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  1. 21 de nov. de 2005 · Their father Leonard Jerome began his love affair with the city in 1850, at the age of thirty-two, irresistibly drawn to a place where an ambitious young man could make his mark and his fortune. The company of other like-minded entrepreneurs, who gave themselves wholeheartedly to the pursuit of their dreams, was like a tonic to him.

  2. 9 de dic. de 2015 · Leonard W. Jerome, 1817–1891 Leonard Jerome was born on 3 November 1817 in upstate New York. His flamboyant career on Wall Street combined the making and losing of fortunes with opulent spending. During the New York Draft Riots in July 1863, he defended the New York Times office building with a Gatling gun.

  3. Leonard Jerome was born in 1817 on a farm in the Central New York town of Pompey, near Syracuse. He enrolled in Princeton University, then known as the College of New Jersey, as a member of the Class of 1839, before leaving for Union College, where he studied law and set up a practice in Rochester, New York. He later moved to New York City.

  4. When Lady Leonie Blanche Jerome was born on 15 August 1859, in Saint-Germain, Gironde, Aquitaine, France, her father, Leonard Walter Jerome, was 41 and her mother, Clarissa Alta Hall, was 34. She married Sir John Leslie on 1 October 1884, in Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons.

  5. Leonard Walter Jerome (November 3, 1817 – March 3, 1891) was an American financier in Brooklyn, New York, and the maternal grandfather of Winston Churchill. (en) Leonard Walter Jerome, né le 3 novembre 1817 à Pompey et mort le 3 mars 1891 à Brighton, est un homme d'affaires américain.

  6. Horaires d’ouverture. Lundi de 9h00 à 13h00 et de 14h00 à 19h00. Mardi de 8h30 à 13h00 et de 14h00 à 17h00. Mercredi de 8h30 à 13h00 et de 14h00 à 16h00. Jeudi de 8h30 à 13h00 et de 14h00 à 17h00. Vendredi de 8h30 à 13h00, Fermé le vendredi après-midi.

  7. 24 de ene. de 2013 · The Leonard Jerome mansion was the home of financier Leonard Jerome, whose daughter became the mother of Winston Churchill. The mansion, the first of it's kind compared to the surrounding dowdy brownstones, featured a ballroom over the carriages, a 27-seater breakfast room, a dining room that could hold 100 people and a movie theater that could hold 600 people.