David Sinton (26 June 1808 – 31 August 1900) was an Irish-born American pig-iron industrialist, born in County Armagh, Ireland, who became one of the wealthiest people in America.
In 1811, the family came to America from Ireland and settled in Pittsburgh when he was three years of age. Sinton had one brother (Dr. William Sinton, a physician) and two sisters (Isabella Eliza, who never left Ireland and Sarah, who married John Sparks, a banker).
A man of "irregular education",Hess, Stephen, America's Political Dynasties, P. 306 his business interests centered on the manufacture of iron; his furnaces were in Lawrence County, Ohio. Historical Collections of Ohio: Pages 843-847 Much of his fortune was made by Stockpile pig iron, waiting for the American Civil War, and selling that iron on at inflated prices. He eventually acquired the majority of stock in the Eureka Company, and at the time that Oxmoor merged with the DeBardeleben Coal and Iron Company, he owned most of Oxmoor.
He was described as "a large, strong person with strong common sense, and therefore moves solely on the solid foundation of facts." His residence, at Cincinnati, was the old Longworth mansion on Pike Street, built by Martin Baum early in the 19th century. Mr. Sinton's only surviving child, Annie, was the wife of Charles Phelps Taft, editor of the Times-Star and brother of William Howard Taft; Sinton money was said to have financed the presidential bid.
Sinton died on August 31, 1900, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Upon his death, he left $20,000,000 (the 2011 equivalent of this is about $500,000,000) to his daughter; he was Ohio's richest man at the time. His home is now the Taft Museum of Art.
The town of Sinton, Texas, is named in his honor (given that he was the majority stock holder in Coleman-Fulton Pasture Company).
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