H.C. Putnam | |
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Born |
Henry Cleveland Putnam 1832 Madison, New York |
Died | January 25, 1912 |
Nationality | American |
Other names | H. C. Putnam |
Occupation | Lumberman, Entrepreneur, Proprietor, land agent |
Known for | Founding father of Eau Claire, Wisconsin and played major role in the formation of the modern Chippewa Valley |
Home town | Eau Claire, Wisconsin |
Net worth | 15 Million USD |
Political party | Democratic |
Board member of | Treasurer, Dell Improvement Company, Inc. (1884) |
Spouse(s) | Jane Balcom Putnam |
Children | Ernest B. Putnam, Katherine Putnam Schrauff |
Parent(s) | Hamilton Putman and Jeanette Cleveland |
Henry Cleveland Putnam (1832 – January 25, 1912) was a philanthropist and lumber baron in the Chippewa Valley of Wisconsin, also serving as a member of the Wisconsin State Forestry Commission. In Eau Claire he is known as H. C. Putnam and is regarded as one of the founders of the city. He donated the land for the eponymous Putnam Park in Eau Claire.
Henry Putnam was born in Madison, New York, in 1832. As a young worker, he was first employed as a civil engineer by various railroads in New York and the Southern United States. In 1855 he moved to Wisconsin, settling in Hudson, where he did surveying and was connected with the North Wisconsin and the Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien railroads.
Putnam moved to Eau Claire on May 23, 1857, and became a clerk at the federal land office. Through his control of this office, Putnam became a powerful force in the Chippewa Valley pinery. One of the most successful land agents and promoters in the area, his knowledge of the Chippewa pine lands brought him the business of lumbermen like Frederick Weyerhaeuser and pine-land dealers like Henry W. Sage and Cornell University. In the 1870s he served as the County Register of Deeds.
Although his dream of a pool to monopolize the timber lands of the Chippewa went unrealized, Putnam acquired a considerable fortune through his promotions. He was a director of several lumber companies in Wisconsin, the Pacific Northwest, and Canada, was one of the founders of the Chippewa Valley Bank in Eau Claire, and was influential in several other businesses in the area including the Eau Claire Book & Stationery Company and the Eau Claire Railroad Company. In later years he became a vigorous exponent of conservation.