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Alfred I. du Pont person

also: Alfred DuPont, Alford, Alfred I. DuPont

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Related entities (most co-mentioned)

Ed Ballperson · 4St. Joe Paper Companyorganization · 3Jessie Ball du Pontperson · 3Nemours Foundationorganization · 2C. J. Boleynperson · 1A.I. du Pont Trustorganization · 1

Claims (1)

Alfred I. du Pont founded St. Joe Paper Company documented
“One of the first moves Ed Ball made after Alfred DuPont died was to build up the St. Joe Paper Company, which Alfred had just started, at the town of Port St. Joe on the northwest coast of Florida. Ball had a huge paper mill constructed. To…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Mafia, CIA and George Bush Part 21 @ 36:39

Mentions (5)

The Colonels Corner Mafia, CIA and George Bush Part 21
▶ 32:49 in the 1920s. Following after his brother-in-law, Alfred DuPont, the great black gunpowder man in the country, Alfred had feuded and split with his Wilmington, Delaware kin, one of the richest, most powerful, most famous families in America…
The Colonels Corner Mafia, CIA and George Bush Part 21
▶ 33:48 much of it backwater neglected panhandle property at $2 to $3 an acre. After Alford died in 1935, before he could get much further in his Florida dealings, he left most of his $55 million estate to his wife, Jessie, who along with her broth…
The Colonels Corner Mafia, CIA and George Bush Part 21
▶ 36:39 One of the first moves Ed Ball made after Alfred DuPont died was to build up the St. Joe Paper Company, which Alfred had just started, at the town of Port St. Joe on the northwest coast of Florida. Ball had a huge paper mill constructed. To…
The Colonels Corner Mafia, CIA and George Bush Part 21
▶ 47:02 Ball also carried on a continuous fight with the Attorney General in Florida and Delaware over the amount of money remitted to the trust for the Nemore Foundation, which operated several hospitals and clinics in Delaware and Florida for eld…
The Colonels Corner Mafia, CIA and George Bush Part 21
▶ 52:42 Pristine beaches and inland freshwater lakes had been called the finest golf property left available for development. Ed Ball, fronting for Alfred DuPont, bought most of this land for $11 an acre in 1925. By 1981, just after Ball's death, B…