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Hardcover The Man Who Made Wall Street: Anthony J. Drexel and the Rise of Modern Finance Book

ISBN: 0812236262

ISBN13: 9780812236262

The Man Who Made Wall Street: Anthony J. Drexel and the Rise of Modern Finance

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Book Overview

He tamed the market's bulls and bears. "He was the best friend I have ever had in every way."--J. P. Morgan

It was the height of the Gilded Age and J. Pierpont Morgan controlled the fate of railroads, corporations, and governments. The wealthy and influential were said to tremble before his blinding intellect and intimidating gaze, yet he deferred to one man: Anthony J. Drexel. Drexel--whose name is familiar today only through the university he founded and his recently canonized niece and protegee, Katharine--was the most influential financier of the nineteenth century.

The second son of an Austrian emigre, Anthony Drexel (1826-1893) soon established himself as the preeminent financial mind in the Philadelphia currency brokerage his father began in 1838. Shunning publicity, self-promotion, and high-profile public accolades (he declined President Ulysses S. Grant's invitation to become Secretary of the Treasury), Drexel initiated a partnership with J. P. Morgan and his father, Junius, that became the most powerful financial combination of its age.

At a time when the United States did not have a central bank, the government as well as large-scale commercial ventures relied on financiers to raise the enormous sums of money necessary to build railroads, construct factories, and fight major wars. With branches and partnerships in London, Paris, Chicago, and New York, all benefiting from their leader's reputation for impeccable integrity, Drexel's firms were able to steer American business through the most extraordinary long-term economic growth of any nation in world history, as well as through four devastating depressions, an enlightening lesson in the cyclical nature of the U.S. economy.

Drexel and his firm quietly pioneered many of the financial and business strategies that we now take for granted, such as trading national currencies, guaranteeing credit for travelers abroad, rewarding workers based on individual initiative, and offering "sweat equity" to deserving employees who could not afford to buy stock. By cultivating Morgan's self-confidence and allowing his younger business partner to become the public face for the firm, Drexel was able to avoid attention and, instead, nurture his extended family.

Today, Anthony J. Drexel's influence and accomplishments are mostly forgotten or credited to others, but after decades of detective work and careful research, Dan Rottenberg has succeeded in writing the first biography of this exceptionally influential and elusive man. Since Drexel gave no interviews, kept no diaries, held no public offices, and destroyed most of his personal papers, Rottenberg had painstakingly to track down every reference and anecdote he could find and, in the process, discovered 150 previously unknown letters and cables in Drexel's hand. Drexel believed that there is no limit to what one can accomplish if one doesn't mind who gets the credit, but as The Man Who Made Wall Street shows, the balance has finally been paid in full.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Terrific

I read this book several years ago and just recently started reading it again (in light of recent Wall Street scandals and bailouts). We could use Anthony Drexel today.

Captivating

I could not put it down. A fascinating informative tale or an amazing man.

The Man Who Made Wall Street

I thoroughly enjoyed reading Dan Rottenberg's informative book The Man Who Made Wall Street. The book contains all there is to know about the wise and amazingly successful nineteenth century financier Anthony Drexel and the profound role he played as a mentor to the young J. Pierpont Morgan. I especially enjoyed reading about financial systems and processes in nineteenth century America that author Rottenberg describes so well in his new book.

The Man Who Made J.P. Morgan

A gripping good story about one of the titans of American history, who did his best to hide out. Author Rottenberg writes a grand supplement to things that one thinks that one knows, putting a whole new perspective on the history of corporate finance. This subject is anything but dull in the hands of an author who so skillfully depicts its high drama of riches and ruin. J.P. Morgan was a made man, not a self-made man, for his more famous role in a time closer to our own, and Drexel is the mentor who made him. Ron Chernow, the great Morgan and Rockefeller author, flew blind on this part of the story, for Rottenberg's material had to be dredged up over a 20-year period from remote sources, given Drexel's own destruction of records and correspondence. Required reading for anyone with an interest in the source of the general wealth that makes this country's political and economic freedoms possible.

An Outstanding History

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I became very interested in Rottenberg's engrossing account of the American economy in the decades before and just after the Civil War. I didn't pick up the book for that reason, but as I read along, I became more and more fascinated by how financial transactions were made and the meteoric rise of America as a global financial center. The main focus of the book, the reconstructed life of a private person who was a major influence on many key public figures, including J.P. Morgan (whom Drexel nurtured), his niece, the recently canonized Mother Katherine Drexel, and the Bouvier family of Jackie Kennedy fame, among many others, is well told, surprising, and great reading.
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