Hendon Chubb


Hendon Chubb was an American insurance executive who established the Chubb Fellowship at Yale.

Early life

Chubb was born in Brooklyn, New York on March 19, 1874. He was the youngest son of Thomas Caldecot Chubb and Victoria Edds, a daughter of William Edds. His parents were both born in England and emigrated to the United States. His older siblings included Sidney Caldecot Chubb, Percy Chubb, and Mabel Ada Victoria Chubb.
His paternal grandparents were John and Sarah Chubb of St Pancras, Soper Lane, London.
He was educated at Dearborn Morgan School in Orange, New Jersey before graduating from the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale University in 1895.

Career

In 1882, his father elder brother, Percy, opened a marine underwriting business in the seaport district of New York City. They collected $1,000 each from 100 prominent merchants to start their venture, initially focusing on insuring ships and cargoes. After his father died in 1887, brother Percy took over as head of the firm. Hendon became a partner in 1895. After Percy's death in 1930, Hendon became senior partner, serving in that role until his retirement in 1959. Upon his brother's death in 1930, he inherited Percy's "Springwood" estate, a ten-thousand-acre plantation in Thomasville, Georgia.
Chubb also founded, and was serving as chairman emeritus, of Federal Insurance Company, which had assets of more than $220,000,000, at the time of his death. He was involved in the development of the American Institute of Marine Underwriters and the Board of Underwriters of New York. During World War I, he served as a Director of War Risk Insurance, and an Insurance Advisor to the United States Shipping Board and the American Red Cross.
In 1924, he established the Victoria Foundation, named in honor of his mother, which makes grants for medical research. In 1936, he endowed the Chubb Fellowship at Yale for "…the encouragement and aid of students interested in government and public affairs."

Personal life

On June 6, 1898, Chubb was married to Alice Margaret Lee at Grace Episcopal Church in Orange, New Jersey. The service was read by Rev. Alexander Mann, Archdeacon of Newark, and the marriage ceremony was performed by Rev. Dr. Anthony Schuyler, rector of the church. She was the daughter of Samuel Lee and Annie Lee. They lived in Llewellyn Park in West Orange, New Jersey. Before her death in 1955, they were the parents of:
After her death, he married Marian Garrison, the widow of Philip McKim Garrison and daughter-in-law of Wendell Phillips Garrison and Lucy McKim Garrison.
Chubb died on September 3, 1960 at his summer home on Mishaum Point in South Dartmouth, Massachusetts. He was buried at the Holy Innocents Cemetery in West Orange, New Jersey. His widow lived until July 1974, dying in her 101st year.

Descendants

Through his daughter Margaret, he was a grandfather of James Russell Parsons IV, who was killed in Italy during World War II; Frances Dorothea Parsons, who married Dr. René A. Pingeon; Victoria Parsons, who married lawyer Robert Morgan Pennoyer ; and Margaret Hendon Parsons, who married lawyer Franklin E. Parker III.