WOOD COUNTY WEST VIRGINIA ****************************************************************** Submitted to the West Virginia Biographies Project by: Pam Honaker pam_honaker@hotmail.com October 28, 2000 ****************************************************************** The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc. Chicago and New York, Volume II Pg. 465 MONROE J. RATHBONE--WOOD COUNTY MONROE J. RATHBONE, manager of the Camden Works ar Parkersburg for the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, is a native of Parkersburg and represents two prominent families of the state. He is a maternal grandson of James Monroe Jackson, of the distinguied family of West Virginia. This subject im more fully treated on other pages. In the Rathbone line he is descended from Wait Rathbone, who was a New England sea captain and also a captain of militia during the Revolution. A son of Wait was William Palmer Rathbone, a native of Connecticut, subsequently a business man of New York City, and for a number of years a county judge in New Jersey. He settled at Burning Springs in what is now West Virginia in 1843, and finally retired to Parkersburg, where he died in 1862. His wife was Martha Valleua. Thier son, John Valleau Rathbone, was born in New York City in 1821 and accompanied his father to West Virginia. For several years he and his brother wer general merchants, and in 1861 he became interested in the pioneer phases of oil development and was one of the men conspicuously successful in that industry. It is said that in spite of his wealth he always remained a plain man of the people, enjoyed the companionship and fellowshipo of his old friends and acquaintances in Parkersburg, and was a wit and humorist. He died January 11, 1897, his old home becoming subsquently the quarters of the Blennerhasset Club. In 1841 he married Anna Maria Doremus, of New Jersey. She died in the same year and eight months later than her husband. Of the eleven children the seventh in order of birth is Francis Vinton Rathbone, who married Mary E. Jackson, daughter of Judge James Monroe Jackson. Monroe Jackson Rathbone, a son of Francis V. Rathbone, was born in Parkersburg July 23, 1874. He was well educated, attending the Parkersburg High School and the Virginia Military Institute. As a youth he bacame a runner for the First National Bank of Parkersburg, also had some experience in merchandising, and for a time was an employee of a local gas company. In 1895 Mr. Rathbone removed to Chicago, and for five years was assistant manager of the lubricating sales department of the Standard Oil Company. On his return to Parkersburg in 1900 he was purchasing agent for the wholesale grocery house of Shattuck-Jackson Company, but in 1904 resuemd his service witht the Standard Oil Company, and since 1907 has been manager of the Camden Works. He represents the third generation of a family active in the oil industry in West Virginia. Mr Rathbone is also a director of the Citizens National Bank. Other interests and activities betray the public spirited and benevolent character of his citizenship. He is a member of the Board of Governors of the Country Club, a director of the Blennerhasset Club, a member of the Rotary Club, Chamber of Commerce, an Elk, is president of the local council of the Boy Scouts, and during the World war was a member of the War Labor Board. He is a democrat in politics and a member of the Protestant Epicopal Church. October 19, 1898, Mr Rathbone married Miss Ida Virginia Welch, daughter of W.M. Welch. Four sons were born to their marriage: Monroe Jackson, Jr., Richard A., William Vinton, and James Vinton. The youngest died in infancy.