The Morgan family is an American family and
banking dynasty, which became prominent in the U.S. and throughout the world in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Members of the family amassed an immense fortune over the generations, primarily through the work of
Junius Spencer (J.S.) Morgan (1813-1890) and
John Pierpont (J. P.) Morgan Sr. (1837–1913).
Morgan members dominated the banking industry during their time. J. P. Morgan was the de facto leader of this dynasty, having been the most prominent businessman in America at the turn of the century. He revolutionized numerous industries, including electricity, railroad, and steel. Through his business methods, he was highly successful in asserting his power as one of the most influential businessmen in America. Historians describe the Morgan family along with its web of partners to be part of the large American banking empire known as the House of Morgan. It is difficult to place an exact beginning and end date on the dynasty. However, many scholars [who?] attribute the death of J. P. Morgan to the end of the banking dynasty. In The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance,
Ron Chernow chronicles the lives of the Morgans which he described as "encrusted with legend... ripe with mystery, [and] exposed to such bitter polemics".[1]
History
The Morgan family came to some prominence in
Wales during the 17th century. Born in
Llandaff, Glamorgan County in 1616,
Miles Morgan was the son of lawyer and politician
William Morgan, who would be elected a
Member of Parliament in 1628. At the age of 20, Miles sailed for America, along with his brothers, John and James, seeking new opportunities in the New World. Arriving in April 1636, he landed in the
Massachusetts Bay Colony. Settling in
Roxbury and later
Springfield, Massachusetts, Miles met Prudence Gilbert, his future wife.[2] Miles was a soldier during the
sack of Springfield. He later worked on a farm and lived a comfortable life. He continued living in the city until the age of eighty-three.[3]
One of his sons, Nathaniel, continued the legacy of the Morgan name by becoming a powerful member of his small town. Nathaniel had many professions in his town, including
Fence Viewer,
hayward, field driver,
constable,
surveyor, and
assessor.[4] He married Hannah Bird on January 19, 1691, daughter of James Bird of
Farmington, CT.
Nathaniel's son, Joseph Morgan, was the fifth of seven children. Born on December 3, 1702, Joseph began to learn to weave at a young age. At the age of 21, he became a soldier in the company of Captain Josiah Kellogg of Suffield. Upon his father's death, he inherited part of Chicopee Field. He married Mary Stebbins in 1735 and raised a family on a farm of two hundred acres. Upon his death, he gave much of his property to sons Joseph, Jr., and Titus.
Joseph, Jr. was elected Lieutenant and later Captain of the 8th Company in the 3rd Regiment of the
Hampshire County, Massachusetts militia on April 26, 1776. Upon his death, one of his sons, Joseph III, received 112 acres of land.
Joseph III was the first to enter the financial industry, which is what the family is known for today. He left the family business of working on farms behind. In 1812, he joined the Washington Benevolent Society as a private banker.[5] He moved the family to Hartford, which existed as one of the most prominent trade centers in the Connecticut River Valley.[6] In November 1816, he purchased the Hartford Exchange Coffee House, where he acted as an innkeeper. It stood as the focal point of all business affairs and social activities in the area; the idea of meeting new clients and collaborating with other businessmen in these coffee shops and inns allowed for the growth of the industry in America.[7] In July 1825, he bought the Hartford Bank. Joseph III purchased and reorganized the Hartford Fire Insurance Company into the Aetna Fire Insurance Company. (Many of these business deals were conducted at his inn, which acted as a hub for businessmen.) After a fire struck several
New York City buildings, which held insurance plans from Aetna, Joseph Morgan III made prompt payments to the companies. New business suddenly poured in, as the insurance company was seen as highly reliable and trustworthy. The partners of the firm and the stockholders made large sums of money in future years.[8] After moving from the farming business to the coffee house business, Joseph III decided it was time to turn to finance. He purchased the City Hotel on Main Street, which he renovated and cleaned up; business at the hotel boomed like never before.[9] He married Sarah Morgan (née Spencer), who was the Director of the Hartford Orphan Asylum. He acted as a director of the firm until his death.
Junius Spencer (J. S.) Morgan, Joseph III's son, played a prominent role in the banking industry. From a young age, he showed interest in entering the business field like his father. In 1829, at the age of 15, he worked as an apprentice with a merchant, Alfred Welles, in Boston. Following that, he worked at some firms including:
Morgan, Ketchum, and Company of New York (1834–1836)
Howe, Mather, and Company; later known as Mather, Morgan, and Company (1836–1851)
J. M. Beebe, Morgan, and Company (1851–1854), Boston's largest mercantile bank at the time[10]
George Peabody and Company (1854–1864)
In 1864, Junius Morgan changed the name of George Peabody and Company to J. S. Morgan and Company. Under his leadership, it became one of the most prominent banking firms in both America and Europe. At the age of 64, J. S. Morgan retired.
Perhaps the most prominent member of the family is J. P. Morgan (1837–1913), son of J. S. Morgan. He became exposed to his father's business deals at an early age. He worked as an accountant until eventually becoming a partner at
Drexel, Morgan & Co. in 1871.[11]
By 1885, he began buying out railroads and reorganizing them. Through his business strategies, the term "Morganization" was coined to describe his method of creating
monopolies through buying companies, eliminating competition, and cutting costs.[12][13] By the turn of the century, he became incredibly successful in his business endeavors, controlling most of the major industries in America. During the
Panic of 1907, J. Pierpont Morgan bailed out the U.S. government.
The key characteristic of the Morgan banking style, perpetuated by J. P. Morgan, exists where banks "perpetuate an ancient European tradition of wholesale banking, serving governments, large corporations, and rich individuals".[14] J. Pierpont Morgan was also a member of numerous social clubs including the
Union League,
New York Yacht Club, and
Knickerbocker Club.[15] In 1891, he also founded his own club, the
Metropolitan Club. Famous members included
Cornelius Vanderbilt,
Darius Ogden Mills, and more. The club had 1200 resident and 500 non-resident members at its founding.[16] These social clubs were important in establishing relationships among powerful leaders of American society. Modeled after British social clubs,[17] these organizations had people who held a tremendous influence over everyday life, such as bankers, politicians, lawyers, and railroad tycoons.
J. P. Morgan's legacy was continued by his son of the same name, although his son never became as prominent as his father. Born in 1867,
John Pierpont Morgan, Jr. attended
Harvard University, class of 1889. Also known as "Jack", he entered the banking industry, like his father, becoming a partner at Drexel, Morgan and Company, Bankers and Brokers of New York City in 1892. He helped in the establishment of J.P. Morgan and Company, which was founded in 1894. Yet, his life marked the decline and fall of the Morgan dynasty. With the passage of the
Glass-Steagall Act in 1933,[18] which restricted the merging of
investment and
commercial banks, came the end of the period of
Robber barons and banking dominance.[19] Thus,
J. P. Morgan and Company became a commercial bank, and
Morgan Stanley an investment bank. Through new legislation, and a growing public resentment against big business, the opportunities for Jack were rare compared to his predecessors. Additionally, Jack suffered from many ailments, such as neuritis, to the point where he had to resign from numerous positions.[20] Lastly, The bankers of the pre-1913 Baronial Age are said to have been the "lords of creation", since they catapulted the
American economy into an industrial powerhouse of production and power. This unprecedented development became attributed to the Morgan banking style. The Morgan family are members of the
Episcopal Church.[21]
Wealth
By one estimate,
J. P. Morgan (1837–1913) is believed to have been the 24th richest American in history,[22] inflation-adjusted. His fortune is believed to have grown to about $57 billion (2024 USD).
According to historians Michael M. Klepper and Robert E. Gunther, Morgan had one of the highest wealth: GNP ratios in American history. In their book, The Wealthy 100: From Benjamin Franklin to Bill Gates,[23] Morgan's wealth:GNP ratio was 328.[24] At the time, his fortune equaled around $119 billion.
John Adams Morgan (b. 1930) m. (1) 1953: Elizabeth Robbins Choate (1933–1998) (div. 1957); m. (2) Tania Goss (div.) m. (3) 1998:
Sonja Tremont (b. 1963) (div. 2008)
Doughty, Geoffrey H. (2007). "New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad (New Haven)". In Middleton, William D.; Smerk, George M.; Diehl, Roberta L. (eds.). Encyclopedia of North American Railroads. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. pp. 742–745.
ISBN978-0-253-34916-3.
Drury, George H. (2007). "Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railway (Monon Railroad)". In Middleton, William D.; Smerk, George M.; Diehl, Roberta L. (eds.). Encyclopedia of North American Railroads. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. pp. 222–223.
ISBN978-0-253-34916-3.
Moody, John; Turner, George Kibbe (1911).
"Masters of Capital in America, The Seven Men". McClure's Magazine. New York City, NY: S.S. McClure Company. pp. 418–428. Retrieved 2024-02-29.
^W. Williams, Peter (2016). Religion, Art, and Money: Episcopalians and American Culture from the Civil War to the Great Depression. University of North Carolina Press. p. 176.
ISBN978-1-4696-2698-7. The names of fashionable families who were already Episcopalian, like the Morgans, or those, like the Fricks, who now became so, goes on interminably: Aldrich, Astor, Biddle, Booth, Brown, Du Pont, Firestone, Ford, Gardner, Mellon, Morgan, Procter, the Vanderbilt, Whitney. Episcopalian branches of the Baptist Rockefellers and Jewish Guggenheims even appeared on these family trees.
^
abcJohnson, Philip E. (2014). The Hampden Railroad: The Greatest Railroad That Never Ran. Lulu Enterprises, Inc. p. 2.
ISBN978-1-304-73390-0.
^Casto, James E. (2006). The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. Arcadia Publishing. p. 8.
ISBN978-0-7385-4334-5.
^Chernow, Ron (1990). The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance. New York City, NY: Grove Press. p. 152.
ISBN0-8021-3829-2.
^Chernow, Ron (2003). The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance. New York City, NY: Grove Press. p. 224.
ISBN0-8021-3829-2.
^"Morgan Mergers". Time. 1929. Retrieved 2024-02-26. "But also announced last week was a Morgan-managed merger of Fleischmann Co., Royal Baking Powder Co., and E. W. Gillett, Ltd. ... The merger was arranged by a committee consisting of Morgan-Partner Thomas Cochran, Fleischmann President Joseph C. Wilshire, Board Chairman Max C. Fleischmann, Royal President William Ziegler Jr. Mr. Wilshire will be president of the new company. The directorate will include Morgan-Men William Ewing and Henry P. Davison. The Morgan interest in the merger was accented by the personal friendship long existing between Morgan-Partner Cochran and Major Fleischmann, and by the Morgan ownership of a considerable portion of Fleischmann stock (estimated at 400,000 shares) purchased in 1926."
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