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Charles M. Schwab

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Charles Michael Schwab

(born Feb. 18, 1862, Williamsburg, Pa., U.S. — died Sept. 18, 1939, New York, N.Y.) U.S. entrepreneur and steel-industry pioneer. He joined Andrew Carnegie's steelworks at Braddock, Pa., as a labourer and rose swiftly in the Carnegie empire. In 1892 Carnegie delegated to Schwab the task of returning the plant in Homestead, Pa., to normal production after the bloody Homestead Strike. His success in improving labour relations and increasing production led to his appointment as president of Carnegie Steel Co. in 1897 at the age of 35. Schwab proposed the merger of the competing steel companies that would create the U.S. Steel Corp., and he became its first president in 1901. He resigned in 1903 to devote himself to the Bethlehem Steel Corp., which he built into one of the nation's largest steel producers of its time.

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Biography: Charles Michael Schwab
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Charles Michael Schwab (1862-1939), American industrialist, became a multimillionaire in the steel industry but died bankrupt.

Charles M. Schwab was born on Feb. 18, 1862, in Williamsburg, Pa. He graduated from high school in 1880 and 2 years later joined the steel enterprise of Andrew Carnegie as an unskilled manual laborer. In 6 months he was an assistant manager. He was appointed superintendent of Carnegie's Homestead Works in 1887. No wonder Carnegie declared about Schwab, "I have never met his equal."

The steel industry at the turn of the 20th century was in the throes of a competitive struggle in which Carnegie was the ruthless competitor and other firms attempted to achieve stability. Schwab served as the intermediary between Carnegie and banker J. P. Morgan, and the sale of Carnegie's company became the main step in organizing the U.S. Steel Corporation in 1901. Morgan chose Schwab as president of the new giant corporation. In 1903 Schwab left because of internal disagreements with his associates.

Schwab acquired control of the Bethlehem Steel Company in 1901. When the concern was merged into the United States Shipbuilding Company, Schwab's stock was exchanged for bonds. When this company failed owing to an improper financial policy, Schwab as the prime creditor became the owner. Bethlehem Steel Corporation, organized in 1904, was his own creation, and he made it a major steel producer and a worthy competitor of U.S. Steel. During World War I Bethlehem Steel became an important producer of materiel for the Allied war effort. He also spurred the American shipbuilding program to new heights after he was appointed director of the Emergency Fleet Corporation in April 1918.

After the war Schwab entered into semiretirement. He continued as the chairman of the board of directors of Bethlehem Steel until his death but delegated the responsibility to the president. During the 1930s Bethlehem was accused of having earned extortionate profits during the war, but the courts upheld the company's actions. Schwab died in London, England, on Sept. 18, 1939.

Further Reading

There is no biography of Schwab. Information on various phases of his career must be pieced together from works which have another emphasis: James H. Bridge, The Inside History of the Carnegie Steel Company (1903); Ida M. Tarbell, The Life of Elbert H. Gary (1925); Arundel Cotter, The Story of Bethlehem Steel (1916) and United States Steel: A Corporation with a Soul (1921); Burton J. Hendrick, The Life of Andrew Carnegie (2 vols., 1932; new introduction, 1969); Stewart H. Holbrook, Age of the Moguls (1953); Joseph Frazier Wall, Andrew Carnegie (1970); and Louis M. Hacker, The World of Andrew Carnegie (1968). Both Arthur S. Dewing, Corporate Promotion and Reorganizations (1914), and Henry R. Seager and Charles A. Gulick, Jr., Trust and Corporation (1929), contain a chapter on the U.S. Shipbuilding Company.

Additional Sources

Hessen, Robert, Steel titan: the life of Charles M. Schwab, Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1990.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Charles Michael Schwab
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Schwab, Charles Michael (shwäb), 1862-1939, American steel magnate, b. Williamsburg, Pa. He started as a stake driver in Andrew Carnegie's steelworks and rose to become (1897) president of the Carnegie Steel Company and then the first president (1901) of the U.S. Steel Corp. He resigned (1903) to run the Bethlehem Steel Company, which under his direction became the largest independent producer in the field.
Quotes By: Charles M. Schwab
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Quotes:

"The hardest struggle of all is to be something different from what the average man is."

"The first essential in a boy's career is to find out what he's fitted for, what he's most capable of doing and doing with a relish."

"A man can succeed at almost anything for which he has unlimited enthusiasm."

"All successful employers are stalking men who will do the unusual, men who think, men who attract attention by performing more than is expected of them."

"Lead the life that will make you kindly and friendly to everyone about you, and you will be surprised what a happy life you will lead."

"There's no limit possible to the expansion of each one of us."

See more famous quotes by Charles M. Schwab

Wikipedia: Charles M. Schwab
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For the founder and CEO of the Charles Schwab Corporation brokerage firm, see Charles R. Schwab
Charles Michael Schwab; the hand-written dedication is to Andrew Carnegie

Charles Michael Schwab (18 February 1862 in Williamsburg, Pennsylvania – 18 October 1939 in London, England) was an American steel magnate. Under his leadership, Bethlehem Steel became the second largest steel maker in the United States, and one of the most important heavy manufacturers in the world.

Contents

Life

Schwab was born into a German Catholic family and grew up in Loretto, Pennsylvania, which he always considered his "home town". He attended Saint Francis College, now Saint Francis University, but left after two years to find work in Pittsburgh.

Schwab in 1901 at age 39.

Schwab the steel executive and stockholder eventually became very wealthy. He moved to New York City, specifically the Upper West Side, which at the time was considered the "wrong" side of Central Park, and where he built "Riverside", the most ambitious private house ever built in New York. The US$7 million 75 room house combined details from three French chateaux on a full city block. After Schwab's death, New York mayor Fiorello La Guardia turned down a proposal to make Riverside the official mayoral residence, deeming it too grandiose. It was eventually torn down and replaced by a drab apartment block.

The main house, cascades, and gardens of "Immergrün", Charles M. Schwab's retreat in Loretto, PA

He also owned a 44 room summer estate on 1,000 acres (4 km²) in Loretto called "Immergrün" (German for "evergreen"). The house featured opulent gardens and a nine hole golf course. Rather than tear down the existing house, Schwab had the mansion raised on rollers and moved 200 feet to a new location to make room for the new mansion. Schwab's estate sold Immergrün after his death and it is now Mount Assisi Friary on the grounds of Saint Francis University.

Schwab became notorious for his "fast lane" lifestyle including opulent parties, high stakes gambling, and a string of extramarital affairs producing at least one illegitimate child. The affairs and the illegitimate child soured his relationship with his wife. He became an international celebrity when he "broke the bank" at Monte Carlo and traveled in a $100,000 private rail car named "Loretto".[1] Even before the Great Depression, he had already spent most of his fortune estimated at between $25 million and $40 million. Adjusted for inflation, that equates to between $500 million and $800 million in the first decade of the 21st century.

The stock market crash of 1929 finished off what years of wanton spending had started. He spent his last years in a small apartment. He could no longer afford the taxes on "Riverside" and it was seized by creditors. He had offered to sell the mansion at a huge loss but there were no takers.

At his death ten years later, Schwab's holdings in Bethlehem Steel were virtually worthless, and he was over US$ 300,000 in debt. Had he lived a few more years, he probably would have seen his fortunes restored when Bethlehem Steel was flooded with orders for war material. He was buried in Loretto at Saint Michael's Cemetery in a private mausoleum with his wife.

A fine bust-length portrait of Schwab painted in 1903 by the Swiss-born American artist Adolfo Müller-Ury (1862-1947) was formerly in the Jessica Dragonette Collection at the American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming at Laramie, but has recently been donated to the American National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC. Müller-Ury also painted his nephew and namesake Charles M Schwab (son of his brother Joseph) as a boy in a sailor-suit around the same date.

Schwab is not related to Charles R. Schwab, founder of the brokerage firm Charles Schwab Corporation.

Schwab's children were kept out of the industrialist lifestyle, all having been educated at private schools in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Several of his sons were on the board of Bethlehem Steel, as was one grandson. The Schwab family maintained ownership in the company in the late 1980s when it had to be sold in order to avoid bankruptcy. According to US public tax records, the nineteen heirs of this sale each grossed over $40 million. Charles Schwab himself died bankrupt, living on borrowed money for five years before his death.

The steel executive

Schwab began his career as a stake driver in Andrew Carnegie's steelworks and in 1897, at only 35 years of age, became president of the Carnegie Steel Company. In 1901, he helped negotiate the secret sale of Carnegie Steel to a group of New York-based financiers led by J.P. Morgan. After the buyout, Schwab became the first president of the U.S. Steel Corporation, the company formed out of Carnegie's former holdings.

After several clashes with Morgan and fellow US Steel executive Elbert Gary, Schwab left USS in 1903 to run the Bethlehem Steel Company in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Under his leadership (and that of Eugene Grace), it became the largest independent steel producer in the world.

A major part of Bethlehem Steel's success was the development of the H-beam, a precursor of today's ubiquitous I-beam. Schwab was interested in mass producing the wideflange steel beam, but that was a risky venture that required raising capital and building a large new plant, all to make a product whose ability to sell was unproven.

"I've thought the whole thing over," Schwab told his secretary, "and if we are going bust, we will go bust big." It is his most famous remark.

In 1908, Bethlehem Steel began making the beam, which revolutionized building construction and made possible the age of the skyscraper. Its success helped make Bethlehem Steel the second-largest steel company in the world. Bethlehem, Pennsylvania was incorporated, virtually as a company town, by uniting four previous villages.

In 1910, Schwab broke the Bethlehem Steel strike by calling out the newly-formed Pennsylvania State Police. Schwab kept labor unions out of Bethlehem Steel, which was not organized until 1941, two years after his death.

In 1911, Bethlehem Steel formed a company soccer team known as Bethlehem Steel F.C. In 1914 Schwab took the team professional.[2][3] Until its demise in 1930, the team won 8 league championships, 6 American Cups and 5 National Challenge Cups. It was considered among the greatest soccer teams in U.S. history. The company disbanded the team as a result of financial losses incured during the internecine 1928-1929 "Soccer Wars" between American Soccer League and United States Football Association and onset of the Great Depression in 1929.

On April 16th, 1918, Schwab became Director General of the Emergency Fleet Corporation, a board granted by Congress with master authority over all shipbuilding in the United States. He was appointed over Charles Piez, the former General Manager of the corporation. President Wilson had specifically asked Schwab to assume this responsibility. Schwab's biggest change to the shipbuilding effort was to abandon the cost plus profit contracting system that had been in place up to that time and begin issuing fixed price contracts.[4][5]

In 1928, Charles Schwab was awarded the Bessemer Gold Medal for "outstanding services to the steel industry".

Schwab was considered to be a risk taker and was highly controversial. Thomas Edison once famously called him the "master hustler". He circumvented American neutrality laws during the early years of World War I by funneling goods through Canada. After America's entry into the war, he was accused of profiteering but was later acquitted. His lucrative contract providing steel to the Trans-Siberian Railroad came after he provided a $200,000 "gift" to the mistress of the Grand Duke Alexis Aleksandrovich.

Charles Schwab's innovative ways of dealing with his staff are given a mention in Dale Carnegie's most famous work How to Win Friends and Influence People.

Mr. Schwab was inducted into the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame in 1982.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ North Carolina Transportation Museum: Rail Equipment1
  2. ^ August 2, 1914 New York Times
  3. ^ Makes Record in Soccer: Bethlehem Sets Mark by Winning Double Championship
  4. ^ "New York Times". October 15, 1918. p. 12. 
  5. ^ The New York Times Current History.. 1918. 

References

  • James H. Bridge, 1903. The Inside History of the Carnegie Steel Company.
  • Arundel Cotter, 1916. The Story of Bethlehem Steel.
  • --------, 1921. United States Steel: A Corporation with a Soul.
  • Burton J. Hendrick, 1969. The Life of Andrew Carnegie, 2 vols. 1st ed., 1932.
  • Burton W. Folsom, Jr., The Myth of the Robber Barons. Young America.
  • Louis M. Hacker, 1968. The World of Andrew Carnegie.
  • Hessen, Robert, 1990. Steel titan: the life of Charles M. Schwab, Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Napoleon Hill, 1937. Think and Grow Rich.
  • Stewart H. Holbrook, 1953. Age of the Moguls.
  • Ida M. Tarbell, 1925. The Life of Elbert H. Gary.
  • Joseph Frazier Wall, 1970. Andrew Carnegie.

External links


 
 

 

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