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Ginter, Lewis (1824-1897), tobacco merchant  

Susan Hamburger

Ginter, Lewis (04 April 1824–02 October 1897), tobacco merchant, was born in New York City, the son of John Ginter, a grocer, and Elizabeth (maiden name unknown). His father died when Lewis was an infant, and his mother died a few years later; his older sister Jane raised him. Ginter received little formal education, but through self-education he acquired a love of art and music, became an accomplished pianist, and attained fluency in French and German....

Article

Hill, George Washington (1884-1946), tobacco entrepreneur  

Lawrence F. Greenfield

Hill, George Washington (22 October 1884–13 September 1946), tobacco entrepreneur, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Percival S. Hill, a carpet jobber and retailer, and Cassie Rowland Milnes. In the year that Hill was born North Carolina tobacco executive James B. Duke...

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Reynolds, Richard Joshua, Sr. (1850-1918), tobacco manufacturer and philanthropist  

Edward L. Lach, Jr.

Reynolds, Richard Joshua, Sr. (20 July 1850–29 July 1918), tobacco manufacturer and philanthropist, was born at “Rock Spring,” the family estate near Critz, Patrick County, Virginia, the son of Hardin William Reynolds, a farmer and tobacco merchant, and Nancy Jane Cox. In addition to his other activities, his father engaged in both banking and chewing tobacco production; as one of the largest slaveholders in the state, his family was socially prominent and financially secure. As a boy Richard attended local country schools and worked on his father’s farm. He also worked intermittently in his father’s plug tobacco factory, gaining valuable practical experience that he would later put to good use....

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Reynolds, William Neal (1863-1951), tobacco manufacturer and philanthropist  

Edward L. Lach, Jr.

Reynolds, William Neal (22 March 1863–10 September 1951), tobacco manufacturer and philanthropist, was born at “Rock Creek,” the family estate near Critz, in Patrick County, Virginia, the son of Hardin William Reynolds, a farmer and tobacco merchant, and Nancy Jane Cox. After receiving his early education in local schools, he entered King College in Bristol, Tennessee, in 1882. Reynolds attended King for only a few months before transferring to Trinity College in Durham, North Carolina, following the death of his father. The transfer placed Reynolds closer to Winston (later Winston-Salem), North Carolina, where older brother ...