Lewis Harvie Blair | |
---|---|
Born |
Richmond, Virginia |
June 21, 1834
Died | November 26, 1916 Richmond, Virginia |
(aged 82)
Occupation | Businessman, author |
Spouse(s) | Alice Wayles Harrison (1867-1894, her death) Martha Ruffin Feild (1898-1916, his death) |
Children | 11, 7 with Harrison, 4 with Feild |
Lewis Harvie Blair (June 21, 1834 – November 26, 1916) was an American businessman, economics expert, and author.
Blair was born in Richmond, Virginia on June 21, 1834 to John Geddes Blair and Sara Ann Eyre Heron Blair. He had some formal schooling, but received most of his education through reading. During the Civil War Blair fought with the Confederate States Army with the Company A, 13th Battalion Virginia Light Artillery, where he was known for "challenging authority, engaging in fistfights, and spending time in stockade confinement". Blair would later consider his time spent with the Confederate army a waste, as he considered slavery a "most monstrous institution".
Blair was married twice. He married his first wife, Alice Wayles Harrison, in 1867 and the two had seven children together. Harrison memoirs indicate that Blair and his wife took Alice's mother Lucy Harrison into their home and cared for her during her long final illness until she died there in 1881. Alice herself died in 1894. Blair married again in 1898 to Martha Ruffin Feild, with whom he had four daughters. He died on November 26, 1916 in Richmond of a heart attack and was buried in Hollywood Cemetery.
Blair ran a wholesale auction business after returning from the Civil War and later ran a retail store, as well as a wholesale grocery business. His business ventures were extremely successful and Blair became very wealthy. He would frequently write to newspapers to criticize the concept of the New South, saying that it was something that was made up by people like Henry W. Grady. He argued that most of the South lived in abject poverty and that it was little better than it was prior in 1860.
In one instance Blair allegedly demonstrated a callous approach in his business affairs. He had made a loan to his brother-in-law, Rev. John Hartwell Harrison in Amelia County to enable payment of the taxes owed on his home; Harrison gave Blair title to the home to secure the debt. According to Harrison family memoirs, in 1896 the loan went into default in the third year of the depression. Blair sold the Harrison farm property, and the brother and sister-in-law of his deceased wife Alice, as well as her nephews, aged 17, 15, 9 and 7, were obliged to move from their home, after recently putting in their crops.