Tristram T. Hyde

American politician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican politician
PlacesUnited States of America
wasPolitician
Work fieldPolitics
Gender
Male
Birth3 July 1862, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, U.S.A.
Death27 January 1931Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina, U.S.A. (aged 68 years)
Star signCancer
The details

Biography

Tristram Tupper Hyde (July 3, 1862 – January 27, 1931) was the mayor of Charleston, South Carolina from 1915 until 1919.
Tristram was the son of Simeon Hyde and Ann Elizabeth Tupper. He attended the High School of Charleston. He married Minnie D. Black in 1886 and Sue Estelle Thomas 1907.
Hyde was a real estate broker with Eben Coffin and Co. and then Tristram T. Hyde and Sons. He was also president of Commercial Savings Bank, White Swan-Ideal Laundry and Francis Marion (Hotel]) Corporation.
A notable development of his time in office was the ceding of a large portion of Hampton Park to the state for use in building a new campus for The Citadel so that the school remained in Charleston and also the formation of a public waterworks. In private affairs, he was engaged in diverse business interests including being one of the principal backers of the company that built the Fort Sumter Hotel on the Battery.
He is buried at Magnolia Cemetery (Charleston, South Carolina).

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