Sartain Lanier | |
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Born | 1909 Winchester, Tennessee |
Died | 1994 |
Education | Hume Fogg High School |
Alma mater | Vanderbilt University |
Occupation | Businessman |
Spouse(s) | Claudia Gwynn Whitson Elizabeth Moorman Tuller |
Children | 3, including J. Hicks Lanier |
Parent(s) | John Hicks Lanier Nettie Sartain |
Sartain Lanier (1909-1994) was an American businessman and philanthropist from Tennessee. With his brothers, Lanier co-founded The Lanier Company in 1934, an office products company currently known as Lanier Worldwide, a subsidiary of Ricoh. In 1942, Lanier acquired the Atlanta, Georgia-based Oxford Manufacturing Company, later known as Oxford Industries. He served as its Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and took it public on the in 1963. Additionally, Lanier was a large donor to his alma mater, Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.
Sartain Lanier was born in 1909 in Winchester, Tennessee. His father was John Hicks Lanier and his mother, Nettie Sartain. He has two brothers, Hicks and Thomas, and a sister, Eleanor. He grew up in Nashville, Tennessee.
Lanier was educated at Hume Fogg High School. He graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1931.
In 1934, Lanier and his brothers co-founded The Lanier Company, later known as Lanier Business Products. The firm initially sold the Ediphone, a phonograph cylinder made by Thomas A. Edison, Inc., and later machines used in offices. By 1976, the company was criticized for incurring the 1973–75 recession as their products led to a lesser need for secretarial employees and thus higher unemployment. However, Lanier retorted that businesses had become more profitable thanks to those products. The company was acquired by the Harris Corporation in 1983 and by Ricoh in 2000, where it became a subsidiary known as Lanier Worldwide.
In 1942, in the midst of World War II, Lanier and his brothers acquired Oxford Manufacturing Company, a textile concern of uniforms for the United States Army headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. Lanier served as its Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Under his leadership, he expanded the business to men's and women's apparel, renamed it Oxford Industries. Meanwhile, in 1958, they acquired the Freezer Shirt Corporation of Gaffney, South Carolina. In 1963, it became a public company traded on the , with an annual revenue of US$60 million, 6,000 employees, 20 factories, 10 warehouses, and facilities in New York City. By 1968, the Gaffney subsidiary was known as the Carolina Apparel Co. That same year, the company reported record sales and profits. Also in 1968, after his brother Thomas died, both Sartain and his brother J. Hicks inherited his shares from Lanier Properties, the warehouse company for Oxford Industries; those shares were acquired by the company. By 1971, he predicted that men were unlikely to return to wearing "the grey flannel suit and the conservative tie", preferring to wear colors and special fabrics.