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Early days
Industrialist and art collector Henry
Clay Frick (1849-1919) was born in West Overton, Pennsylvania, a rural
village settled by Mennonites forty miles southeast of Pittsburgh. His
grandfather, Abraham Overholt, was the village patriarch. Henry's rise to prominence and prosperity began
close to home, when as a young man, he realized the potential of local
bituminous coal. At the age of 21, he borrowed money and formed a partnership,
Frick & Co, with two cousins and a friend. The newly-formed business used
beehive ovens to turn coal into coke, a fuel in great demand by the burgeoning
steel industry in Pittsburgh.
Rising
Industrialist
Frick prospered at a time when heavy
industries and private fortunes were growing to unprecedented sizes. By the late
1870s, Frick bought out his partners. The company, now known as H.C. Frick
and Company, had nearly 1,000 employees, and Frick was a millionaire by the time
he was 30.
His first recorded purchase of a painting, a wooded landscape by
local artist George Hetzel, was made in February 1881. Frick also met his wife,
Adelaide Howard Childs (1859-1931), in 1881, and they were married December 15
of that year. While staying in New York City on their wedding trip, the Fricks
were guests at a luncheon hosted by Andrew Carnegie at the Windsor Hotel. It was
then that the partnership between H.C. Frick and Company and Carnegie Steel was
officially announced.
The union of the two men insured their dominance over the
Pittsburgh steel industry, and the eventual formation of United States Steel. In
1882, after returning to Pittsburgh, the Fricks bought Clayton, moving there
early in 1883. Their son, Childs, was born in March, and two years later a
daughter, Martha, was born but died in 1891. The Fricks' third child,
Helen Clay Frick, was born in 1888. A fourth child, Henry Clay Frick, Jr.
died shortly after birth in 1892.

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The Frick
Collection
The Fricks raised their children
at Clayton, leaving daughter Helen with fond memories of an idyllic
childhood. However, by 1905, Henry Clay Frick's business, social, and artistic
interests had shifted from Pittsburgh to New York. At first the family occupied
a Vanderbilt mansion on Fifth Avenue. Then, in 1910 Frick purchased property at
Fifth Avenue and 70th Street and began construction of the magnificent mansion
now known as The Frick Collection. The residence was designed to accommodate his
large art collection of growing international standing. The Frick residence was
opened to the public as a museum in 1935.
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