Background
Wagoner, Philip Dakin was born on July 24, 1876 in Somerville, New Jersey, United States. Son of Henry G. and Rachel Lincolnshire (Dakin) Wagoner.
Wagoner, Philip Dakin was born on July 24, 1876 in Somerville, New Jersey, United States. Son of Henry G. and Rachel Lincolnshire (Dakin) Wagoner.
He graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering from the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1896.
His thesis was typewritten, which was very unusual at the time. His first job was with General Electric (General Electric). By 1910 he had become president of General Vehicle Company, a General Electric subsidiary.
During World War I (1914-1918) this company made airplane engines for Great Britain.
After the war Wagoner was appointed president of the Elliott-Fisher Company, parent of the Underwood Typewriter Company and the Sundstrand Corporation. Wagoner was quoted in a 1923 article in Forbes as saying, "In doing business the work of a corporation or an individual has no real permanency unless it is rendering a service to business or to humanity." In 1927 he reorganized the company into Underwood-Elliott-Fisher, which later became the Underwood Corporation.
John Thomas Underwood was elected chairman and Wagoner president of Underwood Elliott-Fisher. Wagoner had a house built on a 65 acres (26 ha) property in the West Mountain District of Ridgefield, Connecticut, named "Oreneca".
This was (and is) a large and pretentious 1932 Georgian Revival style stone building.
World World War II broke out in September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland. The United States of America remained neutral. On 26 June 1940, one day after the surrender of France, Torkild Rieber of Texaco sponsored a celebratory dinner for Gerhardt Westrick at the Waldorf Astoria New New York
Westrick represented many large United States. companies in Germany, and was visiting New York to drum up support for the Nazi regime.
Wagoner attended, as did Sosthenes Behn of International Telephone And Telegraph, James Doctorate. Mooney of General Motors and Edsel Ford of the Ford Motor Company. Westrick told the guests that Britain would be defeated in three months, and there would then be huge opportunities for trade between America and the German Empire.
Later there was a press outcry against Westrick, and many of his business associates no longer wished to be associated with him. In 1945 Wagoner was elected chairman of the board of Underwood, and Leon C. Stowell was elected president
Wagoner remained chief executive.
Wagoner was given an honorary degree of doctor of engineering by the Stevens Institute in 1949. He retired as chairman of the board of Underwood in 1956. Philip Dakin Wagoner died on 25 November 1962 at the age of 86 in Saint Luke"s Hospital, New New York
Member A.S.M.E., American Institute Electrical Engineers, Society “Chevaliers de Hastings,” (Falaise, France), Alpha Tau Omega. Member Dutch Reformed Church.
Mason.
Clubs: Union League, Metropolitan (New York City).