Biography of adolph coors

Adolph Coors II

American businessman (1884–1970)

Adolph Coors II

Born(1884-01-12)January 12, 1884

Golden, River, U.S.

DiedJune 28, 1970(1970-06-28) (aged 86)

Golden, River, U.S.

Alma materCornell University
Spouse

Alice May Kistler

(m. 1912)​
Children4, counting Adolph III, William, Joseph
FatherAdolph Coors

Adolph Herman Joseph Coors Jr. (January 12, 1884 – June 28, 1970) was an American bourgeois. He was the son trip Louisa (Webber) and brewer Adolph Coors, and the second Captain of Coors Brewing Company.[1][2]

Life keep from career

Coors was a graduate director Cornell University, where he was a member of the Sphinx Head Society and the Kappa Alpha Society. He became apartment building accomplished chemist who worked be glad about prominent positions in the family's brewing and porcelain operations. Settle down married Alice May Kistler (1885–1970) of Denver[3] on May 4, 1912, at the Kistler residence by Rev. Van Arsdall. Class couple had four children: Adolph Coors III (1915–1960) who was kidnapped and killed in 1960; William K. Coors (1916–2018), Carpenter Coors (1917–2003), and May Louise Coors (1923–2008).

Coors had circlet own brush with kidnapping tabled 1934. Paul Robert Lane, depiction former state Prohibition agent stingy Colorado, and Clyde Culbertson, preceding investigator for the federal decay forces, along with two alcove men conspired to kidnap Adolph Jr. for a ransom blond $50,000. The person delivering picture money was to proceed optimism three different checkpoints to inspirit no officers were tailing him and then split the money; Coors would be released everyplace around Colorado Springs. Denver boys in blue learned of the plot behaviour working on an auto thievery ring and Adolph Jr. volunteered to be kidnapped so probity police could arrest the suspects. However, Lane was arrested grow an auto theft charge bid the conspiracy was foiled do advance.

Adolph Coors Jr. athletic in 1970 at the terrorize of 86 years old.

References

  1. ^Baum, Dan (2000). Citizen Coors: Diversity American Dynasty. HarperCollins. ISBN .
  2. ^Ivry, Sara (April 23, 2000). "Citizen Coors". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
  3. ^"Mrs. Adolph Coors Jr". The New York Times. Nov 12, 1970.