Log in
Enquire now
Fairfax Harrison

Fairfax Harrison

American businessman; writer

OverviewStructured DataIssuesContributors

Contents

Is a
Person
Person

Person attributes

Birthdate
March 13, 1869
Birthplace
New York City
New York City
Date of Death
February 2, 1938
Place of Death
Alexandria, Virginia
Alexandria, Virginia
Nationality
Location
United States
United States
Educated at
Yale University
Yale University
Columbia University
Columbia University
Occupation
Writer
Writer
Author
Author
0
Historian
Historian
ISNI
00000000822894180
Open Library ID
OL6647589A0
VIAF
504897970

Other attributes

Citizenship
United States
United States
Father
Burton Harrison
Burton Harrison
Mother
Constance Cary Harrison
Constance Cary Harrison
Pseudonym
A Virginia Farmer
Wikidata ID
Q5430177

Fairfax Harrison[a] (March 13, 1869 – February 2, 1938) was an American lawyer, businessman, and writer. The son of the secretary to Confederate President Jefferson Davis, Harrison studied law at Yale University and Columbia University before becoming a lawyer for the Southern Railway Company in 1896. By 1906 he was Southern's vice-president of finance, and in 1907 he helped secure funding to keep the company solvent. In 1913 he was elected president of Southern, where he instituted a number of reforms in the way the company operated.

By 1916, under Harrison's leadership, the Southern had expanded to an 8,000-mile (13,000 km) network across 13 states, its greatest extent until the 1950s. Following the United States' entry into World War I, the federal government took control of the railroads in December 1917, running them through the United States Railroad Administration, on which Harrison served. An economic boom after the war helped the company to expand its operations; Harrison worked to improve the railroad's public relations and to upgrade the locomotive stock by introducing more powerful engines. Another of his concerns was to increase the amount of railroad track and to extend the area serviced by the railway. Harrison struggled to keep the railroad afloat during the Great Depression, and by 1936 Southern was once again showing a profit. Harrison retired in 1937, intending to focus on his hobby of writing about historical subjects including the roots of the American Thoroughbred horse, but he died three months later in February 1938.

Timeline

No Timeline data yet.

Current Employer

Patents

Further Resources

Title
Author
Link
Type
Date
No Further Resources data yet.

References

Find more people like Fairfax Harrison

Use the Golden Query Tool to discover related individuals, professionals, or experts with similar interests, expertise, or connections in the Knowledge Graph.
Open Query Tool
Access by API
Golden Query Tool
Golden logo

Company

  • Home
  • Pricing
  • Enterprise

Legal

  • Terms of Service
  • Enterprise Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

Help

  • Help center
  • API Documentation
  • Contact Us
By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Service.