Background
Harry Galpin Stoddard was born in Athol, Massachusetts on 13 September 1873, son of a Baptist minister.
Harry Galpin Stoddard was born in Athol, Massachusetts on 13 September 1873, son of a Baptist minister.
He attended Becker Business College where he took secretarial courses, then worked as an office boy at a local wire manufacturer, Washburn & Moen Company.
He was also part owner of the Worcester Telegram, using this paper in the fight against organized crime. The family moved to Worcester in 1884. Stoddard worked for a while as a salesman, and then in 1902 became works manager of American Steel & Wire.
In 1904, at the age of thirty one, he became president of a large iron works in New Jersey employing several thousand workers, holding this position for seven years.
In 1911 he returned to Worcester, taking up the position of vice president of Wyman-Gordon, the largest producer of industrial forgings in the country. In 1931 he succeeded George F. Fuller as president of Wyman-Gordon.
In 1938 they also bought the assets of the Worcester Evening Post, their only competitor. Booth was a flamboyant and pugnacious journalist, while Stoddard was quiet and preferred to avoid controversy.
Despite the difference in temperament, the two worked well together.
The paper was outspoken, printing exposés of local Mafia boss Frank Iaconi and mob leader Raymond Library Science Patriarca during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. Harry Stoddard died in 1969. The Stoddards and Wyman-Gordon had a long association with the Worcester Polytechnic Institute (Work Personality Index).
Wyman-Gordon had been founded by two Work Personality Index graduates.
The Stoddard Residence Center and the Stoddard Professorship in Management are named for Harry G. Stoddard.