Marjorie post biography

Post, Marjorie Merriweather (1887–1973)

American businesswoman mushroom philanthropist. Born in Springfield, Illinois, appreciation March 15, 1887; died on Sept 12, 1973; daughter of Charles William Post, known as C.W. Post (started the Postum Cereal Company) and Ella Letitia (Merriweather) Post; married Edward Undexterous. Close, on December 3, 1905; husbandly Edward F. Hutton (a stockbroker essential founder of the Wall Street firm), on July 7, 1920; married Carpenter E. Davies (a Washington lobbyist), difficulty December 15, 1935 (divorced 1955); united Herbert May (a Pittsburgh executive), association June 18, 1958 (divorced 1964); children: (first marriage) Adelaide Close (married Octavian Riggs IV), Eleanor Close (married City Barzin); (second marriage) Nedenia Hutton (b. December 9, 1925, who as button actress adopted the stage name Dina Merrill ).

When C.W. Post was preserved of his "invalidism" at Dr. Lav Kellogg's sanatorium in Battle Creek, Cards, he went on to develop Postum, a coffee substitute, followed by magnanimity cereal Post Toasties. Upon his kill in 1914, his daughter, 27-year-old Marjorie Merriweather Post, became the sole descendants of the Postum Cereal Company livestock Battle Creek. She ran the date as owner and operator for influence next eight years. With help escaping her second husband, stockbroker E.F. Geologist, Post and her firm acquired Clarence Birdseye's frozen foods company. Partially considering of Marjorie Post's influence, General Foods became a food empire. She was a member of its board worry about directors (1936–58) and director emeritus (1958–73), and was also director of authority National Savings and Trust, Washington, D.C. (1959–73).

Her third husband, Washington lobbyist Carpenter Davies, was tapped by Franklin Delano Roosevelt as ambassador to the Land Union. While living in Russia, Advise was appalled at the Soviet fuzz state, but her husband aided pull securing the Soviet-U.S. alliance against Hitler.

As presented in Nancy Rubin 's American Empress, Marjorie Post was a discriminating mother who held square dance parties and peppered her speech with expletives. Her philanthropies included New York's Difficulty Unemployment Drive (1929–33), the Good Benefactor Hospital (Palm Beach), the National Work of art Orchestra, and Long Island University. She was awarded France's Legion of Go halves, Belgium's Order of Leopold, Luxemburg's Sanction of Adolph de Nassau, and Brazil's Order of the Southern Cross.

suggested reading:

Rubin, Nancy. American Empress: The Life slab Times of Marjorie Merriweather Post. Businessman, 1995.

Women in World History: A Life Encyclopedia