Morehead Patterson (October 9, 1897 – August 5, 1962) was an American businessman, a diplomat, an inventor, and president, CEO and chairman of American Machine and Foundry, the company founded by his father Rufus Patterson.
Early life
Patterson was born in Durham, North Carolina on October 9, 1897 but his family moved to New York City in 1899.[1] He was the only son of Rufus L. Patterson Jr. and Margaret Warren "Madge" (née Morehead) Patterson (1874–1968).[2] His only sibling was Lucy Lathrop Patterson,[3] who married Casimir de Rham (a descendant of Henry Casimir de Rham).[4]
In 1941, his father retired as president of AMF and became chairman of the board of directors. Morehead replaced him as president and following the elder Patterson's death in 1943, Morehead replaced him as chairman of the board and was succeeded as president by Herbert H. Leonard (former president of the Consolidated Packaging Machinery Corporation of Buffalo, New York).[8] Patterson led expansion of AMF from $5 million a year company to $500 million a year conglomerate.[1] In 1959, Patterson was elected chairman of the Brookings Institution.[2]
With the rank of Ambassador, he represented the United States at the United Nations Committee on Disarmament in 1954 and at the International Atomic Energy Agency Negotiations in London in 1954 and 1955.[9] He also served as chairman of the Nuclear Standards Board of the American Standards Association.[2]
Personal life
In 1921, Patterson was married to Elsie Parsons, a daughter of Herbert Parsons and Elsie Clews Parsons.[10] Before their divorce in 1929, they were the parents of:
In 1945, he married Helen Isabelle (née Mitchell) Clark (1909–1955), a daughter of journalist Roscoe Conklin Mitchell and Clara Belle (née Howland) Mitchell,[16] in 1945.[17]
After her death in 1955, he married Margaret Morgan (née Tilt) Jacob (1903–1996), the former wife of Dr. Arthur D. Bissell and Walter Phelps Jacob who was a daughter of automaker and Diamond T founder Charles Arthur Tilt and Agnes Josephine (née Morgan) Tilt,[18] in 1956.
^Powell, William S., ed. (1994). Dictionary of North Carolina Biography. Vol. V. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 35–36. ISBN0-8078-2100-4.