(Redirected from Pierre Lorillard)'Pierre Lorillard IV' (
October 13 1833 –
July 7 1901) was an
American tobacco manufacturer and
thoroughbred race horse owner.
Born in
Westchester, New York, he was the son of Peter (Pierre) Lorillard (1796-1867) and Catherine Griswold. In 1760, his great-grandfather, and namesake, founded
P. Lorillard and Company in
New York City to process tobacco, cigars, and snuff. Today, P. Lorillard is the oldest tobacco company in the U.S. Pierre Lorillard married Emily Taylor with whom he had four children. He is the grandfather of the artist
Peter Beard.
In the early 1880's Lorillard helped make
Newport, Rhode Island a
yachting center with his schooner "Vesta" and a steam yacht named "Radha." He owned a summer estate in Newport called "
The Breakers" which he sold to
Cornelius Vanderbilt II in 1885 in order to use his newly developed estate, the Tuxedo Club, at what became known as
Tuxedo Park in
Orange County, New York. Lorillard had inherited 13,000 acres (53 km²) around Tuxedo Lake which he developed in conjunction with
William Waldorf Astor and other wealthy associates into a luxury retreat. Lorillard's son, Griswold Lorillard, is reported to be the person who introduced the
English dinner jacket to the United States in 1886 at the Tuxedo Club's Autumn Ball. The "new" look was given the name,
tuxedo.
An avid sportsman, Pierre Lorillard and his brother
George were both involved in thoroughbred
horse racing. Although Pierre Lorillard's horse "Parole" finished fourth in the 1876
Kentucky Derby, it went on to race with considerable success both in the United States and in
Europe. However, another horse owned by Pierre Lorillard name "Saxon" won the
Belmont Stakes that year. In the 19th century, shipping horses from New York to
Louisville, Kentucky was a major undertaking and because back then both the
Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes were both held in the New York City area, neither of the Lorillard brothers raced again in the Derby. Pierre Lorillard established
Rancocas Stable, named for the
New Jersey town where Lorillard owned a country manor. He spent time in
Paris, France and in England where in 1881 his horse "Iroquois" became the first American-owned and -bred horse to win a European classic race. Ridden by the champion English
jockey,
Fred Archer, his horse won the
Epsom Derby then went on to also capture the
St. Leger Stakes. Lorillard had other successes in England including with the horse named for the actor "David Garrick" who won the 1901 Chester Cup ridden by American jockey, Danny Maher.
Beyond his interest in racehorses, Lorillard was a scholar who financed the expedition of the
French archaeologist Désiré Charnay and his publication of "''The Ancient Cities of the New World. Being Travels and Explorations in Mexico and Central America from 1857 - 1882''." For making the project possible, the government of France awarded Lorillard the
Legion of Honor. Charnay named some
Maya ruins "Lorillard City" in his honor, but the name did not stick, and the site is better known as
Yaxchilan. Lorillard also helped finance some of the explorations of
Augustus Le Plongeon.
Pierre Lorillard died in 1901, aged 67, and was interred in the
Green-Wood Cemetery in
Brooklyn, New York. His wife Emily died in 1925 and was interred next to him.
Lorillard Place in
The Bronx is named for him and brother George.