When The Headlines Said: Charlie Schwab Breaks The Bank (April 1957 | Volume: 8, Issue: 3)

When The Headlines Said: Charlie Schwab Breaks The Bank

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Authors: John A. Garraty

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April 1957 | Volume 8, Issue 3

 

On the thirteenth of January, 1902, William E. Dodge, a large stockholder in the United States Steel Corporation, was reading his copy of the New York Sun in his comfortable Madison Avenue residence. No event of unusual importance dominated the staid Sun’s front page, but Mr. Dodge found a small item in the right-hand column that stirred him deeply. Beneath the headline, SCHWAB BREAKS THE BANK, the story ran as follows:

Monte Carlo, Jan. 12.—Charles M. Schwab, President of the United State’s Steel Corporation, who has been playing roulette very high here during the past few days, broke the bank this afternoon. He had backed 26 plain and in various ways in maximums had won 50,000 francs. He left the table amid great excitement and a large crowd followed him.

He resumed playing later on another table and lost 15,000 francs on five successive coups. He then resumed his practice of backing a certain number and the contiguous numbers on the cloth to the extent of 1,000, 2,000 or 3,000 francs. He lost every time and his winnings nearly vanished.

Although Mr. Schwab had occasional runs of luck late in the afternoon in addition to his recent winning of 75,000 francs on two successive coups, he has already dropped several thousand dollars.

To Dodge, this brief narrative threatened disaster. The giant United States Steel Corporation, capitalized at 1,400,000,000, was less than one year old. Its creation by the mighty banker J. Pierpont Morgan, who brought together the tremendous holdings in ore, blast furnaces, mills, and transportation of Andrew Carnegie, John W. “Bet a Million” Gates, John D. Rockefeller and other tycoons, had been accompanied by serious misgivings and much criticism. Its promise of expansion, order, and efficiency in the vitally important steel industry had yet to be made good. Meanwhile, the monopolistic nature of the company was apparent to every observer; its policies and its very existence were being challenged in the courts. The new corporation was plainly on its good behavior before the public. Should the public form the impression that the president of the corporation was a reckless gambler, the future of what Dodge called “the largest Experiment of Co-operation and Consolidation ever attempted” might be imperiled. That very day Dodge wrote an indignant letter to the chairman of the corporation’s finance committee, George W. Perkins, who represented the interests of the House of Morgan. “I have no right to criticize [Schwab’s] habits or pleasures,” Dodge wrote, “but as the President of the U.S. Steel Corporation the fact that he plays ‘roulette very high’ and sees no harm in it absolutely changes the view the public has had of his caution, care & business methods. A loss of twenty millions of dollars would have been nothing to this.”

At this time President Schwab was blissfully unaware of the excitement he was causing in his native land. He was not