NameRobert Packer Linderman
Birth26 Jul 1863, Mauch Chunk, PA
Death21 Jan 1903, So. Bethlehem, PA
MotherLucy Evelyn Packer (1832-1873)
Misc. Notes
ROBERT PACKER LINDERMAN, who was long and prominently identified with various of the most important industrial and financial interests of the Lehigh Valley, was born at Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania, July 26, 1863, and died January 21, 1903. The splendid ancestry from which he sprang is written upon other pages of this work.
At the age of thirteen years Robert P. Linderman entered Mt. Pleasant Military Academy at Sing Sing, New York, where he spent four years, being graduated with valedictorian honors. His academic course was supplemented by the knowledge and pleasure gained from travel in Europe, and upon his return to his native country in the autumn of 1880 he matriculated in the Lehigh University, and was graduated therefrom in 1884 with the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy. While pursuing his undergraduate course he was elected a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, and was for two years president of the Alumni Association of the University. For many years he was a member of the executive committee of the board of trustees of the Lehigh University, his alma mater.
After completing his University studies he entered the employ of the firm of Linderman & Skeer, coal operators, of which firm his father was the senior partner, and upon his father's death, in September, 1885, he became the head of, the firm and conducted an enterprise of extensive proportions until the spring of 1897, when the firm retired. Various other important enterprises, however, claimed the attention of Mr. Linderman. On January 31, 1885, he was elected a director of the Lehigh Valley National Bank of Bethlehem, and at the death of his father, who was the founder of the institution, he was elected to the position of vice-president. Following the death of President Weiss he was elected his successor on March 5, 1888, and was at that time the youngest president of a national bank in the United States. He was a director in the Jurugua Iron Company in Cuba. On December 15, 1885, be was elected director of the Bethlehem Iron Company to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his father; was elected vice-president in 1888, and president in May 1890. This company was merged into the Bethlehem Steel Company, one of the largest works in the county, which was capitalized at fifteen million dollars and he continued its president until August, 1901. He was one of the foremost business men of this section of the state, and his ready understanding of business situations and recognition of possibilities made him a valued factor in community affairs, and as a promoter of a number of important enterprises his labors proved of marked benefit to the locality in which he resided. He also took a keen interest in church matters, was a vestryman for many years in the Church of the Nativity (Protestant Episcopal) at South Bethlehem, and with his sister and brother erected a chancel in the church. He was a trustee of St. Luke's Hospital, which was the object of his liberal benefactions, and took a great interest in all affairs of his day and time. He was a man of winning personality, his heart ever warm with kindliness and sympathy for his fellows. Those in distress, of body or mind, found in him a ready helper. He aided many to the acquisition of home and establishment in business, but his benefactions were bestowed so entirely, without ostentation that they went unheralded save by the recipients of his bounty.
Spouses
1Ruth May Sayre
Birth11 May 1864, So. Bethlehem, PA
Death11 Jan 1938, Easton, PA
MotherMary Evelina Smith (1824-1869)
ChildrenRuth Evelyn (1885-1979)
Mary Evelyn (1889-)
Lucy Evelyn (1892-)
Evelyn (1893-)
Christine Sayre (1895-1958)
Robert Packer (1898-)