Book Read Free

Dark Genius of Wall Street

Page 39

by Edward J Renehan Jr


  5. New York World. 23 July 1877.

  6. Maury Klein. The Life and Legend of Jay Gould. 157.

  7. Frank Lewis Dyer and Thomas Commerford Martin. Edison: His Life and Inventions. New York: Harper Brothers. 1929. 217.

  8. Jay Gould to Oliver Ames. 24 and 25 July 1875. Union Pacific Railroad Archives. (Hereafter UP.)

  9. Alexandra Villard de Borchgrave and John Cullen. Villard: The Life and Times of an American Titan. New York: Doubleday. 2001. 301.

  10. Henry Villard to William J. Endicott. 6 April 1877. Letterbook 16, Private Correspondence. Villard Papers, Baker Library, Harvard Business School. (Hereafter Villard.)

  11. United States Pacific Railway Commission, Testimony, Executive Document No. 51. Senate, 50th Congress, 1st Session. 1887. 450.

  12. Henry Villard to Fanny Villard. 25 June 1878. Villard.

  13. Richard O’Connor. Gould’s Millions. 109.

  14. Alexandra Villard de Borchgrave and John Cullen. Villard: The Life and Times of an American Titan. 302.

  15. Julius Grodinsky. Jay Gould: His Business Career, 1867–1892. 179.

  16. Alexander D. Noyes. Forty Years of American Finance. 127.

  17. Robert Riegel. The Story of the Western Railroads. 223.

  18. Richard Cleghorn Overton. Burlington Route: A History of the Burlington Lines. New York: Knopf. 1965. 131.

  19. Richard Cleghorn Overton. Gulf to Rockies. Houston: University of Texas Press. 1956. 220.

  20. New York World. 2 July 1887.

  CHAPTER 25: EVERYTHING BUT A GOOD NAME

  1. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 115.

  2. Ibid. 119.

  3. Ibid. 118.

  4. Maury Klein. The Life and Legend of Jay Gould. 214.

  5. New York Times. 8 August 1883.

  6. Edwin P. Hoyt. The Goulds: A Social History. 72.

  7. Dramatic Mirror. 23 October 1883.

  8. In 1900, Nellie Gould donated 230 orchids and palms from Lyndhurst to the new conservatory at the New York Botanical Garden, where descendants of Jay’s collection still reside.

  9. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 276.

  10. Ibid. 282.

  11. Giovanni P. Morosini. “Memoir of Jay Gould.” HGS.

  12. The best source for details on the architecture and furnishings of 579 Fifth Avenue, now demolished, is the catalog developed for the sale of the home’s furnishings a few years after the death of Nellie Gould. The Entire Contents of 579 Fifth Avenue [The Jay Gould House]. Superb Paintings Including Masters of the Barbizon School. New York: Kendel Galleries at Gimbel Brothers. 1942.

  13. Sarah Gould Northrop. “Reminiscences.” HGS.

  14. Alice Northrop Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 22. Alice did not acknowledge her father’s suicide in her book, only his death. Confirmation of Northrop’s suicide, however, comes from numerous sources, including the memoirs of Gould’s sisters Sarah and Bettie.

  15. Ibid. 37.

  16. Jay Gould to Helen “Nellie” Gould. 21 March 1882. HGS.

  17. Giovanni P. Morosini. “Memoir of Jay Gould.” HGS.

  CHAPTER 26: WIRES AND ELS

  1. John Murray Forbes to Fred Ames. 8 September 1880. Burlington Railroad Archives, Newberry Library, Chicago. (Hereafter Burlington.)

  2. New York Times. 3 December 1879.

  3. New York Stockholder. 20 August 1878.

  4. New York Times. 19 February 1875.

  5. Maury Klein. The Life and Legend of Jay Gould. 490.

  6. The date of incorporation was 15 May 1879.

  7. New York Herald. 2 September 1879.

  8. New York Herald. 16 February 1881.

  9. New York Tribune. 10 March 1881.

  10. Richard O’Connor. Gould’s Millions. 132.

  11. Edward Bok. The Americanization of Edward Bok. New York: Scribner’s. 1921. 67–68.

  12. James McGurrin. Bourke Cockran: A Free Lance in Politics. New York: Scribner’s. 1948. 39–40.

  13. New York World. 15 June 1881.

  14. Philadelphia North American. 30 June 1881.

  15. New York World. 23 September 1881.

  16. Richard O’Connor. Gould’s Millions. 141.

  17. New York Times. 27 December 1881.

  CHAPTER 27: AMBITION SATISFIED

  1. Commercial and Financial Chronicle. 25 March 1882.

  2. New York Tribune. 7 May 1882.

  3. New York Sun. 3 October 1882.

  4. New York Times. 8 April 1883.

  5. Omaha Herald. 3 February 1884.

  6. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 320.

  7. New York Times. 9 July 1887.

  8. New York Times. 8 July 1887.

  9. New York Sun. 18 August 1883.

  10. Francis Carpenter, ed. Carp’s Washington. New York: McGraw Hill. 1960. 72.

  11. Richard O’Connor. Gould’s Millions. 195.

  12. “Memphis Under Quarantine Rule.” Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Paper. 20 September 1879.

  13. New York Times. 8 July 1890.

  14. Alice Northop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 204–205.

  15. Ibid. 354.

  16. New York Times. 15 September 1886.

  17. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 354.

  18. New York Times. 30 October 1887.

  19. New York Herald. 30 October 1887.

  20. Jay Gould’s private railroad car Atalanta is today on display at Jefferson, Texas.

  21. New York Times. 11 June 1888.

  22. New York Tribune. 24 July 1888.

  23. New York World. 17 July 1888. (Reprinted from the Philadelphia Times.)

  24. New York Times. 3 August 1888.

  25. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 169.

  26. Helen [Nellie] Gould to Helen [Ellie] Gould. 2 September 1888. HGS.

  27. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 165.

  28. Ibid. 165–166.

  29. Charles Francis Adams. “Memorabilia 1888–1893.” 23 December 1888, 13 January 1889, 24 February 1889. Charles Francis Adams Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society. (Hereafter CFA.)

  30. Maury Klein. The Life and Legend of Jay Gould. 440.

  31. New York World. 14 January 1889.

  32. New York World. 10 and 11 February 1889.

  33. Maury Klein. The Life and Legend of Jay Gould. 432.

  34. New York Herald. 7 November 1890.

  35. New York Herald. 9 November 1890.

  36. Charles Francis Adams to R. S. Grant. 13 November 1890. UP.

  37. Charles Francis Adams. “Memorabilia 1888–1893.” 23 November 1890. CFA.

  38. New York World. 27 November 1890.

  39. New York Times. 2 October 1891.

  40. New York World. 3 October 1891.

  41. Charles Francis Adams. Memorabilia 1888–1893. 13 November 1891. CFA.

  42. New York World. 5 December 1891.

  43. New York World. 27 February 1892.

  44. Alice Northrop Snow and Henry Nicholas Snow. The Story of Helen Gould. 193.

  45. London Standard. 3 December 1892.

  46. London News. 3 December 1892.

  47. New York Times. 3 December 1892.

  48. New York Herald. 5 December 1892.

  EPILOGUE: THE GOULDS AFTER JAY

  1. See Abram’s obituary in the Washington County (New York) Post, 30 June 1899. Abram died at the residence of his brother-in-law, Fredeick Kegler, in Salem, N.Y. Today he lies buried in Evergreen Cemetery, Salem, beside his wife, Sophia.

  2. The estate is today the campus of Georgian Court College.

  3. See George Brodrick’s obituary published in the London Daily Telegraph on 27 February 2004, some two months after his death on 12 December 2003.

  4. “Gould Foundation Carries Out Work of Its Founder.” Journals News, Rockland County. 29 September 2
001.

  5. Frank Miller Gould’s daughter Marianne married a man named John Wright McDonough, heir to a Texas ironworks. The couple settled in Galveston, Texas, where Marianne had a son in 1947. Marianne’s brother, Edwin Gould III, established the New York investment firm of Edwin Gould & Company. Like his father and grandfather before him, this Edwin spent a great deal of time out-of-doors (hunting and deep-sea fishing) while also focusing his professional energies on sound investments that built his fortune safely.

  6. For an amusing portrait of Helen Gould Shepard as a mother, see Celeste Andrews Seton’s affectionately critical memoir entitled Helen Gould Was My Mother-in-Law. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell. 1953.

  7. Marie Ernest Paul Boniface de Castellane. How I Discovered America. New York: Scribner’s. 1924. 14–15.

  8. Frank Jay Gould’s daughter Dorothy married a Swiss baron, Roland Graffenried de Villars, in early 1925. Their marriage ended in divorce but produced two children (Roland, born 1925, and Dorothy, born 1927). During the early 1940s, while visiting Cuba, the elder Dorothy met her second husband, Archibald Burns, a Mexican national born of Scottish parents. She and Burns married in 1944 and settled in Mexico City, where she died in 1969. Dorothy’s daughter wed Alexandre Borgia in 1947; the marriage ended in divorce without issue. Nothing is known of the son Roland. As well, nothing more is known of Frank’s other daughter, Helen, except that she married into the Marat family of France and lived in Lausanne, Switzerland, at the time of her father’s death.

  INDEX

  A&GW (Atlantic & Great Western Railway)

  Erie's link with

  McHenry manipulates Erie stock

  McHenry vs. Gould

  in receivership

  A&P (Atlantic & Pacific) wire

  A&S (Albany & Susquehanna) Railroad

  Academy of Music

  Adams, Charles Francis, Jr.

  1887 Interstate Commerce Act and

  controls UP in 1884

  loses control of UP in 1890

  Pacific Railroad Ring and

  Adams, Henry

  Albany & Susquehanna (A&S) Railroad

  Albany Academy

  Albany County survey

  Alley, John B.

  American Refrigerator Transit

  American Telegraph & Cable Company

  American Union

  The Americanization of Edward Bok (Bok)

  Ames, Frederick

  Ames, Oakes

  joins board of Pacific Mail

  UP Railroad and

  view of Gould

  Ames, Oliver

  Archer, O.H.P.

  Atalanta steamship

  Atkins, Elisha

  Atlantic & Great Western Railway. see A&GW (Atlantic & Great Western Railway)

  Atlantic & Pacific (A&P) wire

  Automatic Telegraph Company

  B&O (Baltimore & Ohio)

  Balcom, Judge Ransom

  Bardwell House Hotel

  Baring Brothers

  Barlow, Francis Channing

  Barnard, Judge George C.

  A&S Railroad war

  Erie's British shareholders and

  first Erie War

  Gould allies himself with

  Gould's bear trap and

  impeachment of

  Battle of the Little Big Horn

  Beach, William A.

  Beechwood Seminary

  Belden, William

  Belmont, August

  Bennett, James Gordon, Jr.

  BH&E (Boston, Hartford and Erie) Railroad

  Big Horn Mountains

  Bigelow, John

  Bixbey, B. H.

  Black Friday

  actions against Gould

  Capitol Hill testimony

  overview of

  reputation ruined after

  Black Horse Cavalry

  Blaine, James G.

  Bloomville Mirror

  "blue-jays"

  Bok, Edwin

  Boston, Hartford and Erie (BH&E) Railroad

  Bouton, Orrin Rice

  Boutwell, George S.

  Black Friday

  events leading to Black Friday

  Gould meets President Grant

  US Treasury gold policy and

  Bradley, Esther (great-great grandmother)

  Brink, Peter

  Brodrick, George

  Brodrick, George St. Johns

  Brodrick, Guinevere

  Brodrick, Jane

  Bronx Community College

  Brooklyn Oil

  Brooks, James

  Broughman's Theater

  Burhans, Edward

  disagreement with Gould

  Gould demonized about

  Gould helps in romance

  Gould's employment with

  Burhans, Hamilton

  Burhans, Maria

  Burhans, Mary More

  Burlington Route (Overton, Richard C.)

  Burr, Aaron, Sr.

  Burr, Sarah

  Burroughs, John

  boyhood friendship with Gould

  dropping relationship with Gould

  Roxbury and

  Burt, Joseph L.

  Butterfield, Daniel

  as assistant federal treasurer

  Black Friday and

  Gould's no-margin gold account for

  Buttonwood Agreement

  Calico Indians

  California Gold Rush

  Camp Woody Crest

  Canadensis

  Cardozo, Judge Albert

  Carpenter, Frank

  Carr, Robert E.

  Castellane, Boni, Jr.

  Castellane, Elizabeth

  Castellane, Ernest Paul Boniface "Boni" de

  Castellane, Yvonne (Patenotre)

  Castle Erie

  Castle Gould

  Catherwood, Robert B.

  Catskills

  Cavanagh's Restaurant

  Central Branch Line

  Central Construction Company

  Central Pacific

  Champion, Simon D.

  Champlin, John

  Chapin, W. O.

  Chapters of Erie (Adams)

  Charles M. Leupp & Company. see Leupp, Charles M.

  Cherokee Cottage

  Chicago & Northwestern Railroad

  Chicago Fire

  The Chronological Biography of the Hon. Zaddock Pratt

  Church, Walter S.

  Civil War

  Erie helped by

  gold prices following

  Gould's feelings on

  James Fisk and

  profiteers in

  Vanderbilt's railroad strategy

  Wall Street and

  Western Union and

  Clark, Horace F.

  Clark, Silas H.H.

  Classification Act

  Clemmons, Viola Kathrine

  Clerke, T. W.

  Clews, Henry

  Cockran, W. Bourke

  Colfax, Schuyler

  Colorado Central Line

  Commercial and Financial Chronicle

  on Erie bonds

  on Erie settlement

  on Gould's money market manipulations

  on success of Erie manipulation

  Connor, Washington

  Convoy railroad car

  Cook, William F.

  Corbin, Abel Rathbone

  economic policy influenced by

  gold market exit of

  Gould bribes

  Grant meets Gould through

  Grant sees self-interest of

  Corbin, Mary Ann

  Corbin, Virginia Paine (Grant)

  Corse & Pratt

  Courter, Charles

  Credit Mobilier of America

  Cropsey, Jasper

  Crosby, Abel

  Crouch, George

  Dark Shadows

  Dater & Company

  Davies, Judge Henry E.

  Davis, Andrew Jackson

  Davis, Noah

  De Borchgrave, Alexandra
Villard

  Delaware & Hudson Canal Company

  Delaware & Lackawanna Railroad

  Delaware County survey

  Delevan House Hotel

  Democratic Party

  Denver Pacific Line

  Depew, Chauncey

  Develin, John E.

  Dexter, Gordon

  Dickerman, Beda

  Dickerman, Esther

  Dillon, John F.

  Dillon, Sidney

  as board member of Pacific Mail

  buying and converting UP bonds

  death of

  as president of UP

  relationship with Gould

  Dix, John A.

  Dominion Telegraph of Canada

  down-renters

  Drew, Daniel

  Erie stock manipulation

  Erie stock manipulation and demise of

  feelings about Gould

  Northwestern Railroad and

  puritanical values of

  unscrupulous reputation of

  Vanderbilt vs.

  Drexel, Anthony

  Drexel, Marjorie (Gould)

  Du Bois, J.A.

  Duncan, William Butler

  Durant, Thomas Clark

  Dutcher, John B.

  Eaton, D. B.

  Eckert, Thomas T.

  Edison, Thomas A.

  Edwin Gould Foundation

  Erie Bill

  Erie Railroad

  A&S war

  adding ferryboats

  background of

  BH&E and

  British suit against

  Drew ousted and reinstated

  Duane and West office

  Erie Bill

  executive board fights against Vanderbilt

  executive board uses law against Vanderbilt

  framing British and Wall Street shareholders

  framing British shareholders

  Gould settles all claims against him

  Grand Opera House offices

  near-bankruptcy of

  Northwestern Railroad strategy

  Vanderbilt tries to corner shares

  Vanderbilt/Eldridge compete for control

  Eldridge, John

  competing for control of Erie

  Erie agenda of

  as Erie president

  Vanderbilt and Drew settlement

  elevated railroads

  Empire State survey bill

  Evarts, William M.

  background of

  running for U.S. senator

  settling Leupp estate

  Everett House Hotel

  ferryboat business

  Field Codes

  Field, Cyrus

  attempt to control Manhattan Elevated

 

‹ Prev