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}} as of ) |networth = |height = |weight = |term = |predecessor = |successor = |party = Republican〔Guide to the Paul Shoup Papers (), 3.〕 |boards = |religion = |spouse = Rose Wilson Shoup〔Who's Who on the Pacific Coast, 1913〕 |partner = |children = Carl Sumner, Jack Wilson, and Louise〔 |parents = Timothy and Sarah Sumner Shoup |relatives = Siblings: Twins Carl and Guy Shoup, Brother Fred, Sister Faith |signature = Paul_Shoup_Signature.tiff |website = |footnotes = }} Paul Shoup (January 8, 1874 – July 30, 1946)〔 was an American businessman, president and later vice-chairman of the Southern Pacific Railroad in the 1920s and 1930s,〔〔 a founding board member of the Stanford University School of Business,〔''Stanford University 1916-1941'', pg 79. J. Pearce Mitchell, 1958〕 and founder of the community of Los Altos, California. ==Family== He was the third of five children of Timothy and Sarah Sumner Shoup. His siblings included two older twin brothers, Carl and Guy, a younger brother, Fred, and a younger sister, Faith. Paul’s father was a well-respected attorney in San Bernardino who relocated the family from Iowa in 1872. After Timothy’s death in 1877, Sarah moved back to Iowa with her children. Carl died in 1898 while still in his early 20s.〔Robert J. Burdette, American Biography and Genealogy (Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1914), 829-830.〕 Guy and Fred joined Paul in careers with Southern Pacific, with Guy becoming an influential company attorney and Fred working for the Pacific Electric Railway Company in Los Angeles. Paul married Rose Wilson in 1900 in San Francisco〔Harper, Franklin, editor. Who’s Who on the Pacific Coast. Los Angeles, California: Harper Publishing Co., 1913.〕 and eventually settled in Los Altos with their three children – Carl Sumner Shoup, Jack Wilson Shoup, and Louise Shoup.〔 Son Carl went on to become an economist, responsible for drafting the post-World War II Japanese tax structure, forming the modern Value Added Tax; he also taught economics as a professor at Columbia University.〔David Cay, “Carl S. Shoup, 97; Shaped Japan’s Tax Code,” ''New York Times'', 31 March 2000, Obituary.〕 Brother Guy became a business partner with Paul in various Los Altos-focused businesses. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Paul Shoup」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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