. Jones
Succeeded by
William M. Stewart

References

  1. ^ Grant H. Smith (1943) The History of the Comstock Lode, Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology, Geology and Mining Series No. 37, p.118.
  2. ^ His hotel built that year survived the San Francisco Earthquake and continues as the "Queen Anne Hotel".
  • Tales of Love and Hate in Old San Francisco, Millie Robbins. Chronicle Books, San Francisco 1971.
  • J. Walton Ferguson, Rosecliff (The Preservation Society of Newport County) 1977. Rosecliff was built for Fair's daughter, Mrs Oelrichs.

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Copyrights:

Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "James Graham Fair" Read more

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