E. Bronson Ingram II


E. Bronson Ingram II Biography

E. Bronson Ingram II (1931-1995) was an American businessman and billionaire, and the long-time head of Ingram Industries.

Biography

Early life

Erskine Bronson Ingram II was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota on November 27, 1931, the son of millionaire businessman Orrin Henry Ingram and Hortense Bigelow Ingram. He was named after his grandfather. His family moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 1948. He attended the Phillips Academy and Montgomery Bell Academy. He attended college at Vanderbilt University and transferred to Princeton University, graduating in 1953. At Princeton, he majored in English, and belonged to the Republican Club.

Career

He joined the United States Navy as a naval officer, when he sailed to Panama on a destroyer until 1955, when he resigned. He then started working for his father's company, the Ingram Oil & Refining Co., later known as the Ingram Corporation. In particular, he managed the company-owned service stations and helped build truck stops where Ingram truckers could sleep, shower, or eat. In 1958, he met Martha Robinson Rivers in New York City, and they got married the same year. They moved to New Orleans, where the Ingram Corporation was headquartered, but moved back to Nashville in 1961. They had three sons, David B. Ingram, Orrin H. Ingram II, and John R. Ingram, and one daughter, Robin Ingram Patton.

After his father died in 1963, he became President and his brother, Frederic B. Ingram, became Chairman of the Ingram Corporation. However, in 1978, after his brother had been convicted of corruption in Illinois, they spilt the company. Frederick kept the Ingram Corporation, which consisted of oil refineries and pipeline system, headquartered in New Orleans. E. Bronson took over the Ingram Book Company, Ingram Materials Company, Ingram Barge Company, Tennessee Book Company, and Bluewater Insurance Company. He called it Ingram Industries. By 1995, the Ingram Barge Company became the Inland Marine Transportation Group, the third-largest inland waterway carrier in the United States. In 1970, the Tennessee Book Company became known as the Ingram Book Company, and by 1995 it controlled 52 percent of the wholesale book distribution market to American retail bookstores. He also founded Ingram Software, and in 1985 it acquired Micro D and morphed into Ingram Micro Incorporated. It quickly became the largest distributor of microcomputer hardware and software in the world. He also founded Ingram Entertainment, the largest wholesale distributor of pre-recorded videocassettes.

Philanthropy

He held leadership positions in the Tennessee Performing Arts Center in the late 1970s and the state Bicentennial Celebration of 1996. He joined the Vanderbilt Board of Trust in 1967, and served as its Chairman from 1991 to 1995. He donated US$25 million to Vanderbilt. He served as the President of the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce in 1987, and later as Vice-Chairman of the Tennessee Industrial and Agricultural Development Commission. In 1993, he nominated the first African-American accepted for membership in the Belle Meade Country Club. He also supported Inroads and the Nashville Symphony. He was a member and former Chair of the PENCIL Foundation, and Chairman of the steering committee of Nashville's Agenda.

Death

He died of cancer on June 15, 1995. At the time of his death, he was Tennessee's only billionaire and 56th richest person in the United States. Golfer Arnold Palmer was a pallbearer at his funeral. He is buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery. The Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center and the Ingram Studio Arts Center are named for him.

Bibliography

About him

  • Martha Rivers Ingram, E. Bronson Ingram: Complete These Unfinished Tasks of Mine (2001)



This webpage uses material from the Wikipedia article "E._Bronson_Ingram_II" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. Reality TV World is not responsible for any errors or omissions the Wikipedia article may contain.
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