The Rockefellers July 8, 1839



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The Rockefellers
July 8, 1839
John Davison Rockefeller is born in Richford, upstate New York, to William Avery ("Bill")

Rockefeller,a travelling peddler of novelties and "cures," and Eliza Davison Rockefeller,

a devout Baptist
1855

Bill Rockefeller marries Margaret Allen, a woman 25 years his junior, beginning a secret life as

a bigamist. Under pressure from his father, John D. Rockefeller drops out of high school two months

shy of commencement. He enters a professional school, where he studies double-entry bookkeeping,

penmanship, banking, and commercial law.
September 26, 1855

At 16, Rockefeller gets his first job, working for Hewitt & Tuttle, commission merchants and produce

shippers. He would celebrate "job day" the rest of his life. Rockefeller starts keeping careful accounts

of his finances in Ledger A, where he meticulously notes every receipt, expenditure and charitable

donations.
August 28, 1859

Edwin Drake strikes oil in Titusville, Pennsylvania, instigating an "Oil Rush" to the region.


1861

Civil War begins. Rockefeller, like some other northern businessmen, hires substitutes to avoid

fighting. The war at first disrupts industry, but ultimately it will accelerate economic development

in the North, contributing to Rockefeller's meteoric ascent.


1863

At 24, Rockefeller gets involved in the oil business, along with partners Maurice Clark and Samuel

Andrews. Andrews, Clark & Co. builds a refinery in The Flats, Cleveland's burgeoning industrial

area, which will soon be linked to the East Coast hubs by the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad


September 8, 1864

Rockefeller marries Laura Celestia ("Cettie") Spelman in a small, private ceremony, following a

nine-year courtship
1865

At 25, Rockefeller buys out his partners and founds Rockefeller & Andrews, Cleveland's

largest refinery.

Laura gives birth to the Rockefellers' first child, Elizabeth ("Bessie").


1868

Rockefeller strikes a major deal with a railroad, guaranteeing a certain volume of shipments in

exchange for rebates. The first of many, this deal was made with Jay Gould, owner of the Erie

Railroad. The Rockefellers move to Euclid Avenue, Cleveland's "Millionaires' Row.”


1870

Rockefeller founds Standard Oil of Ohio with $1 million in capital, the largest corporation in the

country. The new company controls 10 percent of U.S. petroleum refining.
1872

Rockefeller is tainted by the scandal surrounding the South Improvement Company scheme, a


secret alliance between major refiners and the railroads. However, he uses the scheme to

persuade other Cleveland refiners to sell out to Standard Oil. Following the so-called

"Cleveland Massacre," Rockefeller owns 22 of the 26 refineries in town.
September 18, 1873

"Black Thursday." The stock exchange crash sets off a depression that will last six years.

Standard Oil takes advantage of the economic downturn to absorb refineries in Pittsburgh,

Philadelphia, New York, and Pennsylvania's Oil Region.



1877

At 38, Rockefeller -- still relatively unknown to the public -- controls almost 90 percent of

the oil refined in the United States
At 40, Rockefeller is numbered among the country's 20 richest men.
Mid-1880s

Standard Oil expands into the overseas markets of Western Europe and Asia, selling more

oil abroad than in the U.S.
1882

Standard Oil trust is formed. Rockefeller creates a highly centralized structure with enormous power

but murky legal existence. Standard Oil builds up its distribution system, streamlining the delivery

and sale of oil and underselling its adversaries.


1883

The Rockefellers move to New York and build a mansion at 4 West 54th Street.


1887

At age 13, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., suffers a nervous collapse due to "overwork." He spends the

winter at the family's country house, healing through hard physical work.
1888

Amid growing anti-monopoly sentiment, economic concentration becomes an issue in the

presidential campaign. Both parties condemn it.

A New York Senate committee launches an investigation into Standard Oil. Rockefeller is called to the

witness stand, and gives evasive testimony.
1889

Eliza, Rockefeller's mother, dies at age 76. Her estranged husband does not attend the ceremony.

Rockefeller asks the minister to say that she was a widow.

Rockefeller agrees to contribute to the founding of a new Baptist college in Chicago. The University

of Chicago will become his first major philanthropic undertaking.

Andrew Carnegie publishes "The Gospel of Wealth," arguing that the wealthy have a moral

obligation to serve as stewards for society.
Late-1890s

Standard Oil attains its peak influence. Its dividends surge to 31 percent and its control of the

market is uncontested.
1890

Congress passes the Sherman Antitrust Act, which outlaws trusts and combinations in restraint of trade

and establishes fines for violators. The law remains in effect today.
1891

Frederick Gates, a former Baptist minister, starts working for Rockefeller as a philanthropic administrator.

Gates helps make Rockefeller's philanthropy more efficient.
1893

The stock market crashes, setting off the country's first great industrial depression. Bank closings and

massive unemployment heighten social tension.
1895

Rockefeller decides to retire from Standard Oil, gradually and secretly, in a move designed to keep the

press and the public in the dark.
1896

Henry Ford assembles the first automobile. Just as electricity is starting to replace kerosene as an

illuminant, gasoline enters the scene, creating a rising demand for oil.

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., starts working at 26 Broadway. During the first few years, his role there will be

marginal and ill defined.

Standard Oil contributes $250,000 to Republican William McKinley's presidential campaign against

Democrat William Jennings Bryan, a supporter of antitrust legislation. The candidates' opposing views

about trusts polarize public opinion on the issue.


1898

Between 1898 and 1902, many follow the Rockefeller business model; 198 trusts are created in coal, sugar,

and other industries
1901

J. P. Morgan purchases Carnegie Steel from Andrew Carnegie, leading to the creation of U.S. Steel,

the first billion-dollar corporation and a landmark in business consolidation.

Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research is created. The institute, called Rockefeller University today,

will become a leader in the new field of experimental medicine.
September 1901

An anarchist assassinates President McKinley. Vice President Theodore Roosevelt becomes president.

His vehement antitrust rhetoric will target corporations such as Standard Oil.
1902

The General Education Board is created by the Rockefellers to promote education in the South without

distinction of race.
November 1902

McClure's Magazine runs the first of 19 installments on the history of Standard Oil, written by muckraking

journalist Ida Tarbell.


1903

Abby gives birth to daughter "Babs" (Abby), dubbed "the richest of all babies" in the press.


1906

Rockefeller and Carnegie are perceived by the press as being locked in competition over the extent of

their philanthropic giving.

President Roosevelt's attacks on Rockefeller and Standard Oil escalate. Rockefeller is singled out as

one of the "malefactors of great wealth." Anti-Rockefeller sentiment is at an all-time high.
1907

The U.S. government has seven different suits pending against Standard Oil. The lawsuits argue that

Standard Oil is more than 20 times the size of its closest competitor.
The U.S. government launches its largest antitrust suit to date, targeting Standard Oil.
Rockefeller finances a campaign to fight hookworm in the South. By 1927 the disease will

be eradicated.


1910

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., leaves Standard Oil to devote himself to philanthropy. He is named foreman of New

York's White Slavery Special Jury to investigate the traffic in young women forced into prostitution.
May 15, 1911

The U.S. Supreme Court announces its decision to dismantle Standard Oil. The company is ordered

to divest itself of its subsidiaries within six months.

1913

Rockefeller Foundation is incorporated "to promote the wellbeing of mankind throughout the world."

Rockefeller gives the foundation $100 million in its first year.

Rockefeller's wealth reaches its lifetime peak of $900 million, thanks in part to the dismantling of

Standard Oil. Newspapers run daily box scores of his wealth.
September 26, 1913

A United Mine Workers strike begins in Southern Colorado. Nine thousand workers of the

Rockefeller-owned Colorado Fuel & Iron, the largest mining operation in the area, go out on strike.

Miners and their families are evicted, and they set up massive tent colonies.


April-May 1914

Writer and activist Upton Sinclair stages anti-Rockefeller demonstrations. Several "Wobblies,"

members of the revolutionary Industrial Workers of the World union, are killed when a bomb

possibly aimed at John D. Rockefeller, Jr., goes off.


April 6, 1914

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., testifies before the House Subcommittee on Mines and Mining regarding the

miners' strike. He upholds the principle of the open shop and reiterates his support for Colorado Fuel &

Iron management.




April 20, 1914

The Ludlow Massacre. At least 24 miners die, among them two women and 11 children, in a 14-hour

confrontation between miners and the National Guard. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., denies any responsibility.
April 30, 1914

President Wilson sends federal troops to curb an outbreak of violence in tent camps in Colorado.


August 1914

World War I begins. The Rockefellers donate millions to international relief agencies.



December 1914

The United Mine Workers union agrees to call off its strike without having achieved its goals.


January 25, 1915

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., testifies before the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations.

He softens his position on labor unions and vows to improve the situation at Ludlow.
September 1915

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and his advisor MacKenzie King tour Ludlow and meet the

miners in a well-publicized visit.
1917

John D. Rockefeller, Sr., begins to transfer his wealth. His son John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,

will be the main beneficiary.
1919

President Wilson sets aside Mount Desert Island, Maine, as a national park. Over the next decade,



John D. Rockefeller, Jr., will donate 11,000 acres to what will eventually become Acadia National Park.

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