Stanley Alexander Lindo | |
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Born | March 3, 1875 |
Died | January 4, 1958 | (aged 82)
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Stanley Alexander Lindo was born on March 3, 1875 in Falmouth, Jamaica, to Frederick Lindo and Grace Morales.
He migrated to Costa Rica in 1890 to join his older brothers in business.
They had arrived in 1885 to work for Minor Cooper Keith, who was building a railroad from Limón to San José, Costa Rica, but quickly went into business as merchants, bankers and banana planters.[1]
In 1908, the brothers founded the Florida Ice and Farm Company in Siquirres, Limón Province[2] [3] The company was located at a farm called La Florida and was a major producer of ice and other agricultural produce.[4] The company acquired Beer in Costa Rica in 1912. [5]
In 1911, the Lindo Brothers, in partnership with Felipe Alvarado, purchased the Compañía Luz Eléctrica de San Jose, Heredia y Alajuela and invested in a large hydroelectric power plant in Belén (canton) the next year. In 1924 the company was transformed into La Compañía Nacional de Electricidad.[6]
By 1911, the Lindo properties were producing half of Costa Rica's bananas, and DiGiorgio Corporation, on behalf of the Atlantic Fruit Company, approached Lindo Bros with idea of purchasing all of their banana plantations, although the entire production was contracted to United Fruit Company until July, 1914.
On October 27, 1911, Cecil Vernon Lindo gave the Atlantic Fruit Company an option to purchase their banana plantations for $3,500,000 before August, 1912. Cecil was to be the General Manager of the Atlantic Fruit Company in Costa Rica. Atlantic Fruit Company could not or would not execute the option, and the Lindo properties were sold to United Fruit Company for $5,000,000 that year.[7]
By 1913, the Lindo brothers were owners of vast sugar, coffee and cocoa estates, lumber and flour mills, breweries, ice-making and aerated factories.[8] Their agricultural interests included 1,000 acres of sugar, 2,000 acres of cacao and 7,000 acres of Coffee plantations, exporting three millions pounds of coffee each year, with an approximate value of half a million dollars.
In 1920 he was elected President of the newly organised Chamber of Agriculture. The Secretary was Manuel F Jiménez.[9]
Stanley was the Grand Master (Freemasonry)|Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Costa Rica between 1937 and 1941.[10][11]
Stanley married Rosalía Acuña Vargas (1879-1978) on 25 June 1899 in Limón, Costa Rica and has issue including:
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