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John D. Rockefeller

John Davison Rockefeller Sr. (July 8, 1839 – May 23, 1937) was an American business magnate and philanthropist. He has been widely considered the wealthiest American of all time[1][2] and the richest person in modern history.[3][4] Rockefeller was born into a large family in Upstate New York that moved several times before eventually settling in Cleveland. He became an assistant bookkeeper at age 16 and went into several business partnerships beginning at age 20, concentrating his business on oil refining. Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870. He ran it until 1897 and remained its largest shareholder.

John D. Rockefeller
Rockefeller in 1895
Born
John Davison Rockefeller

(1839-07-08)July 8, 1839
DiedMay 23, 1937(1937-05-23) (aged 97)
Burial placeLake View Cemetery, Cleveland 41°30′40″N 81°35′28″W / 41.511°N 81.591°W / 41.511; -81.591
Occupations
  • Businessman
  • philanthropist
Known forFounding and leading the Standard Oil Company
Founding the University of Chicago, Rockefeller University, Central Philippine University, General Education Board, and Rockefeller Foundation
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
(m. 1864; died 1915)
Children
Parents
RelativesRockefeller family

Rockefeller's wealth soared as kerosene and gasoline grew in importance, and he became the richest person in the country, controlling 90% of all oil in the United States at his peak.[a] Oil was used throughout the country as a light source until the introduction of electricity, and as a fuel after the invention of the automobile. Furthermore, Rockefeller gained enormous influence over the railroad industry which transported his oil around the country. Standard Oil was the first great business trust in the United States. Rockefeller revolutionized the petroleum industry and, through corporate and technological innovations, was instrumental in both widely disseminating and drastically reducing the production cost of oil. His company and business practices came under criticism, particularly in the writings of author Ida Tarbell.

The Supreme Court ruled in 1911 that Standard Oil must be dismantled for violation of federal antitrust laws. It was broken up into 34 separate entities, which included companies that became ExxonMobil, Chevron Corporation, and others—some of which still have the highest level of revenue in the world. In the end it turned out that the individual segments of the company were worth more than the entire company was when it was one entity—the sum of the parts were worth more than the whole—as shares of these doubled and tripled in value in their early years. Consequently, Rockefeller became the country's first billionaire, with a fortune worth nearly 2% of the national economy.[5] His personal wealth was estimated in 1913 at $900 million, which was almost 3% of the US GDP of $39.1 billion that year.[6][full citation needed] That was his peak net worth, and amounts to US$24.7 billion (in 2021 dollars; inflation-adjusted).[7][page needed][8][b]

Rockefeller spent much of the last 40 years of his life in retirement at Kykuit, his estate in Westchester County, New York, defining the structure of modern philanthropy, along with other key industrialists such as steel magnate Andrew Carnegie.[9] His fortune was mainly used to create the modern systematic approach of targeted philanthropy through the creation of foundations that had a major effect on medicine, education, and scientific research.[10] His foundations pioneered developments in medical research and were instrumental in the near-eradication of hookworm[11] and yellow fever[12] in the United States. He and Carnegie gave form and impetus through their charities to the work of Abraham Flexner, who in his essay "Medical Education in America" emphatically endowed empiricism as the basis for the US medical system of the 20th century.[13]

Rockefeller was also the founder of the University of Chicago and Rockefeller University and funded the establishment of Central Philippine University in the Philippines.[14][15][16] He was a devout Northern Baptist and supported many church-based institutions. He adhered to total abstinence from alcohol and tobacco throughout his life.[17] For advice, he relied closely on his wife Laura Spelman Rockefeller with whom he had five children. He was a faithful congregant of the Erie Street Baptist Mission Church, taught Sunday school, and served as a trustee, clerk, and occasional janitor.[18] Religion was a guiding force throughout his life and he believed it to be the source of his success. Rockefeller was also considered a supporter of capitalism based on a perspective of social Darwinism, and he was quoted often as saying, "The growth of a large business is merely a survival of the fittest".[19][20]

Early life

 
Rockefeller's birthplace in Richford, New York

Rockefeller was the second child born in Richford, New York, to con artist William A. Rockefeller Sr. and Eliza Davison. He had an elder sister named Lucy and four younger siblings: William Jr., Mary, and twins Franklin (Frank) and Frances. His father was of English and German descent, while his mother was of Ulster Scot descent.[21] William Sr. was first a lumberman and then a traveling salesman who identified himself as a "botanic physician" who sold elixirs, described by locals as "Big Bill" and "Devil Bill."[22] Unshackled by conventional morality, he led a vagabond existence and returned to his family infrequently. Throughout his life, Bill was notorious for conducting schemes.[23] In between the births of Lucy and John, Bill and his mistress and housekeeper Nancy Brown had a daughter named Clorinda who died young. Between John and William Jr.'s births, Bill and Nancy had another daughter Cornelia.[24]

Eliza was a homemaker and a devout Baptist who struggled to maintain a semblance of stability at home, as Bill was frequently gone for extended periods. She also put up with his philandering and his double life, which included bigamy.[25][c] Eliza was thrifty by nature and by necessity, and she taught her son that "willful waste makes woeful want".[28] John did his share of the regular household chores and earned extra money raising turkeys, selling potatoes and candy, and eventually lending small sums of money to neighbors. He followed his father's advice to "trade dishes for platters" and always get the better part of any deal. Bill once bragged, "I cheat my boys every chance I get. I want to make 'em sharp." However, his mother was more influential in his upbringing and beyond, while he distanced himself further and further from his father as his life progressed.[29] He later stated, "From the beginning, I was trained to work, to save, and to give."[30]

When he was a boy, his family moved to Moravia, New York, and to Owego, New York, in 1851, where he attended Owego Academy. In 1853, his family moved to Strongsville, Ohio, and he attended Cleveland's Central High School, the first high school in Cleveland and the first free public high school west of the Alleghenies. Then he took a ten-week business course at Folsom's Commercial College, where he studied bookkeeping.[31] He was a well-behaved, serious, and studious boy despite his father's absences and frequent family moves. His contemporaries described him as reserved, earnest, religious, methodical, and discreet. He was an excellent debater and expressed himself precisely. He also had a deep love of music and dreamed of it as a possible career.[32]

Pre-Standard Oil career

As a bookkeeper

 
Rockefeller at age 18

In September 1855, when Rockefeller was sixteen, he got his first job as an assistant bookkeeper working for a small produce commission firm in Cleveland called Hewitt & Tuttle.[33] He worked long hours and delighted, as he later recalled, in "all the methods and systems of the office."[34] He was particularly adept at calculating transportation costs, which served him well later in his career. Much of Rockefeller's duties involved negotiating with barge canal owners, ship captains, and freight agents. In these negotiations, he learned that posted transportation rates that were believed to be fixed could be altered depending on conditions and timing of freight and through the use of rebates to preferred shippers. Rockefeller was also given the duties of collecting debts when Hewitt instructed him to do so. Instead of using his father's method of presence to collect debts, Rockefeller relied on a persistent pestering approach.[35] Rockefeller received $16 a month for his three-month apprenticeship. During his first year, he received $31 a month, which was increased to $50 a month. His final year provided him $58 a month.[36]

As a youth, Rockefeller reportedly said that his two great ambitions were to make $100,000 (equivalent to $2.91 million[37] in 2021 dollars) and to live 100 years.[38]

Business partnership and Civil War service

In 1859, Rockefeller went into the produce commission business with a partner, Maurice B. Clark, and they raised $4,000 ($120,637 in 2021 dollars) in capital. Clark initiated the idea of the partnership and offered $2,000 towards the goal. Rockefeller had only $800 saved up at the time and so borrowed $1,000 from his father, "Big Bill" Rockefeller, at 10 percent interest.[39] Rockefeller went steadily ahead in business from there, making money each year of his career.[40] In their first and second years of business, Clark & Rockefeller netted $4,400 (on nearly half a million dollars in business) and $17,000 worth of profit, respectively, and their profits soared with the outbreak of the American Civil War when the Union Army called for massive amounts of food and supplies. When the Civil War was nearing a close and with the prospect of those war-time profits ending, Clark & Rockefeller looked toward the refining of crude oil.[41] While his brother Frank fought in the Civil War, Rockefeller tended his business and hired substitute soldiers. He gave money to the Union cause, as did many rich Northerners who avoided combat. "I wanted to go in the army and do my part," Rockefeller said. "But it was simply out of the question. There was no one to take my place. We were in a new business, and if I had not stayed it must have stopped—and with so many dependent on it."

Rockefeller was an abolitionist who voted for President Abraham Lincoln and supported the then-new Republican Party.[42] As he said, "God gave me money", and he did not apologize for it. He felt at ease and righteous following Methodist preacher John Wesley's dictum, "gain all you can, save all you can, and give all you can."[43] At that time, the Federal government was subsidizing oil prices, driving the price up from $.35 a barrel in 1862 to as high as $13.75.[44] This created an oil-drilling glut, with thousands of speculators attempting to make their fortunes. Most failed, but those who struck oil did not even need to be efficient. They would blow holes in the ground and gather up the oil as they could, often leading to creeks and rivers flowing with wasted oil in the place of water.[45]

A market existed for the refined oil in the form of kerosene. Coal had previously been used to extract kerosene, but its tedious extraction process and high price prevented broad use. Even with the high costs of freight transportation and a government levy during the Civil War (the government levied a tax of twenty cents a gallon on refined oil), profits on the refined product were large. The price of the refined oil in 1863 was around $13 a barrel, with a profit margin of around $5 to $8 a barrel. The capital expenditures for a refinery at that time were small – around $1,000 to $1,500 and requiring only a few men to operate.[46] In this environment of a wasteful boom, the partners switched from foodstuffs to oil, building an oil refinery in 1863 in "The Flats", then Cleveland's burgeoning industrial area. The refinery was directly owned by Andrews, Clark & Company, which was composed of Clark & Rockefeller, chemist Samuel Andrews, and M. B. Clark's two brothers. The commercial oil business was then in its infancy. Whale oil had become too expensive for the masses, and a cheaper, general-purpose lighting fuel was needed.[47]

While other refineries would keep the 60% of oil product that became kerosene, but dump the other 40% in rivers and massive sludge piles,[48] Rockefeller used the gasoline to fuel the refinery, and sold the rest as lubricating oil, petroleum jelly and paraffin wax, and other by-products. Tar was used for paving, naphtha shipped to gas plants.[44] Likewise, Rockefeller's refineries hired their own plumbers, cutting the cost of pipe-laying in half. Barrels that cost $2.50 each ended up only $0.96 when Rockefeller bought the wood and had them built for himself.[citation needed] In February 1865, in what was later described by oil industry historian Daniel Yergin as a "critical" action, Rockefeller bought out the Clark brothers for $72,500 (equivalent to $1 million[37] in 2021 dollars) at auction and established the firm of Rockefeller & Andrews. Rockefeller said, "It was the day that determined my career."[49] He was well-positioned to take advantage of postwar prosperity and the great expansion westward fostered by the growth of railroads and an oil-fueled economy. He borrowed heavily, reinvested profits, adapted rapidly to changing markets, and fielded observers to track the quickly expanding industry.[50]

Beginning in the oil business

In 1866, William Rockefeller Jr., John's brother, built another refinery in Cleveland and brought John into the partnership. In 1867, Henry Morrison Flagler became a partner, and the firm of Rockefeller, Andrews & Flagler was established. By 1868, with Rockefeller continuing practices of borrowing and reinvesting profits, controlling costs, and using refineries' waste, the company owned two Cleveland refineries and a marketing subsidiary in New York; it was the largest oil refinery in the world.[51][52] Rockefeller, Andrews & Flagler was the predecessor of the Standard Oil Company.[citation needed]

Standard Oil

Founding and early growth

 
Rockefeller c. 1872, shortly after founding Standard Oil

By the end of the American Civil War, Cleveland was one of the five main refining centers in the U.S. (besides Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, New York, and the region in northwestern Pennsylvania where most of the oil originated). By 1869 there was triple the kerosene refining capacity than needed to supply the market, and the capacity remained in excess for many years.[53]

On January 10, 1870, Rockefeller abolished the partnership of Rockefeller, Andrews & Flagler,[54] forming Standard Oil of Ohio. Continuing to apply his work ethic and efficiency, Rockefeller quickly expanded the company to be the most profitable refiner in Ohio. Likewise, it became one of the largest shippers of oil and kerosene in the country. The railroads competed fiercely for traffic and, in an attempt to create a cartel to control freight rates, formed the South Improvement Company offering special deals to bulk customers like Standard Oil, outside the main oil centers. The cartel offered preferential treatment as a high-volume shipper, which included not just steep discounts/rebates of up to 50% for their product but rebates for the shipment of competing products.[55]

 
Rockefeller in 1875. By then, he shaved off his sideburns, leaving his iconic mustache.
 
Share of the Standard Oil Company, issued May 1, 1878[56]

Part of this scheme was the announcement of sharply increased freight charges. This touched off a firestorm of protest from independent oil well owners, including boycotts and vandalism, which led to the discovery of Standard Oil's part in the deal. A major New York refiner, Charles Pratt and Company, headed by Charles Pratt and Henry H. Rogers, led the opposition to this plan, and railroads soon backed off. Pennsylvania revoked the cartel's charter, and non-preferential rates were restored for the time being.[57] While competitors may have been unhappy, Rockefeller's efforts did bring American consumers cheaper kerosene and other oil by-products. Before 1870, oil light was only for the wealthy, provided by expensive whale oil. During the next decade, kerosene became commonly available to the working and middle classes.[48]

Undeterred, though vilified for the first time by the press, Rockefeller continued with his self-reinforcing cycle of buying the least efficient competing refiners, improving the efficiency of his operations, pressing for discounts on oil shipments, undercutting his competition, making secret deals, raising investment pools, and buying rivals out. In less than four months in 1872, in what was later known as "The Cleveland Conquest" or "The Cleveland Massacre," Standard Oil absorbed 22 of its 26 Cleveland competitors.[58] Eventually, even his former antagonists, Pratt and Rogers, saw the futility of continuing to compete against Standard Oil; in 1874, they made a secret agreement with Rockefeller to be acquired.[citation needed]

 
Standard Oil Trust Certificate 1896

Pratt and Rogers became Rockefeller's partners. Rogers, in particular, became one of Rockefeller's key men in the formation of the Standard Oil Trust. Pratt's son, Charles Millard Pratt, became secretary of Standard Oil. For many of his competitors, Rockefeller had merely to show them his books so they could see what they were up against and then make them a decent offer. If they refused his offer, he told them he would run them into bankruptcy and then cheaply buy up their assets at auction. However, he did not intend to eliminate competition entirely. In fact, his partner Pratt said of that accusation "Competitors we must have ... If we absorb them, it surely will bring up another."[48]

Instead of wanting to eliminate them, Rockefeller saw himself as the industry's savior, "an angel of mercy" absorbing the weak and making the industry as a whole stronger, more efficient, and more competitive.[59] Standard was growing horizontally and vertically. It added its own pipelines, tank cars, and home delivery network. It kept oil prices low to stave off competitors, made its products affordable to the average household, and, to increase market penetration, sometimes sold below cost. It developed over 300 oil-based products from tar to paint to petroleum jelly to chewing gum. By the end of the 1870s, Standard was refining over 90% of the oil in the U.S.[60] Rockefeller had already become a millionaire ($1 million is equivalent to $28 million[37] in 2021 dollars).[61]

He instinctively realized that orderliness would only proceed from centralized control of large aggregations of plant and capital, with the one aim of an orderly flow of products from the producer to the consumer. That orderly, economic, efficient flow is what we now, many years later, call 'vertical integration' I do not know whether Mr. Rockefeller ever used the word 'integration'. I only know he conceived the idea.

— A Standard Oil of Ohio successor of Rockefeller.[53]
 
Standard Oil Refinery No. 1 in Cleveland, Ohio, 1897

In 1877, Standard clashed with Thomas A. Scott, the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Standard's chief hauler. Rockefeller envisioned pipelines as an alternative transport system for oil and began a campaign to build and acquire them.[62] The railroad, seeing Standard's incursion into the transportation and pipeline fields, struck back and formed a subsidiary to buy and build oil refineries and pipelines.[63]

Standard countered, held back its shipments, and, with the help of other railroads, started a price war that dramatically reduced freight payments and caused labor unrest. Rockefeller prevailed and the railroad sold its oil interests to Standard. In the aftermath of that battle, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania indicted Rockefeller in 1879 on charges of monopolizing the oil trade, starting an avalanche of similar court proceedings in other states and making a national issue of Standard Oil's business practices.[64] Rockefeller was under great strain during the 1870s and 1880s when he was carrying out his plan of consolidation and integration and being attacked by the press. He complained that he could not stay asleep most nights. Rockefeller later commented:[53]

All the fortune that I have made has not served to compensate me for the anxiety of that period.

Monopoly

 
Portrait of John D Rockefeller by Eastman Johnson, 1895

Although it always had hundreds of competitors, Standard Oil gradually gained dominance of oil refining and sales as market share in the United States through horizontal integration, ending up with about 90% of the US market.[44] In the kerosene industry, the company replaced the old distribution system with its own vertical system. It supplied kerosene by tank cars that brought the fuel to local markets, and tank wagons then delivered to retail customers, thus bypassing the existing network of wholesale jobbers.[65] Despite improving the quality and availability of kerosene products while greatly reducing their cost to the public (the price of kerosene dropped by nearly 80% over the life of the company), Standard Oil's business practices created intense controversy. Standard's most potent weapons against competitors were underselling, differential pricing, and secret transportation rebates.[66]

The firm was attacked by journalists and politicians throughout its existence, in part for these monopolistic methods, giving momentum to the antitrust movement. In 1879, the New York State Legislature's Hepburn Committee investigations into "alleged abuses" committed by the railroads uncovered the fact that Standard Oil was receiving substantial freight rebates on all of the oil it was transporting by railroad – and was crushing Standard's competitors thereby.[67] By 1880, according to the New York World, Standard Oil was "the most cruel, impudent, pitiless, and grasping monopoly that ever fastened upon a country". To critics Rockefeller replied, "In a business so large as ours ... some things are likely to be done which we cannot approve. We correct them as soon as they come to our knowledge."[68]

At that time, many legislatures had made it difficult to incorporate in one state and operate in another. As a result, Rockefeller and his associates owned dozens of separate corporations, each of which operated in just one state; the management of the whole enterprise was rather unwieldy. In 1882, Rockefeller's lawyers created an innovative form of corporation to centralize their holdings, giving birth to the Standard Oil Trust.[69] The "trust" was a corporation of corporations, and the entity's size and wealth drew much attention. Nine trustees, including Rockefeller, ran the 41 companies in the trust.[70] The public and the press were immediately suspicious of this new legal entity, and other businesses seized upon the idea and emulated it, further inflaming public sentiment. Standard Oil had gained an aura of invincibility, always prevailing against competitors, critics, and political enemies. It had become the richest, biggest, most feared business in the world, seemingly immune to the boom and bust of the business cycle, consistently making profits year after year.[71]

 
The big corporations such as Standard Oil made large contributions to McKinley's presidential campaign.

The company's vast American empire included 20,000 domestic wells, 4,000 miles of pipeline, 5,000 tank cars, and over 100,000 employees.[71] Its share of world oil refining topped out above 90% but slowly dropped to about 80% for the rest of the century.[72] Despite the formation of the trust and its perceived immunity from all competition, by the 1880s Standard Oil had passed its peak of power over the world oil market. Rockefeller finally gave up his dream of controlling all the world's oil refining; he admitted later, "We realized that public sentiment would be against us if we actually refined all the oil."[72] Over time, foreign competition and new finds abroad eroded his dominance. In the early 1880s, Rockefeller created one of his most important innovations. Rather than try to influence the price of crude oil directly, Standard Oil had been exercising indirect control by altering oil storage charges to suit market conditions. Rockefeller then ordered the issuance of certificates against oil stored in its pipelines. These certificates became traded by speculators, thus creating the first oil-futures market which effectively set spot market prices from then on. The National Petroleum Exchange opened in Manhattan in late 1882 to facilitate the trading of oil futures.[73]

Although 85% of world crude production was still coming from Pennsylvania in the 1880s, oil from wells drilled in Russia and Asia began to reach the world market.[74] Robert Nobel had established his own refining enterprise in the abundant and cheaper Russian oil fields, including the region's first pipeline and the world's first oil tanker. The Paris Rothschilds jumped into the fray providing financing.[75] Additional fields were discovered in Burma and Java. Even more critical, the invention of the light bulb gradually began to erode the dominance of kerosene for illumination. Standard Oil adapted by developing a European presence, expanding into natural gas production in the U.S., and then producing gasoline for automobiles, which until then had been considered a waste product.[76]

 
Fear of monopolies ("trusts") is shown in this critique of Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company.

Standard Oil moved its headquarters to New York City at 26 Broadway, and Rockefeller became a central figure in the city's business community. He bought a residence in 1884 on 54th Street near the mansions of other magnates such as William Henry Vanderbilt. Despite personal threats and constant pleas for charity, Rockefeller took the new elevated train to his downtown office daily.[77] In 1887, Congress created the Interstate Commerce Commission which was tasked with enforcing equal rates for all railroad freight, but by then Standard depended more on pipeline transport.[78] More threatening to Standard's power was the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, originally used to control unions, but later central to the breakup of the Standard Oil trust. Ohio was especially vigorous in applying its state antitrust laws, and finally forced a separation of Standard Oil of Ohio from the rest of the company in 1892, the first step in the dissolution of the trust.[79]

 
Rockefeller as an industrial emperor, 1901 cartoon from Puck magazine

In the 1890s, Rockefeller expanded into iron ore and ore transportation, forcing a collision with steel magnate Andrew Carnegie, and their competition became a major subject of the newspapers and cartoonists.[80] He went on a massive buying spree acquiring leases for crude oil production in Ohio, Indiana, and West Virginia, as the original Pennsylvania oil fields began to play out.[81] Amid the frenetic expansion, Rockefeller began to think of retirement. The daily management of the trust was turned over to John Dustin Archbold and Rockefeller bought a new estate, Pocantico Hills, north of New York City, turning more time to leisure activities including the new sports of bicycling and golf.[82]

 
Puck magazine cartoon: "The Infant Hercules and the Standard Oil serpents", May 23, 1906, issue; depicting U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt grabbing the head of Nelson W. Aldrich and the snake-like body of John D. Rockefeller

Upon his ascent to the presidency, Theodore Roosevelt initiated dozens of suits under the Sherman Antitrust Act and coaxed reforms out of Congress. In 1901, U.S. Steel, then controlled by J. Pierpont Morgan, having bought Andrew Carnegie's steel assets, offered to buy Standard's iron interests as well. A deal brokered by Henry Clay Frick exchanged Standard's iron interests for U.S. Steel stock and gave Rockefeller and his son membership on the company's board of directors. In full retirement at age 63, Rockefeller earned over $58 million in investments in 1902.[83] One of the most effective attacks on Rockefeller and his firm was the 1904 publication of The History of the Standard Oil Company, by Ida Tarbell, a leading muckraker. She documented the company's espionage, price wars, heavy-handed marketing tactics, and courtroom evasions.[84] Although her work prompted a huge backlash against the company, Tarbell stated she was surprised at its magnitude. "I never had an animus against their size and wealth, never objected to their corporate form. I was willing that they should combine and grow as big and wealthy as they could, but only by legitimate means. But they had never played fair, and that ruined their greatness for me." Tarbell's father had been driven out of the oil business during the "South Improvement Company" affair.[citation needed] Rockefeller called her "Miss Tarbarrel" in private but held back in public saying only, "not a word about that misguided woman."[84] He began a publicity campaign to put his company and himself in a better light. Though he had long maintained a policy of active silence with the press, he decided to make himself more accessible and responded with conciliatory comments such as "capital and labor are both wild forces which require intelligent legislation to hold them in restriction." He wrote and published his memoirs beginning in 1908. Critics found his writing to be sanitized and disingenuous and thought that statements such as "the underlying, essential element of success in business are to follow the established laws of high-class dealing" seemed to be at odds with his true business methods.[85]

 
Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis wags his pen at John D. Rockefeller, who is sitting in the witness stand, during the Standard Oil case on July 6, 1907.

Rockefeller and his son continued to consolidate their oil interests as best they could until New Jersey, in 1909, changed its incorporation laws to effectively allow a re-creation of the trust in the form of a single holding company. Rockefeller retained his nominal title as president until 1911 and he kept his stock. At last in 1911, the Supreme Court of the United States found Standard Oil Company of New Jersey in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. By then the trust still had a 70% market share of the refined oil market but only 14% of the U.S. crude oil supply.[86] The court ruled that the trust originated in illegal monopoly practices and ordered it to be broken up into 34 new companies. These included, among many others, Continental Oil, which became Conoco, now part of ConocoPhillips; Standard of Indiana, which became Amoco, now part of BP; Standard of California, which became Chevron; Standard of New Jersey, which became Esso (and later, Exxon), now part of ExxonMobil; Standard of New York, which became Mobil, now part of ExxonMobil; and Standard of Ohio, which became Sohio, now part of BP. Pennzoil and Chevron have remained separate companies.[87]

 
Rockefeller c. 1914. By then, his moustache had fallen off due to alopecia.

Rockefeller, who had rarely sold shares, held over 25% of Standard's stock at the time of the breakup.[88] He and all of the other stockholders received proportionate shares in each of the 34 companies. In the aftermath, Rockefeller's control over the oil industry was somewhat reduced, but over the next 10 years the breakup proved immensely profitable for him. The companies' combined net worth rose fivefold and Rockefeller's personal wealth jumped to $900 million.[86]

Colorado Fuel and Iron

In 1902, facing cash flow problems, John Cleveland Osgood turned to George Jay Gould, a principal stockholder of the Denver and Rio Grande, for a loan.[89] Gould, via Frederick Taylor Gates, Rockefeller's financial adviser, brought John D. Rockefeller in to help finance the loan.[90] Analysis of the company's operations by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. showed a need for substantially more funds which were provided in exchange for acquisition of CF&I's subsidiaries such as the Colorado and Wyoming Railway Company, the Crystal River Railroad Company, and possibly the Rocky Mountain Coal and Iron Company. Control was passed from the Iowa Group[91] to Gould and Rockefeller interests in 1903 with Gould in control and Rockefeller and Gates representing a minority interests. Osgood left the company in 1904 and devoted his efforts to operating competing coal and coke operations.[92]

Strike of 1913–14 and the Ludlow Massacre

The strike, called in September 1913 by the United Mine Workers, over the issue of union representation, was against coal mine operators in Huerfano and Las Animas counties of southern Colorado, where the majority of CF&I's coal and coke production was located. The strike was fought vigorously by the coal mine operators association and its steering committee, which included Welborn, president of CF&I, a spokesman for the coal operators. Rockefeller's operative, Lamont Montgomery Bowers,[93] remained in the background. Few miners actually belonged to the union or participated in the strike call, but the majority honored it. Strikebreakers (called "scabs") were threatened and sometimes attacked. Both sides purchased substantial arms and ammunition. Striking miners were forced to abandon their homes in company towns and lived in tent cities erected by the union, such as the tent city at Ludlow, a railway stop north of Trinidad.[94]

Under the protection of the National Guard, some miners returned to work and some strikebreakers, imported from the eastern coalfields, joined them as Guard troops protecting their movements. In February 1914, a substantial portion of the troops were withdrawn, but a large contingent remained at Ludlow. On April 20, 1914, a general fire-fight occurred between strikers and troops, which was antagonized by the troops and mine guards. The camp was burned, resulting in 15 women and children, who hid in tents at the camp, being burned to death.[94][95] Costs to both mine operators and the union were high. This incident brought unwanted national attention to Colorado.

Due to reduced demand for coal, resulting from an economic downturn, many of CF&I's coal mines never reopened and many men were thrown out of work. The union was forced to discontinue strike benefits in February 1915. There was destitution in the coalfields. With the help of funds from the Rockefeller Foundation, relief programs were organized by the Colorado Committee on Unemployment and Relief. A state agency created by Governor Carlson, offered work to unemployed miners building roads and doing other useful projects.[94]

The casualties suffered at Ludlow mobilized public opinion against the Rockefellers and the coal industry. The United States Commission on Industrial Relations conducted extensive hearings, singling out John D. Rockefeller Jr. and the Rockefellers' relationship with Bowers for special attention. Bowers was relieved of duty and Wellborn restored to control in 1915, then industrial relations improved.[94] Rockefeller denied any responsibility and minimized the seriousness of the event.[96] When testifying on the Ludlow Massacre, and asked what action he would have taken as Director, John D. Rockefeller Jr. stated, "I would have taken no action. I would have deplored the necessity which compelled the officers of the company to resort to such measures to supplement the State forces to maintain law and order." He admitted that he had made no attempt to bring the militiamen to justice.[97]

Personal life

Family

Against long-circulating speculations that his family has French roots, genealogists proved the German origin of Rockefeller and traced them back to the early 17th century. Johann Peter Rockenfeller (baptized September 27, 1682, in the Protestant church of Rengsdorf) immigrated in 1723 from Altwied (today a district of Neuwied, Rhineland-Palatinate) with three children to North America and settled down in Germantown, Pennsylvania.[98][99]

The name Rockenfeller refers to the now-abandoned village of Rockenfeld in the district of Neuwied.[citation needed]

Marriage

 
Kykuit in Westchester County, New York, where Rockefeller spent his retirement. It has been home to four generations of the Rockefeller family.

In 1864, Rockefeller married Laura Celestia "Cettie" Spelman (1839–1915), daughter of Harvey Buell Spelman and Lucy Henry. They had four daughters and one son together. He said later, "Her judgment was always better than mine. Without her keen advice, I would be a poor man."[40]

The Rockefeller wealth, distributed as it was through a system of foundations and trusts, continued to fund family philanthropic, commercial, and, eventually, political aspirations throughout the 20th century. John Jr.'s youngest son David Rockefeller was a leading New York banker, serving for over 20 years as CEO of Chase Manhattan (now part of JPMorgan Chase). Second son Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller was Republican governor of New York and the 41st Vice President of the United States. Fourth son Winthrop Aldrich Rockefeller served as Republican Governor of Arkansas. Grandchildren Abigail Aldrich "Abby" Rockefeller and John Davison Rockefeller III became philanthropists. Grandson Laurance Spelman Rockefeller became a conservationist. Great-grandson John Davison "Jay" Rockefeller IV served from 1985 until 2015 as a Democratic Senator from West Virginia after serving as governor of West Virginia,[100] and another Winthrop served as lieutenant governor of Arkansas for a decade.

Religious views

 
The Euclid Avenue Baptist Church and its pastor, the Rev. Dr. Charles Aubrey Eaton in 1904

John D. Rockefeller was born in Richford, New York, then part of the Burned-over district, a New York state region that became the site of an evangelical revival known as the Second Great Awakening. It drew masses to various Protestant churches—especially Baptist ones—and urged believers to follow such ideals as hard work, prayer, and good deeds to build "the Kingdom of God on Earth." Early in his life, he regularly went with his siblings and mother Eliza to the local Baptist church—the Erie Street Baptist Church (later the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church)—an independent Baptist church which eventually came to associate with the Northern Baptist Convention (1907–1950; modern American Baptist Churches USA).[citation needed]

His mother was deeply religious and disciplined, and had a major influence on him in religious matters. During church service, his mother would urge him to contribute his few pennies to the congregation. He came to associate the church with charity. A Baptist preacher once encouraged him to "make as much money as he could, and then give away as much as he could".[101] Later in his life, Rockefeller recalled: "It was at this moment, that the financial plan of my life was formed". Money making was considered by him a "God-given gift".[101]

A devout Northern Baptist, Rockefeller would read the Bible daily, attend prayer meetings twice a week and even led his own Bible study with his wife. Burton Folsom Jr. has noted:

[H]e sometimes gave tens of thousands of dollars to Christian groups, while, at the same time, he was trying to borrow over a million dollars to expand his business. His philosophy of giving was founded upon biblical principles. He truly believed in the biblical principle found in Luke 6:38, "Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you."[101]

Rockefeller would support Baptist missionary activity, fund universities, and heavily engage in religious activities at his Cleveland, Ohio, church. While traveling the South, he would donate large sums of money to churches belonging to the Southern Baptist Convention, various Black churches, as well as other Christian denominations. He paid towards the freedom of two slaves[102] and donated to a Roman Catholic orphanage. As he grew rich, his donations became more generous, especially to his church in Cleveland; nevertheless, it was demolished in 1925, and replaced with another building.[101]

Philanthropy

 
Rockefeller in 1911

Rockefeller's charitable giving began with his first job as a clerk at age 16, when he gave six percent of his earnings to charity, as recorded in his personal ledger. By the time he was twenty, his charity exceeded ten percent of his income. Much of his giving was church-related.[27] His church was later affiliated with the Northern Baptist Convention, which formed from American Baptists in the North with ties to their historic missions to establish schools and colleges for freedmen in the South after the American Civil War. Rockefeller attended Baptist churches every Sunday; when traveling he would often attend services at African-American Baptist congregations, leaving a substantial donation.[27] As Rockefeller's wealth grew, so did his giving, primarily to educational and public health causes, but also for basic science and the arts. He was advised primarily by Frederick Taylor Gates[103] after 1891,[104] and, after 1897, also by his son.

 
Rockefeller with his son John Jr., 1915

Rockefeller believed in the Efficiency Movement, arguing that: "To help an inefficient, ill-located, unnecessary school is a waste ... it is highly probable that enough money has been squandered on unwise educational projects to have built up a national system of higher education adequate to our needs, if the money had been properly directed to that end."[105]

Rockefeller and his advisers invented the conditional grant, which required the recipient to "root the institution in the affections of as many people as possible who, as contributors, become personally concerned, and thereafter may be counted on to give to the institution their watchful interest and cooperation".[106]

In 1884, Rockefeller provided major funding for Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary in Atlanta for African-American women, which became Spelman College.[107] His wife Laura Spelman Rockefeller, was dedicated to civil rights and equality for women.[108] John and Laura donated money and supported the Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary whose mission was in line with their faith based beliefs. Today known as Spelman College, the school is an all women Historically Black College or University in Atlanta, Georgia, named after Laura's family. The Spelman Family, Rockefeller's in-laws, along with John Rockefeller were ardent abolitionists before the Civil War and were dedicated to supporting the Underground Railroad.[108] John Rockefeller was impressed by the vision of the school and removed the debt from the school. The oldest existing building on Spelman's campus, Rockefeller Hall, is named after him.[109] Rockefeller also gave considerable donations to Denison University[110] and other Baptist colleges.

 
University of Chicago view from the Midway Plaisance
 
Central Philippine University in the Iloilo City was founded by the American Baptist missionaries through the benevolence as a legacy university of John D. Rockefeller in 1905. It is the first Baptist and second American university in Asia.

Rockefeller gave $80 million to the University of Chicago[111] under William Rainey Harper, turning a small Baptist college into a world-class institution by 1900. He would describe the University of Chicago as "the best investment I ever made." He also gave a grant to the American Baptist Missionaries foreign mission board, the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society in establishing Central Philippine University, the first Baptist and second American university in Asia, in 1905 in the heavily Catholic Philippines.[112][113][16][14][15]

Rockefeller's General Education Board, founded in 1903,[114] was established to promote education at all levels everywhere in the country.[115] In keeping with the historic missions of the Baptists, it was especially active in supporting black schools in the South.[115] Rockefeller also provided financial support to such established eastern institutions as Yale, Harvard, Columbia, Brown, Bryn Mawr, Wellesley and Vassar. On Gates' advice, Rockefeller became one of the first great benefactors of medical science. In 1901, he founded the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research[114] in New York City. It changed its name to Rockefeller University in 1965, after expanding its mission to include graduate education.[116] It claims a connection to 23 Nobel laureates.[117] He founded the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission in 1909,[114] an organization that eventually eradicated the hookworm disease,[118] which had long plagued rural areas of the American South. His General Education Board made a dramatic impact by funding the recommendations of the Flexner Report of 1910.[citation needed] The study, an excerpt of which was published in The Atlantic,[13] had been undertaken by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.[citation needed]

 
Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York City, c. 1912

Rockefeller created the Rockefeller Foundation in 1913[119] to continue and expand the scope of the work of the Sanitary Commission,[114] which was closed in 1915.[120] He gave $182 million to the foundation,[107] which focused on public health, medical training, and the arts. It endowed Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health,[114] the first of its kind.[121] It also built the Peking Union Medical College in China into a notable institution.[110] The foundation helped in World War I war relief,[122] and it employed William Lyon Mackenzie King of Canada to study industrial relations.[123]

In the 1920s, the Rockefeller Foundation funded a hookworm eradication campaign through the International Health Division. This campaign used a combination of politics and science, along with collaboration between healthcare workers and government officials to accomplish its goals.[124]

Rockefeller's fourth main philanthropy, the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Foundation, was created in 1918.[125] Through this, he supported work in the social studies; this was later absorbed into the Rockefeller Foundation. In total Rockefeller donated about $530 million.[126]

 
Rockefeller in old age

Rockefeller became well known in his later life for the practice of giving dimes to adults and nickels to children wherever he went. He even gave dimes as a playful gesture to wealthy men, such as tire mogul Harvey Firestone.[127]

Rockefeller supported the passage of the 18th Amendment, which banned alcohol in the United States. He wrote in a letter to Nicholas Murray Butler on June 6, 1932, that his neither Rockefeller nor his parents or his father's father and mother's mother drank alcohol. In the same letter, Rockefeller writes that he has "always stood for whatever measure seemed at the time to give promise of promoting temperance." He believed that measure to be prohibition, as he and his father donated 350,000 to "all branches of the Anti-Saloon League, Federal and State." But by 1932, Rockefeller felt disillusioned by prohibition because of its failure to discourage drinking and alcoholism. He supported the incorporation of repealing the 18th amendment into the Republican party platform.[128]

Florida home

 
The Casements, in Ormond Beach, Florida

Henry Morrison Flagler, one of the co-founders of Standard Oil along with Rockefeller, bought the Ormond Hotel in 1890, located in Ormond Beach, Florida, two years after it opened. Flagler expanded it to accommodate 600 guests and the hotel soon became one in a series of Gilded Age hotels catering to passengers aboard Flagler's Florida East Coast Railway. One of Flagler's guests at the Ormond Hotel was his former business partner John D. Rockefeller, who first stayed at the hotel in 1914. Rockefeller liked the Ormond Beach area so much that after four seasons at the hotel, he bought an estate in Ormond Beach called The Casements.[129][130] It would be Rockefeller's winter home during the latter part of his life. Sold by his heirs in 1939,[131] it was purchased by the city in 1974 and now serves as a cultural center and is the community's best-known historical structure.[132]

Illnesses and death

 
Rockefeller in 1922

In his 50s Rockefeller suffered from moderate depression and digestive troubles; during a stressful period in the 1890s he developed alopecia, the loss of some or all body hair.[133] By 1901 he began wearing toupées and by 1902, his mustache disappeared. His hair never grew back, but other health complaints subsided as he lightened his workload.[134]

 
Rockefeller's grave in Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland

Rockefeller died of arteriosclerosis on May 23, 1937, less than two months shy of his 98th birthday,[135] at "The Casements", his home in Ormond Beach, Florida. He was buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.[136]

Legacy

External video
  Booknotes interview with Ron Chernow on Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr., June 21, 1998, C-SPAN
 
John D. Rockefeller's painting by John Singer Sargent in 1917

Rockefeller had a long and controversial career in the oil industry followed by a long career in philanthropy. His image is an amalgam of all of these experiences and the many ways he was viewed by his contemporaries. These contemporaries include his former competitors, many of whom were driven to ruin, but many others of whom sold out at a profit (or a profitable stake in Standard Oil, as Rockefeller often offered his shares as payment for a business), and quite a few of whom became very wealthy as managers as well as owners in Standard Oil. They include politicians and writers, some of whom served Rockefeller's interests, and some of whom built their careers by fighting Rockefeller and the "robber barons".

Biographer Allan Nevins, answering Rockefeller's enemies, concluded:

The rise of the Standard Oil men to great wealth was not from poverty. It was not meteor-like, but accomplished over a quarter of a century by courageous venturing in a field so risky that most large capitalists avoided it, by arduous labors, and by more sagacious and farsighted planning than had been applied to any other American industry. The oil fortunes of 1894 were not larger than steel fortunes, banking fortunes, and railroad fortunes made in similar periods. But it is the assertion that the Standard magnates gained their wealth by appropriating "the property of others" that most challenges our attention. We have abundant evidence that Rockefeller's consistent policy was to offer fair terms to competitors and to buy them out, for cash, stock, or both, at fair appraisals; we have the statement of one impartial historian that Rockefeller was decidedly "more humane toward competitors" than Carnegie; we have the conclusion of another that his wealth was "the least tainted of all the great fortunes of his day."[137]

Hostile critics often portrayed Rockefeller as a villain with a suite of bad traits—ruthless, unscrupulous and greedy—and as a bully who connived his cruel path to dominance. Economic historian Robert Whaples warns against ignoring the secrets of his business success:

[R]elentless cost cutting and efficiency improvements, boldness in betting on the long-term prospects of the industry while others were willing to take quick profits, and impressive abilities to spot and reward talent, delegate tasks, and manage a growing empire.[138]

Biographer Ron Chernow wrote of Rockefeller:[139]

What makes him problematic—and why he continues to inspire ambivalent reactions—is that his good side was every bit as good as his bad side was bad. Seldom has history produced such a contradictory figure.[140]

Wealth

 
Rockefeller playing golf, 1932

Rockefeller is largely remembered simply for the raw size of his wealth. In 1902, an audit showed Rockefeller was worth about $200 million—compared to the total national GDP of $24 billion then.[141]

His wealth continued to grow significantly (in line with U.S. economic growth) as the demand for gasoline soared, eventually reaching about $900 million on the eve of the First World War, including significant interests in banking, shipping, mining, railroads, and other industries. His personal wealth was 900 million in 1913 worth 23.5 billion dollars adjusted for inflation in 2020.[142] According to his New York Times obituary, "it was estimated after Mr. Rockefeller retired from business that he had accumulated close to $1,500,000,000 out of the earnings of the Standard Oil trust and out of his other investments. This was probably the greatest amount of wealth that any private citizen had ever been able to accumulate by his own efforts."[143] By the time of his death in 1937, Rockefeller's remaining fortune, largely tied up in permanent family trusts, was estimated at $1.4 billion, while the total national GDP was $92 billion.[1] According to some methods of wealth calculation, Rockefeller's net worth over the last decades of his life would easily place him as the wealthiest known person in recent history. As a percentage of the United States' GDP, no other American fortune—including those of Bill Gates or Sam Walton—would even come close.[citation needed]

Rockefeller, aged 86, wrote the following words to sum up his life:[144]

I was early taught to work as well as play,
My life has been one long, happy holiday;
Full of work and full of play—
I dropped the worry on the way—
And God was good to me everyday.

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Fortune magazine lists the richest Americans by percentage of GDP, not by the changing value of the dollar. Rockefeller is credited with a Wealth/GDP of 165.[1]
  2. ^ That is, two years after the dissolution of Standard Oil.
  3. ^ At the height of Rockefeller's fame, Joseph Pulitzer offered a reward of $8,000 for information about his father. However, journalists could not find him before his death, and details of his bigamous marriage only became public after his death.[26] Abandoning his family around 1855, but remaining married to Eliza up to her death, Bill Rockefeller adopted the name William Levingston and contracted a bigamous marriage with Margaret L. Allen (1834–1910) in Norwich, Ontario. He died in 1906 and his tomb was paid from the property of his second wife.[27]

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General bibliography

  • Bringhurst, Bruce (May 10, 1979). Antitrust and the Oil Monopoly: The Standard Oil Cases, 1890–1911 (Contributions in Legal Studies). Praeger. ISBN 978-0-313-20642-9.
  • Chernow, Ron (1998). Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. Random House. ISBN 978-0-679-43808-3. Online via Internet Archive
  • Collier, Peter; Horowitz, David (1976). The Rockefellers: An American Dynasty. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston. ISBN 9780030083716.
  • Ernst, Joseph W., editor. "Dear Father"/"Dear Son": Correspondence of John D. Rockefeller and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. New York: Fordham University Press, with the Rockefeller Archive Center, 1994.
  • Folsom, Burton W. Jr. (2003). The Myth of the Robber Barons. New York: Young America.
  • Fosdick, Raymond B. (1989). The Story of the Rockefeller Foundation (reprint ed.). New York: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-88738-248-7.
  • Gates, Frederick Taylor. Chapters in My Life. New York: The Free Press, 1977.
  • Giddens, Paul H. Standard Oil Company (Companies and men). New York: Ayer Co. Publishing, 1976.
  • Goulder, Grace. John D. Rockefeller: The Cleveland Years. Western Reserve Historical Society, 1972.
  • Harr, John Ensor; Johnson, Peter J. (1988). The Rockefeller Century: Three Generations of America's Greatest Family. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • ———; Johnson, Peter J. (1992). The Rockefeller Conscience: An American Family in Public and in Private. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Hawke, David Freeman (1980), John D: The Founding Father of the Rockefellers, New York: Harper and Row
  • Hidy, Ralph W. and Muriel E. Hidy. History of Standard Oil Company (New Jersey: Pioneering in Big Business). New York: Ayer Co., reprint, 1987.
  • Hofstadter, Richard (1992) [1944]. Social Darwinism in American Thought, 1860–1915. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-5503-8.
  • Jonas, Gerald. The Circuit Riders: Rockefeller Money and the Rise of Modern Science. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1989.
  • Josephson, Matthew. The Robber Barons. London: Harcourt, 1962.
  • Kert, Bernice. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller: The Woman in the Family. New York: Random House, 1993.
  • Klein, Henry H. (2003) [1921]. Dynastic America and Those Who Own It. New York: Kessinger.
  • Klein, Henry (2005) [1921]. Dynastic America and Those Who Own It. Cosimo. ISBN 1-59605-671-1.
  • Knowlton, Evelyn H. and George S. Gibb. History of Standard Oil Company: Resurgent Years 1956.
  • Latham, Earl, ed. (1949). John D. Rockefeller: Robber Baron or Industrial Statesman?.
  • Manchester, William. A Rockefeller Family Portrait: From John D. to Nelson. New York: Little, Brown, 1958.
  • Morris, Charles R. The Tycoons: How Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Jay Gould, and J. P. Morgan Invented the American Supereconomy. New York: Owl Books, reprint, 2006.
  • Nevins, Allan (1940). John D. Rockefeller: The Heroic Age of American Enterprise. Favorable scholarly biography
  • Nevins, Allan (1953). Study in Power: John D. Rockefeller, Industrialist and Philanthropist. 2 vols. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Pyle, Tom, as told to Beth Day. Pocantico: Fifty Years on the Rockefeller Domain. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pierce, 1964.
  • Roberts, Ann Rockefeller. The Rockefeller Family Home: Kykuit. New York: Abbeville Publishing Group, 1998.
  • Rockefeller, John D. (1984) [1909]. Random Reminiscences of Men and Events. New York: Sleepy Hollow Press and Rockefeller Archive Center.
  • Public Diary of John D. Rockefeller, now found in the Cleveland Western Historical Society
  • Rose, Kenneth W.; Stapleton, Darwin H. (1992). "Toward a 'Universal Heritage': Education and the Development of Rockefeller Philanthropy, 1884–1913". Teachers College Record. 93 (3): 536–55. doi:10.1177/016146819209300315. ISSN 0161-4681. S2CID 151797425.
  • Sampson, Anthony (1975). The Seven Sisters: The Great Oil Companies and the World They Made. Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Scamehorn, H. Lee (1992a). "Chapter 1: The Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, 1892–1903". Mill and Mine: The CF&I in the Twentieth Century. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-4214-2.
  • Scamehorn, H. Lee (1992c). "Chapter 3: The Coal Miners' Strike of 1913–1914". Mill and Mine: The CF&I in the Twentieth Century. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 38–55. ISBN 978-0-8032-4214-2.
  • Segall, Grant (February 8, 2001). John D. Rockefeller: Anointed With Oil. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19512147-6. Retrieved December 19, 2012.
  • Stasz, Clarice (2000). The Rockefeller Women: Dynasty of Piety, Privacy, and Service. iUniverse. ISBN 978-1-58348-856-0.
  • Tarbell, Ida M. (1963) [1904]. The History of the Standard Oil Company. 2 vols. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith.
  • Williamson, Harold F.; Daum, Arnold R. (1959). The American Petroleum Industry: The Age of Illumination. (vol. 1); also vol 2, Williamson, Harold F.; Daum, Arnold R. (1964). American Petroleum Industry: The Age of Energy.
  • Yergin, Daniel (1991). The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4391-1012-6.

External links

  • John D. Rockefeller Biography
  • Works by John D. Rockefeller at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about John D. Rockefeller at Internet Archive
  • Works by John D. Rockefeller at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

john, rockefeller, other, people, named, disambiguation, john, davison, rockefeller, july, 1839, 1937, american, business, magnate, philanthropist, been, widely, considered, wealthiest, american, time, richest, person, modern, history, rockefeller, born, into,. For other people named John D Rockefeller see John D Rockefeller disambiguation John Davison Rockefeller Sr July 8 1839 May 23 1937 was an American business magnate and philanthropist He has been widely considered the wealthiest American of all time 1 2 and the richest person in modern history 3 4 Rockefeller was born into a large family in Upstate New York that moved several times before eventually settling in Cleveland He became an assistant bookkeeper at age 16 and went into several business partnerships beginning at age 20 concentrating his business on oil refining Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870 He ran it until 1897 and remained its largest shareholder John D RockefellerRockefeller in 1895BornJohn Davison Rockefeller 1839 07 08 July 8 1839Richford New York U S DiedMay 23 1937 1937 05 23 aged 97 Ormond Beach Florida U S Burial placeLake View Cemetery Cleveland 41 30 40 N 81 35 28 W 41 511 N 81 591 W 41 511 81 591OccupationsBusinessmanphilanthropistKnown forFounding and leading the Standard Oil CompanyFounding the University of Chicago Rockefeller University Central Philippine University General Education Board and Rockefeller FoundationPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseLaura Spelman m 1864 died 1915 wbr ChildrenElizabethAliceAltaEdithJohn Jr ParentsWilliam Rockefeller Sr Eliza DavisonRelativesRockefeller familyRockefeller s wealth soared as kerosene and gasoline grew in importance and he became the richest person in the country controlling 90 of all oil in the United States at his peak a Oil was used throughout the country as a light source until the introduction of electricity and as a fuel after the invention of the automobile Furthermore Rockefeller gained enormous influence over the railroad industry which transported his oil around the country Standard Oil was the first great business trust in the United States Rockefeller revolutionized the petroleum industry and through corporate and technological innovations was instrumental in both widely disseminating and drastically reducing the production cost of oil His company and business practices came under criticism particularly in the writings of author Ida Tarbell The Supreme Court ruled in 1911 that Standard Oil must be dismantled for violation of federal antitrust laws It was broken up into 34 separate entities which included companies that became ExxonMobil Chevron Corporation and others some of which still have the highest level of revenue in the world In the end it turned out that the individual segments of the company were worth more than the entire company was when it was one entity the sum of the parts were worth more than the whole as shares of these doubled and tripled in value in their early years Consequently Rockefeller became the country s first billionaire with a fortune worth nearly 2 of the national economy 5 His personal wealth was estimated in 1913 at 900 million which was almost 3 of the US GDP of 39 1 billion that year 6 full citation needed That was his peak net worth and amounts to US 24 7 billion in 2021 dollars inflation adjusted 7 page needed 8 b Rockefeller spent much of the last 40 years of his life in retirement at Kykuit his estate in Westchester County New York defining the structure of modern philanthropy along with other key industrialists such as steel magnate Andrew Carnegie 9 His fortune was mainly used to create the modern systematic approach of targeted philanthropy through the creation of foundations that had a major effect on medicine education and scientific research 10 His foundations pioneered developments in medical research and were instrumental in the near eradication of hookworm 11 and yellow fever 12 in the United States He and Carnegie gave form and impetus through their charities to the work of Abraham Flexner who in his essay Medical Education in America emphatically endowed empiricism as the basis for the US medical system of the 20th century 13 Rockefeller was also the founder of the University of Chicago and Rockefeller University and funded the establishment of Central Philippine University in the Philippines 14 15 16 He was a devout Northern Baptist and supported many church based institutions He adhered to total abstinence from alcohol and tobacco throughout his life 17 For advice he relied closely on his wife Laura Spelman Rockefeller with whom he had five children He was a faithful congregant of the Erie Street Baptist Mission Church taught Sunday school and served as a trustee clerk and occasional janitor 18 Religion was a guiding force throughout his life and he believed it to be the source of his success Rockefeller was also considered a supporter of capitalism based on a perspective of social Darwinism and he was quoted often as saying The growth of a large business is merely a survival of the fittest 19 20 Contents 1 Early life 2 Pre Standard Oil career 2 1 As a bookkeeper 2 2 Business partnership and Civil War service 2 3 Beginning in the oil business 3 Standard Oil 3 1 Founding and early growth 3 2 Monopoly 4 Colorado Fuel and Iron 4 1 Strike of 1913 14 and the Ludlow Massacre 5 Personal life 5 1 Family 5 2 Marriage 5 3 Religious views 6 Philanthropy 7 Florida home 8 Illnesses and death 9 Legacy 9 1 Wealth 10 See also 11 Explanatory notes 12 Citations 13 General bibliography 14 External linksEarly life Rockefeller s birthplace in Richford New York Rockefeller was the second child born in Richford New York to con artist William A Rockefeller Sr and Eliza Davison He had an elder sister named Lucy and four younger siblings William Jr Mary and twins Franklin Frank and Frances His father was of English and German descent while his mother was of Ulster Scot descent 21 William Sr was first a lumberman and then a traveling salesman who identified himself as a botanic physician who sold elixirs described by locals as Big Bill and Devil Bill 22 Unshackled by conventional morality he led a vagabond existence and returned to his family infrequently Throughout his life Bill was notorious for conducting schemes 23 In between the births of Lucy and John Bill and his mistress and housekeeper Nancy Brown had a daughter named Clorinda who died young Between John and William Jr s births Bill and Nancy had another daughter Cornelia 24 Eliza was a homemaker and a devout Baptist who struggled to maintain a semblance of stability at home as Bill was frequently gone for extended periods She also put up with his philandering and his double life which included bigamy 25 c Eliza was thrifty by nature and by necessity and she taught her son that willful waste makes woeful want 28 John did his share of the regular household chores and earned extra money raising turkeys selling potatoes and candy and eventually lending small sums of money to neighbors He followed his father s advice to trade dishes for platters and always get the better part of any deal Bill once bragged I cheat my boys every chance I get I want to make em sharp However his mother was more influential in his upbringing and beyond while he distanced himself further and further from his father as his life progressed 29 He later stated From the beginning I was trained to work to save and to give 30 When he was a boy his family moved to Moravia New York and to Owego New York in 1851 where he attended Owego Academy In 1853 his family moved to Strongsville Ohio and he attended Cleveland s Central High School the first high school in Cleveland and the first free public high school west of the Alleghenies Then he took a ten week business course at Folsom s Commercial College where he studied bookkeeping 31 He was a well behaved serious and studious boy despite his father s absences and frequent family moves His contemporaries described him as reserved earnest religious methodical and discreet He was an excellent debater and expressed himself precisely He also had a deep love of music and dreamed of it as a possible career 32 Pre Standard Oil careerAs a bookkeeper Rockefeller at age 18 In September 1855 when Rockefeller was sixteen he got his first job as an assistant bookkeeper working for a small produce commission firm in Cleveland called Hewitt amp Tuttle 33 He worked long hours and delighted as he later recalled in all the methods and systems of the office 34 He was particularly adept at calculating transportation costs which served him well later in his career Much of Rockefeller s duties involved negotiating with barge canal owners ship captains and freight agents In these negotiations he learned that posted transportation rates that were believed to be fixed could be altered depending on conditions and timing of freight and through the use of rebates to preferred shippers Rockefeller was also given the duties of collecting debts when Hewitt instructed him to do so Instead of using his father s method of presence to collect debts Rockefeller relied on a persistent pestering approach 35 Rockefeller received 16 a month for his three month apprenticeship During his first year he received 31 a month which was increased to 50 a month His final year provided him 58 a month 36 As a youth Rockefeller reportedly said that his two great ambitions were to make 100 000 equivalent to 2 91 million 37 in 2021 dollars and to live 100 years 38 Business partnership and Civil War service In 1859 Rockefeller went into the produce commission business with a partner Maurice B Clark and they raised 4 000 120 637 in 2021 dollars in capital Clark initiated the idea of the partnership and offered 2 000 towards the goal Rockefeller had only 800 saved up at the time and so borrowed 1 000 from his father Big Bill Rockefeller at 10 percent interest 39 Rockefeller went steadily ahead in business from there making money each year of his career 40 In their first and second years of business Clark amp Rockefeller netted 4 400 on nearly half a million dollars in business and 17 000 worth of profit respectively and their profits soared with the outbreak of the American Civil War when the Union Army called for massive amounts of food and supplies When the Civil War was nearing a close and with the prospect of those war time profits ending Clark amp Rockefeller looked toward the refining of crude oil 41 While his brother Frank fought in the Civil War Rockefeller tended his business and hired substitute soldiers He gave money to the Union cause as did many rich Northerners who avoided combat I wanted to go in the army and do my part Rockefeller said But it was simply out of the question There was no one to take my place We were in a new business and if I had not stayed it must have stopped and with so many dependent on it Rockefeller was an abolitionist who voted for President Abraham Lincoln and supported the then new Republican Party 42 As he said God gave me money and he did not apologize for it He felt at ease and righteous following Methodist preacher John Wesley s dictum gain all you can save all you can and give all you can 43 At that time the Federal government was subsidizing oil prices driving the price up from 35 a barrel in 1862 to as high as 13 75 44 This created an oil drilling glut with thousands of speculators attempting to make their fortunes Most failed but those who struck oil did not even need to be efficient They would blow holes in the ground and gather up the oil as they could often leading to creeks and rivers flowing with wasted oil in the place of water 45 A market existed for the refined oil in the form of kerosene Coal had previously been used to extract kerosene but its tedious extraction process and high price prevented broad use Even with the high costs of freight transportation and a government levy during the Civil War the government levied a tax of twenty cents a gallon on refined oil profits on the refined product were large The price of the refined oil in 1863 was around 13 a barrel with a profit margin of around 5 to 8 a barrel The capital expenditures for a refinery at that time were small around 1 000 to 1 500 and requiring only a few men to operate 46 In this environment of a wasteful boom the partners switched from foodstuffs to oil building an oil refinery in 1863 in The Flats then Cleveland s burgeoning industrial area The refinery was directly owned by Andrews Clark amp Company which was composed of Clark amp Rockefeller chemist Samuel Andrews and M B Clark s two brothers The commercial oil business was then in its infancy Whale oil had become too expensive for the masses and a cheaper general purpose lighting fuel was needed 47 While other refineries would keep the 60 of oil product that became kerosene but dump the other 40 in rivers and massive sludge piles 48 Rockefeller used the gasoline to fuel the refinery and sold the rest as lubricating oil petroleum jelly and paraffin wax and other by products Tar was used for paving naphtha shipped to gas plants 44 Likewise Rockefeller s refineries hired their own plumbers cutting the cost of pipe laying in half Barrels that cost 2 50 each ended up only 0 96 when Rockefeller bought the wood and had them built for himself citation needed In February 1865 in what was later described by oil industry historian Daniel Yergin as a critical action Rockefeller bought out the Clark brothers for 72 500 equivalent to 1 million 37 in 2021 dollars at auction and established the firm of Rockefeller amp Andrews Rockefeller said It was the day that determined my career 49 He was well positioned to take advantage of postwar prosperity and the great expansion westward fostered by the growth of railroads and an oil fueled economy He borrowed heavily reinvested profits adapted rapidly to changing markets and fielded observers to track the quickly expanding industry 50 Beginning in the oil business In 1866 William Rockefeller Jr John s brother built another refinery in Cleveland and brought John into the partnership In 1867 Henry Morrison Flagler became a partner and the firm of Rockefeller Andrews amp Flagler was established By 1868 with Rockefeller continuing practices of borrowing and reinvesting profits controlling costs and using refineries waste the company owned two Cleveland refineries and a marketing subsidiary in New York it was the largest oil refinery in the world 51 52 Rockefeller Andrews amp Flagler was the predecessor of the Standard Oil Company citation needed Standard OilMain article Standard Oil Founding and early growth Rockefeller c 1872 shortly after founding Standard Oil By the end of the American Civil War Cleveland was one of the five main refining centers in the U S besides Pittsburgh Pennsylvania New York and the region in northwestern Pennsylvania where most of the oil originated By 1869 there was triple the kerosene refining capacity than needed to supply the market and the capacity remained in excess for many years 53 On January 10 1870 Rockefeller abolished the partnership of Rockefeller Andrews amp Flagler 54 forming Standard Oil of Ohio Continuing to apply his work ethic and efficiency Rockefeller quickly expanded the company to be the most profitable refiner in Ohio Likewise it became one of the largest shippers of oil and kerosene in the country The railroads competed fiercely for traffic and in an attempt to create a cartel to control freight rates formed the South Improvement Company offering special deals to bulk customers like Standard Oil outside the main oil centers The cartel offered preferential treatment as a high volume shipper which included not just steep discounts rebates of up to 50 for their product but rebates for the shipment of competing products 55 Rockefeller in 1875 By then he shaved off his sideburns leaving his iconic mustache Share of the Standard Oil Company issued May 1 1878 56 Part of this scheme was the announcement of sharply increased freight charges This touched off a firestorm of protest from independent oil well owners including boycotts and vandalism which led to the discovery of Standard Oil s part in the deal A major New York refiner Charles Pratt and Company headed by Charles Pratt and Henry H Rogers led the opposition to this plan and railroads soon backed off Pennsylvania revoked the cartel s charter and non preferential rates were restored for the time being 57 While competitors may have been unhappy Rockefeller s efforts did bring American consumers cheaper kerosene and other oil by products Before 1870 oil light was only for the wealthy provided by expensive whale oil During the next decade kerosene became commonly available to the working and middle classes 48 Undeterred though vilified for the first time by the press Rockefeller continued with his self reinforcing cycle of buying the least efficient competing refiners improving the efficiency of his operations pressing for discounts on oil shipments undercutting his competition making secret deals raising investment pools and buying rivals out In less than four months in 1872 in what was later known as The Cleveland Conquest or The Cleveland Massacre Standard Oil absorbed 22 of its 26 Cleveland competitors 58 Eventually even his former antagonists Pratt and Rogers saw the futility of continuing to compete against Standard Oil in 1874 they made a secret agreement with Rockefeller to be acquired citation needed Standard Oil Trust Certificate 1896 Pratt and Rogers became Rockefeller s partners Rogers in particular became one of Rockefeller s key men in the formation of the Standard Oil Trust Pratt s son Charles Millard Pratt became secretary of Standard Oil For many of his competitors Rockefeller had merely to show them his books so they could see what they were up against and then make them a decent offer If they refused his offer he told them he would run them into bankruptcy and then cheaply buy up their assets at auction However he did not intend to eliminate competition entirely In fact his partner Pratt said of that accusation Competitors we must have If we absorb them it surely will bring up another 48 Instead of wanting to eliminate them Rockefeller saw himself as the industry s savior an angel of mercy absorbing the weak and making the industry as a whole stronger more efficient and more competitive 59 Standard was growing horizontally and vertically It added its own pipelines tank cars and home delivery network It kept oil prices low to stave off competitors made its products affordable to the average household and to increase market penetration sometimes sold below cost It developed over 300 oil based products from tar to paint to petroleum jelly to chewing gum By the end of the 1870s Standard was refining over 90 of the oil in the U S 60 Rockefeller had already become a millionaire 1 million is equivalent to 28 million 37 in 2021 dollars 61 He instinctively realized that orderliness would only proceed from centralized control of large aggregations of plant and capital with the one aim of an orderly flow of products from the producer to the consumer That orderly economic efficient flow is what we now many years later call vertical integration I do not know whether Mr Rockefeller ever used the word integration I only know he conceived the idea A Standard Oil of Ohio successor of Rockefeller 53 Standard Oil Refinery No 1 in Cleveland Ohio 1897 In 1877 Standard clashed with Thomas A Scott the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad Standard s chief hauler Rockefeller envisioned pipelines as an alternative transport system for oil and began a campaign to build and acquire them 62 The railroad seeing Standard s incursion into the transportation and pipeline fields struck back and formed a subsidiary to buy and build oil refineries and pipelines 63 Standard countered held back its shipments and with the help of other railroads started a price war that dramatically reduced freight payments and caused labor unrest Rockefeller prevailed and the railroad sold its oil interests to Standard In the aftermath of that battle the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania indicted Rockefeller in 1879 on charges of monopolizing the oil trade starting an avalanche of similar court proceedings in other states and making a national issue of Standard Oil s business practices 64 Rockefeller was under great strain during the 1870s and 1880s when he was carrying out his plan of consolidation and integration and being attacked by the press He complained that he could not stay asleep most nights Rockefeller later commented 53 All the fortune that I have made has not served to compensate me for the anxiety of that period Monopoly Portrait of John D Rockefeller by Eastman Johnson 1895 Although it always had hundreds of competitors Standard Oil gradually gained dominance of oil refining and sales as market share in the United States through horizontal integration ending up with about 90 of the US market 44 In the kerosene industry the company replaced the old distribution system with its own vertical system It supplied kerosene by tank cars that brought the fuel to local markets and tank wagons then delivered to retail customers thus bypassing the existing network of wholesale jobbers 65 Despite improving the quality and availability of kerosene products while greatly reducing their cost to the public the price of kerosene dropped by nearly 80 over the life of the company Standard Oil s business practices created intense controversy Standard s most potent weapons against competitors were underselling differential pricing and secret transportation rebates 66 The firm was attacked by journalists and politicians throughout its existence in part for these monopolistic methods giving momentum to the antitrust movement In 1879 the New York State Legislature s Hepburn Committee investigations into alleged abuses committed by the railroads uncovered the fact that Standard Oil was receiving substantial freight rebates on all of the oil it was transporting by railroad and was crushing Standard s competitors thereby 67 By 1880 according to the New York World Standard Oil was the most cruel impudent pitiless and grasping monopoly that ever fastened upon a country To critics Rockefeller replied In a business so large as ours some things are likely to be done which we cannot approve We correct them as soon as they come to our knowledge 68 At that time many legislatures had made it difficult to incorporate in one state and operate in another As a result Rockefeller and his associates owned dozens of separate corporations each of which operated in just one state the management of the whole enterprise was rather unwieldy In 1882 Rockefeller s lawyers created an innovative form of corporation to centralize their holdings giving birth to the Standard Oil Trust 69 The trust was a corporation of corporations and the entity s size and wealth drew much attention Nine trustees including Rockefeller ran the 41 companies in the trust 70 The public and the press were immediately suspicious of this new legal entity and other businesses seized upon the idea and emulated it further inflaming public sentiment Standard Oil had gained an aura of invincibility always prevailing against competitors critics and political enemies It had become the richest biggest most feared business in the world seemingly immune to the boom and bust of the business cycle consistently making profits year after year 71 The big corporations such as Standard Oil made large contributions to McKinley s presidential campaign The company s vast American empire included 20 000 domestic wells 4 000 miles of pipeline 5 000 tank cars and over 100 000 employees 71 Its share of world oil refining topped out above 90 but slowly dropped to about 80 for the rest of the century 72 Despite the formation of the trust and its perceived immunity from all competition by the 1880s Standard Oil had passed its peak of power over the world oil market Rockefeller finally gave up his dream of controlling all the world s oil refining he admitted later We realized that public sentiment would be against us if we actually refined all the oil 72 Over time foreign competition and new finds abroad eroded his dominance In the early 1880s Rockefeller created one of his most important innovations Rather than try to influence the price of crude oil directly Standard Oil had been exercising indirect control by altering oil storage charges to suit market conditions Rockefeller then ordered the issuance of certificates against oil stored in its pipelines These certificates became traded by speculators thus creating the first oil futures market which effectively set spot market prices from then on The National Petroleum Exchange opened in Manhattan in late 1882 to facilitate the trading of oil futures 73 Although 85 of world crude production was still coming from Pennsylvania in the 1880s oil from wells drilled in Russia and Asia began to reach the world market 74 Robert Nobel had established his own refining enterprise in the abundant and cheaper Russian oil fields including the region s first pipeline and the world s first oil tanker The Paris Rothschilds jumped into the fray providing financing 75 Additional fields were discovered in Burma and Java Even more critical the invention of the light bulb gradually began to erode the dominance of kerosene for illumination Standard Oil adapted by developing a European presence expanding into natural gas production in the U S and then producing gasoline for automobiles which until then had been considered a waste product 76 Fear of monopolies trusts is shown in this critique of Rockefeller s Standard Oil Company Standard Oil moved its headquarters to New York City at 26 Broadway and Rockefeller became a central figure in the city s business community He bought a residence in 1884 on 54th Street near the mansions of other magnates such as William Henry Vanderbilt Despite personal threats and constant pleas for charity Rockefeller took the new elevated train to his downtown office daily 77 In 1887 Congress created the Interstate Commerce Commission which was tasked with enforcing equal rates for all railroad freight but by then Standard depended more on pipeline transport 78 More threatening to Standard s power was the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 originally used to control unions but later central to the breakup of the Standard Oil trust Ohio was especially vigorous in applying its state antitrust laws and finally forced a separation of Standard Oil of Ohio from the rest of the company in 1892 the first step in the dissolution of the trust 79 Rockefeller as an industrial emperor 1901 cartoon from Puck magazine In the 1890s Rockefeller expanded into iron ore and ore transportation forcing a collision with steel magnate Andrew Carnegie and their competition became a major subject of the newspapers and cartoonists 80 He went on a massive buying spree acquiring leases for crude oil production in Ohio Indiana and West Virginia as the original Pennsylvania oil fields began to play out 81 Amid the frenetic expansion Rockefeller began to think of retirement The daily management of the trust was turned over to John Dustin Archbold and Rockefeller bought a new estate Pocantico Hills north of New York City turning more time to leisure activities including the new sports of bicycling and golf 82 Puck magazine cartoon The Infant Hercules and the Standard Oil serpents May 23 1906 issue depicting U S president Theodore Roosevelt grabbing the head of Nelson W Aldrich and the snake like body of John D Rockefeller Upon his ascent to the presidency Theodore Roosevelt initiated dozens of suits under the Sherman Antitrust Act and coaxed reforms out of Congress In 1901 U S Steel then controlled by J Pierpont Morgan having bought Andrew Carnegie s steel assets offered to buy Standard s iron interests as well A deal brokered by Henry Clay Frick exchanged Standard s iron interests for U S Steel stock and gave Rockefeller and his son membership on the company s board of directors In full retirement at age 63 Rockefeller earned over 58 million in investments in 1902 83 One of the most effective attacks on Rockefeller and his firm was the 1904 publication of The History of the Standard Oil Company by Ida Tarbell a leading muckraker She documented the company s espionage price wars heavy handed marketing tactics and courtroom evasions 84 Although her work prompted a huge backlash against the company Tarbell stated she was surprised at its magnitude I never had an animus against their size and wealth never objected to their corporate form I was willing that they should combine and grow as big and wealthy as they could but only by legitimate means But they had never played fair and that ruined their greatness for me Tarbell s father had been driven out of the oil business during the South Improvement Company affair citation needed Rockefeller called her Miss Tarbarrel in private but held back in public saying only not a word about that misguided woman 84 He began a publicity campaign to put his company and himself in a better light Though he had long maintained a policy of active silence with the press he decided to make himself more accessible and responded with conciliatory comments such as capital and labor are both wild forces which require intelligent legislation to hold them in restriction He wrote and published his memoirs beginning in 1908 Critics found his writing to be sanitized and disingenuous and thought that statements such as the underlying essential element of success in business are to follow the established laws of high class dealing seemed to be at odds with his true business methods 85 Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis wags his pen at John D Rockefeller who is sitting in the witness stand during the Standard Oil case on July 6 1907 Rockefeller and his son continued to consolidate their oil interests as best they could until New Jersey in 1909 changed its incorporation laws to effectively allow a re creation of the trust in the form of a single holding company Rockefeller retained his nominal title as president until 1911 and he kept his stock At last in 1911 the Supreme Court of the United States found Standard Oil Company of New Jersey in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act By then the trust still had a 70 market share of the refined oil market but only 14 of the U S crude oil supply 86 The court ruled that the trust originated in illegal monopoly practices and ordered it to be broken up into 34 new companies These included among many others Continental Oil which became Conoco now part of ConocoPhillips Standard of Indiana which became Amoco now part of BP Standard of California which became Chevron Standard of New Jersey which became Esso and later Exxon now part of ExxonMobil Standard of New York which became Mobil now part of ExxonMobil and Standard of Ohio which became Sohio now part of BP Pennzoil and Chevron have remained separate companies 87 Rockefeller c 1914 By then his moustache had fallen off due to alopecia Rockefeller who had rarely sold shares held over 25 of Standard s stock at the time of the breakup 88 He and all of the other stockholders received proportionate shares in each of the 34 companies In the aftermath Rockefeller s control over the oil industry was somewhat reduced but over the next 10 years the breakup proved immensely profitable for him The companies combined net worth rose fivefold and Rockefeller s personal wealth jumped to 900 million 86 Colorado Fuel and IronIn 1902 facing cash flow problems John Cleveland Osgood turned to George Jay Gould a principal stockholder of the Denver and Rio Grande for a loan 89 Gould via Frederick Taylor Gates Rockefeller s financial adviser brought John D Rockefeller in to help finance the loan 90 Analysis of the company s operations by John D Rockefeller Jr showed a need for substantially more funds which were provided in exchange for acquisition of CF amp I s subsidiaries such as the Colorado and Wyoming Railway Company the Crystal River Railroad Company and possibly the Rocky Mountain Coal and Iron Company Control was passed from the Iowa Group 91 to Gould and Rockefeller interests in 1903 with Gould in control and Rockefeller and Gates representing a minority interests Osgood left the company in 1904 and devoted his efforts to operating competing coal and coke operations 92 Strike of 1913 14 and the Ludlow Massacre Main article Ludlow Massacre The strike called in September 1913 by the United Mine Workers over the issue of union representation was against coal mine operators in Huerfano and Las Animas counties of southern Colorado where the majority of CF amp I s coal and coke production was located The strike was fought vigorously by the coal mine operators association and its steering committee which included Welborn president of CF amp I a spokesman for the coal operators Rockefeller s operative Lamont Montgomery Bowers 93 remained in the background Few miners actually belonged to the union or participated in the strike call but the majority honored it Strikebreakers called scabs were threatened and sometimes attacked Both sides purchased substantial arms and ammunition Striking miners were forced to abandon their homes in company towns and lived in tent cities erected by the union such as the tent city at Ludlow a railway stop north of Trinidad 94 Under the protection of the National Guard some miners returned to work and some strikebreakers imported from the eastern coalfields joined them as Guard troops protecting their movements In February 1914 a substantial portion of the troops were withdrawn but a large contingent remained at Ludlow On April 20 1914 a general fire fight occurred between strikers and troops which was antagonized by the troops and mine guards The camp was burned resulting in 15 women and children who hid in tents at the camp being burned to death 94 95 Costs to both mine operators and the union were high This incident brought unwanted national attention to Colorado Due to reduced demand for coal resulting from an economic downturn many of CF amp I s coal mines never reopened and many men were thrown out of work The union was forced to discontinue strike benefits in February 1915 There was destitution in the coalfields With the help of funds from the Rockefeller Foundation relief programs were organized by the Colorado Committee on Unemployment and Relief A state agency created by Governor Carlson offered work to unemployed miners building roads and doing other useful projects 94 The casualties suffered at Ludlow mobilized public opinion against the Rockefellers and the coal industry The United States Commission on Industrial Relations conducted extensive hearings singling out John D Rockefeller Jr and the Rockefellers relationship with Bowers for special attention Bowers was relieved of duty and Wellborn restored to control in 1915 then industrial relations improved 94 Rockefeller denied any responsibility and minimized the seriousness of the event 96 When testifying on the Ludlow Massacre and asked what action he would have taken as Director John D Rockefeller Jr stated I would have taken no action I would have deplored the necessity which compelled the officers of the company to resort to such measures to supplement the State forces to maintain law and order He admitted that he had made no attempt to bring the militiamen to justice 97 Personal lifeFamily Further information Rockefeller family Against long circulating speculations that his family has French roots genealogists proved the German origin of Rockefeller and traced them back to the early 17th century Johann Peter Rockenfeller baptized September 27 1682 in the Protestant church of Rengsdorf immigrated in 1723 from Altwied today a district of Neuwied Rhineland Palatinate with three children to North America and settled down in Germantown Pennsylvania 98 99 The name Rockenfeller refers to the now abandoned village of Rockenfeld in the district of Neuwied citation needed Marriage Kykuit in Westchester County New York where Rockefeller spent his retirement It has been home to four generations of the Rockefeller family In 1864 Rockefeller married Laura Celestia Cettie Spelman 1839 1915 daughter of Harvey Buell Spelman and Lucy Henry They had four daughters and one son together He said later Her judgment was always better than mine Without her keen advice I would be a poor man 40 Elizabeth Bessie Rockefeller August 23 1866 November 14 1906 Alice Rockefeller July 14 1869 August 20 1870 Alta Rockefeller April 12 1871 June 21 1962 Edith Rockefeller August 31 1872 August 25 1932 John Davison Rockefeller Jr January 29 1874 May 11 1960 The Rockefeller wealth distributed as it was through a system of foundations and trusts continued to fund family philanthropic commercial and eventually political aspirations throughout the 20th century John Jr s youngest son David Rockefeller was a leading New York banker serving for over 20 years as CEO of Chase Manhattan now part of JPMorgan Chase Second son Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller was Republican governor of New York and the 41st Vice President of the United States Fourth son Winthrop Aldrich Rockefeller served as Republican Governor of Arkansas Grandchildren Abigail Aldrich Abby Rockefeller and John Davison Rockefeller III became philanthropists Grandson Laurance Spelman Rockefeller became a conservationist Great grandson John Davison Jay Rockefeller IV served from 1985 until 2015 as a Democratic Senator from West Virginia after serving as governor of West Virginia 100 and another Winthrop served as lieutenant governor of Arkansas for a decade Religious views The Euclid Avenue Baptist Church and its pastor the Rev Dr Charles Aubrey Eaton in 1904 John D Rockefeller was born in Richford New York then part of the Burned over district a New York state region that became the site of an evangelical revival known as the Second Great Awakening It drew masses to various Protestant churches especially Baptist ones and urged believers to follow such ideals as hard work prayer and good deeds to build the Kingdom of God on Earth Early in his life he regularly went with his siblings and mother Eliza to the local Baptist church the Erie Street Baptist Church later the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church an independent Baptist church which eventually came to associate with the Northern Baptist Convention 1907 1950 modern American Baptist Churches USA citation needed His mother was deeply religious and disciplined and had a major influence on him in religious matters During church service his mother would urge him to contribute his few pennies to the congregation He came to associate the church with charity A Baptist preacher once encouraged him to make as much money as he could and then give away as much as he could 101 Later in his life Rockefeller recalled It was at this moment that the financial plan of my life was formed Money making was considered by him a God given gift 101 A devout Northern Baptist Rockefeller would read the Bible daily attend prayer meetings twice a week and even led his own Bible study with his wife Burton Folsom Jr has noted H e sometimes gave tens of thousands of dollars to Christian groups while at the same time he was trying to borrow over a million dollars to expand his business His philosophy of giving was founded upon biblical principles He truly believed in the biblical principle found in Luke 6 38 Give and it will be given to you A good measure pressed down shaken together and running over will be poured into your lap For with the measure you use it will be measured to you 101 Rockefeller would support Baptist missionary activity fund universities and heavily engage in religious activities at his Cleveland Ohio church While traveling the South he would donate large sums of money to churches belonging to the Southern Baptist Convention various Black churches as well as other Christian denominations He paid towards the freedom of two slaves 102 and donated to a Roman Catholic orphanage As he grew rich his donations became more generous especially to his church in Cleveland nevertheless it was demolished in 1925 and replaced with another building 101 Philanthropy Rockefeller in 1911 Rockefeller s charitable giving began with his first job as a clerk at age 16 when he gave six percent of his earnings to charity as recorded in his personal ledger By the time he was twenty his charity exceeded ten percent of his income Much of his giving was church related 27 His church was later affiliated with the Northern Baptist Convention which formed from American Baptists in the North with ties to their historic missions to establish schools and colleges for freedmen in the South after the American Civil War Rockefeller attended Baptist churches every Sunday when traveling he would often attend services at African American Baptist congregations leaving a substantial donation 27 As Rockefeller s wealth grew so did his giving primarily to educational and public health causes but also for basic science and the arts He was advised primarily by Frederick Taylor Gates 103 after 1891 104 and after 1897 also by his son Rockefeller with his son John Jr 1915 Rockefeller believed in the Efficiency Movement arguing that To help an inefficient ill located unnecessary school is a waste it is highly probable that enough money has been squandered on unwise educational projects to have built up a national system of higher education adequate to our needs if the money had been properly directed to that end 105 Rockefeller and his advisers invented the conditional grant which required the recipient to root the institution in the affections of as many people as possible who as contributors become personally concerned and thereafter may be counted on to give to the institution their watchful interest and cooperation 106 In 1884 Rockefeller provided major funding for Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary in Atlanta for African American women which became Spelman College 107 His wife Laura Spelman Rockefeller was dedicated to civil rights and equality for women 108 John and Laura donated money and supported the Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary whose mission was in line with their faith based beliefs Today known as Spelman College the school is an all women Historically Black College or University in Atlanta Georgia named after Laura s family The Spelman Family Rockefeller s in laws along with John Rockefeller were ardent abolitionists before the Civil War and were dedicated to supporting the Underground Railroad 108 John Rockefeller was impressed by the vision of the school and removed the debt from the school The oldest existing building on Spelman s campus Rockefeller Hall is named after him 109 Rockefeller also gave considerable donations to Denison University 110 and other Baptist colleges University of Chicago view from the Midway Plaisance Central Philippine University in the Iloilo City was founded by the American Baptist missionaries through the benevolence as a legacy university of John D Rockefeller in 1905 It is the first Baptist and second American university in Asia Rockefeller gave 80 million to the University of Chicago 111 under William Rainey Harper turning a small Baptist college into a world class institution by 1900 He would describe the University of Chicago as the best investment I ever made He also gave a grant to the American Baptist Missionaries foreign mission board the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society in establishing Central Philippine University the first Baptist and second American university in Asia in 1905 in the heavily Catholic Philippines 112 113 16 14 15 Rockefeller s General Education Board founded in 1903 114 was established to promote education at all levels everywhere in the country 115 In keeping with the historic missions of the Baptists it was especially active in supporting black schools in the South 115 Rockefeller also provided financial support to such established eastern institutions as Yale Harvard Columbia Brown Bryn Mawr Wellesley and Vassar On Gates advice Rockefeller became one of the first great benefactors of medical science In 1901 he founded the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research 114 in New York City It changed its name to Rockefeller University in 1965 after expanding its mission to include graduate education 116 It claims a connection to 23 Nobel laureates 117 He founded the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission in 1909 114 an organization that eventually eradicated the hookworm disease 118 which had long plagued rural areas of the American South His General Education Board made a dramatic impact by funding the recommendations of the Flexner Report of 1910 citation needed The study an excerpt of which was published in The Atlantic 13 had been undertaken by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching citation needed Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York City c 1912 Rockefeller created the Rockefeller Foundation in 1913 119 to continue and expand the scope of the work of the Sanitary Commission 114 which was closed in 1915 120 He gave 182 million to the foundation 107 which focused on public health medical training and the arts It endowed Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health 114 the first of its kind 121 It also built the Peking Union Medical College in China into a notable institution 110 The foundation helped in World War I war relief 122 and it employed William Lyon Mackenzie King of Canada to study industrial relations 123 In the 1920s the Rockefeller Foundation funded a hookworm eradication campaign through the International Health Division This campaign used a combination of politics and science along with collaboration between healthcare workers and government officials to accomplish its goals 124 Rockefeller s fourth main philanthropy the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Foundation was created in 1918 125 Through this he supported work in the social studies this was later absorbed into the Rockefeller Foundation In total Rockefeller donated about 530 million 126 Rockefeller in old age Rockefeller became well known in his later life for the practice of giving dimes to adults and nickels to children wherever he went He even gave dimes as a playful gesture to wealthy men such as tire mogul Harvey Firestone 127 Rockefeller supported the passage of the 18th Amendment which banned alcohol in the United States He wrote in a letter to Nicholas Murray Butler on June 6 1932 that his neither Rockefeller nor his parents or his father s father and mother s mother drank alcohol In the same letter Rockefeller writes that he has always stood for whatever measure seemed at the time to give promise of promoting temperance He believed that measure to be prohibition as he and his father donated 350 000 to all branches of the Anti Saloon League Federal and State But by 1932 Rockefeller felt disillusioned by prohibition because of its failure to discourage drinking and alcoholism He supported the incorporation of repealing the 18th amendment into the Republican party platform 128 Florida home The Casements in Ormond Beach Florida Henry Morrison Flagler one of the co founders of Standard Oil along with Rockefeller bought the Ormond Hotel in 1890 located in Ormond Beach Florida two years after it opened Flagler expanded it to accommodate 600 guests and the hotel soon became one in a series of Gilded Age hotels catering to passengers aboard Flagler s Florida East Coast Railway One of Flagler s guests at the Ormond Hotel was his former business partner John D Rockefeller who first stayed at the hotel in 1914 Rockefeller liked the Ormond Beach area so much that after four seasons at the hotel he bought an estate in Ormond Beach called The Casements 129 130 It would be Rockefeller s winter home during the latter part of his life Sold by his heirs in 1939 131 it was purchased by the city in 1974 and now serves as a cultural center and is the community s best known historical structure 132 Illnesses and death Rockefeller in 1922 In his 50s Rockefeller suffered from moderate depression and digestive troubles during a stressful period in the 1890s he developed alopecia the loss of some or all body hair 133 By 1901 he began wearing toupees and by 1902 his mustache disappeared His hair never grew back but other health complaints subsided as he lightened his workload 134 Rockefeller s grave in Lake View Cemetery Cleveland Rockefeller died of arteriosclerosis on May 23 1937 less than two months shy of his 98th birthday 135 at The Casements his home in Ormond Beach Florida He was buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland 136 LegacyExternal video Booknotes interview with Ron Chernow on Titan The Life of John D Rockefeller Sr June 21 1998 C SPAN John D Rockefeller s painting by John Singer Sargent in 1917 Rockefeller had a long and controversial career in the oil industry followed by a long career in philanthropy His image is an amalgam of all of these experiences and the many ways he was viewed by his contemporaries These contemporaries include his former competitors many of whom were driven to ruin but many others of whom sold out at a profit or a profitable stake in Standard Oil as Rockefeller often offered his shares as payment for a business and quite a few of whom became very wealthy as managers as well as owners in Standard Oil They include politicians and writers some of whom served Rockefeller s interests and some of whom built their careers by fighting Rockefeller and the robber barons Biographer Allan Nevins answering Rockefeller s enemies concluded The rise of the Standard Oil men to great wealth was not from poverty It was not meteor like but accomplished over a quarter of a century by courageous venturing in a field so risky that most large capitalists avoided it by arduous labors and by more sagacious and farsighted planning than had been applied to any other American industry The oil fortunes of 1894 were not larger than steel fortunes banking fortunes and railroad fortunes made in similar periods But it is the assertion that the Standard magnates gained their wealth by appropriating the property of others that most challenges our attention We have abundant evidence that Rockefeller s consistent policy was to offer fair terms to competitors and to buy them out for cash stock or both at fair appraisals we have the statement of one impartial historian that Rockefeller was decidedly more humane toward competitors than Carnegie we have the conclusion of another that his wealth was the least tainted of all the great fortunes of his day 137 Hostile critics often portrayed Rockefeller as a villain with a suite of bad traits ruthless unscrupulous and greedy and as a bully who connived his cruel path to dominance Economic historian Robert Whaples warns against ignoring the secrets of his business success R elentless cost cutting and efficiency improvements boldness in betting on the long term prospects of the industry while others were willing to take quick profits and impressive abilities to spot and reward talent delegate tasks and manage a growing empire 138 Biographer Ron Chernow wrote of Rockefeller 139 What makes him problematic and why he continues to inspire ambivalent reactions is that his good side was every bit as good as his bad side was bad Seldom has history produced such a contradictory figure 140 Wealth Rockefeller playing golf 1932 Rockefeller is largely remembered simply for the raw size of his wealth In 1902 an audit showed Rockefeller was worth about 200 million compared to the total national GDP of 24 billion then 141 His wealth continued to grow significantly in line with U S economic growth as the demand for gasoline soared eventually reaching about 900 million on the eve of the First World War including significant interests in banking shipping mining railroads and other industries His personal wealth was 900 million in 1913 worth 23 5 billion dollars adjusted for inflation in 2020 142 According to his New York Times obituary it was estimated after Mr Rockefeller retired from business that he had accumulated close to 1 500 000 000 out of the earnings of the Standard Oil trust and out of his other investments This was probably the greatest amount of wealth that any private citizen had ever been able to accumulate by his own efforts 143 By the time of his death in 1937 Rockefeller s remaining fortune largely tied up in permanent family trusts was estimated at 1 4 billion while the total national GDP was 92 billion 1 According to some methods of wealth calculation Rockefeller s net worth over the last decades of his life would easily place him as the wealthiest known person in recent history As a percentage of the United States GDP no other American fortune including those of Bill Gates or Sam Walton would even come close citation needed Rockefeller aged 86 wrote the following words to sum up his life 144 I was early taught to work as well as play My life has been one long happy holiday Full of work and full of play I dropped the worry on the way And God was good to me everyday See alsoAllegheny Transportation Company Duluth Missabe and Northern Railway Ivy Lee List of German Americans Rockefeller s Mesabi Range InterestsExplanatory notes Fortune magazine lists the richest Americans by percentage of GDP not by the changing value of the dollar Rockefeller is credited with a Wealth GDP of 1 65 1 That is two years after the dissolution of Standard Oil At the height of Rockefeller s fame Joseph Pulitzer offered a reward of 8 000 for information about his father However journalists could not find him before his death and details of his bigamous marriage only became public after his death 26 Abandoning his family around 1855 but remaining married to Eliza up to her death Bill Rockefeller adopted the name William Levingston and contracted a bigamous marriage with Margaret L Allen 1834 1910 in Norwich Ontario He died in 1906 and his tomb was paid from the property of his second wife 27 Citations a b c The Richest Americans Fortune CNN Retrieved March 25 2016 The Wealthiest Americans Ever The New York Times July 15 2007 Retrieved July 17 2007 Top 10 Richest Men of All Time AskMen com Retrieved May 29 2007 The Rockefellers PBS Archived from the original on January 26 2012 Retrieved May 29 2007 Nicholas Tom Fouka Vasiliki John D Rockefeller The Richest Man in the World hbs edu President amp Fellows of Harvard College Retrieved April 22 2022 US Gross Domestic Product 1913 1939 Stuck on Stupid U S Economy http www usstuckonstupid com sos charts php gdp Archived June 2 2021 at the Wayback Machine Hanson Elizabeth January 2000 The Rockefeller University Achievements A Century of Science for the Benefit of Humankind 1901 2001 The Rockefeller University Press ISBN 9780874700312 10 richest people in the entire history fbacs com accessed October 21 2016 Daniel Gross July 2 2006 Giving It Away Then and Now The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved March 8 2017 Fosdick 1989 p page needed Eradicating Hookworm Rockefeller Archive Center Archived from the original on February 23 2017 Retrieved March 8 2017 Hookworm Exporting a Campaign Rockefeller Archive Center Archived from the original on March 20 2017 Retrieved March 8 2017 a b GRITZ JENNIE ROTHENBERG June 23 2011 The Man Who Invented Medical School The Atlantic a b A walk through the beautiful Central Retrieved August 5 2019 a b Weekly Centralian Link June 15 2018 CPU holds Faculty and Staff Conference 2018 Retrieved August 5 2019 a b Facts about Central Retrieved September 5 2019 Martin Albro 1999 John D Rockefeller Encyclopedia Americana vol 23 Chernow 1998 p 52 Hofstadter 1992 p 45 Schultz Duane P Schultz Sydney Ellen A History of Modern Psychology p 128 Chernow 1998 p 7 A prudent straitlaced Baptist of Scotch Irish descent deeply attached to his daughter John Davison must have sensed the world of trouble that awaited Eliza Chernow 1998 p 11 Chernow 1998 p 6 Chernow 1998 Chapter one The Flimflam Man via New York Times Chernow 1998 p 43 John T Flynn 1932 God s Gold The Story of Rockefeller and His Times PDF New York Harcourt Brace And Company p 467 ISBN 978 0 837 15588 3 Retrieved August 28 2013 a b c Chernow 1998 pp 50 235 Segall 2001 p 14 Segall 2001 pp 15 16 The Philanthropists John D Rockefeller Tim Challies October 13 2013 Coffey Ellen Greenman Shuker Nancy 1989 John D Rockefeller empire builder Silver Burdett pp 18 30 Chernow 1998 p 40 John D Rockefeller Biography Facts amp Death Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved August 24 2017 Chernow 1998 p 46 Hawke 1980 pp 23 24 Hawke 1980 p 22 a b c 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Stevens Mark 2008 Rich is a Religion Breaking the Timeless Code to Wealth John Wiley amp Sons p 135 ISBN 978 0 470 25287 1 Hawke 1980 p 26 a b Segall 2001 p 25 Hawke 1980 pp 29 36 Segall 2001 pp 24 28 Chernow 1998 pp 54 55 a b c Folsom 2003 Chapter 5 John D Rockefeller and the Oil Industry Williamson amp Daum 1959 pp 82 194 Hawke 1980 pp 31 32 Chernow 1998 pp 73 74 a b c Nevins 1940 pp 183 185 197 198 Segall 2001 p 32 Segall 2001 pp 32 35 People amp Events John D Rockefeller Senior 1839 1937 PBS Archived from the original on December 16 2000 Retrieved June 10 2008 Our History ExxonMobil Archived from the original on November 12 2008 Retrieved June 10 2008 a b c Yergin 1991 p page needed Chernow 1998 p 132 Segall 2001 p 42 Udo Hielscher Historische amerikanische Aktien p 68 74 ISBN 3921722063 Segall 2001 p 43 Segall 2001 p 44 Segall 2001 p 46 Segall 2001 pp 48 49 Segall 2001 p 52 Chernow 1998 p 171 Segall 2001 p 57 Segall 2001 p 58 Chernow 1998 p 253 Chernow 1998 p 258 Proceedings of the Special Committee on Railroads Appointed under a resolution of the Assembly to investigate alleged abuses in the Management of Railroads chartered by the State of New York Vol I 1879 Internet Archive New York State Legislature 1879 Retrieved February 11 2022 Resolved That a special Committee of five afterwards increased to nine persons be appointed with power to send for persons and papers and to employ a stenographer whose duty it shall be to investigate the abuses alleged to exist in the management of the railroads chartered by this State and to inquire into and report concerning their powers contracts and obligations said Committee to take testimony in the city of New York and such other places as they may deem necessary and to report to the Legislature either at the present or the next session by bill or otherwise what if any legislation is necessary to protect and extend the commercial and industrial interests of the State Composed of Messrs HEPBURN HUSTED DUGUID LOW GRADY NOYES WADSWORTH TERRY and BAKER met at the Capitol in the City of Albany on Wednesday March 26th 1879 at 3 o clock P M and was called to order by the Chairman Segall 2001 p 60 John D Rockefeller history com Retrieved August 24 2017 Segall 2001 p 61 a b Chernow 1998 p 249 a b Segall 2001 p 67 Chernow 1998 p 259 Chernow 1998 p 242 Chernow 1998 p 246 Segall 2001 p 68 Segall 2001 pp 62 63 Rockefeller 1984 p 48 Segall 2001 p 69 Segall 2001 p 77 Chernow 1998 p 287 Segall 2001 pp 79 80 Segall 2001 p 84 a b Segall 2001 p 89 Segall 2001 p 91 a b Segall 2001 p 93 Segall 2001 p 112 Chernow 1998 p 333 Scamehorn 1992a p 17 Scamehorn 1992a p 18 Scamehorn 1992a p 19 Scamehorn 1992a p 20 Lamont Montgomery Bowers Retrieved March 3 2016 a b c d Scamehorn 1992c Militia slaughters strikers at Ludlow Colorado History com Retrieved November 9 2015 The Ludlow Massacre PBS Retrieved November 9 2015 Rockefeller Says He Tries To Be Fair The New York Times May 21 1915 Chernow 1998 pp 3 10 Scheiffarth Engelbert 1969 Der New Yorker Gouverneur Nelson A Rockefeller und die Rockefeller im Neuwieder Raum Genealogisches Jahrbuch in German 9 16 41 Rockefeller John Davison IV Jay Biographical Directory of the United States Congress 2015 Retrieved February 15 2015 a b c d Rockefellers documentary full citation needed Segall 2001 p 24 Coon Horace 1990 Money to burn great American foundations and their money Transaction Publishers p 27 ISBN 0 88738 334 3 Creager Angela 2002 The life of a virus tobacco mosaic virus as an experimental model 1930 1965 The University of Chicago Press p 42 ISBN 0 226 12025 2 Rockefeller 1984 p 69 Rockefeller 1984 p 183 a b Weir Robert 2007 Class in America Q Z Greenwood Press p 713 ISBN 978 0 313 34245 5 a b Laughlin Rosemary 2001 John D Rockefeller Oil Baron and Philanthropist Biography Reference Center EBSCO Miller Bernal Leslie 2006 Challenged by coeducation women s colleges since the 1960s Vanderbilt University Press p 235 ISBN 0 8265 1542 8 a b Fosdick 1989 pp 5 88 Dobell Byron 1985 A Sense of history the best writing from the pages of American heritage American Heritage Press p 457 ISBN 0 8281 1175 8 WO Valentine The Centennial Echo brief biography Central Philippine University 2004 archived from the original on October 31 2003 retrieved January 26 2013 Founder s Day Celebration Central Philippine University October 1 2005 archived from the original on July 22 2011 retrieved January 16 2013 a b c d e Brison Jeffrey David 2005 Rockefeller Carnegie and Canada American philanthropy and the arts and the arts and letters in Canada McGill Queen s University Press pp 27 31 62 ISBN 0 7735 2868 7 a b Jones Wilson Faustine Childress 1996 Encyclopedia of African American education Greenwood Press p 184 ISBN 0 313 28931 X Unger Harlow 2007 Encyclopedia of American Education A to E Infobase Publishing p 949 ISBN 978 0 8160 6887 6 Beaver Robyn 2008 KlingStubbins palimpsest Images Publishing p 334 ISBN 978 1 86470 295 8 Hotez Peter 2008 Forgotten people forgotten diseases the neglected tropical diseases and their impact on global health and development ASM Press p 20 ISBN 978 1 55581 440 3 Klein 2005 p 143 Sealander Judith 1997 Private wealth amp public life foundation philanthropy and the reshaping of American soclial policy from the Progressive Era to the New Deal The Johns Hopkins University Press p 58 ISBN 0 8018 5460 1 Freeman A W July 1922 The Rotarian p 20 Schneider William Howard 1922 Rockefeller philanthropy and modern biomedicine international initiatives from World War I to Cold War Indiana University Press p 11 ISBN 0 253 34151 5 Prewitt Kenneth Dogan Mettei Heydmann Steven Toepler Stefan 2006 The legitimacy of philanthropic foundations United States and European perspectives Russell Sage Foundation p 68 ISBN 0 87154 696 5 Birn Anne Emanuelle Solorzano Armando 1999 Public health policy paradoxes science and politics in the Rockefeller Foundation s hookworm campaign in Mexico in the 1920s Social Science amp Medicine 49 9 1197 1213 doi 10 1016 S0277 9536 99 00160 4 PMID 10501641 Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Foundation Famento Archived from the original on October 6 2011 Retrieved April 21 2011 The Philanthropy Hall of Fame John D Rockefeller Sr profile philanthropyroundtable org accessed October 21 2016 Chernow 1998 pp 613 14 Text of Rockefeller s Letter to Dr Butler The New York Times June 7 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 29 2022 Stasz 2000 p 209 Chernow 1998 p 610 History Ormond Beach Retrieved May 29 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link History of the House and The Guild The Casements n d Retrieved May 30 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link John D Rockefeller Sr and family timeline PBS Retrieved June 19 2013 John D Rockefeller Infinitely Ruthless Profoundly Charitable HistoryAccess com Archived from the original on September 26 2016 Retrieved June 19 2013 Carmichael Evan The Richest Man In History Rockefeller is Born Archived from the original on September 1 2010 Retrieved September 11 2010 Old Home Visited By Rockefellers The Plain Dealer May 28 1937 p 4 Latham 1949 p 104 Robert Whaples Review of Doran Breaking Rockefeller The Incredible Story of the Ambitious Rivals Who Toppled an Oil Empire EH Net July 2016 Visser Wayne 2011 The Age of Responsibility CSR 2 0 and the New DNA of Business John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781119973386 Retrieved July 19 2014 Chernow 1998 US GDP Measuring Worth Retrieved September 11 2010 United States Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics historical inflation calculator Financier s Fortune in Oil Amassed in Industrial Era of Rugged Individualism archive nytimes com Retrieved February 7 2020 Rockefeller PDF ANBHF Retrieved September 11 2010 General bibliographyThis article lacks ISBNs for the books listed in it Please make it easier to conduct research by listing ISBNs If the Cite book or Citation templates are in use you may add ISBNs automatically or discuss this issue on the talk page May 2021 Bringhurst Bruce May 10 1979 Antitrust and the Oil Monopoly The Standard Oil Cases 1890 1911 Contributions in Legal Studies Praeger ISBN 978 0 313 20642 9 Chernow Ron 1998 Titan The Life of John D Rockefeller Sr Random House ISBN 978 0 679 43808 3 Online via Internet Archive Collier Peter Horowitz David 1976 The Rockefellers An American Dynasty New York Holt Rinehart amp Winston ISBN 9780030083716 Ernst Joseph W editor Dear Father Dear Son Correspondence of John D Rockefeller and John D Rockefeller Jr New York Fordham University Press with the Rockefeller Archive Center 1994 Folsom Burton W Jr 2003 The Myth of the Robber Barons New York Young America Fosdick Raymond B 1989 The Story of the Rockefeller Foundation reprint ed New York Transaction Publishers ISBN 0 88738 248 7 Gates Frederick Taylor Chapters in My Life New York The Free Press 1977 Giddens Paul H Standard Oil Company Companies and men New York Ayer Co Publishing 1976 Goulder Grace John D Rockefeller The Cleveland Years Western Reserve Historical Society 1972 Harr John Ensor Johnson Peter J 1988 The Rockefeller Century Three Generations of America s Greatest Family New York Charles Scribner s Sons Johnson Peter J 1992 The Rockefeller Conscience An American Family in Public and in Private New York Charles Scribner s Sons Hawke David Freeman 1980 John D The Founding Father of the Rockefellers New York Harper and Row Hidy Ralph W and Muriel E Hidy History of Standard Oil Company New Jersey Pioneering in Big Business New York Ayer Co reprint 1987 Hofstadter Richard 1992 1944 Social Darwinism in American Thought 1860 1915 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8070 5503 8 Jonas Gerald The Circuit Riders Rockefeller Money and the Rise of Modern Science New York W W Norton amp Co 1989 Josephson Matthew The Robber Barons London Harcourt 1962 Kert Bernice Abby Aldrich Rockefeller The Woman in the Family New York Random House 1993 Klein Henry H 2003 1921 Dynastic America and Those Who Own It New York Kessinger Klein Henry 2005 1921 Dynastic America and Those Who Own It Cosimo ISBN 1 59605 671 1 Knowlton Evelyn H and George S Gibb History of Standard Oil Company Resurgent Years 1956 Latham Earl ed 1949 John D Rockefeller Robber Baron or Industrial Statesman Manchester William A Rockefeller Family Portrait From John D to Nelson New York Little Brown 1958 Morris Charles R The Tycoons How Andrew Carnegie John D Rockefeller Jay Gould and J P Morgan Invented the American Supereconomy New York Owl Books reprint 2006 Nevins Allan 1940 John D Rockefeller The Heroic Age of American Enterprise Favorable scholarly biography Nevins Allan 1953 Study in Power John D Rockefeller Industrialist and Philanthropist 2 vols New York Charles Scribner s Sons Pyle Tom as told to Beth Day Pocantico Fifty Years on the Rockefeller Domain New York Duell Sloan and Pierce 1964 Roberts Ann Rockefeller The Rockefeller Family Home Kykuit New York Abbeville Publishing Group 1998 Rockefeller John D 1984 1909 Random Reminiscences of Men and Events New York Sleepy Hollow Press and Rockefeller Archive Center Public Diary of John D Rockefeller now found in the Cleveland Western Historical Society Rose Kenneth W Stapleton Darwin H 1992 Toward a Universal Heritage Education and the Development of Rockefeller Philanthropy 1884 1913 Teachers College Record 93 3 536 55 doi 10 1177 016146819209300315 ISSN 0161 4681 S2CID 151797425 Sampson Anthony 1975 The Seven Sisters The Great Oil Companies and the World They Made Hodder amp Stoughton Scamehorn H Lee 1992a Chapter 1 The Colorado Fuel and Iron Company 1892 1903 Mill and Mine The CF amp I in the Twentieth Century University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 4214 2 Scamehorn H Lee 1992c Chapter 3 The Coal Miners Strike of 1913 1914 Mill and Mine The CF amp I in the Twentieth Century University of Nebraska Press pp 38 55 ISBN 978 0 8032 4214 2 Segall Grant February 8 2001 John D Rockefeller Anointed With Oil Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19512147 6 Retrieved December 19 2012 Stasz Clarice 2000 The Rockefeller Women Dynasty of Piety Privacy and Service iUniverse ISBN 978 1 58348 856 0 Tarbell Ida M 1963 1904 The History of the Standard Oil Company 2 vols Gloucester MA Peter Smith Williamson Harold F Daum Arnold R 1959 The American Petroleum Industry The Age of Illumination vol 1 also vol 2 Williamson Harold F Daum Arnold R 1964 American Petroleum Industry The Age of Energy Yergin Daniel 1991 The Prize The Epic Quest for Oil Money and Power New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 1012 6 External linksJohn D Rockefeller at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata John D Rockefeller Biography Works by John D Rockefeller at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John D Rockefeller at Internet Archive Works by John D Rockefeller at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Portals Biography Business and economics Energy New York state Ohio Trains Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John D Rockefeller amp oldid 1138196481, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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