
No record of the successful men of Cincinnati would be complete without
adequate mention of Levi Addison Ault, whose name is associated with
one
of the most important manufacturing enterprises in the city. For more
than
thirty years he has been engaged in the manufacture of printers' inks
and
colors and the Ault & Wiborg company of which he is the head is now
the largest concern of the kind in the world. He was born at Mille
Roches,
Ontario, Canada, November 24, 1851, a son of Simon W. and Caroline
(Brownell)
Ault. The father was a cloth manufacturer and it was from him that the
son inherited the talent which he has applied with such good effect in
his life vocation. The ancestry of the Ault family has been traced to
Ault,
Picardy, France. At the time of the Huguenot massacre in France members
of the family escaped to Holland and thence in 1780 came to America,
settling
in Canada. The Brownell family is of English origin. The early
progenitors
in America arrived in Connecticut in Colonial times. Being friendly to
the King of England, in 1776 the descendants fled to Canada.
Mr. Ault of this review received his early education in the common
schools
and the Cornwall grammar school. After laying his books aside he
devoted
his attention for five years to bookkeeping and in 1878 began on a
modest
scale in the manufacture of printers' inks. As the years passed the
business
grew and the Ault & Wiborg Company now occupies one of the most
complete
plants of the kind that has ever been erected and sends its products to
all the civilized countries of the globe. Mr. Ault has witnessed
various
fluctuations I the course of his business life but never yielded to
discouragement.
By the application of strict business principles, good judgment and
fair
dealing the company has reached the front rank. Its achievements are
the
result of harmonious cooperation of the various departments under the
constant
care and watchfulness of competent leadership and its great success has
been honorably gained and is well deserved. In addition to his
manufacturing
interests Mr. Ault is a member of the board of directors of the First
National
Bank.
On the 23rd of October, 1878, at Cincinnati, he was married
to Miss Ida May Holtzinger, a daughter of Henry E. and Angie
Holtzinger,
the latter of whom died when her daughter was four years of age. They
have
one son, Lee Brownell, who married Miss Hildegarde von Steinwehe.
Politically Mr. Ault is an adherent of the republican party in national
affairs but he is an advocate of a business administration in city
government
and at home elections votes independently. He has taken a great
interest
in beautifying the city and was appointed by the mayor in 1906 as
president
of a commission of leading citizens to develop a park system for
Cincinnati.
This work was completed in 1908 and Mr. Ault has served most acceptably
for three years as president of the first park commission. In May,
1911,
he donated to the city of Cincinnati a tract of land comprising
approximately
one hundred and fifty acres and overlooking the Ohio river on Madison
Road.
This great tract is to be known as Ault Park and is a splendid addition
to the park system of the city. Mr. Ault is a valued member of the
Commercial,
Queen City and Country Clubs and in religious belief adheres to the
Unitarian
Church. He has through his ability, integrity and public spirit won an
honorable place in his adopted city and has no cause to regret his
selection
of Cincinnati as a home, for here he has found friends and fortune.
