Fillmore Condit
Fillmore Condit was an American inventor, temperance activist and local politician serving New Jersey and later Long Beach, California.
Early life
Condit was born in Roseland, New Jersey on September 4, 1855, the son of Stephen J. and Catherine Tappan Condit. At the age of 24, in 1879 he invented and manufactured a refrigerator door fastener for use in meat markets. According to his own biography, he met his wife Ida Rafter as a customer in his store, and married her in 1881.Later life
The couple moved to Verona, New Jersey, where Fillmore soon participated in local politics, serving on the Essex County Board of Chosen Freeholders. The family moved to California in 1899 for one year, where Fillmore became interested in the oil industry. When they returned to New Jersey in 1901, he was placed in charge of the Eastern District of the Union Oil Company of California. In the 1890s, Condit acquired a large plot of land and built a home for his family in Verona. He created building lots for homes to be constructed on the periphery of his property, but kept a large, central plot of greenspace around the home where his family could spend time outdoors, particularly his son Everett, who had tuberculosis. Condit deeded the land to the township after his son's death in 1911 and the property became the site of Everett Park.In July 1912, his wife, Ida Francis Condit, purchased a property next to theirs in Essex Fells, New Jersey, to keep Black purchasers from buying the property, with Mrs. Condit saying that she "knew all of our homes would be ruined, especially mine, which is just next door."
Participation in social movements
He also participated in the temperance and suffrage movements. He was briefly the executive chairman of the Anti-Saloon League of America. One of his most popular tracts was called "The Relation of Saloons to Insanity," published by the American Issue Publishing Company in 1910. He spoke at the National Suffrage Day open-air meeting in Montclair, and was one of the speakers during the tour of the "Torch of Victory," circulated under the auspices of the Women's Political Union. Condit was put up by the Anti-Saloon League as a candidate for governor of New Jersey in 1919, but for personal reasons decided to withdraw, obtaining concessions from the Republican Party that they would support prohibition.Condit's testimony in 1913 for a grand jury investigating former Syracuse mayor and Tammany boss James Kennedy McGuire, was successful in obtaining McGuire's indictment on charges of soliciting a campaign contribution from a corporation.