Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Levi_LeiterLevi Leiter - Wikipedia

    Levi Ziegler Leiter (November 2, 1834 – June 9, 1904) was an American businessman based in Chicago. He co-founded what later became the Marshall Field & Company retail empire.

  2. 17 de mar. de 2003 · Levi. Z. Leiter of Chicago died suddenly early yesterday morning at the Vanderbilt college, Bar Harbor, Me., where he was spending the summer with his family. The end came suddenly, following an attack of heart failure shortly after midnight. At his bedside were Mrs. Leiter and his daughters, Daisy and Nannie.

  3. 23 de fev. de 2020 · Levi Z. Leiter. Although Field and Leiter were temperamentally and philosophically incompatible, they spent a decade and a half sharing ownership of Chicago’s finest dry goods emporium and an allied wholesale business of ever-growing magnitude. Also ever-growing was the partners’ disagreement about the importance of the retail arm.

    • Levi Leiter1
    • Levi Leiter2
    • Levi Leiter3
    • Levi Leiter4
    • Levi Leiter5
  4. 19 de jan. de 2021 · Levi and Mary Leiter: Washington, DC's Quintessential Parvenus and Buccaneers The current site of the large International-style hotel at 1500 New Hampshire Avenue was once home to one of the largest and grandest mansions in Washington, built by Levi Ziegler Leiter (1834-1904).

  5. When old Chicago’s Levi Zeigler Leiter died in 1904, aged 69, he left behind him a wife, a son, three daughters and $30,000,000. Born in…

  6. Leiter, Levi Z. Levi Leiter was a Chicago wholesaler. He purchased a tract of land from Franklin Cossitt, the primary successful real estate developer of the La Grange area. Levi teamed up with Marshall Field in 1865 and bought Potter Palmer's dry goods business. For many years Field & Leiter was Chicago's

  7. 12 de jan. de 2013 · Well, three months after his interment in 1904, The Washington Post reported that “ghouls have formed a plot to rob the grave in the cemetery of the remains of Levi Z. Leiter and hold them for...