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  1. ALDRICH, NELSON WILMARTH, (Father of Richard Steere Aldrich, cousin of William Aldrich, grandfather of Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, and great-grandfather of John Davison Rockefeller), a Representative and a Senator from Rhode Island; born in Foster, R.I., November 6, 1841; attended the public schools of East Killingly, Conn., and the Academy of East Greenwich, R.I.; entered the wholesale ...

  2. 20. Sept. 1986 · In 1974, he began Nelson W. Aldrich & Associates. Mr. Aldrich was president of the Institute of Contemporary Art from 1947-60 and trustee until 1964. He also was chairman of the Boston Art ...

  3. 24. Okt. 2015 · Little was expected of the commission, because the chairmanship was awarded to Senator Nelson W. Aldrich, a Republican from Rhode Island and the powerful head of the Senate Finance Committee.(His ...

  4. Aldrich Hall was made possible through a gift from John D. Rockefeller Jr. and is named in honor of his father-in-law, Nelson W. Aldrich. When it opened in 1953, Aldrich Hall provided much-needed classroom space on the HBS campus. Plans for a dedicated classroom building had been eliminated from the 1920s campus construction for economic ...

  5. 1. Juni 1997 · Books. Old Money: The Mythology of Wealth in America. Nelson Aldrich. Allworth, Jun 1, 1997 - Business & Economics - 340 pages. This insider's look at inherited wealth in the United States explores the complex meanings of money and success in American sociey with a new introduction that examinies whether America's privileged class will be ...

  6. Aldrich is the fourth-generation descendant of Nelson W. Aldrich (1841-1915) who rose from grocery clerk to be a powerful U.S. Senator from Rhode Island and key political ally of nineteenth-century captains of industry. In terms of clanship, the Aldriches might be understood as a collateral lineage of matrifiliated kin

  7. Nelson W. Aldrich A.A. Knopf , 1988 - Business & Economics - 309 pages A highly entertaining and provocative account of how rich Americans try to turn themselves into aristocrats: their habits and customs, their attitudes to money and to people who don't have it, their upbringing and social behavior, and the way they live and die.