Tiemann was an
industrialist, who lived in
Manhattanville where he owned D.F. Tiemann & Company Paint & Color Works, which manufactured pigments and paints. This business had been started originally in 1804 by his father, I. Anthony Tiemann, with his brother, Julius William Tiemann, and Nicholas Stippel. His father retired from the business in 1839.[3] The Tiemann laboratory and factory was originally located on
23rd Street and
Fourth Avenue in New York City, near
Madison Square Park, later relocating uptown to
Manhattanville in 1832.[3]
He was educated in a private seminary and at age thirteen began an apprenticeship in the drugstore of H.M. Schiefflin & Co., on
Pearl Street, until 1824, when he joined his father's company. He became a partner in the company in 1826.[3]
In December 1857, Democrat
Fernando Wood, the mayor of New York, was removed from office by the
New York State Legislature, and an election was held to replace him. Fed up with the corruption of Wood's administration, members of the Democratic Party's inner circle, powerful merchants such as
August Belmont,
John A. Dix,
William Havemeyer, and
John van Buren left the party and joined with reformers such as
Peter Cooper, Republicans and
Know-Nothings to create a fusion Independent Party. They nominated Tiemann as their candidate, while Wood ran on the Democratic ticket. Tiemann won the election with 51.4% of the vote, against Wood's 48.6%. He served for one term.[4][5][6]
His younger brother, Julius William Tiemann, was one of the founding partners in the D.F. Tiemann company, and father of Hermann Newell Tiemann (1863–1957), who was a commercial photographer in New York City.[3][7]
D.F. Tiemann was nephew-in-law of
Peter Cooper, the American industrialist and inventor.[8] In 1826, he had married Martha Clowes, Cooper's niece, and they had three sons and three daughters.[3]
Legacy
Tiemann Place, near 125th Street and Broadway in the New York City borough of Manhattan, and Tiemann Avenue, which extends from Pelham Parkway North to East 222nd Street in the northeastern part of the borough of
the Bronx, are named for him.
References
^Meredith, Roy, The world of Mathew Brady: portraits of the Civil War period, Brooke House Publishers, 1976. Cf.
p.69
^Nevins, Allan (1935). Abram S. Hewitt: with some account of Peter Cooper. Harper & brothers. p. 175.
Ortssippenbuch Karlshafen The ancestors of Daniel Fowcett Tiemann (his father born in
Bad Karlshafen, Germany) are published in the genealogical book "Ortssippenbuch Karlshafen", family number 4698.
External links
Tiemann Place - Eric Washington site (archived 2011)