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    • Harry F. GuggenheimHarry F. Guggenheim
    • M. Robert GuggenheimM. Robert Guggenheim
    • Gladys Guggenheim StrausGladys Guggenheim Straus
  2. Daniel Guggenheim (July 9, 1856 – September 28, 1930) was an American mining magnate and philanthropist, and a son of Meyer and Barbara Guggenheim. By 1910 he directed the world's most important group of mining interests. He was forced out in 1922 and retired to philanthropy to promote aviation.

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  3. Apr 29, 2024 · Daniel Guggenheim (born July 9, 1856, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.—died Sept. 28, 1930, Port Washington, N.Y.) was an American industrialist and philanthropist who oversaw the expansion of his family’s vast mining empire in the early 20th century.

  4. Daniel Guggenheim became a leading figure in the copper industry of the United States and Mexico and pushed for development of gold mines in Alaska, rubber plantations in Africa, tin mines in Bolivia, and nitrate deposits in Chile.

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  6. May 18, 2018 · Daniel Guggenheim (1856 – 1930) dominated the U.S. mining industry in the first half of the twentieth century. One of ten surviving children in an immigrant household, he took over his father's successful mining interests and turned them into one of the great U.S. family fortunes.

  7. Sep 23, 1996 · Daniel Guggenheim, small in stature and gifted with enormous foresight and business acumen, was the second of eight sons raised by Meyer Guggenheim. A Philadelphia businessman and financier, Meyer cut short Daniel’s education and sent him to Switzerland to manage the family’s manufacturing and merchandising firm at the age of 17.

  8. The Guggenheim family ( / ˈɡʊɡənhaɪm / GUUG-ən-hyme) is an American-Jewish family known for making their fortune in the mining industry, in the early 20th century, especially in the United States and South America.

  9. Born and raised in Philadelphia, Daniel Guggenheim was sent to Switzerland as a young man to study the Swiss lace and embroidery business, and to serve as a buyer for his father's import firm. The discovery of high-grade silver-lead ore in the Guggenheim mines in Leadville, Colorado in 1881 became the foundation for the Guggenheim fortune in ...

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