";s:4:"text";s:4462:" He passed the title of "Wm. Deceased persons do not fall within the scope of these legal provisions. He was founder and eponym of the Wm. Parents purchasing crayons for their kids, take note: Playskool crayons have been found to contain toxic levels of asbestos, according to the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (U.S. PIRG). Wrigley’s Mansions Across America Michal Czerwonka for The Wall Street Journal They’re the homes that Juicy Fruit built, but they’ll cost you more than 99 cents a pop. Wrigley Jr. Company and owner of the Chicago Cubs when his father, William Wrigley Jr., died in 1932. Wrigley Jr. Company in … This artist rendering provided May 1, 2013 by the Chicago Cubs shows renovations planned at Wrigley Field. In 1891 he went to Chicago as a soap distributor and there started In Central Florida, William Wrigley Jr. II, 54, is trying to sell an equestrian property called Winter Haven Farm; it is composed of almost 1,100 acres and a grass racetrack. Currently, two of […] The name is derived from when the Wrigley family lived in a settlement called Wrigley, which experts theorize was in the West Riding of Yorkshire.The surname Wrigley belongs to the large category of Anglo-Saxon habitation names, which are derived from pre-existing names for towns, villages, parishes, or farmsteads. He became the President of Wm.
Chicago confectionary tycoon William Wrigley Jr. and his family made a mint on chewing gum, a fortune that bought them trophy homes across the … William Wrigley, Jr., American salesman and manufacturer whose company became the largest producer and distributor of chewing gum in the world. William lived in 1891, at address .
He bought most of the land in 2005 for $24 million, and later added several lots, according to one of the listing agents, Gary Pohrer of Douglas Elliman. In 1999 William Beau Wrigley Jr., an heir to the Wrigley's chewing gum fortune, took over the business his great-grandfather started in 1891. The Geneanet family trees are powered by Geneweb 7.0. Wrigley went to work as a traveling soap salesman for his father’s company at age 13. Chicago confectionary tycoon William Wrigley Jr. and his family made a mint on chewing gum, a fortune that bought them trophy homes across the country. His father died in 1932 elevating Philip's role in the family business. From what I have found, it was Edmund Wrigley, born about 1766 in Knowl, Yorkshire, England's great grandson who was William Mills Wrigley, Jr., famous for his chewing gum, etc. He presided over the Wm. William had 2 siblings: Mary A Wrigley and one other sibling . The ancestors of the name Wrigley date back to the Anglo-Saxon tribes of Britain. William Wrigley Jr. 30 Sep 1861 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US - 26 Jan 1932 William Wrigley III 21 Jan 1933 Chicago, Illinois, US - 08 Mar 1999 Eliza Ann (Wrigley) Halliwell 19 Dec 1820 Ashton, England - 17 Nov 1894 managed by Lorin Galvin In 1917 he returned to the United States and enlisted in the United States Naval Reserve, attaining the rank of Lieutenant (junior grade) when he was discharged in 1921.