American Rascal: How Jay Gould Built Wall Street's Biggest Fortune

American Rascal: How Jay Gould Built Wall Street's Biggest Fortune

by Greg Steinmetz
American Rascal: How Jay Gould Built Wall Street's Biggest Fortune

American Rascal: How Jay Gould Built Wall Street's Biggest Fortune

by Greg Steinmetz

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Overview

A gripping, “rollicking” (John Carreyrou, New York Times bestselling author of Bad Blood) biography of Jay Gould, the greatest of the 19th-century robber barons, whose brilliance, greed, and bare-knuckled tactics made him richer than Rockefeller and led Wall Street to institute its first financial reforms.

Had Jay Gould put his name on a university or concert hall, he would undoubtedly have been a household name today. The son of a poor farmer whose early life was marked by tragedy, Gould saw money as the means to give his family a better life...even if, to do so, he had to pull a fast one on everyone else. After entering Wall Street at the age of twenty-four, he quickly became notorious when he paralyzed the economy and nearly toppled President Ulysses S. Grant in the Black Friday market collapse of 1869 in an attempt to corner the market on gold—an event that remains among the darkest days in Wall Street history. Through clever financial maneuvers, he gained control over one of every six miles of the country’s rapidly expanding network for railroad tracks—coming close to creating the first truly transcontinental railroad and making himself one of the richest men in America.

American Rascal shows Gould’s complex, quirky character. He was at once praised for his brilliance by Rockefeller and Vanderbilt and condemned for forever destroying American business values by Mark Twain. He lived a colorful life, trading jokes with Thomas Edison, figuring Thomas Nast’s best sketches, paying Boss Tweed’s bail, and commuting to work in a 200-foot yacht.

Gould thrived in an expanding, industrial economy in which authorities tolerated inside trading and stock price manipulation because they believed regulation would stifle the progress. But by taking these practices to new levels, Gould showed how unbridled capitalism was, in fact, dangerous for the American economy. This “gripping biography” (Fortune) explores how Gould’s audacious exploitation of economic freedom triggered the first public demands for financial reforms—a call that still resonates today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781982107413
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 08/22/2023
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 148,878
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Greg Steinmetz is a partner at a money management firm in New York. He previously worked for The Wall Street Journal, where he covered investment banking before becoming Berlin Bureau Chief and then London Bureau Chief. His first book, The Richest Man Who Ever Lived: The Life and Times of Jacob Fugger, was heralded by Andrew Ross Sorkin as one of the best reads of 2015.

Table of Contents

Introduction xi

Part 1

1 School Days 3

2 The Seduction of Zadock Pratt 11

3 Tanners War 23

4 This Thing Ambition 27

5 Influencers 35

6 Erie 43

7 Sardines 51

8 The Flight 57

9 Peculiar Affairs 65

10 Good Morning, Commodore 77

11 Prophet of Regulation 81

12 Gold 89

13 The Plot 99

14 The Mix-up 107

15 Pump and Dump 113

16 Black Friday 119

17 The Day After 125

18 The Reckoning 131

Part 2

19 Fisk's Reward 139

20 Cows in the Moonlight 147

21 Union Pacific 155

22 Edison 165

23 Dirty Tricks 173

24 In Gould's Grip 177

25 Acquisitions 183

26 Western Union 187

27 Elevated 191

28 Wares at a Bazaar 197

29 Terror 207

30 The Strike 215

31 A Gould Wedding 225

32 In the Dock 229

33 Bad News 233

34 Morgan 239

35 Change at the Top 245

36 Woodlawn 253

37 An Appraisal 259

Epilogue 267

Acknowledgments and Sourcing 271

Notes 273

Index 287

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