Sturgis was born in New York City on September 13, 1847. He was the son of William Sturgis Jr. (1806–1895) and Elizabeth Knight (née Hinckley) Sturgis (1809–1849).[2] Among his siblings was Annie Sturgis Freeman, William Sturgis (who married Anna Sprague), and Thomas Sturgis (who married Helen Rutgers), who became a rancher in Wyoming. His father was a prominent merchant of New York, Boston and London and his mother was from an old Yarmouth, Massachusetts family.[3]
He was educated in the public schools in New York before beginning his business career.
Career
At the age of sixteen, Sturgis joined a mercantile firm as a clerk.[3] In January 1868, he joined the banking firm of Capron, Strong & Company, quickly becoming a partner of the firm in 1869 at the age of twenty-two. The original firm became known as Work, Strong & Company in 1871 and in 1896, it became Strong, Stugis & Company.[3]
On January 12, 1869, he was admitted to membership in the New York Stock Exchange,[5] serving on the governing committee (since 1876) and later becoming its vice president.[5] In 1892, he was elected as president of the exchange. While serving as president, "it was largely at his suggestion and through his labors, in association with other leading financiers, that the Clearing House was established."[3] He was re-elected the following year and served during the Panic of 1893 until 1894.[3] Sturgis testified before the Pujo Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives,[6] set up to investigate the so-called "money trust" and, reportedly, gave "quick and incisive replies to the severe examination of Samuel Untermyer".[1]
In 1914, Sturgis, who was known as "the Beau Brummel of his day", was honored with a resolution from its members praising his record of service and expressing their gratitude for his part in expanding the Exchange and upgrading its standards. He retired from active business at the age of seventy-two in 1919.[1] Upon his death in 1932, the governing committee of the Exchange adopted a resolution praising his services, stating:[7]
"The death of Frank K. Sturgis has deeply moved those members of the New York Stock Exchange who remember the closing years of the nineteenth century. The Exchange at that time was a local institution dealing mainly in American railroad securities and had not yet developed into the great world market of today. In those earlier years, when the foundations were being laid for the present international market in New York, Mr. Sturgis was a conspicuous leader both as president and as governor of the Exchange. His clear judgment, his high ideals, as well as his charming personality, gave him a unique and commanding position among his fellow-members."[7]
On October 16, 1872, Sturgis was married to Florence Lydig (d. 1922). She was the daughter of Philip Mesier Lydig, the family that owned the land that subsequently became the Bronx Park; the park now contains the New York Botanical Garden.[13] Florence and Frank, who did not have any children together,[4] resided at 17 East 51st Street in New York, a classical townhouse designed in 1905 by prominent architect Ogden Codman, Jr., another cousin of Sturgis.[4] The townhouse was built of limestone, with giant fluted pilasters, and was similar to a house designed by Robert Adam at 20 St James's Square in London.[14]
The Sturgis' owned a summer home in Lenox, Massachusetts known as Clipston Grange, where Frank bred horses.[15][16] The home was originally built in 1870 in the village, but was moved to Kemble Street in 1893, shortly before the Sturgis' bought it in 1894 and had it enlarged into a colonial revival mansion.[17]
His wife died in New York in March 1922 and was buried at Island Cemetery in Newport, Rhode Island.[22] Upon his wife's death, in her honor, he endowed the Florence Lydig Sturgis Endowment Fund for the purpose of purchasing birds for the Zoological Park collection of the New York Zoological Society.[23] In her will, she left the Lenox estate to Frank.[24] After four years of near invalidism, Sturgis died on June 15, 1932, also at his home in New York City.[1] After a funeral at Grace Church which was officiated by the church's rector, Rev. Dr. Stanley C. Hughes,[25] he was buried beside his wife at Island Cemetery in Newport.[1]
^Pinther, Miklos (September 2003). "Charles Patrick Daly"(PDF). Ubique. 23 (2). The American Geographical Society: 1–6. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2009-03-04. Retrieved 2018-11-07.