ROCKEFELLER - THE RICHEST AMERICAN WHO EVER LIVED
ROCKEFELLER - THE RICHEST AMERICAN WHO EVER LIVED
He was called “the most hated man in America.” Yet the New York Times described him as “the world’s greatest giver.” He was America’s first billionaire. And he gave half of it away. He was the quintessential so-called “Robber Baron” of the Gilded Age. But he was probably more responsible than any other single individual for the creation of the American middle class and the development of America as a great industrial power. He lived in a splendid mansion. But was so worried about spoiling his children that he dressed them in hand me down clothes. Song lyrics were written about him. But he rarely went to social events.
His name was John D. Rockefeller. And his story is uniquely American.
Born in upstate New York in 1839, he did not have an easy childhood. His father was a part time salesman and a full time philanderer. Rockefeller’s mother assured John that God was the father who would never let him down. Rockefeller absorbed that message. It guided his life. Deeply religious, he put into practice the spiritual law “Give and it shall be given unto you.” From his teenage years to his dying day, Rockefeller always gave a portion of his income to charity.
Rockefeller’s special gift to the world was kerosene, cheap kerosene, cheap enough that anyone could buy it. Before the formation of his signature company, Standard Oil, people lit their homes with candles and heated them with coal or wood. The candles were dim and the coal was dirty. Rockefeller’s affordable kerosene -- processed crude oil -- made the world brighter, warmer, cleaner, and better -- for everyone. “We must ever remember,” Rockefeller wrote to one of his partners in 1885, “we are refining oil for the poor man and he must have it cheap and good.”
Rockefeller loved the business of business. He attended to every detail -- always with the same goal, saving the customer money. That he made so much of it himself was a byproduct. He was also scrupulously honest. His first partner, Maurice Clark said, “If there was a cent due a customer, he wanted the customer to have it.”
Rockefeller displayed genius at getting creative ideas from his employees at Standard Oil. He paid them well -- and rarely had labor problems. He generously rewarded his chemists and engineers when they found new ways to get more kerosene out of a barrel of oil. Other oil refiners dumped oil waste into nearby rivers. That repulsed Rockefeller who was perhaps the greatest environmentalist of his age. Not only was he a great lover of nature, he was the ultimate recycler. He believed there was a God-given use for every particle in a barrel of oil and he was determined to find it.
After the kerosene had been removed, Rockefeller’s staff found uses for the remaining components: the gasoline as fuel, some of the tars for paving, and other by-products to manufacture paint, varnish, and even anesthetics.
It’s hard to imagine that the automobile industry would have even come into existence without the availability of Rockefeller’s cheap oil. When Henry Ford was ready with his Model-T, Rockefeller was ready to supply the gas.
By the early decades of the new century, millions of Americans had jobs in oil-related industries. Those jobs helped to build the American middle class. As Rockefeller said, “We saw the vast possibilities of the oil industry, stood at the center of it, and brought our knowledge and imagination and business experience to bear in a dozen, in twenty, in thirty directions.”
Rockefeller was an oddity -- the first billionaire in U.S. history, but no one could out-give him. From the time of his first job, earning 50 cents a day, the sixteen-year-old Rockefeller gave to his local Baptist church, to missions in New York City, and to the poor -- black or white. He believed in the biblical admonition that not money, but “the love of money” was “the root of all evil.”
Rockefeller supported churches and missionaries all over the world; lavishly endowed colleges like the University of Chicago and Spelman College, a black women’s college, named after his wife, Laura; and gave millions to medical research. Before he died in 1937 in his 98th year, he had given away about $550,000,000, which was more than any other American had ever possessed.
So, if he did so much good during his life, why is he most commonly remembered today as the paradigm of a greedy capitalist? The answer to that question, I’m afraid, has much more to do with our educational system than with Rockefeller himself. Maybe it’s time to take a fresh look at both.
I’m Burt Folsom, professor of History at Hillsdale College, for Prager University.
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