Reuben R. Springer was an American businessman and philanthropist in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Background
Springer was born into a large family in Frankfort, Kentucky on November 16, 1800. He was the son of the local postmaster, originally from Virginia and a veteran of the American Revolution, who had fought under Mad Anthony Wayne, and his mother, who was a native of New Jersey.
Career
He was a major contributor to the construction of the city"s Music Hall, a major musical venue, where a life-size marble statue of him by Preston Powers can be seen. At age 13 he left school to become a clerk at the local post office, under his father"s supervision. In time, he succeeded his father as postmaster, but found himself disenchanted by the work.
Drawn to life on the Ohio River, he was got a position with the firm of Taylor, Kilgour & Company, who were wholesale grocers, as a store clerk on one of their steamboats, the George Madison, which transported food between Louisville and New Orleans.
In 1826, he obtained a transfer to a better position on another of the company"s boats, the George Washington. In 1830, Springer married Jane Kilgour, the daughter of one of the firm"s founders, and became a partner in the company.
Within ten years, he had worked himself so hard that he became very wealthy, not only in the grocery trade but also through investments in real estate and the railroads, but he had also destroyed his health in the process. Living in semi-retirement the rest of his life, Springer would travel frequently to Europe, where he acquired a major art collection.
He also became a patron of the arts, contributing hugely to the construction of the Music Hall of city, which was built largely through his own initiative.
Springer died childless in 1884 at his home, located at the northeast corner of Seventh and Plum Streets in 1884.