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James Erwin Yeatman

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James Erwin Yeatman

Birth
Tennessee, USA
Death
7 Jul 1901 (aged 82)
Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA
Burial
Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.693399, Longitude: -90.2320187
Plot
Block 60, Lot 72
Memorial ID
View Source
Born in Tennessee, Yeatman moved to St. Louis in 1842 and established a branch of a Nashville iron manufacturing facility. In 1850 he opened a commission house & became one of the founders of the Merchants' Bank. Though once a slave holder, Yeatman was a strong supporter of the Union cause during the Civil War. In 1861 he accompanied Hamilton Gamble on a visit to President Lincoln to persuade him to continue with General William Harney's conciliatory policies in St. Louis. Lincoln listened to the arguments of Frank Blair instead, and they failed in their mission. Yeatman later became president of the Western Sanitary Commission, which established hospital steamers, founded soldiers' homes, & took steps to provide relief for freedmen & former slaves. He served as the first president of Bellefontaine Cemetery.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PROVIDED BY BRENT STEVENS: James E. Yeatman High School (now closed) was constructed in St. Louis, Missouri in 1904. The school name was changed in 1924 to Central High School.
Born in Tennessee, Yeatman moved to St. Louis in 1842 and established a branch of a Nashville iron manufacturing facility. In 1850 he opened a commission house & became one of the founders of the Merchants' Bank. Though once a slave holder, Yeatman was a strong supporter of the Union cause during the Civil War. In 1861 he accompanied Hamilton Gamble on a visit to President Lincoln to persuade him to continue with General William Harney's conciliatory policies in St. Louis. Lincoln listened to the arguments of Frank Blair instead, and they failed in their mission. Yeatman later became president of the Western Sanitary Commission, which established hospital steamers, founded soldiers' homes, & took steps to provide relief for freedmen & former slaves. He served as the first president of Bellefontaine Cemetery.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PROVIDED BY BRENT STEVENS: James E. Yeatman High School (now closed) was constructed in St. Louis, Missouri in 1904. The school name was changed in 1924 to Central High School.


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  • Maintained by: Connie Nisinger
  • Added: Nov 16, 2000
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/18436/james_erwin-yeatman: accessed ), memorial page for James Erwin Yeatman (27 Aug 1818–7 Jul 1901), Find a Grave Memorial ID 18436, citing Bellefontaine Cemetery, Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA; Maintained by Connie Nisinger (contributor 74).