Recent Changes for "Hiram Sibley" - Rochester Wikihttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_SibleyRecent Changes of the page "Hiram Sibley" on Rochester Wiki.en-us https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=15&version2=16&ts=1388876091Hiram Sibley2014-01-04T22:54:51ZEileenFclean-up <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,noborder, "Hiram Sibley")]]<br> <span>- </span>Hiram Sibley was born in North Adams, Massachusetts on February 6 of 1807 to parents Benjamin and Zilpha Sibley. He was one of thirteen children of which three were girls and twelve were boys. While in Massachusetts, the young Sibley with no real formal education sought out to find work and with only his gift for mechanical ability he gave a demonstration of what he could achieve to a local shoemaker who quickly hired Hiram as an apprentice. A few years later in 1829, at the age of sixteen and after learning much more, he came to Western New York and settled in Livingston County where he would quickly master five trades in as many years. </td> <td> <span>+</span> [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,noborder<span>,thumbnail, 300</span>, "Hiram Sibley")]]<br> <span>+ ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Birth name''' || ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Aliases'''||<br> + ||</span>Hiram Sibley<span>&nbsp;&nbsp;|| || None ||<br> + ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Birth date'''|| ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Birth place'''||<br> + ||February 6, 1807|| ||North Adams, MA||<br> + ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Date of death'''|| ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Place of death'''||<br> + ||July 12, 1888|| ||Rochester, NY||<br> + <br> + ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Known for'''||<br> + ||Helping develop the telegram||<br> + ||&lt;class="tablehead"&gt;'''Occupation(s)'''||<br> + ||President of Western Union Telegraph Company||<br> + <br> + '''Hiram Sibley'''</span> was born in North Adams, Massachusetts on February 6 of 1807 to parents Benjamin and Zilpha Sibley. He was one of thirteen children of which three were girls and twelve were boys. While in Massachusetts, the young Sibley with no real formal education sought out to find work and with only his gift for mechanical ability he gave a demonstration of what he could achieve to a local shoemaker who quickly hired Hiram as an apprentice. A few years later in 1829, at the age of sixteen and after learning much more, he came to Western New York and settled in Livingston County where he would quickly master five trades in as many years. </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 9: </td> <td> Line 21: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 14: </td> <td> Line 27: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- During the first sixteen years at Western Union Sibley grew the company to four thousand offices and the company was valued at almost fifty million dollars. From this growth Western Union had the strength to move out and really innovate. They introduced the first stock ticker, a standardized time service, money transfer service and most notably they ran the Atlantic – Pacific line (1861).</span> </td> <td> <span>+ During the first sixteen years at Western Union Sibley grew the company to four thousand offices and the company was valued at almost fifty million dollars. From this growth Western Union had the strength to move out and really innovate. They introduced the first stock ticker, a standardized time service, money transfer service and most notably they ran the Atlantic-Pacific line (1861).</span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 22: </td> <td> Line 35: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- Other accomplishments include being president and largest stockholder in the Bank of Monroe in Rochester, NY. He, made several large donations such as building the ["Sibley Hall library"] at the ["University of Rochester"], building the Sibley College of Mechanics at Cornell University and building the ["Sibley Music library"]. ["The Hiram Sibley Building"] is named after Hiram but was built by his son, ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] in his fathers honor in the 1920’s.</span> </td> <td> <span>+ Other accomplishments include being president and largest stockholder in the Bank of Monroe in Rochester, NY. He, made several large donations such as founding the ["Sibley Library"] at the ["UR"] ["Eastman School of Music"] and building the Sibley College of Mechanics at Cornell University. The ["Hiram Sibley Building"] is named after Hiram but was built by his son, ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] in his father's honor.</span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 24: </td> <td> Line 37: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- Wife: Elizabeth M. Tinker Sibley also of Massachusetts<br> - Children: Zilpha Louise (after Hiram’s mother), ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] and Emily. Not sure of 4th child<br> - Fact:<br> - * He and his partner named their sons middle names after each other: James Sibley Watson and Hiram Watson Sibley.<br> - * Was once the richest man in Monroe County</span> </td> <td> <span>+ Sibley was at one point the richest man in ["Monroe County"].</span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 30: </td> <td> Line 39: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- </span>References<span>:<br> -</span> [http://www.vintageviews.org/vv-tl/Photos/pages/sibley_h.html]<br> <span>-</span> [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiram_Sibley]<br> -<span>&nbsp;[http://all-</span>biographies.com/historical/hiram_sibley.htm]<br> <span>-</span> [http://www.strongmuseum.org/BHOF2002/Sibley.html]<br> <span>-</span> [http://www.library.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=1138] </td> <td> <span>+ ===Family===<br> + His wife was Elizabeth M. Tinker Sibley, also of Massachusetts. Their children were Zilpha Louise (after Hiram’s mother), ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] and Emily. Not sure of 4th child. He and his partner named their sons middle names after each other: James Sibley Watson and Hiram Watson Sibley.<br> + <br> + ===</span>References<span>===<br> + *</span> [http://www.vintageviews.org/vv-tl/Photos/pages/sibley_h.html]<br> <span>+ *</span> [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiram_Sibley]<br> <span>+ * [http://all</span>-biographies.com/historical/hiram_sibley.htm]<br> <span>+ *</span> [http://www.strongmuseum.org/BHOF2002/Sibley.html]<br> <span>+ *</span> [http://www.library.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=1138]<span><br> + </span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=14&version2=15&ts=1388872965Hiram Sibley2014-01-04T22:02:45ZMarjorieSearlComment added. <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 39: </td> <td> Line 39: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ ------<br> + ''2014-01-04 17:02:45'' [[nbsp]] That is, Hiram Watson rather than Hiram Sibley(see previous comment). --["Users/MarjorieSearl"]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=13&version2=14&ts=1388872839Hiram Sibley2014-01-04T22:00:39ZMarjorieSearlComment added. <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 37: </td> <td> Line 37: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ ------<br> + ''2014-01-04 17:00:39'' [[nbsp]] I believe he was one of fifteen children. His daughter Zilpha Louise would have been named for both grandmothers, as both Hiram and Elizabeth's mothers were named Zilpha. A fourth child was born after Zilpha Louise and before Hiram Sibley. His name was Giles Benjamin and he died when he was about two years old. There is a Tiffany memorial window dedicated to him in the chapel of the Episcopal Church Home. --["Users/MarjorieSearl"]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=12&version2=13&ts=1272419223Hiram Sibley2010-04-28T01:47:03Zpetebnoborder <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,"Hiram Sibley")]] </td> <td> <span>+</span> [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,<span>noborder, </span>"Hiram Sibley")]] </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=11&version2=12&ts=1214241104Hiram Sibley2008-06-23T17:11:44Zalexandergartley(quick edit) <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 22: </td> <td> Line 22: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> Other accomplishments include being president and largest stockholder in the Bank of Monroe in Rochester, NY. He, made several large donations such as building the ["Sibley Hall library"] at the U<span>-</span>of<span>-</span>R, building the Sibley College of Mechanics at Cornell University and building the ["Sibley Music library"]. ["The Hiram Sibley Building"] is named after Hiram but was built by his son, ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] in his fathers honor in the 1920’s. </td> <td> <span>+</span> Other accomplishments include being president and largest stockholder in the Bank of Monroe in Rochester, NY. He, made several large donations such as building the ["Sibley Hall library"] at the <span>["</span>U<span>niversity </span>of<span>&nbsp;</span>R<span>ochester"]</span>, building the Sibley College of Mechanics at Cornell University and building the ["Sibley Music library"]. ["The Hiram Sibley Building"] is named after Hiram but was built by his son, ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] in his fathers honor in the 1920’s. </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=10&version2=11&ts=1214241073Hiram Sibley2008-06-23T17:11:13Zalexandergartley(quick edit) <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 20: </td> <td> Line 20: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> He purchased what otherwise was worthless land and turned it into farmable land. One such example is Howland Island, which compromised of 3500 acres of land that he purchased cheaply. After backfilling the land it became invaluable due to its proximity to the Erie Canal and the New York Central Railroad. At one point they produced seed, grain and herded 500 head of cattle there. Another example is Fox Ridge farm that was six hundred acres of swam land which he backfilled and used profitably, much to his delight. It didn’t hurt that the NY Central Railroad also passed through it as well. In total he owned fourteen large farms in NY and Massachusetts. </td> <td> <span>+</span> He purchased what otherwise was worthless land and turned it into farmable land. One such example is Howland Island, which compromised of 3500 acres of land that he purchased cheaply. After backfilling the land it became invaluable due to its proximity to the <span>["</span>Erie Canal<span>"]</span> and the New York Central Railroad. At one point they produced seed, grain and herded 500 head of cattle there. Another example is Fox Ridge farm that was six hundred acres of swam land which he backfilled and used profitably, much to his delight. It didn’t hurt that the NY Central Railroad also passed through it as well. In total he owned fourteen large farms in NY and Massachusetts. </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=9&version2=10&ts=1214241016Hiram Sibley2008-06-23T17:10:16Zalexandergartley(quick edit) <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 6: </td> <td> Line 6: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of ["Monroe County"]. This brought him to Rochester NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washington to Baltimore. </td> <td> <span>+</span> A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of ["Monroe County"]. This brought him to Rochester<span>,</span> NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washington to Baltimore. </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=8&version2=9&ts=1214241000Hiram Sibley2008-06-23T17:10:00Zalexandergartleyadded wiki link to Monroe County <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 6: </td> <td> Line 6: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of Monroe County. This brought him to Rochester NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washington to Baltimore. </td> <td> <span>+</span> A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of <span>["</span>Monroe County<span>"]</span>. This brought him to Rochester NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washington to Baltimore. </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=7&version2=8&ts=1213412162Hiram Sibley2008-06-14T02:56:02ZSteveVictor <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,"Hirm<span>an</span> Sibley")]] </td> <td> <span>+</span> [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,"Hir<span>a</span>m Sibley")]] </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=6&version2=7&ts=1170371333Hiram Sibley2007-02-01T23:08:53Zandrewhallidielink <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 12: </td> <td> Line 12: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> This new telegraph line made headlines and shortly after new independent companies started to crop up, so many in fact that many of them had problems making money. Sibley, on top of his game and with the same foresight that got him into the telegraph game partnered up and bought out a bunch of these independent telegraphs and convinced the others to merge and pull together all of their patents. The new company, as suggested by Ezra Cornell, was called The Western Union Telegraph Company, of which Sibley was the first acting president. </td> <td> <span>+</span> This new telegraph line made headlines and shortly after new independent companies started to crop up, so many in fact that many of them had problems making money. Sibley, on top of his game and with the same foresight that got him into the telegraph game partnered up and bought out a bunch of these independent telegraphs and convinced the others to merge and pull together all of their patents. The new company, as suggested by Ezra Cornell, was called The <span>["</span>Western Union Telegraph<span>"]</span> Company, of which Sibley was the first acting president. </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=5&version2=6&ts=1152034526Hiram Sibley2006-07-04T17:35:26Zandrewhallidietypo <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 6: </td> <td> Line 6: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of Monroe County. This brought him to Rochester NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washing to Baltimore. </td> <td> <span>+</span> A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of Monroe County. This brought him to Rochester NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washing<span>ton</span> to Baltimore. </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=4&version2=5&ts=1151021880Hiram Sibley2006-06-23T00:18:00ZRickUrwin <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 26: </td> <td> Line 26: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> Fact: He and his partner named their sons middle names after each other: James Sibley Watson and Hiram Watson Sibley. </td> <td> <span>+</span> Fact:<span><br> + *</span> He and his partner named their sons middle names after each other: James Sibley Watson and Hiram Watson Sibley.<span><br> + * Was once the richest man in Monroe County</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=3&version2=4&ts=1151021828Hiram Sibley2006-06-23T00:17:08ZRickUrwinforgot some links. <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 28: </td> <td> Line 28: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ References:<br> + [http://www.vintageviews.org/vv-tl/Photos/pages/sibley_h.html]<br> + [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiram_Sibley]<br> + [http://all-biographies.com/historical/hiram_sibley.htm]<br> + [http://www.strongmuseum.org/BHOF2002/Sibley.html]<br> + [http://www.library.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=1138]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=2&version2=3&ts=1151021662Hiram Sibley2006-06-23T00:14:22ZRickUrwinUpdated info, added some links. <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>- Hiram Sibley was born in 1807 in ["Mendon"]. He became Sheriff of ["Monroe County"] in 1843 and moved to Rochester. This would bring him into contact with a group of businessmen interested in the telegraph and he was eventually elected president of Western Union. The consolidation of a number of small telegraph companies into Western Union under Sibley would bring efficient communication capability to the North during the Civil War. Sibley helped build a transcontinental railroad after the war and then retired to run a seed and nursery business. He died in 1888. ["The Hiram Sibley Building"], constructed in the 1920s, was named in his honor.</span> </td> <td> <span>+ [[Image(sibley.jpg,right,"Hirman Sibley")]]<br> + Hiram Sibley was born in North Adams, Massachusetts on February 6 of 1807 to parents Benjamin and Zilpha Sibley. He was one of thirteen children of which three were girls and twelve were boys. While in Massachusetts, the young Sibley with no real formal education sought out to find work and with only his gift for mechanical ability he gave a demonstration of what he could achieve to a local shoemaker who quickly hired Hiram as an apprentice. A few years later in 1829, at the age of sixteen and after learning much more, he came to Western New York and settled in Livingston County where he would quickly master five trades in as many years.<br> + <br> + After growing in machining and blueprinting he felt secure enough to move on to own his own shop and so he moved to Sibleyville in the town of Mendon and along with new partner Don Watson they started a sawmill which produced enough for them to open a machine shop and eventually a foundry with the first working blast furnace in America. The businesses grew and became successful and Sibley began to become popular locally and with the increase of reputation and success he eventually started looking at public offices.<br> + <br> + A few years later, at the age of 36, he was elected Sheriff of Monroe County. This brought him to Rochester NY where his life started to slow a little and he became bored so he started looking for something new. Just at the right time he heard about two scientists named Alfred Vail and Samuel Morse whose work in something called the telegraph peaked his interest so much so that he gave up office for now and went with Morse and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezra_Cornell Ezra Cornell] to promote the telegraphs growth and ask for money from Congress to build a telegraph line from Washing to Baltimore.<br> + <br> + Initially the meeting with Congress was shaky as Morse tried to oversell the project beyond realistic measurements:<br> + ''"We had made up our minds to allow the appropriation, when the Professor came in and upset everything. Why! he undertook to tell us that he could send ten words from Washington to Baltimore in two minutes. Good heavens! Twenty minutes is quick enough, but two minutes is nonsense. The Professor is too radical and visionary, and I doubt if the committee recommend the sum to be risked in such a manner."''<br> + Morse was quickly quieted and the grant was approved and the Pioneer Line was born.<br> + <br> + This new telegraph line made headlines and shortly after new independent companies started to crop up, so many in fact that many of them had problems making money. Sibley, on top of his game and with the same foresight that got him into the telegraph game partnered up and bought out a bunch of these independent telegraphs and convinced the others to merge and pull together all of their patents. The new company, as suggested by Ezra Cornell, was called The Western Union Telegraph Company, of which Sibley was the first acting president.<br> + <br> + During the first sixteen years at Western Union Sibley grew the company to four thousand offices and the company was valued at almost fifty million dollars. From this growth Western Union had the strength to move out and really innovate. They introduced the first stock ticker, a standardized time service, money transfer service and most notably they ran the Atlantic – Pacific line (1861).<br> + <br> + Moving away from success and good timing, Sibley became interested in a project to link Russia to Alaska with telegraph wire via the Bearing Straits. After about 3 million in investments the project was shelved because of the successful installation of the Atlantic Cable. However during the push Sibley visited Russia in 1865 and was greeted the Czar and so impressed that had not the Atlantic Cable been completed, Sibley’s Russian-American Telegraph link would have no doubt been completed.<br> + <br> + After leaving Western Union he moved from the Telegraph business into other areas of industry. He bought and sold railroads, manufactured salt and ran lumber mills in both Rochester and Massachusetts. He also got into farming, seeds and farm supply. In the plant business he excelled in the market when he engineered seeds that were stronger and developed plants that had greater seed bearing qualities, with seed sales becoming his main business.<br> + <br> + He purchased what otherwise was worthless land and turned it into farmable land. One such example is Howland Island, which compromised of 3500 acres of land that he purchased cheaply. After backfilling the land it became invaluable due to its proximity to the Erie Canal and the New York Central Railroad. At one point they produced seed, grain and herded 500 head of cattle there. Another example is Fox Ridge farm that was six hundred acres of swam land which he backfilled and used profitably, much to his delight. It didn’t hurt that the NY Central Railroad also passed through it as well. In total he owned fourteen large farms in NY and Massachusetts.<br> + <br> + Other accomplishments include being president and largest stockholder in the Bank of Monroe in Rochester, NY. He, made several large donations such as building the ["Sibley Hall library"] at the U-of-R, building the Sibley College of Mechanics at Cornell University and building the ["Sibley Music library"]. ["The Hiram Sibley Building"] is named after Hiram but was built by his son, ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] in his fathers honor in the 1920’s.<br> + <br> + Wife: Elizabeth M. Tinker Sibley also of Massachusetts<br> + Children: Zilpha Louise (after Hiram’s mother), ["Hiram Watson Sibley"] and Emily. Not sure of 4th child<br> + Fact: He and his partner named their sons middle names after each other: James Sibley Watson and Hiram Watson Sibley.</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=recall&version=2&ts=1151021366Hiram Sibley2006-06-23T00:09:26ZRickUrwinUpload of image <a href="https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=Files&do=view&target=sibley.jpg">sibley.jpg</a>.https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=1&version2=2&ts=1150857224Hiram Sibley2006-06-21T02:33:44ZRickUrwinadded [[Comments]] <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 2: </td> <td> Line 2: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ <br> + [[Comments]]</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div> https://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibleyhttps://rocwiki.org/Hiram_Sibley?action=diff&version1=0&version2=1&ts=1141858767Hiram Sibley2006-03-08T22:59:27ZTomMaszerowskiCreated page <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for Hiram Sibley<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ Hiram Sibley was born in 1807 in ["Mendon"]. He became Sheriff of ["Monroe County"] in 1843 and moved to Rochester. This would bring him into contact with a group of businessmen interested in the telegraph and he was eventually elected president of Western Union. The consolidation of a number of small telegraph companies into Western Union under Sibley would bring efficient communication capability to the North during the Civil War. Sibley helped build a transcontinental railroad after the war and then retired to run a seed and nursery business. He died in 1888. ["The Hiram Sibley Building"], constructed in the 1920s, was named in his honor.</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div>