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Chapin was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the son of Emory David and Marietta Armour Chapin. In 1878, he attended Harvard School for Boys in Chicago. In 1883, he began work at Armour and Company in Chicago. In 1892, he began his own business as a banker and broker in Chicago and in the same year married Elizabeth Mattocks.
Edwin Hubbell Chapin (December 29, 1814 – 1880) was an American preacher and editor of the Christian Leader. He was also a poet, responsible for the poem Burial at Sea , which was the origin of a famous folk song, Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie .
July 16 – Harry Chapin, American singer and songwriter (b. 1942) July 26 – Stafford L. Warren, American physician and radiologist; inventor of the mammogram (b. 1896) [21] July 27 – William Wyler, American movie director (b. 1902) [22] July 28 – Stanley Francis Rother, American priest, martyr, and Blessed (b. 1935) July 29
William McClellan Chapin (December 28, 1943 – December 2, 2016) was an American child actor, known for a considerable number of screen and TV performances from 1943 to 1959 and best remembered for both his roles as the "diaper manager" Christie Cooper in the 1953 family feature The Kid from Left Field and little John Harper in Charles Laughton's 1955 film noir movie The Night of the Hunter.
They became business partners and opened stores around Horry County, South Carolina, with the Gully Store in Conway the largest. In the mid-1890s the men incorporated Burroughs and Collins Company which had an office on Main Street in Conway. [1] In 1874, Burroughs and Collins built a sawmill in Conway. According to Charles Joyner, Horry County ...
Chapin, popularly known as the "Capital of Lake Murray", is a small lake town located at the northern tip of Lexington County, South Carolina, United States. Lake Murray separates Chapin from the rest of Lexington County. The population of Chapin was 1,445 according to the 2010 census, [5] and an estimated 1,633 in 2019.
Schuyler Garrison Chapin was born on February 13, 1923. He was the son of Lindley Hoffman Paul Chapin (1888–1938) and Leila Howard Chapin (née Burden; 1899–1967). [1] His father's sisters were poet Katherine Garrison Chapin and sculptor Cornelia Van Auken Chapin; his father's half-sister was publisher Marguerite Caetani.
Roy Dikeman Chapin Jr. (September 21, 1915 – August 5, 2001) was the chairman and chief executive officer of American Motors Corporation (AMC). Chapin's father, Roy D. Chapin Sr., was one of the co-founders of the Hudson Motor Car Company ; Hudson later merged with Nash-Kelvinator Corporation in 1954 to form American Motors.