Difference between revisions of "Alfred Craven Harrison"
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| first_name = Alfred Craven | | first_name = Alfred Craven |
Latest revision as of 09:35, 22 January 2021
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
Proposed by A.C. Haddon; seconded by J.L. Myres 1902.12.15
[in A10:3 proposed 1902.11.11, elected 1902.11.25 - just 'A' - assume it's same man]
death noted in Report of the Council 1933-1934
Notes From Elsewhere
Alfred C. Harrison was a rich motherfucker born from a long line of rich motherfuckers. He helped run his dad's Franklin Sugar Refinery and had made mad stacks on top of his already huge family fortune. In 1893, both him and his father Charles built office buildings in Center City. His father's was done first, a little seven-storey box at 10th and Market. His dad wanted it there because the location was close to the new City Hall that had begun construction and the new Reading Terminal. He called it the Harrison Building.
Alfred Craven Harrison
Birth: 1845
Philadelphia
Philadelphia County
Pennsylvania, USA Death: Jul. 30, 1927
Philadelphia
Philadelphia County
Pennsylvania, USA
Graduated from UPenn in 1864. Sugar Refiner. Director, Western Savings Fund; Philadelphia National Bank; Philadelphia Country Club; Rittenhouse Club.
Travelled to Dutch Borneo 1897-98 with Hiram Milliken Hiller
? Like many combat soldiers, Private First Class Alfred C. Harrison kept a diary of his experiences, writing descriptions of the French people and countryside, noting variations in the weather, and recording the constant boom of guns in the distance. In order to disguise his diary in the event that he was captured behind enemy lines, he wrote his journal entries on scraps of paper and kept them tucked into the lining of his trousers. After the war, he was awarded a Silver Star for his bravery in the trenches.
Publications
External Publications
House Publications
Related Material Details
RAI Material
Other Material
Univ. of Philadelphia: collection of objects
Library of Congress: diaries