Laurence F. Whittemore

[3] Whittemore headed up public relations and industrial development for both railroads and was an officer of several B&M subsidiaries, including the Boston Garden-Arena Corporation, Mount Washington Cog Railway, and Mystic Terminal Company.[3] He helped organize Boston-Maine Airways and served as its vice president until federal regulations barred railroads from the aviation business.[10] Under Whittemore's leadership, the papermaker began producing a number of new products, including chloroform and shoe inserts.He was also a trustee of the Brookings Institution and New Hampshire Historical Society and chairman of the Crotched Mountain Rehabilitation Center.[2] Whittemore stepped down as president of Brown Company in 1955, but remained chairman until ill health forced his resignation in 1960.
Pembroke, New HampshireConcord, New HampshireFederal Reserve Bank of BostonNew York, New Haven and Hartford RailroadBrown CompanyDemocraticNew Hampshire State LegislaturePembroke AcademyDartmouth CollegeUniversity of New HampshireNew England CollegeLowell Textile InstituteSuffolk UniversityBoston UniversityKimball Union AcademyRhodes ScholarshipBoston and Maine RailroadUnited States ArmyMaine Central RailroadBoston Garden-Arena CorporationMount Washington Cog RailwayBoston-Maine AirwaysRalph Flanderschloroformshoe insertsNew England CouncilDwight D. EisenhowerGeneva RoundGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and Trademultilateral trade negotiationsAmoskeag CompanyNew England Telephone and Telegraph CompanyPeerless InsuranceH. P. Hood and SonsState Street Bank and Trust CompanyBoston and Albany RailroadBrookings InstitutionNew Hampshire Historical SocietyCrotched Mountain Rehabilitation CenterWhittemore School of Business and EconomicsConcord HospitalJoseph A. EricksonWilliam P. G. HardingRoy A. YoungRichard F. SyronCathy MinehanEric S. RosengrenSusan Collins