Oliver Burr Jennings


Oliver Burr Jennings was an American businessman and one of the original stockholders in Standard Oil.

Early life

Jennings was born in 1825 in Fairfield, Connecticut, to Abraham Gould Jennings and Anna Jennings. His brother was Frederick B. Jennings. At a young age he came to New York to learn the dry goods business. Through his great-grandfather, Peter Burr, he was distantly related to U.S. Vice President Aaron Burr.

Career

In 1847 he headed West to seek his fortune in the California Gold Rush. He set up a general mercantile store in San Francisco with Benjamin Brewster an amassed a considerable fortune by outfitting prospecting camps along the coast and around Sacramento.

Standard Oil

In 1862, he returned to New York with the intention of retiring from al business activities. Due to his close relationship with his wife's brother-in-law, Standard Oil co-founder William Rockefeller Jr., he became interested in the affairs of the Standard Oil Company. In 1871, when Standard Oil was incorporated in Ohio, Jennings was one of the original stockholders. Of the initial 10,000 shares, John D. Rockefeller received 2,667; William Rockefeller, Henry Flagler, and Samuel Andrews received 1,333 each; Stephen V. Harkness received 1,334; Jennings received 1,000; and the firm of Rockefeller, Andrews & Flagler received 1,000.
Jennings served as a director of Standard Oil of Ohio and then as a trustee of the Standard Oil Trust that resulted from the company's reorganization in 1882.

Personal life

On December 13, 1854, he married Esther Judson Goodsell in Fairfield. Her younger sister, Almira Geraldine Goodsell, was the wife of William Rockefeller Jr. Together, Oliver and Esther had five children:
Jennings died in 1893 at his residence in New York City. His estate amounted to, which he left entirely to his family.

Descendants

Jennings's grandchildren include businessman Benjamin Brewster Jennings and stockbroker Hugh D. Auchincloss Jr., who married Janet Lee Bouvier. and Anne Burr Auchincloss, who married Wilmarth S. Lewis and spent her fortune to setting up the Lewis Walpole Library at Yale University, devoted to the life and works of Horace Walpole, the builder of Strawberry Hill House.