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I 
 
 JAY GOULD 
 
 IJ 
 
,!« 
 
 GEORGE J GOULD. 
 
1 
 
 LIFE AND ACHIE\TMBNTS 
 
 OF 
 
 JAY GOULD 
 
 THE WIZARD OF WALL STREET 
 
 —BEING— 
 
 A Complete and Graphic Account of the 
 
 Greatest Financier of Modern 
 
 Times: 
 
 HIS EARLY LIFE AND STRUGGLES ; BOLD VENTURES AND 
 BRILLIANT ■ JCCESSES; WONDERFUL CAREER AS 
 A SPECULATOR AND RAILROAD KING, VAST 
 OPERATIONS IN WALL STREET; HIS 
 IMMENSE FORTUNE ACCUMU- 
 LATED IN A FEW YEARS. 
 
 A Remarkable Story abounding in Fascinating 
 
 Incidents, Thrilling Episodes, and 
 
 Marvelous Achievements. 
 
 BY HENRY DAVENPORT NORTHROP, 
 
 Author of "Earth, Sea and Sky," Etc., Etc. 
 
 EMBELLISHED WITH NUMEROUS FINE ILLUSTRATIONS. 
 
 R. A. H, MORROW, 
 
 ST. JOHN, NEW BRUNSWICK. 
 
CoPVKir.iir, 1S92, 
 
 This 
 and ach 
 road ki 
 iant cart 
 in Wall 
 His e, 
 but he re 
 out wea] 
 namp h'la 
 the great 
 He wa 
 "nd sudd 
 every e UK 
 operation 
 as the Wi 
 This Cci 
 account o 
 veyor, anc| 
 Jiis com in; 
 cesses as 
 " BIac^. 
 'street, 
 pleaded fir] 
 mystery J 
 jwatched. 
 land journ( 
 pe had be( 
 This fai 
 's a com I 
 
PREFACE. 
 
 This volume contains a grapliic account of the life 
 and achievements of the o-reatest fmancier and rail- 
 road kin<j^ of modern times. It portrays the brill- 
 iant career of the most dazzling operator ever known 
 in Wall street. 
 
 His early life was spent in humble surroundings, 
 but he rose to the highest pinnacle of fortune. With- 
 out wealth or influence to aid him, he carved his 
 nani'^ high before the eyes of the people, and became 
 the greates: money king of the world. 
 
 He was a man of great shrewdness, bold decision 
 ind sudden movements. His courage was equal to 
 every emergency ; he was master of every crisis. His 
 operations w^ere on a vast scale, and he became known 
 as the Wizard of Wall street. 
 
 This captivating Story of his Life gives a graphic 
 account of his boyhood and youth, his life as a sur- 
 veyor, and in a country store, his business as a tanner, 
 his coming to the great metropolis, and his first suc- 
 cesses as a railroad operator. 
 
 •' Blac'-. Friday " is historic in the history of Wall 
 street. On that day of wild excitement this cool- 
 headed financier made ^4,000,000. F'or years a great 
 mystery gathered about him ; every movement was 
 > investments, his deals, even his health 
 vere chronicle 
 
 ici journeys were c 
 he had been a Kino-. 
 
 by 
 
 This fascinating work traces his whole career. It 
 [s a complete history of the money Monarch. I| 
 
 (iii) 
 
IV 
 
 PRKFACE. 
 
 abounds in facts anu incidents which cvrryhody is 
 eager to read. It picUires his home hfe, his eh*gant 
 mansions, his majj^nificent works of art, and jjives a 
 detailed account of the <dnantic schemes and achieve- 
 ments wiiich have made his name known tliroughout 
 the civihzed workl. 
 
 This complete life of Jay Gould is portrayed by a 
 masterly pen, and is as fascinating^ as a romance. 
 
 The world unites in pronouncing the career of Jay 
 Gould wonderful. He was endowed with a <jcnius 
 
 fo 
 
 th 
 
 )f Napoleo 
 
 n 
 
 r speculation as great as tne genuis ot i\apo 
 for war, and of Gladstone for statesmanship. 
 
 He found out in early life what he was fitted for, 
 and he never entered any field of endeavor except the 
 one to which nature assigned him. Few men have 
 ever united such penetrating intellect and indomitable 
 will. His name and activities have entered into the 
 history of our country, and have aroused the interest 
 of other nations. 
 
 In business life this hero among speculators was 
 quick to discover chances, and equally quick to take 
 advantaofe of them. He died the controllino- owner of 
 three great systems of organized capital — the ii,ooo 
 miles of railroad centring about the Missouri Pacific, 
 the Western Union Telegraph Company, and the New 
 York Elevated System. In addition to these, he was 
 a large owner in many great properties, all of which he 
 acquired by his own unaided efforts. Bold, daring, 
 ambitious, capable of immense combinations, and the 
 rapid execution of vast schemes, he stood before the 
 world as the very King of Finance. 
 
MRS. GEORGE J. GOULD. 
 
IVu 
 
 Km 
 
 Sto] 
 
 The 
 
 Insi 
 
 Hov 
 
 The 
 
 EDWIN GOULD. 
 
 The 
 

 CONTENTS. 
 
 CI I. \ I'll: R I. 
 
 Hirth iiiHl ISoyliood 
 
 PAGE 
 
 17 
 
 CHAPTER II. 
 Eiirly Lil'e of the Great Financier 26 
 
 CIIATTER III. 
 Story of the Tannery 41 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 The Wizard in New York . 
 
 • • 
 
 • • 
 
 53 
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 Inside History of the Erie Railroad 
 
 CHAPTER VI. 
 How GoUl Went Up and Down 
 
 . 60 
 
 89 
 
 CHAPTER VII. 
 The Story of Black Friday . 
 
 100 
 
 CHAPTER VIII. 
 The Famous Wall Street and Stock Exchange 
 
 . 116 
 
 (V) 
 
VI 
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER IX. • 
 
 Gould and the Pacific Railroads 
 
 CHAPTER X. 
 Gould and the New York Elevated Kailroads 
 
 CHAPTER XI. 
 Supreme Dictator of Telegraph Companies 
 
 CHAPTER XIT. 
 Important Events in Gould's Career 
 
 CHAPTER XIII. 
 The Great Union Pacific Deal .... 
 
 CHAPTER XIV. 
 How the Millionaire Lived 
 
 PAGB 
 
 134 
 
 150 
 
 159 
 
 • C 
 
 172 
 
 . 184 
 
 194 
 
 CHAPTER XV. 
 Mr. Gould's Charities .... 
 
 CHAPTER XVI. 
 Stories Ahout the Money King- 
 
 214 
 
 • • • • • 
 
 223 
 
 CHAPTER XVII. 
 
 Keniarkahle Characteristics of the Wall Street 
 
 Napoleon 267 
 
 CHAPTER XVIII. 
 Cranks and Crazy Men ...,..,. 288 
 
 St( 
 
 Iiu 
 
 A 1 
 
 In 
 
 Eff( 
 
 Tril 
 
 Prcj 
 
 *'i:a 
 
 Mr. 
 
 Who 
 
pagb 
 
 . 134 
 
 . 150 
 
 159 
 
 . 172 
 
 . 184 
 
 194 
 
 . 214 
 
 223 
 
 . 267 
 
 . 288 
 
 CONTENTS. Vil 
 
 PAOB 
 
 CHAPTER XIX. 
 
 Stories of Interviews with Mr. Uould by Newspaper 
 Reporters 298 
 
 ■^ CHAPTER XX. 
 
 1 Incidents in the Life of Jay Gould 317 
 
 i 
 
 i CHAPTER XXI. 
 
 I A Many-Sided Man 334 
 
 f 
 
 I CHAPTER XXII. 
 
 In the Valley of Death 356 
 
 ■I 
 
 S CHAPTER XXIII. 
 
 Eflfcct of Mr. Gould's Death 370 
 
 I 
 
 i CHAPTER XXIV. 
 
 I Tributes to the Kin^ of Wall Street 381 
 
 J| CHAPTER XXV. 
 
 Preparation fV)r the Obsequies 392 
 
 I CHAPTER XXVI. 
 
 '* Earth to Earth, Ashes to Ashes" . . • • . 401 
 
 CHAPTER XXVII. 
 ^^ Mr. Gould's Last Will and Testament .... 424 
 
 CHAPTER XXVIII. 
 Who is to Succeed Jay Gould? ...... 449 
 
Vlll CONTENTS. 
 
 CHAPTER XXIX. 
 
 "What was Said of the Railroad King 
 
 CHAPTER XXX. 
 Views of the Press Coucerninjj the Wizard 
 
 CHAPTER XXXI. 
 Hohhies of Millionaires 
 
 PAGE 
 
 45<3 
 
 4^9 
 
 S 
 
 49; 
 
 CHAPTER XXXII. 
 Other Rich Men 504 
 
 can 
 
 wor 
 
 poo 
 
 fina 
 
 I sou I 
 
 Iwer 
 
 a ri^ 
 
 [now 
 
 fntei 
 
 It 
 
 ^elf- 
 
 Iborr 
 
 'bury 
 
 desti 
 
 his t 
 
 f^i^ o 
 
 mis ] 
 
 J 
 
469 
 
 Story of Jay Gould's Life. 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 Birth and Boyhood. 
 
 The death of Jay Gould ended a remarkable 
 career. He began life with nothing; and he died 
 worth nearly a hundred million of dollars. From a 
 poor boy he became the most brilliant and successful 
 financier of our time. His judgment was quick and 
 isound, his energy was untiring, and his enterprises 
 were planned on so vast a scale that he was without 
 a rival in the business world. The history of this re- 
 nowned financier and railroad king awakens universal 
 unterest; the story is graphic and startling throughout. 
 
 It is scarcely necessary to say that Mr. Gould was a 
 "%elf-made man. He came of Puritan stock, and was 
 born on May 27th, 1836, in the litde village of Rox- 
 i)ury, Delaware county, New York State. He was 
 .destined to be one of the most extraordinary men of 
 his time. His life covered the most eventful period 
 0f our political and commercial history, and during 
 ijiis period he was a unique and commanding figure. 
 [e was remarkable for the creation of a colossal for- 
 
 2 (17) 
 
18 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 tune of tens of millions ; remarkable for the methods 
 he employed to create this wealth, and for the 
 stirrincT and dramatic events in which his life 
 abounded ; remarkable for the extraordinary power 
 Avhich for many years he exerted in the world of 
 speculation and business ; remarkable for the striking 
 contrasts of his character, for the purity of l.is private 
 life and for the audacious daring- of his public life ; 
 remarkable for the frailty of liis physique, and for the 
 courage, breadth and power of his mind. 
 
 Tlic Napoleon of Fiiiaiiee. 
 
 Other men have risen from poverty to affluence, 
 and the United States contain not a few who have 
 created colossal fortunes in a few bold enterprises by 
 the simple exercise of their shrewdness, foresight and 
 darino-. but Mr. Gould's (jreat wealth was created 
 through a series of incidents so extraordinary and 
 so dramatic, and by methods so startling, that his 
 career dazzles the imagination. He has been in 
 finance and speculation what Napoleon was in war and 
 politics — the most brilliant character the world has 
 ever seen. 
 
 Look back upon his wonderful career. We see 
 him leaving his father's farm a penniless but deter- 
 mined lad. clerking in a country store by day and study- 
 inor mathematics at niofht. We follow him as he be- 
 comes a map-maker and goes forth to survey his own 
 and adjoining counties. We see him, hungry and 
 unable to purchase a meal, kneeling down by the road- 
 side and repeating his sister's prayer. 
 
BIRTH AND BOYHOOD. 
 
 19 
 
 lethocls 
 for the 
 [lis life 
 
 power 
 orld of 
 striking 
 
 private 
 )lic life ; 
 I for the 
 
 ffluence, 
 ho have 
 )riscs by 
 iaht and 
 created 
 ary and 
 that his 
 been in 
 war and 
 rid has 
 
 IWe see 
 lit deter- 
 id study- 
 Is he be- 
 his own 
 jgry and 
 Ihe road- 
 
 % 
 
 ■^ 
 ■'i^ 
 
 We see him strike his first bargrain. We see him win 
 the confidence of Zadock Pratt, the tanner. We fol- 
 low him into the forests of Pennsylvania and hear the 
 sound of his axe as he fells the first tree for a great 
 tannery. We see him working for the control of the 
 property. We follow him in his partnership with 
 Leupp, the old-fashioned and honorable merchant of 
 New York, and see him acrain workinqr to eain control 
 of the entire business. We see him entering, even 
 at this early day, into wild speculations that involved 
 his partner and threatened him with ruin. We follow 
 the young adventurer to New York. We see him 
 buy his first railroad on credit and clear a handsome 
 fortune out of the operation. We follow him into 
 Wail street, where for more than twenty years he 
 was to reign as a king and master. We see him in 
 Erie, first as a follower of Daniel Drew and after- 
 wards as President. 
 
 Wall Street in a Panic. 
 
 We see him and his companion, James Fisk, Jr., the 
 great speculator, in a series of wonderful stock 
 operations, cornering even their former leader, Daniel 
 Drew, and fighting with desperation Commodore Van- 
 derbilt. We hear the awful crash of Black Friday's )] 
 earthquake, from which Mr. Gould saved himself, but 
 In which hundreds were involved In ruin. We see 
 him now driven out of Erie by the Indignant £,.ock- 
 holders, headed by Gen. Sickles, Gen. Dix and Gen. 
 McClellan. We see him cornerinof Northwest and 
 raking In the wealth of his recent Wall street partner. 
 
20 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 We can see him now fastening his fingers on the 
 great Union Pacific Railroad, which for ten years he 
 controlled. 
 
 We see hirn securing control of th2 Pacific Mail, 
 the chief American steamship line. We see him buy- 
 inor for a few million dollars from Commodore Garri- 
 son the Missouri Pacific, "just as a plaything," but 
 which he afterwards developed into a great railroad 
 system covering thousands of miles of territory. We 
 see him • ontrolling vast sums of money, fostering 
 railroad enterprises, developing the resources of new 
 regions, and thus adding immensely to the wealth of 
 the nation. He is restless and eager, always launch- 
 ing some new undertaking, and surprising the public 
 by his bold schemes and the coolness of his judg- 
 ment. 
 
 We see him organizing an opposition against West- 
 ern Union un.il, the favorable moment arriving, he 
 secures control of the company, and by a series of ex- 
 traordinary consolidations, makes himself the head of 
 a telegraph monopoly with a system covering the 
 United States and crossinor the Adantic ocean. 
 
 Domestic Virtues. 
 
 We hear the crash of another panic. There are 
 moments when we think the great speculator will fall 
 — when, lo ! we see him calmly exhibiting his millions 
 of securities to his friends. Others fall, among them 
 men who had been his partners and agents, but he is 
 safe. 
 
 We see him living in a palace on the Hudson and 
 
BIRTH AND BOYHOOD. 
 
 21 
 
 on the 
 iars he 
 
 ic Mail, 
 im buy- 
 ; Garri- 
 ig," but 
 railroad 
 V. We 
 Dstering 
 
 of new 
 ealth of 
 
 launch- 
 i public 
 
 [S 
 
 judg- 
 
 5t West- 
 ing, he 
 IS of ex- 
 
 "liead of 
 inor the 
 
 o 
 
 lere are 
 rill fall 
 lillions 
 le them 
 It he is 
 
 ton and 
 
 r loughing the waters of the river and the ocean with 
 the most splendid yaclit ever constructed. We see 
 him at home, the personification of domestic honor and 
 purity, a faithful husband and a kind father. We find 
 the power of his millions and of the great properties 
 he controlled felt in every direction. Me is a factor v^ 
 in elections. Candidates seek him for favors. He 
 
 JAY GOULD S BIRTHPLACE. 
 
 dictates appointments to high offices. Honorable men ■ 
 sit with him in boards* of direction and are identified 
 with some of his enterprises. Nothing that the fertile 
 imagination of Balzac, Dumas or Goboriau ever con- 
 ceived equals in dramatic incidents and sensational de- 
 velopments the career of this extraordinary man. 
 It will be observed that there were two Goulds — 
 
22 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Goul'l the man of affairs and Gould the man of family. 
 In all his domestic relations his life was pure, his 
 nature affectionate. No criticism can touch him in his 
 home life. There he was above reproach. Towards 
 the end of his life his dual nature seemed to blend into 
 one. He became more conservative in business, more 
 solicitous, apparently, of the good will and good opin- 
 ion of his fellow-men^ niore careful to keep within the 
 bounds of strict business morality, less audacious in 
 his methods. Nor should it be forofotten that however 
 much Mr. Gould's public career may be justly subject 
 to criticism, much that he did was indirectly for the 
 public benefit ? For instance, he developed properties 
 that enriched wide sections of the country. No re- 
 view of his career would be complete without this 
 
 acknowledgment. 
 
 A Sterling- Ancestry. 
 
 Such were &i^ marvellous achievements of the 
 country lad who was born in the little village in New 
 York state on that May day in 1836. Nearly lialf a 
 century before, while Delaware, Ulster and Otsego 
 counties were yet one, his grandfather came with half 
 a dozen Puritan families from Fairfield county, Con- 
 necticut, and took up land near the hamlet which be- 
 came Jay Gould's birthplace. 
 
 This grandfather was Captain AbrsTi Gould. He 
 had been a Revolutionary soldier and is described 
 as a "grim, earnest, honest man." To him was born 
 in 1792 a son who Vv^as named John B., the first male 
 child born in the new settlement. John B. grew to 
 
*: 
 
 BIRTU AND BOYHOOD. 
 
 23 
 
 f family. 
 )ure, his 
 m in his 
 Fowards 
 end into 
 ss, more 
 od opin- 
 idiin die 
 .cious in 
 however 
 Y subject 
 y for die 
 'operties 
 No re- 
 lout diis 
 
 of the 
 in New 
 ly half a 
 
 Otseo^o 
 'ith half 
 
 ■y 
 
 Con- 
 lich be- 
 
 i He 
 ascribed 
 as born 
 St male 
 o-rew to 
 
 manhood, was three time 3 married and Jay was his 
 
 son by his first wife. 
 
 The boy's mother was a pious woman, a regular 
 
 attendant on the Methodist services held in the " Yal- 
 
 ler Meetin' House " where Jay also imbibed such 
 
 reli^^ious notions as found a foot-hold in a nature not 
 
 much given to the contemplation of spiritual things. 
 
 The father was a small farmer and kept a dairy of 
 
 twenty cows. 
 
 At School. 
 
 Until he was fourteen years old Jay lived on the 
 farm, picking up sucli a meagre education as attend- 
 ance for from four to five years at a district school, 
 which was closed during the greater part of the year, 
 afforded. This school was finally closed altogether 
 by the breaking out of the " Anti-Rent War,'' as it was 
 called, an uprising of the farmers against tlie efforts 
 of persons who claimed to have bought the land from 
 the Indians to collect an annual rental. 
 
 Jay was dissatisfied with farm life, which, indeed, 
 offered nothing under the circumstances to satisfy his 
 boyish ambitions. The reasons of his dissatisfaction 
 he once set forth as follows : "As I was the boy of 
 the family I generally brought the cows in the morn- 
 ing and assisted my sisters to milk them and drove 
 them back, and went for them again at night. I went 
 barefooted and I used to get thistles In my feet, and I 
 did not like farming in that way ; so I said one day to 
 my father that I would like to go to a select school that 
 was some twelve or fifteen miles from there. He said 
 
24 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 all right, but that I was too yoiingr. I said to him that 
 
 if he would give me my time J would try my fortune. 
 
 He said, all right ; that I was not worth much at home 
 
 and I might go ahead. So next day I started off. I 
 
 showed myself up at U: .lool, and finally I found 
 
 a blacksmith who consented to board me, as I wrote a 
 
 pretty good hand, if I could write up his books at 
 
 n'ght. In that way I worked myself through this 
 
 school." 
 
 Locked in the Cellar. 
 
 This school was kept by a Mr. Oliver, and Jay left 
 it in 185 1 after he had studied a year. During this 
 year, however, he must have made considerable pro- 
 gress in mathematics in spite of the fact that it used to 
 be related of him in the neiofhborhood that he orrew 
 tired once of going to school and was locked up one 
 morning in the cellar by his father as a measure of 
 correction, and forgotten until his non-return in the 
 evening caused comment. 
 
 The taste for mathematics it was that opened up to 
 him the first steadily lucrative employment in which 
 he became engaged, and also led him by easy steps 
 into the career which destiny seems to have marked 
 out for him. But first it w^as reserved for him to take 
 part in a transaction in which one cannot fail to 
 recoo;nize one of the distinctive traits of his future 
 business career. 
 
 If the King of Wall Street never went hunting for 
 snipes with a brass band, neither did the country lad. 
 After leaving school Jay got into a country store as a 
 
I him that 
 ' fortune. 
 I at home 
 d off. I 
 ' I found 
 I wrote a 
 books at 
 iigh this 
 
 1 Jay left 
 rinix this 
 able pro- 
 it used to 
 he orrew 
 d up one 
 asure of 
 n in the 
 
 ed up to 
 in which 
 asy steps 
 marked 
 n to take 
 t fail to 
 is future 
 
 ntinof for 
 itry lad. 
 :ore as a 
 
 
 
 CELEBRITIES OF WALL STREET 
 
:^- 
 
 
 CELEBRITIES OF WALL STREET. 
 
BIHTII AND BOYHOOD. 
 
 25 
 
 sort of boy of all work. He had to open the store at 
 6 o'clock in the niorniiiLr and sweep it out, and his 
 duties occupied him until lo o'clock at night. During 
 this time he was learning the business, and one inci- 
 dent dating back to this period in his career shows 
 that he was more than an apt pupil. 
 
 A Sharp Bargain. 
 
 His employer was negotiating for the purchase of 
 some property belonging to an estate in chancery and 
 Jay carried on the correspondence for him. The 
 executor demanded 5^2,500, but the would-be purchaser 
 offered only 5^2,000. Jay undertook a little investiga- 
 tion on private account and became convinced that the 
 property was bound to appreciate in value. He went 
 to his father, got $2,500 on a loan, bought the property 
 at that price, had the deed made in his father's name 
 and within two weeks sold out for $4,000. It is said 
 that his employer looked at the transaction in the 
 liorht of a breach of confidence and the result was a 
 severance of relations and the disturbance oftlK! young 
 man's first matrimonial plans. 
 
CHAPTER II. 
 
 Early Life of the Great Financier. 
 
 Mr. Gould related the story of his early life before 
 the Committee of the United States on Labor and 
 Education as follows : 
 
 ** I think I was about fourteen when I left home, and 
 I spent about a year at school. Then I got into a 
 country sto^f^ where I made myself useful, sweeping- 
 it out every morning and learning what I could about 
 the business during the day. My duties in the store 
 occupied me from 6 o'clock m the morning until lo 
 o'clock at night. In the meantime I had got quite a 
 taste for mathematics, especially surveying and engin- 
 eering. I took that up after I had left school, and as 
 I was pretty busy during the day, I used to get up at 
 3 o'clock in the morning and study from that time 
 until 6 o'clock, and I very soon found that I had got a 
 pretty good idea of that branch, so I concluded that I 
 would start out as a surveyor. 
 
 ** I heard of a man in Ulster county who was look- 
 ing for an assistant in making a map of the county — a 
 surveyor. I wrote to him, and he wrote back engag- 
 ing me ; so one spring morning I started off home. 
 This man's bargain with me was ^20 a month and 
 found. When I came to start I questioned whether I 
 
 (26) 
 
 4 
 
 :A 
 
EARLT LIFE OF THE GREAT FINANCIER. 
 
 27 
 
 : before 
 )or and 
 
 ne, and 
 
 : into a 
 
 seeping 
 
 1 about 
 
 e store 
 
 ntil lo 
 
 quite a 
 
 enqrin- 
 
 and as 
 
 t up at 
 
 t time 
 
 got a 
 
 that I 
 
 look- 
 ity — a 
 -ngag- 
 home. 
 1 and 
 ther I 
 
 should take any money with me or not. I could have 
 had it, but I thought it was better to break down the 
 bridge behind me ; so I took only enough to pay my 
 fare. I met this gentleman, and he started me out to 
 make these surveys. The map he was making was 
 one on which all the roads and residences are located 
 — a map showing the general topography of the 
 country. They are useful for reference. 
 
 *' There are my Pockets.** 
 
 " When this man came to start me out he Qfave me 
 a small passbook and said, *As you go along, you will 
 get trusted for your little bills, what you eat, and so on, 
 and I will come round afterwards and pay the bills.* 
 I thought that was all right. I think it was on my 
 second or third day out that I met a man who took a 
 different view. I had stayed at his house over night. 
 They charged in that part of the country at that 
 time a shilling for supper, sixpence for lodging, and a 
 shillincy for breakfast, makin<j two shillinofs and six- 
 pence in all. I took out my little book and said : ' I 
 will enter that.' 
 
 "The man turned c . me widi an oath and said (re- 
 ferring to my employer) : * Why, you don't know this 
 man ! He has failed three times. He owes every- 
 body in the county, and you have got money and I 
 know it and I want the bill paid. There I was ; I 
 hadn't a cent in my pocket ; so I just pulled my 
 pockets out and said to him : 'You can see that I tell 
 the truth. There are my pockets.' So finally he said he 
 would trust me. ' I'll trust you,' said he, * but I won't 
 
 (if, 
 
■* 
 
 28 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 trust that man.' This incident had such an effect on 
 
 me that it seemed to me as thoucrh the world had 
 
 come to an end. This was in the morning, and I 
 
 could not have the heart that day to ask anybody to 
 
 give me a dinner, so along about 3 o'clock in the 
 
 afternoon I got faint and I sat down for a few 
 
 minutes. 
 
 Praying in the Woods. 
 
 "After this rebuff I was naturally timid. It had a 
 great effect upon me, and I debated with myself 
 whether I should give up and go home or whether I 
 should go ahead. I came to a piece of woods where 
 nobody could see me, and I had a good cry. Finally 
 I thought I would try my sister's remedy — a prayer. 
 So I got down and prayed, and felt better after it, and 
 I then made up my mind to go ahead. I set my lips 
 close together and made up my mind that I would go 
 ahead and * die in the last ditch.' 
 
 " So I went on and the first house I came to I deter- 
 mined right then and there to go in and get something 
 to eat. I went in and the woman treated me kindly, 
 gave me some bread and milk and cold meats, and 
 one thing and another, and when I got ready to leave 
 I said to her, * I will enter it down.' She said all right. 
 In the meantime her husband came in and they both 
 said it was all right. I started, and had got, I guess, 
 about forty rods away from the house when I heard 
 him hallooing to me. Well, after the morning scene 
 I thought he was going to finish me ; but he came 
 right on and when he got up to me he said, * I want 
 
EARLY LIFE OF THE GREAT FINANCIER. 
 
 29 
 
 effect on 
 3rld had 
 y, and I 
 y'body to 
 c in the 
 r a few 
 
 [t had a 
 
 myself 
 
 hether I 
 
 s where 
 
 Finally 
 
 prayer. 
 
 r it, and 
 
 my lips 
 
 ould cro 
 
 o 
 
 deter- 
 lething 
 kindly, 
 ts, and 
 3 leave 
 rigrht. 
 y both 
 guess, 
 heard 
 scene 
 came 
 [ want 
 
 you to take your compass back and make me a noon- 
 mark.* 
 
 " That, as you perhaps know, is a north and south 
 line rici^ht throus^h the window, marked in so that the 
 farmers can regulate their clocks by it. When the 
 sun strikes the line it is 12 o'clock. I took my com- 
 pass back and made the noon mark for him. When 
 I had made it, and was about to go away, he said, 
 * How much is that ? ' * Oh,' said I, * nothing.' • Oh, 
 yes,' said he, ' I want to pay you for it.' I thought a 
 moment and he went on to say, * Our surveyor always 
 charges a dollar for these jobs.' Said I, ' Very well. 
 Take out a shilling for my dinner.* So he paid me 
 the seven shillings. Everything went by ' shillings ' in 
 those days — eight shillings to the dollar — and he kept 
 one and paid me the oth^T seven. That was the first 
 money I made in that business, and it opened up a 
 new field to me, so that I went on from that time and 
 completed the surveys and paid my expenses all that 
 summer by making noon-marks at different places. 
 
 A County Map. 
 
 "When I got through with the summer's work my 
 
 employer had failed and was unable to pay me. There 
 were two other young men, wealthy men's sons, who 
 had been engaged on the same work, and we three 
 together had the control of it. I proposed to them 
 that we should go on and finish the map ourselv s, 
 and finally we decided to do so. Then, as they lived 
 in the county and were pretty conspicuous, they 
 wanted to put their names to the map, so I said to 
 
30 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 them, 'Very well ; I will sell you out my interest,' and 
 I sold out my interest to them for ^5^500. 
 
 '* This was the result of my first summer's work. I 
 went on and finished the work and got it ready for the 
 engraver, so that what I sold was the perfected map. 
 This was a map of Ulster county. With this little 
 capital (which was a great deal to me then) I went 
 forward and made similar surveys of Albany and Dela- 
 ware counties. I had made up my mind that I would 
 go it alone, and I made those surveys alone and com- 
 pleted them, and they were very successful in sale, so 
 that I made about $5,000 out of those maps. About 
 that time, while I was carrying on these surveys, I 
 met a gentleman who seemed to take a fancy to me, 
 Mr. Zadoc Pratt, of Prattville. He was at that time 
 one of the largest tanners in the country. I had done 
 some surveying for him. He had a very beautiful 
 place at Prattville, and I fixed that up for him, and 
 finally he proposed to me to go into the tanning busi- 
 ness with him. He knew my whole history. 
 
 Off for Pennsylvania. 
 
 " I accepted this proposal, and next day I started for 
 
 Pennsylvania. The Delaware and Lackawanna Rail- 
 road had just been completed. I went over that road 
 and found some very large lots of hemlock timber 
 land, and I came back and reported to Mr. Pratt what 
 I had found, and we decided to go on. 
 
 " He sent me back and i made the purchase of the 
 land — made all the contracts myself, and then came 
 back and took about fifty or sixty men down there 
 
 .^1 
 
EARLY LIFE OF THE GREAT FINANCIER. 
 
 31 
 
 rest,' and 
 
 work. I 
 ly for the 
 :ted map. 
 this little 
 i) I went 
 md Dela- 
 t I would 
 and com- 
 1 sale, so 
 About 
 urveys, I 
 ;y to me, 
 hat time ^ 
 lad done 
 beautiful 
 him, and 
 ng busi- 
 
 rted for 
 na Rail- 
 lat road 
 timber 
 itt what 
 
 1 
 
 of the 
 came 
 there 
 
 with me to start the work. It was right in the woods, 
 fifteen miles from any place. I went in th.'^re and 
 chopped down the first tree. We had a portable saw- 
 mill, and we sawed the tree up, and that day we built 
 a blacksmith's shop out of the timber. I slept in it 
 that night, on a bed made of hemlock boughs. We 
 went on and built the tannery. It was a very large 
 one, the largest in the country at that time. We car- 
 ried on the business for a while, and then I bought 
 Mr. Pratt out, and sold the interest to a firm in New ^ 
 York, at the head of which was a Mr. Loup." 
 
 Such was the modest beginning of the man who 
 piled up the most colossal fortune of modern times 
 that has been acquired by individual exertion, without 
 any help from those who had gone before. Nobody 
 living but his sons know just how large that fortune 
 
 really is. 
 
 Eager to Attend School. 
 
 Mr. Jay Gould used to tell his intimate friends that 
 whatever nerve he possessed he inherited from his 
 father. He remembered seeing his father chase a 
 band of anti-renters out of his dooryard with nothing 
 but an old musket in his hands. P'or a few years after 
 the anti-rent turmoil had quieted down young Jay re- 
 mained at home, doing such work as his limited 
 strength would permit. 
 
 He was discontented, and from time to time ureed 
 his father to send him to some academy where he 
 could obtain an education. His father did not refuse 
 
 ■.**■ 
 ■^ 
 
32 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 his request, but kept telling the impatient boy to wait 
 a while. 
 
 Jay did wait until he was fourteen years old. Then, 
 after pondering over his prospects, he formed a res- 
 olution, and at once put it into practice by asking his 
 father's permission to leave home, saying that he was 
 confident in his ability to take care of himself His 
 father was inclined to be amused at the boy's request, 
 which was made with much earnestness, and thinking 
 that it was a mere passing whim, returned a careless 
 affirmative. The family were astounded, however, 
 the next morning when little Jay entered the break- 
 fast room equipped for his journey out into the world. 
 
 He ate his breakfast quietly and, arising from the 
 table, held out his hand to his father with a hearty 
 "good-bye, father." His father was amazed at his 
 determination, and his stepmother and sisters entreated 
 him tearfully to remain at home. Unshaken in pur- 
 pose, however, the future "Wizard of Wall Street" 
 hastily caught up his little bundle and left his parent's 
 house. His bundle contained a spare suit of clothes, 
 and he had fifty cents in his pocket. 
 
 Bookkeeping- and Mathematics. 
 
 Young Jay trudged hopefully through the moun- 
 tainous road between Roxbury and Hobart, where 
 there was an academy that he had long desired to 
 enter. He went directly to the Principal of the academy 
 and told him of his anxiety to obtain an education and 
 his desire to get employment that he might earn money 
 to pay his tuition fees. The Principal became Interested 
 
 i 
 
 c 
 a 
 
 V( 
 
EAKLY LIFK u/ TUE GREAT FINANCIER. 
 
 3S 
 
 )y to wait 
 
 \d. Then, 
 ried a res- 
 iskinor his 
 
 at he was 
 self. His 
 s request, 
 thinkin^f 
 a careless 
 however, 
 lie break- 
 :he world, 
 from the 
 a hearty 
 id at his 
 entreated 
 in pur- 
 Street " 
 parent's 
 clothes, 
 
 moun- 
 t, where 
 :sired to 
 academy 
 Ltion and 
 n money 
 iterested 
 
 in the boy and secured for him the position of book- 
 keeper in a store kept by the village blacksmith.* 
 
 Gould worked hard and soon mastered the intrica- 
 cies of bookkeeping. He spent a few hours each day 
 at the academy and endeavored to avail himself of all 
 its advantages. He developed a decided talent for 
 mathematics and soon became quite proficient in sur- 
 veying, trigonometry, and engineering. 
 
 He was at the same time an eager reader of history, 
 and his liking for historical works was one of his char- 
 acteristics through life. He was an early riser. There 
 was scarcely a day while he was at Hobr/rt that he did 
 not get up at 4 o'clock in the morning. 
 
 Having acquired a theoretical knowledge of en- 
 gineering, Gould borrowed an old compass and a set 
 of surveying implements from a resident of the village 
 and devoted himself assiduously to practice in the 
 fields. Beinof of an inventive turn of mind he made 
 various toys which he gave to the village boys as com- 
 pensation for acting as flag and chain bearers on his 
 surveying expeditions. 
 
 Gets an Interest in a Tin-Shop. 
 
 After he had been with the village blacksmith as 
 
 [bookkeeper for one year, his employer offered him a 
 
 ihalf interest in the store on condition that he would 
 
 [take full charge of the business. Gould accepted the 
 
 offer, and it is related that he speedily built up a 
 
 flourishing trade and developed business traits that 
 
 [attracted the attention of New York merchants. The 
 
 (business, however, was not congenial to his taste and 
 3 
 
34 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 in the spring of 1852 he transferred his interest in the 
 Hobart store to his father, who, meanwhile, had sold 
 his farm. 
 
 The house in which Jay was born and spent his 
 boyhood is described as '*a two-story, box-like frame 
 building covered with a coating of white paint." In 
 July, 1880, Jay Gould revisited his birthplace and also 
 Hobart, eleven miles distant, where he went to school. 
 He used to walk the entire distance to school every 
 Monday morning, returning Saturdays. He was en- 
 thusiastically received by the inhabitants at the time 
 of his visit as the most noted man ever born in that 
 region. 
 
 Anecdotes of the Wizard. 
 
 Innumerable anecdotes are related of Jay's early 
 life. All the world has heard the mouse-trap story. 
 It was in 1853, when the World's Exhibition was held 
 in New York, that young Gould, then about seventeen 
 years old, is said to have made his first visit to the 
 metropolis, in which he was to become such a power. 
 He carried with him a showy mahogany case, contain- 
 ing an invention which the boy hoped would bring 
 him fame and fortune. The invention was a mouse- 
 trap. 
 
 He entered a horse-car, and leaving his invention 
 on the seat, stepped outside and stood on the platform, 
 where he could viev; the glories of the great city. The 
 box was picked up by a thief, but not without the ob- 
 servation of young Gould, who pursued the thief and 
 captured him, his exploit being related next day in the 
 
Early life of the great financier. 
 
 a5 
 
 terest in the 
 le, had sold 
 
 d spent his 
 
 x-like frame 
 
 paint." In 
 
 ace and also 
 
 nt to school. 
 
 school every 
 
 He was en- 
 
 at the time 
 
 born in that 
 
 f Jay's early 
 e-trap story, 
 ion was held 
 ut seventeen 
 visit to the 
 ch a power. 
 ;ase, contain- 
 would bring 
 las a mouse- 
 
 [\s invention 
 |the platform, 
 
 iat city. The 
 Ihoiit the ob- 
 
 Ihe thief and 
 :t day in the 
 
 Herald, this being the first newspaper reference to 
 Gould, whose renown has filled columns' of the daily 
 press for years. The mouse-trap was a success, but 
 its inventor laid traps and caught speculative mice all 
 his life. 
 
 In conversation Mr. Gould's dark eyes were seldom 
 directetl full at one. There was a far-off expression 
 in them, as if he were constantly gazing into the 
 future. Indeed, in his conferences with his associates, 
 Mr. Gould rarely said anything until every one else had 
 had his say. If ever his eyes betrayed his innermost 
 feelings it was when he told of his first visit to New 
 York. He was not poor even then. He had several 
 thousand dollars, though he had but just turned sev- 
 enteen years of age. This was his story : 
 That Famous Mouse-Trap. 
 
 "I was ambitious and had brought a little thing with 
 me which I was sure was to make my fortune and 
 revolutionize the world," said Mr. Gould, "and you 
 will smile when I tell you that it was a mouse-trap. 
 It was in a pretty mahogany case, which I carried un- 
 der my arm. I got into a Sixth avenue car, I think, 
 and every now and then I ran out on the platform to 
 see the buildincrs, leavinof the case containinof the 
 mouse-trap on the seat. When I got to the street 
 where I was to get off the mouse-trap had disap- 
 peared. I turned to the conductor and said: 
 
 '* * What has become of my box ? ' 
 
 " ' That box that was on the seat ? ' 
 
 " * Yes.' 
 
^s-^ 
 
 36 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 "'Was it yours? Why/ replied the conductor, 'a 
 man who got out and turned down the last street 
 carried it off. If you run you will probably catch 
 him.' 
 
 " I ran and caught him. He was a great strong 
 fellow, but I collared him. I really regretted that I 
 had done so and tried to let him go, but the fact is one 
 of my fingers caught in a button-hole of his coat, and 
 before I could get off there was a crowd around us 
 and a policeman, who took us both off to a near-by 
 court. The statements of the policeman and of my- 
 self and of the thief were all heard. The magistrate 
 drew some nice legal and technical distinctions which 
 came very near costing me my liberty. 
 
 Escapes IinprisouineRi/. 
 
 "While the thief who stole my mouse-trap was com- 
 mitted to trial, I was given to understand that owing 
 to my inability to furnish bail — for I knew no one in 
 New York then — I should be detained as a witness 
 until the trial. It was not a pleasant introduction to 
 New York, but I have never forgotten it, and its recol- 
 lection has often afforded me a good deal of amuse- 
 <nent. Fortunately for me there was a detective in 
 the place who had been hunting my mouse-trap thief 
 for years, and who had a requisition from, I think, the 
 Governor of Pennsylvania or New Jersey. He 
 saved me. 
 
 " I forgot to say that when In the course of the ex- 
 amination the box was opened to verify the truth of 
 my statement, and the purloiner of my great inven- 
 
 € 
 
EARLY LIFE OF THE GREAT FINANCIER. 
 
 37 
 
 ductor, 'a 
 ast street 
 bly catch 
 
 2at strong 
 ted that I 
 fact is one 
 , coat, and 
 iround us 
 a near-by 
 md of my- 
 nagistrate 
 ons which 
 
 I was com- 
 
 ;hat owing 
 
 no one in 
 
 a witness 
 
 iuction to 
 
 i its recol- 
 
 of amuse- 
 
 2tective in 
 
 trap thief 
 
 think, the 
 
 sey. He 
 
 Df the ex- 
 t truth of 
 sat inven- 
 
 tion found it was only a mouse-trap, his face assumed 
 such an expression of disgust that 1 could not help 
 laughing at him." 
 
 That Gould's great fortune was not the result of a 
 streak of luck, but of strict attention to business and 
 hard work, is clearly proved in all the events of his 
 life. His plans Were the result of careful thought, 
 and they were carried out by hard work. The man 
 in whose family young Gould worked for his board 
 when going to school thus speaks of his conduct at 
 that early date : *' He was an excellent boy. His hab- 
 its were good and he devoted most of his evenings to 
 study. He was always the hrst one up in the morn- 
 ing and he had the fire burnincr and the tea-kettle 
 boiling by the time my wife was ready to prepare 
 
 breakfast." 
 
 A Great Pusher. 
 
 The map-making episode has been pretty fully related 
 by Mr. Gould in his testimony before the Senate Com- 
 mittee, but there are a few additional particulars of 
 interest related by Oliver J. Tillson, one of his part- 
 ners in the map-making enterprise, after the failure of 
 the man who had first employed him in the business. 
 
 Mr. Tillson confirms Mr. Gould's account, and tells 
 of the bargain in which the latter sold out to his part- 
 ners. Here is a copy of a receipt given by Gould on 
 that occasion. 
 
 December 27, 1852. 
 Received of Oliver J. Tillson and Peter H. Brink 
 ninety dollars and wheel in full of all debts and dq- 
 
38 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 mands and dues against them and the Ulster county 
 map. Jason Gould, 
 
 for John B. Gould. 
 
 It will be observed that he sit^ned his name " Jason," 
 not Jay. He was christened " Jason," but about this 
 time began to ciiange it to Jay, by which he was ever 
 after known. "There wasn't any foolishness in Jason's 
 books," says Mr. Tillson, referring to the books in 
 which Mr. Gould had made his notes of the surveys. 
 "He was all business in those days, as he is now. 
 Why, even at meal times he was always talking map. 
 He was a worker, and my father used to say : ' Look 
 at Gould ; isn't he a driver?' " 
 
 This, in fact, is the testimony of all his contempo- 
 raries. From his earlier years he was absorbed in 
 schemes for making money, and his whole aim in life 
 was to "get on." With every passing year his ambi- 
 tion broadened, until it enveloped a continent. 
 
 What a Lawyer I>i(l. 
 
 It is a striking coincidence that young Gould and his 
 two partners in the map business were sued by the 
 man who first employed the former in the project, and 
 they placed their case in the hands of Lawyer T. R. 
 Westbrook, who succeeded in having the suit dis- 
 missed. Westbrook afterwards became (and this is 
 the coincidence) the Supreme Court Judge who years 
 after scandalized the legal profession by holding court 
 in Jay Gould's private office and issuing an order in 
 one of the Manhattan Railway litigations, 
 
 a'wk 
 
 I 
 
EARLY LIFE OF THE GREAT FINANCIER. 
 
 39 
 
 r county 
 
 JLD, 
 ioULl). 
 
 " Jason," 
 bout this 
 I'as ever 
 1 Jason's 
 jooks in 
 surveys, 
 is now. 
 ng map. 
 : ' Look 
 
 ntempo- 
 rbed in 
 m in life 
 lis anibi- 
 
 1 and his 
 1 by the 
 ect, and 
 sr T. R. 
 suit dis- 
 1 this is 
 
 lo years 
 \g court 
 )rder in 
 
 I 
 
 Personal Apin'jiraii<*c». 
 
 Jay Gould was a short, spare man, with piercing; 
 black eyes and a sallow face, the lower part of which 
 was hidden behind a full black beard. Those who 
 knew him best said that it was through his eyes that 
 the man revealed himself. They were a remarkable 
 pair — searching, firm, 
 cold and all but inca- 
 pable of changing in 
 any way that might be- 
 tray his feelings. 
 
 He seldom lost his 
 temper or was excited. 
 His methods, if his 
 friends analyze them 
 correctly, led him to 
 discern public move- 
 ments before his rivals 
 did, and to follow rather 
 than to lead theni. 
 Thus he got the great 
 influence of natural 
 forces to add to his 
 power and weight in many important railway specu- 
 lations. In others he created conditions to suit his 
 speculative intentions, and* there were no means he 
 would hesitate to adopt in order to succeed. 
 
 Many who knew Mr. Gould intimately are in the 
 habit of assertincr that his oriorin must have been 
 Hebraic. No one pretends to say how many genera- 
 
 JAY GOULD. 
 
40 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 tions back the Jewish blood was in the family, or that 
 Mr. Gould was aware of its existence in hi 
 
 ni. 
 
 But 
 
 l)(Hh his names — Jason, or Jay, and Gould — served to 
 strenothen this belief in those who held it. The 
 twisted form " Goidd " was suspected of being changed 
 from "Gold," which is a common prefix in the names 
 of inanimate and natural objects which certain Jews in 
 Europe were compelled to adopt as surnamt s in one 
 period of their history. His habits of thought and his 
 extraordinar)' intellect were both Jewish, these persons 
 assert, with how much or little basis in the actual fat t 
 of his origin no one can ever decide. 
 
 Mr. Gould was certainly American in the character 
 and extent of his self-creation and success. Born of 
 poor parents on a poorer farm, he began to make 
 money to pay his way through school, and he was a 
 partner in. business enterprises while yet a lad. He 
 got richer and richer by the fairest means and by 
 means that caused him to be the man most cordially 
 disliked by the public of all the conspicuous men of 
 his day. He died worth many millions of dollars, 
 inheriting none and marrying none that united in his 
 vast estate. 
 
 
mily, or that 
 1 him. But 
 I — served to 
 ■Id it. The 
 :ino- chanoed 
 n the names 
 rtain Jews in 
 ami s in one 
 Lioht and his 
 liese persons 
 ,e actual fac t 
 
 :he character 
 3. Born of 
 ran to make 
 nd he was a 
 t a lad. He 
 ans and by 
 ost cordially 
 uous men of 
 of dollars, 
 united in his 
 
 WILLIAM H. VANDBRBILT. 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
II 
 
 JAMES FISK. JR 
 
 ^ 
 
iff 
 
 * 
 
 
 
 CHAPTER III. 
 Story of the Tannery. 
 
 Mr. Gould next became a tanner, and his expert 
 ence in this business, which occupied him only a short 
 time, forms one of the most interesting chapters of 
 his eventful life. 
 
 While surveying in the interior of New York State 
 he became acquainted with Zadoc Pratt. He related 
 the incident himself and the events which followed it 
 to the Senate Committee as follows : 
 
 •' At that time, while I was carrying on these surveys, 
 I met a gentleman who seemed to take a fancy to me 
 — one Zadoc Pratt, of Prattville, who owned one of 
 the largest tanneries in the country. I had done some 
 surveying for him. He had a beautiful place at Pratt- 
 ville, and he proposed to me to go into the tannery 
 business with him. I consented, and on the next day 
 started for Pennsylvania. I found that the Delaware, 
 Lackawanna and Western Railroad had just been com- 
 pleted and had some large tracts of hemlock timber for 
 sale. I told Mr. Pratt what I had found, and he sent 
 me back to purchase this tract. I made all the con- 
 tracts myself and, returning, got from fifty to sixty 
 men and with them started the works. It was ri^^ht 
 ^Hit in the woods and I cut d^wn the first tree. 
 
 (4P 
 
 M 
 
T^. 
 
 II 
 
 42 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 "We got Up a saw mill and put up a blacksmith's 
 shop, and I slept in that on a bed make of hemlock 
 bark. So we went on and it became the larofest tan- 
 nery in the country. I finally bought Pratt out, and 
 afterwards sold it in New York to a firm at the head 
 of which was a Mr. Leupp. About that time the panic 
 of 1857 came, and of course everything was very 
 much disturbed — confidence was gone in almost every 
 kind of business, and money was almost impossible to 
 get. I thought once or twice that we would fail, but 
 we went through. Mr. Leupp afterwards committed 
 suicide. That left the property in such a condition 
 that litigation grew out of it." 
 
 Tanner and Politician. 
 
 It is to be regretted that Mr. Gould was not so full 
 
 and explicit in his account of this part of his career 
 as he was in his statement of his earlier years. Zadoc 
 Pratt was a famous man in his days — a man of ability, 
 push and ambition. He was not only the biggest 
 tanner in the country, but he also was a power in the 
 politics of the State. He served ten years in Congress, 
 and at least one of his speeches attracted widespread 
 attention. 
 
 He was one of the earliest advocates of cheap 
 postage, and he moved the establishment of the 
 Bureau of Statistics, which has since developed into 
 the Department of the Interior. He also moved the 
 first survey oi^ the Pacific Railroad line. When he 
 ceased his Prattville tannery in 1845 ^^^ estimated that 
 in twenty years he had used 150,000 cords of bark. 
 
STORY OF THE TANNERY. 
 
 43 
 
 smith's 
 
 
 emlock 
 
 
 ist tan- 
 
 
 ut, and 
 
 1 
 
 e head 
 
 
 e panic 
 
 
 IS very 
 
 
 t every 
 
 ■ ■'^'" 
 
 sible to 
 
 • 
 
 ail, but 
 
 ■l 
 
 imitted 
 
 
 ndition 
 
 
 so full 
 career 
 Zadoc 
 ability, 
 )iggest 
 in the 
 igress, 
 spread 
 
 cheap 
 )f the 
 d into 
 ^d the 
 len he 
 :d that 
 bark. 
 
 and wood, had employed 30,000 men, had cleared 1 2,- 
 000 acres of land and tanned over one million sides 
 of sole-leather. 
 
 He was, however, nearly seventy years old when he 
 interested himself in Gould. The latter was fortunate 
 in obtaining the confidence of this man. The histor) 
 of his association with Pratt, and later with Leupp, 
 is not contained in legislative and law reports, as are 
 other portions of Gould's career, but there are several 
 very circumstantial accounts extant based on the testi- 
 mony of eye-witnesses, some of whom may still be 
 
 living. 
 
 A Big- Coiicerii. 
 
 Pratt was doubtless taken with young Gould's snap 
 and energy, and considered him just the kind of 
 material to use in pushing a new enterprise. Pratt 
 furnished all the capital and Gould conducted the 
 active operations. The capital of the firm w^as $120,- 
 000, and the tannery at Gouldsboro, Pa. — for the 
 place was named after Gould — became the biggest 
 concern of its kind in the country. Gould threw the 
 whole energy of his being into the enterprise. As 
 he has related, he cut with his own hand the first tree. 
 He carried a portable saw-mill wnth him into the 
 woods, and in a day or two a blacksmith's shop was 
 erected. As already stated, Gould slept and ate in 
 that shop until the tannery was completed. 
 
 Pratt made occasional visits to Gouldsboro, but the 
 business was left practically in Gould's hands, and it 
 grew rapidly. But after a while Mr. Pratt became 
 
•^ , •' 
 
 44 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 dissatisfied with the condition of affairs. Appar . .itly 
 a rushing business was being done, from which there 
 was no adequate return. The books seemed to be 
 so mixed that it was quite impossible to ascertain just 
 how the firm stood. 
 
 Gould soon saw that his partner was becoming 
 suspicious, and determined to be ready for him. On 
 the growth of the business Gould had, of course, occa- 
 sion to frequendy visit New York, where he became 
 acquainted with most of the merchants in the 
 " Swamp," then, as now, the centre of the leather 
 
 trade. 
 
 All Old New-Yorker. 
 
 Among others, he became acquainted with Charles 
 M. Leupp, a merchant of the old school, honorable 
 and correct in all his dealings. He was a man of 
 great refinement and of poetic temperament, and 
 possessed many literary and artistic tastes. He was 
 a man of wealth and owned a fine mansion on the 
 corner of Madison avenue and Twenty-fifth street. 
 This mansion is still standing, but has been altered 
 into an apartment-house. In Mr. Leupp's time it was 
 probably the handsomest and best constructed private 
 dwelling in the city, and cost about ^150,000. 
 
 It was an evil day for Mr. Leupp when Gould came 
 to him and proposed that he advance the money to 
 purchase Mr. Pratt's interest in the tannery. That 
 was the beginning of Mr. Leupp's troubles, but at 
 that time he considered the proposition an advanta- 
 geous one and he consented to advance the cash. 
 
^ , -^ 
 
 STORY OF THE TANNERY. 
 
 45 
 
 ppar . »itly 
 lich there 
 led to be 
 irtain just 
 
 becoming 
 him. On 
 irse, occa- 
 e became 
 s in the 
 e leather 
 
 h Charles 
 honorable 
 I man of 
 lent, and 
 He was 
 on the 
 th street, 
 altered 
 me it was 
 ^d private 
 
 )uld came 
 money to 
 y. That 
 s, but at 
 advanta- 
 the cash. 
 
 ^ 
 
 ■^ 
 
 Gould never seems to have had at any period in his 
 career any difficulty in interesting the wealthiest and 
 most powerful men in his schemes. He himself said 
 that it is just as easy to obtain the acquaintance and 
 secure the friendship of the most powerful as of the 
 most insignificant if only one will set about it in the 
 right way. 
 
 Well, Gould returned to Gouldsboro with Leupp's 
 backing. He found Pratt looking over the books 
 and puzzled by their intricacies. He discovered that 
 Gould had started a private bank at Stroudsburg in 
 his own name, and he became suspicious that the 
 firm's funds were used in the bank. 
 
 An Explanation Demanded. 
 
 Pratt then demanded an explanation and finally 
 
 threatened to close up the tannery and dissolve the 
 partnership. Gould protested that this would ruin 
 him, when Pratt said that he must buy or sell. This 
 was what Gould was waiting for, and he offered Pratt 
 $60,000 for his interest in the business. Pratt ac- 
 cepted the offer and Gould drew on Leupp for the 
 money. 
 
 This made Gould a partner of Leupp with full 
 powers. He continued with Leupp the policy he 
 had begun with Pratt. He branched out in many 
 speculations in Leupp's name, but without his knowl- 
 edge. It is said that he bought another tannery, 
 attempted to get up a "corner" in hides and in other 
 ways entered into many hazardous enterprises. He 
 continued to draw on Leupp for money and to dis- 
 
5 I* 
 
 46 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 play his incapacity as a bookkeeper until Leupp be- 
 came suspicious, just as Pratt had. 
 
 Meanwhile the panic of 1857 had swept over the 
 country and unsettled all business operations, and 
 when Leupp discovered the extent in which he had 
 been involved in Gould's speculations he thought that 
 he was ruined. He went to his magnificent home one 
 night and, in a fit of despondency, shot himself dead. 
 It is not certain but that Gould's schemes would have 
 turned out all right, and to Leupp's, as well as to 
 Gould's advantage, but it is a fact that Leupp's part- 
 ners and heirs have always felt very bitter against 
 Gould, and could not help believing that he was 
 indirectly the cause of Leupp's sad and untimely end. 
 
 "Who Killed Leupp? " 
 
 It is related that in the excitement and passion of 
 
 Black Friday, when a mob surged through Wall street, 
 a voice was heard above the tumult shouting the 
 awful question : 
 
 " Who killed Leupp ? " 
 
 And the answer is said to have come from a hun- 
 dred throats : 
 
 ''Jay Gould!" 
 
 Mr. Gould then negotiated with Leupp's daughters 
 for the control of the tannery. It is stated that they 
 demanded ^60,000, thv^ amount Leupp had originally 
 advanced. Gould agreed to this, but proposed a plan 
 by which the payments should extend over a term of 
 years — $10,000 cash and a like amount every year 
 until the entire indebtedness had been liquidated. 
 
Story of the tannery. 
 
 47 
 
 ^eupp be- 
 over the 
 :ions, and 
 ch he had 
 ought that 
 home one 
 iself dead. 
 ;ould have 
 well as to 
 ipp's part- 
 cr against 
 It he was 
 imely end. 
 
 passion of 
 
 /all street, 
 
 uting the 
 
 om a hun- 
 
 daughters 
 that they 
 originally 
 sed a plan 
 a term of 
 ;very year 
 iquidated. 
 
 When the papers were drawn up it was found Gould 
 had made no provision for paying interest. 
 
 Negotiations were broken off, and Mr. Lee, a 
 relative and former partner of Leupp, hastened to 
 Gouldsboro and took possession of the tannery in 
 the name of Leupp's heirs, taking the precaution to 
 hire a lot of men to help him barricade and guard it. 
 Gould arrived a day or two later and determined to 
 capture the tannery at all hazards. Gouldsboro was a 
 village of about three hundred inhabitants, situated 
 some distance from the railway station, and besides 
 the tannery the most important building was the hotel. 
 Mr. Lee, who, like Mr. Leupp, is described as an 
 honorable, warm-hearted man, but with more courage 
 and grit, had the tannery guarded by about thirty or 
 forty men whom he had hired at Scranton. Gould, 
 as soon as he arrived, began active operations. He 
 interested nearly the entire population of the place in 
 his behalf. They knew him and Lee was a compar- 
 ative stranger. 
 
 A Battle for the Tannery. 
 
 Gould told every one he met that he owned the 
 tannery, that Lee and his cutthroats were endeavor- 
 ing to get it away from him, and that if they suc- 
 ceeded the business would go to wreck and ruin and 
 the place would suffer a big loss. He had soon an 
 armed gang of about 150 men around him prepared 
 to fight for him. They were a tough-looking set of 
 men. He took them to the hotel, where he gave them 
 an oyster supper, and then mounting an empty box he 
 
48 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 addressed his forces, telling them to use no unnecessary 
 violence, but to '• be sure and get the tannery." 
 
 This was probably the first and only speech that 
 Gould ever made in all his life. Filled with oysters 
 and whiskey, the men made a determined charge; on 
 the tannery, Gould directing everything, but prudently 
 keeping in the background, for he heard that Lee had 
 a loaded musket ready for him. 
 
 The battle was fierce but short. The barricaded 
 doors were battered in and Lee's men were driven 
 from the tannery. Two men were badly wounded. 
 One of Lee's party was shot through the breast. 
 Warrants were issued for the arrest of all concerned. 
 Many of the men fled from the place never to return. 
 Those arrested were afterwards released on bail. 
 Gould was left in possession of the property, but it 
 did him little good. 
 
 Lee began legal proceedings against him and Gould 
 brought counter-suits, and this litigation was continued 
 until the business was destroyed and the tannery 
 abandoned. Gould's ready resources were so ex- 
 hausted that it is related that he had to borrow the 
 money to pay his railroad fare to New York. It is 
 probable that no man in this or any other country has 
 ever been a party to so many law-suits as Gould. 
 From the time of the contest over the map business 
 there was scarcely a day during his whole life that he 
 did not have some litigation on his hands. 
 
 We give below the graphic account of the battle 
 to secure the tannery which was published in the New 
 
 
STORY OF THK TANNERY. 
 
 49 
 
 icessary 
 
 -ch that; 
 oysters 
 argc on 
 rudcntly 
 Lee had 
 
 rricaded 
 e driven 
 I'ounded. 
 
 1 breast, 
 mcerned. 
 o return, 
 on bail. 
 ty, but it 
 
 d Gould 
 ontinued 
 tannery 
 
 2 so ex- 
 )rrow the 
 rk. It is 
 untry has 
 s Gould. 
 
 business 
 fe that he 
 
 the battle 
 the New 
 
 York Hera Id Hi the time, prefacing it with a statement 
 of the circumstances which led to the exciting combat. 
 
 Another Aocouiit. 
 
 Like other men of active brain Mr. Gould had a 
 fancy for a tan yard. He had become familiar with 
 the favorite tanning regions of New York and Penn- 
 sylvania, and he knew the hemlock forest in the 
 counties of Luzerne and Monroe, in Pennsylvania, as 
 well as the travelled wilds of his native county. It 
 occurred to him to establish a town and tannery on 
 the Lehigh bordering on the counties above named. 
 He fixed on the site, sought Zadock Pratt, an exten- 
 sive New York tanner, formed a firm (Pratt and 
 Gould), laid out the village of Gouldsboro, and in 
 one hundred days after the first tree was felled in the 
 previously unbroken forest the works were in full 
 operation. 
 
 A post-office, schoolhouse, church, plank road, bank 
 and stage route were very soon added to the conven- 
 iences of the village, and Mr. Gould was postmaster, 
 of course. 
 
 After a while Gould bought out his partner, obtain- 
 ing the needed capital from Charles M. Leupp, a hide 
 and leather merchant of this city. They became 
 partners, but the daring ventures of Gould, who was 
 the resident partner, alarmed the New York firm of 
 Leupp and Lee, and after considerable distress of 
 mind Mr. Leupp sent his bookkeeper to Gouldsboro 
 to investigate the accounts. The bookkeeper found 
 himself in a quagmire of undecipherable figures. He 
 
60 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 was puzzled and confoiiiKUni and could make nothin<| 
 of thcni beyond tiic tact thai die concern was badly 
 involved and that it was probable that the New York 
 house was likewise involved. 
 
 Gould had crone into corners in hides and other 
 tanneries, which might or might not have turned out 
 well, but the old-fashioned notions of Mr. Leupp were 
 shocked, and when he found that his partner had 
 bought not only all the hides then in the market, but 
 all that were to arrive in the ensuing six months, he 
 literally lost his reason and shot himself after a 
 stormy interview with Gould, who remained imperturb- 
 ably cool, and simply turned on his heel and left the 
 office. Mr. Leupp lived in what was then called the 
 Barretta mansion, corner of Twenty-fifth street and 
 Madison avenue, which cost in low price time $150,000 
 to build, and which was filled with costly furniture and 
 rare products of pencil and chisel. 
 
 A Hard Fij-lit. 
 
 On the death of their common partner Gould and 
 Lee made a dash for the property in Gouldsboro. 
 Prior to the fatal shot Gould had arranged with Con- 
 gressman Alley, of Massachusetts, to take the works 
 and thus relieve Leupp and Lee : but the suicide of 
 the senior partner stopped the final consummation of 
 this plan, and, Gould always insisted, stopped the way 
 to a profitable continuance of the works. Both Gould 
 and Lee were men of nerve, and both determined to 
 get and hold the tannery. Lee reached it first and 
 garrisoned it with the employes. Information was 
 
STORY OP THE TANNERY. 
 
 61 
 
 received that Goukl intended to use force, and prepara- 
 tions were made to receive and repel him. 
 
 In the Herald o{ March i6, iS6o, the battle is thus 
 described : — 
 
 TANNKKV INSURRECTION IN PENNSYLVANIA. 
 
 liattle between the forces of the swamp leather dealers 
 — The Leupp and Lee tannery, in Gouldsboro, 
 attacked and defended — Sides of leather used 
 for breastworks — Insurgents two hundred strong 
 — The tannery tak^n — Flight of the defenders 
 — Wounded four. 
 
 About half-past ten o'clock on Tuesday morning 
 the lock was wrenched from the stable, the men having 
 been concentrated into the tannery, and the stable 
 beinor uno^uan' :d. 
 
 A little past twelve the tannery itself was attacked 
 by a mob variously estimated at from i8o to 250 men, 
 armed with axes, muskets, rifles and other weapons. 
 Without a demand of possession or summons to 
 surrender the doors were beaten in, and but a few 
 blows had been struck by the assailants before they 
 began to fire ball and buckshot through the building, 
 raking it in every direction. As vigorous a defence 
 was made, by a force of fifteen men in the story 
 attacked, with tannery sticks, stones and four re- 
 volvers, as was possible against such overwhelming 
 odds. 
 
 The tannery was finally carried on all sides, and 
 those who did not escape were violently flung from 
 the windows and doors, while the assailants rushed 
 through the buildings, yelling like Indians, pursuing 
 the fugitives with their guns in every direction. In 
 the action many contusions were received and four 
 
52 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 gunshot wounds, and had it not been for the large 
 number of sides of leather hung in the lofts, very few 
 of the defending party would have escaped without 
 wounds. 
 
 Mr. Jay Gould, in his version of the affair, in which 
 he endeavors to exculpate himself, says : — 
 
 "I quiedy se' icted fifty men, commanding the 
 reserve to keep aloof. I divided them into two 
 companies, one of which I despatched to the upper 
 end of the building, directing them to take off the 
 boards, while I headed the other to open a large front 
 door. I burst open the door and sprang in. I was 
 immediately sa! ited by a shower of balls, forcing my 
 men to retire, and I brought them up a second and 
 third time and pressed them into the building, and by 
 this time the company at the upper end of the tannery 
 had succeeded in effectinof an entrance and the firincr 
 now became general on all sides and the bullets were 
 whistling in every direction. After a hard contested 
 struggle on both sides we became the victors and our 
 opponents went flying from the tannery, some of them 
 making fearful leaps from the second story." 
 
s large 
 ery few 
 without 
 
 n which 
 
 ng the 
 ito two 
 I upper 
 off the 
 re front 
 I was 
 :ing my 
 )nd and 
 and by 
 tannery 
 le firing 
 ts were 
 mtested 
 and our 
 of them 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 The Wizard in New York. 
 
 On his visits to New York Mr. Gould used to put 
 up at the Everett House, and here about this time he 
 met the lady who shortly became his wife, as will here- 
 after be related. The impression is that after the ^ 
 tannery episode Mr. Gould was pretty thoroughly im- 
 poverished. However that may be, his marriage put 
 him on his feet again, for his father-in-law was a 
 wealthy merchant, and though it is said that he op- 
 posed his daughter's marriage with the hero of Goulds- 
 boro, yet he soon became reconciled and evidently 
 aided Mr. Gould in the operations into which he then 
 entered. 
 
 At this time he bought his first railroad, and Mr. 
 Gould's own account of the transaction, oriven in his 
 extraordinary narrative to the Senate committee, from 
 which extracts have already been given, will be inter- 
 esting. 
 
 " About that time," he said, " the panic of 1857 came 
 on and everything was very much disturbed. Rail- 
 road values after this time went down very' low and 
 the first mortgage bonds of the Rutland and Washing- 
 ton Railroad were selling at 10 cents on the dollar. 
 I bought all the bonds at that price, borrowing the 
 
 (53) 
 
54 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 money to pay for them. I took the entire charge of 
 this road and learned the business, as 1 may say. I 
 was President, wSecretary, Treasurer and Superintend- 
 ent, had sole control, and I formed what was known 
 as the Saratoga consolidation. The first road was 
 sixty-two miles long. I had gradually drawn the road 
 up and I kept at work until finally we made the present 
 Rensselaer and Saratoija consolidation. Meantime 
 the bonds became good and my stock also. 
 
 A Ijiioky Vol I til re. 
 
 "A friend of mine came to me one nigrht and said 
 that the next day he must fail. He had bought Cleve- 
 land and Pittsburg, but could not pay for it. He 
 bought it at 60 and it was down to about 40. I told 
 him, 'I will take half of what you have at diat figure.' 
 He agreed to this, and that was the way I became the 
 owner of the Cleveland and Pittsburg. As soon as it 4 
 was found that there was some one there who could 
 take care of it the stock went up to 120. I took the 
 road and it was very successful. It paid dividends 
 from the start, and finally I sold it to the Pennsylvania 
 road," 
 
 His profits from the Rutland Railroad speculation 4. 
 were very large, and Gould was now fairly on his way 
 to his colossal fortune. At this time his attention was 
 turned to Wall street, aiid, though friends warned him 
 against entering into the whirlpool of blasted hopes 
 and ruined fornmes, his inclinations in that direction 
 were too strong to be resisted. Gould was a born 
 speculator. It is true that his great fortune was created 
 
 s. 
 
 
 f. 
 
 V 
 
 'J. 
 
 A ^!U 
 
ge of 
 ay. I 
 ntend- 
 cnown 
 d was 
 e road 
 resent 
 I n time 
 
 d said 
 CI eve- 
 . He 
 
 I told 
 ioryre.' 
 lie the 
 in as it 4 
 
 could 
 )k the 
 dends 
 Ivania 
 
 ilation 4- 
 is vvav 
 )n was 
 d him 
 hopes 
 ection 
 born 
 reated 
 
 X 
 
 
 r. 
 
 y 
 
5(3 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 mainly in hazardous enterprises outside of Wall street, ^ 
 
 and that in stock speculations pure and simple he was 
 
 not always so successful or so infallible as many have 
 
 supposed, but by nature and habit Gould was at this 
 
 time of his life a commercial gambler, and it was as 
 
 natural that he should enter Wall street as for a duck 
 
 to take to water. 
 
 In Wall Street. 
 
 It was in 1859 or i860 that Gould firs^ entered Wall 
 street. It was not very long before he stepped to the 
 front rank. WHiat a long list of brainy and courageous 
 men do Gould's contemporaries in the street make ! 
 With most of them Gould has been at sword's point, 
 with a few he has been an ally, with some he has been 
 both ally and enemy. Most of them are no longer 
 powers in the speculative world. Some of them are 
 dead. Not a few have been overwhelmed in the swift, 
 resistless torrent of stock speculation. Three or four 
 yet remain with power in their hands and millions in 
 their vaults. 
 
 The Vanderbilts — the Commodore, his son and 
 grandsons — Daniel Drew, James Fisk, Jr., the Beldens, 
 Commodore Garrison, Henry N. Smith, James R. 
 Keene, William Heath, George I. Seney, General 
 Thomas, Calvin S. Brice, D. O. Mills, Horace F". Clark, 
 Alfred Sully, Addison Cammack, C. F. Woerishoffer, 
 the Rockefellers, S. M. Kneeland, C. J. Osborn, D. P. 
 Morgan, H. S. Ives, C. P. Huntington, Russell Sage, 
 Cyrus W. Held, John W. Garrett, Robert Garrett, J, 
 P. Morgan, the Seligmans, Brown Bros., Jay Cooke, 
 
 
11 street, )k 
 e he was 
 ,ny have 
 i at this 
 t was as 
 r a duck 
 
 red Wall 
 ^d to the 
 i rag eons 
 It make ! 
 I's point, 
 has been 
 o longer 
 hem are 
 the swift. 
 ;e or foil r 
 illions in 
 
 son and 
 Beldens, 
 imes R. 
 General 
 F. Clark, 
 rishofft-r, 
 rn, D. P. 
 ell Sage, 
 arrett, J. 
 y Cooke, 
 
 CYRUS W FIELD. 
 
I 
 
 RUSSELL SAGE. 
 
THE WIZARD IN NEW YORK. 
 
 67 
 
 Hugh J. Jevvett, Lathrop, Little and Austin Corbin, 
 Henry Clews, Washington E. Connor, Burnham, Gen- 
 eral E. F. Winslovv, Edward S. Stokes, S. V. White, 
 Wm. Dowd, Solon Humphreys Wm. R. Travers, 
 
 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. 
 
 Rufus Hatch, Samuel Sloan — these were some of the 
 men identified with various Wall Street interests with 
 whom Gould has been allied or at enmity, or both, 
 during his long career in the street. 
 
 A Born Leader. 
 
 That he has been able among all these financial 
 
MlkMHi^^dUH 
 
 68 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 UNITED STATES SUB-TREASURY, WALL STREET. 
 
 criants to make himself the leader is the hiofhest evi- 
 dence that can be given of his genius in speculation 
 and railroad financierinof. As we read some of these 
 names there arise before our eyes the visions of 
 murder, of suicide, of bankruptcy, of the debtor's 
 prison, of the felon's cell, of ruined fortunes and blasted 
 reputations. Others of the men have achieved wealth 
 
 
TIIK WIZAKD IN NEW YORK. 
 
 59 
 
 Ik 
 
 t evi- 
 lation 
 these 
 ns of 
 btor's 
 lasted 
 vealth 
 
 and honorable names. It is interestinir to note that 
 at the time (iould first entered the street one of his 
 ft'llow-boarders at the Everett House was James Gor- 
 don Bennett, the elder, with whose son and successor 
 he became engaged in such bitter business and per- 
 sonal antagonisms. 
 
 Gould not only gambled in Wall Street, but he de- ^ 
 fended the operation. " People," he told a State 
 Senate Committee which was investicjatinof into stock 
 and grain corners, '* will deal in chance. Your min- 
 ister, doctor and barber all have the same interest in 
 speculation. Would you not, if you stopped it, pro- 
 mote oramblinir ? " 
 
 No young man should get the impression that suc- 
 cess in life depends on trickery and a shrewdness that 
 borders on rank dishonesty. Many of Jay Gould's , 
 transactions have been almost unanimously con- 
 demned. There is enough to admire in the man with- 
 out applauding his tricks, his cunning schemes, his un- 
 scrupulous dealings. Whether any man can honestly 
 make as many million dollars as he did is a question 
 which most persons would answer by an emphatic no. 
 It is not the aim of this story of the great money- 
 maker to uphold the saying which must be familiar to 
 all, " Make money — honestly, if you can — but make? 
 '1 it." The man who takes this in its full meaning for 
 his motto is a knave. If he is outside the peniten- 
 tiary he is not getting his deserts. The only proper 
 place for such a rogue and thief is under lock and 
 key. 
 
CHAPTER V. 
 
 Inside History of the Erie Railroad. 
 
 Mr. Gould, in his sworn autobiography before the 
 Committee on Labor and Education, while careful to 
 give minute details about other periods of his history, 
 significantly preserved an entire silence as to Erie and 
 Black Friday. 
 
 There is.no intention to speak maliciously of Gould. 
 Beside an open grave charity and forgetfulness stand 
 guard on either side. But the lesson of Gould's career 
 would be lost if even at this time the facts were not 
 plainly and openly told. 
 
 Fortunately the record of Erie, notwithstanding Mr. 
 Gould's silence, can be told from authoritative testi- 
 mony. In his famous " Chapter of Erie," published 
 in the North American Review \x\ 1869, Charles Fran- 
 cis Adams gave a thrilling account of Erie from the 
 time Daniel Drew engracred in his famous war with 
 Commodore Vanderbilt to the time when the unfortu- 
 nate road was in complete control of Jay Gould and 
 James Fisk, Jr. Mr. Adams's history stopped short 
 in the middle of the story, but the record of Erie from 
 1869 till Mr. Gould was driven from power in 1872 is 
 given in the reports of the Legislative inquiry in 1873 
 and of the Hepburn investigation in 1879. 
 
 (60) 
 
INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ERIE RAILROAD. 
 
 61 
 
 id. 
 
 J fore the 
 ireful to 
 , history, 
 Erie and 
 
 f Gould, 
 ss stand 
 I's career 
 vere not 
 
 diner Mr. 
 ;ive testi- 
 )ublished 
 es Fran- 
 from the 
 war with 
 
 unfortu- 
 ould and 
 ed short 
 
 rie from 
 n 1872 is 
 nn 1873 
 
 Power of Money. 
 
 It is a curious fact that years after writing this 
 " chapter " Mr. Adams, having become Pn'sident of 
 the Union Pacific, sat in the same Board of Directors 
 with Mr. Gould, but only for a comparatively brief 
 period, and Mr. Adams never repudiated or recalled 
 his early history of Gould in Erie. 
 
 It is a striking illustration, however, of the power 
 of millions that Gould should live to sit in the same 
 board with the representative of the aristocratic 
 Adams family, which furnished two Presidents to the 
 United States ; that after involving the administration 
 of President Grant in the disaster of Black Friday, he 
 should in after years be joined with him in business 
 enterprises ; that after having been denounced in a 
 Congressional report written by James A. Garfield, he 
 should be sousfht for to render aid to secure Garfield's 
 election as President, and that, though not seeking to 
 join the social circles in which the Astors are leaders, 
 he was able to induce John Jacob Astor to sit with 
 him in the Western Union Board of Directors. 
 
 After Mr. Adams wrote his " Chapter of Erie," he 
 was himself President of the Union Pacific, and it 
 must have given Mr. Gould the keenest satisfaction to 
 have been the occasion of his retirement from that 
 position. The railway was in a bad way financially — 
 had a big floating debt — and Mr. Gould and his friends 
 stepped in, gained control of the property the second 
 time, retired Mr. Adams from the Presidency and se- 
 cured an adjustment of the floating debt. 
 
dd 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Mr. AdaiiiH Ketires, 
 
 It was su i>f < If e steel to Mr. Gould at this time that he 
 might write a " Chapter of Union Pacific," covering the 
 history of the Adams administration. But whatever 
 there may have been lacking in administrative vigor 
 in Mr. Adams's presidency, he retired without any blot 
 on the family escutcheon. 
 
 When Gould entered Wall street ^rie was one of 
 the most active stocks on the list of the Stock Ex- 
 change. It was natural that he should drift into its 
 speculation, and his connection with the Cleveland and 
 Pittsburg led him naturally into Erie. His old ac- 
 quaintances were surprised to hear one day that he 
 had become a director and a controlling spirit of this 
 great road. This was in 1867. 
 
 But now let us quote a little plain language from 
 Charles P'rancis Adams in order to get into the atmos- 
 phere of Erie at this time : 
 
 " Yet freebooters are not extinct," he wrote. " They 
 have only transferred their operations to the land, and 
 have conducted them in more or less accordance with 
 the forms of law, until at last so great a proficiency 
 have they attained that the commerce of the world is 
 more equally but far more heavily taxed in their be- 
 half than would ever have entered into their wildest 
 hopes, while outside the law they simply make all 
 comers stand and deliver. . . Gambling is a business 
 now, where formerly it was a disreputable excitement. 
 Cheating at cards was always disgraceful. Transac- 
 tions of a similar character under the euphemisdc 
 
 
I that he 
 iring the 
 vhatever 
 ve vigor 
 any blot 
 
 I one of 
 
 .tock Ex- . 
 t into its 
 iland and 
 s old ac- 
 Ly that he 
 it of this 
 
 tore from 
 le atmos- 
 
 '* They 
 and, and 
 nee with 
 oficiency 
 
 world is 
 their be- 
 ir wildest 
 make all 
 
 business 
 citement. 
 
 Transac- 
 phemistic 
 
 JAMES FISK, JR. 
 
 (63) 
 
64 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 names of ' operating,' ' cornering ' and the like are not 
 so regarded. . . . No better illustration of the fantastic 
 disguises which the worst and most familiar evils of 
 history assume as they meet us in the actual move- 
 ment of our own day could be afforded than was seen 
 in the events attendingr what are known as the Erit* 
 wars of the year 1868." 
 
 A Famous Verummt PeddUir. 
 
 In these wars Gould was an active *spirit, and here, 
 for the first time in Wall street, showed his consum- 
 mate ability. 
 
 Before his entrance into Erie Gould had become ac- 
 quainted with James Fisk, Jr., and the former, with that 
 unerring judgment of men which was always one of 
 the elements of his success, soon perceived in Eisk the ^ 
 qualities which supplied his own deficiencies. Fisk 
 was the son of a Vermont peddler and followed the 
 calling himself for some time, and in it learned the 
 ereat art of driving a hard and shrewd baro-ain. 
 Wholly uneducated, his natural ability in the line of 
 making money was very great. 
 
 Gould was timid and shrank from publicity. Fisk 
 was bold and loved notoriety. Gould had many re- 
 finements of mind and was of a domestic nature. 
 Fisk was coarse, sensual and fond of display. He be- 
 came the colonel of a militia regiment, and with great 
 delight used to put on his uniform and ride in the front 
 of his command. He used to create a sensation by 
 riding in a carriage with six horses in questionable 
 female company. He considered it one of the choicest 
 
 i 
 4 
 
INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ERIE RAILROAD. 
 
 65 
 
 i not 
 
 astic 
 ilsof 
 love- 
 seen 
 Eric 
 
 here, 
 isu ni- 
 ne ac- 
 h that 
 me of 
 pk the -^ 
 Fisk 
 d the 
 d the 
 
 .rgain. 
 
 ne 
 
 of 
 
 Fisk 
 my re- 
 uiture. 
 ie be- 
 arcat 
 le front 
 jion by 
 Ion able 
 hoicest 
 
 prerogatives of his position as Vice-President and 
 Comptroller of Erie to direct the theatre that adjoined 
 the railway offices in the Grand 0[)era House, 
 
 While Gould did not have the inclination or courage 
 to do these things, he did not hesitate to use Fisk in 
 every available way and to hide his own personality 
 behind that of his partner. In those days P1sk seemed 
 to play the more prominent part, and Gould, in pubhc 
 estimation, was a secondary character. When any- 
 thinof was done it was Fisk that bore the brunt of 
 popular criticism and indignation. Yet the facts as 
 they are now known show that Gould was the master "• 
 mind ; F'isk was simply his right arm. " With Gould 
 to plan and Fisk to act," said General Francis Barlow, 
 in 1872, *' they were a strong team." 
 
 Uiifl<' I>aiiiel l>re\v. 
 
 At the time Gould and Fisk entered into Erie Daniel 
 Drew was the master of that great trunk line. Drew 
 was one of the most extraordinary characters in Wall 
 street history. He was a Director and Treasurer of ' 
 Erie, and used these positions simply for speculative 
 purposes. He was known in his day as " the great 
 speculative director." 
 
 His biggest piece of " financierinor " was to fret him- 
 self apparendy cornered in Erie stock, and then to 
 appear in the street widi a block of stock which had 
 been converted from bonds issued witli an obscure 
 provision entitling the holders to convert them into 
 stock. Gould later on repeated this trick with suc- 
 cess, both in Erie and Jersey Central. 
 
6Q 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Soon after Gould and Fisk entered Erie Drew be- 
 came engaged in his celebrated contest with Commo- 
 dore Vanderbilt and in this contest he had their able 
 assistance. The first and erreat Vanderbilt was cast 
 in a larger mould than Drew. The latter was simply 
 a speculator. Vanderbilt was a creator of property. 
 He was the first of the line of railroad kings. Laying 
 the foundations of his irreat wealth in the steamboat 
 and steamship business, he soon drifted into railroad 
 operations, clearly seeing that in the development of 
 the crreat inland commerce of America there were 
 larger and quicker profits to be obtained than in the 
 
 export trade. 
 
 Gij^antio Stock Operation. 
 
 Vanderbilt had obtained control of the Harlem and 
 Hudson River Roads: he now aimed at the owner- 
 ship of Erie. Space will not permit the telling of the 
 story of this famous contest. It is a story of extraor- 
 dinary stock operations, of millions lost and won ; of 
 securities issued by the bushel and with little or no re- 
 gard for law or equity: of large and intricate litiga- 
 tion ; of judges bought, legislators bribed ; of direc- 
 tors defying injunctions and fleeing to another State 
 to escape arrest. 
 
 Vanderbilt, having been defeated in other efforts to 
 get his fingers on the Erie road, resolved if possible to 
 buy a controlling interest, and his brokers were set at 
 work on this difficult job. Drew resolved to let Van- 
 derbilt have as much stock as he wanted, but entered 
 into a bargain with Gould and Fisk by which the rail- 
 
 ni 
 
INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ERIE RAILROAD. 
 
 67 
 
 w be- 
 mmo- 
 r able 
 s cast 
 
 simply 
 )perty. - 
 Laying 
 imboat 
 ail road 
 lent of 
 •e were 
 1 in the 
 
 lem and 
 I owner- 
 icr of the 
 extraor- 
 Kvon ; of 
 or no re- 
 :e litiga- 
 lof direc- 
 .er State 
 
 iftbrts to 
 )ssible to 
 ire set at 
 let Van- 
 It entered 
 li the rail- 
 
 
 
 road king should be defeated by issuing and marketing 
 an unlimited number of new securides. So Drew 
 sold and Vanderbilt bought. The latter, having in 
 remembrance Drew's famous convertible stock trick, 
 resorted to the courts to prevent him from issuing any 
 more stock. 
 
 Injunctions were issued enjoining Drew and all the 
 directors of the road from issuing any stock. Counter- 
 injunctions were obtained by the Drew-Gould party. 
 One judge would issue an order commanding certain 
 things to be done which another judge sinmltaneously 
 commanded should not be done. Judges in New 
 York, Brooklyn, Albany and Binghamton issued 
 contradictory injunctions. Such a legal pandemonium 
 has never been seen before or since. 
 
 In ♦"lie meantime, regardless of injunctions. Drew 
 and his aides calmly proceeded to carry out their care- 
 fully matured plans to issue new stock. It was agreed 
 that 50,000 shares of new stock should be delivered 
 to the Wall Street firms of which Gould and Fisk 
 were members. Without croino- into the details of the 
 intrigue it is sufficient to say that it was, at least for 
 the time being, successful. When the 50,000 shares 
 were thrown on the market the price of Erie fell from 
 83 to 71. Vanderbilt found that he had bought at 
 high figures a lot of Erie stock, but that he was no 
 nearer control than ever. 
 
 Drew raked in about $7,000,000 of Vanderbilt's 
 money, and Gould and Fisk shared in the profits. 
 Then orders were issued to arrest the Drew directors 
 
""-^ " IT 
 
 68 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 for contempt of court. Receiving- intelligence of this, 
 they hastily packed up their papers and securities, and, 
 thrusting them into their pockets and valises, they 
 
 VElFAi V,. SWr.ENY. 
 
 beat a hasty retreat to Jersey City. Over J6,ooo,ooo 
 in securities were carried in one coach. Among this 
 company, of course, were Gould and Fisk. 
 
 ! <' 
 
insidp: historv of the erie railroad. 
 
 69 
 
 -^?\;-, 
 
 -%.= 
 
 ,,000,000 
 
 ong this 
 
 In Jersey they were safe from the o[Jcrati()n of New 
 
 York law. They cahnly proceeded to have the Erie 
 
 Incorporated as a New Jersey institution, at the same 
 
 time laborino- to o^et the New York Leoiskiture to 
 
 pass a bill to leo^alize the issue of 50,000 shares of 
 
 stock.- 
 
 *' Poor Krie." 
 
 It was not conscientious scruples which caused the 
 Legislature to hesitate to pass this bill. It was simply 
 a question of cash. Vanderbilt w'as still in the fight 
 to protect his interests, and it was a question of who 
 had the biggest pursv- Meanwhile Peter B. Sweeny 
 — the brains of the Tweed ring — had been made, tem- 
 porarily, receiver of the road, and though he never 
 actually did anything in that position, Judge Barnard 
 ordered that he be paid ^150,000 for his services. 
 Poor Erie had to foot the bill. 
 
 It was necessary that the Drew party should have 
 a trusty representative at Albany to look after Erie 
 legislation there, and Gould was selected as the fittest 
 man to act in this capacity. Gould now appears on 
 the scene as a lobbyist. First giving out tliat he is go- 
 ing to Ohio, Gould quietly slips up to Albany with 
 $500,000 of Erie cash in his pockets. Here in a day 
 or two he was arrested but released on <i;5oo,ooo bail 
 to appear in a New York court on Saturday. He ap- 
 peared on that day, but his attorneys secured a post- 
 ponement, and he was allowed to return to Albany in 
 charge of an under-sheriff. 
 
 Arriving in Albany Mr. Gould was conveniendy 
 
 
70 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 taken sick, and unable to return to New York to 
 attend the court proceedings, though he drove to the 
 Capitol in a snow-storm. The officer reported him to 
 the court as a " runaway," but the matter was after- 
 wards settled, and, in the language of Mr. Adams, he 
 " assiduously cultivated a thorough understanding 
 between himself and the Legislature." The corrup- 
 tion at this session was investigated by a legislative 
 committee in 1869. 
 
 Gcmhl's Own Story, 
 
 In the famous Erie investigation of 1873, Mr. Gould 
 testified as follows : 
 
 " I was first elected President of the Erie Railroad 
 in 1868, and I was President in 1869, 1870 and 1871. 
 I do not remember whether I approved payment to 
 William M. Tweed of money for legal services while 
 he was Senator. I do not know whether he is a lawyer. 
 He was a director of Erie and a member of its 
 Executive Committee. I would not have allowed 
 pecuniary transactions with Mr. Tweed to be put in 
 the shape of legal services if my attention had been 
 called to them. The name of William M. Tweed is in 
 my handwriting. The words in my handwriting are: 
 ' Wm. M. Tweed, legal disbursements as per order J. 
 G., $35,000, April 25th, 1 87 1.' The approval of 
 voucher was on April 5th, 1869. He was Senator in 
 1869, also in 1871 and 1872. 
 
 " The ' le^al account ' was of an india-rubber char- 
 acter. I gave large atnounts in 1869, 1870, 1871 and 
 1872 in the Senatorial and Assembly districts. It was 
 
INSIDE UISTOKY OF THE ERIE RAILFOAD. 
 
 71 
 
 k to 
 
 the 
 
 im to 
 
 after- 
 
 is, he 
 
 nding 
 
 )rrup- 
 
 ilative 
 
 Gould 
 
 ail road 
 
 i 1871- 
 nent to 
 s while 
 lawyer, 
 of its 
 allowed 
 i put in 
 ad been 
 sed is in 
 [no- are : 
 order ]. 
 Dval of 
 :nator in 
 
 3er char- 
 1871 and 
 It was 
 
 what they said would be necessary to carry the clay 
 in addition to the amount forwarded by the committee, 
 and contributed more or less to all the districts along 
 the line of the road. We had to look after four States, 
 New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio. It 
 was the custom w^hen men received nominations to 
 come to me for contributions, and I made them and 
 considered them good paying investments for the com- 
 pany. In a Republican district I was a strong Re- 
 publican ; in a Democratic district I was Democratic, 
 and in doubtful districts I was doubtful. 
 
 •' In politics I was an Erie Railroad man all die time. 
 We had friends on both sides — friends in a business 
 way. The amounts contributed for the election were 
 large, but I could not give any definite estimate. No 
 names occur to me at the moment. I am a poor 
 hand to remember names. I had relations in several 
 States. I did not keep separate what I paid out in 
 New jersey from what I paid out in New York. We 
 had the same oround to cro over there, and there has 
 been so much of it — it has been so extensive — that I 
 have no details now to refresh my mind. You might 
 as well go back and ask me how many cars of freiglit 
 were moved on a particular day." 
 
 Buying- Klectioiis. 
 
 This confession, so charmingly frank, relates to pay- 
 ments before elections, but there is every reason to 
 believe that the payments were contniued after 
 election. 
 
 The state of things unearthed by this investigation 
 
72 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 was officially dcscrihetl in the report of the legislative 
 committee as follows : 
 
 *' It is further in evidence that it has been the cus- 
 tom of the managers of the Erie Railway, from year 
 to year in the past, to spend large sums to control 
 elections and to inilucnce legislation. In the year 
 1868 more than one million ($1,000,000) was dis- 
 bursed from the treasury for 'extra and legal 
 
 services.' 
 
 O^-rrupt Use of Money. 
 
 " Mr. Gould, whei: 'ast on the stand, and examined 
 in relation to various vouchers shown him, admitted 
 the payment during the three years prior to 1872 of 
 large sums to Barber, Tweed and others, and to influ- 
 ence legislation or elections ; these amounts were 
 charged in the ' India-rubber account.' The memory 
 of this witness was very defective as to details, and 
 he could only remember large transactions, but could 
 distinctly recall that he had been in the habit of send- 
 ing money into the numerous districts all over the 
 State, either to control nominations or elections for 
 Senators and members of Assembly. 
 
 " Considered that, as a rule, such investments paid 
 better than to wait till the men got to Albany, and 
 added the significant remark, when asked a question, 
 that it would be as impossible to specify the numerous 
 instances as it would to recall to mind the numerous 
 freight-cars sent over the Erie road from day to day." 
 
 The report of the committee concludes as follows : 
 
 *' It is not reasonable to suppose that the Erie Rail- 
 
slatlve 
 
 le cus- 
 in year 
 control 
 e year 
 as dis- 
 [ le^j^al 
 
 amlned 
 dmitted 
 1872 of 
 to influ- 
 ts were 
 pieniory 
 Ills, and 
 Lit could 
 of send- 
 )ver the 
 ions for 
 
 nts paid 
 
 iny, and 
 
 |uestlon, 
 
 LHiierous 
 
 umerous 
 
 to day." 
 
 follows : 
 
 rie Rail- 
 
 THE BOWERY—SHOWING ELEVATED R. R 
 
I 
 
 Eh 
 
 < 
 Eh 
 
 < 
 
 Eh 
 
 W 
 O 
 
 <! 
 
 >:• 
 
 GO 
 
 Q 
 ^^ 
 t> 
 O 
 
 r 
 
 in 
 
 Jc 
 J 
 
 hi 
 
INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ERIE RAILROAD. 
 
 i:\ 
 
 Eh 
 
 IS 
 
 o 
 
 < 
 
 CO 
 
 p 
 
 8 
 
 ►-3 
 
 a 
 
 J ' 
 
 way has been alone in the corrupt use of money for 
 the purposes named ; but the sudden revohition in 
 the direction of this com})any has laid bare a chapter 
 in the secret history of raih'oad management such as 
 has not been permitted before. It exposes the reck- 
 less and prodigal use of money, wrung from the i 
 peop]>:^ to purchase the election of the people's repre- 
 sentatives and to bribe them when in office. Accord- 
 ing to Mr. Gould, his operations extended into four 
 different States. It was his custom to contribute 
 money to influence both nominations and elections." 
 
 Mr. Adams did not have this report before him 
 when he wrote his '* chapter." His record closes in 
 1868, soon after Mr. Gould had been elected Presi- 
 dent of the road. This had been broui^ht about in 
 die followinnf manner: While Gould was encra2fed in 
 "fixing" the legislature, and the courts were filled 
 with Erie suits, the various parties in interest got 
 together and effected a compromise. Vanderbilt got 
 rid of the useless stock he had bouQ^ht at hiofh figures. 
 Drew pocketed his profits and returned from exile in 
 Jersey. The Boston, Hartford and Erie crowd which 
 had figured in these transactions, having got all they 
 could out of Erie for the benefit of their own bank- 
 rupt road, withdrew. All litigation was stopped and 
 injunctions revoked. Bills were rushed throueh the 
 legislature favorable to both Vanderbilt and Erie. 
 Drew resigned from the road ; Vanderbilt relinquished 
 his ambition for control, and the property was turned 
 over to Gould and Fisk. Drew may have thought 
 
71 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 tliat by this time the poor old road was a squeezed 
 lemon, but if so he was mistaken, for Gould and Sa^^e 
 found that the property had not yet been worked for 
 all that was in it. 
 
 Kii<»riii<Mis IiuToaso of l)el>t. 
 
 What their administration cost the road is very 
 
 plainly set fordi in the 
 testimony given be- 
 fore the Hepburn Com- 
 mittee of 1S79 by J. 
 \V. Guppy, assistant 
 general superintendent 
 under Gould, and for 
 many years connected 
 with tlu! road, into 
 whose service he first 
 entered as a telegraph 
 operator. When Gould 
 was ousted from the 
 control in March, 1872, 
 the total stock was 
 $8 6, 5 3 6, 9 10, the funded 
 RUSSELL SAGE. ^j^^j^^. ^6^26,395,000 and 
 
 the floating debt ^2,517,301, a total of j^i 15,449,21 1 ; 
 an increase durincf the time of Gould's identification 
 with the road of $64,383,268. Yet Mr. Guppy testi- 
 fied that not a dollar of this vast sum was represented 
 by any additions to the road. 
 
 One of the first achievements of Gould and Fisk 
 when they assumed entire control of Erie was to 
 
 I 
 
 n 
 
 I 
 
INSIDE UISTOUY OF TIIK EKIE KAILROAD. 
 
 75 
 
 eezcd 
 [ Sage 
 ed for 
 
 I 
 
 > 
 
 s very 
 
 > 
 
 in the 
 n bc- 
 n Com- 
 by J. 
 ssistant 
 tendent 
 and for 
 nnected 
 id, into 
 he first 
 leorraph 
 n Gould 
 -om the 
 ch, 1872, 
 )ck was 
 c funded 
 000 and 
 449,211 ; 
 tification 
 Dpy testi- 
 )resented 
 
 and Fisk 
 e was to 
 
 I 
 
 corner their old associate, Danit^l Drew. The latter, 
 after a sliort retirement from the street, returned to 
 speculation and naturally drifted into Erie, but this 
 time froni the outside. He was caught just as many 
 times he had caught otht^rs. And Gould repeated, 
 only in a more aggravated way, his trick of issuing 
 new stock and tlooding Wall street with it. 
 
 This new stock was issued by Gould and Fisk with- 
 out even iioinof throu'di the form of consultation with 4^ 
 the other directors. I\Ir. Adams calls this " the most 
 extraordinary feat of financial legc:rdemain which 
 history has yet recorded." 
 
 Too Slirt'wd I'or Drew. 
 Drew found that even he, old and experienced in 
 all the tricks of his trade, was no match for Gould. 
 Me appealed to the courts for relief, but Mr. Gould 
 fought him in the same way. Realizing that he had 
 no other avenue of escape, Drew actually called on 
 Gould and Fisk one night and appealed piteously to 
 be permitted to get out without loss, though his com- 
 panions in loss might be squeezed to Gould's heart's 
 content. Gould and P'isk bowed their ao^ed associate 
 out without satisfaction and smiled as they closed the 
 door on the old man. Drew lost $1,500,000 in this 
 transaction. Gould at this time posed as an anti- ^ 
 mo opolist before the public. All his extraordinary 
 acts as President of the Erie were defended on the 
 ground that he was endeavoring to protect the system 
 against consolidation or affiliation with other trunk 
 lines. 
 
 r m 
 
 I 
 
 fl 
 
76 
 
 LIFK UF JAY (iOL'LD. 
 
 The wonderful I'lnancial operations of the Drew 
 and Gould regimes in Erie could not ha\<' been pos- 
 sible but for the extraordinary fascination which the 
 stock [)Ossess(Hl for l-'ni^dish capitalists. While Ameri- 
 cans looked with more than suspicion on the Erie 
 securities, EnL;land was possessed of an irresistible 
 craze to get as many of them as jjossible. English 
 capitalists would not take the United States bonds 
 even when selling below j>ar, but they bought with 
 avidity every share of Erie tlu^y could get hold of. 
 
 At last, however, the (;)es of the luiglish stock- 
 holders were opened to the true; condition of affairs, 
 and under the lead of James ]\IcIIenr\- the)- organized 
 to get the control of the property. At this time Gen. 
 Daniel ¥.. Sickles, one of the heroes of Gettysburg, 
 was Minister to Spain. 1 le was engaged to leael the 
 anti-Gould forces against the bh'ie strongholds. I le 
 did his Vi'ork well, and it is said was paid a ver)- big 
 fee for his labors. 1 le obtained a leave of absence 
 from Madrid and returned home to conduct the opera- 
 tions in person on the ground. This was the last of 
 the Erie wars. 
 
 It should be recorded at this time, however, that the 
 famous partnership oi (iouKl and 1 isk had been dis- 
 solved by death. I^'isk, late in 1S71, had l)Cen shot by 
 lulward S. Stokes, and after a few da\s had died from 
 the wound. He and .Stokes had at onr. time been 
 friends, but had ci[uarrelled over business matters and 
 
 i 
 
 I 
 
-y^xeif 
 
 Drew 
 
 :n pos- . 
 lich the 
 Ameri- 
 [\c Erie 
 jsistible 
 English 
 ^ bonds 
 ;ht with 
 id of. 
 h stock- 
 1" affau's, 
 r-'anized 
 me Gen. 
 ;tysburg, 
 lead th(; 
 ds. lie 
 •ery big 
 absence 
 ic ope ra- 
 le last of 
 
 that die 
 )een dis- 
 n shot by 
 lied from 
 me been 
 tiers and 
 
 I 
 
 ^J 
 
 m 
 
 ■I 
 
 (77) 
 
 
78 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 about a woman — the beautiful, but notorious, Josle 
 Mansfield — and the quarrel led to the murder. 
 
 The 3lnr<lercr of FisU. 
 
 It will surprise no one who has read this history 
 thus far that in the course of the l^ie litigations a 
 Supreme Court Judi.^e once held court and issued 
 orders from Josie Mansfield's apartments. Stokes 
 was tried three times. Once the jury disagreed. 
 Once he was convicted of murder in the first decree 
 and sentenced to be hanged by Judge Noah Davis. 
 This verdict being overruled by the Court of Appeals, 
 he was tried a^^ain and conxicted of manslaucxhter in 
 the third degree. After serving a few years in Au- 
 burn Prison Mr. Stokes returned to New York, where 
 he soon became a prosperous business man, intimate 
 for a lon<^ time with John A. Macka\', the California 
 millionaire, and President of a telegraph system com- 
 peting with Gould's Western Union. 
 
 Before his drath the belief is that Gould and Fisk 
 had substantially parted company. One of the 
 journals of that day gives an account of an inter- 
 view b(!t\veen Gould and Fisk in which the former 
 asked Fisk for his resignation as Vice-President and 
 Comptroller of Erie. After b'isk's death Gould acted 
 handsomely by his widow. Whatever else may be 
 said of Fisk he was certainly a more popular man 
 than Gould, and after the former's death Gould did 
 not lonor remain at the head of P>ie. 
 
 Fisk was l*<>]>iilar. 
 
 "The feeling against Gould," said Gen. Barlow at 
 
 
INSIDE mSTOUV OF THE ERIE KAILROAD. 
 
 '0 
 
 ;, Josie 
 
 history 
 Ltions a 
 
 issued 
 
 Stokes 
 
 acrreed. 
 
 deoree 
 
 Davis. 
 \ppeals, 
 TJuer in 
 s in Au- 
 k, where 
 intimate 
 [ahfornia 
 em com- 
 
 and Fisk 
 of the 
 
 an inter- 
 former 
 cnt and 
 
 uld acted 
 may be -mi- 
 liar man 
 ould did 
 
 the time of the anti-Gould revohition, " o^rew in cjreat / 
 part since Fisk's death. Fisk was always popular 
 with the people of the road and in the oftice. Had 
 he been alive we should have had more trouble or 
 perhaps the move would never have been made." 
 
 Besides Barlow, (jcn. Sickles had other efficient aid, 
 and the anti-Gould movement was strengthened by 
 such names as Gen. John A. I)ix, who in the same 
 year was elected Governor of New York ; Gen. 
 George B. IVIcCIellan and William R. Travers. 
 
 In March, 1872, the blow was struck. A man named 
 Archer had been elected Vice-President in place of 
 Fisk, and with his aid the revolution was accomplished. 
 Gould had made him Vice-President with the view of 
 conciliating- the opposition. Nine members of the 
 Board of Directors had been won over to th(i oppo- 
 sition. These wrote to Gould askinir him to call a 
 meeting of the board. As Gould did not respond 
 \'ice-President Archer called the met^ting. 
 
 The revolutionists assembled at Barlow's house and 
 prepared to carry the (jrand Opera-House by storm. 
 'J1iis building- is located at the corner of 8th Avenue 
 and 23rd ..treet, and was occupied b)' the offices of the 
 lu'ie Railroad. Gould had this buiUling barricaded by 
 his men, with instructions to permit no one to pass in. 
 But the revolutionists succeeded in passing the picket 
 line and passed in, and Mr. Archer called the meeting 
 to order. Then ensued an extraordinary scene which 
 lasted all night. Gould ordered the " conspirators," 
 as he called them, to leave the building. They refused. 
 
( 
 
 80 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Gould at ibis time had the benefit of tlie lecial id- 
 vice of David Dudley Field and Thomas G. Sliear'iian, 
 Mr. Field was lonr one of the leaders o'i tiie Ne'v 
 York Bar. One of his brothers sat on tiie Suprenv:; 
 Court bench of the United States, and the other, 
 Cyrus W. Field, was the father of the Atlantic cable, 
 
 and soon one of the 
 
 closest of Gould's busi- 
 ness associates. Mr. 
 Shearman, who after- 
 wards became famous 
 in the defense of Henry 
 V ard Beecher, had 
 before this time pub- 
 lisiied an article on the 
 corruption of the New 
 York judiciary which 
 attracted widespread 
 attention, but he was 
 now counsel to a man 
 who owned two or 
 three Supreme Court 
 CYRUS w. FIELD. Judges and a few 
 
 months later publicly admitted the distribution of a 
 
 corruption fund. 
 
 A Stormy Scone. 
 
 Space will not permit the tellings of all the incidents 
 of that night. Shearman appeared with forty police- 
 men and ordered the revolutionists to leave, but they 
 sliut themselves up in their rooms and refused to do 
 
 be 
 
 parti( 
 
 as q( 
 
 Fi,i 
 
 to Ofl 
 
 perioj 
 a pill] 
 Idispii 
 jattemi 
 
I 
 
 INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ERIE RAILROAD. 
 
 81 
 
 1 ad- 
 
 )rem'3 
 other, 
 cable, 
 of tl.e 
 sbusi- 
 ,. Mr. 
 ► after- 
 famous 
 f Henry 
 •r, bad 
 ne pub- 
 c on the 
 ^he New 
 which 
 espread 
 l,e was 
 o a nian 
 two or 
 ne Court 
 a few 
 tion of a 
 
 so. Gould obtaiiitu from Judge Ingrahani a temporary 
 
 injrnction to restrain Archer and the other directors 
 
 from acting, but tlv y cihnly proceeded to elert new 
 
 officers and directors. Field and Shearman declared 
 
 that Gould's legal position was absolutely perfect, but 
 
 notwithstanding this he was finally obliged to give 
 
 in. 
 
 A Xijiiit to 1; » Keinoiiibrrcrt. 
 
 A daily paper of March 1 1, 1872, dius describes this 
 memorable ni^ht. 
 
 "The scene at the Grand Op(.Ta-House was one to 
 be remembered. Gould and Eldridoe, with their coun- 
 sel, in one room and the newly chosen directors in 
 another, the doors of both rooms barred, opening to 
 no one but an avowed friend, each fearful of orders of 
 arrests being served on them, every spare room in the 
 offices filled with blue-coated officers of the peace, 
 sitting in all the chairs and on all the tables and lying 
 on the floors, and an intense sense of subdued excite- 
 ment pervading the heavy air of the place." 
 
 The only communication between the two hostile 
 parties was by means of Peter B. Sw^eeney, who acte ' 
 as go-between. 
 
 Finding that he was defeated, Gould then resorted 
 to one of those bold strokes with whicli at different 
 periods in his career he has surprised die public. In 
 a public letter he offered to leave all the questions in 
 dispute to arbitration by Horace Greeley. Thus he 
 [attempted to place himself in favorable light before 
 the public. But it should not be supposed that Greeley 
 
 'jI 
 
82 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 was in any sense a friend of Gould. On the contrary 
 
 the Tribune of that day shows how severely he criti- 
 cised Gould. 
 
 The battle lasted one nieht and then Gould sur- 
 
 IIOKACK (GREELEY. 
 
 rendered, I le remained as a director for a time, but 
 his power was gone and Erie passed out of his hands 
 forever. The propt^rty has never fully recovered from 
 the condition into which it was thrown by the Drew- 
 
 r 
 
 rj 
 
il 
 
 INSIDE HISTORY OF THE EUIE RAILROAD. 
 
 83 
 
 atrary 
 I criti- 
 
 id sur- 
 
 L time, but 
 If his hands 
 )vered from 
 the Drew- 
 
 Gould regime. Though one of the most iniportant 
 systems in the country and enjoying an imnvMise 
 business, it is crip[)led with its enormous stock and 
 bond liabilities, and not until 1891 did it pay a dividend. 
 For many years it remained in the hands of a receiver. 
 The testimony of J. W. Gupi)y before the Hepburn 
 Committee, already referred to, gives some interesting 
 details of Gould's mana'j"ement of the Vaic. Among 
 the roads which r>ie leased were tlu! Chemun<> Rail- 
 road and the Canandaifruaand Mhnira, These leases 
 were very profitable to Erie, but (iould, as an in- 
 dividual, after quietly purchasing a majority of their 
 capital stocks, as President of luie refused to pay the 
 rentals, thus abrooatiuL:' th*^ leases. 
 
 New IOiit<'r|>ris<'S. 
 
 Then he sold the roads to the Northern Central of 
 Pennsylvania at a big profit. Gould and P'isk organ- 
 ized a number of auxiliary companies whose plant 
 was usually paid for by P^rie. Among thes(; compan- 
 H ies was the National Stock Yard Company. 'Phe land, 
 was purchased and the improvements made bv P^rie. 
 The Erie Emigrant Company, the Jefferson Railroad 
 Company, the Blackford Company and the Greenwood 
 Coal Company were the names of some of the coin- 
 l)anies practically saddled upon P>ie, but v*-hose stock 
 was issued to Gould and Fisk without consideration. 
 Auirustus Stein, who made an examination into the 
 records, told the Plepburn Committee that the amount 
 of Gould's transactions in Erie was about ^12,000.000. 
 
 ft 
 
 After he had left Erie the new management sougrht 
 
 4 
 
 4 
 
84 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 Ut 
 
 to ascertain how large were the profits carried away 
 by Gould. This information could be obtained with 
 complete accuracy only from IMorosini, the auditor of 
 the company, and he refused to make up the accounts 
 and left Erie and joined Gould. 
 
 A Notable Italian. 
 
 IMorosini now became inseparable from Gould and 
 a notable figure in Wall Street. lie was a tall, -^ 
 athletic Italian, shrewd and faithful, an ideal private 
 secretary. Me had served with Garibaldi in the wars 
 for Italian liberty, and was proud of his service under 
 the gr(?at Italian patriot. I le had been a sailor, too, 
 and had had a wide experience with the world, which 
 made him invaluable to a man like Gould. When the 
 firm of \V. E. Connor & Co., of which Gould was a 
 special, was founded, IMorosini became partner, and 
 when the firm dissolved and Morosini retired from 
 business Gould said that his private secretary was 
 worth <s2,ooo,ooo or ^^3,000.000. 
 
 A w ny was soon opened, however, by which the new 
 Erie management gained some proof of Gould's trans- 
 actions. Gould, in company with Horace F. Clark, 
 had engineered a corner in Northwest stock, one of 
 the most famous and successful corners in Wall Street 
 history. In after years Gould gave a unique account 
 of this corner to a legislative committee which was in- 
 vestii^atinqr corners. 
 
 " He was interested," said Mr. Gould, with that 
 charming frankness which he sometimes assumed, "in 
 the Chicao^o and Northwest corner. The stock was 
 
vay 
 vith 
 r of 
 ants 
 
 and 
 
 tall, -^ 
 ■ivate 
 wars 
 jnder 
 r, too, 
 which 
 en the 
 was a 
 ;r, and 
 I from 
 was 
 
 \Q new 
 s trans- 
 Clark, 
 one of 
 1 Street 
 account 
 was in- 
 
 1th that 
 med/'in 
 took was 
 
 INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ERIK KAILKUAD. 
 
 85 
 
 selling at 75 to So." lie "considered it very cheap/* 
 and he boiiMit. He soon had bought a <'reat tleal 
 more than there really was to deHver, and the shorts 
 were cornered. The price went up to 250. " I was 
 induced," said Mr. Gould, with exc^uisite humor, '* to 
 part with some at that price." 
 
 JAY Gould's old dksk. 
 
 Mr. Mori)>iiu tciliii!; !riiiiniM.ciiCcs. 
 How Foi'tiiiios Shift. 
 
 Amonor the shorts cau^jht in this famous corner was 
 Henry N. Smith, who only a short time before had 
 been Gould's partner in the firm of Smith, Gould & 
 Martin, and who had supported Gould in cornering 
 g^oid. Smith is another noted Wall Street character, 
 
 •^-"^ ■■ --■-'■'^-- 
 
80 
 
 LI IE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 wliose life is linked in that of Gould. He was some- 
 thing of an " exquisite," and had the reputation of 
 wcariuLj corsets, but he was for many years remarkably 
 successful in Wall Street. After rencwinLT his rela- 
 tions with Gould he became chielly distinguished as 
 one of the bear leaders, and was thus continually in 
 anta</onism with Gould. Woerishoffer, Cammack and 
 Smith were a trio that once nearly drove Gould to the 
 wall, but the latter lived to see one dead, the second 
 his associate in certain speculations and the third in- 
 volved in irretrievable bankruptcy. 
 
 It was nut in the Northwest corner that Smith was 
 ruined, but in it he lost a very large sum. Smith was 
 not slow in o;ettin<Tf his revenfje. The books of the 
 late firm of Smith, Gould Sc Martin were in his pos- 
 session, and he handed them over to Mr. Barlow, of 
 the Erie, who quickly discovered in them the evidence 
 on which to obtain an order of arrest for Gould and to 
 establish a suit for the recovery of 5^12,803,059, the 
 proceetls of bonds conv(jrte'd into stock to the extenf"-* 
 of 407.347 shares, which were sold by Mr. Gould's 
 firm and never accounted for. 
 
 TIk; AV'izard Arrested. 
 
 That was the charge, and Gould was arrested and 
 placed under very heavy bonds, which he furnished. 
 Here Mr. Gould's genius displayed itself. He actually 
 entered into a big speculation based on his restitution 
 of this money. General Dix, it should be recorded, 
 remained as President of Erie for only a few months, 
 and was succeeded by President Watson, a man who 
 
INSIDE HISTORY OF THE ElilE RAILROAD. 
 
 87 
 
 ome- 
 )n of 
 kably 
 
 cd as 
 illy in 
 :k antl 
 to the 
 iecond 
 lirtl in- 
 
 ,th was 
 
 ith was 
 of the 
 
 lis pos- 
 
 low, of 
 
 evidence 
 and to 
 59, the 
 extent •^•> 
 
 Gould's 
 
 ted and 
 
 rnished. 
 
 actually 
 
 Btitution 
 
 ^corded, 
 
 months, 
 
 lan who 
 
 owed his position mainly to Horace V. Clark, who, as 
 has been seen, was in intimate relations with Gould. 
 
 Clark undertook to arrange a compromise between / 
 Watson and Ciould, and all three evidendy united to 
 " rig " the stock market by the operation. One day 
 it was reported that Gould intended to make restitu- 
 tion, and the price of Erie advanced with a bound. A 
 day or two later a denial of the report would come, 
 and down would go the price. 
 
 Great Talk of ICestitution. 
 
 This was repeated two or three times, and Gould, 
 of course, bought at the low figures and sold at the 
 top, and the profits must have been big. iMually the 
 restitution, so-called, was announced with a flourish 
 of trumpets. On the face of the agreement Gould 
 made over to Erie an immense amount of property, and 
 all suits were withdrawn and Gould released from all 
 criminal responsibility. A clause in the agre(;ment 
 said that in making this transfer of property Gould 
 expressly stipulated that it should not be considered 
 as an admission of wronu-doini^. 
 
 The Opera House and adjoining buildings and 
 other real estate, w^ith the exception of Gould's Eifth 
 Avenue mansion, were made over to the Erie, and, in 
 addition, a mass of stocks of the par value of about 
 $6,000,000. As a matier of fact most of these stocks 
 were worthless. J. G. Guppy told the Hepburn Com- 
 mittee that he would not give $200,000 for the endre 
 lot. Among the securities were $1,000,000 of United 
 States Express stock to be issued, and which Gould 
 
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 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
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 JAY GOULD S NEW YORK HOUSE, WHERE HE DIED. 
 
 guaranteed to be issued, but which, as a matter of fact, 
 never was. When Hugh J. Jewett became receiver 
 of Erie he made a final settlement with Mr. Gould. 
 
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 HE DIED. 
 
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 CHAPTER VI. 
 Ho'vV Gold went Up and Down. 
 
 The gold *' combine " of 1869, now famous In the 
 history of Wall street, was investigated in 1870 by 3 
 Committee of Congress of which James A. Garfield, 
 afterwards President, was Chairman, and S. S. Cox, a 
 member. The report of the Committee, with the ac- 
 companying testimony, is one of the most absorbingly 
 ''interesting books in existence. 
 
 It was one of Mr. Gould's peculiarities that he 
 rarely entered into any large speculation without fur- 
 nishing the public with a plaurible reason for assisting 
 him in his operations. This was certainly the case in 
 tiiv. gold conspiracy. The plausible reason was in this 
 case suggested to Mr. Gould by James McHenry, who 
 was then training with Mr. Gould in Erie. The latter 
 spared no pains to dress the reason up in the best 
 shape and give it to the public. Mr. Gould argued 
 with much apparent force that an advance in the price 
 of gold would benefit the Western farmers in giving 
 them a bigger price for their grain, and Mr. Gould 
 backed up this theory with many facts and figures. 
 
 Gen. Grant had just become President. His Sec- 
 retary of the Treasury was George F. Boutwell. The 
 key to the situation was the financial policy of the 
 
 (89) 
 
 ■' ,■«■■ 
 
 m 
 
90 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 -I 
 
 Government. No successful corner in gold could be 
 established if the Treasury should sell gold with a 
 liberal hand. It should be explained that the war had 
 caused a lively speculation in gold which continued 
 after the war, until the resumption of specie payments 
 made the greenbacks equal in value to gold. Specu- 
 lation in oold was carried on in the o[old-room, an in- 
 stitution separate from the Stock Exchange. 
 
 Roping" ill the Acliiiiiiistratioii. 
 
 It became essential to the success of Mr. Gould's 
 plans that the Grant Administration should either be- 
 come a party to the speculation or else an honest be- 
 liever in his crop theory. Failing in both of these, the 
 public must at least be impressed with the idea that the 
 Administration was in the deal whether it was or not. 
 So Gould began to lay sN'stematic siege around the 
 Administration. He seems to have entered alone into 
 this speculation. It was only when he was unable to 
 carry the burden alone that he took in others, and it 
 was not until late that Fisk entered. Gould found a 
 brother-in-law of President Grant a convenient helper 
 in his operations. The name of this brother-in-law 
 was A. R. Corbin, who had been something of an 
 operator all his life. Gould unfolded enough of his 
 plans to Corbin to enlist him in his service and to bind 
 him by Interest to the speculation. Gould bought for 
 Corbin $1,500,000 of gold, and promised him that all 
 the profits should be turned over to him. Every rise 
 of I per cent, in the price of gold made Corbin $15,- 
 000 richer. Corbin claimed to have great influence 
 
h 
 
 i be 
 
 ith a 
 • had 
 nued 
 lents 
 pecu- 
 in in- 
 
 ould's 
 
 ler be- 
 st be- 
 
 56, the 
 
 lat the 
 
 jr not. 
 
 nd the 
 
 ne Into 
 ble to 
 and it 
 
 Dund a 
 helper 
 
 r-in-law 
 
 of an 
 
 of his 
 
 to bind 
 
 jaht for 
 
 that all 
 
 ery rise 
 
 in $I5»- 
 ifluence 
 
 '1^ 
 
 (91) 
 
 n 
 
I 
 
 h 
 
 im 
 
 IS'' 
 
 tNi 
 
 li 
 
 m 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 with the President, and Gould evidently placed much 
 reliance in him. "I am ricrht behind the throne," said 
 Corbin to Gould at one stage of the proceedings. 
 "Give yourself no uneasiness. All is right." 
 
 Gould Good to liis FriciK^s. 
 
 The hrst step after the purchase of a large quantity 
 
 WALL STREET, NEW YORK:. 
 
 of gold was to secure the appointment of the right 
 sort of man as Assistant Treasurer at New York. 
 Though nominally a subordinate officer and having 
 
now GOLD WENT UP AN!) DUWN. 
 
 93 
 
 ced much 
 3ne," said 
 )ceedings. 
 
 e quantity 
 
 :a 
 
 [<^. 
 
 mi 
 lilt 
 
 ?^s; 
 
 )f the right 
 Mew York, 
 and having 
 
 no original authority, the Assistant Treasurer draws 
 the salary of a cabinet officer and his influence is 
 large. 
 
 Corbin undertook this part of the scheme and 
 secu/'^d the appointment of Gen. Butterworth, who 
 seemeci to give great satisfaction to Oould. Butter- 
 worth was afterwards exonerated by Congress of all 
 guilty connection with the affair, but Gould purchased 
 for his account sf^i, 000,000 of gold. But then Gould 
 also had the presumption at one stage of the negotia- 
 tions to buy $500,000 of gold for Gen, Porter, the 
 President's private secretary, which that gentleman 
 promptly declined. It was said also that $500,000 
 was purchased in the name of Mrs, Grant, but she 
 never received any of the profits and had no connec- 
 tion with the " combine." 
 
 Butterworth secured, it was necessary to make an, 
 impression on the President. Through Corbin, Gould 
 secured an interview with Gen. Grant, and later, when 
 the President made a brief visit to New York, he was 
 given risk's private box at the Opera House, and on 
 his way to Newport was honored with a big banquet 
 on one of Fisk's Sound steamers. Fisk and Gould 
 were both there and were supported by Cyrus W. 
 Field and otlier " solid " citizens. At dinner an at- 
 tempt was made to extract from the President the 
 lines of his financial polic3^ Gould obtained little 
 satisfaction. A remark by the President' in reply to a 
 question by Fisk that there was "a fictitiousness 
 about .''he prosperity of the country and the bubble 
 
 
 4 
 •^ 
 
 •■-- -r^imm 
 
.Ji. . I . Ji.^ 
 
 94 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 tllll 
 
 u 
 
 , I 
 
 i('' 
 
 might as well be tapped " threw a wet blanket on 
 Gould's schemes. 
 
 -r^^- 
 
 "«kVw\.vs;vCl=g 
 
 BROADWAY NORTH FROM EXCHANGE PLACE IN 1 869. 
 
 However, Gould was already in, and he was not a 
 man to back out as long as he saw any chance for 
 
HOW GOLD WENT UP AND DOWN. 
 
 95 
 
 }i 
 
 *5uccess, and he finally succeeded in really impressing 
 on the President's mind that in order to move the 
 crops it was necessary that gold should sell at 145. 
 Gould's first purchases had been made as low as 
 130}^, which was about the normal price. 
 
 PresUU'iit Ciraiit Iniprossod. 
 
 But it should be said at the outset that there is not 
 a particle of evidence that Gen. Grant was ever per- 
 sonally concerned in the speculation or that he winked 
 at members of his official household beinij so. On 
 the contrary, the evidence is all the other way. Grant 
 never seemed to like Gould. When the latter suc- 
 ceeded in getting his first interview with the President, 
 Gen. Grant reprimanded his servant for allowing him 
 so easy an access to his person. 
 
 How different was Gould's position in 1892 \vhen 
 he was a specially invited guest at the White House 
 of President Harrison, making the journey to Wash- 
 ington in his private car, attended by his daughter 
 Helen, whom he had just introduced to society at a big 
 reception at his own mansion in Fifth avenue. 
 
 Grant's apparent conversion to the gold theory was 
 brought about by persistent agitation, and he finally 
 wTOte to Secretary Boutwell that in his opinion it 
 w^ould be unwise to force down the price of gold at 
 present — a suggestion which, of course, the Secretary 
 considered the same as an order. This was the 
 position which Gould desired the administration to 
 maintain. He did everything to give the public 
 
 y . 
 
 I V 
 
> iiiii 
 
 t 
 
 96 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 i 
 
 In 
 
 i '^■' 
 
 ■i; 
 i: 'U 
 
 the impression that the Government was behind the 
 
 "deal." 
 
 The Odor of Wall Street. 
 
 An article written by Corbin was published as an 
 editorial in the Times and attracted attention, as the 
 editor, John Bigelow, had just had a conversation with 
 the President and was supposed to speak with 
 authority. Notwithstanding the authorship of the 
 article, it is just to say that the Times detected the 
 odor of Wall Street about it and quarantined the 
 article before making it public. Its effectiveness for 
 Gould was much lessened. Gould wrote to Boutwell 
 with a view of obtaining an official statement from 
 him, but received a reply that said litde and that diplo- 
 matically. Meanwhile Gould had been buying millions 
 in gold and had formed a pool that bought millions 
 more. That the movement was fictitious is shown by 
 the fact that the impression on prices was compara- 
 tively small. Fisk looked on incredulously. " The 
 country is against you," was his criticism of the 
 scheme. 
 
 The members of the pool sold out, but Gould con- 
 tinued to buy. " I had to buy," testified Gould after- 
 wards, " or show the white feather. The other fellows 
 deserted me like rats." Gould had the material aid 
 of the Tenth National Bank, an institution which he 
 owned and which he used as an adjunct to his specu- 
 ladve operations. The extent to which he used it in 
 the gold movement was shown by the fact that it in one 
 day ovcrcertified Gould's checks to the amount of 
 
 11 
 
now GOLD WFNT UP AND DOWN. 
 
 97 
 
 con- 
 
 fter- 
 lows 
 
 aid 
 11 he 
 lecu- 
 lit in 
 
 one 
 It of 
 
 $7i5oo,ooo. Garfield called this bank " a manuf-ctory 
 of certified checks." 
 
 An Excitiii{j^ Battle. 
 
 As Gould bought, the bears sold •• short " and the 
 battle became intensely exciting. At this point Fisk 
 was drawn into the scheme. He took no stock in the 
 crop theory, but the idea of making the Administra- 
 tion a partner in the enterprise seems to have attractetl 
 him. Fisk was drawn into the movement when his 
 aid was most needed. This corner was a glittering 
 edifice built on a weak foundation. It could not long 
 stand. The most that Gould and Fisk could do was 
 to frighten the "shorts " into covering before Gi^nt 
 awakened to the realization of how he was being used 
 and issue orders to sell gold. Wall street was soon 
 filled with rumors that the Administration was in the 
 deal and the excitement ran high. 
 
 The magnitude of the movement is shown by the 
 fact that before Black Friday Gould had employed 
 fifty to sixty brokers to make his purchases, and $50,- 
 000,000 to Ji6o,ooo,ooo of gold had been bought by 
 Heath & Co., Woodward, H. K. Enos, E. K. Willard 
 and others of the brokers. He required all this to 
 advance the price of gold from 135^^ to i^o^i. 
 
 Grant Says *« All Right." 
 Fisk's entrance into the game was a powerful help 
 to Gould, for it not only furnished another purchaser 
 for gold, but directed public attention from himself to 
 
 Fisk. The ex-peddler loved to bask in the sun of 
 7 
 
 111 
 
 
 I A- 
 
 i 
 
 mi 
 
dd 
 
 LI^E O^ JAY GOtLB. 
 
 H '' 
 
 
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 fl 
 
 
 
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 r^^H 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 -IH! 
 
 
 ■« ! 1 
 
 1. 
 
 II 
 
 public notoriety. Gould was timid, but Fisk had 
 brazen courage. 
 
 At last the denouement came. A last attempt was 
 made to still further involve the President in the 
 scheme. Grant was then at a little town in Western 
 Pennsylvania off the line of a railroad. Corbin wrote 
 him a long letter calculated to elicit a response and 
 Fisk sent his special messenger to deliver the letter. 
 He succeeded in handing it to the President, and, after 
 waiting until he had read the contents, asked if he had 
 anything to say. The President replied " All right," 
 and the messenger so telegraphed to the conspirators. 
 
 These interpreted " all right '' to mean a favorable 
 answer to the letter, and they were much elated. But 
 the President, supposing that the messenger was only 
 a clerk from the Post-office, had said "All right" 
 merely to indicate that he had received the letter and 
 required his presence no longer. His suspicions were 
 aroused after the messenger had left, when he ascer- 
 tained that he had brought the letter at post haste all 
 the way from New York. 
 
 That night Mrs. Grant wrote to Mrs. Corbin a note 
 stating that the President had heard that Mr. Corbin 
 was engaged in Wall street speculations, and if it 
 were true he desired that he should immediately dis- 
 sociate himself from them. This letter filled Gould 
 with consternation. He and Corbin sat in the latter's 
 house all night reading and rereading the note and 
 endeavoring to grasp the meaning between the lines. 
 
 " If you show that note," said Gould, finally, " I am 
 
i 1 
 
 fiOW GOLD WENT UP AND DOWN. 
 
 99 
 
 had 
 
 t was 
 
 1 the 
 
 astern 
 
 wrote 
 
 je and 
 
 letter. 
 
 I, after 
 
 lie had 
 
 right," 
 
 rators. 
 
 ^orable 
 
 i But 
 
 as only 
 right " 
 er and 
 s were 
 ascer- 
 aste all 
 
 a note 
 Corbin 
 Ind if it 
 [ely dis- 
 Gould 
 latter's 
 lote and 
 le lines. 
 "I am 
 
 a ruined man." Corbin said he must obey orders and 
 leave the street, but he insisted Gould should first 
 take up the gold held in Corbin's name and pay him 
 the profits, '^orbin had already received a check for 
 ^2 5,cxxD. But Gould had already all the gold he 
 wanted, and after standing for a while in silence by the 
 door, his brow black with mystery, he left the house. 
 
 The game was up. One stroke of a woman's pen 
 had punctured the dazzling bubble. A word from the 
 President was sufficient to collapse the biggest corner 
 on record. How to save himself? That was the 
 question which, with knit brow and lips compressed 
 with hidden excitement, Gould debated as he returned 
 home that night His mind labored for himself alone. 
 He soon reached a conclusion. While there was yet 
 time he would dump his heavy load of gold on the 
 market, and let others take what he could not carry. 
 His only capital now was the early information he 
 possessed of the President's aroused suspicions ; of 
 his change of purpose. He did not tell even Fisk of 
 Mrs. Grant's letter ',o Mrs. Corbin, but let Fisk con- 
 tinue his purchases in ignorance of the real situation. 
 He only remarked to Fisk that Corbin was getting 
 weary and wanted his profits, or something to that 
 purpose. Thursday — the day preceding Black Friday 
 — Gould began his dumping process. 
 
 " I sold that day," he testified afterwards, " and only 
 bought enough to make the street think I was still a 
 bull." 
 
 4 
 
 ■I'fi 
 
 :in 
 
 l4 
 
 •'* !■ 
 
 I i^ 
 
 MMMUPpi 
 
 .1 
 
i! 
 
 Ill 
 
 ft'.' 
 
 li i '! 
 
 J' * / ; 
 
 V '■ 
 
 CHAPTER VII. 
 The Story of Black Friday. 
 
 In the month of September, 1869, one of tlie most 
 gigantic attempts to run up the value of gold ever 
 made was attempted by a powerful combination of 
 Bulls, whose only object was to made money. Their 
 scheme came near attaininof a success which would 
 have broken the market utterly, liave unsettled values 
 of all k'iids, and have precipitated upon the whole 
 country a financial crisis of the most terrible propor- 
 tions. Nothing but the interfi^rence of the Secretary 
 of the Treasury at a critical moment averted this 
 disaster. As it was, the losses were fearful. Men in 
 Wall Street were ruined by the score, and for several 
 days the best houses in the street were uncertain as 
 to their exact condition. 
 
 An account of this formidable transaction is inter- 
 estinor as revealino- the method of conducting^ the 
 great operations of the street. 
 
 On the 22d of September, 1869, gold stood at 137^.^ 
 when Trinity bells rang out the hour of twelve. By 
 two it was at 139. Before night its lowest quotatipn 
 was 141. An advance of three and a half per cent. 
 in five hours. At the same time the Stock Market 
 exhibited tokens of excessive febrility, New York 
 
 (ICO) 
 
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 ^^^ 
 
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 Their 
 would 
 values 
 whole 
 propor- 
 cretary 
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 Men in 
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 It 1375^ 
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 Liotatipn 
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 Market 
 IVY York 
 
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 V 
 
102 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Hi 
 
 Central dropping twenty-three per cent, and Harlem 
 thirteen. Loans had become extremely difficult to 
 negotiate. The most usurious prices for a twenty-four 
 hours' turn were freely paid. The storm was pal- 
 pably reaching the proportions of a tempest. 
 
 Nevertheless, the brokers on the Bear side strove 
 manfully under their burden. The character and 
 purposes of the clique were fully known. Whatever 
 of mystery had heretofore enfolded them was now 
 boldly thrown aside, and the men of Erie, with the 
 sublime Fisk in the forefront of the assailing column, 
 assured the shorts that they could not settle too 
 quickly, since it remained with, the ring, now holding 
 calls for one hundred millions, either to kindly com- 
 promise at 1 50 or to carry the metal to 200 and nail 
 it there. This threat was accompanied by conse- 
 quences in which the mailed hand revealed itself 
 under the silken oflove. 
 
 Millions of Money Involved. 
 
 The movement had intertwisted itself deep into 
 the affairs of every dealer in the street, and entangled 
 in its meshes vast numbers of outside speculators. 
 In borrowing or in margins the entire capital of the 
 former had been nearly absorbed, while some five 
 millions liad been deposited by the latter with their 
 brokers in answer to repeated calls. 
 
 When Thursday morning rose, gold started at 
 1415^, and soon shot up to 144. Then the clique 
 becran to titjhten the screws. The shorts received 
 peremptory orders to increase their borrowing mar- 
 
arlem 
 ult to 
 y-four 
 ,s pal- 
 strove 
 :r and 
 latever 
 ts now 
 ith the 
 olumn, 
 tie too 
 lolding 
 ly com- 
 nd nail 
 conse- 
 itself 
 
 ip into 
 
 tangled 
 
 ulators. 
 
 of the 
 
 rne five 
 
 h their 
 
 rted at 
 t clique 
 eceived 
 
 le mar- 
 
 THE STORY OF BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 103 
 
 gins. 
 
 At the same moment the terms of loans over- 
 night were raised beyond the pitch of ordinary 
 human endurance. Stories were insidiously circulated 
 exciting suspicion of the integrity of the Administration, 
 and strenoftheninor the belief that the National Treas- 
 ury would bring no help to the wounded Bears. 
 Whispers of an impending lock-up of money were 
 prevalent ; and the fact, then shrewdly suspected, and 
 now known, of certifications of checks, to the amount 
 of twenty-five milHons by one bank alone on that day, 
 lent color to the rumor. Many brokers lost courage, 
 and settled instantly. The Gold Room shook with 
 the conflict, and the battle prolonged itself into a 
 midnight session at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. 
 
 Great Excitement. 
 
 The din of the tumult had penetrated to the upper 
 chambers of journalism. Reporters were on the alert. 
 The great dailies magnified the struggle, and the 
 Associated Press spread intelligence of the excite- 
 ment to remote sections. 
 
 When Friday opened clear and calm, the pavement 
 of Broad and New streets soon filled up with un- 
 wonted visitors. All the idle population of the city 
 and its neighborhood crowded into the financial 
 quarter to witness the throes. of the tortured shorts. 
 Blended with the merely curious were hundreds of 
 outside speculators who had ventured their all in the 
 great stake, and trembled in doubt of the honor of 
 their dealers. 
 
 Long before 9 a. m. these men, intensely interested 
 
 ■I* 
 
 iiitWfiil'ir -£2 
 
i ' 
 
 104 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 In the day's encounter, poured through the alley-way 
 from Broad street, and betwev.*n the narro^v walls of 
 New street, surging up around the doorways, and pil- 
 ing themselves densely and painfully within the 
 cramped galleries of the Room itself. They had made 
 good the fresh calls for margins up to 143, the closing 
 figL. re of the night before. The paramount question 
 now was, How would gold open ? They had not 
 many minutes to wait. 
 
 A Startling Shout. 
 
 Pressing up to the fountain, around which some 
 fifty brokers had already congregated, a Bull operator 
 with resonant voice bid 145 for twenty thousand. The 
 shout startled the galleries. Their margins were once 
 more in jeopardy. WouM their brokers remain firm ? 
 It was a terrible moment. The Bears closed round 
 the ao^gressors. Yells and shrieks filled the air. A 
 confused and baffling whirl of sounds ensued, in which 
 all sorts of fractional bids and offers mingled, till 
 '46 emerged from the chaos. The crowd within the 
 arena increased rapidly in numbers. The clique 
 agents became vociferous. 
 
 Gold steadily pushed forward in its perilous upward 
 movement from '46 to '47, thence to '49, and, pausing 
 for a brief twenty minutes, dashed on to 150^^. It 
 was now considerably past the hour of regular ses- 
 sion. The President was in the chair. The Secre- 
 tary's pen was bounding over his registry book. The 
 floor of the Gold Room was covered with 300 agitated 
 dealers and operators, shouting, heaving in masses 
 
ley-way 
 vails ot 
 cind pil- 
 lin the 
 id made 
 closinnr 
 
 [uestion 
 lad not 
 
 :h some 
 Dperator 
 nd. The 
 ere once 
 tin firm ? 
 d round 
 
 air. A 
 in which 
 ^led, till 
 
 thin the 
 clique 
 
 upward 
 pausing 
 0%. It 
 liar ses- 
 
 Secre- 
 ok. The 
 agitated 
 
 masses 
 
 ^n 
 
 I 
 
 SIDNEY DILLON. 
 
til 
 
 o 
 
 Q 
 O 
 O 
 
 O 
 
 Eh 
 
 CO 
 
 Q 
 
 ID 
 
 o 
 
 < 
 
.mn4*.y 
 
 I 
 l^ 
 
 O 
 
 Q 
 O 
 
 o 
 
 PQ 
 O 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 (105) 
 
 j, .tj^ J ,-y>^.^.-^<.._^.^., . 
 
I! 
 
 106 
 
 LIFE OF JAV GOULD. 
 
 IJ 
 
 against and around the iron railing of the fountain, 
 falling back upon the approaches of the committee- 
 rooms and the outer entrance, guarded with rigorous 
 care by sturdy door-^'^^pers. Many of the principal 
 brokers of the strc ., »/ere there — Kimber, who had 
 turned traitor to the ring ; Colgate, the Baptist ; Clews, 
 a veteran government broker; one of the Marvins ; 
 James Brown ; Albert Speyer, and dozens of others 
 hardly less famous. 
 
 Bedlam Let Loose. 
 
 Every individual of all that seething throng had a 
 personal stake beyond, and, in natural human estimate, 
 a thousand-fold more dear than that of any outside 
 patron, no matter how deeply or ruinously that patron 
 might be involved. At 1 1 of the dial gold was 1 50^^ ; 
 in six minutes it jumped to 155. Then the pent-up 
 tiger spirit burst from control. The arena rocked as 
 the Coliseum may have rocked when the gates of the 
 wild beasts were thrown open, and with wails and 
 shrieks the captives of the empire sprang to merciless 
 encounter with the ravenous demons of the desert. 
 The storm of voices lost human, semblance. Clenched 
 hands, livid faces, pallid foreheads on which beads of 
 cold sweat told of the interior anguish, lurid, passion- 
 fired eyes — all the symptoms of a fever which at any 
 moment might become frenzy were there. The shouts 
 of golden millions upon millions hurtled in all ears. 
 
 The labor of years was disappearing and reappear- 
 ing in the wave line of advancing and 'receding prices. 
 With fortunes melting away in a second, with five 
 
 
 M 
 
THE STOUY OF BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 107 
 
 I tain, 
 ittee- 
 )rous 
 cipal 
 had 
 lews, 
 vins ; 
 thers 
 
 lad a 
 mate, 
 atside 
 »atron 
 
 int-up 
 :ed as 
 of the 
 3 and 
 ■ciless 
 esert. 
 nched 
 ds of 
 ssion- 
 it any 
 houts 
 lars. 
 pear- 
 )nces. 
 h five 
 
 hundred millions of gold in process of sale or pur- 
 chase, with the terror of yet higher prices, and the ex- 
 ultation which came and went witli the whis[)ers of 
 fresh men enterincf from Hroad street bcarin*'- con- 
 fused rumors of the probable interposition of the 
 Government, it is not hard to und(jrstand how reason 
 faltered on its throne, and operators became reckless, 
 buying or selling without thought of the morrow or 
 consciousness of the present. 
 
 A Groat Hid. 
 
 Then came the terrific bid of Albert Speyer for any 
 number of miUions at 160. William Parks sold in- 
 stantly two millions and a half in one lot. Yet the 
 bids so far from yielding rose to 161, 162, 1623/2. For 
 five minutes the Board reeled under the ferocity of the 
 attack. Seconds became hours. The agony of Wel- 
 lino-ton awaitinof Blucher was in the souls of the Bears. 
 Then a broker, reporte'l to be acting for Baring & 
 Brothers, at London, so d five millions to the clique 
 at the top price of the day. Hallgarten followed ; and 
 as the shorts were Qfatherinij couraofe, the certain news 
 that the Secretary of the Treasury had come to the 
 rescue sv/ept through the chamber, gold fell from 160 
 to 140, and thence, with hardly the interval of one 
 quotation, )o 133. 
 
 The end had come, and the exhausted operators 
 streamed out of the stiflino- hall into the fresh air of 
 the street. To them, however, came no peace. In 
 some offices customers by dozens, whose margins 
 were irrevocably burnt away in the smelting-furnace 
 
 
 
108 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 of the Gold Board, confronted their dealers with 
 taunts and threats of violence for their treachery, 
 hi others the nucleus of mobs bet,^an to form, and, as 
 the day wore off, Broad street had the aspect of a 
 riot. Muf^^e masses of men gathered before the door- 
 way of Smith, CiOuld, Mai tin &. Co., and I leaiii & 
 Co. Fisk was assaulted, and his life threatened. 
 Deputy-sheriffs and police officers appeared on the 
 scene. In Brooklyn a company of troops were held in 
 readiness to march upon Wall street. 
 
 A Kc'iiiiirkable Si^lit. 
 
 When night came, Broad street and its vicinity saw 
 an unwonted sight. The silence and the darkness 
 which ever rests over the lower city after seven of the 
 evening, was broken by the blaze of gas-light from a 
 hundred windows, and the foot-fall of clerks hurrying 
 from a hasty repast back to their desks. Until long 
 after Trinity bells pealed out the dawn of a new day, 
 men bent over their books, scrutinized the Clearing- 
 House statement for the morrow, took what thought 
 was possible for the future. At the Gold Exchange 
 Bank the weary accountants were making ineffective 
 efforts to complete Thursday's business. That toilful 
 midnight, at the close of the last great passion-day of 
 the bullion-worshippers, will be ever memorable for 
 its anxieties and unsatisfying anguish. 
 
 Saturday brought no relief. The Gold Board met 
 only to adjourn, as the Clearing-House had been 
 incapable of the task of setding its accounts, compli- 
 cated as they were by ever fresh failures. The small 
 
THE STORY OF BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 109 
 
 '» 'i 
 
 brokers had gone under by scores. The rumors of 
 
 the impending suspension of some of the lan^est 
 
 houses of the street gave fresh grounds for fear. The 
 
 Stock Exchange was now tiie centre of attraction. If 
 
 that yielded, all was lost. To sustain the market was 
 
 vital. 
 
 Values Pluiigfe Headlong;. 
 
 But whence was the saving power to come? All 
 through yesterday shares had been falling headlong. 
 New York Central careened to 148, and then re- 
 covered to 185^. Hudson plunged from 173 to 145. 
 Pittsburg fell to 68. Northwest reached 62 J/^. The 
 shrinkacre throuofhout all securities had been not less 
 than thirty millions. Would the impulse downward 
 continue ? The throncfs which filled the corridors and 
 overhung the stairway from which one can look down 
 upon the Long Room saw only mad tumult, heard 
 only the roar of the biddings. For any certain knowl- 
 edge they might have been in Alaska. 
 
 But the financial public in the quiet of their offices, 
 and nervously scrutinizing the prices reeled off from the 
 automaton telegraph, saw that Vanderbilt was sup- 
 porting the New York stocks, and that the weakness 
 in other shares was not sufficient to shadow forth 
 panic. It soon became known that the capitalists 
 from Philadelphia, Boston, and the great Western 
 cities had thrown themselves into the breach, and 
 were earning fortunes for themselves as well as grati- 
 tude from the money-market, by the judicious daring 
 of their purchases. The consciousness of this new 
 
 ii 
 
1)1 
 
 s ■ 
 
 110 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 clement was quieting, but Wall street was still too 
 feverish to be reposed by any ordinary anodyne. A 
 
 BROAD STREET ON BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 run on the Tenth National Bank had commenced, 
 and all day long a steady line of dealers filed up to 
 the counter of the paying teller demanding their 
 
THE STORY OF BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 Ill 
 
 ml 
 
 i 
 
 ^ 
 
 I 
 
 2fe 
 
 balances. The courage and the ability in withstand- 
 ing the attack which were shown by the president 
 and his associates deserve something more than 
 
 praise. 
 
 Freaks ot* Mad 3Ieii, 
 
 The Gold Exchangre Bank witnessed a similar 
 scene, angry brokers assaulting the clerks and threat- 
 ening all possible things unless instantaneous settle- 
 ments were made. The freedom with which the press 
 had given details of the explosion had been extremely 
 hurtful to the credit of many of the best houses. In 
 a crisis like that of Black Friday the sluice-gates of 
 passion open. Cloaked in the masquerade of genuine 
 distrust, came forth whispers whose only origin was 
 in ancient enmities, long-treasured spites, the sound- 
 less-depths of unquenchable malignities. Firms of 
 staunchest reputation felt the rapier-stroke of old 
 angers. 
 
 The knowledge that certain houses were large 
 holders of particular stocks was the signal of attacks 
 upon the shares. Despite of outside orders for vast 
 amounts, these influences had their effect upon securi- 
 ties, and aided to tighten the loan market. One, one 
 and a half, two, and even four per cent, were the com- 
 pulsory terms on which money could alone be bor- 
 rowed to carry stocks over Sunday. 
 
 On Monday the 27th the Gold Board met, but only 
 to be informed that the Clearing-House was not yet 
 ready to complete the work of Friday. Important 
 accounts had been kept back, and the dealings, swollen 
 
•I I 
 
 \l 
 
 112 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 iJBiii 
 
 in sum total to five hundred millions, were beyond the 
 capacity of the clerical force of the Gold Bank to 
 grapple with. A resolution was brought forward 
 proposing the resumption of operations Ex-CIearing- 
 House. The measure took the members by surprise, 
 for a moment quivered between acceptance and rejec- 
 tion, and then was swiftly tabled. It was an immense 
 Bear scheme, for no exchange can transact business 
 where its dealers are under suspicion. All outstand- 
 ing accounts require immediate fulfilment. Failure to 
 make good deliveries would have insured the instant 
 selling out of the defaulters " under the rule." 
 
 A Measure of Kelief. 
 
 As the majority of brokers were inextricably in- 
 volved in the late difficulty, the only consequence 
 would have been to throw them into bankruptcy, thus 
 bringing some $60,000,000 under the hammer. The 
 market could not have borne up under such an ava- 
 lanche. It was decided that the Room should be kept 
 open for borrowings and loans, but that all dealings 
 should be suspended. One result of this complication 
 was that gold had no fixed value. It could be bought 
 at one house for 133 and at other offices sold for 139. 
 The Board thus proved its utility at the very juncture 
 when least in favor. 
 
 Such is a picture of Black Friday, a day of days, a 
 day more exciting and terrible than ever dawned on 
 the financial world before or since : 
 
 The scene during the conflict almost beggars de- 
 scription, and exceeds anything ever before witnessed 
 
THE STORY OF BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 113 
 
 [the 
 
 k to 
 
 ward 
 
 rini;- 
 
 prise, 
 
 rejec- 
 
 aensG 
 
 siness 
 
 stand- 
 
 lure to 
 
 nstant 
 
 bly in- 
 quence 
 :y, thus 
 The 
 an ava- 
 
 ekept 
 ieaUngs 
 )hcation 
 
 bought 
 
 [for 1 39- 
 iuncture 
 
 days, a 
 rned on 
 
 rars de- 
 ktnessed 
 
 on Wall street. It was a tussle of enormous masfnl- 
 tude, fierce and desperate. It was a day long to be 
 remembered and not easily forgotten by those who 
 witnessed it, or were caught in the maelstrom that 
 carried everything before it. 
 
 The operators were early in the street, and the 
 offices of Smith, Gould & Martin, Fisk & Belden, and 
 William Heath & Co., were the centre of enormous 
 excitement. William Belden, who was Fisk's partner, 
 played a conspicuous part in this day's history. He 
 was a man cool and daring — the fit companion of such 
 bold speculators as Gould and Fisk. The day, how- 
 ever, left a stain on his record that could never be 
 obliterated, and when, in 1888, Belden formed a co- 
 partnership with a member of the Stock Exchange, 
 the governing committee of the institution stated that 
 unless the member severed his partnership with Bel- 
 den he must leave the Exchange. 
 
 The Silent Wizard. 
 
 Gould, Fisk, Belden and their brokers held a coun- 
 sel of war and laid out the work of the day. Heath 
 was to look after this, Willard was to attend to that, 
 Belden was to direct this, and Fisk was to direct that, 
 while Gould, by nods and whispers, directed all. " I 
 determined," said Mr. Gould afterwards, " not to open 
 my mouth that day, and I did not." 
 
 What a study for a dramatic painter Gould would 
 have made that day ! 
 
 Albert Speyer, who accepted verbal orders from 
 
 Belden in the presence of Gould and Fisk to buy, 
 8 
 
 !« 
 
 
 u 
 
n; 
 
 h 
 
 
 114 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 !: ^V 
 
 went into the board-room and did buy immense quan- 
 tities of gold at the highest prices. The street was 
 filled with the wildest rumors. Prices rapidly ad- 
 vanced to 165. The shorts trembled before the rising 
 tide that seemed about to sweep over them. Many 
 were frightened into covering their contracts. 
 
 Gould continued to sell. Fisk and Belden con- 
 tinued to buy. The excitement rose point by point 
 to the wildest pitch. Old operators lost their heads, 
 men rushed hadess and half crazy through the streets, 
 their eyes bloodshot, their faces pale with anxiety, 
 their brains on fire. There came rumors of contem- 
 plated selling of gold by the treasury, and the street 
 went mad. Where these rumors started no one ever 
 knew, but they were the forerunners of actual fact. 
 Jam.es Brown, the Scotch banker, appeared in the 
 board and began to offer gold at declining figures. 
 
 The Earthquake Comes. 
 
 Then the earthquake started, and the golden edifice 
 
 built by Gould began to tumble. Soon the treasury 
 order to sell $4,000,000 of gold appeared, and then 
 the terrible collapse. Prices fell from 165 to 133^^. 
 The board-room was the scene of contending furies. 
 Albert Speyer completely lost control of himself; his 
 hair is said to have turned white that nieht after he 
 went home a ruined man. Wall and Broad streets 
 were filled with men wild with excitement. 
 
 Infuriated mobs surrounded the offices of Fisk and 
 Belden, and Smith, Gould, and Mardn. Threats of 
 violence were made. Speyer went about saying; 
 "Some one has threatened to shoot me. Let him 
 
 irl 
 
 (( 
 
 a 
 vvl 
 
 I 
 
THE STORY OP BLACK FRIDAY. 
 
 115 
 
 ^uan- 
 was 
 J ad- 
 rising 
 f^any 
 
 1 con- 
 point 
 
 heads, 
 itreets, 
 .nxiety, 
 ;ontem- 
 
 2 street 
 ne ever 
 lal fact. 
 
 in the 
 ares. 
 
 n edifice 
 treasury 
 ,nd then 
 
 io 133/^- 
 cr furies. 
 
 self; bis 
 
 after he 
 
 d streets 
 
 Fisk and 
 ireats of 
 saying : 
 Let him 
 
 shoot.'* The Gold Exchange Bank was obliged to 
 suspend operations. Its clearances that day amounted 
 to over ^300,000,000 of gold. Trading was stoppt^d 
 in the gold board. Fisk and Belden suspended and 
 their contracts were repudiated. 
 
 The fortunes of hundreds were swept away in that 
 (hiy's battle, Several firms were driven to the wall 
 and announced their failures. The Administration 
 was involved in suspicion which it took years to re- 
 move. The nation was disgraced and its credit was 
 broken. 
 
 But Gould went home saved. What he made or 
 what he lost in that struijorle is unknown, but thouofh 
 he had involved others, he had saved himself from 
 overthrow. 
 
 In his sworn autobiography delivered to the Com- 
 mittee on Labor and Education, Mr. Gould omitted all 
 mention of Black Friday, but when ?s a witness before 
 ^lie Committee on Corners, he was asked about the 
 Black Friday panic, he calmly said that it was the 
 " result of over-trading," and that its real cause was 
 " the fluctuatio.is in the price of gold caused by the 
 war !" It is a singular coincidence that exactly twenty- 
 two years after Black Friday, on the very anniversary 
 of the day in 1891, Gould caused another big ^urry 
 in Wall street. After several years of depression, a 
 •*boom" in stocks was in progress, when the sudden 
 announcement was made that the IMissouri Pacific, of 
 which Gould was president, would pass its dividend. 
 The announcement caused a revolution in prices and 
 the " boom " completely collapsed. 
 
 if 
 
 i 
 
 
 I 
 
 ''s; 
 
 " '\i\ 
 
 It 
 
j! 
 
 !■» 
 
 CHAPTER VIII. 
 
 The Famous Wall Street, and Stock Exchange. 
 
 Frequent reference has been made to Wall street. 
 This will be understood by residents of New York 
 and many others who are familiar with the city. Some 
 readers may not fiilly understand what goes on in 
 Wall street, and the talk about L;"old- rooms, stock, 
 boards, broker's offices, etc., is to them mysterious 
 and puzzlin^r. Before proceeding, therefore, with the 
 narrativ^e we will give a full description of this cele- 
 brated street and some account of the great financial 
 transactions which go on there. 
 
 Wall street begins on the east side of Broadway, 
 opposite Trinity Church, and terminates at the East 
 River. It Is about half a mile from the extreme 
 southern end of the island, and about the same dis- 
 tance from the City Hall. It is a narrow street, 
 about fifty feet in width, and slopes gradually from 
 Broadway to the river. It is lined on both sides with 
 handsome brown stone, yellow stone, granite, marble, 
 iron, and brick buildings, and the Treasury and 
 Custom-House rear their maonlficent fronts about 
 midway between the termini of the street. They are 
 diagonally opposite each other. 
 
 The buildings are covered with a multiplicity of 
 
 (116) 
 
.^ ! 
 
 lange. 
 
 street. 
 f York 
 Some 
 5 on in 
 , stock, 
 iterious 
 vith the 
 lis cele- 
 inancial 
 
 Dadway, 
 le East 
 extreme 
 me dis- 
 street, 
 y from 
 des with 
 marble, 
 ry and 
 s about 
 They are 
 
 licity of 
 
 ll 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 THE DREAM OF A SPECULATOR. 
 
 (117) 
 
118 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 . 
 
 sig^ns, rivalling the edifices of Nassau street in this re- 
 spect. Scarcely a house has less than a score of 
 offices within its walls, and some contain at least three 
 times as many. Space is valuable, and rents are high 
 in Wall street, and many of the leading; firms in it 
 have to content themselves with small, dark apart- 
 ments, which a conscientious man would hesitate to 
 call an " office." The rents paid for such quarters 
 are enormous, and the buildings yield their owners 
 large incomes every year. The streets running into 
 Wall street, on the right and left, are also occupied 
 for several blocks with the offices of bankers and 
 brokers, and are all included in the general term 
 •' Wall street," or •' The Street." 
 
 Wall street first appears in the history of the city as 
 a portion of a sheep pasture which was used in com- 
 mon by the inhabitants of New Amsterdam. Its 
 natural condition was partly rolling upland and partly 
 meadow of a swampy character. 
 
 Origin of the Name. 
 
 The name of the street originated thus : About the 
 middle of the seventeenth century, the English in the 
 New England colonies began to press heavily upon 
 the Dutch in New^ Netherlands, and kept the worthy 
 burghers of New Amsterdam in a constant dread of 
 an invasion. Influenced by this feeling, the city 
 authorities resolved to fortify the place, and in 1653 
 constructed a wall or stockade across the island, from 
 river to river just beyond the line of the village. This 
 wall passed directly across the old sheep pasture. 
 
. 
 
 WALL STREET AND STOCK EXCHANGE. 
 
 119 
 
 IS re- 
 -e of 
 three 
 ; high 
 i in it 
 ipart- 
 ite to 
 arters 
 wners 
 r into 
 :upied 
 s and 
 [ term 
 
 city as 
 
 n com- 
 
 n. Its 
 
 pardy 
 
 out the , 
 l\ in the 
 y upon 
 worthy 
 •ead ot 
 le city 
 
 n 1653 
 
 d, from 
 
 e. This 
 Dasture. 
 
 Citizens were forbidden to build within 100 feet of 
 the stockade, tiiis open space being reserved for 
 tile movements of troops. It soon became a promi- 
 nent highway, and the eastern portion has since re- 
 mained so. 
 
 The anticipated attack on the city was not made, 
 but the wall was kept in good condition. Houses 
 crept up close to the wall on the city side, and began 
 to appear on the opposite side just under the wall. 
 Thus a new street was formed, through which ran the 
 old stockade. The open space along the wall was 
 originally called T/ie Cingel, signifying " the ramparts." 
 Soon after the town reached the limit of the military 
 reservation, persons residing here were spoken of as 
 living "long de Wal," and from this the street came 
 to be called " the Wall street," which name it has ever 
 since borne. 
 
 The wall, having fallen into decay, was demolished 
 about the year 1699, and its stones were used in the 
 construction of the old City Hall, which stood at the 
 intersection of Wall and Nassau streets, the site now 
 occupied by the Sub-Treasury of the United States. 
 The old building was used for the various purposes of 
 the city government until the close of the Revolution. 
 It contained, besides the council and court rooms, a 
 jail for the detention and punishment of criminals, a 
 debtor's prison, which was located in the attic, a fire- 
 engine room, a cage and a pillory. A pair of stocks 
 was set up on the opposite side of the street, wherein 
 
 I 
 
 i 
 
n 
 
 120 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 I 
 
 ^111 
 
 criminals were exposed to the indignant gaze of a 
 
 virtuous public. 
 
 Old Fcdciiil llalL 
 
 At the close of the Revolution the City Hall was 
 enlarged and improved for the use of the General 
 Government. It thus became the first capitol of the 
 new Republic, and was known as Federal Hall. The 
 first Contjress of the United States assembled within 
 its walls in the year 1789, and upon its spacious 
 portico, in the presence of an immense multitude, 
 George Washington took the oath to support and 
 defend the Constitution as first President of the United 
 States. 
 
 Wall street was originally taken up with priva:e 
 residences, and the old views represent it as well 
 shaded with trees. Even as late as 1830 it presented 
 a very rural appearance between Broadway and Wil- 
 liam street. Prior to the Revolution, the lower part 
 of the street had been built up with stores as far as 
 Front street, and had become the centre of mercantile 
 affairs in the city, the row of stores on Wall street 
 being the first erected beyond Water street. About 
 the year 1792, the old Tontine Coft'ee House was 
 erected on the northwest corner of Wall and Water 
 streets, and this become the favorite rendezvous for 
 the city merchants, by whom, indeed, it was erected 
 and controlled. In 1791 the Bank of New York was 
 located at the corner of William street, and marked 
 the first encroachment upon the strictly private por- 
 tion of the street. It was also the first effort to make 
 
WALL STREET AND STOCK EXCHANGE. 
 
 121 
 
 of a 
 
 . was 
 
 neral 
 f the 
 The 
 vithin 
 Lcious 
 itude, 
 t and 
 Jnited 
 
 )nva ;e 
 s well 
 nted 
 Wil- 
 part 
 far as 
 antile 
 street 
 About 
 e was 
 Water 
 us for 
 erected 
 rk was 
 arked 
 [te por- 
 make 
 
 se 
 
 r 
 
 this locality the centre of the financial optn-ations of 
 the city. Other institutions and private bankers soon 
 followed, and the character and architecture of the 
 street bei^an to undergo a change. The work of im- 
 provement went on steadily, and the Wall street of 
 to-day is the result. 
 
 Wall StnM't Celebrities. 
 
 Famous lawyers have also had their offices in this 
 
 street. Alexander Hamilton's siofn miirht once have 
 been seen here, not far from where his humble monu- 
 ment now stands in Trinity churchyard, and the name 
 of Caleb Gushing is still tu be found near a doorway 
 just below Broadway. 
 
 The street fairly began its present career in the days 
 of Jacob Litde, " the great bear of Wall street." He 
 opened an office here in 1822, and by dint of such 
 labor as few men are capable of performing, placed 
 himself at the head of American operators. His 
 credit was good for any amount, and his integrity was 
 unimpeachable. He could sway the market as he 
 pleased, and his contracts were met with a punctuality 
 and fidelity which made '* his word as good as his 
 bond." 
 
 Efforts were made to ruin him, but his genius and 
 far-sightedness enabled him to defeat all his enemies 
 with their own weapons. His gains were enormous, 
 and so were his losses. The civil war brought upon 
 him disasters which he could not surmount, and he 
 died poor in the early part of 1861, leaving behind 
 him one of the names of which New York is proud. 
 
 I '.'J 
 
 ^,; 
 
 1 iJ 
 
 OBBBEE 
 
122 
 
 LIFE UF JAY GOULD. 
 
 At the corner of Nassau street, and looking down 
 into Broad street, is the Sub-Treasury of the United 
 States, a haudsonK.' white marble edifice. It is built 
 in the Doric style of architecture!, and its massive llij^dit 
 of steps ami imposing portico give to it a striking ap- 
 pearance. It is constructed in the most substantial 
 manner, and has a rear entrance on Pine street. 
 
 (jrov<>i-iiiii< lit Vaults. 
 
 The interior is handsomely arranged, and tasteful 
 but secure iron gratings protect the emplo)ecs from 
 surprise and robbery. The vaults are burglar proof. 
 This is the principal depository of the Federal Gov- 
 ernment, and millions of dollars are always in its 
 vaults. The buildinijf was erected for, and was used 
 for some years as, a Custom House. 
 
 From the steps of the Treasury one may enjoy a 
 fine view of the entire street, and of Broad street also. 
 About the hour of noon the scene is busy and exciting. 
 The roadway in Wall street is full of struggling vehi- 
 cles, and long rows of cabs bland in waiting in Broad 
 street for the busy operators within the Exchanges. 
 The sidewalks are crowded with an eager, hurrying 
 thronof. 
 
 The steps and street around the Stock Exchange, 
 in Broad street, are black with men who are shouting, 
 pushing, and struggling in the effort to turn the trans- 
 actions of the day to their advantage. Overhead is 
 an intricate maze of telegraph wires, along which flow 
 the quick and feverish pulsations of the great financial 
 heart of the country. The sunlight falls brightly and 
 
 I 
 
 o 
 
 > 
 
 ?3 
 
 5i 
 
 Wi 
 
 Hi* 
 
 o 
 
iown 
 nited 
 built 
 
 nii^ht 
 
 antial 
 
 asU;ful 
 
 s from 
 proot. 
 
 .1 Cov- 
 in its 
 
 IS used 
 
 ;njoy a 
 
 ;et also, 
 xcitiiv^-. 
 Iicr vehi" 
 n Broad 
 bhanges. 
 lurrying 
 
 xhange, 
 Ihouting, 
 ke trans- 
 
 rhead is 
 IVich flow 
 
 financial 
 
 ditly and 
 
' 11 
 
 ]24 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 cheerily over it all, and at intervals the clear, sweet 
 chimes of old Trinity come floating down the street 
 high above the noise and strife below them. 
 
 Famous Buildiiijj^K. 
 
 Diagonally opposite the Treasury, and at the corner 
 of William street, is the Custom House, which occu- 
 pies the irregular square bounded by Wall street. 
 Exchange Place, William street, and Hanover street. 
 It is one of the finest and best arranged edifices in the 
 city. 
 
 Just below the Custom House is the handsome 
 marble building of Brown Brothers, one of the model 
 houses of New York, as regards both the firm and the 
 edifice. The Messrs. Brown are regarded as the most 
 reliable and accomplished operators in the street. 
 
 The Drexels occupy and own the handsome white 
 marble building at the corner of Broad street, oppo- 
 site the Treasury, and there conduct the New York 
 branch of their enormous business. A few years ago 
 they purchased the ground on which their building 
 stands, paying for it the highest sum ever paid for real 
 estate in any of the great cities of Europe or America. 
 Other firms, of more or less eminence, fill the street. 
 Some have fine, showy ofiices, others operate in dark, 
 
 dingy holes. 
 
 The Stock Exchange. 
 
 The Stock Exchanofe is located on the west side of 
 Broad street, just out of Wall street. It is a fine 
 white marble edifice, with a portico of iron, painted 
 flashily in black and gold. It extends back to New 
 
jweet 
 street 
 
 :orner 
 
 occu- 
 3treet, 
 street. 
 
 in the 
 
 dsome 
 model 
 ind the 
 le most 
 pt 
 
 2 white 
 , oppo- 
 V York 
 irs ago 
 ►uilding 
 for real 
 
 merica. 
 
 street. 
 
 n dark, 
 
 side of 
 a fine 
 painted 
 to New 
 
 WALL STREET AND STOCK EXCHANGE. 
 
 125 
 
 Street, with an entrance on that street. It contains 
 the " New York Stock Exchange," the " Mining 
 Board," and the " Government Board." 
 
 During the spring and summer of 1871 the internal 
 arrangements of the building were very much im- 
 proved. The refitting cost the brokers ^60,000, but 
 they now have the handsomest establishment of its 
 kind in the world. 
 
 The main entrance is on Broad street, and from this 
 
 the visitor passes into a room, the larger portion of 
 
 which is separated from the Broad street end by an 
 
 iron railing. This is "The Long Room," and during 
 
 the day it is almost always filled with a noisy and not 
 
 over-nice crowd. It is the scene of the irregular sales 
 
 of stocks. Any one who can raise ^50 can purchase 
 
 a season ticket to this hall, and once admitted can sell 
 
 and purchase stocks without being a member of the 
 
 Regular Board. 
 
 Beautiful Apartments, 
 
 This arrangement has nearly put an end to the 
 sales of stocks on the sidewalks, and has given a 
 tinge of respectability to the class known as " Curb- 
 stone Brokers." A dozen or more different stocks 
 may be sold here at once, and the sale may be con- 
 tinued as long as the seller sees fit. There is no reg- 
 ular organization of the brokers operating here, though 
 these men control the bulk of the sales made in the 
 street. They are noisy and seem half demented in 
 their frantic efforts to make sales! 
 
 The " Stock Exchange " occupies the main hall, 
 
 r 
 
126 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ^f 
 
 , ; 
 
 which is on the floor above the Lena- Room. This 
 
 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Si-Hl:- hall is one of the most 
 ^^^i5^^^SS8Sii beautiful apartments 
 
 in the city. It is sev- 
 I enty-four feet lone, 
 I fik\'-four feet wide, 
 and fifty-two feet four 
 in{:h(?s high. Its lofty 
 ceiling is arched and 
 t decorated with bright 
 red and buff pencil- 
 ing upon a sky-blue 
 ■j' ground, while the 
 l^g walls are relieved by 
 broad square pilas- 
 
 ters, painted in bril- 
 liant bronze, with tall 
 :^ windows and arched 
 tops rising between, 
 WM tind other spaces be- 
 twetn the columns 
 ~fc covered with drapery 
 pm^ in more subdued col- 
 Efe^ ors. Up to a few 
 feet from the floor 
 the painting is in a 
 dark-hued bronze. 
 The coloring is in the 
 Moorish style, and the 
 
 THE STOCK EXCHANGE. 
 
 effect of the whole is very fine throughout. 
 
 
 
ftA^. , 
 
 This 
 most 
 nents 
 3 sev- 
 long, 
 wide, 
 t four 
 s lofty- 
 id and 
 brif^ht 
 pencil- 
 y-bluc 
 the 
 'ed by 
 pilas- 
 [11 bril- 
 th tall 
 rched 
 tween, 
 :es be- 
 lli mns 
 rapery 
 :d col- 
 a few 
 floor 
 s in a 
 ) n z e . 
 
 m 
 
 n the 
 dthe 
 
 o 
 
 7*1 
 
 71 
 'jri 
 
 O 
 
 1— t 
 
 n 
 
 H 
 
 > 
 H 
 
 o 
 
 7) 
 W 
 
 w 
 
 (127) 
 
f^ 
 
 I mi 
 
 l;]f 
 
 : ! .. i ii 
 
 III 
 
 128 
 
 Life of jay gould. 
 
 At the north end is the platform for the desks of 
 the Vice-President and Secretary, and on each side 
 of this is a black-board for recording- the quotations 
 of the session. On the same platform are the desk and 
 instrument of the stock telegraph operator. 
 
 At the south end of the hall is a light gallery ca- 
 pable of holding 200 persons, for the use of visitors. 
 In connection with the hall arc several committee, 
 cloak and ante-rooms. In the centre of the ceilincj is 
 a huge ventilator, beneath which is suspended the 
 lighting apparatus, containing 100 burners. A cham- 
 ber five feet in depth underlies the hall and the ad- 
 joining lobby, and in it are laid pipes for conducting 
 warm air. At the base of the walls is an open iron 
 grating covering the apertures of a shaft leading from 
 the engine-room. Through this shaft warm air is 
 forced into the hall in winter, and cool air in summer, 
 thus securing perfect ventilation. 
 
 Stock Exeliaiij^e Board. 
 
 The Stock Exchange Board is an Incorporated 
 company, and is the only law ful association in the city 
 for the transaction of business coimected with stocks. 
 It consists of 1050 members, but the control of its 
 affairs is vested in a council of forty members, to- 
 gether with the President, Secretary and Treasurer 
 in their unofficial capacity. The admission fee is 
 $5000, and a seat in the Board becomes the absolute 
 personal property of the broker, who can sell or 
 otherwise dispose of it as he would of his watch or 
 his coat. 
 
cs of 
 
 side 
 
 Ltions 
 
 h: and 
 
 ry ca- 
 ntors, 
 littee, 
 ing is 
 d the 
 cham- 
 le ad- 
 .ictintT 
 
 1 iron 
 r from 
 
 ) 
 
 n 
 
 m 
 
 air IS 
 
 I 
 
 iimer, 
 
 1 
 
 Drated 
 
 
 le city 
 
 
 tocks. 
 
 
 of its 
 
 
 rs, to- 
 
 
 isurer 
 
 
 fee is 
 
 
 solute 
 
 ■1 
 
 ell or 
 
 -1 
 
 ;ch or 
 
 
 WALL STREET AND STOCK EXCHANGE. 
 
 129 
 
 Candidates are admitted by ballot and with great 
 care, the object being to secure the exclusion of all 
 but men of known integrity, for the Board requires 
 the most scrupulous good faith in the transactions of 
 all its members. Four black balls will prevent the 
 admission of a candidate whether he wishes to enter 
 by purchase or otherwise. Candidates must submit to 
 a close scrutiny of their previous lives, and must show 
 a clear record. 
 
 There are two daily sessions of the Board, one in 
 the mornincr and the other in the afternoon. The 
 securities offered at these meetinors are divided into 
 two classes, the Kegular and the Free List. No stock 
 or \ u . can be dealt in until it has been rigidly ex- 
 amined by a committee, and found to be a bona fide 
 security. 
 
 At half-past ten o'clock in the morning, the Morn- 
 ing Board is called to order by the First Vice-Presi- 
 dent. The Regular List, which is made up in advance 
 of the meeting, must always be called, and called 
 first. The Free List mav be called or not at the 
 option of the Board. The Regular List consists of 
 1st, Miscellaneous Stocks. 2d. Railroad Stocks. 
 3d. State Bonds. 4th. City Stocks. 5. Railroad 
 
 Bonds. 
 
 Mode of Opcratiou, 
 
 The session opens with the reading of the minutes 
 of the previous day. Then comes the call of the 
 Reirular List. The call of Miscellaneous Stocks 
 awakens but little excitement. Bids follow quickly 
 
 I : * il 
 
 5*! \\ 
 
 
 1 , !■ 
 
ml 
 
 lit. 
 
 130 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Hi 
 
 Upon the announcement of the stocks, n.nd the trans- 
 actions, as they are announced by tl ^ cries of the 
 brokers, are repeated by the \'ice-President to the 
 Assistant Secretary, who records them in the journal, 
 and they are also recorded by a clerk on a black- 
 board in full view of the members. Where there is 
 a doubt respecting- a sale or purchase the Vice-Presi- 
 dent decides, and his decision is final, unless reversed 
 by the votes of a majority of the members present. 
 
 The call of railroad securities brings the brokers to 
 their feet, and the real business of the day begins. 
 Offers and bids, shouted in deep bass, high treble, or 
 shrill falsetto, resound through the hall, and in a few 
 minutes the jovial-looking brokers seem to be on the 
 verge of madness. How they yell and shout, and 
 stamp, and gesticulate. 
 
 A Roaring' 3Iob. 
 
 The roar and confusion are bewilderino- to a 
 
 stranger, but the keen, practised ears of the Vice- 
 President at once recoi2:nize the various transactions, 
 and down they go in the Secretary's book, and on the 
 black-board, while the *solemn-visagecl telegraph 
 operator sends them clicking into every broker's of- 
 fice in the city. High over all rings the voice of 
 Peter, the keeper of the gate, calling out members for 
 whom teleo^rams or visitors have arrived. 
 
 The other stocks awaken more or less excitement, 
 and when the Regular List is completed, the Free List 
 is in order, and the Vice-President calls such stocks as 
 the members express a desire to deal in. Then, unless 
 
trans- 
 )f the 
 o the 
 urnal, 
 black- 
 ere is 
 Presi- 
 /ersed 
 ent. 
 :ers to 
 )ecrins. 
 ble, or 
 a few 
 on the 
 It, and 
 
 to a 
 Vice- 
 
 Lctions, 
 on the 
 raph 
 er s of- 
 fice of 
 1)0 rs for 
 
 •cr\ 
 
 ement, 
 ee List 
 ocks as 
 unless 
 
 .1 
 
 i^t 
 

 m 
 
 i 
 
 132 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 there is a wish to call up some stock hastily passed 
 over on the call of the Regular List, the session 
 closes. 
 
 At one o'clock the afternoon session is held, and the 
 routine of the morninof is orone over a<Tain. The 
 transactions of both sessions are carefully recorded in 
 the Secretary's books. 
 
 The Vice-President receives a salary of $7,000 per 
 annum for his services, which are not light. The Sec- 
 retary and Assistant Secretary and Roll-keeper do the 
 rest of the work of the Board. The last named keeps 
 a record of the fines, which yield an exceedingly large 
 revenue to the Board. 
 
 tTokes and Hoi'seplay. 
 
 The brokers are not the most diofnified of mortals 
 in their meetings, but are very much given to disor- 
 derly conduct and practical jokes. The annual dues 
 of the Exchange are but fifty dollars, but the average 
 broker pays at least ten times as much in fines. To 
 interrupt the presiding officer during a call of the 
 stocks subjects the offender to a fine of not less than 
 twenty-five cents for each offence ; to smoke a cigar 
 within the Exchange costs five dollars; to be absent 
 from special meetings is to incur a fine of not more 
 than five dollars ; to stand on a table or chair is pun- 
 ishable with a fine of one dollar ; to throw a paper 
 dart or ball at a member durinqf the session of the 
 Board costs ten dollars ; and other offences may be 
 punished with fines assessed by the Vice-President at 
 any sum between twenty-five cents and five dollars. 
 
 B 
 
passed 
 session 
 
 and the 
 .. The 
 orded hi 
 
 ,000 per 
 The Sec- 
 ir do die 
 -d keeps 
 Tly large 
 
 WALL STREET AND STOCK EXCHANGE. 
 
 133 
 
 Vii< 
 
 Each day a hst of stocks to be put in the market is 
 made out, and no others can be sold durincr the session. 
 The Board can refuse to offer any particular stock for 
 sale, and a guarantee is required of the party making 
 the sale. The members of the Board are men of 
 character, and their transactions are fair and open. 
 They are required to fulfill all contracts in good faith, 
 however great the loss to themselves, on pain of ex- 
 pulsion from the Board, and it is very rarely that an 
 expelled member can be reinstated. 
 
 I'ti 
 
 f mortals 
 to disor- 
 uial dues 
 i average 
 nes. To 
 11 of the 
 ess than 
 e a cigar 
 DC absent 
 lot more 
 r is pun- 
 
 a paper 
 311 of the 
 s may be 
 
 sident at 
 2 dollars. 
 
 it 
 
CHAPTER IX. 
 Gould and the Pacific Railroads. 
 
 Having given a description of Wall street and the 
 Stock lixchan^e, the scene of the o^reat battles of 
 finance and speculation, we resume the story of Mr. 
 Gould, whose operations for many years startled the 
 whole business world. Thousands envied his money- 
 making genius, yet he stood without a rival. Jay Gould 
 was a phenomenon. Once in a century, or more, such 
 a phenonK-non appears in almost every pursuit and 
 calling. He bursts upon the world's astonished gaze 
 as the burning meteor does; he passes and there is 
 no other to rival his dazzling splendor. 
 
 Havino- severed his relations with Erie Mr. Gould 
 entered into that career of acquisition which made 
 him the master of several of the most important rail- 
 roads in the United States, of the Yale system of tele- 
 ^ graph and of the chief line of transportation in New 
 York city. In nearly all his railroad operations he 
 repeated, to a greater or less extent, his career in 
 Erie. His scheme was to buy up cheap and bankrupt . 
 roads and reorofanize them. His career in Union 
 Pacific comes naturally first in order. For ten years 
 he was master of this great system which, with the 
 Central Pacific, constitutes the first and most important 
 
 (134) 
 
 ^3 
 
ind the 
 [les of 
 of Mr. 
 led the 
 money- 
 ^ Gould 
 re, such 
 uit and 
 d oaze 
 there is 
 
 . Gould 
 
 made 
 nt rail- 
 of tele- 
 n New 
 ons he 
 reer in 
 ankrupt , 
 
 Union 
 n years 
 'ith the 
 iportant 
 
 il^ 
 
 Jii 
 
 1 1 
 
 m 
 
1111 
 
 II 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 136 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 of the lines Icadincr to the Pacific coast. His record 
 in this road has been a matter of official investigation. 
 It is but fair that Mr. Gould's own account of his 
 connection with Union Pacific, as stated in his testi- 
 mony before the Senate Committee on Labor and 
 lidiication, should be given. Having omitted all 
 mention of Erie, Mr. Gould said: 
 
 "I then went into the Union Pacific road. I met 
 Horace Clark and Augustus Schell out West, and they 
 <»ave me so <»ood an account of the road that I con- 
 eluded to buy in it. I telegraphed to New York an 
 order to buy at a certain price. When Mr. Clark got 
 home he was taken ill, and as soon as his brokers 
 learned that his illness was to be fatal they sold out 
 his stock. That broke the market and filled orders 
 which I had sent at a price lower than I ever expected. 
 
 Thrcjiteiicd Biiukriiptcy. 
 
 "WHien I got home I found myself the owner of a 
 large amount of this property and at once inquired 
 into its condition. I learned that it was saddled with 
 a large floating debt and that there were J 10,000,000 
 of bonds cominor due within a month. It was in 
 rather a blue condition. The directors were consult- 
 ing who should be the receiver. I made up my mind 
 that I would carry it through, and I told them that if 
 they would furnish half of the money to pay the debt 
 I would furnish the other half. 
 
 ''The stock went down to 15. It was a large loss, 
 but still I kept right on buying, so when the turn came 
 there did not seem to be any top to it. It went up to 
 
GOULD AND THE PACIFIC UAILKUADS. 
 
 137 
 
 75 and I immediately went to work to bring the road 
 up. I went out over it, started coal mines, and to the 
 surprise of everybody it soon began to [)ay dividends 
 and has never [)assed a dividend since. 
 
 "'Well,' con'inued Mr. Gould, "when this road 
 began to be a financial success and developed oUier 
 ways there arose quite a clamor, and it was said to be 
 Jay Gould's road, as though it were a dangerous thing 
 to have one man control a road. I thouoflu that it 
 was better to bow to public opinion, so I took an 
 opportunity when I could place the stock in the hands 
 of investors. 
 
 Great Xiiinbcr of Stocklioklers. 
 
 " In the course of a very few months, instead of con- 
 trolling the road, I was entirely out of it, and the stock 
 was twenty per cent, higher than I had sold it for. 
 Instead of being thirty or forty stockholders there 
 were between six and seven thousand, representing 
 the savings of widows and orphans. There were 
 also a great many lady stockholders. That was after 
 Congress enacted very harsh legislation, after they 
 had broken the bargain they had made to get the 
 road through in its early stages.* " 
 
 "You refer to the Thurman act?" asked the 
 Chairman. 
 
 "Yes, and that closed my connection with the 
 Union Pacific road." 
 
 The reader will be interested In a more detailed 
 account of the orreat financier's connection with the 
 
 li 
 
?l 
 
 138 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Pacific Railroads. That his power was felt clear 
 across the continent cannot be denied. 
 
 When Mr. Gould bes^an to take an interest in the 
 Pacific railroads he found, as he subsequently ex- 
 pressed it, that they had been " badly financed." He 
 took hold of some of them, notably the Union Pacific, 
 the Kinsas Pacific, the Denver Pacific, and the« , 
 Missouri Pacific and "financed" them with conspicu- 
 ous results. Me began buying Union Pacific stock 
 in 1S73. After a while, in consequence of a mis- 
 understanding with other persons, he found himself 
 in possession of several thousand shares. Horace 
 Clark was then in praci-ical control of the property. 
 He was taken seriously ill, and the price of the stock 
 went down at a rapid rate. Gould kept buying the 
 stock as it went down, and when it touched 14 he 
 concluded that the best way to save himself was to 
 buy control of the property. 
 
 TIh' Koad Comes Up. 
 
 He acquired 200,000 of the 367,000 shares and 
 took ti,e manr.oement into his own hands. The 
 stock increased in value, and in a few years dividends . 
 were declared. 
 
 Sidney Dillon was then President of the Union 
 Pacific, and he, Mr. Gould, and other large stock- 
 holders agreed upon a plan to fund the floating debt 
 in bonds, of which Mr. Gould took j^ 1,000,000. Mr. 
 Gould remained in practical control of the property 
 until about 1880, when public opinion clamored for a 
 change, and, as Mr. Gould said to one of the numer- 
 
 
'f: *i 
 
 ;l 
 
 i 
 
 Hf 
 
 ! '4ii 
 
 •i: 
 
 now A SUCCESSFUL OPERATOR SPENDS HIS MONEY. 
 
 (139) 
 
Kl^ 
 
 140 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 
 
 ous inve-stisfatinof committees before which he was 
 called upon during his busy life to testify, "I bowed 
 to public opinion. I let outside parties in, and soon, 
 instead of thirty or forty stockholders, there were 
 6,ooo or 7,000." 
 
 Charles Francis Adams succeeded Sidney Dillon 
 as President, and in a short time an astonished public 
 beheld the spectacle of the author of the scathing 
 " Chapter of Erie " standing sponsor for the man he 
 had denounced. Mr. Gould managed to persuade Mr. 
 Adams to view the future of Union Pacific throus^h his 
 (Gould's) eyes, and in consequence Mr. Adams un- 
 consciously assisted Mr. Gould in disposing of large 
 blocks of the stock to crood advantaoe. In i8qi Mr. 
 Gould again got control of the Union Pacific Road, 
 owing to peculiar Wall street conditions, and he 
 calmly turned Mr. Adams out of the Presidency and 
 put Sidney Dillon back there. 
 
 In 1876 Mr. Gould began buying Kansas Pacific 
 stock because it was cheap. At that time stock 
 speculators did not regard the stock as being worth 
 anything. Mr. Gould, however, was looking away 
 ahead, and he boucvht laro-elv of Denver Pacific 
 securities and stock and bonds of tli:" St. Joe and 
 Western, the Kansas Central, and Central Branch 
 Roads. 
 
 All of these securities he got at a very low price, 
 and he realized an enormous profit when they were 
 all turned in under the famous Union Pacific consoli- 
 dation scheme in 18S0. For his Central Branch 
 
GOULU AND THE PACIFIC RAILROADS. 
 
 141 
 
 stock alone lie received ^^^39 per sliare. Mr. Gould 
 was one of the first to su merest the consolidation of 
 the Kansas Pacific and Its subsidiary roads with the 
 Union Pacific. He employed Solon Humphries and 
 Gen. Dodge to go West, look over the situation, and 
 make a report on the practicability of the consoli- 
 dation. 
 
 In 1S79 a consolidated mortgage was issued by the 
 Kansas Pacific to wipe out the innumerable securities 
 bearlni^f different rates of interest which were then 
 burdening the road. Jay Gould and Russell Sage 
 were then directors of both the Union and the Kansas 
 Pacific Roads, and they were made trustees of this 
 mortgage. Among the assets covered by this mort- 
 oracje were ^0,000 shares of the Denver Pacific Rail- 
 road, then of little value, but which under the plan of 
 consolidation which Gould was then maturinof would 
 become of great value. Sidney Dillon, who was 
 associated wnth Gould and Sage in all three roads, 
 asked them to release these stocks from the lien of 
 
 the mortcracre. 
 
 Slirow<l Tactics. 
 
 Gould and Sao^e sat down at the same desk at 
 which Dillon had written this modest request and 
 wrote sui^(Tfestincr that an action should be brought 
 ao^ainst them in the courts for the release of the stock. 
 The action was immediately brought before Judge 
 Donohue, to which Gould and SaQfe made no defense. 
 Dillon testified tliat the stock was worth only ;>^2oo,ooo 
 or^ 300,000 The order was given, the stock released, 
 
 il 
 
 J;^ 
 
 P 
 
 
 
 ■1)1 
 
 '!. I 
 
 
 
142 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 and the day after the consoHdation was effected which 
 made the stock worth its face vaUie, or ^^3,000,000. 
 
 In 1888 an action was brought by the bondholders 
 through three New York lawyers to compel a restitu- 
 tion of the value of this stock. District-Attorney 
 (afterwards Judge) Martine and his successor, Dis- 
 trict-Attorney Fellows, brought the facts before the 
 Grand Jury, the chairman of which, Mr. Havens, had 
 been a fellow-director of Gould in Jersey Central. 
 The jury, on a ruling by Judge i "owing that the statute 
 of limitations prevented a criminal action, refused to 
 brinof in an indictment. This rulinor was afterwards 
 upheld by Recorder Smyth. 
 
 The Wizard Disappears. 
 
 While criminal proceedings were being agitated 
 
 Gould went away on a long ocean trip, on his yacht, 
 returnino^ after the matter had been settled. On his 
 return he attacked his prosecutors with a virulence 
 which he had never displayed before, and filled the 
 columns of the newspapers with interviews. 
 
 In one of these he declared that the attack upon 
 him was the result of a conspiracy and blackmail, and 
 that the powers behind the criminal proceedings were 
 "a newspaper" (meaning the Herald), "a cable com- 
 pany " (referring to the Mackey-Bennett Company) 
 " and a woman." The latter was understood to be the 
 wife of an officer of one of Gould's railroads who had 
 brought suit for divorce. This brinorincr of a woman 
 into the case created a ofreat sensation. 
 
 A few days later Gould made a bitter personal at- 
 
GOULD AND THE PACIFIC RAILROADS. 
 
 143 
 
 which 
 
 CO. 
 
 ciders 
 estitu- 
 torney 
 r, Dis- 
 re the 
 IS, had 
 entral. 
 statute 
 ised to 
 rwards 
 
 ^itated 
 yacht, 
 On his 
 Lilence 
 sd the 
 
 upon 
 il, and 
 s were 
 e com- 
 ipany) 
 be the 
 ho had 
 voman 
 
 lal at- 
 
 tack on James Gordon Bennett, of the Herald, calHng 
 in question his personal and social character, and re- 
 citing incidents unfit for publication. This was the 
 first time in his life that Gould appeared to be thor- 
 oughly "rattled;" the first time that he let down the 
 curtain of mystery with which he had so long covered 
 himself, and the first time that he broke that silence 
 which was his best weapon. 
 
 How he Did It. 
 
 This is a good place to quote from Gould's testi- 
 mony before the Pacific Railroad Commission, as it 
 gives an insight into his theory of railroad operations. 
 
 " I consider," he said, " the past a good thing to 
 judge a road by, but the future more. I have been 
 all my life dealing in railroads, that is, since before I 
 came of age. I always bought on the future; that's 
 how I made my money. The bonds on the first road 
 I bought were down to lo cents. I built up the road 
 and sold them for $i 25. That's the reason I went into 
 the Kansas Pacific and the Union Pacific. But I saw 
 the Kansas Pacific was going to develop faster than 
 the Union Pacific." 
 
 After Mr. Gould came in possession of the Wabash 
 system, he was impelled by force of circumstances to 
 get control of Missouri Pacific in order to protect his 
 Wabash interests. The Wabash system had been 
 built up by the amalgamation of sixty-eight different 
 railroad corporations, and Mr. Gould was bitterly as- 
 sailed for some of the financial methods with which he 
 worked out his great consolidation scheme. 
 
 :ii'« 
 
 •*i'. 
 
 \¥ 
 
 1 1^ 
 
1 1 
 
 144 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ill! : 
 
 
 iHi: 
 
 The Wabash system finally got Into the hands of a 
 receiver, and the hody-contested litigation which fol- 
 lowed the efforts of the security holders to wrest the 
 property from Gould's control, culminated in a strong- 
 anti-Gould decision by Judge Walter Q. Gresham, of 
 the United States District Court. 
 
 Sudden Rise in a IJailroad. 
 
 The Missouri Pacific Railroad was owned iti 1880 
 by Commodore Garrison, who was not friendly to Mr. 
 Gould. The latter sent Russell Saq^e to find out how 
 much the Commodore would take for his interest in 
 the Missouri Pacific. The Commodore said that 
 $2,000,000 would be about right. Sage offered 
 $1,500,000 and Garrison shook his head brusquely. 
 The next day Sage returned and offered to close the 
 bargain at $2,000,000. '* No," said the Commodore, 
 " the price has advanced to $2,800,000." " Pooh, 
 pooh !" said Sage, and he went back and reported to 
 Mr. Gould. 
 
 The next day Gould went himself and told Garri- 
 son that he would take his stock at $2,800,000. The 
 Commodore replied that the stock had advanced in 
 price to $3,800,000, and it would continue to go up 
 $ 1 ,000,000 a day. Gould closed the bargain on the 
 spot, giving Garrison his check for $3,800,000. 
 
 The Missouri Pacific stock subsequently became 
 very much depressed in the stock market, and a great 
 many weak stockholders were obliged to let go. 
 Gould was always ready to buy. After a while he 
 consolidated the Missouri Pacific with the Iron Moun- 
 
GOULD AND THE TACIFIC RAILROADS. 
 
 145 
 
 ds of a 
 
 lich fol- 
 
 est the 
 
 strong 
 
 lam, 
 
 of 
 
 in 1880 
 y to Mr. 
 out how 
 terest hi 
 lid that 
 offered 
 •usquely. 
 :lose the 
 imodore, 
 Pooh, 
 orted to 
 
 d Garri- 
 )0. The 
 meed in 
 o go up 
 on the 
 
 • 
 
 became 
 
 a ei'eat 
 
 let go. 
 
 Iwhile he 
 
 n Moun- 
 
 tain and the International and Great Northern, and 
 Missouri Pacific stock went up rapidly. The Iron 
 Mountain was a first-class money-earning road. 
 
 Coiitroll* r of 5()00 Miles of Itailrojid. 
 
 This consolidation gave Mr. Gould a southwestern 
 railroad syst'jm of more than 5000 miles, which he 
 subsequently extended largely. In speaking of his 
 development of the Missouri Pacific system to a Sen- 
 ate committee, Mr. Goukl remarked: "I did not care 
 about making money with it. 1 had got beyond that 
 point where I cared about making money for myself. 
 I was chiefly interested in convincing myself and others 
 that I could make an effective and financially success- 
 ful railroad combination." 
 
 Mr. Gould's policy while in control of the Union 
 Pacific- was such as greatly to curtail the earning power 
 of the Kansas Pacific road, which was a natural de- 
 pendent on the Union Pacific. Consequently the 
 marketable value of Kansas Pacific stock went down 
 to almost nothing. Gould bought much of it. It was 
 then that the consolidation of the Kansas Pacific and 
 the Denver Pacific with the Union Pacific was sue- 
 gested. 
 
 Mr. Gould was committed to the scheme. Before 
 it was completed Gould had got control of the Mis- 
 souri Pacific, and although still in the Union Pacific 
 directory, he threatened* to build a short line connect- 
 ing the Kansas Pacific with the Colorado Central, and 
 thus, with the Missouri Pacific, forminof a stronof com- 
 
 peting line to the Pacific coast. -This frightened the 
 10 
 
 1^1 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 • 'm 
 
 I'l 
 
ff' ' 
 
 iJ 
 
 146 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 i1: 
 
 l!liiiiliiii«iiiiWiiwiW'isiiiwi«i» 
 
 THE PARK BANK, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 
 
 Boston directors of the Union Pacific, and they hast- 
 ened to Gould's house and insisted upon his standing 
 by the consolidation-agreement. 
 
GOULD AND THE PACIFIC RAILROADS. 
 
 147 
 
 ;y hast- 
 tanding 
 
 " Lost a Good Thiiij?." 
 
 Gould subsequently testified that he offered the 
 Boston people his check for jjsi, 000,000 to h^t him out 
 of the agreement, but they declined and remained with 
 him until he signed a binding contract to stand by the 
 agreement. In his testimony before the Pacific Rail- 
 way Commission in 1SS7, Mr. Gould ruefully remarked 
 that he lost a o^ood thinof when he abanthined his Mis- 
 sour! Pacific extension scheme, and at the snmn time 
 frankly admitted that the success of that scheme would 
 have resulted in wiping out the Government's claim 
 of $17,000,000 against the Union Pacific. 
 
 When the Union Pacific consolidation was com[)leted 
 Gould was found to be the larofest holder of the secu- 
 rities of all the subordinate roads. The Kansas Pacific 
 road owed him $2,000,000, he owned $2,000,000 of 
 Denver Pacific securities, and he and Russell Sage 
 were trustees for $3,000,000 of Denver Pacific bonds 
 which had been in the Kansas Pacific treasurv. All 
 of Gould's stocks in the subordinate roads were 
 turned into the Union Pacific consolidation at par and 
 over. Here he reaped extraordinary profits. For 
 instance, on January 17, 1880 (before the consolida- 
 tion), Kansas Pacific stock was worth but $2 or $3 a 
 share. On January 24, 1880 (after the consolidation), 
 
 it was rated at par. 
 
 Those Trust Bonds. 
 
 Some time afterward, when a committee of Kansas 
 Pacific bondholders took hold of that property and 
 reorganized it, they found that the $3,000,000 of trust 
 
 v\ 
 
 f 
 
m 
 
 
 iiiit 
 
 148 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 bonds were missing. The Messrs. Gould and Sage 
 gave no other explanation than that the bonds had 
 been released from th trust. By what authority the 
 release was effected v.t b never made known. Suits 
 were brought ao-ainst Gould and Saofe for fraud and 
 larceny, and District Attorney John R. Fellows was 
 appealed to to prosecute them. Mr. Fellows, how- 
 ever, regarded the defendants* plea of the Statute of 
 Limitations as effective, and the criminal char^res were 
 pi^Teonholed. Mr. Gould went to Europe about the 
 time this matter was being agitated. 
 
 Mr. Gould was questioned about the release of that 
 Js3,ooo,ooo trust fund by E. Ellery Anderson of the 
 Pacific Railway Commission, in 1887, and he said: "I 
 considered that it was the only thing to do, and I 
 stand on what was done. I am ready to take the re- 
 sponsibility for it that day, or this day, or any other 
 
 day." 
 
 A Great Kaili'oad Strike. 
 
 One of the most memorable events connected with 
 Gould's manaorement of the Missouri Pacific was the 
 great Knights of Labor strike in 1885, which disabled 
 the road for a lonof time. An interestincr feature of 
 the strike was a Sunday conference at Mr. Gould's 
 house between him and General Master Workman 
 Powderly, at which negotiations for a settlement were 
 entered into. The foremost representatives of capital 
 and labor thus met to settle vital questions at issue 
 affecting the wealth of the capitalists and the liveli- 
 
Sage 
 Is had 
 ity the 
 
 Suits 
 ucl and 
 vs was 
 s, how- 
 tute of 
 es were 
 out the 
 
 i of that 
 n of the, 
 5aid: m' 
 3, and I 
 t the re- 
 ny other 
 
 ed with 
 was the 
 disabled 
 ature of 
 
 Gould's 
 /orkman 
 ent were 
 3f capital 
 
 at issue 
 ne liveli- 
 
 GOULD AND THE PACIFIC RAILROADS. 
 
 149 
 
 hood of the workingmen. Mr. Gould said to the 
 Senate Committee on Labor and Education : 
 
 "I have been all my life a laborer or an employer 
 of laborers. Strikes come from various causes, but 
 are principally brought about by the poorest, and 
 therefore the dissatisfied element. The best workers 
 generally look forward to advancement in the ranks 
 or save money enough to go into business on their 
 own account. Though there may be few advanced 
 positions to be filled, there is a large number of men 
 trying to get them. They get better pay here than in 
 any other country, and that is why they come here. 
 My idea is that if capital and labor are let alone they 
 will mutually regulate each other. People who think 
 they can regulate all mankind and get wrong ideas 
 which they believe to be panaceas for every ill cause 
 much trouble to both employers and employees by 
 their interference." 
 
 To the Concrressional Committee which investiirated 
 the Missouri Pacific Strike he said: "I am in favor of 
 arbitration as an easy way of settling differences be- 
 tween corporations and their employees." 
 
 ! \\\ 
 
 *IR^ 
 
 P 
 
CHAPTER X. 
 
 m 
 
 r. IMf, I 
 
 »fi i 
 
 Gould and the New York Elevated Railroads. 
 
 Mr. Gould turned his attention to the elevated rail- 
 roads in New York city, early in 1881. The Man- 
 hattan Company was then in control of all the lines 
 as lessee, and to Mr. Gould's keen vision that com- 
 pany presented the appearance of being- on the verge 
 of financial disaster. The Manhattan Company had 
 issued $'13,000,000 of stock — pure water — and had 
 divided the same equally between the Metropolitan 
 and the New York Companies. 
 
 There was much criticism of the action of the Man- 
 hattan Corporation in issuing so large a quantity of 
 stock, which was wholly unrepresented by property. 
 The Attorney-General of the State, Hamilton Ward, 
 obtained permission from Judge Donohue, May 18, 
 1 88 1, to begin a suit for the dissolution of the Man- 
 hattan Company's charter and the appointment of a 
 receiver. Other suits were becrun about the same 
 time to restrain the Manhattan Company from paying 
 any dividends on its stock. Of course those suits 
 tended to depress Manhattan stock in the stock 
 market. 
 
 Mr. Gould, naturally enough, came into control of 
 
 this great system, which carries 600,000 passengers 
 
 (160) 
 
 'II 
 
THE ELKTATED RAILROADS. 
 
 151 
 
 ■r^i 
 
 oads. 
 
 d rail- 
 Man- 
 i lines 
 t com- 
 : verge 
 ny had 
 id had 
 ipohtaii 
 
 Man- 
 
 tity of 
 
 operty. 
 
 Ward, 
 
 lay 1 8, 
 
 Man- 
 nt of a 
 ; same 
 paying 
 se suits 
 2 stock 
 
 1 
 
 trol of 
 
 sengers 
 
 every day, through a consoHdation and the " water- 
 ing " of stock. As already stated, there were three 
 elevated roads — the Metropolitan (formerly the "(jil- 
 bert," named after the originator. Dr. Gilbert), of 
 which S. H. Kneeland was President ; the second, the 
 New York, of which Cyrus W. Field was President 
 and of which Samuel J. Tilden was once a heavy 
 stockholder, and the third, the Manhattan, of which 
 Jay Gould and Russell Sage were the owners. 
 
 A PaiKT CoiK't'i'ii. 
 
 The Metropolitan and the New York were bona- 
 fide companies, actually owning railroads and rolling 
 stock, but the Manhattan was a •' paper " company, 
 havino; a nominal charter and an oro^anization, but not 
 one inch of road. Yet these three companies were 
 consolidated on equal terms, and Gould, Sage, and 
 Field became the owners. Later the control narrowed 
 down to Gould and Sacfe. 
 
 Saofe, Field, and Kneeland are remarkable' charac- 
 ters in Wall street history, and their names are in- 
 timately identified with Gould's — Sage and P^ield as 
 associates, and Kneeland as an unpurchasable oppo- 
 nent. 
 
 Russell Sage is one of the richest men of his genera- 
 tion. He came originally from Troy, where he ran a 
 bank, and whose district he represented in Congress 
 before the war for one or two terms. Then he 
 entered Wall street. Money-getting was his passion — 
 not for the power and luxury which money can pur- 
 chase, but for the mere pleasure of acquisition. He 
 
 ■=n 
 
m 
 
 152 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 lived, it is true, on Fifth Avenue and gave somewhat 
 to charity, but his habits were economical ahnost to 
 the point of penuriousness, and once a dollar got 
 into his hands it did not ^jasily slip through them. 
 
 A Powerful Ally. 
 
 It should be said for him, however, that he was as 
 careful of other people's money as of his own. This 
 was the man who for many years was Gould's most 
 intimate business associate, a director in all his com- 
 panies and a partner in all his schemes. Gould esti- 
 mated Sage's wtjalth at ^50,000,000 and their com- 
 bined capital was thus enormous. Sage was chielly 
 a money-lender in Wall street. I le carried an im- 
 mense amount of ready cash and was of incalculable 
 aid to Gould in all his undertakinijs. 
 
 It is indeed one of the traditions of the street that 
 Sage saved Gould from 1 in at a time when he was 
 hotly pressed by James R. Keene and other bear 
 operators. 
 
 Field wa;' a different kind of a man. He liked 
 money, but oidy as a means to an end, and he shared 
 for a time in the enterprises of Gould and Sage. At 
 one time he was worth millions. Field's passion was 
 love of fame. His brothers all ofained distinction in 
 the professions: he sought aiid obtained distinction in 
 commercial life. One of his brothers sat on the 
 Supreme Bench of his country. Another was a leader 
 of the New York Bar. A third was a noted clergy- 
 man, editor, and traveller. 
 
:rgy- 
 
 iin7j^Ai'ii'iri,iii^i!jiiiiiiiiiiiiii,,, 
 
 '!-<! 
 
 ! ' 'm 
 
 ji^i',| i, //g/Ln.n :<iJirtJi^fl-n-.iwnnnflim-nntni tmnflgit 
 
 I ' 
 
^l 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 % 
 
 l|lii: 
 
 il 
 
 154 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 Famous Hag Merchant. 
 
 Cyrus W. Field began his business life as a rag 
 merchant, but with indomitable pluck, energy, and 
 foresight he finally succeeded in constructing the first 
 Atlantic cable, and was honored both in London and 
 New York. Mr. Field sought almost equal distinc- 
 tion in connection with the elevated railroads, whose 
 great importance he comprehended, and he made a 
 bid for popularity by insisting on a reduction of the 
 fares from lo to 5 cents against the wishes of Gould 
 and Sage. Sage first became acquainted with Gould 
 in Troy. Field first became identified with him in 
 1879, when he (Field) was President of the Wabash 
 Railroad, though we have seen him as a guest at the 
 famous banquet given to President Grant on "Jim" 
 F'isk's steamboat in 1869. 
 
 Gould, Saofe and l^eld a^rreed toofether to consoli- 
 date the three elevated railroad companies. They 
 were, however, met by the determined opposition of 
 President Kneeland of the Metropolitan road. Noth- 
 ing could induce him to waver in his opposition. His 
 associates in the Metropolitan deserted him and one by 
 one they went over to Gould^ but he stood firm to the 
 very last, and his persistency caused a celebrated litiga- 
 tion, which proved so protracted and costly that Knee- 
 land was finally defeated, though his spirit was un- 
 subdued. 
 
 Making Three One. 
 
 The first plan of consolidation was by leasing the 
 New York and Metropolitan roads to the Manhattan, 
 
THE ELEVATED RAILROADS. 
 
 155 
 
 a rag 
 y, and 
 le first 
 Dn and 
 distinc- 
 
 whose 
 made a 
 
 of the 
 
 Gould 
 1 Gould 
 
 him in 
 Wabash 
 it at the 
 1 "Jim 
 
 consoli- 
 . They 
 ,ition of 
 Noth- 
 n. His 
 Id one by 
 Im to the 
 led litiga- 
 ,1 Knee- 
 was un- 
 
 Lsing the 
 inhattan, 
 
 but the courts did not uphold die lease, and finally, in 
 1884, the Manhattan issued stock which was ex- 
 changed for the securities of the other two companies, 
 and Gould became President of the whole system. 
 Mr. Field became identified with all of Mr. Gould's 
 properties, but gave most of his attention to the de- 
 velopment of the elevated roads. 
 
 In 1886 he inaugurated the hicr bull movement in 
 Manhattan stock. He "boomed" the stock in every 
 possible way, and bought immense quantities, and 
 publicly predicted that it would sell at 200. He suc- 
 ceeded in pushing the price to 175. Like almost all 
 artificial corners this movement collapsed suddenly 
 and Mr. Field was nearly buried in the ruins. Many 
 believed at the time that this collapse was precipitated 
 by Gould and Sage. It might have come about by 
 other causes, but Gould o^ave the totterincf structure 
 the push that levelled it to the ground. 
 
 There were many reasons, it was argued, for this 
 action. First, Field was no longer necessary, but on 
 the contrary a hindrance to Gould and Sage, and they 
 therefore wanted to get rid of him ; and second, Field 
 was conducting his bull movement independently of 
 them. They would profit by his fall, while if he suc- 
 ceeded the system might pass into his hands. 
 
 Tlie Crash Comes. 
 
 So in June, 1887, came the collapse. Mr. Field 
 
 never charged Gould with having precipitated it, and 
 Gould himself claimed that he came to the rescue of 
 Field and saved him from bankruptcy. It was, how- 
 
 ■' i'v: ! 
 
 ■^',1 
 
 , ■ 1;. 
 
 ''i 
 
 hi 
 
 t! i 
 
 1 &\ 
 
 * 
 
15B 
 
 LIFE OF JAY CJOULD. 
 
 ever, a remarkable deal and one by which Gould made 
 himself absolutely master of the elevated system, of 
 which in 1891 he made his eldest son vice-president 
 and another son a director. 
 
 Field was carr)ing- an immense amount of stock on 
 margins and was consequently a heavy borrower of 
 money. Gould and Sage were lenders. The bank 
 reserves were low. Gould and Sage called in their 
 loans and Field foinul it impossible to negotiate 
 loans and was thus oblioed to throw over his stock 
 at a sacrifice. The price of Manhattan fell from 160 
 to 1 20 and Gould purchased from Field 78,000 shares 
 at prices understood to have ranged from par to 120. 
 Field saved his real estate and other property, but his 
 power in the street was gone. His later history was 
 a tragedy. In 1891, within a few weeks, he lost his 
 wife and his son became a disgraced bankrupt. Flis 
 death occurred July 26Lh, 1892. 
 
 This chapter wouUl not be complete without a 
 reference to the elevated railroad litigation. This was 
 remarkable not only fur the number and high stand- 
 incr of the lawyers eno;aQ^ed in the suits and the im- 
 portance of the questions at issue, but also for a judi- 
 cial incident which recalled the palmy days of the Erie 
 and Tweed rings. Mr. Gould's favorite judge in this 
 litigation was Westbrook, who sat on the Supreme 
 Bench in a Hudson River district. Many years before 
 he had been the first lawyer consulted by Gould, and 
 now that he was ludofe he o^ave several orders that 
 were favorable to Gould, and once actually held court 
 
made 
 m» of 
 ?ident 
 
 ►ck on 
 er of 
 bank 
 1 their 
 
 votiate 
 
 ■» 
 
 stock 
 im 1 60 
 shares 
 to 120. 
 but his 
 iry was 
 3st his 
 His 
 
 hout a 
 Ihis was 
 stand- 
 Ihe im- 
 a judi- 
 le Erie 
 in this 
 pre me 
 before 
 Id, and 
 rs that 
 court 
 
 
 o 
 
 o 
 
 o 
 
 < 
 
 iiNi 
 
 If 
 
 \ ■ 
 
 rt; 
 
 r 
 
 A : 
 
 'A 
 
 i 
 
158 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 and issued an injunction from Mr. Gould's private 
 office in the Western Union Building. The State 
 Assembly presented him for impeachment for malfeas- 
 ance in office, but on trial by the Senate he was ac- 
 quitted, but not unanimously by any means. He died 
 shordy after while still serving as Judge. 
 
 '-I 
 
 I 1 
 
 iill 'f 
 
 m 
 
CHAPTER XI. 
 Supreme Dictator of Telegraph Companies. 
 
 In probably no other country of the world could one 
 man control its telegraph system. But Gould became 
 the absolute dictator of the Western Union and suc- 
 cessfully overcame every competitor that arose. His 
 record in Western Union, like that in his other prop- 
 erties, is that of a tremendous increase of securities. 
 
 The mainspring of the Western Union is monopoly. 
 Its condition is such that it cannot exist with profit to 
 its stockholders with a strong competition in the field. 
 Thus it is a grand aggregation of small companies. 
 It has absorbed and will probably continue to absorb 
 every rival in the field. Gould himself rode into con- 
 trol on the back of a competing company. This was 
 early in 1881. His version of the story is given in his 
 testimony to the Senate Committee on Labor and 
 Education. 
 
 " I am interested in the telegraph," he told the 
 Committee, " for the railroad and telegraph systems 
 go hand in hand, as it were, integral parts of a great 
 civilization. I naturally became acquainted with the 
 telegraph business and gradually became interested 
 in it. I thought well of it as an investment and I kept 
 increasing my interests. 
 
 (169) 
 
 I 
 
 111! Ill 
 
 :.W 
 
 Ir 
 
 !'• 
 
 ¥ 
 
 ■i' 
 
 1^ 
 
 I 
 
 ■' r 
 
 fi 
 
\m 
 
 !i! 
 
 160 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 A llival Company. 
 
 " When the Union Pacific was built I had an inter- 
 est in a company called the Atlantic and Pacific and I 
 endeavored to make that a rival to the Western Union. 
 We extended it considerably, but found it rather up- 
 hill work. We saw that our interest lay more with 
 the Western Union. Through that we could reach 
 evei) part of the country, and through a small com- 
 ya-iy - e could not; so w^e made an offer to sell to 
 \\ isterv Union the control of the Atlantic and Pacific. 
 
 " At that time a very dear friend of mine was the 
 manager, and I supposed that he would be made the 
 manager ot tlic Western Union, but after the consoli- 
 dation was perfected it was not done, and I made up 
 my mind that he should be at the head of as good a 
 company as I had taken him from. The friend was 
 General Eckert, and for him I started another com- 
 pany — the American Union — and we carried it forward 
 until a proposition was made to merge it also into the 
 Western Union. 
 
 "As the stock of the latter went down I bousfht a 
 large interest in it, and found that the only way out 
 was to put the two companies together. Gen. Eckert 
 became general manager of the whole system. Mean- 
 time I bought so much of its property and its earning 
 power that I have kept increasing my interest. I 
 thought it better to let my income go into the things 
 that I Vv'as in myself, and I have never sold any of my 
 interests, but have devoted my income to increasing 
 them. This is the whole history of it." 
 
 8 
 
 C 
 
 H 
 
 n 
 o 
 c 
 
 H 
 
 
 
 7C 
 
inter- 
 
 : and 1 
 
 Union. 
 
 [\itr up- 
 
 i'c with 
 
 I reach 
 
 .11 coni- 
 sell to 
 Pacific. 
 
 ^vas the 
 
 lade the 
 
 consoli- 
 
 aade up 
 cTood a 
 
 end was 
 er corn- 
 forward 
 into the 
 
 )OUQ:ht a 
 way out 
 Eckert 
 i. Mean- 
 earning 
 ;rest. I 
 |e things 
 
 ly of my 
 icreasing 
 
 aaai^^*M^-w|pi,i:;|!|! 
 
 n 
 o 
 c 
 
 < 
 
 n 
 o 
 c: 
 
 V2 
 
 
 O 
 7^ 
 
 '* 
 
 'i:i 
 
 [■i 
 
\M 
 
 162 
 
 LIFE OF J AT QOULb. 
 
 il.il ' * 
 
 ilk 
 
 A Move to Obtain Control. 
 
 Gould's policy in regard to the American Union was 
 twofold. It was to establish a competing company so 
 stronof that the Western Union would have to absorb 
 it, or else it would absorb the Western Union. The 
 n;sult was that the Western Union did absorb the 
 American Union and Gould absorbed the Western 
 Union ! By the aid of his rival company Gould kept 
 hammering at the stock of the Western Union, then 
 controlled by Vanderbilt. By every art known to 
 Wall street speculation he forced the price down as 
 low as he could. He sold the stock " short " in large 
 amounts, and in buying to cover bought enough addi- 
 tional to place him in control. 
 
 Then he consolidated the two companies and 100,000 
 shares of American Union, which represented a com- 
 paratively small outlay of capital on the part of Gould, 
 went into the Western Union at par, and Gould's 
 immense holdings of Western Union were thus 
 acquired at a low figure. Of course, if he had 
 attempted to market his holdings in one lump his 
 profits would have been wiped out, but by carrying 
 the load and letting the stock out by driblets his 
 profits were large, even if he sold under the market 
 price, which was nearly always below par. 
 
 Sudden Rise in Stock, 
 
 On Jan. 11, 1881, it became known m Wall street 
 that the consolidation was probable and the price of 
 Western Union rose from 78 to 103, and the next 
 day to 114^. The consolidation increased the cap- 
 
wad 
 y so 
 sorb 
 The 
 ► the 
 stern 
 kept 
 , then 
 m to 
 wn as 
 large 
 1 addi- 
 
 00,000 
 la com- 
 iGould, 
 ould's 
 thus 
 e had 
 p his 
 irrying 
 lets his 
 Imarket 
 
 street 
 »rice of 
 le next 
 le cap- 
 
 I 
 
 SUPREME DICTATOK OF TELEGRAPH COMPANIEg. 163 
 
 itah'zation of the Western Union to $80,000,000, and 
 this amount increased later by the capitalization of 
 script dividends and by the acquisition of the Balti- 
 more and Ohio telegraph. After Gould became the 
 master of the system the Mutual Union was started 
 as a rival concern. Gould soon secured it and leased 
 it to the Western Union. 
 
 Hii.yiii^ up Coiupaiiies. 
 
 Then Robert Garrett developed the wires owned by 
 the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad into a competing 
 telegraph system, and under the management of Mr. 
 Bates, who had formerly been with Gould in American 
 Union and Western Union, it became a big system, 
 stretchincr far West and South. But Garrett soon <:ot 
 into deep waters. He had not the genius of his 
 father, the famous Tohn W. Garrett, and a struofole with 
 Gould was beyond his strength. 
 
 The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, nominally a 
 Gibraltar of strength, was intrinsically weak. Garrett 
 entered into ne^rotiations to sell a controllins^^ interest 
 in the property. His desire was to place it in hands 
 hostile to Gould, but the latter used his power in the 
 stock market to frustrate his plans. Garrett contracted 
 to deliver the control to Henry S. Ives, a young spec- 
 ulator who was modellinor his life after the Gould 
 pattern, but in the end Garrett was not able to deliver 
 nor was Ives able to receive. The Baltimore and 
 Ohio system was dismembered, and the telegraph fell 
 into Gould's hands. 
 
 Gould had previously announced to the public that 
 
 r! 
 
 
 Mi 
 
 11 r 
 
 
 
 „ I. 
 
 ;i 
 
I! 
 
 164 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 M\ 
 
 •* the Western Union does not intend to buy any more 
 rival telegraph companies," but when he found he 
 could get the Baltimore and Ohio cheap, a little 
 declaration of that kind did not stand in the way. In 
 fact it was intended only to mask his intention to buy. 
 
 Gould drew around him in Western Union a power- 
 ful body of men. His board of directors included Nor- 
 vin Green, Harrison Durkee, Alonzo B. Cornell (who 
 when Governor of the State from 1880 to 1883 posed 
 as an anti-Gould and anti-monopoly Governor), Cyrus 
 W. Field, Robert L. Kennedy, Hugh J. Jewett, J. 
 Pierpont Morgan, of Drexel, Morgan & Co., C. P. 
 Huntington, R. C. Clowry, Henry Weaver, Erastus 
 Wiman, of R. G. Dun & Co., John Jacob Astor, Frank 
 Work, George B. Roberts, President of the Pennsyl- 
 vania Railroad, the leading railroad system of the 
 world, George D. Morgan, John Hoey, W. D. Bishop 
 and J. W. Clendenin. 
 
 The management, however, was in the hands of an 
 executive committee composed of Gould's immediate 
 associates. The Western Union, besides its land 
 system, owns ocean cables and has a big interest in the 
 telephone and stock " ticker " systems, and Gould's 
 power as the master of this company can scarcely be 
 estimated 
 
 Willingr to Sell Out. 
 
 It is believed that Mr. Gould's real ambition, so far 
 as concerned the Western Union, was to sell it to the 
 Government. But so long as the country believed 
 that Jay Gould desired to sell there could be no pub- 
 
Dre 
 
 he 
 ttle 
 
 In 
 3uy. 
 wer- 
 Slor- 
 who 
 osed 
 'yrus 
 tt, ]. 
 
 C. P. 
 
 •astiis 
 Frank 
 pnsyl- 
 the 
 ishop 
 
 of an 
 ediate 
 land 
 in the 
 ould's 
 :ely be 
 
 so far 
 
 to the 
 ilieved 
 
 10 pub- 
 
 SUPREME DICTATOR OP TELEGRAPH COMPANIES. 165 
 
 lie opinion aroused in favor of purchasing it. So 
 Gould, if such was his real desire, masked his purpose 
 behind a dispkiy of indifference or opposition, in the 
 hope that if it was thoui^ht he did not wish to sell, the 
 country would be all the more eager to buy. Thus lie 
 told the Committee on Labor and P2ducation : 
 
 "1 think the control by the Government is contrary 
 to our institutions. The telegraph system, of all otluT 
 business, wants to be managed by skilled experts, 
 while the Government is founded on the idea that the 
 party in power shall control the patronage. If the 
 Government controlled it the sfeneral managers' heads 
 would come off every four years, and you would not 
 have any such efficient service as at present. The 
 very dividend of the Western Union is based upon 
 doing business well, keeping her customers and de- 
 veloping her business. 
 
 Worth $100,000,000. 
 
 '• If the Democrats were in power there would be a 
 Democratic telegraph ; if the Republicans came mto 
 power there would be a Republican telegraph, and if 
 the Reformers came in I don't know what there would 
 be. (Laughter.) I think it would be a mere political 
 machine. I would be perfecdy willing, so far as I am 
 concerned, to allow the Government to try it, to sell 
 out our property, but it would be very unjust to take 
 it away, the property of our own citizens, and make it 
 valueless." 
 
 " Have you any idea what the Gc ernirient ought 
 to pay ? " 
 
 ' 11 
 
 I T 
 
IGC 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 " I think that it ouoht to pay what it is worth and no 
 more. I think that the method that was provided in 
 the kiw is a very just one, and 1 woiikl be perfectly 
 wilhiiL; to let the (Government tak(* it on those terms." 
 
 "What, in your opinion, is the Western Union 
 |)r()perty worth ? " 
 
 " Well, I jud^e of property myself by its net earning 
 power; that is the only rule 1 have been able to get. 
 II you show me a |)ri)perty that is payini^ no more 
 than the taxes, I don't want it. I want property that 
 earns money. You misj^ht say that there is water in 
 Western Union, and so there is. I'here is water in all 
 this property aloni; Broadway. Tiiis whole island was 
 once boui^dit for a few strings of beatls. Ikit now you 
 will find this property valued by its earning power, by 
 its rent i)()wer, and that is the wa)' to value a railroad 
 or a telegra[)h. So it is worth what it earns now, a 
 capital that pays 7 per cent." 
 
 " That would be <s 1 00,000.000 ? " 
 
 *• Yes, and it is worth much more than that, because 
 there are a great many assets.'' 
 
 What the Pnsidont Said. 
 
 After Mr. ("lould's death. Dr. Norvin Green, the 
 
 Presid(Mit of ihr. W^estern Union Telegraph Company, 
 ivave an interestin'); account of Mr. (icndd's connection 
 widi that company. Dr. Green had the high(ist re- 
 spect f;)r Mr. Gould personall)', and he spoke with a 
 ^reat deal of feelin;^ about his private character. 
 
 "Mr. (jould," he said, "came into the Western 
 Union Conn)an\- in 1881. Three years belore that I 
 
the 
 
 pany. 
 
 Iction 
 
 it rt;- 
 
 ith ii 
 
 Iste.rn 
 IhiU 1 
 
 SUPREME DICTATOR OF TELEGRAPH CO>fPANIES. 1^7 
 
 was elected president of the company. Mr. Gould 
 got into the Western Union Company through the 
 
 NASSAU STREEl' NEW YORK. 
 
 American Union Teleqraph Company, which he then 
 
 controll(Ml, and which he used as a 1 
 
 ever to get into 
 
 .ir 
 
 i 1' 
 
 the Western Union Company. Through an outside 
 

 
 1G8 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 agreement, when Mr. Gould's company was taken into 
 the \V(;stern Union Company, four of the directors 
 of Liiis company were also taken as directors of the 
 Western Union. They were Jay Gould, Russell Sage, 
 T. C. T. Kckert and Frederick Ames. 
 
 " Mr. Gould had been gunning for the Western. 
 Union Company for twenty years. I it! was extremely 
 anxious to get control of it. To do this he first se- 
 cured the control of a dilapidated company known as 
 the Adantic and Pacific Telegraph Company. He; 
 bolstered up the stock of this company and finally got 
 it taken into the Western Union, through a poolin 
 
 CV 
 
 ft 
 
 arrancrement. 
 
 Gcttiiij;: Ready to Btiy. 
 
 " He was more successful, however, in breaking down 
 the Western Union stock with the American Union 
 Company. With this company he worked the stock 
 of the Western Union Company so low that he could 
 afford to buy it. As the Western Union went down 
 Gould bought: it quiedy, and when the November 
 meeting of 1881 was held, at which Gould went into 
 the company, it was found diat Mr. Gould held more 
 of the Western Union stock than did William H. Van- 
 derbilt, who was supposed to own more stock in the 
 company than any one else did. 
 
 " Mr. Gould then controlled f 30,000,000 of the 
 Western Union stock. About five years ago he re- 
 duced his holdings in this company to |^20.ooo,ooo, 
 which he has since held. Mr. Gould always had great 
 
 fifi 
 
SUPREME DICTATOR OF TELEGRAPH COMPANIES. 169 
 
 into 
 
 tors 
 
 the 
 
 .age, 
 
 ;tern. 
 mely 
 t se- 
 \jn as 
 He 
 
 y g^>^ 
 
 •oling 
 
 down 
 Jnion 
 stock 
 could 
 dow\': 
 imber 
 t into 
 more 
 Van- 
 n the 
 
 )f the 
 
 he re- 
 
 lo.ooo, 
 
 great 
 
 faith in the Western Union Company, and lie looked 
 upon it as a safe investment stock. 
 
 A W<Hi(lorrul Brain. 
 
 •• Mr. Gould was a man of wonderful brain power. 
 He was a man of decided views and strong will, yet 
 he never strongly expressed them. As an instance 
 of this art! his actions in the meetings of the boards of 
 directors of the com[)anies in which he was interested. 
 He woiiKl sit quietly rubbing his hands while the 
 members of the boards would express their views as 
 to whit ou<'ht to be done. 
 
 " He would listen to all that was said, and after every 
 one was through he would say: ' How would it do to 
 pass such and such resolutions ?' naming them over 
 as th(; case mii'ht be. His suof<'estions would just hit 
 the point, and the members of the particular board 
 would all declare that he had suggested just the right 
 thing to do. 
 
 "The nK.Mi with whom Mr. Gould was associated 
 recognized his power and followed him. He had 
 wonderful sagacity and foresight. Mr. Gould was a 
 generous man, and his noble impulses and generous 
 deeds were never known except to those most inti- 
 mately associated with him, I know that during the 
 financial troubles of 18S4, Mr. Gould carried through 
 many men who had gotten into financial straits. He 
 did this at a great sacrifice to himself, and he had to 
 sell his stock to do it. In 1889 I was carrying 
 Jii, 000,000 worth of securities. The money market 
 was tight. I was straine*^' for money and my broker-s 
 
 i> 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 i I' 
 
 ') . 
 
';h 
 
 I! 
 
 170 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 I^Iltlf 
 
 were also strained for money. Tlicy wantc d me to 
 increase my margins from lo to 20 per cent. 
 
 Help in Need. 
 
 "In view of the situation I went to Mr. Gould, 
 showed him my securities and asked him wha^ I ou^'ht 
 to do. He looked them over and said he would t(^ll 
 me what he thou^dit at luncheon time. At that hour 
 when we met, Mr. Gould put his hand on my shoulder 
 and said : ' Mr. Green, I have arranged for you to 
 borrow $450,000,' naming a certain trust company, 
 'and as your securities will not quite secure that 
 amount, I will send Geornje over to the office of tlie 
 company this afternoon \.ith ^^50,000 Missouri Pacific 
 bonds and secure the money for tl e loan.' Mr. 
 Gould never asked me for collateral or for interest. 
 It wds a simple loan. 
 
 " As the manager of a corporation, Mr. Gould was 
 a close man, but when an appeal was made to him he 
 acted most generously. There was the case of the 
 head of a department '-^ the Western Union Company, 
 who, when he present ... his report for a period, accom- 
 panied it with a request of a raise in his salary of 
 from j^2400 to $3000 a year. Some of the directors 
 did not seem to be willing to vote to make the increase, 
 but Mr. Sage said: 'Wait until Mr. Gould comes in 
 and see what he says.* When he reached the meeting- 
 room the case was put to him. Mr. Gould looked 
 over the report carefully and said : 'If that man made 
 out this report he is entitled to the salary that he asks. 
 He is a valuable man.' The salary was voted to him." 
 
 c 
 
 r 
 i 
 
 « 
 
 t 
 
 h 
 ii 
 
 Vi 
 
SUPREME DICTATOR OF TELEGRAi'H COMPANIES HI 
 
 Dr. Green would not ma^.e an estimaie as in Mr. 
 Gould's wealth, but he said : 
 
 "I know that Mr. Gould held $20,000,000 '>orln o( 
 Missouri Pacific, $20,000,000 of Manhattan 3 le^/ated 
 Railroad, and $20,000,000 of Western Union. He 
 always haa great faith in these companies, and he told 
 me some time ago, that he wanted them to be retained 
 in his estate. He believed that Missouri Pacific stock 
 would go to 120, Western Union to 150, and Manhat- 
 tan to 200. It was always his idea that this part of 
 his fortune should not be dissipated. I do know this 
 in repfard to Mr. Gould: He never carried a dollar's 
 v»^orth of life insurance in his life." 
 
 , ii: i 
 
 img- 
 )ked 
 lade 
 Lsks. 
 
 mi. 
 
m 
 
 m 
 
 ■ i i\ 
 
 CHAPTER XII. 
 
 Important Events in Gould's Career. 
 
 IV) write an account of Gould's career in Wall 
 street would be equal to the task of writing a history 
 of Wall street itself, and besides, his important Wall 
 street operations w^ere closely allied with his outside 
 enterprises, of which a full account has been given. 
 There remain only two or tliree incidents of com- 
 maudini^r interest out of the mass of material which 
 could b(; used. 
 
 The most dramatic of these was the pommelling of 
 Jay (njuld by Major A. A. Selover in August, 1877. 
 Selover was a Californian, a six-footer, a blond, mus- 
 cular and vigorous. He first attained prominence in 
 Wall street when James R. Keene came East after 
 his successful mining operations in San Francisco, by 
 which he achieved a fortune of $8,000,000. 
 
 Keene was a daring, almost foolhardy stock gam- 
 l)ler. He always played for big stakes and took 
 enormous chances. His success in San Francisco 
 had been so orreat that he entered Wall street with the 
 idea uf clearino- all before him. He tackled Gould as 
 the biggest animal in the arena, but found to his sorrow 
 that he had to deal with a man more able than he, 
 scarcely less daring but far more cautious. In a few 
 
 (172) 
 
 o 
 
 en 
 H 
 
 6 
 n 
 
 O 
 ?1 
 
 '^ 
 
 fe 
 
(ram- 
 took 
 
 1 CISCO 
 
 h the 
 Id as 
 3rrow 
 m he, 
 a few 
 
 h3 
 o 
 
 H 
 
 I 
 
 O 
 
 I— < 
 o 
 
 '^ 
 
 O 
 ?1 
 
 
 (173) 
 
 4 
 
 l'\ 
 
m 
 
 174 
 
 LIFE OF JAY COULD. 
 
 years Keene's wealth had dwindled away, and early in 
 1884 he failed, owing hundreds of thousands of dol- 
 lars in the shape of " puts," " calls " and •' straddles." 
 
 Loses $1,000,000 Yearly. 
 
 He dropped at the rate of about a million dollars a 
 year in Wall street, and no small proportion of this 
 found its way into the pockets of Gould. Yet Keene 
 at one time was thought to have outmatched Gould. 
 Selover introduced Keene to Gould, and acted as go- 
 between for them in certain operations in which both 
 were interested. Early in 1877 the two men com- 
 bined forces in one deal. That is to say, they joined 
 in one enterprise and fought each other behind each 
 other's back. It was a case of diamond cut diamond. 
 Keene formed a big pool, and beginning to fight 
 Gould, finally went over to him ; being led into 
 this change largely through the instrumentality of 
 Selover. 
 
 Both Keene and Selover then operated on an un- 
 derstanding with Gould, but soon found, as they 
 charged, that Gould was secretly selling them out. 
 Gould and Keene had a stormy scene in Russell 
 Sage's office, when Keene is sai-^ to have bran- 
 dished a pistol in Gould's face. The deal had been 
 mainly in Western Union, which Gould did not then 
 control, and Atlantic and Pacific, which he did control. 
 Gould's double-dealing not only made Keene very 
 mad, but made Selover very desperate. He hiid 
 placed reliance in Gould's statements and had suffered 
 loss, and resolved upon revenge. 
 
IMPORTANT KVENTS IN GOULDS CAliEER. 
 
 175 
 
 Selover Assaults Gould. 
 
 Accordincrly, on the 2d of August, 1877, while walk- 
 ing down Exchange place from Broadway, Selover, 
 meeting Gould walking up to the office of Belden & 
 Co., No. 80 Broadway, of which he was then a part- 
 ner, first engaged him in what app^^ared to be an 
 amicable conversation but soon resulted in an assault. 
 Selover tirst struck Gould in the face and then 
 dropped him over an areaway at No. 65 Kxcliange 
 place which was seven or eight feet deep. 
 
 Mr Gould was a good deal shaken up, but not 
 seriously injured. Selover left to go to his brokers 
 and Gould proceeded to transact his business as 
 usual. Me was assisted from the areaway, singularly 
 enough, by George Crouch, who has been identified 
 with several incidents in Gould's career from the 
 days of Erie and Black Friday to the Kansas Pacific 
 criminal prosecution, and who was one-third artist, 
 one-third newspaper man and one-third speculator. 
 
 The Selover incident created an immense sensa- 
 tion at the time and the newspapers printed columns 
 about it. Selover became quite a hero, for while there 
 was nothing very courageous in his assault from a 
 physical point of view, as he was more than a match 
 for timid little Mr. Gould, yet to attack Gould was 
 considered by many an act of moral bravery. 
 
 Reason for the Attack. 
 
 Selover declared that he had attacked Gould be- 
 cause Gould had been guilty of fraud, lying and 
 duplicity. Gould, he said, had made arrangements 
 
 ;;}':,;■' 
 
 
I7f) 
 
 LIFE OF JAV fiOULD. 
 
 with him to oo short on Western Union, and while he 
 (Selover) was seUinLT accordifit'lv in ltoocI faitli he 
 discovered that Gould was buying lieavily. When he 
 learned of diis he determined to punish him the first 
 time he met him, and so he had charijed him with th(^ 
 fraud and slappc^d his face. "I attacked him on my 
 own account alone," he adiled, "and regardlc..; of the 
 fact that he had played Jim K<;ene the same; trick. 
 He is notoriously treacherous, and this is not the 
 first time he has been punished for die same offence." 
 
 Poor Mr. Selover never amounted to very much in 
 Wall street after this, thou^^h hr. continued to be seen 
 there daily. Ciould after this incident rarely appeareil 
 in the street unless accompanied by stalwart G. P. 
 Morosini. 
 
 It is related that not lonof after this Keene came 
 near oettin<' his revenofe on CjouKI. The latter was 
 putting- all his energies into Union Pacific and carry- 
 ing 5(^2 2,000,000 of the stock, mostly in margin^. 
 Keene organized an opposition party and nearly suc- 
 ceeded in breaking- Gould. Saire, however, came- to 
 the latter's assistance with if^2,ooo,ooo of much-ne(ided 
 cash and Gould was saved. Keene's purpose was to 
 drive Gould from the street forever, but ht; not onh' 
 failed, but in a few years he was himself a bankrupt, 
 with Gould more powerful and richer than ever. 
 
 Startliiij;' Rmnors in Wall Street. 
 
 Rumors of Gould's death and of his impending 
 
 bankruptcy were not unfrequently circulated in Wall 
 street. Rumors of death could be easily disproved, 
 
 witl 
 on 
 
 the 
 and 
 
Mi 
 
 was 
 .rry- 
 
 suc- 
 
 X'. t() 
 IS to 
 
 only 
 rupt. 
 
 'all 
 )ved, 
 
 IMPOKTANT EVENTS IX GOULDS CAKKER. 
 
 1 t ( 
 
 Lilt once, at least, the street was firnilv convinrrd that 
 (joukl was in financial (lifficiilti(-'s, and (iouKl was 
 obliged to exhibit his wealtli in order to prove that he 
 was solvent. 
 
 On March 13, 1882. Gould exhibited to Sai^e, lM<ld 
 antl Frank Work his box of securities to show that he 
 was not only solid, but also had not been a seller of 
 stocks. Me exhibited to ihc. astonished vision of 
 tlu;se associates <s23,ooo,ooo of Western L/nion. $12,- 
 000,000 of Missouri Pacific, and $ 1 9.ooo,o< )o of other 
 stocks. Russell Sage said: " Thert? is not another 
 man in America except \ andt'rbilt who could make 
 such a display of stock as that." In i884(jould made 
 another exhibition of his securities to John T. Terry 
 and others, and the display was even bii^'^gcr than two 
 years before. 
 
 The panic of 1884 is believetl to have caused Mr. 
 (lOuld much anxiety. It came; sudtlenly and without 
 warning. There had been, earlier in the )'(;ar, it is 
 true, the collapse and resignation of 1 lenry X'illard, 
 soon followed by tlu! failure; of James R. Keene. but 
 these disasters would not have produc(;d the financial 
 earthquake that shook Wall street in May. 
 
 Ciraiit aiKl Ward. 
 
 The failuHM)! the Marine P)ank and Orant c^ War>i, 
 
 with the revelations which followed of embez;<lemi'iit 
 
 on a scale never before witnessed in the street, and 
 
 the suspension en the nK.Mnorable 13th and 14th of 
 
 the month of the Metropolitan Bank, George I. Seney 
 
 and seven or eight prominent banking-houses in New 
 12 
 
 
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 WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 
 
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 178 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 York and two baiiks in Brooklyn and Newark, caused 
 a panic like that of 1869 ^^^^ ^^7o^ ^^^^^ from the de- 
 pressing effects of which the street did not rally for 
 several years. Gould's fortune melted like snow in 
 the decline of values wdiich accompanied this panic. 
 He came out of it probably ^20,000,000 poorer than 
 when it began. 
 
 But this loss, it is true, was chiefly on paper. He 
 was able to hold most of his securities, the value of 
 which afterwards increased. But it is believed that 
 he was at one time very hotly pressed. His associate, 
 Russell Sage, lost millions in the decline by his opera- 
 tions in puts and calls. His office was besieged by a 
 mob clamorous for their profits. The old man reluc- 
 tantly paid up, and, badly scared and sick at heart, 
 retired from the street for a while, hoarding the $40,- 
 000,000 or $45,000,000 which was still left to solace 
 
 him. 
 
 Two Notable Men. 
 
 The men who chiefly profited by the great decline 
 were Charles F. Woerishoffer and Addison Cammack, 
 the leaders of a smJ-. but powerful bear party, which 
 for several years had been preparing for this depres- 
 sion, and by all the bear tactics, of which they were 
 masters, assisting in the downward movement. They 
 were two men of mark. Woerishoffer was the supe- 
 rior in mind and nerve. When he died in 1886, while 
 under forty years of age, he was worth, it is said, 
 ji8,ooo,ooo to J^ 1 0,000,000, the result of his daring 
 speculation. He was probably the ablest stock specu- 
 
ecline 
 ack, 
 
 Iwhich 
 pres- 
 were 
 They 
 supe- 
 while 
 said, 
 aring 
 pecu- 
 
 IMPORTANT EVENTS IN GOULDS CAREEK. 
 
 179 
 
 lator Wall street has ever seen, not exceptini^ Gould, 
 whose principal success, it should be remembered, 
 was in operations outside of the street. 
 
 WoerisholTer was by birth a German, and was the 
 son-in-law of Oswald Ottendorfer. Some of the most 
 successful men in Wall street, it may be remarked, are 
 Germans or of German descent, as for instance, Vil- 
 lard, who after his collapse in 1884 ^"^^^d recovered in 
 1888 the ground he had lost; August Belmont, the 
 banker, the Wormsers and the Seligmans. Cammack 
 was a man of much coarser nature than Woerishoffer. 
 He came originally from the South, and the Wall 
 street tradition was that he had been a slave-driver 
 by profession. 
 
 Gould Keported to be in Straits. 
 
 Gruff in his manners, uncouth in his language, he 
 yet had qualities as a speculator which made him a 
 power in the street. These two men, with their fol- 
 lowing, are believed to have very nearly driven Gould 
 to the wall in 1884, and the story is that Gould might 
 have gone down if Cammack — of all men — had not 
 relented. This story, like many others told in Wall 
 street, probably has a mixture of truth and fiction. In 
 1887 and 1888 Cammack was very evidently in al- 
 liance with Gould in stock operations. 
 
 Gould was not a member of the Stock Exchange, 
 thoucrh he was often the bi^^i^est customer the institu- 
 tion had. He was, however, almost always in general 
 or special partnership with some member of the Ex- 
 change and thus obtained all the advantages of 
 
 
 ill 
 
 
 r,- . 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 ; 
 
 
 
 .. 
 
 
 
 
 II 
 
 r ' 
 
 
 1 
 
 ■ j ' 
 
 i! 
 
 !i 
 
 If; 
 
 180 
 
 TIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 personal membership. After the cHssohition of the 
 house of Smith, Gould and Martin, Gould became the 
 silent partner in the firm of William Belden & Co. 
 This was succeeded by the famous house of W. E. 
 Connor & Co., which lasted about ten years and which 
 engineered some of Mr. Gould's most successful 
 deals. 
 
 At the time Mr. Gould retired from the firm, in 
 1886, it was composed of himself as special partner, 
 and of Washinoton E. Connor, G. P. Morosini and 
 George J. Gould, the great operator's eldest son. 
 Mr. Connor was the ideal broker and perhaps the 
 most valuable lieutenant Mr. Gould ever had. Very 
 enterprising in carrying out the interests of his master, 
 he was faithful to the last minute to him. 
 
 Always True to liis Chief. 
 
 Tempting offers were made to buy him off at various 
 times, and he might have made several fortunes in be- 
 traying the confidences of his chief, but it is believed 
 he was always true. Like Morosini, he allied his in- 
 terests to those of Gould and profited by the connec- 
 tion. When the firm dissolved, Gould said of his 
 partners: "Both are very rich men. Mr. Connor is 
 worth at least a million, and Mr. Morosini two or three 
 times as much. The new firm will have my heartiest 
 good will in whatever it undertakes. Between Mr. 
 Connor, Mr. Morosini and myself there has never 
 been an interruption of good feeling." 
 
 Mr. Connor was not only faithful, but quick and 
 shrewd in his judgments. Upon him rested nearly 
 
 itri 
 
IMPORTANT EVENTS IN GOULDS CAREER. 
 
 181 
 
 all the details of the best operations of the house. 
 These o[)erations often required the assistance of fifty 
 or sixty brokers. Often these brokers did not know 
 that they were working for the same client. Some- 
 times they were ignorant even of the fact that Gould 
 was their client. 
 
 The prime necessity in great stock operations is to 
 conceal one's movements. Sometimes a part of the 
 brokers might be selling and a part might be buying. 
 Gould and Connor alone held the string-s of the intri- 
 cate operations. 
 
 Toil Millions by One Operation. 
 
 One of the first great successful movements the 
 house undertook was in Kansas Pacific in 1879. The 
 stock within a period of a few months shot up from 8 
 to 97, and the bonds from 10 to no. Gould cleared 
 nearly $10,000,000 by this operation. The most bril- 
 liant feat accomplished by the house was performed 
 when Gould acqu.- jd Western Union. Mr. Gould for 
 a long time, as has been related, had been an uncom- 
 promising bear on the stock. The whole street was 
 aware that he and his firm were heavily short of the 
 stock. Suddenly the stock began to rush up. Gould 
 was caucrht for Oiice, it was said. The truth was that 
 Connor had eno;ineered the movement and Gould had 
 not only bought in all his shorts but purchased enough 
 stock to give him control of the company. It was 
 also this house that pushed Western Union up from 
 78 to 91 and pushed Henry Smith and other bears to 
 
 1 
 
 \^f 
 
 '^ I' 
 
 %n^ 
 
 
 
182 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 tlil 
 
 cover their shorts at a heavy loss. It also handled 
 the elevated railway deals. 
 
 While Gould and the Beldens were in partnership 
 at No. 80 Broadway, Connor had a small office in the 
 rear. He was bri^^dit, sharp, sagacious, reticent, and 
 nearly as well informed as Gould himself. Gould was 
 drawn to Connor naturally, and when the former fell 
 out with the Beldens, he and Connor formed a co-part- 
 nership. Mr. Morosini for many years had been Mr. 
 Gould's ri»an Friday, and was invariably seen with a 
 large canvas bag following his employer to the safe 
 deposit vaults and protecting him against any repe- 
 tition of the Selover attack. 
 
 Iiiinieiise Capital. 
 
 Morosini went Into the new firm, whose limitation 
 only ran from year to year. Connor and Morosini 
 put in ^100,000 each, and Gould, as special partner, 
 ^250,000. George Gould was admitted in 1881, but 
 without paying in a cent. Although the nominal cap- 
 ital of the house at all times has been 5)^450,000, the 
 actual capital at times of great activity on " Change " 
 ran up into the millions. 
 
 But Mr. Connor was not Gould's only broker. 
 Charles J. Osborn was for years one of Gould's 
 closest lieutenants and associates, and a more dashing 
 broker never stepped into the Stock Exchange. 
 William Heath, ** the antelope of Wall street," as he 
 was called because of his long legs and slender body, 
 was also long a favorite with Gould. Heath was a 
 master at keeping secrets. None of his customers 
 
nirORTANT EVENTS IN GOULDS CAREER. 
 
 183 
 
 could ever learn what his other customers were doing. 
 His faithfulness, experience and ability, however, 
 availed him little in the end. 
 
 He assisted Gould on Black Friday and helped him 
 in many a risky transaction. When Heath failed with 
 Henry N. Smith in 1885, Mr. Gould, though, with Mr. 
 Morosini, the principal creditor, did not come to his 
 assistance It was thought that Gould would put him 
 on his feet again, but he did not do so, and Heath — 
 alone, broken in spirit and in fortune — died shortly 
 after in Staten Island, but not until he had been lodged 
 for a while in Ludlow street jail, a prisoner for debt. 
 
 On the dissolution of W. E. Connor & Co., Dec. 
 31, 1885, Mr. Gould announced his permanent retire- 
 ment from the str^^et. That perhaps was his intention 
 (though he was as prolific in retirements as Patti), but 
 it was not long before his presence was again felt in 
 the Sfock Exchange. 
 
 !■«' 
 
 |a 
 
 Ls a 
 
fijii 
 
 CHAPTER XIII. 
 
 The Great Union Pacific Deal. 
 
 The f^rentcst financial transaction ever consummated 
 in America is believed by many people to have been 
 the creation of the Union Pacific Railway Company by 
 Jay Gould. By a stroke of hnancial genius at once 
 bold and adroit, he consolidated into that corporation 
 other great railroad companies, assuming control of 
 all. It will be remembered that the Union Pacific 
 Railroad Company and Union Pacific Railway Com- 
 pany are two distinct corporations. The former was 
 die original company. 
 
 It was in 1873 that Gould w^ent into Union Pacific. 
 He bought about j> 10,000,000 of the stock, had it 
 bound into a book and put it in a safe, as he told a 
 friend at the time, " for his wife and family as an in- 
 vestment." In 1878 Gould conceived the idea of a 
 grand coup, and this was carried out so successfully 
 that in sixty days he had made terms which netted him 
 about j^2 1,000,000 in profits. 
 
 He first ran over to Amsterdam from London, ar- 
 riving there late in the morning. At 10 A. M. that day 
 he notified the Dutch bondholders of the Denver Pa- 
 cific that he would be pleased to meet them at 1 1 
 o'clock. Prompdy at that hour he met them, and at 
 
 (184) 
 
 
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 186 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 t| 
 
 ^1 
 
 12 ht left Amsterdam with his gripsack full of the 
 securities of the Dutch bondholders. By this means 
 he captured control of the Denver Pacific. Inside ot 
 ten hours he bouij^^ht out Commodore Garrison's in- 
 terest in the Missouri Pacific. He bought out ex-Gov- 
 ernor Ames's interest in the Central Branch of the 
 Union Pacific, and he had previously formed a pool by 
 which he acquired control of the Kansas Pacific. 
 
 It Alarmed the Directors. 
 
 One day the Union Pacific directors awoke to the 
 alarming discovery that Mr. Gould had dropped out 
 of their organization, and was surveying a line from 
 Denver to Salt Lake City. The Kansas Pacific was 
 utterly worthless, the Central branch had not earned 
 any money for years, the Denver Pacific had been in 
 very bad shape ; but when the Union Pacific directors 
 discovered the extent of Mr. Gould's combinations, 
 they lost no time in boarding a special car in Boston 
 and rushing over to New York to see him about it. 
 They went up to Mr. Gould's house and were there 
 gathered in by him on the consolidation of the three 
 roads, all of their stocks being exchanged at par and 
 merged into the new Union Pacific Railway Company 
 as distinguished from the Union Pacific Railroad 
 Company. 
 
 This incident formed one of the subjects of inquiry 
 committed to the Pacific Railroad Commission in 1887. 
 The members of the commission appointed by Presi- 
 dent Cleveland consisted of Governor Pattison, of 
 
THE GREAT UNION PACIFIC DEAL. 
 
 187 
 
 
 Pennsylvania ; E. i'lllcry Anderson, of New York, and 
 David Littler, of Illinois. 
 
 ('oiijfrcss Wiiiits to Know About It. 
 
 The Union Pacific Railroad and the Kansas Pacific 
 Railroad companies had received Government subsi- 
 dies in bonds and lands. The bonds were received 
 upon the stipulation that the companies would pay at 
 par and accumulated interest upon their maturity, 
 The first of these bonds Vv'ill mature in 1895. -^'^ 
 application had been made by the Pacific railroads to 
 Congress to extend the time of payment, and this 
 commission was appointed to report upon that matter 
 and incidentally to furnish Congress with information 
 relative to these deals which had affected the status 
 of tl.a corporations. 
 
 The Commission beo^an its sittings in New York at 
 No. 10 Wall street. A large number of railway 
 magnates intimately connected with the Pacific Rail- 
 roads were first examined, including Russell Sage and 
 Sidney Dillon. They were examined particularly with 
 a view to finding out exactly what had taken place 
 when the Union Pacific Railway was created. They 
 seemed to know nothins: about the matter. At everv 
 point the well-directed questions of the inquirers were 
 adroitly turned aside. The witnesses did not know 
 or could not remember. 
 
 No light had yet been thrown upon the subject 
 under examination. But the great witness of all was 
 reserved for the last. This was Jay Gould. He 
 knew it all, but the great question was, " Would he 
 
■ill 
 
 1«8 
 
 LIFE OF .lAV (lOULD. 
 
 tell ? " Nobody believed diat he would tell volun- 
 tarily the facts relating to his connection with the 
 Government interest in the matter, but it was believed 
 that a severe and searchin<^f cross-examination would 
 compel him to divuli^e some of the facts. 
 
 iitmUl I <M»lo<l i lu'in All. 
 
 An immense amount of labor was gone through 
 with in anticipation of the time when Jay Gould 
 should take his seat in the witness chair. Men on 
 the inside and familiar with the lines along which the 
 inquiry should be directed devoted weeks to the 
 study of figures and the procurement of papers upon 
 which to base the questions which should be asked of 
 Mr. Gould. Dozens of questions on the same sub- 
 ject were prepared. If he answered one question 
 one way he was to be asked a certain question, and 
 if he answered another way he was to be asked an- 
 other question. In this way it was believed when Mr. 
 Gould took his seat that the beginning of a long 
 struofole was at hand. 
 
 That was on May 1 7, 1887. Mr. Gould wore a plain 
 pepper-and-salt suit and a shabby silk hat. The ex- 
 aminers, all ready to level their batteries of questions 
 at him, were dumb-founded when the first questions 
 were asked and Mr. Gould blandly stated his willing- 
 ness and desire to afford all the information in his 
 power. He seemed anxious to withhold no facts, to 
 evade no questions and to help the members of the 
 commission in their work. 
 
THE GHEAT UNION PACIFIC DEAL. 
 
 189 
 
 the 
 
 i 
 
 A Lhtlo Moinoraiuliiiii. 
 
 There; being some uncertainty as to the exact route 
 of iiome of the roads in qut'stion, Mr. (iould even 
 took out of his pocket a littU; niap and kindly en- 
 liljhtened thcj members of the commission as to the 
 various localitic's, and said: "I had antici[)at(;d that 
 possibly you might want to know what had becMi my 
 holdings of various securities relating to this trans- 
 action and so I instruced my bookkeeper to ilraw off 
 a statement, which I now submit to you." He then 
 produced a little memorandum covering about sixteen 
 lines of writino; which covered all the facts and oave 
 the cue to every feature of the transaction. Mr. Gould 
 said he had kept books of all his transactions. 
 
 Q. Where are the books ? 
 
 A. I have them. 
 
 O. Where? 
 
 A. In my possession. 
 
 Q. Are they at the service of the commission ? 
 
 A. If they desire them, with the greatest of pleas- 
 ure. 
 
 This willingness to show the books created a pro- 
 found sensation. Railway magnates worth millions 
 and controllincr thousands of miles of road had one 
 after another followed each other to the stand only to 
 show that Gould was the one who pulled the strings, 
 that they did not know what his intentions were in re- 
 gard to the commission, and that he made up his mind 
 upon a certain line of policy without consulting them. 
 
 Many of these magnates were in the room and 
 
 k 
 
 M' 
 
 H\^ 
 
I 
 
 190 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOtJLD. 
 
 \'i 
 
 :iin 
 
 ! > 
 
 ill' 
 
 they sat with open mouths and plainly evinced their 
 astonishment which they saw Mr. Gould giving up 
 the hitherto carefully guarded facts. Nothing more 
 plainly showed the absolute mastery of Jay Gould 
 over all the other railway magnates of the country. 
 
 Railway Magnates Afraid of Him. 
 
 Throughout the whole inquiry gentlemen not in 
 the habit of associating with railway millionaires, but 
 shrewd observers of the phenomena of life, remarked 
 as singular the talk and manner of these plutocrats in 
 regard to Jay Gould. They spoke of him with defer- 
 ence verging on awe. The little man with the pepper- 
 and-salt clothes and the ^^nappy black eyes was re- 
 garded by them in the light of a fountain of all knowl- 
 edge and power, and the big magnates made their 
 obeisance before him like Spanish grandees in the 
 presence of an infant king. 
 
 Mr. Gould was asked why he had bought certain 
 stock and he said that the books would show. 
 
 Q. Will your books show who the broker was ? A. 
 Oh yes ; certainly, certainly. 
 
 Q. Did you not buy some of your securities 
 abroad ? A. I bought $2,000,000 of Denver Pacific at 
 74 cents, I think, from some Amsterdam people. I 
 was in London and heard they wanted to sell. I was 
 afraid to go over because I had very little time, and 
 thought that they would probably take a couple of 
 days to smoke before finding out whether they would 
 sell or not. But I was mistaken. I went over and 
 got to Amsterdam in the morning, washed and had 
 
 u' 
 
 ( 
 I 
 
 e 
 
THE GREAT UNION PACIFIC DEAL. 
 
 191 
 
 my breakfast. I saw them at eleven, had bought them 
 out at twelve and started back. 
 
 None Could Forget It. 
 
 E. Ellery Anderson asl^^d Mr. Gould why he re- 
 membered a certain conversation so well. He re- 
 plied that he "had it impressed upon his mind." 
 
 O. How was that ? A. Well, I remember parting 
 with a lot of stock at lo cents for which I could have 
 got par a few days afterwards. Wouldn't that im- 
 press the occasion on your memory, Mr. Anderson? 
 
 Mr. Gould and everybody else in the room laughed 
 at this retort. 
 
 O. According: to the ethics of Wall street, do you 
 consider it absolutely within the limits of your duty 
 while a director of the Union Pacific to purchase 
 another property and to design an extension of the 
 road, which would perhaps ruin the Union Pacific? 
 A. I don't think it would have been proper. That's 
 the reason I let it go. 
 
 O. Did you consider your duty to the Govern 
 ment? A. I had considered it. 
 
 O. How would the Government claim have been 
 affected by building a parallel line? A. It would have 
 been wiped out. 
 
 From the testimony it appeared that after the 
 Ihurman bill had been sustained by the Supreme 
 Court Mr. Gould had a plan to build a road from 
 Omaha to Ogden, just outside the right of way of the 
 Union Pacific, and to give the road back to the Gov- 
 ernment. It would give others, he said, "a chance to 
 
 li ' 
 
 \ 
 
 ! ('; 
 
192 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 
 mm 
 
 1^ 
 
 ! 
 
 work ; " that the Government had tried to squeeze 
 
 more out of the turnip than was in it, and that for 
 
 $15,000,000 a road could be built where it had cost 
 the Union Pacific $75,000,000. 
 
 A Smooth Explanation Tliroug-liout. 
 
 O. You were not devoted to the interests of the 
 
 Government? A. I wanted to protect them. Their 
 legislative action hurt their own interests and put 
 those of the stockholders in jeopardy. The Govern- 
 ment repudiated their own contracts. Cash was 
 offered to pay the Government the Union Pacific 
 debt. I had the debt reckoned up and offered to pay 
 it. In 1877 or 1878 I "■'ade the offer to the Judiciary 
 Committee, of which Mr. Edmunds was chairman. I 
 made that offer myself The debt was estimated at 
 Ji 5,000,000 or $17,000,000. But the Government 
 would not concede that interest terminated with the 
 bonds. No action was taken on the proposition. 
 
 Mr. Gould said that he had boucrht the Central 
 Branch of the Union Pacific from Oliver Ames and 
 President Pomeroy, who came on from Boston to 
 New York and induced him to o-o and look at the 
 property. It had cost him $1,826,500. 
 
 "Ithouoht it was doino- a big" business," said the 
 witness. "Afterwards I learned that they had kc^pt 
 the freight back for a week to impress me. So I saw 
 a freight train at every station when I got there. I 
 bought the road anyway." 
 
 He was asked about the dividends. " Stock doesn't 
 always depend upon dividends," said Mr. Gould. " I 
 
t1 
 
 K^ 
 
 THE GREAT UXION PACIFIC DEAL. 
 
 193 
 
 paid 750 for my Missouri Pacific — 4,000 at that figure. 
 You pay more for rubies than for diamonds, and more 
 for diamonds than for Qr^ass." 
 
 Asked in regard to some difference in the accounts 
 in these large transactions Mr. Gould said he did not 
 know where it went exactly; "but it is safe to say 
 the lawyers got the difference," he said, with a 
 chuckle. " Now I'm showino; \'ou my whole hand." 
 
 He was asked if he had ever ofone to Washing-ton 
 in connection with the road, and Jay Gould said : '' Yes, 
 and I always paid my own hotel bills." 
 
 Q. Do you know whether anything was spent to 
 influence legislation ? A. No, sir, I know of no such 
 expenditure. 
 
 O. Where could we find records of such trans- 
 actions? A. I don't think such transactions exist. 
 
 Many other witnesses gave their testimony before 
 the commission, but that of Mr. Gould was by far the 
 most important of all as regarded disclosures. He 
 spoke in low and indistinct tones, but at times when 
 worked up to a high pitch of interest emphasized his 
 remarks with quick and nervous gestures. 
 
 13 
 
 *ii 
 
 N 
 
 . I 
 

 CHAPTER XIV. 
 
 How the Millionaire Lived. 
 
 'ill 
 
 W^i 
 
 As has already been said, in all his domestic rela- 
 tions Mr. Gould was a model man. He had no habits 
 but that of hard work and home enjoyments. He did 
 not use tobacco in any form. He rarely, if ever, sipped 
 a glass of wine. Social scandal never attached to his 
 name. He loved his home. When not in his office 
 he was with his family. He owned a box at the opera, 
 but when he attended his family always accompanied 
 him. He belonged to no social clubs. He did not 
 add the excitement of the turf to the excitement of 
 the Stock Exchange. 
 
 On his return from a journey his first questions 
 were of the welfare of his family. He made his home 
 as beautiful as wealth, refinement and purity could 
 make it. He loved his children, the sweet discourse 
 of the fireside, and the companionship of books and 
 flowers. There was no attempt at display, but every- 
 thing he possessed was the best. Neither he nor his 
 wife had any ambition for society distinction. They 
 gave no great balls and rarely were they present at 
 "society events." They had none of the vulgar traits 
 of the parvenu or prejudices of the aristocrat. 
 
 When his son wished to marry an actress, Mr. 
 
 (194) 
 
traitj 
 
 J, Mr. 
 
 HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 195 
 
 Gould interposed no objection, and even approved the 
 choice, declaring his pleasure that his son had selected 
 a respectable woman who was able to earn her own 
 living. Perhaps his devotion to his family was due in 
 part to the fact that his public career placed him apart 
 from other men, and made him an object of fear and 
 hatred. He was an exile from the sympathies of his 
 fellow-men. But he uttered no complaint, and found 
 in his family full solace for any loss of friendships he 
 may have incurred. The members of his family were 
 his only intimate friends. 
 
 All Estimable Wife. 
 
 Mr. Gould's wife was Miss Pollen Miller, whose 
 
 father, a wealthy New York merchant, was a member 
 of the grocery house of Philip Dater & Co. As 
 already stated, Mr. Gould met his wife while living at 
 the Everett House, before the war. She lived in a 
 house across the street, and a delightful flirtation with 
 the charming young lady, whose pretty face appeared 
 at the window of the house across the way, preceded, 
 it is related, the formal acquaintance and betrothal. 
 She proved a most estimable wife. 
 
 She made her home her life, and gave her best 
 thouQfht to the rearing^ of her children. Her death 
 was a severe blow to Mr. Gould. Their union was 
 blessed with six children, four boys and two girls. Of 
 the children the eldest boy, George J. Gould, is f' e 
 best known, because he has entered into man's estate 
 and become the business associate of his father. 
 
 Mr. Gould is fortunate in this son. Whether he 
 
 Mi 
 
 
 «ii 
 
 'it' 
 
/ - 
 
 ■M\ 
 
 . r 1 i 
 
 196 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 possesses the great ability of his father Is a question 
 which only the future can decide, but he is industrious, 
 sober and faithful. More than that, he has shown 
 himself capable of caring for large interests. He has 
 many of the physical and mental traits of his father. 
 He loves a fast horse, a good play and a swift yacht, 
 but the first law of his being is devotion to business. 
 Mr. Gould early began to introduce his son to the 
 manifold affairs o( his extensive Interests. He bous^ht 
 him a seat in the ^tock Exchange, made him his com- 
 panion in his tours of mspection over his railroads, 
 made him a partner in his broker's firm, and eventually 
 a director in all his companies. Another son, Edwin, 
 has shown unmistakable talent for speculation and is 
 following in his father's footsteps. 
 
 A Domestic Man. 
 
 Jay Gould had no social ambition whatever. He 
 was the most domestic of men, and his affection and 
 attention to his own immediate family was so deep as 
 to apparently kave no place for outside social influ- 
 ences. That both he and his wife desired that their 
 eldest son make a match that would be considered 
 sociallv good is a well-known fact, but they accepted 
 the marriage, and Mrs. George Gould was admitted 
 to the affections of her husband's relatives. The 
 death of Mrs. Gould set aside all plans for social 
 diversions, just as the eldest daughter, Miss Helen 
 Gould, was of an age to be brought forward. 
 
 r\Tr. Jay Gould was one of the box owners of the 
 Metropolitan Opera-House, and he and his daughter 
 
m 
 
 t 
 
 HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 10 
 
 wen; regular attendants during the season. INIiss 
 Gould, as a rule, was quietly attired, very often in pale 
 gray gowns, which were always well made. 
 
 About a year ago cards were sent out by Mr. Jay 
 Gould, which read simply : 
 
 Mr. Jav Gould 
 
 and 
 
 Miss Gould 
 
 At Home 
 
 Saturday, Dec. 26, from 3 until 7. 
 
 As many as 3,000 of these were sent out, and every 
 person in the social set was asked. This was nothing 
 very unusual, as general invitations are frecjuently ex- 
 tended by people of personal prominence in this way. 
 During the first couple of hours of the "at home" 
 there were but few callers at the Gould house, but 
 later they came in a steady stream. 
 
 Sensible View of 3Iutriinoiiy. 
 
 The motliers of marriageable youths were very 
 kindly disposed towards Miss Gould. Whether she 
 was to achieve a social success has never yet been de- 
 termined, for almost immediately after the coming out 
 reception she left town with her father, who went away 
 for his health. Social leaders say that with his great 
 wealth Mr. Gould might easily have arranged for his 
 daug-hter's marriage to a man of oreat social rank. 
 But Mr. Gould didn't care to encourage the quest for 
 
 •iiiPi 
 
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 H! 
 
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ii; 
 
 fl 
 
 
 I ' i' 1 
 
 198 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 his daughter'r hand on the part of men of great 
 social rank. This was evidenced by the hearty con- 
 sent he gave to the recent marriage of his son Edwin 
 to Miss Shrady, the adopted daughter of Dr. Shrady. 
 
 His Ite.sicleuce.s. 
 
 Mr. Gould had four residences, two stationary and 
 
 two movable — na lely, his Fifth avenue mansion, his 
 country seat on the Hudson, his steam yacht and his 
 private palace car. In these he spent the latter and 
 best years of his life. 
 
 His Fifth avenue residence is a massive edifice on 
 the corner of Forty-seventh street, opposite the Wind- 
 sor Hotel. It was formerly the home of ex-Mayor 
 Opdyke, himself once a prominent Wall Street man. 
 It is furnislied in sumptuous style, with splendid pic- 
 tures and other works of art and books in abundance. 
 The pictures include masterpieces by Rosa Bonheur 
 and other famous artists. Back of this house is the 
 residence of George J. Gould and his wife, who was 
 formerly Miss Edith Kingdon, a member of Daly's 
 theatrical company. 
 
 Mr. Gould's principal residence, however, was his 
 maofnificent country seat on the Hudson between 
 Irvington and Tarrytown. This comprises 500 acres, 
 commanding a splendid panorama of the Hudson. 
 Besides the large and richly furnished mansion con- 
 taining a costly library of about eight thousand vol- 
 umes, there is a conservatory which ranks with the 
 best which this world contains. It is probably the 
 largest private conservatory in this country, and is 
 
,'' 4 
 
 HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LITKD. 
 
 19» 
 
 I 
 
 equalled in England only by that of the Duke of 
 Westminster, at Chester. I'hcre are public conserva- 
 tories which equal or surpass it, but none private. 
 
 Bewildoriiij;- Floral Bounty. 
 
 In this conservatory may be found every variety of 
 flower, orchid, plant and fruit in bewildering quantity 
 and beauty. A few years ago the writer had the 
 privilege of a view of this splendid horticultural collec- 
 tion, his conductor being Mr. Gould himself. The 
 great speculator dia not own this collection simply for 
 the pride of saying that he possessed it, but for the 
 real pleasure he took in flowers and plants. He 
 knew the names of the different varieties and could 
 point out the beauties and characteristics of an orchid 
 as well as could his high-priced gardener. 
 
 The conservatory was burned in iS8o, but another 
 larger and more costly soon rose from the ashes. 
 This is 400 feet long and 32 feet wide. There are 
 also two wings, 80 feet long and 25 feet wide. An- 
 other building, 250 feet long and 18 feet wide, is de- 
 voted to similar purposes. Several years ago there 
 were over four thousand different varieties of plants in 
 the conservatory, and nearly as many more on the 
 ^rounds, and the collection has been added to every 
 year. Every country and every climate is represented 
 in this splendid collection. 
 
 Famous Steam Yacht. 
 
 The great steam yacht Atalanta, which cost as much 
 
 as a first-class ocean steamer and required an annual 
 expenditure nearly equal to the salary of the Presi- 
 
 .1^ 
 
 ' r; 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 •1 
 f 
 
200 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 1/ :- 
 
 I 
 
 W' 
 
 I 'll 
 
 dent of the United States, was Mr. Gould's third 
 home. He took the greatest pleasure in this magnifi- 
 cent plaything. When, during the summer, he lived 
 at Irvington, it carried him to and from the city every 
 day. On this yacht also he made ^.tent ocean voy- 
 ages to the West Indies, across the Atlantic, and in 
 the waters of the Mediterranean. It was, in fact, a 
 floating palace, but was built not simply for luxury but 
 for speed, and not another steam yacht afloat could 
 distance it in a trial of speed. Mr. Gould was a 
 member of the American Yacht Club, the only or- 
 ganization, by the way, of which he was a member, 
 and of this he was practically the founder. 
 
 Mr. Gould also owned a private railroad car. He 
 used for many years the Union Pacific car Convoy, 
 but in 1887 had a new car especially constructed for 
 his use by die Pullman Company. It was the longest 
 car ever constructed by that Company, being seventy 
 feet in length, and containing an observation-room, a 
 parlor, a dining hall and sleeping-rooms, besides the 
 porter's quarters and the kitchen. 
 
 Mr. Gould's Pleasures. 
 
 The pleasures of Jay Gould's life were simple and 
 few. With vast wealth at his command, he seldom 
 sought recreation away from his immediate home. To 
 a certain extent money-getting seemed to be a pleasure 
 to him. In the many deals engin^eered by his master 
 hand he felt the thrill of a nervy speculator who stakes 
 his money on the turn of a transaction. It was not 
 making money that w^orrled him. It was keeping 
 
 m 
 
He 
 
 HOW THE MILLIONAIRE I.IVED. 
 
 201 
 
 what he made and holdin^^ his own in the thousand 
 and one schemes concocted to get the better of him. 
 
 His Hfe was a continual game of chance, and in this 
 game for many years he found his chief enjoyment in 
 existence. It is not recorded that in the earHer years 
 of his career Mr. Gould ever sought any physical 
 relaxation in the way of sport or pastime. His whole 
 mind, heart and soul lay between Wall street and his 
 uptown home. 
 
 Finally, however, money-making became an old 
 
 story. Time and again he had milked Wall street 
 
 dry, and his fortune had rolled up into the tens of 
 
 millions. 
 
 Buys a Country llosidcnce. 
 
 Then, observing an occasional smile on the faces 
 of other millionaires, and hearing the laughter of light 
 hearts all about him, he began to wonder if there were 
 not other pleasures in the world out-^'de of cent per 
 cent and the dull, eternal rows of fiofur ;s that stood for 
 stocks and bonds. 
 
 So one day he turned his back on the dingy office 
 that represented his paradise and took a New York 
 Central train for Irvington. Here he met Mr. Merritt 
 and was driven to the residence of the latter, a mile or 
 so north of the old river :own and close to the shore. 
 Mr. Gould was very quiet and very reserved, but his 
 keen eye took in all the possibilities of the place at a 
 glance. When he returned to New York on the 
 evening train he had closed a bargain with Mr. Merritt 
 
 ; r »>/. 
 
 
 
 ,(fl: 
 
 
I . 'I 
 
 ii 
 
 202 
 
 LIFB or JAT GOULD. 
 
 by which the estate became his for a consideration of 
 a quarter of a million of dollars. 
 
 The Home at Irviiigton. 
 
 A small army of builders and decorators and glaziers 
 was employed, and out of the general chaos of bush 
 and bramble arose the minarets of a modern palace, 
 with wide, well-ordered grounds and every comfort 
 one could wish for, Mr. Gould seemed to take great 
 pleasure in planning the arrangements for his future 
 country residence. For a while all but the general 
 detail of his business was put in the background. 
 Every few days he would journey up to Irvington to 
 see how matters were progressing. It may be safely 
 said that these were the first leisure days of Mr. Gould's 
 life. His eyes grew brighter, his step more buoyant 
 and he be^an to look upon these little excursions as a 
 pleasant diversion. 
 
 Sometimes he would take his younger children with 
 him, and their unaffected happiness was another source 
 of relaxation for the care-worn millionaire. Previous 
 to this time money-making had been Mr. Gould's ex- 
 clusive thouo-ht. Thereafter it became to a certain de- 
 ofree intermittent. 
 
 He named his new residence Lyndhurst, and erected 
 a short distance away one of the largest and most 
 handsomely equipped conservatories in the country. 
 It covers nearly four acres, and from a distance looks 
 like the fabled palace of Kubla Khan. Here there 
 was another source of pleasure for the weary financier. 
 He employed Ferdinand Mangold, Mr. Merritt's for- 
 
 ipi 
 
HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 30S 
 
 
 
 mer g^ardener, to take charge of the conservatory, and 
 gave him carte blanche to procure the rarest tlowers 
 and exotics from all over the world. Mangold per- 
 formed his work well. When the leaves grew yellow 
 around Lyndhurst the autumn following, the conser- 
 vatory contained the finest palm garden on the West- 
 ern hemisphere. 
 
 The Gnrdeii ol' Karc Palni*^. 
 
 There are over 250 varieties, from the size of a 
 maidenhair fern to great shadowy trees, thirty feet 
 high, and with leaves as wide as the jib of a pilot 
 boat. They range in value from $20 to $500; but 
 what is money to a millionaire in pursuit of the butter- 
 fly of pleasure ? These palms were brought from 
 Africa, Central and South America, Samoa, the Sand- 
 wich Islands, the heart of India, and from beyond 
 Trebizonde, for the simple purpose of wooing Mr. 
 Gould's pale face into a smile. There were Viridi- 
 foliuvi, HyopJiorbe Aniericanlis, and Plecocomio Assayn- 
 ica palms without number, and Mr. Gould knew every 
 one of them by name. 
 
 In another apartment was a wilderness of roses, 
 pink and white, and gold and guelder. Burgundy 
 and Austrian in an endless tangle of color, and a 
 delirious, odorous atmosphere that would have enrap- 
 tured the soul of a lotus eater. No wonder that Mr. 
 Gould abandoned care when he entered the portals 
 of his conservatory. He did not have many personal 
 friends, yet surely a man cannot be altogether bad 
 who is a friend of the roses. There must be some 
 

 If 
 
 mm 
 
 r 
 
 i.t 
 
 204 
 
 Lit OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 good in the heart of a man whose eyes grow tender 
 as he bends over a Hly. 
 
 The conservatory became a hobby with Mr. Gould. 
 Every morning after breakfast he would pay a visit to 
 the h'lcr orlass house to w-ander for an hour or so amons: 
 the plants and flowers. While there he would seem 
 to forget everything but the green, tropical tangle 
 about him. In the eveninij, on his return from the 
 city, he w^ould again stroll through the shadowy aisles 
 of palm and vine, sometimes alone, and at others ac- 
 companied by the members of his family. 
 
 Orchids Were liis Hobhy. 
 
 Orchids were IMr. Gould's especial hobby. In this 
 department of his conservatory he had nearly 8,000 
 orchid plants and over 1 50 varieties. For some of these 
 delicate air-fed and angel-painted blossoms Mr. Gould 
 had paid $300 — half the amount of a poor man's 
 wages for a year of toil. In another apartment were 
 nearly 2,000 azaleas, litde bits of sunset sky cut into 
 the shape of bells. In the fernery were 600 varieties 
 of ferns, giving the entire place the appearance of a 
 soft green cloud hemmed in glass walls. Just the 
 place for Titania and her fairies. 
 
 It is strange that this appreciation of pure and poet- 
 ical thincrs should exist in the soul of a man of such 
 financial crnmness. But it was doubtless in Mr. Gould's 
 nature before his life took on its acquired thirst for 
 gold. When that thirst was in a measure satiated he 
 turned again to his fundamental instincts and his great 
 conservatory was the result. 
 
HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 205 
 
 Luxuries of Country Life. 
 
 Yet in the summer months Mr. Gould found much 
 pleasure in his open-air garden. It was a big affair, 
 guiltless of weeds, yet it is doubtful if Mr. Gould ever 
 weeded his own potato patch or hoed his own turnips. 
 There were beds for cantaloupes and watermelon, 
 cucumbers, peas, beans, parsley, spinach, carrots, 
 beets, lettuce and cauliflower, and Mr. Gould knew 
 just where to find everything. 
 
 For a short time every day he would walk through 
 the crarden, and doubtless dream of his old barefoot 
 boyhood days when he looked after his mother's gar- 
 den, in Delaware county. He was a sort of intermit- 
 tent farmer, and seemed to find a transitory pleasure 
 in everything that pertained to a farm. There was 
 nothing in common, however, between Mr. Gould's 
 luxurious style of farming and that of the everyday, 
 horny-handed knight of the pitchfork and plough. 
 
 Blooded Stock ou the Farm. 
 
 His barnyards and meadows, situated some distance 
 from the conservator3^ contained innumerable blooded 
 stock. There were 50 cov/s, 25 horses, a span of 
 oxen, 3 bulls, over 1,000 chickens, 200 ducks and 500 
 pigeons, besides half a dozen deer. This gave the 
 entire estate a farm-like aspect that was very pleasing 
 to Mr. Gould. Over 250 tons of hay were harvested 
 in the fields of Lyndhurst every year. Mr. Gould 
 took great pleasure in going out to the fields on sum- 
 mer afternoons to lie under the trees and watch the 
 haying. The far-oflf drone of the flying sickle came 
 
 fit. 
 
 rgjH 
 
 ft 
 1 ],' 
 
/ ,,H 
 
 m 
 
 'itJi iit. : 
 
 \ ill 
 
 <1. 
 
 206 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 to his brain as a soporific balm, and the sight of the 
 sun-worn toilers heaving away at the great, slow wag- 
 ons, and the distant songs of the reapers, lulled him 
 to slumber. 
 
 In Mr. Gould's stables there were fifteen or twenty 
 carriages and conveyances of one kind or another, 
 many of which were not used once a year. To get 
 rid of malaria, Mr. Gould filled in over one hundred 
 and twenty acres of swamp land. Mr. Merritt spent 
 over $1,250,000 in improving the place, and Mr. Gould 
 spent about $1,500,000 in the same endeavor. 
 
 An Art Lover, Too. 
 
 Mr. Gould was a great lover of art, and was con- 
 tinually purchasing statuary and paintings. Beyond 
 the carriage archway leading to the outer hall of the 
 Gould castle is a bust of Lafayette ; on the other side 
 is one of Washinofton. On the rio^ht of the inner hall 
 is a bronze Ethiopian woman and a painting by Per- 
 rault. There are many marble busts and statues on 
 ' onyx pedestals scattered throughout the house, most 
 of which were purchased by Mr. Gould. In the 
 picture gallery are innumerable rare paintings. 
 Among them are "A Forest Scene," by Rousseau ; 
 "A River Scene," by Ziem ; " Evening Antique 
 Dance," by Corot ; "A Girl," by Fleury; **A Storm 
 on the Farm," by Jacque ; " Priest and Cavalier," by 
 Meissonier, and " Le Loup dans la berguerie,'' by 
 Loustaunau. 
 
 Then there are Vernets, Simonettis, Kaemmerers, 
 Constants, Bouguereaus and Troyons innumerable, all 
 
HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 207 
 
 )' 
 
 of which were purchased, either directly or indirectly, 
 
 by Mr. Gould. This was in the earlier stages of his 
 
 home-making and before he had the fever of the farm 
 
 and conservatory upon him. 
 
 Mr. Gould was not a great admirer of the drama, 
 
 but he was rather fond of opera, and this formed 
 
 almost his only public diversion during the winter 
 
 months. He was seen very often at the Metropolitan 
 
 during the opera season with his daughter and 
 
 daughter-in-law. 
 
 His Yacht AtaUinta. 
 
 In the summer of 1882 a new idea in the way of 
 diversion struck Mr. Gould. It came upon him as he 
 sat in front of his Irvincrton castle orazinof on the broad 
 Hudson. Why not build a yacht? Why not have a 
 flyer that would make the distance from the city in 
 almost as fast time as the New York Central trains? 
 Mr. Gould was not overfond of the sea, but he knew 
 that the salt air would do him good, and besides he 
 was partial to privacy when it came to travelling. 
 Therefore the yacht idea was adopted without delay. 
 
 The next year he received from the Cramps, o( 
 Philadelphia, the steam yacht Atalanta, whose fame as 
 an ocean flyer has since become world-wide. Mr. 
 Gould was delighted and for a time conservatory, gar- 
 dens, live-stock and art were minor considerations. 
 He took on a nautical air and it made his heart glad 
 to tell him that his face looked weather-beaten. He 
 made several trips abroad on the yacht with his family 
 and enjoyed himself hugely. 
 
 i! i' 
 

 m 
 
 I ' 
 
 208 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 Everybody who saw the international yacht races of 
 
 1885 and 1886 remembers the long black hull of the 
 
 Atalanta sliding along on the outer edge of the great 
 
 fleet like a black ghost, with Mr. Gould on the 
 
 bridge, holding a big pair of marine glasses to his 
 
 eyes. 
 
 A Marine Curiosity. 
 
 The big yacht was almost as much of a curiosity as 
 the racers. Day after day Mr. Gould was out for the 
 races with his heavy coat and big glasses. That part 
 of his face not covered by his heavy black beard grew 
 absolutely red from the stinging winds and the salt 
 spray. On one occasion the little Stiletto, the Herres- 
 hoff flyer, steamed around and around the Atalanta as 
 if to challenge her for a trial of speed, but Mr. Gould 
 only laughed. He is reported to have shouted to the 
 pilot of the Stiletto : 
 
 "Choose somebody of your own size; we are too 
 big for you." 
 
 Physically Mr. Gould was not a courageous man. 
 He hated to have the newspapers expatiate upon the 
 ease with which he could be abducted. He was afraid 
 that somebody might be tempted to try it. This feel- 
 ing finally robbed his life of much of its pleasure. 
 After the Norcross dynamite episode he grew more 
 than ever ill at ease, and it is thought to have been 
 this feeling that finally prompted the sale of his yacht. 
 At any rate, it was advertised iu the papers for several 
 months. 
 
HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 209 
 
 s of 
 the 
 
 reat 
 the 
 his 
 
 ty as 
 r the 
 part 
 erew 
 e salt 
 irres- 
 ita as 
 jould 
 to the 
 
 -e too 
 
 man. 
 )n the 
 afraid 
 feel- 
 sure, 
 more 
 been 
 yacht, 
 iveral 
 
 No Pleasure in Travelling-. 
 
 Travelling, which to ordinary men would be a rec- 
 reation, was scarcely a pleasure to Mr. Gould. It is 
 true that he enjoyed scenery in a quiet way, but he 
 enjoyed it most from his car window. He had a 
 horror of Indians and cowboys and rough characters. 
 Only on one occasion is he known to have fired a gun. 
 On one of his southern trips through the Indian Ter- 
 ritory he stopped over night in his car at a little soli- 
 tary side-track, miles from all human habitation. Of 
 course the wolves made merry around the sleeper, 
 and the coyotes chased each other under the trucks, 
 fighting over the remnants of Mr. Gould's supper. 
 
 He did not sleep much, because he was not used to 
 wolf music, and then again a camp fire over in the 
 neighboring hills worried him. Somebody had told 
 him the country was full of robbers. It was, but 
 somehow they always missed Mr. Gould. Early in 
 the morning a slashing, rip-roaring cowboy road up 
 and, sticking the nose of his bronco through the 
 sleeping-car door, informed Mr. Gould's party that a 
 big gang of deer were "just over the hilL" Two or 
 three Indian police were in the baggage-car, and Mr. 
 Gould was not afraid. He made up his mind to have 
 a shot at the deer. 
 
 A Shot at a Deer. 
 
 Accompanied by several of his party and flanked 
 
 by the Indian police, he ascended the hill with all the 
 
 stealth of an old scout, armed with a big Hotchkiss 
 
 rifle. Now, anybody who understands anything about 
 14 
 
 1' 
 
 
 li! 
 
 mM il 
 
210 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Pilri;! 
 
 It I ■ ! 1 
 
 rifles knows how an old-fashioned Hotchkiss can kick. 
 Mr. Goulr< peeped over the hill, and, sure enough, 
 eight or ten deer were grazing out on the prairie about 
 200 yards distant. 
 
 Mr. Gould scorned to take a rest for the gun. He 
 lifted it slowly to his shoulder, almost after the fashion 
 of a girl, with the Indian police looking on in amuse- 
 ment. I'hey knew what the gun would do with a man 
 of Mr. Gould's weight It wobbled a good deal, but 
 that made no difference. He would not have hit any 
 livinof thino;- even if it had not wobbled. The slant of 
 the hill behind Mr. Gould was pretty steep, but he did 
 not notice it. 
 
 " Whang !" roared the gun, and the next instant 
 Mr. Gould was flying down the hill, hrst on his back 
 and then on all-fours. The Indians did not smile. 
 They were too busy killing deer. While Mr. Gould's 
 friends were runninor to his rescue the Indians had 
 bagged two, one of which they tried to persuade Mr. 
 Gould was his. But the wily financier knew better, 
 because, as he put it, ''the gun had shot backw^ards 
 and kicked him twice after it had oot him down." 
 Consequently hunting could not be considered one of 
 his pleasures. 
 
 His Horses and Carriages. 
 
 Mr. Gould once attended a horse show, but this 
 was the only occasion he ever publicly exhibited any 
 particular liking for horses. His city stable was one 
 of a row on West Forty-fourth street, between the 
 Berkeley School building and Fifth avenue. It is a 
 
 ffi 
 
HOW THx. MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 211 
 
 »» 
 
 two-story, twenty-foot-front brick buildlnnr trimmed 
 with granite. It is No. 14 West Forty-fourth street. 
 It is a neatly arranged stable of the old-fashioned oak- 
 trimmed pattern common in the neighborhood. Mr. 
 Gould kept only three pairs of horses at the time of 
 his death, and they were all quartered in the building. 
 Four of the horses were cobby bays, two with docked 
 and two with banfred tails. The other two were lonof- 
 tailed black roadsters, and the most valuable of the 
 lot. None of the horses would bring a fancy price if 
 put up at auction, but they were all of the good plain 
 sort that will stand plenty of work. 
 
 Old Style Vohitles. 
 
 Simplicity was the chief characteristic of the car- 
 riages used by Mr. Gould. He always bought the 
 best and paid the prices asked without cavilling, but 
 the first outlay was all the carriages ever cost him. 
 He was careless in the extreme regarding repairs or 
 fresh trimmings, seldom having any work done on any 
 of his vehicles. Mr. Gould always selected his car- 
 riages personally, and always bought from the same 
 firm. He was easy to suit, always telling just what he 
 wanted and takinof the first carrlaore that met his ideas. 
 
 The carriages at the stable ready for use were a 
 brouofham, landau, victoria and a huatinof wafjon. The 
 last was gaudy in yellow and black and was the newest 
 of the vehicles. The others were plain in coloring 
 and were what driving people call old style. Jay 
 Gould's iivery was a dark green, and was worn on the 
 usual occasions by both coachman and footman. 
 
 
 E 'i| 
 
 :Fi 
 
/ \'i 
 
 212 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 His Drives in the Park. 
 
 For a while Mrs. George Gould was in the habit of 
 giving her father-in-law early morning drives in Gen- 
 tral Park, calling for him daily in a neat trap of her 
 own. With this exception he seldom drove for pleas- 
 ure in the city. At Irvington he was occasionally seen 
 driving on the roads near his residence. Until the 
 purchase of his yacht Mr. Gould drove to and from 
 the railroad station daily, but after that he took drives 
 at infrequent intervals. 
 
 None of the Gould family is especially devoted to 
 riding or driving. Edwin Gould is a capital rider, and 
 until his promotion to a captaincy and the post of In- 
 spector of Rifle Practice in the Seventy-first Regiment, 
 was an active member of Troop A. He always rode 
 a long-tailed gray thoroughbred, for which he paid a 
 high price. Edwin Gould was very proficient at 
 wrestling on horseback and few of the cavalrymen 
 could unseat him. The Misses Gould drive dailv dur- 
 ing their stay at Irvington, using the family carriages 
 or else handling the reins in the hunting wagon or in 
 a mail phaeton. 
 
 Didn't Like Showy Trappings. 
 
 An uptown harness dealer said of Jay Gould : " Mr. 
 Gould was a rec?ular customer for small articles. He 
 seldom bought a new harness, preferring instead to 
 have his old ones patched up from year to year. He 
 is the only millionaire I ever saw who did not care 
 about showy trappings for his horses. I could never 
 persuade him to try the new fads. Once he called for 
 
 iljili; 
 
HOW THE MILLIONAIRE LIVED. 
 
 213 
 
 a harness I had been repairing. I showed him how 
 nicely the work had been done, and said incidentally 
 it was as q^ood as new. Before he left I tried to sell 
 him another harness. ' No,* said Mr. Gould, * wrap 
 up my old harness and I will take it home. You say 
 it is as good as new, so I can't waste money by buying 
 still another brand new set. I could not use two new 
 harnesses if I had them.' " 
 
 III' 
 
CHAPT..R XV. 
 Mr. Gould's Charities. 
 
 iii' 
 
 Jay Gould was not what is called a religious man. 
 He was a pewholder in the Presbyterian Church at 
 IrvincTton and in the Rev. Dr. Paxton's Church on 
 West Forty-second street, New York, but not a com- 
 municant. If he ever expressed any religious views 
 it was to the Rev. Dr. Paxton. Certainly he did not 
 to the Rev. Dr. Henry M. McCracken, chancellor of 
 the University, nor to the Rev. Roderick Terry, with 
 whom he was on intimate terms of friendship. Dr. 
 Terry said : 
 
 "There was no pretense about Mr. Gould. He 
 never made r.iy public profession of Christianity that 
 I know of. On the subject of religion, as on so many 
 others, he was extremely reticent, unless he unbosomed 
 himself to his pastor. Dr. Paxton. He certainly never 
 talked with me about his feelings on the subject of 
 religion, though the opportunity offered more than 
 once." 
 
 Mr. Gould's wife was a member of the South Re- 
 formed Church for many years, but afterwards became 
 a Presbyterian. The millionaire of late years had 
 been a frequent attendant at the Rev. Dr. Paxton's 
 Church and at the Presbyterian Church at Irvlngton- 
 
 (214) 
 
 1 
 
 B 
 
INSIDE VIEW OF A NEW YORK TENEMENT HOUSE. 
 
 (215) 
 
 4^ 
 
216 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 on-thc-Mudson, near his country place. An old friend 
 of the family said that when a very young man Jay 
 Gould became converted at a Methodist revival meet- 
 
 ing. 
 
 Ill a Methodist Kovival. 
 
 This gentleman said : 
 
 '* When Jay Gould was a young man he was con- 
 verted in a Methodist Church at Roxbury, Delaware 
 County, N. Y. The Rev. Mr. Dutcher, father of Rev. 
 E. C. Du teller, now pastor of the Methodist Episcopal 
 Church in Nyack, Newark Conference, was pastor in 
 charge of the Roxbury Church. The elder Mr. 
 Dutcher was holdincr a series of revival meetinirs. The 
 little Delaw^are County Church was crowded night 
 afteV nieht. 
 
 ** At one of the meetings, after a specially earnest 
 appeal by the venerable preacher, young Gould went 
 forward to the altar and professed conversion. He 
 subsequently connected himself with the Presbyterians. 
 The late Rev. Dr. Jacob West, then Corresponding 
 Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions of the 
 Dutch Reformed Church, preached a number of times 
 in the Roxbury Reformed Church. Gould always at- 
 tended, and the Rev. Dr. West frequently said Gould 
 was always a remarkably attentive listener." 
 
 Mr. Gould's name was discussed most prominently 
 in connection with church work in February, 1892, 
 when he gave his check for J 10,000 to the Rev. Dr. 
 John Hall. The circumstances aroused much com- 
 ment and considerable unfavorable criticism. 
 
MH. GOUr.DS CHARITIES. 
 
 217 
 
 I 
 
 11 
 
 On Tuesday evening, February 23CI, the Gould 
 mansion was handsomely lighted up. Over one hun- 
 dred invitations had been issued by Mr. Gould and 
 his daughter, Miss Helen Gould, to prominent Pres- 
 byterians and members of the Presbyterian Board of 
 Church Extension. It was understood by those re- 
 ceiving the invitations that the reception was solely 
 for the purpose of raising funds. Mr. and Miss Gould 
 received the guests. They were assisted by Mrs. 
 Russell Sage and Mrs. J. P. Munn. The Rev. Dr. 
 Paxton said, in the course of his opening address to 
 the guests : 
 
 *' When I asked Mr. Gould about opening his home 
 for a meeting of the friends of Presbyterian Church 
 extension, without hesitation or deliberation he and 
 Miss Gould said at once, and said it cordially: 'Cer- 
 tainly, with great pleasure,' and Mr. Gould added : 
 *I believe in church extension on Manhattan Island.' 
 But Mr. Gould has taken another step in the right 
 direction, for since he asked us here — Mr. Sacje told 
 me this — Mr. Gould, who is superficial in nothing, 
 wanted to know what church extension is, and what 
 church ought to be extended, and so he read our 
 confession of faith. 
 
 Favors Church Extension. 
 
 " I am not certain of that, for he and the Revision 
 and new creed people would not agree ; he is old 
 school ; he believes in obeying marching orders, like 
 Wellington ; in walking in the old paths, like the New 
 York Observer. But one thing, Mr. Sage told me, 
 
m 
 
 218 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 our host has made up his mind on, and that was that 
 our form of church government was the most just, the 
 most repubhcan, the best in the world. Therefore, 
 our host is not only in favor of church extension but 
 of Presbyterian Church extension. I am sure this in- 
 formation will warm Dr. Hall's heart and impart to 
 his speech increased forver when he speaks to-night. 
 
 *' We are here to face the foe, to take heart and 
 hope, to give our money, our prayers, our tribute, our 
 toil, knowing no such word as fail, to this good cause 
 of extending, as Mr. Gould says, the only true, holy, 
 catholic, American Church — our old blue-bordered 
 Presbyterian denomination." 
 
 " I have never met Mr. Gould but once before," said 
 the Rev. Dr. Hall, *' and that was many years ago. 
 A ofentleman in Chicao^o wrote me reo^ardino- a mis- 
 sionary, who had been called back from China by the 
 illness of his wife. The wife had recovered after the 
 missionary's return, and the couple wanted to return 
 to China a^rain. The Chicao^o orentleman wanted to 
 know if I could not secure a free pass for the man. I 
 went to the railroad authorities, and was referred to 
 Mr. Gould. 
 
 " I entered the room with fear and tremblinsf and 
 with many misgivings. I had never seen Mr. Gould, 
 and you can all sympathize with my feelings. He re- 
 ceived me cordially and listened to all I had to say. 
 He said he thought it was a very deserving case and 
 asked me to leave a memorandum of it. The next 
 day I received a communication from him containing 
 
that 
 
 the 
 fore, 
 
 but 
 3 hi- 
 •t to 
 ight. 
 
 and 
 :, our 
 :ause 
 holy, 
 lered 
 
 " said 
 ago. 
 
 I mis- 
 
 )y the 
 r the 
 eturn 
 ed to 
 an. I 
 
 •ed to 
 
 MR. GOULDS CHARITIES. 
 
 219 
 
 CT 
 
 and 
 ould, 
 ie re- 
 o say. 
 e and 
 
 next 
 ainuig 
 
 a ticket for the railway journey and another for the 
 missionary's passage to his destination." 
 
 Gives $10,000. 
 
 About $20,000 was subscribed at this reception, 
 and Jay Gould gave his check for $10,000. The Rev. 
 Dr. Parkhurst was anions- those who criticised the 
 affair as an ostentatious display of wealth in the name 
 of religion. He wanted to know where Mr. Gould 
 got that $10,000. 
 
 The religious side of Mr. Gould's life, so far as the 
 public knew anything of it, was fully told at this 
 church-extension reception. 
 
 Mr. Gould was interested in the extension of the 
 University of the City of New York. Chancellor 
 McCracken said : 
 
 " Mr. Gould was very much interested in the uni- 
 versity from his interest in telegraphy and telegraph 
 lines ar.d the fact that in this buildinof the first tele- 
 graph had Its home. Prof. Morse labored here fifty- 
 five years ago, and was assisted by two of the uni- 
 versity's professors. Profs. Gail and Vail. 
 
 " I had known Mr. Gould for five years and from 
 the beginning of our acquaintance he evinced an in- 
 terest in the close relation between the university and 
 telegraphy, and he made it a favorite subject of con- 
 versation. He made the largest single subscription 
 towards our purchase of the uptown grounds, $25,000, 
 and he gave an additional conditional pledge which I 
 have never made public and shall not yet." 
 
 imu' 
 
 .f 
 
 m 
 
 1! * 
 
Mr 
 
 ' !l 
 
 
 Wv0 
 
 220 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Credited with Generous Givingr. 
 
 In his active, tempestuous business career one might 
 infer that Jay Gould had httle time and less inclina- 
 tion to take up charitable work to any extent. As a 
 matter of fact, what little is known of him in this con- 
 nection became public only a short time before his 
 death. His friends say he gave largely and was gen- 
 erous to a degree when he was assured of the genuine- 
 ness of a reported case of distress. He never, so far 
 as can be learned, made use of any public organiza- 
 tion in the disbursement of funds for any charitable 
 object. Whatever he did he preferred to do with his 
 characteristic secrecy. 
 
 He was very greatly influenced by his family in 
 giving, and through his children quite a large number 
 of institutions were aided by the money of the finan- 
 cier. For instance, his daughter Helen, of whom he 
 was exceedingly fond, is interested in many organiza- 
 tions engaged in charity work. Through her Jay 
 Gould has given frequendy and largely. 
 
 A Story of tlie Breakfast Table. 
 
 A pretty story is told of the charity organization 
 society that existed in Mr. Gould's own household. 
 Its sessions were held each morninof after breakfast. 
 Like other rich men, he was assailed constantly with 
 showers of begging letters. These were regularly 
 sorted out every morning, and each member of the 
 family chose as many from the pile as desired until 
 none were left. If a letter appeared to describe a case 
 
 mw' 
 
ii 
 
 MR. GOULDS CHARITIES. 
 
 221 
 
 night 
 clina- 
 As a 
 5 con- 
 re his 
 igen- 
 nuine- 
 so far 
 aniza- 
 ritable 
 ith his 
 
 aily in 
 umber 
 finan- 
 om he 
 :raniza- 
 er Jay 
 
 ization 
 isehold. 
 akfast. 
 ly with 
 gularly 
 of the 
 d until 
 i a case 
 
 of real need it was placed in the centre of the table. 
 The others were burned. 
 
 Then ensued quiet investigation, conducted as 
 secretly as the operations of the closest detective 
 bureau. People in want were given aid commen- 
 surate with the needs of the particular case, but were 
 never able to thank the donor, for the identity of the 
 giver was never disclosed. In this way, it is said, 
 many hundreds of poor people were relieved. 
 
 Another method employed was to look up cases of 
 distress independent of the petitions poured in by 
 mail. To just what extent this charitable work was 
 carried on will never be known, for those conversant 
 with it will not speak of it. 
 
 Mr. Goukl's name is unidentified with anv preat 
 public benefactions. Astor and Tiklen founded li- 
 braries. Drew establislied a theological seminary, 
 George I. Seney distributed millions, and Vanderbilt 
 endowed a hospital, but Gould's purse was never 
 opened by any such generous ambition. He was kind 
 to his relatives, gave his brother a good position in 
 the Missouri Pacific Railroad, and built his sisters a 
 school in Camden. He gave liberally to alleviate the 
 suffering by the Chicago fire and by the Memphis yel- 
 low-fever plague, made big subscriptions to the Grant 
 and Garfield funds, and added eighty acres to the 
 Mount Vernon property. This was nearly all he did 
 in a public way. 
 
 In their private charities Mr. and Mrs. Gould and 
 Miss Helen Gould are said to have distributed a large 
 
? li 
 
 222 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 iiH: 
 
 1 .1 
 
 :f)li 
 
 amount of money, and every Christmas Mr. Gould 
 made presents to his clerks. 
 
 Mr. Gould's treatment of the widow of the late 
 James Fisk, Jr., has often been criticised. 
 
 In 1 88 1 this letter appeared in the JVew York 
 Herald: 
 
 No. 1654 Washington street, 
 Boston, Mass., Nov. 14, 1881. 
 To the Editor of the Herald : — 
 
 Knowing your paper has the widest circulation in 
 New York, I desire to say a few words in defence of 
 my great friend Mr. Gould, the only friend of Mr. 
 Fisk who has responded to my actual needs and 
 wants since his death. He may be interested in his 
 own interests when in business, but he never has 
 proved unmindful to the needs of those deserving his 
 charity. I write these few lines after reading assaults 
 on his charity to-day. 
 
 Lucy D. Fisk. 
 
 
 :!f 
 
 1 
 
 1 t:-i' \u:. 
 
 i 
 
 1 [flfif 
 '[I'll 
 
 V 
 
CHAPTER XVI. 
 
 Stories About the Money King. 
 
 In his "Twenty-eight Years in Wall Street" Henry 
 Clews tells a humorous story of Mr. Gould. In 1853, 
 soon after Gould had failed in the tanning business, a 
 son of Schuyler Livingston, who held a lease from the 
 Cruger family to a vast brick fiek; on the banks of the 
 Hudson River, adv x ■ sd for a partner, and Jay 
 Gould presented himself as a speculator looking for 
 an investment. He remained the guest of the family 
 for three or four days. One day the Cruger young 
 men proposed a sail in their yacht to Newburgh, and 
 induced Gould to accompany them. He was a natty, 
 dapper, precise little man with swarthy complexion. 
 The sun's rays were hot and the pitch in the seams of 
 the deck began to boil, and the paint to peel off and 
 powder. 
 
 The guest fidgeted about a good deal, and when 
 pressed for an explanation of his evident distress ac- 
 knowledcred that it arose from the knowledqfe that his 
 nether garments were being spoiled by sitting upon 
 the deck. The yacht put into Peekskill and Eugene 
 Cruger hurried ashore and purchased a pair of blue 
 jeans for three shillings. With these on Gould 
 breathed more freely. On the return from Newburg, 
 
 (223) 
 
 ri 
 
 
illl 
 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ^^^1 
 
 iM 
 
 the party decided to go ashore again at Peekskill and 
 get some refreshments, but Goiikl decided to stay on 
 board, so he told his hosts. 
 
 When the young men left the hotel and started to- 
 ward the yacht they passed the ship chandler's shop 
 and saw the proprietor chuckling heartily to himself. 
 Euo'ene Cruo-er had never seen the chandler smile 
 before, so stopped and asked the reason. 
 
 He learned that, while they were eating and drink- 
 ing at the hotel Gould had slipped ashore and sold 
 back to the chandler for two shillings the blue jeans 
 for which young Mr. Cruger had paid three shillings. 
 When the party boarded the yacht they found Gould 
 sitting upon his outspread handkerchief. 
 
 They got even with him the next day, when he 
 started for New York to keep an important engage- 
 ment, after telling- Cruiser that he thouHit he did not 
 care to invest in the brick field. Gould wanted to 
 catch a certain train, but was induced to take a sail 
 first. When off Sing Sing they saw the train some 
 two miles away and Gould excitedly requested the 
 Crugers to run in and land him. They purposely ran 
 the boat upon a sand bar, and, with deep apparent re- 
 ofret, informed Gould that he must let that train ^o or 
 else swim or wade ashore. 
 
 Quick as a flash he took off his doeskin suit and 
 stood up in a suit of red flannel underwear. Hoisting 
 the doeskins over his head he sprang overboard and 
 waded ashore just as the train had pulled up. It had 
 star<-ed again before he caught it, and two brakemen 
 
 \i 
 
 o 
 
 H 
 > 
 
 O 
 
 c 
 
 < 
 
 'J. 
 
 n 
 
 H 
 
 
 n 
 
and 
 y on 
 
 d to- 
 sh op 
 nsclf. 
 smile 
 
 Irink- 
 . sold 
 jeans 
 lings, 
 jould 
 
 en 
 
 he 
 
 :e 
 
 ftgage- 
 id not 
 d to 
 a sail 
 some 
 d the 
 ly ran 
 lent re- 
 
 cro or 
 
 It and 
 oistinsf 
 
 r 
 
 d and 
 
 It had 
 
 kemen 
 
 
 16 
 
 (225) 
 
 -W il 
 
ilii! 
 
 226 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 hauled him up on the rear platform amid the laughter 
 and cheers of scores of passengers and residents of 
 Sing Sing. He wrung out his flannels, drew on his 
 doeskins and then calmly entered the car without a 
 word or a smile. 
 
 Only a Butter Churn. 
 
 Mr. Morosini, his partner in many deals, says : 
 " Mr. Gould could enjoy immensely anything funny or 
 ludicrous. We used to have a small window in the 
 office through which I would talk to some of the un- 
 important callers, and through which Mr. Gould would 
 also talk to people whom it was not necessary to 
 bring into the inner room. One day a man came to 
 the window and said : * I want to see Mr. Gould.' I 
 told him he could not see Mr. Gould unless he told 
 me what he wanted. He replied ' I have an invention 
 here, and there's millions to be made out of it.* Mr. 
 Gould was in the next room, and he said : * Morosini, 
 what is it the man wants ? ' and I told him, whereupon 
 he got up and came to the window to talk to the man. 
 
 *• When Mr. Gould appeared the man put his hand 
 under his coat as if to pull something out. I saw it 
 glisten, and thinking it was a blunderbuss, I dodged 
 down under the counter, and Mr. Gould, seeing me 
 go down, dropped down also. ' Shoot high, you son of 
 gun,' I yelled out. Then the man laughed and said 
 there was nothing tc fear, and he began to explain the 
 nature of his invention. We got up and looked at it, 
 and what do you think it was ? He had a sort of a 
 brass cylinder, and he said It was a patent portable 
 
 •I 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEV KING. 
 
 227 
 
 htef 
 s of 
 , his 
 tut a 
 
 says : 
 
 ny or 
 
 n the 
 
 le un- 
 
 would 
 
 iry to 
 
 me to 
 
 Id.' I 
 
 e told 
 
 ention 
 Mr. 
 rosini, 
 eupon 
 
 |e man. 
 s hand 
 saw it 
 Lodged 
 ng me 
 son of 
 d said 
 [ain the 
 :d at it, 
 ,rt of a 
 .ortable 
 
 churn. I said to the man when he had explained 
 what the thing- was : *I will give you thirty days in the 
 penitentiary,' and you ought to see him get out. It 
 would have done you good to see Mr. Gould laugh 
 over our dropping down behind the counter at the 
 sight of that portable churn." 
 
 Mr. Gould is said to have been cruising on a vessel 
 when a storm came up and an unusually rough sea 
 gave him a violent attack of mal de mer. Mr. Gould 
 was hanging over the rail, acknowledging at the same 
 time his own weakness and the mightiness of Nep- 
 tune, when a fellow voyager accosted him : — 
 
 "Sorry, Mr. Gould, to see you so ill." 
 
 Mr. Gould, without changing his position over the 
 rail, and not forgetting his duty when there is any 
 rumor out affecting his health, replied: — 
 
 " It's no such thing, sir, I'm perfectly well — excuse 
 me (here a tribute to Neptune). I haven't been so 
 well — excuse me (here another) — in a long time, as 
 I'm this winter — excuse me " (Still another and more 
 of the same). 
 
 It frequently happens that a very rich man finds 
 himself a long distance from his home without money 
 enough to pay his car fare. Mr. Gould had been in 
 this position after he became very rich, and he used to 
 laugh about it. But there was one occasion in his life 
 when all the money he had in the world was a ten cent 
 piece, and that was in his pocket. It was during his 
 early struggles, and to him the dime stood between 
 him and hunger. Before it became necessary for him 
 
228 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 I If 
 
 ■fhi 
 
 
 to spend it he " made a raise," to use his own expres- 
 sion, and he resolved never to part with the dime. He 
 never diM, but carried it in his pocket up to the hour 
 of his death. 
 
 $30,000 to Impersonate Gould. 
 
 Broker Sam Leopold, of No. 84 Broadway, for 
 several years was known as Gould's double, but after 
 a while he got tired of the distinction, and had his 
 beard cut to a point. During the campaign of 1884 
 he was offered 5^20,000 to impersonate Mr. Gould. 
 Conspiring brokers proposed that he sn\ear blood on 
 his face and roll on the sidewalk near the corner of 
 Broad and Wall streets. Confederates were to be on 
 hand to keep the crowd back till an ambulance ar- 
 rived, and to say at intervals: "That's Jay Gould; 
 he's fatally injured." 
 
 Further details of the plan were to have a carriage 
 near Chambers street hospital for the purpose of taking 
 "Mr. Gould" to his house. Of course, Leopold's re- 
 markably close resemblance to Gould would be suf- 
 ficient to make the scheme work well, especially as a 
 man was to have been posted at Irvington to telegraph 
 that the millionaire was in his country home. Then 
 the telegraph wires were to be "grounded " for a few 
 hours. The tremendous excitement would naturally 
 depress the Gould stocks, and, in sympathy, about 
 everything would go down with a rush. The schemers 
 were to take advantage of this by selling short, and 
 they expected to have at least from 10 to 2 o'clock in 
 
m 
 
 STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 229 
 
 )res- 
 
 He 
 
 hour 
 
 ', for 
 
 after 
 ,d his 
 
 1884 
 }ould. 
 lOcl on 
 ler of 
 
 be on 
 ice ar- 
 jould ; 
 
 irriage 
 taking 
 Id's re- 
 3e suf- 
 y as a 
 e^^raph 
 
 Then 
 r a few 
 itu rally 
 
 about 
 hemers 
 3rt, and 
 clock in 
 
 which to work this peculiarly daring manipulation of 
 the market. 
 
 Sam reluctantly declined the tempting offer. Al- 
 though he wanted the ^20,000 awfully bad, he feared 
 that he mi^ht be mobbed after the ^'^ii'ht was over, 
 and so the scheme fell through. Leopold knew Gould 
 very well, and they delighted to meet and look at each 
 other. It is related that whenever Sam discovered a 
 new gray hair in his whiskers he would hurry to Mr. 
 Gould only to find that the millionaire was also keeping 
 tab on his white hairs, and the two accounts tallied 
 exactly. 
 
 There are two other men in Wall street, either of 
 
 whom would be picked out by a stranger for Mr. 
 
 Gould as quickly as Mr. Gould himself. Both of these 
 
 men are curbstone brokers, and both are called Gould 
 
 by the people with whom they deal. It was the fact 
 
 of their looking like Mr. Gould that took them into 
 
 Wall street. 
 
 Guarded by the Police. 
 
 Few men in New York had closer confidential re- 
 lations with Jay Gould in recent years than those sus- 
 tained by Thomas Byrnes, the Superintendent of 
 Police. When Mr. Byrnes was Chief Inspector, in 
 charge of the Detective Bureau, he performed valuable 
 services for the millionaire in the line of police duty 
 and gained his lasting respect and friendship. The 
 advice of the police official was sought on several 
 occasions when Mr. Gould was beset by " cranks " and 
 by other strangers who tried to blackmail him or im- 
 
 lil! 
 
 i 'i 
 
 ; 1 
 1 
 
 4 
 
 1 ; . 
 
 1 ^ ; 
 
230 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 M 
 
 pose upon him by means of threatening letters or 
 
 appeals for fiiuincial aid. 
 
 Mr. Hynics was consulted also on other subjects of 
 importance, and he became a frc([uent visitor at Mr. 
 Gould's house. Superintendent Byrnes is said to 
 have made many thousands of dollars in stock specu- 
 lations in Wall street by following the advice of Mr. 
 Gould. He refused to talk about his relations with 
 the great financier, saying that they had been almost 
 wholly of a private nature. 
 
 All linportiuit Service, 
 
 One important service which Mr. Byrnes, as Chief 
 Inspector, gave to the millionaire was the capture of 
 Colonel J. Howard Wells. Wells was a broken-down 
 speculator, with good social relations, and he conceived 
 a plan to frighten Mr. Gould into aiding him to recover 
 the money which he had lost. He at first wrote 
 anonymous threatening letters to Mrs. Gould, thinking 
 that she would show them to her husband. 
 
 On October 15, 1881, he sent an anonymous letter 
 to Mr. Gould, beginning thus: "Sir: It is my painful 
 duty to inform you that within six days from the date 
 of this letter your body will have returned to the dust 
 from whence it came. I therefore entreat you to 
 make your peace with God and prepare for the fate 
 which awaits you." The letter further declared that 
 Mr. Gould's death would be painless, as he would be 
 shot throufjh the heart. " Victim " was the sicrnature 
 to the letter. 
 
 Mr. Byrnes was consulted by W. E. Connor, Mr, 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 231 
 
 or 
 
 5 of 
 
 Mr. 
 1 to 
 ecu- 
 Mr. 
 
 with 
 most 
 
 Zhief 
 
 :e of 
 
 down 
 
 leived 
 
 cover 
 
 wrote 
 
 liking 
 
 r, 
 
 Mr. 
 
 Gould's broker, and plans were laid to capture the 
 writer of the letter. With the consent of Mr. Gould 
 personal notices were published, requesting " Victim " 
 to write again and offering him assistance. Wells 
 wrote other letters asking Mr. Gould to assist him by 
 giving " tips " on stocks. lie insisted that the corre- 
 spondence on the part of Mr. Gould should be con- 
 ducted through personal notices, and he sent a cipher 
 code by which the directions, about buying or selling 
 stocks, could be conveyed in the notices without in- 
 forming the public. 
 
 Nicely Caught. 
 
 Later a number of notices giving the "tips" asked 
 for were published, and Wells continued to write letters. 
 It was ascertained that all of the letters were mailed 
 at street letter boxes in the district of Post-office 
 Station E. With the aid of Postmaster James, Mr. 
 Byrnes set a watch upon each of the letter boxes in 
 the district of Station E, on Sunday, November 13, 
 1881. 
 
 As soon as a letter was placed in a box a letter- 
 carrier went to the box and looked at the address of 
 the letter, while a detective kept watch of the person 
 who had deposited the letter, until a signal was given 
 by the carrier. At 3 p. m. Wells went to the box at 
 Seventh avenue and Thirty-fourth street and dropped 
 into it a letter addressed to Mr. Gould. He was 
 arrested by Detective-Sergeant Reilly as he was walk- 
 ing away. Finding himself fairly caught. Wells con- 
 fessed that his letters had been written to compel Mr. 
 
 
232 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Gould to give the "tips" on stocks. He, however, 
 expressed sorrow that he had not killed Mr. Gould 
 and then committed suicide, and his conduct as a 
 prisoner in the Tombs led to his commitment as an 
 insane person. 
 
 The correspondence which led to the capture of 
 Wells and the manipuLtion of the stock market 
 which was necessary to keep the correspondence 
 going, cost Mr. Gould a large sum of money, it was 
 said. Mr. B\'rnes's reputation as a detective was 
 increased by the arrest of Wells. 
 
 A Subject for Newspapers. 
 
 No man in the country had a wider audience than 
 
 Gould. Whatever he had to say was sure of publica- 
 tion in every newspaper in the land. Journals that 
 continually denounced him would print everything he 
 had to say as a matter of news. Gould was always 
 an interesting figure. The public never tired of read- 
 ing about him, his ope-'ations, his yacht, his home, his 
 daily life. Every word he uttered was eagerly re- 
 ported and his movements were watched as closely as 
 the President's. In his later years he was quite ac- 
 cessible to newspaper men, and they found him not 
 averse to the process of interviewing if he had any- 
 thing to say. 
 
 The Tribune and Siin were his favorite mediums of 
 communication widi the public, because they seldom 
 attacked and often defended .Gould. Indeed, they 
 were looked upon as his personal organs during a 
 part o^ his life. But Gould would frequendy give in- 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 233 
 
 
 ll'i 
 
 2ver, 
 ould 
 as a 
 IS an 
 
 re of 
 
 arket 
 ience 
 t was 
 : was 
 
 I than 
 jblica- 
 5 that 
 ng he 
 Iways 
 read- 
 lie, his 
 •ly re- 
 jcly as 
 te ac- 
 m not 
 any- 
 
 ims of 
 
 lelduni 
 
 I they 
 
 ring a 
 
 ive in- 
 
 terviews to other papers. He recognized the factthat 
 the papers which opposed him were of the widest cir- 
 culation and influence, and that if he had anything 
 to say it was time to give it to the largest circula- 
 tion. 
 
 A Good Talker. 
 
 The World was foremost in denouncing his opera- 
 tions, but he was often pleased to reach the public 
 through its columns, even if his words were accom- 
 panied with severe editorial criticism. Mr. Gould was 
 a good talker ; he possessed the art of saying little or 
 much, as he pleased. The most skilful interviewers 
 could not trap him into saying something which he 
 did not wish to say. When he got through he would 
 stop, and no amount of ingenuity could induce him to 
 continue. Mr. Gould was fond of testifying to the 
 honesty and good faith of newspaper men. When he 
 Knew his man he said he could trust him not to betray 
 him. But Gould almost invariably insisted on see- 
 ing the proof-sheets of the interview before pub- 
 lication. 
 
 When in Marseilles, France, in 1887, Gould was in- 
 terviewed by a correspondent. 
 
 " What do you think of railway comforts and prices 
 in France ?'' he was asked. 
 
 "Half a century behind America," was his reply. 
 "Take our journey down here. Twenty-one dollars 
 for a ticket and ^i i for a berth in a sleeping-car — 5^32 
 for a ride of 500 miles between the capital of France 
 and her principal seaport. I could not sleep a wink. 
 
 m 
 
 III 
 I 
 
 !( 
 
 ■fit! ■■ 
 
'I 
 
 ll 
 
 U JLt l 'J^J^Tft t U B 
 
 f-ttigligMlgga 
 
 234 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ) , I 
 
 hi i. 
 
 . !;. 
 
 '■ \ !( 
 
 ■M 
 
 The car was too hot. We could not get any one to 
 ventilate it, and the comfort of passengers was 
 the last thing uniformed officials on board seemed 
 to think of. 
 
 " We have got some things yet to learn from the 
 Old World," he added, further on, when speaking of 
 the splendid docks at Marseilles, "but in all essential 
 respects, in the form of government, of national char- 
 acter, resources and opportunities we have the great 
 country of the future, and the more I see of foreign 
 countries the better American I am." 
 
 Defence of Corporations. 
 
 Early in 1881 Gould gave the Zr<?rrt;/^ a four-column 
 
 interview which created great interest, for up to that 
 time Gould had not cared, apparently, much to culti- 
 vate friendly relations with the public. In this inter- 
 view he touched upon a great variety of subjects. 
 
 " Corporations," he said, " are going, we are told, to 
 destroy the country. But what would this country be 
 but for corporations? Who have developed it? Cor- 
 porations. Who transact the- most marvellous busi- 
 ness the world has ever seen ? Corporations." 
 Again : " My theory of investments is this : To go 
 into everything that promises profit. For me busi- 
 ness possesses a very great fascination. I believe in 
 this country, in its future. Unfortunately I do not 
 always succeed. I have been in a score, a hundred 
 speculations from which I would gladly have with- 
 drawn. 
 
 " But once in an enterprise it is very hard to leave it, 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 235 
 
 lid, to 
 y be 
 Cor- 
 busi- 
 )ns. 
 lo go 
 Ibusi- 
 ^e in 
 not 
 id red 
 iwith- 
 
 ive it, 
 
 We are all slaves, and the man who owns $1,000,000 
 is the greatest slave of all, except him who owns 
 j^2,ooo,ooo." Still again : " I am a mere passenger in 
 all my undertakings. I am interested not with one or 
 a dozen men, but with thousands. Any man to-day 
 can buy anything I have got." 
 
 " But you dictate the price ? " 
 
 "In other words, I control Wall street?" 
 
 "Yes." 
 
 " Nonsense ! No man can control Wall street. 
 Wall street is like the ocean. No man can govern it. 
 It is too vast. Wall street is full of eddies and cur- 
 rents. The thing to do is to watch them, to exercise 
 a little common sense, and on the wane of specula- 
 tion, or whatever you please to call it, to come in on 
 top." 
 
 " Do you read the newspapers much, Mr. Gould? " 
 
 " Oh yes." 
 
 " And see all the cartoons of you ? " 
 
 " Yes, some of them are very funny, and I enjoyed 
 them immensely. I suppose I am something of a 
 public character and that I must bear my contribution 
 to the fun of the time. I do not object to criticism, 
 provided it is only fair. Sometimes, however, I get, 
 as I think, some unfair knocks. I asked a certain 
 editor once why he abused me so. He replied that 
 there were only three or four men in the country 
 worth abusing, and that I was one of them. * Well,' 
 said I, *go ahead, but I hope you will change your 
 mind some day.' I am sorry to say he is of the same 
 
 ;( 
 
 1i 
 
 i 
 

 Ifii 
 
 i • i 
 
 
 li 
 
 ii'^^' 
 
 236 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 opinion still." " No man in this country, outside of 
 a lunatic asylum, whom I know, imagines for a moment 
 that he could control the press or mould the opinion 
 of this country." 
 
 Extracts innumerable could be given from his 
 interviews, but these give a fair idea of his ability as a 
 talker as well as reveal something of his personality. 
 
 Manager at $500 a Year. 
 
 A broker of Syracuse has in his possession artit 'es 
 of copartnership between himself and Jay Gould, the 
 instrument being in Gould's handwriting and dated 
 Feb. 22, 1859, before Gould was twenty-three years old. 
 
 The copartnership was to be in the running of a 
 tannery, near Fonda, Montgomery county. Jay Gould 
 was to be manager at $500 a year. A quick sale of the 
 tannery by Gould brought the partnership to naught. 
 
 The Courier, of Syracuse, relates an anecdote show- 
 inor Commodore Vanderbilt's estimate of Gould. 
 The Commodore happened to be in this city when 
 Gould obtained control of the Erie Railway. Being 
 asked his opinion of Gould the Commodore replied, 
 " He's the smartest man in America." 
 
 3Ir. Ooiild and Ertuoatioiial Affairs. 
 
 The Rev. Dr. Henry M. MacCracken, chancellor of 
 the University of the city of New York, was a per- 
 sonal friend of Mr. Gould. 
 
 "I knew Mr. Gould for several years," he said. 
 "My usual intercourse with him has been almost en- 
 tirely directed toward the discussion of either scien- 
 tific or educational topics, concerning both of which 
 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 237 
 
 he manifested a great deal of interest. In the first 
 conversation that ever occurred between us he dis- 
 cussed his connection with the telegraph. He took a 
 lively interest in the relation of the University with 
 the invention of the telegraph, which was first brought 
 to a practical result by Professor Morse in his room in 
 the University fifty-five years ago, the first public ex- 
 hibition taking place in the University building fifty- 
 five years ago next January. I think the relation of 
 the University with the invention of the telegraph had 
 the chief part to do in Mr. Gould's friendliness to the 
 University. Still, he manifested a broad interest in 
 public education, and had plans in his mind of an in- 
 teresting character, not relating to the university work, 
 but to work of a more elementary kind. He was of 
 such a quick, comprehensive, bright, mental constitu- 
 tion that he seemed to master with ease whatever new 
 outlines were presented to him in connection with the 
 scientific and educational progress of the day, and was 
 especially interested in conversation about his travels. 
 
 "When the University grounds were purchased up 
 town, Mr. Gould gave $25,000 towards increasing the 
 fund for the purchase of the property, and Dr. Mac- 
 Cracken also says the millionaire made a further con- 
 ditional subscription. 
 
 "Did he intimate or say that he would make further 
 provision for the University in his will?" the chancel- 
 lor was asked. 
 
 Dr. MacCracken's reply was to the effect that he 
 did not care to talk further about the subject. 
 
 ^m 
 
r«n 
 
 238 
 
 Hi 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 •'He made a further conditional subscription, and 
 that is all I care to say," he replied. 
 
 Help for a Poor Family. 
 
 " During the big strike troubles in the Missouri 
 Pacific," said one broker, " one of the employes who 
 stood by the company was shot and killed. I entered 
 Mr. Gould's office a few days later and found him 
 making out a check. As I approached the desk I saw 
 that the check was for $5000, drawn to the order of 
 the widow of the murdered man. Mr. Gould quickly 
 turned the paper face downward. 
 
 " ' You are too late, Mr. Gould,' I said. ' I uninten- 
 tionally read the check.* 
 
 "He smiled a little as he quietly remarked, 'We 
 must look out for those who stand by us.'" 
 
 " I saw a good deal of the Gould family," said the 
 
 same broker, " and had been more than once struck 
 
 by the spirit of affection which seemed to animate it. 
 
 One evening, when I had dined with Mr. Gould, I saw 
 
 his sons, then just entering into manhood, kiss their 
 
 father before they went out for the evening. It wasn't 
 
 much, perhaps, but it seemed to me decidedly out of 
 
 the ordinary." 
 
 Fiohl was the Step-father. 
 
 Mr. Gould used to be very fond of telling a story 
 about Cyrus Field and Prof. Morse, which, he would 
 relate, was told him by the inventor of the telegraph 
 himself. The story was to the effect that immediately 
 after the successful completion of the first transatlantic 
 cable and the consequent celebrations, in which, of 
 
and 
 
 30un 
 who 
 tered 
 . him 
 I saw 
 er of 
 aickly 
 
 inten- 
 
 'We 
 
 id the 
 truck 
 ate it. 
 I saw 
 their 
 vasn't 
 ut of 
 
 storv 
 Iwoiild 
 [graph 
 liately 
 tlantic 
 Ich, of 
 
 STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 239 
 
 course, Mr. Field bore a prominent part, Prof. Morse 
 had occasion to send a telegram from a small town in 
 Ohio to his home in New York. He wrote out his 
 
 FIFTH AVENUE, NEAR TWENTY-FIRST STREET, NEW YORK. 
 
 message, presented it to the operator, who rapidly 
 
 checked it off with his pencil and curtly demanded Ji. 
 
 "But," said the venerable inventor, "I never pay for 
 
 messages," and seeing an inquiring look in the opera- 
 
 ' t* 
 
 I ! 
 
 it 
 
 ill II 
 
'"•mm^mm 
 
 240 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 W'''^^:' 
 
 'I I' 
 
 tor's eyes, added: "I am, in fact, the father of the 
 telegraph." 
 
 "Then," said the operator, firmly convinced that he 
 was being imposed upon, " why don't you sign your 
 own name, Cyrus W. Field ? " 
 
 At this point Mr. Gould used to laugh and tell l\ow 
 gready humiliated Prof. Morse was when he told the 
 story in his presence. 
 
 "Now, Would be lia' Writ that Air Pass ? " 
 
 An old neighbor of the Goulds at Roxbury, Dela- 
 ware county, told a story about the millionaire's visit 
 to his old home in the midst of one of his busiest 
 financial seasons. 
 
 "Jay and I was always good friends," said the old 
 man, "w^hich is more'n I can say for him and most of 
 the other folks here. You see, old John Gould mar- 
 ried my sister for his second wife, and there was always 
 more or less of a family feeling between the Goulds 
 and us. Says I to Jay: ' Why don't you come and see 
 us once in a while? You're always goin' to get the 
 best we have, yo' know.* Jay said suthin' 'bout bein' 
 always hayin' season with him and couldn't spare the 
 time. There wasn't anythin* he'd like as much as to 
 visit up here, for he liked the old folks, he said. 
 
 "He asked me how I'd like to go down to York. I 
 said farming was not so good as it was and money w^as 
 mighty scarce. He said that was all right, 'n then he 
 fumbled around his pockets for something, but it was 
 not there. He explained that he thought he had his 
 book with him so that he could give me a pass for my- 
 
STORIKS ABOUT THE MONKV KING. 
 
 241 
 
 the 
 
 .t he 
 your 
 
 l\ow 
 d the 
 
 Dela- 
 s visit 
 >usiest 
 
 :he old 
 lost of 
 I mar- 
 always 
 oukls 
 nd see 
 et the 
 [it bein 
 re the 
 |h as to 
 
 [ork. 1 
 ley was 
 then he 
 it was 
 lad his 
 
 Ifor my- 
 
 self and my wife down to York ; but he must have 
 forgotten it and left it at home. H(; said he'd send 
 the pass to me, but if he sent it some other one must 
 have got it, for I never did. I was a-speakin' 'bout it 
 afterward down at the hotel, and the boys said it was 
 most likely Jay Gould never sent it. One thing-, any- 
 how, I'm certain of — that is, ef he had that air book 
 with him that time we met he'd a writ out that air 
 
 pass." 
 
 About the i:i<ler Gould. 
 
 The old man became enthusiastic in talking about 
 Mr. Gould, and said he always liked Jay better than 
 any other man in the village did. One day up at the 
 farm Jay's father told him iiot to take out a colt which 
 was in the barn. Jay thought that colt was aching for 
 a drive, and so, notwithstmdino^ the orders of his 
 father, just hitched up the colt. As a result the ani- 
 mal ran away and smashed things generally. The 
 colt was about ruined and young Jay did not dare to 
 ofo home. 
 
 "Jay came over to my house," said his old bene- 
 factor, "and orot me to iro over and break the news to 
 his father. The old man stormed around like mad, 
 and finally said : 
 
 " 'Let the devilish young cub come here if he dares. 
 I know what I'll do; I'll take his horse for the colt.' 
 
 "The storm blew over and Jay went back. The 
 
 old man appropriated Jay's horse, for he was a man 
 
 of his word. 
 
 "Another time, when Father Gould was keeping 
 16 
 
 Mi I 
 
 
 Hffi 
 
 i.-, 
 
 1 I 
 
^*«« 
 
 ^l 
 
 242 
 
 LIFE OF JAY (;OULD. 
 
 Store down in the village," continued the historian, 
 " the old man was coming down the steps and fell in 
 the cellar-way. H(; lay oroaning there w "n some 
 one happening to pass by heard him. This uian went 
 into the store and called Jay, who was busy counting 
 the cash. Jay brought a light and found his father 
 doubled up on the cellar steps. Would you believe 
 it, some folks was so full of pizen that they said over 
 at the tavern, that it was Jay that pushed his father 
 into the cellar." 
 
 Mr. Traver.s Had Some Fun Out of Mr. Gould. 
 
 William R. Travers, so celebrated as a wit, perpe- 
 trated a joke about Jay Gould that the old-time brokers 
 still remember. One day, although his office in the 
 street was filled with customers and friends, business 
 was dull and Mr. Travers strolled over to the window 
 and looked out. Of a sudden he yelled loudly and 
 excitedly : " C-come h-h-here, b-b-boys ! L-look, 
 1-look ! " 
 
 Every one rushed to the window, falling over each 
 other in their eager hurry. They looked and saw 
 nothing but Jay Gould on the opposite side of the 
 street, whispering in the ear of one of his brokers. 
 But that did not explain Travers's excitement. 
 
 " Well, what is it ? " everybody asked ; " what are 
 you raising such a deuce of a row about ? " 
 
 " L-look, 1-look," returned Travers ; " did-don't 
 y-you se-see ? There's Je-Jay Ge-Gould with h-his 
 h-hands in h-is o-o-own per-per-pockets." 
 
 ^ !«'■ 
 
ii 
 
 STOKIES ABOUT THE MONKY KING. 
 
 2l:^> 
 
 Drum, 
 ell in 
 some 
 \ went 
 anting 
 father 
 relieve 
 d over 
 father 
 
 aid. 
 
 perpe- 
 
 brokers 
 : in the 
 pusiness 
 window 
 dly and 
 L-look, 
 
 ter each 
 md saw 
 of the 
 )rokers. 
 
 /hat are 
 
 [id-don't 
 ith h-his 
 
 A Wall Street man once associated with Mr. Gould 
 
 told an interesting bit of history. " It was several 
 
 months, possibly a year ago," he said, " that Jay (iouUl 
 
 came to the conclusion that his life on diis earth was 
 
 about spanned. So he decided to set his household 
 
 to rights before the summons came. He took his 
 
 four boys into his study one night, and as a preface 
 
 told them the history of his life — of all the; hardships 
 
 and struggles of his youth up to the tim(; that he be- 
 
 cran to know men and to turn that knowledore to 
 
 profit. 
 
 To Perpetuate the House of Gould. 
 
 " He explained the method of his great railroad 
 o{:)erations, the keystone of which was to buy railroad 
 stocks, when the road was run down and the stock 
 was cheap. He would then d(^velop the road, boom 
 the stock and get out with a handsome profit. He 
 ijave illustrations of these methods and urired his sons 
 to follow in his footsteps, keep on building up the 
 great property that he would leave them and thus 
 maintain the name of Gould as a great power in the 
 financial world. He uroed them to emulate the ex- 
 ample of the Vanderbilts. 
 
 *' He told the boys," the Wall street man continued, 
 "the amount of his wealth, and that it would probably 
 be left in trust so as to obviate the necessity of making 
 a will. The boys listened to this story of the great 
 financier, whose fears were to be so soon realized, and 
 gave their promises to keep up the name and estate 
 of Gould, but I doubt if they will succeed, and I don't 
 
 «llii 
 
 I*: 
 
 'J; . 
 
 f 
 
M 
 
 244 
 
 LIFE OF JAY r.OUM). 
 
 
 think Jay Gould bad much faith in their power to do 
 so cither. 
 
 " But I would have liked to have heard that story 
 of Jay Gould's life. It would be better than a fairy 
 tale, and would maki! th(! fortune of any man." 
 
 ll<>\v ho Sjiw tlu' Sfliool-boys* Parade. 
 
 On the morning of the school children's parade, 
 during the Columbian celebration, Jay Gould watched 
 the procession from the little balcony on top of the 
 brownstone portico over the front steps of his resi- 
 dence. As everybody remembers. Fifth Avenue was 
 crowded as it never was before, and nowhere were 
 the thronors on the Avenue denser than between the 
 arch at Fifty-eighth street, and the grand stand at 
 the reservoir, between F'ortieth and Forty-second 
 streets. Every window in the Windsor Hotel and in 
 the private houses thereabouts was filhxl with specta- 
 tors, the sidewalks overflowed with them. The tem- 
 porary reviewing stands, erected with hospitable or 
 speculative purpose, were crowded when the second- 
 story window that opens unto Mr. Gould's little bal- 
 cony opened and he stepped out upon the top of 
 the portico. He was followed by his son, Howard. 
 
 It was a sunshiny, crisp morning. Jay Gould wore 
 a heavy overcoat and a derby hat that was pulled 
 down over his eyes to shield them from the glare. He 
 seated himself on the stone railing of the balcony so 
 that he could look north, up the Avenue. His hands 
 were stuck deep in his overcoat pockets, and his over- 
 coat collar was 'way up around his ears. 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 245 
 
 o c^o 
 
 story 
 lairy 
 
 arade, 
 Itched 
 of the 
 s resi- 
 le was 
 i were 
 en the 
 ;aiKl at 
 second 
 and in 
 specta- 
 le tem- 
 
 ble or 
 
 econd- 
 Itle bal- 
 
 top of 
 
 vard. 
 
 lid wore 
 pulled 
 
 re. He 
 
 cony so 
 
 hands 
 
 is over- 
 
 Before him spread file after file of rosy-cheeked, 
 bright-faced, well-dressi.'d boys, marching; with the 
 sturdiness of youth and the precision of veterans. 
 The sii^ht s('(;m(*d .to pleas(! Mr. (ioiild immensely. 
 He was very fond of children. I le doted on George's 
 children. I le smiled freciiKMitly and nodded to this 
 passing company or that that tickled his fancy, to at- 
 tract his son's att(.'ntion to it. Hut Mr. (jould kept 
 his hands in his pockets, as if he was cold. I le stayed 
 on t!i(^ balcony for thn^e-quarters of an hour. Then 
 a passing cloud obscurc^d the sun, the air grew chillier, 
 and lie went into the house through the window which 
 his son raised for him. 
 
 "Tlio !\I;»ii Who (iot a INHiitor." 
 
 Every friend and ac(piaiiuance of Ja)' (iould knew 
 the story of " the man who got n pointer." The story 
 was as follows : Gould was very seldom uncertain 
 or uncivil with his employees, and while he made no 
 promises, he was rather desirous to see those who 
 served him thrive and feel on ijood terms with the 
 world. Mr. Gould on one occasion told a faithful 
 man in his employment about some things he was 
 going to do. His object was to have the man apply 
 the information in his own way and get the benefit of 
 it. 
 
 Some time afterwards he asked this man if he had 
 bettered himself, as he had been shown the oppor- 
 tunity. The man said no, that he was afraid that if 
 he would act on the information it would seem like 
 usincr Mr. Gould's confidence to his own advantage. 
 
 il 
 
246 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 f! 
 
 m^^^' 
 
 Mr. Gould for the first time suspected his faithful 
 subordinate to be wanting in quality. 
 
 lliiiiioroiis Features of the Erie rij;lit. 
 
 G. P. Morosini, who for over eighteen years was 
 closely associated in business with iMr. Gould, was per- 
 haps as much grieved as any one over the financier's 
 death. Until very recently he and Mr. Gould had ad- 
 joining desks at No. 71 Broadway. Mr. Gould made 
 Mr. Morosini his confidant in many of his private as 
 well as business affairs, and no man was perhaps more 
 familiar than the latter with Mr. Gould's personal 
 characteristics. Seated in his office on one occasion, 
 Mr. Morosini pointed out the plain stained-wood 
 table and leather-bottomed chair which Mr. Gould was 
 accustomed to occupy. 
 
 "There sat a man," said Mr. Morosini, "who was 
 more misunderstood and more causelessly maiicrned 
 than any I have ever known. I was the auditor of 
 the Erie Company at the time Mr. Gould assumed 
 control, and I continued in that capacity until after 
 Gen John A. Dix became President of It in 1872. 
 Mr. Gould was brought into Erie in 1S6S by Col. Jim 
 Fisk. 
 
 " Mr. Gould became President of the company. 
 Immediately the road bounded into popularity. Its 
 stock increased in value and there were many who 
 becrq:ed for blocks but could not Qfct them. Amono 
 those who saw a great future for the road was Com- 
 modore Vanderbilt. He saw in it a j:)Owerfiil rival 
 to the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad 
 
:h. 
 
 STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 247 
 
 and determined if he could to gobble it up. He tried 
 at first to purchase a majority of its stock. He failed. 
 Then he declared a freiget war. 
 
 The Commodore Outwitted. 
 
 At the time cattle were brought from Buffalo to this 
 city at $125 a carload. The Commodore reduced the 
 rate to J^ioo. Fisk and Gould made a cut of $25 less. 
 The Commodore went to J550. Erie then offered to 
 bring catde here at $25 per carload, and when the 
 Erie put the rate still lower Vanderbilt issued an 
 order to bring cattle over the Central at $1 a carload. 
 The Commodore thought this would ruin thr Erie's 
 freight traffic. He waited to see what card Fisk and 
 Gould would next play. Just as he was congratulat- 
 ing himself that not a steer was being carried over the 
 Erie, while the Central was compelled to refuse busi- 
 ness, he discovered that as in previous contests he had 
 been outwitted. 
 
 Maddest Man in America. 
 
 "When the Commodore reduced the rate to j^i per 
 carload, Fisk and Gould purchased every cow and 
 steer to be had west of Buffalo. They shipped them, 
 not by the Erie, but by the Central, at the Commodore's 
 own rate. They had sold enough in the city to make 
 a fortune before Vanderbilt found out 'where he was 
 at.' 1 am told the air was very blue in Vanderbiltdom 
 when the Commodore learned how he had been 
 tricked. He swore revenge, but first put the rate back 
 on the transportation of catde." 
 
 Mr. Morosini laughed heartily while relating this 
 
 • 1 
 
 :lj<i 
 
 n ii 
 
 ;:!!' 
 
M))<Wi 
 
 .rxr:. 
 
 m 
 
 lit! 
 
 248 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 incident. Contlniiinof, he said: " Commodore Vander- 
 bilt still ached to get control of Erie, and he went to 
 buying up all the stock not held by Fisk and Gould. 
 Having partially succeeded he offered to relieve them 
 of their holdings. Fisk said, 'All right; we will give 
 you }Ji 1 0,000,000 worth.' The Colonel issued a lot of 
 stock, which, of course, was not worth the paper on 
 which it was printed. Vanderbilt bit and thought he 
 now possessed supreme power over Erie. When he 
 discovered that Fisk and Gould still held the majority 
 of legitimate stock in Erie, while his purchase at a big 
 price was worthless, the Commodore was the maddest 
 man in America. Then there were interminable suits, 
 interrupted by the killing of Fisk by Stokes. 
 
 *' I am not defending P^isk's trickery, but Vander- 
 bilt had to be fought with his own weapons or he 
 would have had a monopoly of all the railroads in the 
 
 State." 
 
 Young* Har<liiij4f*s Quick Promotion. 
 
 Jay Gould travelled every year in his private car 
 over the branches of his railroad systems in Kansas. 
 The Missouri Pacific is the largest of these Kansas 
 systems, and is under the superintendency of one 
 man, Russell Harding, of Wichita. Mr. Harding is 
 a young man, but he has been an especial favorite of 
 Mr. Gould. The latter, as often with young railroad 
 men to whom he took a likinLr, advanced Harding 
 rapidly. Harding was in a subordinate capacity upon 
 a little road in Southern Texas over which Mr. Gould 
 at one time passed. 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 249 
 
 li \U' 
 
 I ' 
 
 der- 
 it to 
 )uld. 
 ;hem 
 give 
 Dt of 
 ^r on 
 [\t he 
 cm he 
 jority 
 a big 
 iddest 
 ; suits, 
 
 ander- 
 or he 
 in the 
 
 ite car 
 [ansas. 
 "ansas 
 >f one 
 ling is 
 •ite of 
 lilroad 
 larding 
 upon 
 I Gould 
 
 Young Harding was alert and vigorous in clearing 
 the way, with meagre facilities for doing it, to let the 
 Gould train pass. The financier saw the situation 
 and remembered how cleverly the difficulty was solved. 
 He said nothing at the time, but Mr. Harding was as- 
 tonished a few weeks later to receive an offer from the 
 Missouri Pacific Railroad which quickly led him to its 
 superintendency. Since then Mr. Harding has always 
 been a passenger in Mr. Gould's car when travelling 
 over those lines. He had exceptional facilities for 
 observing him. 
 
 Mr. Harding was speaking one day of these ex- 
 periences. 
 
 A Close Observer, 
 
 •'I was continually surprised," he said, "at the exact 
 and technical knowledge which Mr. Gould had about 
 some of the most obscure conditions affcctinof the 
 branches over which I have charge. It was not so 
 much a knowledge of road-bed or construction, 
 althouofh he was observant of these thincrs even to 
 details, but it was of the subtler and broader condi- 
 tions which combined to affect the prosperity of com- 
 munities, their wants and necessities, and consequently 
 the prosperity of his railroads. He seemed to know 
 ad about every cross-road and way station, just what 
 kind of soil the locality had and the character of the 
 crops raised. He seemed to know not only what 
 branches ou^rht to be built but \vhere towns ou<'ht to 
 be placed. This question of locating towns in a new 
 
 Mi 
 
 
 f 
 
 |"i 
 
 II li^ 
 
 i- 
 
[■ii: 
 
 
 250 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 m. 
 
 mm 
 
 territory requires far-sighted knowledge as well as 
 observation. 
 
 How Ooiild Gatlicred Tiifoniiatioii. 
 
 " Citizens in little Kansas towns always knew when 
 Mr. Gould was coming through. Quite often commit- 
 tees of their boards of trade, which are simply organ- 
 izations to boom towns, came to Mr. Gould's car. 
 They were generally received. Of course, the spokes- 
 man liked to talk and laud his town, antl <.'vidently Mr. 
 Gould liked to hear him, for he would sit quietly, 
 rarely speaking, and his black eyes would twinkle with 
 interest. He was always asked to indicate what ex- 
 tensions mi<'ht be made, or what he thought of the 
 towm, but his answ^er, which was apparently satisfying, 
 did nothing but draw out the speaker a little more. 
 None of the information was lost on Mr. Gould. He 
 seemed to weigh it all and treasure up all that was 
 valuable. This personal contact with this class of men 
 he seemed to like, but in the larger places, of which 
 he could gain knowledge in other ways, interviews 
 with him were hard to i^fet. 
 
 " There was always curiosity to see Mr. Gould when 
 the car stopped. There seemed to be a universal 
 impression that he was big and imposing in appear- 
 ance. So when he would step off the forw^ard end of 
 the baorcraore-car he was seldom recoo-nized. Occasion- 
 ally, at a way station on the prairie, where there was 
 a store or two and half a dozen farmers standincj 
 around, we would stop a few minutes to allow a train 
 to pass. Mr. Gould would occasionally chat with a 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 251 
 
 .1 ' 
 
 11 as 
 
 when 
 
 miTiit- 
 
 )roan- 
 
 s car. 
 
 pokcs- 
 
 ;ly Mr. 
 
 quietly, 
 
 le with 
 
 hat ex- 
 of the 
 
 :isfying, 
 
 p more. 
 
 d. He 
 -lat was 
 of men 
 f which 
 ;erviews 
 
 lid when 
 [niversal 
 appear- 
 end of 
 ►ccasion- 
 lere was 
 standing 
 a train 
 It with a 
 
 farmer aboui. tht; crops of the county. Fhe rustic, in 
 ignorance of his identity, wouKl talk ghbly, while he 
 woiikl have been dumb with embarrassment if he had 
 known he was speaking to Jay Gould. It was often 
 amusing to watch these incidents. 
 
 " StiU'k Up? " N«)t a bit of it. 
 
 "I remember once a stop in Butler county. The 
 
 afternoon was awfully hot, but as that always-present 
 breeze was blowing over the prairie, Mr. Gould 
 stepped out for some air. He stood in the shade at 
 one end of the depot talking w* h an old farmer. The 
 farmer looked longingly at the private car and finally 
 said to Mr. Gould: 
 
 '"Be you ridin' in that car?' 
 
 " ' Yes,' replied Mr. Gould. 
 
 " * Course you see Jay Gould, then ? ' 
 
 " ' Yes, sometimes.' 
 
 " ' I s'pose he keeps purty select and don't mix much. 
 What kind of a lookin' feller is he?' 
 
 *' Mr. Gould evasively inquired if his questioner 
 had not seen Jay Gould, as he had been through there 
 several times. 
 
 " ' No, I never seen him,' continued the farmer. 'But 
 I'd just like to. D'ye s'pose he'd give a feller a 
 chance to speak to him ? Ain't he stuck up ? ' 
 
 "The anxious man was assured that Mr. Gould 
 often talked to citizens alom^ his road. 
 
 "'Can't yer fix it fer me ?' earnestly inquired the 
 man. 
 
 Mr. Gould smiled a little at this, but he did not have 
 
 I ' 
 
 ^ ' lis 
 
 ■ # 
 
 M': ,! 
 
 Im t 
 
 ^ 4h 
 
 Ml 
 
 ■ I i 
 I '• 
 
 4 1 
 
■WW 
 
 252 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 lilil 
 
 ^iiiswi 
 
 mm 
 
 the disposition to carry out the joke and reveal him- 
 self. Our train was ready to leave, and he excused 
 himself and stepped on the platform. He shook 
 hands with his new acquaintance. 
 
 "The station aoent knew Mr. Gould, and as soon 
 as the train moved he told the man to whom he had 
 been talking. Mr. Gould disappeared in the car with 
 just a faint smile on his face. I watched the station. 
 I never saw a more dumfounded man than that far- 
 mer. He stepped into the centre of the track, and 
 with both hands in his pockets, legs spread apart, 
 mouth open, and hat on the back of his head, he gazed 
 in amazement at the departing train. 
 
 '* The station airent afterwards told me that for miles 
 around that man's talk with Jay Gould was a house- 
 hold story." 
 
 Ja.son ami ho Foiiiicl the Golden Fleece. 
 
 Jay Gould was one of several prominent men not 
 known to the public by their real names. His Chris- 
 tian name was really Jason Gould. He dropped the 
 Jason and took up Jay because it was more euphonious. 
 In this manner Grover Cleveland dropped his first 
 name, wdiich was Stephen, and Whitelaw Reid dropped 
 his, which was James. 
 
 Did not Love to Sit Before the Camera. 
 
 The announcement made that Jay Gould would sit 
 for his portrait in oil to the French artist, Benjamin 
 Constant, created considerable surprise among Wall 
 street mem who knew somethincr of Gould's charac- 
 teristics and his disinclination to have his features re- 
 
him- 
 :used 
 ,hook 
 
 soon 
 e had 
 r with 
 tation. 
 at far- 
 k, and 
 
 apart, 
 ; crazed 
 
 »r miles 
 house- 
 
 len not 
 Chris- 
 be d the 
 lonious. 
 Ills first 
 iropped 
 
 >uld sit 
 
 tnjamin 
 
 icr Wall 
 
 charac- 
 
 ires re- 
 
 STOI'IES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 253 
 
 produced. It was only recently that his family were 
 able to induce him to sit for a photograj^h, and the 
 photographer he patronized was in the immediate 
 neighborhood of the Grand Central Depot, and was 
 selected because that location represented less loss of 
 time than any other in the city. The result was very 
 satisfactory, and the photographer obtained IMr. 
 Gould's permission to put the photographs on sale. 
 
 A few years ago there was no such thing as a pho- 
 tograph of Mr. Gould, at least as New York knew 
 him, in existence. Some of his associates wanted his 
 picture to put on a telegraph bond, and he would give 
 them no assistance whatever. In fact he good-natur- 
 edly opposed the idea, and they were as good-natur- 
 edly intent on carrying it out. Finally a photograph 
 of Mr. Gould w^as secured, showing him a very young 
 man with a llowine tie and an old-fashioned coat. An 
 artist got to w^ork on this, and it was fixed up in shape 
 so that it could be used. There was a picture of Mr. 
 Gould extant which shows him with an abundance of 
 curly black hair and a very large quantity of black 
 beard. This was contained in a flashy volume on New 
 York life and New York men, which was printed for 
 country sale and circulation. 
 
 A 3Ioclel Youii}^- Man. 
 
 James H. Woolhiser, wdio worked with Jay Gould 
 in the general store in Roxbury, Delaware county, 
 N. Y., tells an interesting story of the great financier's 
 life in the town where both were born. Mr. Wool- 
 
 P 
 
 i 
 
 ^f 
 
 
 mm^' 
 
 
 f 
 
 I :! 
 
 i.|i' 
 
 I ' 
 
 ! M 
 
 
v\ 
 
 
 i 
 
 n '! I 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 254 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 hiser lived there until a few years ago, when he moved 
 to Brooklyn. 
 
 "Jay Gould," said Mr. Woolhiser, "worked on his 
 father's farm, which was about six miles out of town. 
 He tend(!d cattle. I first heard of him when he 
 start(xl to go to the Roxbury High School. He 
 walked from his home to the school and back again 
 every day. His desire to c'cquire a good education 
 was die talk of the to\ rirjd in this way I first heard 
 of him. He was pointe. out lo me by my father as a 
 model young man. He made out few friends among 
 his schoolmates, evidently preferring to be by himself. 
 
 "When I was sixteen years old," continued Mr. 
 Woolhiser, " I went to work in the store of J. E. 
 Burnham. You could buy almost everything from a 
 postage stamp to a mowing-machine in that store. I 
 had been workinof there but a short time when one 
 fine morning I was surprised to see young Gould 
 enter the store and ask ]\Ir. Burnham for a position. 
 He was hired at a salary of j^5 per week. 
 
 " The following Monday morning he went to work as 
 a clerk and assistant book-keeper. He did all kinds 
 of work. Upon several occasions I have seen him 
 sweep the floor of the old store. He worked hard 
 and, although always very pleasant, was never very 
 talkative. During the leisure time of the day he 
 would grab a book and begin to study. For a long 
 time after he had been employed he would leave the 
 store as soon as the day's work was finished and 
 walk home. 
 
oved 
 
 n his 
 
 town. 
 
 ;n he 
 
 He 
 
 again 
 cation 
 heard 
 -r as a 
 imoni; 
 limselt. 
 ^d Mr. 
 f ]. E. 
 from a 
 ore. 1 
 en one 
 Gould 
 osition. 
 
 rork as 
 11 kinds 
 len him 
 Id hard 
 
 :r very 
 iday he 
 |- a long 
 
 lave the. 
 
 ed and 
 
 STOlilES ABOUT TUE MONFA' KING. 
 
 255 
 
 •'As time moved on, however, he became more 
 friendly and in the evenings after the work was done 
 he would sit with us around the stove. Those were 
 happy days. We would take turns at tc^lling stories. 
 We would also eat hard-boiled egrurs, which we cooked 
 ourselves, and drink cider. Jay was not at all back- 
 ward in telling stories when it came to his turn, and 
 could drink and eat as much as any of us. His ab- 
 stracted air at times led me to the impression that he 
 had somcdiing on his mind, and one day I asked him 
 if he had any trouble. He laughed at me. 
 
 What was on Yoniiy Gould's Mind. 
 
 "I remember quite well an incident that liappened 
 
 in the store one day while Jay was waiting upon a 
 customer and that settled in my mind wha was troub- 
 linof him. He was servincr a reerular customer when 
 he suddenly stopped while in the act of wrapping up 
 a bundle and said : ' I don't think it is any trouble to 
 become a millionaire if one sets out to make himself 
 one.' The man addressed laughed and said that he 
 had set out to become* a millionaire, but saw no hopes 
 of ever arriving at the mark. Gould did not reply, 
 and the man went out saying that he would wait 
 patiently for Gould to become a millionaire. 
 
 " Often after that we chaffed Gould about his state- 
 ment and asked him what his plans were for becom- 
 ino- rich. 
 
 "'Why,' replied Gould, 'it's as easy as can be. 
 Work hard and don't be foolish. When you get a 
 little money put it where it will double itself. Keep 
 
 f 
 
 1 1 
 
 ■1' 
 
 ■ I A-i\ 
 
.^■.f^«>4. iJi>.^i JJUiim ' ■.. .wiiK 
 
 ^56 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 ■ ■ * 
 
 1 
 
 i 
 
 i 
 
 1 
 
 
 LEHLIK M 
 
 Is 
 
 i 
 
 doubling all your money and the result will be satis- 
 factory.' 
 
 Bi 
 
 had 
 
 l1 Ml 
 
 tt 
 
 iurnnam naci a pretty daughter namc^ci iviaria, 
 continued Mr. Woolhiser, "and Gould had been work- 
 ing in the store but a short time when he bicame very 
 attentive to her. She was a pretty blonde and all the 
 boys of the town fairly worshiped her, and when it 
 became generally known that (iould was calling 
 steadily on her he was envied by all the young fellows. 
 He attended a party with her one night, and barely 
 escaped getting mto a fight with one of Miss Burn- 
 ham's admirers." 
 
 Old Kiiivt's for New. 
 
 To show Mr. Gould's shrewd business tact Mr. 
 Woolhiser said : 
 
 *' Jay proved himself a sharp business boy. He had 
 a habit of getting old pocket knives, much the worse 
 for wear, and going to a person whom he knew to 
 own a fairly good knife he would say, ' I'll swap knives 
 •' unsight, unseen" with you.' If the man or lad did 
 not know Gould he would trade and in nine cases out 
 of ten would cret much the worst of the baro^ain. 
 
 "Gould had been working in the store about two 
 years when Burnham was elected to thit Legislature, 
 and Jay was left in charge of the store;. While in 
 Albany Burnham received a letter from a man in 
 Margaretville telling him that some property in the 
 latter place could be bought at a bargain. In some 
 unaccountable way Gould learned of the bargain and 
 bought the property himself without telling his em- 
 
satis- 
 
 tt 
 
 ana, 
 .vork- 
 i very 
 ill the 
 un it 
 •allini^ 
 :llo\vs. 
 barc^ly 
 Burn- 
 
 t Mr. 
 
 e had 
 worse 
 lew to 
 [knives 
 lad did 
 les out 
 
 kit two 
 llature, 
 hik in 
 man in 
 
 in the 
 
 some 
 
 lin and 
 
 [is em- 
 
 STORIES ABOUT TIIK MONKV KING. 
 
 257 
 
 ployer a word about it. He made the purchase while 
 Burnham was neijotiatincr for it. 
 
 "The day that Burnham arrived in Roxbury Jay left 
 the store, saying that he was going fishing, I Ic \v(.:nt 
 direct to Maroaretville and bought the tract of land 
 a couple of hours before his employer arrived at the 
 place. When Burnham learned of Jay's act he became 
 angry, and driving back to his store dischargctl him 
 with but few words. To cap the climax, IMaria Puirn- 
 ham entered the store just as Jay was about to leave 
 and told him never to call upon or speak to her again. 
 That was the beorinninix of his business career, and 
 the end of his first love affair. 
 
 At Once Enjiiiioor anil Cowboy. 
 
 "Jay knocked about Roxbury for some time after 
 his discharge, and then took up surveying, of which 
 he had learned a little. In a few months he had sur- 
 veyed and made a map of Delaware county and wrote 
 a history of the anti-rent wars. Both the map and 
 history sold well. Buoyed up by the success of his 
 work Jay next published a map and history of Ulster 
 county. He next engaged in the cattle raising indus- 
 try, and to save the expense of help he would drive 
 his cattle to the market, a distance of sixty miles. 
 He kept at this for some time and then secured a po- 
 sition with an engineer to survey the Adirondack 
 Mountains. While in these mountains he met Col. 
 Pratt, with whom he afterwards went into partner- 
 ship." 
 17 
 
 i' .i 
 
 .11' 
 
 
 .1 i 
 
 i; 
 
 U I 
 
m 
 
 
 258 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 From that time Mr. Woolhiscr saw nothinof more 
 of Jay Gould until he moved to Brooklyn. 
 
 "At one time," said Mr. Woolhiser, "while Gould 
 was still in the employ of Burnham he fell sick. My 
 father, who was a general nurse and something of a 
 doctor, attended him and brouorht him around all ri<>ht. 
 Not long after he recovered he met my father and 
 said: *You saved my life, and if at any time you arc 
 in need and I can help you, I shall do so with pleas- 
 ure.' Fortune has not smiled on my poor old father 
 of late, and being in absolute need he wrote to Mr. 
 Gould, telling him of his condition and asking for 
 help. No reply was ever received. I think that our 
 letters never reached Mr. Gould or he would surely 
 have helped us. I wrote to him only a few days ago 
 for the fourth or fifth time. Gould was always a good 
 boy, and for a while we slept together in the same bed 
 in the old store in Roxbury. Jay never missed saying 
 his nightly prayers before retiring." 
 
 Mr. Gould Objected to the "Pooh" 
 
 Jay Gould was a frequent patron of the Turkish 
 baths. For a long while he went, three or four times 
 a week, to a well-equipped establishment near his 
 residence. It was his custom to give the man who 
 attended him a personal fee of $2. There were half 
 a dozen male attendants in this particular establish- 
 ment, and they agreed among themselves to take 
 turns in waiting upon Mr. Gould in order that each 
 man might have an equal chance to get the J2 fee. 
 
 This arrangement worked smoothly enough until 
 
STORIES ABOUT TIIK MoN'EV KIXG. 
 
 2:)l» 
 
 or more 
 
 e GoiiUl 
 :k. Uy 
 ling of a 
 all right, 
 iher and 
 t you are 
 ith pleas- 
 3ld father 
 )te to Mr. 
 sking for 
 [a that our 
 uld surely 
 days ago 
 ys a good 
 same bed 
 sed saying 
 
 |ie Turkish 
 four times 
 |t near his 
 man who 
 were half 
 Ir establish- 
 les to take 
 Ir that each 
 $2 fee. 
 ough until 
 
 one day Mr. Gould appeared at th(! baths earlic^r than 
 usual. The man whose turn it was to attend to him 
 was just then busy with another customer. Hut Mr. 
 Gould was not allowed to wait. The attend int who 
 was to have treated him at the next visit stepped for- 
 ward, and soon the prime factor of Wall street was 
 undergoing a vigorous scrubbing. 
 
 In the mean time the man who was entided to this 
 "turn" on Mr. Gould finished his other job and pro- 
 ceeded to claim possession of Mr. Gould's recumbent 
 figure. His demand was refused and a quarrel en- 
 sued. The two were about to come to blows whcm 
 Mr. Gould indignantly remonstrated against their 
 making such a scene in his presence. Ibj declared 
 emphatically that he would have nothing more to do 
 with either of them, and, furthermore, in order to 
 break up their combination, he said that he would dis- 
 continue the practice of giving each man $2. 
 
 " Hereafter," said Mr. Gould, " I will not give more 
 than ^i to an attendant at any one time, and unless 
 the attendance is perfectly satisfactory I will not give 
 as much as that." 
 
 Mr. Gould continued his visits to this same estab- 
 lishment. The same attendants were there, and they 
 steamed and scrubbed him with all the skill and tact 
 they could mi ster, trying to win him back to the ^2 
 idea. 
 
 "Always Keep Up Your Credit.'* 
 
 A favorite general officer of one of Gould's West- 
 
 
 I 
 
 '1, 
 
 ,41 
 
 1 ' 
 
— i-«»nr-^ 
 
 2G0 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 crn railroads was called to New York a few years ago 
 and jumped on by the financier thus: 
 
 "They tell me you are broke and don't pay your 
 debts. What is the matter?" 
 
 The officer sputtered and stammered: 
 
 "It costs me a great deal to live," he replied. "My 
 family is large, rents are high, and doctors' bills have 
 been considerable, but things are not so bad as you 
 seem to think." 
 
 "I'll see," said Gould, handing out a check for Jjiooo. 
 "Take this over to Connor and tell him to put it in 
 the market as he sees fit. Come back here when he 
 tells you to." 
 
 The man obeyed. It was an exciting day in Wa- 
 bash, and he returned to Gould with Ji6ooo. 
 
 " So you've been speculating," exclaimed Gould. 
 " Don't do it again. That's what ails you fellows who 
 don't know wliat you are about. You better go home 
 now." 
 
 The fortunate speculator bade Gould good-by with 
 profuse tlianks and started. 
 
 "Haven't you forgotten something?" called Gould. 
 
 " I don't know." 
 
 "Where's that ^^ooo I lent you this morning? It 
 seems to be true that you don't pay your debts. Re- 
 member, my bo}', the essential thing in business is to 
 keep u{) your credit." 
 
 The embarrassed officer paid the j^iooo, and it has 
 never been necessary to dun him for anything since. 
 
;ars ago 
 ,ay your 
 
 i "My 
 
 lills have 
 d as you 
 
 3r $1000. 
 put it in 
 when he 
 
 ly in Wa- 
 
 d Gould. 
 
 lows who 
 
 cro home 
 
 )d-by with 
 led Gould. 
 
 •ning ? It 
 ibis. R^- 
 liness is to 
 
 and it has 
 Insf since. 
 
 STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 261 
 
 Silent he Was and Almost Invisible, Too. 
 
 One of the most striking peculiarities of Mr. Gould's 
 daily life was his remarkable ability to avoid personal 
 observation. At least 200 days of each year were 
 spent in whole or in part in his office in the Western 
 Union Buildinf^-. He went in and out without makinof 
 any apparent effort to keep from being seen, his face 
 was perfectly familiar to everybody in New York, and 
 yet among the thousand or more persons who were 
 employed in and about the Western Union Building, 
 and whose duties called them there every day in the 
 year, more than 90 per cent, of them never saw Mr. 
 Gould In their lives. 
 
 if seen at any time by one of the little knots of tele- 
 graph operators who always gathered about the door 
 of the bio^ buildinnr the fact created as much of a stir 
 as if they had just caught a glimpse of the Czar of 
 Russia or the wild man of Borneo. 
 
 Out of the hundreds of thousands of theatre-eoers 
 in New York city few remember ever having seen 
 him at a place of amusement, and this was not because 
 he did not go often, but from his ability to keep from 
 attracting observation, coupled with the other fact that 
 there were so many men who resembled him that a 
 man was never quite certain whether he was looking 
 at Mr. Gould or one of his many doubles. 
 
 How he Hid his llhiess. 
 
 Jay Gould's battle against disease and death was 
 in every way characteristic of the man. Secretive in 
 all his business relations, he was consistendy so about 
 
 I li 
 
 11 
 
 •11 
 
 I I 
 
262 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 his health. He had been seriously 111 for a long 
 time, but he kept his trouble sedulously to him- 
 self. 
 
 For several years occasional reports were circulated 
 that the marvellous juggler in stocks was extremely 
 ill, and in each instance they were denied. In the last 
 two years these reports gained more credence, chiefly 
 from the fact that Mr. Gould was seen less and less in 
 public. It was generally suspected that his health 
 was poor, but as he never complained to even his 
 most intimate friends there was no way of ascertaining 
 
 the facts. 
 
 Insidious Disoasip. 
 
 The fact that he had hemorrhages was published 
 almost periodically and was admitted, but they were 
 ascribed to the stomach or throat. Mr. Gould knew 
 then that he had consumption. He had confided to 
 his physician that early in life he had had a severe at- 
 tack of pneumonia. He did not think he had entirely 
 recovered, and twino^es in the luncrs reminded him 
 that they were affected. Still he would never give in. 
 His long sea voyages in Southern waters on his 
 palatial yacht, the Atalanta, were taken with a view 
 to building up his constitution and strengthening his 
 lungs. 
 
 It was no use. The insidious disease had obtained 
 a firm hold and it was ineradicable. Latterly he was 
 unable to stand the sea breezes, and his tours on the 
 Atalanta had to be abandoned. From that time he 
 
 iff 
 
STORIES ABOUT THE MONEY KING. 
 
 1G3 
 
 practically engaged the exclusive attendance of Dr. 
 John P. Munn. 
 
 *• Consumption's ghastly form " was ever present 
 with him. In his palace car with no one but his phy- 
 sician, enjoying the balmy air of Florida or the ozone 
 of Colorado and New Mexico, the spectre of a wasting 
 disease attended him. He was told that his life 
 could be prolonged by a residence in the pure air of 
 New Mexico, but he would not live there. Continued 
 residence in the city, especially in the spring, he was 
 told, was practically suicidal, and he conformed to 
 his physician's injunctions by leaving there in the 
 
 spring. 
 
 Would Not Tiiaurc Ills Life. 
 
 AlthoufTh he looked to be a man of solemn thoughts, 
 he was not gloomy, and he took a cheerful view of the 
 future even with the cankerous crerms o^nawinof at his 
 vitals. He could not leave his immense interests 
 centred in New York even to insure a longer lease 
 of life. In this connection it may be pertinent to say 
 that Jay Gould never took out an insurance policy 
 upon his life. Perhaps he might have feared publicity 
 in regard to his condition, or he may have believed 
 himself liable to rejection, an affront his nature 
 would not permit him to court. An almost lifelong 
 friend is authority for the statement that Jay Gould 
 would never entertain a proposition to insure his 
 life. 
 
 When Dr. Munn became attached to him as his 
 personal physician in continuous attendance Mr, 
 
 H' 
 
 n 
 
 I 
 
t 
 
 ! I 
 
 264 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Gould was still able io cloud his real condition from 
 the world. Possibly tne immediate members of his 
 famil ,\'jre acquainted with the truth, or they sur- 
 mised it. In either case they kept their knowledge 
 to themselves. They inherited their father's secre- 
 tiveness. 
 
 An example of this was related by Dr. Norvin 
 Green, President of the Western Union Telegraph 
 Company. 
 
 " ]\Ir. Gould was in die habit of attending the -meet- 
 ings of the directors, and when he was in the city and 
 feeling well he always came down to the office. I 
 knew that he was ill by his failure to come down, and 
 though I saw George every day he gave no hint of 
 his father's condition. In answer to inquiries he 
 would merely say that his father was not feeling well. 
 On Wednesday, the day before Mr. Gould's death, 
 George came down and said, ' P^uher is very ill.' " 
 
 Even to his intimate friends, and the business as- 
 sociates who were his lieutenants, h ' /ould never 
 admit th(.' nature of his illness, or even refer to his 
 bein^r sick. The last time he was down-town to at- 
 tend to business was a few days before his death. It 
 was a meeting of the directors of Union Pacific which 
 brought him down, and at its close he returned 
 home. 
 
 " I L, Moked well then," said ex-Judge John F. Dil- 
 lon. " I next saw him at his house, when I stopped in 
 on my v. ay d'.>wn-town. He was sitting In his library, 
 
\\0l 
 
 STOUIKS ABOUT THE MONEY KIXG. 
 
 265 
 
 (rem 
 
 of his 
 
 V sur- 
 
 vledge 
 
 secre- 
 
 Morvin 
 egraph 
 
 2 'neet- 
 :ity and 
 rficc. I 
 wn, and 
 him of 
 ries he 
 ntr well, 
 death, 
 
 ill;." 
 
 hcss as- 
 1 never 
 \\- to his 
 li to at- 
 ;ath. It 
 lie which 
 •cturned 
 
 F. Dil- 
 
 »pped in 
 
 library, 
 
 ana I thought he was looking reasonably well. I re 
 marked to him then ^hat though I was an older man 
 than he I never felt any iHness or inconvenience ex- 
 cept pain in the bottom of my feet when I walked 
 much. I couldn't explain this, as I had never had 
 rheumatism or gout. 
 
 " Mr. Gould smiled and replied : ' Well, 1 am only 
 bothered by a little sciatica, I think. That troubles 
 me sometimes.' As he said this he rubbed his legs 
 and hips, repeating the word sciatica. Three days 
 afterwards, when 1 called again, he was confined to his 
 bed, and I don't think he ever got up again." 
 
 To the man who was attending to his law business, 
 the man who probably drew his will, Mr. Gould would 
 not confide the nature of his illness nor even say how 
 sick he was. He guarded his secret as jealously as 
 he had guarded his plans for the coups which netted 
 him so much wealth and notoriety. 
 
 Woiidorl'iil Nervo. 
 
 It is said by one who knows that for months and 
 months Mr. Gould would never leave his house and 
 the privacy of his own room until he had conquered 
 his daily fit of cougliing in uhe morning. Like all 
 consumptives, this coughing came on at night and 
 in the morning. Dr. Munn did what he could to stop 
 it, and when assured of a couple of hours or more of 
 relief the financier would go down to business. His 
 doctor would go with him, though, to watch for any 
 premonitory symptoms of weakness or a return of the 
 cough. Dr. Munn invariably carried the necessary 
 
!i 
 
 266 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 medicines with him to allay the cough and strengthen 
 his patient. 
 
 Never at one of these meetings did Mr. Gould utter 
 a syllable about his piiysical condition, nor did he be- 
 tray himself in any other way. With wonderful nerve 
 and will power he sat among his associates cloaking 
 with imperturbability the pain he must have been en- 
 during. He had schooled himself so well that, tor- 
 tured as he might have been, no twitch in his face or 
 nervous motion indicated to others that he was suf- 
 fering. 
 
 Some of those who sat with him in these meetings 
 might have wished for a sign upon which they could 
 predicate the near approach of the inevitable. They 
 knew he was somewhat hoarse, but it was seldom that 
 they heard him cough. No sooner would a fit of 
 coughing appear to be imminent than th" consumptive 
 would hurry to the seclusion of his home. 
 
 It was by these precautionary and heroic measures 
 that lav Gould kept from the public the intelliorence 
 
 that he was dying. Ev :.i when he took to his death- 
 bed the family and tliose in authority to speak for him 
 denied that he was seriously ill. It was not until the 
 evening of the day before he died that the admission 
 was made of his criticril condition. 
 
 He kept his stcret from the world as long as he 
 had strength and consviOu;.mess. 
 
^»^' 
 
 {!l 
 
 CHAPTER XVII. 
 
 Remarkable Characteristics of the Wall Street 
 
 Napoleon. 
 
 G. P. MoROSiNi was associated with Mr. Gould for 
 a longer period, and perhaps more continuously and 
 in some respects more intimately, than any other man 
 in New York. Mr. Gould first met Mr. Morosini in 
 the Erie railway service when the former entered 
 upon his famous career in connection with the affairs 
 of that corporation in the year 1867. Mr. Morosini 
 was at that time chief clerk in the auditor's office, 
 and the manner in which he found his way originally 
 into the service of the company illustrates the influence 
 of circumstance over the destinies of individuals. 
 
 In the year 1855 Morosini was an Italian sailor, 
 temporarily living in New York. He was a youth of 
 splendid build, great muscular strength and a courage 
 corresponding with both. One day while walking 
 along the streets his attention was attracted to a group 
 near the curbstone in which there were signs of an 
 excitingr strugforle. He hastened to the scene, and 
 there saw a crowd of a dozen or more boys against 
 whom one boy was defending himself, but who was 
 being rapidly overpowered by the numbers against 
 which he was contending. 
 
 SI 
 
 m 
 
 1 
 
 ' «^(' 
 
 I v\ 
 
i^m 
 
 % 
 
 268 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Morosini, taking the situation in at a glance, forced 
 his tall fhnire throuirh the crowd, to the side of the 
 boy, n'ho had already been knocked to the ground. 
 Immediately the entire pack of young contestants 
 turned upon Morosini, who, in obedience to native 
 and professional instincts, drew forth a large knife, 
 and holding it conspicuously in front of him drove 
 back his assailants and rescued the prostrate boy at 
 his feet. Helping him to rise, at the lad's solicitation 
 Morosini accompanied him home, followed a part of 
 the way by the yelling mob of youngsters. Seeing 
 his young charge safely landed under his father's roof 
 the sailor youth went his way. 
 
 The Italian KcwardcMl. 
 
 About a week later he had been traced throuofh the 
 instrumentality of the father of the boy. This was 
 Nathaniel Marsh, then Secretary of the Erie Railway 
 Company. Mr. Marsh was grateful to the sailor who 
 had come to tl.o rescue of his son in a momtMit of 
 peril, and wanteci to press upon the young man money 
 in the way of r(;ward. This Morosini refused to ac- 
 cept. Mr. Marsh asketl the young man if there was 
 anythinof else he could do for him. 
 
 Morosini replied that he had been leading the life 
 of a sailor, that he was tired of the sea, and that if he 
 could find suitable employment he would be glad to 
 remain in New York. On May 29th, 1855, young 
 Morosini entered the service of the Erie Company, 
 first as a sort of office-boy. Soon he was placed in 
 the auditor's office, where he rose to the place of chief 
 
 I 
 
)rce(l 
 f the 
 )und. 
 tants 
 lative 
 knife, 
 drove 
 )oy at 
 tation 
 irt of 
 seeing 
 s roof 
 
 eh the 
 is was 
 aiUvay 
 or who 
 c.ni of 
 money 
 to ac- 
 re was 
 
 [he life 
 Lt if he 
 I lad to 
 
 young 
 
 |mpany, 
 
 Lced in 
 
 )f chief 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 269 
 
 clerk, but at the time of Mr. Gould's assumption of 
 the presidency he was practically filling the functions 
 of his superior. 
 
 Six months after ]\Ir. Gould's retirement from the 
 Erie, Mr. Morosini followed him and entered his em- 
 ploy, and in that service he remained until about 
 three years ago, when, it is said, Mr. Gould practically 
 discontinued his large speculative operations in Wall 
 street. 
 
 Speaking of his dead friend and former employer, 
 Mr. Morosini said : 
 
 *' Mr. Gould was one of the most lovable men I ever 
 knew. It was a pleasure to serve him. He was very 
 appreciative, and never imposed a needless task upon 
 any one. In the office he always took things easily 
 and coolly. There was never any hurry jr confu- 
 sion. 
 
 Idolized liis Family. 
 
 " In his family he was the best of husbands, and I 
 never knew a man who loved his children with such 
 intensity as he did. He seemed to worship them all. 
 He was a very companionable man, and there was a 
 great deal of humor in his disposition. While he was 
 not given to telling storit^s or cracking jokes himself, 
 he enjoyed hearing others do so and would laugh as 
 heartilv as the rest. 
 
 " He was very abstemious in his habits, but was ex- 
 ceptionally fond of coffee. Now and then he would 
 sip a little wine, but he rarely took more than a spoon- 
 ful at any time. My opinion is that his system gave 
 
 
 41 
 

 ,1, 
 
 270 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 way under the great strain resulting from the con- 
 sciousness of his immense wealth. It was a tremendous 
 care, and he was always weighed down with the 
 anxiety and excitement of protecting his properties. 
 
 *' Mr. Gould was the most generous of men, and he 
 made a great many other men rich by his own gener- 
 osity. I could give you hundreds of instances where 
 in return for some slight service to him he has started 
 men in the way of making fortunes. 
 
 "There is one which just comes to mind while I am 
 talkincr which is a orood illustration. Once there was 
 a man out West who did some little work for Mr. 
 Gould in a railroad matter there. The man was of the 
 ordinary type of the Westerner on the frontier. Mr. 
 Gould said to me: ' I ought to do something for him ; 
 what would you suggest ? ' I replied, ' Buy him a 
 thousand shares of stock for a rise.' He said ' All 
 right,* and ordered the purchase of 1,000 shares of 
 Denver and Rio Grande. 
 
 " The stock was then about 29. We carried it 
 along until it reached a very high point and looked 
 like going off, and then we sold it. The profit was 
 $65,000, and I paid that money, all of it, sixty-five bills 
 of ;J 1, 000 each, to that man myself. Mr. Gould had 
 ordered that transaction for that particular purpose. 
 He took none of the profit himself, but directed that 
 the man should have it all. 
 
 Bagg^ingr the Cat. 
 
 " There were many instances," continued Mr. Moro- 
 
 sini, " of just that sort, and many in which he greatly 
 
I con- 
 mdous 
 h the 
 ties, 
 and he 
 gener- 
 where 
 started 
 
 le I am 
 -re was 
 for Mr. 
 s of the 
 r. Mr. 
 or him ; 
 him a 
 id ' All 
 ares of 
 
 irried it 
 looked 
 
 lofit was 
 ive bills 
 
 )iild had 
 
 lurpose. 
 
 Ited that 
 
 -. Moro- 
 •Treatlv 
 
 lii 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 271 
 
 helped men here in Wall street from going down — 
 men whom he was under no obligation to help, but he 
 assisted them under an impulse of generosity." 
 
 In regard to Mr. Gould's business methods, Mr. 
 Morosini said: "Of course he was very reserved. 
 He never let the left hand know what the ri^ht hand 
 did. Mis motto was never to say 'cat' until you had 
 him in the bag. For instance, he asked me one day to 
 call in about j;8,ooo,cxXD which we had loaned out. I 
 followed his instructions ; the money was collected ; he 
 said nothing to anybody about why he had called it in. 
 
 " I kept the money for nearly a month, when one day 
 he told me that I might loan it out again, as he had no 
 more use for it; that he had intended it for use in 
 buying the Reading road, but the deal had fallen 
 throu<ifh and therefore it miorht as well be drawincr in- 
 terest. That was the first I knew^ of what he had in 
 contemplation when he called the money in. Then 
 a^rain when he bouMit the Missouri Pacific. His ne- 
 £fOtiations with Commodore Garrison were carried on 
 for three months, and it was only when he asked me 
 to draw checks and told me to whom they should be 
 drawn that the whole thinof came out." 
 
 Mr. Morosini illustrated Mr. Gould's peculiar tactics 
 in operations in some particiJar stocks in the Ex- 
 chancre with another anecdote. Said he: 
 
 "At one time Mr. Gould was short in Pacific Mail, 
 and he bought and sold, bought and sold, bought and 
 sold until the commissions paid brokers amounted to 
 about $36,000. Then the account was finally made 
 
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 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 Corporation 
 
 23 WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 
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 272 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 I III 
 
 
 up and showed to the credit of Mr. Gould on the en- 
 tire transaction the sum of fourteen cents. A rumor 
 was in circulation that Mr. Gould had made a crreat 
 
 o 
 
 deal of money in the stock. One afternoon just 
 about that time I was at Mr. Gould's house when 
 William H. Vanderbilt called to see him about some 
 matter of business. He congratulated Mr. Gould on 
 having made so much money on the stock. Mr. Gould 
 turned to me and said, * Morosini, how much have we 
 made on that deal in Pacific Mail ? ' 
 
 " I answered, ' $i 40,000.' 
 
 " * What,' he exclaimed, and looked at me in a queer 
 way. After Mr. Vanderbilt had gone Mr. Gould said, 
 * When I asked you what we had made on that Pacific 
 Mail transaction, why did you say we had made 
 ^^140,000?' I answered, 'Did we want to disgrace 
 ourselves by saying fourteen cents? Why not let 
 them know that we can make money as well as they 
 can?' Mr. Gould was very much amused." 
 
 Two Great Speculators. 
 
 One of the most important incidents in Mr. Gould's 
 life was the transaction by which the control of Man- 
 hattan came into his hands. There had long been a 
 feeling among Mr. Gould's friends that great injustice 
 was done to him in the popular view of the matter. 
 John T. Terry, of E. D. Morgan & Co., was for years 
 one of Mr. Gould's most trusted counsellors. While 
 Mr. Terry was not as intimate as other men in the 
 stock operations of Mr. Gould, he knew of many of 
 the investment policies pursued by the dead capitalist, 
 
Wn 
 
 I'r 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 273 
 
 he en- 
 rumor 
 I areat 
 n just 
 i when 
 it some 
 )uld on 
 . Gould 
 lave we 
 
 a queer 
 
 uld said, 
 It Pacific 
 ^d made 
 J'lsarace 
 not let 
 as they 
 
 I. Gould's 
 of Man- 
 been a 
 injustice 
 matter. 
 |for years 
 While 
 :n in the 
 many of 
 [capitalist, 
 
 and his sound judgment and high reputation in the 
 mercantile and banking world were frequently availed 
 of by Mr. Gould in important affairs. 
 
 In the case of the sale of Mr. Field's Manhattan 
 stock to Mr. Gould, Mr. Terry was the medium through 
 which Mr. Field was able effL*ctively to appeal to Mr. 
 Gould's resources to assist Mr. Field in the time of 
 his need. Mr. Terry's friends say that the confidential 
 nature of his ri^lations to the negotiations at that time 
 forbade him to tell much of the secret history. But 
 Mr. Terrv made the followino- statement in reirard to 
 the Field-Gould transaction: 
 
 *' Mr. Gould has been for years the subject of much 
 misrepresentation and unreasonable abuse, partly from 
 misapprehension and pardy from malice. Even those 
 of his transactions which have been beneficent in their 
 character, and which have been prompted by the best 
 motives, have been turned and twisted by attributing 
 the worst possible motives to him. 
 
 Iiiiiiiciisc Loann. 
 
 "Take for example the case of Mr. Field and the 
 Manhattan Railway. Mr. Gould was applied to for 
 aid, and he generously loaned ^r, 000,000 of bonds, 
 taking therefor no security whatever. This not being 
 sufficient he purchased most reluctantly and at much 
 personal inconvenience ^5,000,000 of the stock of the 
 Manhattan Elevated road at 1 20. A few days later 
 he stated to me that he feared this was not sufficient 
 to afford all relief needed, and he thought he would 
 be obliged to take the remaining 5^2,800,000, w4iich he 
 
 18 
 
 i 
 
 111' 
 
 i! -I 
 
274 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 1 
 
 did take at the same price and distributed all or the 
 greater portion of it among- his friends. 
 
 " But this was not the end. A few days later I was 
 again asked to his office, when he said to me, the 
 parties being present and he having been summoned 
 to the city by telegraph at their request, although in 
 wretched health : ' More assistance is needed, but I 
 have declined to go any further. Won't you please 
 look at their papers and see if you can suggest any 
 way for them to obtain the money ? ' 
 
 FaLse Accusations. 
 
 "After looking into the matter, I said: 'Mr. Gould, 
 
 you have already done more than could reasonably be 
 asked of any man, but I am assured that $300,000 
 more will be sufficient, and I think you can loan it 
 safely, akhough the securities are not otherwise avail- 
 able.' He replied : ' Very well, I wnll draw the check.' 
 Here was assistance rendered of over $10,000,000 
 and although the stocks were purchased upon thirty 
 days' time, the necessities of ';e case required imme- 
 diate payment, which Mr. Gould made at much per- 
 sonal inconvenience. 
 
 " Now what was the view taken of this transaction 
 by the public press? We read in large print, 'Mr. 
 Gould has ruined Mr. Field,' and other phrases just 
 as false. This transaction not only saved the parties, 
 but beyond question saved a panic in New York. I 
 will only add that the decline in the market value of 
 the stock named within a few succeeding weeks was 
 about $3,750,000, and yet there are probably thou- 
 
 m 
 
or the 
 
 ;r 1 was 
 
 me, the 
 nmoned 
 ough in 
 ;d, but I 
 u please 
 gest any 
 
 r. Gould, 
 Dnably be 
 J 300,000 
 n loan it 
 ise avail- 
 lie check.' 
 0,000,000 
 on thirty 
 [red imme- 
 much per- 
 
 ransaction 
 )rint, *Mr. 
 irases just 
 the parties, 
 York. 1 
 >t value of 
 I weeks was 
 )ably thou- 
 
 REMARKABLE CUAKACTERISTICS. 
 
 275 
 
 sands and tens of thousands of persons here and abroad 
 who are still under the belief that Mr. Field was 
 wronged by Mr. Gould." 
 
 A Talk With his Broker. 
 
 Washington E. Connor knew Mr. Gould about 
 eighteen years. Mr. Gould's early practice in stock 
 operations was to employ a number of brokers in 
 order to conceal his transactions. Finally Mr. Connor 
 came to be the recognized broker of Mr. Gould, and 
 the relations between the two men were intimate. In 
 talking about his dead friend and associate Mi*. Con- 
 nor was cautious in avoiding an expression of opinion 
 as to Mr. Gould's probable wealth, though he did not 
 hesitate to say that it was not less than $60,000,000. 
 
 Speaking of the disposition of the estate, Mr. Con- 
 nor said it was his belief that a trust had been created 
 for the bulk of the fortune. He added that durinof 
 the last two years Mr. Gould had committed to his 
 sons, by way of training them in the care of their busi- 
 ness interests, the management of the properties in 
 which his money was chiefly invested, the father acting 
 only in an advisory capacity. ** George Gould, since 
 he was sixteen years old," said Mr. Connor, " has been 
 undercjoinor a thorouorh business traininof and has 
 proved himself fully capable of taking care of the in- 
 terests intrusted to his care. He promises to be 
 very conservative, and not likely to engage in any- 
 thing bold or rash." Mr. Connor also said that 
 ever since Mr. Gould retired from active operations 
 in the Street there have been people ready to pay 
 
 
 
 
 i II 
 
 ( 
 
 1 
 i 
 
 T 
 
 i 
 
 4- M 
 
 lifi 
 
'ii 
 
 276 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Pill 
 
 •' I / ! I 
 
 him much above the market price for any of his hold- 
 
 ings. 
 
 Referring to Mr. Gould's personal characteristics 
 ' Mr. Connor said ; 
 
 " Mr. Gould was a very quiet unassuming man of 
 kindly impulses. People who might meet him for 
 the first time would be likely to misjudge him, and 
 perhaps not give him credit for the ability he pos- 
 sessed." 
 
 Men Avlio KiK'w Circat Secrets. 
 
 " Frequently men would come into the office and 
 sit down and talk to Mr. Gould, and tell him some 
 story of their knowledge of operations going on in the 
 street, and try to impress him widi the fact that they 
 knew the whole inside of si jh deals, when in truth 
 they would be telling Mr. Gould of a deal in which he 
 was at the bottom and they were giving somebody 
 else the credit for. But he never would betray him- 
 self at such times, but would always listen to the 
 stories, and they would leave him with the impression 
 that they had convinced him of the truth of their state- 
 ments. 
 
 " He had a great gift of self-control. During the 
 whole time I have known him I have never seen him 
 give way to his temper but twice, and then under very 
 great provocation. He never had his equal for 
 ability in Wall street, and probably his equal will 
 never be seen. His success was not a matter of luck, 
 but of energy and good judgment. He had a wonder- 
 ful memory for details and knew more about the 
 
 si 
 
 VF 
 
 n1 
 ol 
 
!il 
 
 lijiii 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 'Jii 
 
 s hold- 
 :enstics 
 
 man of 
 him for 
 lim, and 
 he pos- 
 
 iffice and 
 im some 
 on in the 
 that they 
 ,1 in truth 
 which he 
 somebody 
 itray him- 
 n to the 
 ipression 
 heir state- 
 
 inring the 
 seen him 
 indervery 
 equal for 
 lequal will 
 ter of luck, 
 a wonder- 
 about the 
 
 inside or the various corporations he was associated 
 with than the officers who had direct control. 
 
 *' You will find that (ivery man who has ha^i iiuimate 
 business relations with Mr. Gould will tell you diat 
 his word was safe for them to enter into any opera- 
 tion, no matter of what ma<'nitude, and that he w^as 
 never known either to break his word or attempt to 
 alter his verbal agreements. He was perfecdy loyal to 
 the men with whom he was associated, and they were 
 perfectly loyal to him. I think you will find the most 
 of the men who condemned Mr. Gould had really 
 never met him, did not know him when they saw 
 him, and had no business relations with him either 
 directly or indirecdy." 
 
 A CliJiiijfod Man. 
 
 Mr. Connor briefly referred to the social side of 
 Mr. Gould. "In business he was reticent." said Mr. 
 Connor, "but I have frequendy been out with him 
 when there was just a small party taking dinner 
 toofether or oroinof to the theatre. On such occasions 
 he would seem to change completely. He would 
 become talkative, induloe in reminiscence and often 
 entertain the entire party. This, however, was unu- 
 sual, and it was only among those wdiom he knew 
 very intimately that he would thus let himself out." 
 
 Mr. Connor also testified to die generosity of Mr. 
 Gould, and gave instances in which he had protected 
 men in whom he had no real interest from bankruptcy, 
 or assisted them when they were struoolino- aoainst 
 adverse conditions. 
 
 
 ?V; ■■'■\ 
 
 i 
 
278 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Ex--Judge John F. Dillon knew Mr. Gould Intimately. 
 He first rnet the financier in 1879, and was his legal 
 adviser in many of his undertakings. 
 
 "There were many disdnc- characteristics about 
 Mr. Gould," said Mr. Dillon. ** 1 never knew him to 
 utter a profane word, and he was as delicate and sen- 
 sitive in temperament as a woman. Mr. Gould wrote 
 and spoke capital English, but he never wrote a word 
 that was not necessary. 
 
 blaster of the English Laiig-uage. 
 
 "Judge Usher, who was Secretary of the Interior 
 
 under Lincoln, an able and great lawyer, once said to 
 me that he had boutrht a railroad for Mr. Gould, or in 
 his interest, and h-^d written out a contract covering 
 two or three pages of foolscap. 1 he Judge, in telling 
 of the incident, said : * I sent the contract, which I con- 
 sidered a thorough document, to Mr. Gould, and he 
 almost immediately returned it written out on a half 
 page of paper of tlie same size. When I got the doc- 
 ument and found it perfect in its condensed form, I 
 felt ashamed of myself." 
 
 Mr. Gould was so self-reliant that he had little use 
 for lawyers. . le w^as his own negotiator and contract 
 maker. When he bought the Iron Mountain road he 
 showed me, the next day, a contract for that great 
 purchase. It was a contract written out in his own 
 handwriting on less than two pages of social note 
 paper. 
 
 " He concluded the contract of the purchase of the 
 Missouri Pacific without consulting his lawyers. When 
 
 d 
 d( 
 
"n-sri'c: 
 
 tlh*' 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 279 
 
 lately, 
 s legal 
 
 about 
 liim to 
 id sen- 
 i wrote 
 a word 
 
 Interior 
 said to 
 Id, or in 
 overing 
 a telling 
 h I con- 
 and he 
 a half 
 the doc- 
 form, I 
 
 ittle use 
 contract 
 road he 
 at great 
 his own 
 :ial note 
 
 36 of the 
 s. When 
 
 shown the contract the next day, his counsel told 
 him he had bought a big lawsuit, and that title to the 
 whole property was in question in the Supreme Court 
 of the Ur.ited States. He simply said, * I have given 
 my check for $3,700,000, and the thing is closed. The 
 seller would laugh at me if I went back and expressed 
 a desi'*e to rescind ' He thereupon directed his at- 
 torneys to take charge of the case and try to sustain 
 the tide of the property bought, which after years of 
 litigation they did. 
 
 A Natural Lawyer. 
 
 " But great as Mr. Gould was as a financier and 
 railway manager, he would, if bred to the bar, have 
 made a greater lawyer. That is a fact. I have seen 
 him greatly provoked, but never saw him lose hi 
 temper or utter a threat. Nevertheless, he had a good 
 memory, both for benefits received and injuries done. 
 He was probably, in the language of Dr. Johnson, ' a 
 good hater without loquacity and pomposity.* " 
 
 "What do you consider the cardinal points in Mr. 
 Gould's character? " was asked. 
 
 " Courage, self-reliance, clear perception, an intimate 
 knowledge of his business and untiring industry. It 
 is a great mistake to suppose that Mr. Gould was a 
 mere speculator in properties. He was the most con- 
 summate railway manager that the country has ever 
 produced. He knew everything about a railway from 
 the rails to the locomotive, and from the brakeman's 
 duty to that of the general manager. He could sit 
 down and write a trafific contract, which is perhaps the 
 
 i 
 
— »~*9 
 
 ^^^^Ifc^ 
 
 1f» r. it .'' 
 
 280 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 m 
 
 Ijl!, 
 
 ill 
 
 supreme test for a railway ma* ager. He knew enough 
 not to lose himself in details. He was too wise to 
 lose himself in lontjf details, 
 
 A Suporb I'^xocutivc <)fli<*<»r. 
 
 " 1 1(! was a superb executive orficer. He applied 
 the military rule to his subordinates. 'I do not want 
 processes, but results,' was his doctrine. His great 
 oenius consisted in a knowledi^e of the value of cor- 
 porate properties, and in perception of possibilities of • 
 profitable consolidation. When he acquired properties 
 he bent his energies to develop them, and he had 
 both the will and the strength to defend and protect 
 them. Every successful railway manager must be a 
 militant, and Mr. Gould may be, perhaps, fitly sym- 
 bolized as standinof armed on the boraers of his rail- 
 road territories ready to give battle to all who invaded 
 or threatened to invade them. 
 
 "In some respects Mr. Gould has failed to get the 
 credit to which he is justly entitled in many things. 
 And he was blamed for many things, for which, in 
 reality, he was entitled to praise. He was also blamed 
 for many things in which he had no concern. I will not 
 attempt to go into details. To those who knew him, 
 Mr. Gould was a man of intense activity. He kept 
 his money invested in active enterprises, which gave 
 employment to thousands and thousands of men. He 
 frequently engaged in enterprises without any im- 
 mediate reward, relying on his efforts and upon his 
 faith in the future value of properties for his compen- 
 sation or profit. 
 
ill 
 
 REMARKABLE CUARACTERISTICS. 
 
 281 
 
 Hiit 
 
 ,e to 
 
 I plied 
 want 
 great 
 f cor- 
 :ies of 
 Gerties 
 e had 
 protect 
 ,t be a 
 y sym- 
 lis rail- 
 nvaded 
 
 ;et the 
 things. 
 
 Iiich, in 
 )lamed 
 
 Iwill not 
 :w him, 
 e kept 
 Ih gave 
 :n. He 
 ^ny im- 
 fon his 
 .mpen- 
 
 lU'lievfil ill Aiiierica, 
 
 "In fact, I think Mr. Gould's well-founded faith in 
 the constant and steady growdi of the country, and 
 the consequent prosperity of all legitimate and well- 
 directed enterprises — th-it was the main cause of his 
 ahnost unexampled siicc nss. A less enterprising man 
 would be tempted to sit down idly and take his ease 
 in receivinor the income from rent rolls or Govern- 
 ment bonds, or purchasing established securities. Mr. 
 Gould never seemed to be content except in directing 
 the management of active properties requiring con- 
 stant supervision and good management to make them 
 successful. lie has probably wielded more power 
 than any other man in the country, but with all this 
 he was destitute of the least ostentation or display. 
 He seemed to have no ambidon beyond the success 
 of his business enterprises, an^' though capable of 
 and having strong friendships, his heart and his af- 
 fections were with his family. He was an example 
 of all the parental and domestic virtues." 
 
 Mr. Dillon when asked if he knew who drew Mr. 
 Gould's will said : " 1 cannot give you any details in 
 that direction." 
 
 All Estimate by Hoiiry Clews. 
 
 Henry Clews said: '*Jay Gould's death is not sud- 
 den, as it has long been expected, owing to his frail 
 and weak physical condition. Death is the natural 
 end of all, and it should not be in this case to Wall 
 street much of a shock under the circumstances. 
 Gould has undoubtedly been one of the wonders of 
 
 
 !l\i 
 
 W 
 
282 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 the world — abnormally great among men of affairs. 
 He had many good qualities, he was generous to a 
 fault, and was inva.iably true to his friends, but bitter 
 and unforerivinrr to his enemies. 
 
 •' Much of the spread of the railroad transportation 
 system over our vast country is due to his remark- 
 able enterprise, sagacity and organizing ability. 
 Thereby great distances have been narrowed and 
 people living at far-off points of our big acreaged land 
 have been brouorht in touch for business undertakino^s 
 through his telegraph and railroad schemes ; there- 
 fore what Jay Gould has accomplished for the 
 benefit of the country must be placed to his credit, 
 and will be by most people, and it will, in my judg- 
 ment, outweiofh his shortcomincrs in the recollections 
 of the man. 
 
 " I was one of the few men in Wall street openly 
 to criticise Jay Gould harshly at times when he de- 
 served it while livinof. I will not do so now he is dead, 
 as he has left behind him much that is good and of 
 great benefit to the nation, as a result of his marvel- 
 lous ability and active life." 
 
 " How would you estimate Mr. Gould's wealth ? " 
 was asked. 
 
 "I should place it at $60,000,000 to $75,000,000, 
 largely in railroad bonds, with a good sprinkling of 
 stocks, and some valuable land and coal properties, 
 particularly in the West, along the line of roads with 
 which he was identified. In this city, as I understand 
 it, he has never held much real estate, although, of 
 
 nfjli 
 
II i 
 
 fairs. 
 
 to a 
 
 bitter 
 
 :ation 
 
 Tiark- 
 
 bility. 
 
 I and 
 
 \ land 
 
 ikings 
 
 there- 
 
 3r the 
 
 credit, 
 
 yr judg- 
 
 ections 
 
 openly 
 he de- 
 >s dead, 
 and of 
 arvel- 
 
 ialth?" 
 
 )00,000, 
 
 :ling of 
 [perties. 
 Ids with 
 erstand 
 ugh, of 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 283 
 
 course his house at Forty-seventh street and Fifth 
 avenue and his estate at Irvington are both valual \f\ 
 His city house he bought at a bargain from ex-Mayor 
 Opdyke some ten or twelve years ago fe. ^300,000." 
 
 Like Father, Like Hon. 
 
 "What disposition do you suppose Mr. Gould has 
 made of his property ? " 
 
 *' Mr. Gould had great faith in his son George, and 
 I do not doubt, judging from my knowledge of the 
 man, that he has made most careful provision for his 
 property in his will, and that it will be found to have 
 been left largely in George's comrol. George has 
 worked .vith his father for years. He has been in- 
 dustrious and careful, and has shown a large grasp on 
 affairs, and has in every way acted in a manner that 
 tended to create confidence in his ability. I do not 
 doubt that he will succeed his father in the manacfe- 
 ment of the properties that Mr. Gould has controlled. 
 I think the change will not be for the worse, for the 
 reason that Georcje has never manifested hi.i father's 
 speculative disposition, and the financial world will 
 feel that the properties will be managed upon a stabler 
 and more conservative basis. Jay Gould was a spec- 
 ulator, and no one knew which way he would turn 
 next." 
 
 " Did Mr. Gould make his money in speculation ?" 
 
 •*No. Mr. Gould's fortune was not gathered by 
 speculation in the Strc^^t. He generally lost at that, 
 and sometimes in large amounts. He made his profits 
 by the manipulation of large * deals.' He would buy 
 
 i 
 
 ?r 
 
 'ii 
 
284 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 up two roads at a low figure, consolidate them into 
 one, issue securities and assure the public that the 
 property was a valuable one. Then he would sell out 
 at a high figure and pocket his profits. his opera- 
 tion he repeated over and over again. 
 
 A Bom Speculator. 
 
 "As a speculator he was tenacious. His great 
 
 characteristic was patience. When he had started on 
 a * bear ' campaign, he was the last man to realize that 
 the market had o^one aoainst him. He was almost 
 the only great *bear' operator who did not run to 
 cover just as soon as prices began to go up, and the 
 fact that he was a 'stayer' often cost him millions of 
 dollars. After the panic of 1873 he was a persistent 
 'bear,' and he stayed on that side of the market long 
 enough for the 'bulls' to get full control and to pinch 
 him badly. After the 'good times' that followed the 
 resumption of specie payments got well under way, 
 he w^as forced to make three separate settlements with 
 the ' bull ring.' In the last he sold them 50,000 shares 
 of Union Pacific at 55 and gave an option on 50,000 
 shares more at 65. 
 
 "Within sixty days he was called on for the stock, 
 and the rise never stopped until Union Pacific touched 
 .120. But he followed up those losses by the manipu- 
 lation of Kansas Pacific, and when he had got that 
 *stock up to the level of Union Pacific, he made an 
 exchange, share for share, and pocketed J8,ooo,ooo as 
 the profits of the transaction. At one time he was a 
 
REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 285 
 
 I into 
 It the 
 ill out 
 jpera- 
 
 crreat 
 ted on 
 ze that 
 almost 
 run to 
 nd the 
 ions of 
 rsistent 
 et long 
 o pinch 
 Kved the 
 er way, 
 ts with 
 shares 
 50,000 
 
 le 
 
 stock, 
 touched 
 manipu- 
 got that 
 iiade an 
 0,000 as 
 e was a 
 
 T 
 
 heavy speculator, and as we watched the market we 
 could see the effect of his manipulations. 
 
 " We knew his brokers, and he was a general target 
 for everybody and seemed to enjoy being one. • In 
 later years his dealings were not so open and mysti- 
 fied the Street. More recently still he became a buyer 
 or a seller at favorable times, but did not figure in a 
 speculative sense. For that reason the market is not 
 affected by his death," 
 
 C. P. Hniitiiigton's Views. 
 
 C. p. Huntington, when asked what he thought of 
 Mr. Gould as a man and a financier, said : 
 
 "Well, I have always thought very well of Mr. 
 Gould, though I know there are many people who 
 did not like him. I have had a orreat deal of dealinof 
 with Mr. Gould in the thirty years during which I 
 have known him, and I will say that I always found 
 that he would do just as he had agreed to do. Of 
 his ability as a financier his success is the best 
 evidence." 
 
 " There were published recendy dispatches from the 
 Southwest, announcing a contemplated meeting shortly 
 between yourself and Mr. Gould at El Paso. Had 
 you arranged to meet Mr. Gould in Texas ? " 
 
 " No ; there was no truth in the statement. I have 
 had no correspondence on such a subject with Mr. 
 Gould. I have not been closely associated with him 
 for some time. He was on one side of the line and I 
 was on the other. I never hit with him on prices, for 
 I knew that the market would go up or down just as 
 
 ili 1 
 
 !! ■■\'-\ 
 
 1-: 
 
 Ml- 
 
 1! 
 
 
i' 
 
 k 
 
 m 
 
 I ;* 
 
 km 
 
 
 286 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 he wanted it. We were never in 'cahoots,' as the 
 
 boys say. It is true I was in Western Union with him, 
 
 but I only owned a few shares and I went in there at 
 
 hi's request." 
 
 Fond of a Good Story, 
 
 '•When did you see Mr. Gould last?" 
 
 " I saw him last in El Paso last March. No, I have 
 seen him since that. I saw him two or three times 
 last August in connection with the meetings of the 
 Western Traffic Association in this city. As a man, 
 personally, in private conversation, Mr. Gould was a 
 genial, good fellow, fond of telling a nice story, and a 
 man whose personal traits one would like. In fact, I 
 can truly say it was with genuine sorrow that I heard 
 of his death. I did not think the end would come so 
 soon, and, in fact, called at his house to inquire about 
 him." 
 
 "What do you think is a good estimate of Mr. 
 Gould's wealth ? " 
 
 " Oh, I could not begin to tell. He was a man of 
 very large affairs and was undoubtedly very rich, but 
 as to how many millions he possessed I do not know 
 any more than the man in the moon." 
 
 "What do you think will be the effect of Mr. Gould's 
 death on the properties he owned and controlled ? " 
 
 " I do not think there will be any great effect. His 
 boys, who are really very able, will continue his work. 
 George has had a great deal of experience in the run- 
 ning of these properties, and they will doubtless go 
 along about as they have done. 
 
!: '.' 
 
 w*!«r,-.-«-,;rfM:«BBSK» 
 
 Hi 
 
 REMARKABLE CHARACTERISTICS. 
 
 287 
 
 IS the 
 h him, 
 lere at 
 
 I have 
 e times 
 of the 
 a man, 
 was a 
 r, and a 
 n fact, I 
 I heard 
 |ome so 
 e about 
 
 of Mr. 
 
 man of 
 ich, but 
 )t know 
 
 Gould's 
 led ? " 
 :t. His 
 work, 
 the run- 
 tless go 
 
 " I remember one little incident of my dealings with 
 Mr. Gould," continued Mr. Huntington, "which will 
 show you to some extent what manner of man he was. 
 He and I had entered into an arrangement for the 
 pooling of traffic earnings of the Texas Pacific and 
 Southern Pacific between New Orleans and El Paso. 
 Well, his road, the Texas Pacific, could not do the 
 work. Its service was 'way behind the Southern 
 Pacific in point of celerity. When the time came to 
 divide the proceeds of the pool Mr. Gould was en- 
 titled, under the terms of the agreement, to something 
 like ^750,000. But his road had not done the w^ork, 
 and in settling I called attentioi to the fact, leaving to 
 him the fixing of the sum which might be proper as 
 the share belonging to his road. If it had been left 
 to me I should have fixed it at about ;g40,ooo. Well, 
 he studied over the matter a while and then drew his 
 pencil through the contract, taking nothing at all. 
 Perhaps, though, you had better not publish this story 
 for the reason that it will impose too great a strain on 
 the credulity of the public." 
 
 l;i 
 
 
 ii ,, 
 
; ( 
 
 I 
 
 •!'Wi 
 
 CHAPTER XVIII. 
 
 If ■ 
 
 n, 'ih 
 
 i II 
 
 jiiftif 
 
 Cranks and Crazy Men. 
 
 Jay Gould was oftentimes afraid that he would meet 
 with a violent death. For years cranks had threatened 
 his life and blackmailers had hinted to him of a sudden 
 taking- off. A walk in Wall street any day would re- 
 veal a score of men who were his sworn enemies — 
 men whom he had squeezed at one time or another 
 during some of his gigantic operations. Strange visi- 
 tors were forever calli-ng at his office, just as the bomb- 
 thrower, Norcross, called on Russell Sage. They 
 waited in the hallways to meet him and frequently 
 ranof the door-bell of his residence at nieht. The but- 
 ler learned to be careful whom he admitted. 
 
 Strangely enough it was the first Friday in Decem- 
 ber, 1 89 1, just fifty-two weeks before the millionaire's 
 death, that his old friend and associate, Russell Sage, 
 was so nearly blown into fragments by the Norcross 
 bomb. This fact was recalled by many Wall street 
 people when the news of Jay Gould's death was being 
 shouted about the streets by the newsboys. 
 
 Mr. Gould was in town at that time and the occur- 
 rence gave him a painful shock. There was supposed 
 to be an organized gang of assassins in existence, and 
 the houses of all the prominent millionaires were un- 
 
 (288) 
 
CRANKS AND CRAZY MEN. 
 
 289 
 
 d meet 
 
 jatened 
 
 sudden 
 
 uld re- 
 
 tmies — 
 
 anodier 
 
 lore visi- 
 
 e bomb- 
 They 
 quendy 
 he but- 
 
 iDecem- 
 onaire's 
 In Sage, 
 
 iorcross 
 [\\ street 
 
 LS being 
 
 occur- 
 
 ipposed 
 
 Ince, and 
 
 rere un- 
 
 der surveillance. Mr. Gould prompdy started off on 
 a trip to El Paso, where he would be out of the way 
 of cranks and dynamite. 
 
 Kept Himself Secluded. 
 
 For some time before his death Mr. Gould had no 
 personal encounter with an antagonist. The attacks 
 were made up of bitter denunciations or in legal suits. 
 That is because he was so seldom seen about the 
 streets. In Wall street he was pointed out as a curi- 
 osity whenever he appeared, and even the brokers 
 turned to look at him. He generally went directly to 
 his office in the Western Union building on coming 
 down town in the morning and remained there till he 
 started for home. 
 
 While there it was almost impossible to gain access 
 to him. He entered through a private door opening 
 on the main hall of the first story, which is opened 
 from within upon a peculiar knock on the glass panel. 
 If any one followed him up and knocked in what he 
 believed to be precisely the same way, no attention 
 whatever was paid to him. If a card was sent in to 
 Mr. Gould through the general office there was simply 
 a pretense of sending it, and word was brought back 
 that he was either too busy to see the visitor or that 
 he had just stepped out. 
 
 But when Gould was really operating in the stock 
 market, he came regularly down to the office of Belden 
 & Co., at No. 80 Broadway, every morning, and 
 during the day was to be seen constantly passing from 
 this office to the office of Work, Strong & Co., rn 
 19 
 
 iii ■'■ 
 
 w 
 
 .!',! 
 
I. ■ 
 
 
 200 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Broad street, which did a great deal of his brokerage 
 business, and thence to the office of the Union Pacific, 
 at No. 23 Nassau street, in whose securities Mr. Gould 
 Vv'as at that time heavily interested. 
 
 The opportunities therefore among men who were 
 not Mr. Gould's admirers and well-wishers were not 
 confined to denouncing him to one another. They 
 had the man himself, and his passage from point to 
 point in the neighborhood of Wall street was not only 
 followed by black looks and muttered curses, but he 
 was not infrequendy addressed on the street and un- 
 pleasant epithets hurled at him in passing. 
 
 A Violent Assault. 
 
 One day Mr. Gould was violently assaulted. He 
 was hit in the mouth wh'le eatinor lunch at Delmon- 
 ico's with the late Charles Osborne, at that time one 
 of the most brilliant and successful operators in the 
 street, The assailant was a young lawyer whose 
 name did not come out at the time, but who, it was 
 said, had been seeking a settlement with Mr. Gould 
 for some months without success. He had been 
 goaded beyond the point of endurance by Mr. Gould's 
 indifferent manner of treating his claim. Mr. Gould 
 made no attempt to retaliate or strike back, neither 
 did he have the young lawyer arrested. Mr. Osborne 
 persuaded the lawyer to go away and leave the little 
 man alone. 
 
 Cranks often called at Mr. Gould's office or his 
 residence, and they caused him great uneasiness. 
 The sight of a man with a small satchel or a mys- 
 
^H.CT>,3ieaH«iirs3MfirrfffSMMf'' 
 
 CRANKS AND CRAZY MEN. 
 
 291 
 
 srage 
 acific, 
 :}ould 
 
 ) were 
 re not 
 They 
 loint to 
 lot only 
 , but he 
 ind un- 
 
 ci. He 
 
 Delmon- 
 ime one 
 ■s in the 
 ir whose 
 o, it was 
 [r. Gould 
 id been 
 Gould's 
 Lr. Gould 
 :, neither 
 I Osborne 
 1 the little 
 
 :e or his 
 
 leasiness. 
 
 »r a mys- 
 
 terious packag"e of any kind always reminded Mr. 
 Gould of the Norcross affair. For weeks after that 
 occurrence he had a man located in the Windsor 
 Hotel to do nothing but keep a watch for prowlers 
 about his residence across the way. The month of 
 January brought tvvo cranks, both of whom had de- 
 cided to elope with Miss Helen Gould, or if necessary 
 to kidnap her and hold her for ransom. One of 
 them called himself Prince Von Michaels and gave 
 his residence as Brooklyn. 
 
 Wanted $1,500,000. 
 
 Many will remember the episode of Ephraim Pines, 
 who lived four miles from Millville, N. J. He sta- 
 tioned himself inside the main entrance to the Western 
 Union Buildinij one mornins" in the beijinnincr of Feb- 
 ruary, 1892. He was a big, burly fellow about fifty 
 years old, and in addition to a small satchel slung 
 over his shoulder, carried two large handbags. There 
 was a Bible protruding from his coat pocket. The 
 janitor of the building noticed the stranger and asked 
 him his business. Ephraim went away but came back 
 the next mornincr bacr and bao-o-acre. The janitor in- 
 sisted on knowing his business. He opened the two 
 big bags he carried in his hands and showed they 
 were empty. He declined to say what was in the 
 satchel swunof over his shoulder. The bior ba^js, he 
 said, were to take away j^i, 500,000 which he expected 
 to get from Mr. Gould as soon as he had talked with 
 him. 
 
 The man was finally persuaded to return to New 
 
 H 
 
 1' ': 
 
 I 
 
 % 
 
■j^i^vmifssr 
 
 li 
 
 uW! 
 
 Ilk 
 
 292 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Jersey and negotiate with Mr. Gould thrciigh the 
 mails. 
 
 About the same time a crank went into Judge 
 Walter Q. Greshain's court, in Chicago, and demanded 
 $5,000, which he said had been sent him by Jay Gould. 
 He gave the name of Martin McCinahay. He made 
 a fight before he could be overpowered. He was 
 sent to an asylum. 
 
 The Champion Crai^i;:. 
 
 "Vice-President No. 71 " was the champion danger- 
 ous crank. He called on Dr. Munn, Mr. Gould's 
 physician, one evening. He said he belonged to the 
 organization of " Christ's Followers," which was very 
 strong in this country at the present time and was 
 steadily growing. The object of the organization, he 
 said, was an equal distribution of the wealth and 
 property of the country. Among the first property to 
 be distributed was that of Jay Gould, and if any diffi- 
 culty was to be encountered in cc^rrying out that ob- 
 ject, Gould would have to die. 
 
 Dr. Munn arrancred for the man to call the follow- 
 ing evening. He called as agreed and found Inspec- 
 tor Byrnes wait! ng for him, with Detective Sergeants 
 Frink and McCioskey. He was taken to headquar- 
 ters, where he claimed that a former employer had 
 sent him some weeks before to a place known as 
 Owl's Head, on the Canadian border, near Buffalo. 
 There he was to meet friends and receive instructions. 
 Arriving at the appointed rendezvous in the night- 
 time he was surrounded by a band of about fifty men, 
 
 ! '%■ ^ 
 
fiiw.'rt* *t^'ii fa* 
 
 CRANKS AND CRAZY MEN. 
 
 293 
 
 \ the 
 
 Judge 
 andcd 
 jould. 
 made 
 e was 
 
 langer- 
 jould's 
 I to the 
 as very 
 nd was 
 tion, he 
 1th and 
 perty to 
 ny difft- 
 Ithat ob- 
 
 follow- 
 
 hispec- 
 T^'^eants 
 '.adqiiar- 
 )yer had 
 :no\vii as 
 
 Buffalo, 
 iructions. 
 le night- 
 
 ifty men, 
 
 all heavily masked, who compelled him to kneel in 
 their midst, the band formintr a circle around him. 
 While in a kneeling attitude he was compelled to 
 take a solemn oath, which was administered with 
 much pomp and ceremony, and he from that time 
 forth was a member of the order of " Christ's Fol- 
 lowers." 
 
 What was DeniaiKlcd. 
 
 The object of the order was explained to him, and 
 after various business transactions, which he declined 
 to explain, he was finally ordered by the Arch Council 
 of the organization to come to New York. His mis- 
 sion was to obtain an interview with the money king, 
 Jay Gould, or with some of his most intimate friends, 
 and through them to lay the decree of the order be- 
 fore Gould. He was instructed to say to Gould that 
 the order demanded that j^5, 000,000 of his money be 
 set apart and sent at once to the headquarters of 
 Christ's Followers. Then, within the next ten years, 
 $15,000,000 more was to be sent to the same destina- 
 tion, and at his death the will must be so made that 
 only $1,000,000 was to go to each of his sons, and 
 $1,000,000 to the widow. All the rest of the vast 
 property was to be set aside for charitable pur- 
 poses, or for such other purposes as the order might 
 decree. 
 
 This crank went to an asylum. 
 
 Another of Mr. Gould's visitors who got into trouble 
 for calling was Master James SulHvan, of Edinburgh, 
 Scotland. But of all the schemes of cranks and 
 
 It 
 
 |;i 
 
im 
 
 i 
 
 294 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 mt 
 
 J\ 
 III' 
 m I 
 
 crooks to beat Gould one of the few to prove success- 
 ful was carried out in February, 1881. There had 
 been a great war between the uptown and downtown 
 brokers. 
 
 Heading the uptown boys were Messrs. Cammack, 
 Osborne and Travers, who made their headquarters 
 about the Windsor. They used often to watch the 
 telegra[3h wires running into Gould's liouse, across 
 the way, and wonder what they were saying to the 
 
 crafty little man. 
 
 A Cut ill the Mi'jU. 
 
 During the Western Union Telegraph manipula- 
 tions the uptown boys were shut out of the deal. 
 The stock was sellino- in the neiq;hborhood of 80 and 
 the " points " were thick to go " short " of the stock, 
 that the bottom would soon fall out of it. All the 
 verdant ones quickly sold the stock, but the older 
 heads of Twenty-third street suspected that there was 
 a cat under the wheel. 
 
 Now it happened that the great storm occurred at 
 this time and Mr. Gould's private wires went down 
 with the rest, despite the owner's apparent omnipo- 
 tence. It was absolutely necessary that Gould should 
 continue in communication with his dowr\town people, 
 and for that purpose he made arrangements with the 
 American District Telegraph Company to furnish him 
 with a number of their very best messengers. The 
 boys came and the gang at the Windsor watched the 
 proceedings with no little interest. 
 
 Among the messengers was a tall, slender lad, nearly 
 
' ■igm:^-*t>T^ vJlrtlftartSllBI^^ 
 
 CRANKS AND CUAZV MEN. 
 
 295 
 
 :ess- 
 
 had 
 
 Lown 
 
 iiack, 
 irters 
 [\ the 
 xross 
 the 
 
 iipuUi- 
 
 deal. 
 ,o and 
 stock, 
 ai the 
 
 okler 
 re was 
 
 •red at 
 down 
 nnipo- 
 shouUl 
 peopkN 
 jith the 
 Ish him 
 The 
 led the 
 
 I, nearly 
 
 grown to manhood. The brokers were struck with a 
 happy thought. They got him into the hotel, bribed 
 him to lend them his messenger uniform, and into it 
 they placed a very bright clerk in their employ. The 
 messenger was given a private room at the hotel and 
 fed on the fat of the land. 
 
 In the meantime the bright clerk was playing mes- 
 senger and all the messages he took to Mr. GouUl 
 were first opened and read in the Windsor. The boy 
 kept his eyes and ears open while at Mr. Gould's 
 house, too, and nothing escaped him. 
 
 The conspirators at first thought that their trick 
 would only be for a day, but owing to the power and 
 duration of the storm, their clerk was enabled to play 
 his part for four days. For Mr. Gould had engaged 
 the boys until the wires should again be put up, and 
 had especially arranged that they should not be 
 chancred until that time. 
 
 Successful Trick. 
 
 Mr. Gould and his friends never suspected what 
 was beneath that tall boy's uniform. The bright clerk 
 was entirely familiar with everything pertaining to 
 stocks, and faithfully transmitted his knowledge thus 
 acquired to his employer. In this way the Twenty- 
 third streeters became convinced that a oreat " bull " 
 was about to be made in Western Union, and they 
 consequently covered and bought in all the stock 
 they could from 80 to 85. The stock advanced rap- 
 idly to I 20, and the conspirators not only recovered 
 their former losses, but cleared more than $500,000. 
 
 
296 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 If^ 
 
 l!. 
 
 % 
 
 The real telegraph boy was kept in the Windsor 
 Hotel for four clays, while his place was lilKd by the 
 stock clerk. The outside clique presented tiie mes- 
 senger with $500 cash and got him a good appoint- 
 ment. Operators say this is the cleverest trick ever 
 recorded in the annals of the street. And for the 
 first time the boys got to the windward of Jay 
 Gould. 
 
 Some of the old-timers in Wall street remember 
 how a bogus " Duke of Aberdeen " got the best of 
 Jay Gould about the year 1870. He brought forged 
 letters of introduction to prominent bankers and busi- 
 ness men in this country, and got into Mr. Gould to 
 the extent of )j30o,ocx). A greater part of this was 
 recovered, but Mr. Gouid was about $60,000 out on 
 the transaction. 
 
 Mr. Gould was much annoyed a few months before 
 his death by the persecutions of a crank named 
 Joseph P. Megler, who went about insisting upon con- 
 tracting an alliance with the daughters of various 
 prominent millionaires throughout the country. This 
 fellow insisted upon his right to the hand of one of 
 Mrs. W. H. Vanderbilt's granddaughters, and wrote 
 numerous letters to Mrs. Vanderbilt demanding that 
 she give him one of her granddaughters in marriage. 
 He also wrote the following letter to Miss Helen 
 Gould : — 
 
 Dear Miss — I have gone into the matrimonial 
 market, and your name is on my catalogue. Should 
 
4\ 
 
 idsor 
 y the 
 incs- 
 point- 
 ; ever 
 )r the 
 
 f Jay 
 
 ember 
 )est of 
 forged 
 d busi- 
 Duld to 
 his was 
 out on 
 
 before 
 named 
 Ion con- 
 Ivarious 
 . This 
 one of 
 
 wrote 
 ng that 
 Lrriage. 
 
 Helen 
 
 CRANKS AND CRAZY MEN. 
 
 297 
 
 this information command your fancy, be kind enough 
 to write me of your approval at once. 
 
 Very respectfully, 
 
 Joseph P. Megler. 
 
 It is remarkable that Mr. Gould and his family 
 escaped all the plots and assaults that were laid 
 against their lives and property. They lived in con- 
 stant apprehension and were compelled to adopt the 
 most effective measures for self-protection. 
 
 H 
 
 kmonial 
 Should 
 
^11 
 
 \m 
 
 CHAPTER XIX. 
 
 Stories of Interviews With Mr. Gould by 
 Newspaper Reporters. 
 
 Says a newspaper representative : It was about 
 a week after the elevated railroad hearinof in the Court 
 of Common Pleas, in November, 1883, that I had a 
 funny experience interviewing Jay Gould. He had 
 been on the witness stand two consecutive days, stand- 
 ing the legal firing as calmly as if questioned by one 
 of his clerks. The court-room was packed to suffoca- 
 tion by persons brought there through curiosity to see 
 Gould. Several times he passed his hand over his 
 brow, and the Judge ordered the windows lowered to 
 give more air, particularly as it seemed at one time 
 that the witness would faint. 
 
 A couple of days later rumor had it that Mr. Gould 
 was sick, but all repcr'ers were met by George Gould, 
 who gave the assurance that his father was qu'te well. 
 I called at the Fifth Avenue mansion the following 
 afternoon, having been cautioned by my cit}' editor 
 not to come back without positive information. 
 
 I was shown into the reception-room on th^ left of 
 the hall and the servant took up my card. Presently 
 George Gould entered and said his father vv^as dress- 
 ing to go out, asking if he could be of service to me. 
 
 (298) 
 
? I 
 
 by 
 
 , about 
 e Court 
 I had a 
 rie had 
 3, stand- 
 by one 
 suffoca- 
 :y to see 
 ,ver his 
 ered to 
 ,ne time 
 
 , Gould 
 Gould, 
 l)te well. 
 )11 owing- 
 editor 
 
 ifi left of 
 fresently 
 Ls dress- 
 [e to me. 
 
 STORIES BY REPORTERS. 
 
 299 
 
 Telling him of the disquieting rumors concerning 
 his father, he said they werf. false, absolutely false. 
 " But," said I, •' if Mr. Gould is not sick cannot I see 
 him, just to convince myself?" 
 
 '* I'll see ; excuse me a moment," said George, and 
 he ran upstairs. 
 
 Was he 111? 
 
 About five minutes later in walked Mr. Gould, and, 
 extending his hand, which I t( he gave mine a 
 gentle shake, and in a modulated voice asked : 
 
 •• Do I look as if I were ill ? " 
 
 George had apprised his father of my mission, and 
 he came charged. He didn't look like a sick man. 
 Bidding me be seated, he let himself down gingerly 
 upon a small straw-bottomed chair. 
 
 Mr. Gould sat w'ith his side to the window a little 
 to my right facing me, so that I could observe every 
 play of his countenance. Crossing his legs, one foot 
 resting squarely on a fox skin, he ran both thumbs 
 over his gold watch chain, and said : 
 
 " Well, what can I do for you ? " 
 
 Telling him the object of my call, which so far had 
 been satisfactory, I asked him if it was true that he 
 had been squeezed to the extent of millions in Wall 
 street, as reported. 
 
 " Haven't heard of it," he replied in the same low 
 tone and slowly, 
 
 " But there are rumors that you lost heavily." 
 
 "Yes?" 
 
 ^' Is that true ? " 
 
 «i1 
 
 I 
 
 Inl !'1 
 
 ■: i 
 
 ;',;.;t| 
 
 i !; 1 
 
IJ 
 
 300 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 " I can't say," and he dropped one hand on his knee, 
 while with the other he toyed incessantly with the 
 small charm suspended from his watch-chain. 
 
 "What is your opinion of the course of the stock 
 market within the next fortnight ? " I then ventured. 
 
 " I can't say," he replied, as his black eyes darted 
 from the floor into my face as if he intended reading 
 me through. 
 
 " Do you anticipate a large grain movement this 
 fall ? " 
 
 " Perhaps, yes." 
 
 "And that will, of course, advance the granger 
 
 stocks, won't it ? " 
 
 " Yes." 
 
 A Dry Pump. 
 
 Seeing that he was not disposed to let himself out 
 to any great extent on finances — not that he need 
 have feared my taking advantage of his information — 
 I went on another tack and said it was rumored that 
 he was about to go away on a cruise aboard the yacht. 
 
 "Yes.'*" he answered, with an attempt at a smile. 
 
 "Then you do contemplate going? " 
 
 " No." And he twirled the little charm around his 
 thumb with increased vigor. 
 
 " You do not intend leaving the city ? " 
 
 " No." 
 
 Then his right foot apparently got asleep, for he 
 stood up suddenly, stamped the foot a couple of times 
 and resumed his seat, crossing^ his left leg over the 
 right this time. 
 
 llr 
 
STORIES BY REPORTERS. 
 
 301 
 
 ; knee» 
 th the 
 
 stock 
 itured. 
 darted 
 •eading 
 
 int this 
 
 granger 
 
 self out 
 e need 
 ation — 
 
 red that 
 
 le yacht. 
 
 smile. 
 
 3und his 
 
 ), for he 
 of times 
 over the 
 
 " Mr. Gould," I then said in desperation, as I was 
 getting tired of doing all the talking, " then I can safely 
 report you as quite well, and that you do not intend to 
 take a trip on your yacht." 
 
 " Yes ; " and he inclined his head gently while 
 closing his eyes. 
 
 "Are you going down town to-morrow?^' 
 
 " Perhaps." 
 
 Being asked where his yacht then was, he dropped 
 his watch charm, and exclaimed : 
 
 " Well, ask George." 
 
 We arose simultaneously, and Mr. Gould made a 
 step forward, I suppose to open the reception-room 
 door. The door was ajar about six inches. I under- 
 stood he never allowed a door to be closed while alone 
 in a room with a stranger. As he stepped forward 
 his foot caught in the fox-skin rug, which had been 
 turned up, and he stumbled. 
 
 Before he could recover himself he went forward, 
 but he quickly raised both hands to protect himself 
 and came with full force against the door, which closed 
 with a banof that reverberated throucrhout the house. 
 
 I don't exactly know what the people in the house 
 thought had happened, but in an instant George came 
 running across the hallway from the parlor, the foot- 
 man rushed forward, and a small dog raised such a 
 V in barking upstairs that it looked as if a riot might 
 be going on. 
 
 When the door was opened George and the foot- 
 man stood there open-mouthed, thinking, no doubt, 1 
 
 ji It; 
 
 m h\ 
 
^i)l 
 
 302 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 had assaulted Mr. Gould, but the latter gave a sickly 
 smile, and in a few words assured hir son that it was 
 all right and explained the circumstance. That was 
 my last interview with Jay Gould. 
 
 How a Reporter Interviewed hiiii on a Mountain Side 
 
 in Colorado. 
 
 Mr. Jay Gould came out of the office door leading 
 to the veranda of the Iron Springs Hotel at Manitou, 
 Colorado, one morning in July, 1888, accompanied by 
 his physician, Dr. Munn. The two stood at the head 
 of the stairway overlooking the canyon on the iron 
 springs for a few minutes, and I had an opportunity to 
 note the great change in the Wizard's appearance 
 since the last time I had seen him, two years before. 
 His face bore the impress of suffering, the lines in it 
 were drawn, the eyes heavy, and, when he started 
 down the stairway, his steps were slow and his body 
 swayed slightly as if his strength were not sufficient 
 to encourage vigor of movement. 
 
 Dr. Munn told me a few minutes later that Mr, 
 Gould was not in very robust health. 
 
 " He has come here to rest and I don't think he 
 would like to be interviewed," said the doctor. I 
 argued that I had come a long ways to secure from 
 Mr. Gould an expression of opinion on two matters 
 of the greatest importance to the West — the rumored 
 extension of the Union Pacific Railway from Denver 
 into the Southwestern country, and the amalgamation 
 of that road with the Denver, Texas and Fort Worth 
 Railway, which was then nearing completion. I re- 
 
sickly 
 it was 
 It was 
 
 Side 
 
 eading 
 anitou, 
 lied by 
 e head 
 le iron 
 inity to 
 iarance 
 before, 
 js in it 
 started 
 body 
 ifficient 
 
 lat Mr. 
 
 link he 
 or. I 
 e from 
 
 natters 
 mored 
 
 Denver 
 
 imation 
 Worth 
 I re- 
 
 
 CD 
 
 n 
 
 M 
 
 O 
 
 O 
 
 o 
 o 
 
 cj 
 
 r 
 a 
 
 > 
 
 m 
 
 p— 1 
 
 O 
 
 o 
 
 
 > 
 < 
 
 M 
 
 !^ 
 G 
 
 (303) 
 
 m 
 
■ ^>t 
 
 m 
 
 :304 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 quested the doctor's permission to ask Mr. Gould one 
 or two questions which would serve the double pur- 
 pose of setting- at rest doubt as to the Union Pacific's 
 intentions and relievingf Mr. Gould of much future an- 
 noyance. I think the last suggestion influenced Dr. 
 Munn's negative permission : " Well, I don't think you 
 will get anything out of him." 
 
 He Smiled Once or Twice. 
 
 Mr. Gould was walking slowly up the bridle path 
 that led to the old Pike*s Peak trail, his hands clasped 
 behind him and his attention riveted oii the snow- 
 capped summit of the Peak, fifteen miles away up in 
 the air as you looked to the southeast. 
 
 He did not see me until I had made a misstep a few 
 yards behind him and sent the gravel and loose earth 
 scatterinof down the mountain. Then he turned and 
 peered at me under the half-drawn lids of his beady 
 eyes. He remained standing perfectly still in the 
 same attitude until I had come up with him. 
 
 I stopped a few feet from him and stated my mission 
 in these words, as nearly as I can recall them : "Mr- 
 Gould, the Denver A/^cws has sent me to secure, if 
 possible, a confirmation or denial of the reports cur- 
 rent in New York and Chicago concerning the plans 
 for extending the Union Pacific south from Denver, 
 and also amalgamating with the Denver, Texas and 
 Fort Worth Road. I hope this explanation will serve 
 as an apology for intruding upon your privacy." 
 
 Mr. Gould listened patiently, and then looking up- 
 ward again at the snow-capped Peak, said: "I don't 
 
 A 
 
STORIES BY REPORTERS. 
 
 305 
 
 i one 
 pur- 
 :ific's 
 e an- 
 d Dr. 
 kyou 
 
 2 path 
 
 lasped 
 
 snow- 
 
 I up in 
 
 p a few 
 
 ,e earth 
 
 ed and 
 
 beady 
 
 in the 
 
 lission 
 "Mr- 
 :ure, if 
 Irts cur- 
 ie plans 
 lenver, 
 :as and 
 111 serve 
 
 » 
 
 |ing up- 
 I don't 
 
 know that I can give you the information you seek. 
 I have been away from the East — from business I 
 mean — so long that I am not famihar with the projects 
 you speak of. I should Hke to tell you something 
 worth youi journey, but I am not well enough informed 
 to do so." 
 
 " Perhaps you could tell me enough in a general 
 way to stop these reports," I suggested. 
 
 "What do they say I am going to do?" he asked, 
 turning his eyes on me again, as I briefly retailed the 
 gossip concerning the future of the Union Pacific, of 
 which Mr. Gould was supposed to be seeking the con- 
 trol. He smiled once or twice, that is his eyes lighted 
 up a trifle, though his face lost none of its haggard- 
 ness. 
 
 others Knew More than he Did. 
 
 When I had concluded he said : *' Well, they must 
 talk about something. They appear to be much better 
 informed than I am on these subjects. Do you know 
 this country out here?" he said, abruptly changing 
 the subject. 
 
 I told him that I had visited Manitou and Pike's 
 Peak and had been up the range to the cascades. He 
 started to ask me a question, but I anticipated by say- 
 ing: "Mr. Gould, I think you would be saved much 
 annoyance for tne next week or two if these reports 
 about your railway plans and also this sensational 
 statement about your health could be disposed of now. 
 A number of newspaper reporters are on their way to 
 
 20 
 
 m 
 
 .11 , 
 
 lltil 
 
 .1! 
 
 I 
 
 
 in! 
 
^sssi,^iJi£tssemimmsmiSm 
 
 ^t.)i> 
 
 306 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 investigate them. They could be easily turned back 
 if you denied the reports." 
 
 , i held out to him a telegram from Chicago, which 
 stated that he was seriously ill. He eyed it, but didn't 
 take it. 
 
 "So they're talking about my health, too, are they? 
 Well, I'm used to beinor talked about. If I denied all 
 tile rumors circulated about me and my affairs I would 
 not have time to visit so charming a place as this. 
 About that report concerning my health, you see that 
 1 am still alive. It is true that I have been slightly 
 troubled with my face. That has interfered with my 
 sleep, but my appetite is very good. I am not as sick 
 as some people hope. About the railway stories I 
 have nothing to say. What place is that?" 
 
 A Mountain Grave. 
 
 He pointed up a trend in the valley leading to 
 Cheyenne Canyon, one of the most picturesque spots 
 in the Colorado mountains. I told him, and indicated 
 as nearly as our remote position would allow, the 
 location of the grave of Helen Hunt Jackson—" H. 
 H." He asked many more questions about the points 
 of interest in the vicinity of the Peak, and said : 
 
 " I should like to go up there, but it is too difficult. 
 My son (he didn't mention which, although I had seen 
 the name of Edwin in the register) went up this 
 morning early. I may go up some day when the rail- 
 road is built. They will build one pretty soon." 
 
 We had walked slowly along as we talked, but when 
 we reached the steep part of the trail he turned and 
 
hi 
 
 d back 
 
 >, which 
 it didn't 
 
 •e they ? 
 
 inied all 
 
 1 would 
 
 as this. 
 
 see that 
 
 1 slightly 
 
 with my 
 
 )t as sick 
 
 stories 1 
 
 jading to 
 [ue spots 
 indicated 
 ^llow, the 
 ;on— " H. 
 the points 
 
 laid : 
 difficult. 
 
 had seen 
 
 up this 
 
 In the rail- 
 
 Ion. 
 but when 
 urned and 
 
 STORIES BY REPOKTEUS. 
 
 307 
 
 we retraced our steps. His attention was attracted 
 
 by a fragment of pyrites that some one had dropp(;d 
 
 to the ground. He indicated it with the toe of his 
 
 boot and said : 
 
 " There are many chances to make money in this 
 
 Western country. That rock may contain valuable 
 
 mineral. A little money and perseverance will make 
 
 any man rich. I came very near coming West when 
 
 I was a young man. A friend named Miller (it was 
 
 either Miller or Miiller) wanted me to accompany 
 
 him in 1854 ^^ '55- ^ ^^^ half inclined to do it, but 
 
 I changed my mind. I was always sorry that I did 
 
 not come until I heard, four or five years later, that 
 
 my friend was killed in Nevada. I guess it's just as 
 
 well that I remained in the East. I might have been 
 
 killed, too. 
 
 Easy to Get Rich. 
 
 "Yes, a man will get rich in this Western country, 
 and there has never been a time when so many op- 
 portunities abounded as now. A little money and 
 hard work will make any man independent, particu- 
 larly in the West. There are so many undeveloped 
 resources to be developed. I have always had great 
 confidence in the West." 
 
 By this time we had reached the hotel again. Mr. 
 Gould turned, as he placed his foot on the step above, 
 and said : " It is too bad you came so far for nothing, 
 but I suppose you will write an article anyway. I 
 hope you will be accurate." 
 
 As I turned to go down the trail toward the station, 
 
 ' ii 
 
 l( 
 
 -< i i 
 
-^memmm^^mmm 
 
 < I 
 
 308 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 half a mile away, I thanked Mr. Gould for his courtesy 
 and volunteered the information that an excursion 
 party of 200 Boston school teachers was to arrive 
 that afternoon. 
 
 " I'm sorry for that," said he. " I hoped to have all 
 this grand scenery to myself. But I can assure you 
 that they won't get any more information than you.'' 
 
 Mr. Gould I*]ivJoyed this Interview at his Irviiiyton Suin- 
 
 iiier Home. 
 
 The excitement attending the elopement of the 
 dauothter of Giovanni P. Morosini with Coachman 
 Schilling had pretty nearly died away, when ihere 
 came a rumor that Mr. Gould had determined to 
 carry Mrs. Schilling to Europe in his steam yacht. 
 The rumor said that the misguided girl was even then 
 on board of the yacht, which lay in the Hudson a mile 
 south of Irvington. I had been engaged in trying to 
 solve the seeming mystery of Mrs. Schilling's disap- 
 pearance, and this rumor sent me hurrying up to 
 Irvington to ask Mr. Gould about it. 
 
 A warm afternoon was dying when I reached the 
 puzzling structure known as Mr. Gould's summer 
 home. It was my first visit and I looked 'n vain for a 
 door pretentious enough to indicate that it opened 
 into some room not occupied by the servants. I 
 finally came to a ginger-bread door that was half 
 glass. I rapped on the glass, and pretty soon the 
 door opened about an inch. Before I saw who was on 
 the other side I asked : 
 
 " Is Mr. Gould in ? " 
 
STORIES BY KErOKTKhS. 
 
 309 
 
 )urtesy 
 
 :ursion 
 
 arrive 
 
 lave 
 
 all 
 
 are you 
 you.'' 
 
 >ii Sum- 
 
 of the 
 achman 
 n ihere 
 ined to 
 [1 yacht. 
 /en then 
 n a mile 
 rying to 
 
 ; disap- 
 up to 
 
 led the 
 summer 
 ain for a 
 opened 
 /ants. I 
 ivas half 
 soon the 
 o was on 
 
 The door slowly opened wider, finally disclosini^ 
 Mr. Gould himself. He wore a shabby coat and had 
 on slippers. His eyes twinkled merrily as he looked 
 cautiously around and then said: 
 
 •' I don't believe he is in !" 
 
 This surprised me very much, but as It seemed to 
 tickle Mr. Gould I gave no sign that I had ever met 
 him before and asked : 
 
 " Do you expect him in before long?" 
 
 "I really cannot say," replied Mr. Gould, with a 
 brighter twinkle than ever in his eyes. " What did 
 you want to see him for?" 
 
 I explained the object of my errand and Mr. Gould 
 said : 
 
 "I am sure that Mr. Gould doesn't know anything 
 about Mrs. Schilling and that he has no intention of 
 taking her to Europe or anywhere else." 
 
 "I am very much obliged to you, Mr. Gould," I 
 said. 
 
 He started abrupdy and then laughed right out 
 and said, " You are perfectly welcome, young man, I'm 
 
 sure. 
 
 n 
 
 How the Railway Magnate Fooled a Collection of Chicago 
 
 Reporters. 
 
 Jay Gould arrived at the Grand Pacific Hotel in 
 Chicago one Sunday afternoon in the autumn of 1882. 
 It was one of his regular tours of inspection across the 
 continent, and on this occasion he was in a particularly 
 good humor. 
 
 A small horde of railroad reporters was gathered in 
 
 P 
 
 'I' 
 
 ¥- 
 
I 
 
 310 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 a J! 1314 ;ii 1 
 
 ill! 
 
 the corridor avvaitini: his coniini/, and when he entered 
 and saw them a merry twinkle came in his eye, and 
 with an expression that almost approached a smile he 
 said cheerily : " Well, boys, art* you waitinj^r to see 
 me?" The reply came in a chorus of "Yeses." I 
 was a member of that small horde and was pushed 
 forward to act as spokesman. 
 
 There was a Hurry in railroad circles at that time, 
 and many stockholders feared that Gould's tour 
 through the West meant more than appeared on its 
 face. I told Mr. Gould of this fcelinir and uroed him 
 to give the newspaper men an interview on the gen- 
 eral railroad situation. The twinkle in his eye 
 became more perceptible than when he first en- 
 tered. 
 
 "Well," he said, contemplatively, "if you will wait 
 
 until I make a short toilet I will come down and see 
 
 you.'' 
 
 Curious Twinkle in his Eye. 
 
 I thoucrht there was something- ominous in that un- 
 wonted twinkle in his eye, and the older men in that 
 group of reporters were astounded. They had never 
 seen Jay Gould in such a complaisant mood before, 
 although they had seen him scores of times. Mr. 
 Gould came down stairs on schedule time and headed 
 the procession to a reception-room in which there 
 was a \onor table. Mr. Gould took the head of the 
 table and the reporters surrounded the other three 
 sides. 
 
 " Now, then, boys, when you're ready crack away," 
 
STORIES IIY RFPOKTERS. 
 
 311 
 
 
 titered 
 •e, and 
 iiile he 
 to see 
 
 IS. 1 
 
 )ushed 
 
 t time, 
 ► tour 
 on its 
 L-d him 
 e gen- 
 s eye 
 St en- 
 
 11 wait 
 id see 
 
 lat un- 
 n that 
 
 never 
 before, 
 Mr. 
 leaded 
 
 there 
 of the 
 - three 
 
 away, 
 
 »» 
 
 said the magnate in a tone of voice that was as hearty 
 as though he were really a good fellow. Then fol- 
 lowed a fusillade of questions that would have stag- 
 gered and confused any man but Jay Gould. The 
 questions were fired in solid and scattering volleys, 
 but not one missed the keen ear of Gould and the an- 
 swer came back as rapidly as the questions were 
 asked, and each answer was unerringly directed to the 
 man who had asked it. 
 
 The boys were amazed and delighted. They cov- 
 ered page after page with notes, and thought they 
 were getting the biggest interview the " silent man " 
 had ever given out. The questions and answers came 
 so thick and fast that they had no time to think — 
 they simply put down the answers and felt that they 
 were good and sufficient. At last the firing of ques- 
 tions became desultory and finally ceased altogether. 
 The reporters' ammunition was exhausted. They 
 leaned back in their chairs, and with great beads of 
 perspiration on their faces. But there was a look of 
 joy in their eyes. They felt the ineffable satisfaction 
 that they had secured the greatest interview ever 
 vouchsafed by the sphynx of Wall street. 
 
 The Reporters Duped. 
 
 "Are you all through, boys?" asked Mr. Gould 
 
 cheerfully, and looking fresher than when he began. 
 "All through : we thank you, Mr. Gould." 
 The twinkle in his eye was almost as scintillant as 
 the evening star, as he left the room, and there was a 
 ghost of a smile under his black mustache. 
 
 ¥>' 
 
 ! ri 
 
 I'r. 
 
 I ;' 
 
312 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Then we all sat down to compare notes. We went 
 over the questions and answers carefully. They were 
 all there, but to the horror ol* every one, the *' answers " 
 did not answer the questions. The notes were gone 
 over carefully again and again, but always with the 
 same result. Then it dawned on the bewildered re- 
 porters that in their haste they had allowed the wily 
 railroader to " play them." He had actually not given 
 a word of new information, and the next morning 
 there was not a newspaper in Chicago that had a 
 " stickful " of interview with Jay Gould. 
 
 All of which accounted for the twinkle in his eye. 
 
 Said he Hadn't Time to Deny all the Lies Told About 
 
 him. 
 
 If Jay Gould knew and trusted him, a newspaper 
 reporter rarely failed to secure an interview with him. 
 I had perhaps a half-dozen talks with the dead finan- 
 cier, and in each instance Mr. Gould conversed freely 
 upon a variety of subjects. 
 
 The first time I was assigned to see Mr. Gould was 
 during the exciting days succeeding the election of 
 1884. ^t had been charged that he was instrumental 
 in holdinij back the Presidential election returns, which 
 were passed over the Western Union wires, either in 
 the interest of James G. Blaine, the Republican can- 
 didate for the Presidency, or to secure himself from 
 loss in tlie stock market should a raid be made upon 
 his holdings after the declaration of Mr. Cleveland's 
 triumph. 
 
 While a maddened crowd was threatening to sack 
 
STORIES BY REPORTERS. 
 
 313 
 
 » 
 
 e went 
 y were 
 wers " 
 ^ crone 
 th the 
 •ed re- 
 le wily 
 t given 
 lorning 
 had a 
 
 eye. 
 
 L About 
 
 rspaper 
 
 th him. 
 
 finan- 
 
 freely 
 
 Lild was 
 tion of 
 imental 
 L which 
 Ither in 
 In can- 
 If from 
 upon 
 eland's 
 
 b sack 
 
 the Tribune building and was hooting Gould's name, 
 the financier was reported to be under guard in the 
 Western Union Building, apprehensive of mob vio- 
 lence. Being unable to secure any satisfaction as to 
 his whereabouts at the Western Union offices, I called 
 at his house at Fifth Avenue and Forty-seventh street. 
 The butler told me Mr. Gould was not in, and prob- 
 ably was out of the city. I suspected that the butler 
 was fibbing. On entering the Windsor I happened 
 to meet a broker who had lari^e business dealincrs. 
 with Mr. Gould and, besides, was his personal friend. 
 I explained to him the situation. He gave me a note 
 of introduction to the Wizard. It got to Mr. Gould 
 and word came back that he would see me in the re- 
 ception-room. 
 
 How he Was Dressed. 
 
 I was ushered into a richly furnished but small 
 
 apartment on the left of the hall. It was just after 
 seven p. m., and the gas burned brightly from a cut- 
 glass chandelier. Soon there appeared at the door 
 a man of exceedingly small stature, with very black 
 hair, beard and mustache, dressed in dark trousers 
 and vest and wearing a modest smoking-jacket. Slip- 
 pers which looked like Russian leather incased his 
 very small feet. He wore a plain, white collar, with 
 a little black bow tucked under it. He said quietly : 
 
 *' You wish to see Mr. Gould. I am he. What can 
 I do for you ? " 
 
 As he spoke Mr. Gould rolled an easy-chair to the 
 
 w>\i 
 
m 
 
 314 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 grate and rested his feet on the tender, behind which 
 a fire was blazing brightly. 
 
 "Mr. Gould," 1 said, ** they are saying downtown 
 that you are holding back the election returns.' Crowds 
 have gathered in front of the Western Union and 
 Ti'ibune buildings and are singing ' Hang Jay Gould 
 to a sour apple tree.' '' 
 
 Mr. Gould smiled rather coldly, and then fixing his 
 eyes upon me, said quietly : " If I denied all the lies 
 circulated about me I should have no time to attend 
 to business. Of course there is no truth in this. I 
 do not care one rap of my finger whether Cleveland, 
 Blaine, Butler or any one else has been elected. I 
 doubt if the administration of either would imperil the 
 prosperity of the country." 
 
 A Convenient Cold. 
 
 Then Mr. Gould proceeded to explain that all the 
 time he had been reported to be guarded by police 
 officers in the Western Union Building he had been 
 at his home nursincr a sliorht cold. There followed a 
 brief conversation on the startling events of the pre- 
 ceding days, and as I retired Mr. Gould indicated to 
 me just what I should quote him as saying and what 
 not. 
 
 Apparendy Mr. Gould was pleased with the man- 
 ner in which the interview was treated, for when on 
 several occasions thereafter I asked informadon from 
 him he never failed to furnish it if the request was 
 reasonable. 
 
 Mr. Gould was not an easy man for a newspaper 
 
STORIES BY REPORTERS. 
 
 315 
 
 /hich 
 
 town 
 
 ovvds 
 
 and 
 
 iould 
 
 le his 
 le lies 
 ittend 
 lis. I 
 eland, 
 ed. I 
 iril the 
 
 all the 
 police 
 been 
 wed a 
 le pre- 
 ted to 
 d what 
 
 t man- 
 len on 
 n from 
 ist was 
 
 rspaper 
 
 man to get at. Nor yet was he a difficult one to reach. 
 It all depended on the subject matter, and this Mr. 
 Gould always posted himself about before an inter- 
 view was granted. In his active speculative days there 
 were times when a dozen words coming from him 
 were of more weight than a column from any one else, 
 even the closest of his assumed associates. 
 
 When it was finally decided that it was for the inter- 
 est of Mr. Gould to answer the query to be put or to 
 give his views on the subject matter proposed, he 
 would come sidling to the window or into the outer 
 office where the reporter had been ushered, and with 
 a single glance and the merest suggestion of a nod 
 wait for the questioner to put in words just what he 
 desired to know. If there was a ticker near, Mr. 
 Gould would reach in a mechanical way for the tape; 
 if there was a chairback or a desk or anything for him 
 to lean up against he would utilize it, and his hands 
 would be sure to be fumbling a gold pencil, a rolled-up 
 bit of paper, or something of that sort. 
 
 His Interviews Served his own Interests. 
 
 The reporter, if he was a down-town expert, did not 
 haul out a note-book and turn the talk into a dictation 
 exercise. If anything of that sort was attempted, or 
 if it was evident by the question that the interrogator 
 did not understand the subject and was floundering 
 out of his depth, the irritation on the part of Mr. 
 Gould was plainly shown, and the interview cut very 
 short. He could be drawn out, but it was only by one 
 well up in the subject, and then the drawing out was 
 
 i 
 
 I'l 
 
 
 III 
 
 1^' 
 
316 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 fi' 
 
 M S 
 
 of answers intended to hide Mr, Gould's knowledge 
 of and position on the subject talked about. 
 
 He did not impress one as speaking the truth. 
 Being a little man, he was generally shorter than his 
 vis-a-vis, and did not look up to meet eye to eye. In- 
 stead, Mr. Gould would fix his gaze on the watch- 
 charm, or vest button, or even the shoes of his ques- 
 tioner, but every now and then, particularly after some 
 remark he had himself made, his eyes might be caught 
 taking a sharp glance upward by the upturning of the 
 eyebrows, but not by the upturning of the face 
 
 He knew few reporters by nan_. . few more by 
 face, but after a satisfactory printed report on some 
 subject on which Mr, Gould was interested, the re- 
 porter might detect in another visit a shadow of ap- 
 preciation and a disposition to talk more freely. That 
 is, if Mr. Gould had anything which he wished to 
 have the public read and believe just at that time. If 
 he did not there was the same turning down of the 
 news-seeker, with the formal " Mr. Gould begs to be 
 excused." 
 
 Some people will appreciate the fact that the public 
 expects them to say something on a given subject at 
 a given time. Not so Mr. Gould. The public heard 
 from him only when he, not the public, would profit by 
 the utterance. 
 
/ledge 
 
 ti 
 
 truth, 
 an his 
 e. In- 
 watch- 
 3 ques- 
 r some 
 caught 
 r of the 
 
 lore by 
 iD some 
 the re- 
 V of ap- 
 That 
 shed to 
 me. If 
 of the 
 i to be 
 
 2 public 
 )ject at 
 
 lc heard 
 rofit by 
 
 CHAPTER XX. 
 Incidents in Jay Gould's Life. 
 
 In his youth Mr. Gould's vaulting ambition was to 
 be an editor. He ventured over the hills from Rox- 
 bury up to Stamford, the beauty spot of Delaware 
 county, while he was yet in his teens, to get the chance 
 to learn the printing business. Venerable S. B. 
 Champion, then a hustling journalist hardly much older 
 than young Gould, gave the lad the chance he sought. 
 Mr. Gould tied on his apron, rolled up his sleeves, and 
 went at it. 
 
 Champion is full of anecdotes of that apprenticeship 
 time. There is a tradition that in addition to setting 
 type, the apprentice was permitted to look somewhat 
 after the editorial side of the paper. 
 
 Early in Mr. Gould's career Mr. Champion's journal 
 was able, for one week at least, to attract considerable 
 and rather unusual attention. " Champ " went one 
 day to a political convention, held over in an adjoining 
 town, and young Mr. Jason Gould was left in charge 
 on publication day to close up the forms and generally 
 look after such important matters as addressing wrap- 
 pers and seeing to it that the office towel was kept 
 standing safely in its accustomed corner. 
 
 But the future maste*' of the railway world was am- 
 
 (317) 
 
 1" 
 
 M 
 
 a I 
 
I- . i 
 li;,,:;, 
 
 Sid 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 (' '•; 
 
 Mtious. He bethought himself to scan the editorial, 
 more or less fervid, in which " Champ " was extolling 
 the party's nominees. Somehow it seemed to the bud- 
 ding genius that that editorial lacked something. 
 
 After consideration he came to the conclusion that 
 he ought to round the rhetoric out; that he ought to 
 supply the virtues that were lacking. He did. Mr. 
 Champion came home to find his eulogistic periods 
 slighdy changed. Only slightly. Mr. Gould had only 
 taken the liberty of writing in an occasional "not" 
 here and there. 
 
 That was the week that " Champ " learned to swear. 
 
 It was also the week that Mr. Jay Gould became an 
 
 ex-editor. 
 
 A Contract to Teach. 
 
 After Mr. Gould had discovered that joy was not 
 all unconfined in journalism, he rather inclined to look 
 for a career as a pedagogue. Old Squire Burhans, 
 who had taught Mr. Gould the necessary " r's," was 
 of the opinion that he ought to be a great success as 
 a school teacher, and he encouraged the young man's 
 ambition. In this is said to have appeared Mr. Gould's 
 first opportunity for speculation. A country "deestrict" 
 concluded to cramble on his knowinor enouQfh to teach 
 the Catskill boys and girls, and the committeemen went 
 so far as to sion a contract authorizinof younof Mr. 
 Gould to begin teaching at something like $^o a month, 
 the teacher to "board around." 
 
 But the appointment did not come without a contest, 
 for one faction in the district was anxious to retain tlie 
 
 fir 
 
 1 1 J ■. 
 
INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 319 
 
 itorial, 
 tolling 
 le bud- 
 
 >n that 
 ght to 
 I. Mr. 
 Deriods 
 ad only 
 "not" 
 
 I swear, 
 ime an 
 
 as not 
 
 to look 
 
 lurhans, 
 
 s," was 
 
 ess as 
 
 man's 
 
 ould's 
 
 strict 
 
 teach 
 n went 
 cr Mr. 
 month, 
 
 (ontest, 
 tain the 
 
 old teacher. Just after the contract with Mr. Gould 
 had been signed, somebody began to circulate reports 
 to the effect that Mr. Gould had spoken disparagingly 
 of the intellectual calibre of the committee which had 
 engaged him. Now, up in Delaware county in those 
 days that sort of thing was unforgivable. The com- 
 mittee notified Mr. Gould that his engagement was 
 cancelled. The old teacher was to be retained. 
 
 £qual to the Occasion. 
 
 "Oh, I guess not," quoth Mr. Gould, but he could 
 not, or, at least, did not show that he was innocent of 
 the awful crime attributed to him by current rumor, 
 and the old teacher went to work. 
 
 Mr. Gould, when school opened, went over and 
 tendered his services. The mighty men of the School 
 Board w^ere unswervable. Later that week each mem- 
 ber of the board was called upon by a lawyer. The 
 sicrnatures to the contract were shown. Suits were 
 going to be begun. Mr. Gould had been misrepre- 
 sented. He had never entertained any but the highest 
 opinions of the excellent Trustees. It was not so 
 much the loss of his job that pained him as it was the 
 dreadful revelation that he could have been suspected 
 of entertaining for the dignitaries of the district aught 
 but the most distinoruished consideration. 
 
 o 
 
 When somebody cynically suggested that perhaps 
 the originator of the rumors which had resulted in 
 Mr. Gould's losing his school might have been young 
 Mr. Gould himself, that young gentleman was much 
 too forgivinor to do auoht but smile with a cheerfulness 
 
 o o o 
 
 :( ■• 
 
 |ji^ 
 
320 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 that might have been assent or might have been merely 
 
 a show of affection for the crisp ^loo which his lawyer 
 
 had handed him. 
 
 Strange Superstitious. 
 
 Mr. Gould was superstitious. He did not bother, 
 perhaps, over beginning things on PViday, and the new 
 moon over his left shoulder may not have disturbed 
 him. But he once admitted his superstitious weakness. 
 He was on his way down town, when he came across 
 a Wall Street friend, with whom he kept up conversa- 
 tion down the avenue. In the course of the chat Mr. 
 Gould expressed himself as feeling physically much 
 stronger than for a long time. His eyes were clear, 
 his countenance was ruddy ; he did not look like a sick 
 man. 
 
 " I am getting along famously," he said. " My 
 appetite has come back. I feel like a new man. Why, 
 last nijrht I ate two bowls of bread and milk, went to 
 bed at 8 o'clock, and slept through till 8 this morn- 
 
 mg. 
 
 There was as much enthusiasm in the tone as if a 
 record was being made of some stock market transac- 
 tion with a million profit in it. But the cheerfulness 
 disappeared when Mr. Gould's companion asked: 
 " How old are you, Mr. Gould?" 
 
 " Oh, I'm a young man yet," answered the million- 
 aire. 
 
 The evasion was noticed, and for politeness' sake 
 the questioner remarked blandly : " Pardon my in- 
 quiry, I only happened to be thinking of an odd thing 
 
INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 321 
 
 rierely 
 awyer 
 
 )other, 
 le new 
 turbed 
 .kness. 
 across 
 iversa- 
 at Mr. 
 much 
 ; clear, 
 2 a sick 
 
 "My 
 
 Why, 
 'ent to 
 morn- 
 
 las if a 
 Iransac- 
 Ifiilness 
 lasked: 
 
 lilUon- 
 
 sake 
 
 |my in- 
 
 thing 
 
 I heard yesterday. Did you ever hear, IVIr. Gould, 
 that once every seven years a man runs extraordinary 
 risks, and that whenever a man has a birthday divisible 
 by seven he is in clanger?" 
 
 *' No — I never heard of that," said Mr. Gould. Then 
 he turned to his morning paper. The elevated train 
 ran down two or three blocks further. Mr. Gould 
 was scannini^ the death notice column. 
 
 " The stock market looks well," remarked the other 
 gentleman. 
 
 " How strange ! " quoth Mr. Gould. His gaze went 
 on throuqrh the death notices. 
 
 "I think stocks are going a good deal higher," was 
 further remarked. 
 
 " It's really true," said Mr. Gould. 
 
 " Still," went on Mr. Gould's companion, " the bears 
 are well organized and they are confident." 
 
 " My gracious, it's so," said Mr. Gould. 
 
 His nriglibor looked at him a little astonished. Mr. 
 Gould had finislied the death notices and was lookinof 
 out of the window. There was not much c^listen in his 
 eye. The countenance wasn't ruddy. He had been 
 dividing by seven the ages recorded in those death 
 notices. 
 
 "Western Union ou^^ht to go a good deal higher, 
 ouQ-htn't it, Mr. Gould ? " said the other man. 
 
 And Mr. Gould's answer was: "It may be odd, 
 but really, I never heard before about this dividing your 
 age by seven." 
 
 
 ;"■ ' 
 
 
 \f 
 
 ' 
 
 '1' 
 
 ff 
 '? 
 
822 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 m 
 
 " Oh, that's only a foolish superstition," was the 
 soothing reply. 
 
 ** Oh, of course," said Mr. Gould ; " of course ! " 
 « Then the chat went on of stocks, of money rates, of 
 all the fol-de-rol of Wall Street. 
 
 '* Cortlandt next ! " yelled the elevated railroad 
 
 guard. 
 
 Vfi 
 
 •' It's odd, isn't it," said Mr. Gould, as if in a reverie, 
 and he arose to leave the train. •' Do you know," 
 said he, " eight sevens make fifty-six — and fifty-six, sir, 
 is just my age." 
 
 No Coiuiiieiits on Karly Strujig-lcs. 
 
 Mr. Gould was not given to the affectation of tell- 
 ing folks how he started out as a poor boy and had 
 made all his millions himself. On this account down 
 in Wall Street he was rather lonesome. All the rich 
 fellows down there like to tell how they earned the 
 first dollar they ever had. That sort of thing, in fact, 
 seemed somehow to appeal to Mr. Gould's sense of 
 humor. 
 
 Said he to the writer one day : " Do you know that 
 my father's poverty was never worth a single thousand 
 dollars to me ? " By which remark he wished it to be 
 understood probably that he didn't have much of a 
 liking for trafficking upon early struggles. 
 
 A Good Forg-etter. 
 
 Of course, Mr. Gould had lots of enemies. Some- 
 how or other he never seemed to pay much attention 
 to personalities. He was probably the best forgetter 
 the world ever knew. He never treasured ill-feelinfTf 
 
INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 323 
 
 IS 
 
 the 
 
 tes, of 
 
 ailroacl 
 
 reverie, 
 know," 
 -six, sir, 
 
 I of tell- 
 
 ind had 
 
 It down 
 
 the rich 
 
 ned the 
 
 , in fact, 
 
 feense of 
 
 low that 
 
 Ihoiisand 
 
 it to be 
 
 ich of a 
 
 :3ome- 
 Lttention 
 foro^etter 
 lll-feelin 
 
 (T 
 
 against the man who may have maligned him or at- 
 tempted to injure him yesterday, provided that man 
 was going to be of any use to him to-day or to- 
 morrow. 
 
 A newspaper man once wrote a httle chapter of 
 Mr. Gould's life, in die course of which were recounted 
 Ljme of the incidents in which people had trusted to 
 Mr. Gould and been sorry for it. Perhaps the re- 
 porter was young; perhaps he was not conservative ; 
 anyhow, according to liis recital, Mr. Gould was a very 
 wicked person, and responsible for shipwrecking Wall 
 Street careers galore. 
 
 Perhaps Mr. Gould never saw that article. The 
 writer, though, suspected he did, for when, under 
 orders from his managing editor only a fortnight later, 
 he had to call upon Mr. Gould for an interview, that 
 article itself lay stretched across the top of Mr. 
 Gould's desk. The interview was obtained. Mr. 
 Gould was chatty. 
 
 *' I only give you the suggestions," he said. ** You 
 write them out as you think they ought to be," he 
 went on, " and then we will go over the proofs to- 
 gether." 
 
 The reporter modestly suggested that perhaps Mr. 
 Gould was trustinof too much to the judorment of a 
 lesser mortal, but Mr. Gould, with a more or less sig- 
 nificant glance at the newspaper column stretched 
 across the desk, replied : •' Oh, I can trust you — you'll 
 do it all right. I have heard that you have a very 
 nimble pen, my boy." 
 
 h\ 
 
 r 1 
 
 fil 
 
w 
 
 :y2[ 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 i^^ 
 
 ,r I 
 
 Gniil<l nnd the Ncw.spnpors. 
 
 On his way up to Irvington one day Mr. Gould had 
 a party of friends aboard the Atalanta, when some- 
 body HI the party became very much agitated because 
 one of the important newspapers of the city was 
 arraigning Mr. Gould on some account or other. 
 
 " It's a shame ! a shame ! a shame ! " gasped the 
 Ireful one. Others of the party assented. Only the 
 host was quiet. His calm remark was: 
 
 '' Well, gentlemen, what worries me isn't half as 
 much the newspapers that are against me as the news- 
 papers that are for me." 
 
 People who have had an insight into Mr. Gould's 
 
 journalistic career are likely to appreciate what he 
 
 meant. 
 
 The Kotort Coiirtooiis. 
 
 Mr. Gould did not have any of that quality which 
 descriptive persons call " presence." No stranger 
 would have ever been impressed by any mere look 
 at him that he was much of a man. He was courte- 
 olis always. In public he was never known to get 
 mad, or, indeed, even to say a rude thing, except it be 
 on one occasion, when, with more or less quietness, 
 he remarked to an ambitious young gentleman who 
 more recently became a figure in Wall Street: 
 
 " You make me feel very sorry that I am so busy. 
 If I had time I'd really enjoy taking a day off to send 
 you to State prison." 
 
 Of course Mr. Gould was in many scenes where pas- 
 sion ran high. Everybody in Wall street recalls the 
 
1"%^ 
 
 •:» 
 
 INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 325 
 
 lid had 
 some- 
 jecause 
 ,ty was 
 er. 
 
 ped the 
 inly the 
 
 half as 
 le news- 
 Gould's 
 what he 
 
 y which 
 stranger 
 ere look 
 CO ur te- 
 ll to get 
 :ept it be 
 
 uietness, 
 man who 
 
 t: 
 
 so busy, 
 f to send 
 
 rhere pas- 
 ecalls the 
 
 historic day after Black Friday when Mr. Gould's old 
 partner, Henry N. Smith, shaking his finger in Mr. 
 Gould's face, shouted: 
 
 •* I'll live to see the day, sir, when you have to earn 
 a living by going around this street with a hand organ 
 and a monkev." 
 
 *' Maybe you will, Henry, maybe you will," was the 
 soothing response. "And when I want a monkey, 
 Henry, I'll send for you.'' 
 
 Generous to Others. 
 
 Among the brokers of Wall street Jay Gould had 
 long been renowned as the most liberal payer of com- 
 missions the street had ever known. He never dis- 
 puted a broker's account, being satisfied with the 
 broker's work. 
 
 Mr. Gould didn't distribute gifts for public scrutiny, 
 but none the less, he was bifj in his <'enerosities. His 
 wife and his daughter were provided with funds in 
 abundance wherewith to Jo good. But they always 
 acted on his wish that publicity be avoided. 
 
 Many brokers and speculators who have come to 
 grief in Wall street have proclaimed that their ill 
 fortune was directly traceable to the wickedness of 
 Mr. Gould ; but there are other instances, not a few, 
 that go upon the other side of the Wall street ledger. 
 
 One of the former figures of the street for whom Jay 
 Gould, with the rest of folks, had an especial liking, 
 was " Tommy " Warner. It was that financier who 
 bewailed to Mr. Gould once upon a time that a slump 
 in the stock market had just desolated him. 
 
 
 I 
 
326 
 
 LIFE OF JAY dOULD. 
 
 
 " Why," said he, " I've lost $20,000 — and $62.50 of 
 it was my own money." 
 
 His Secret of Success. 
 
 It was once siiofo^ested to Mr. Gould that he had 
 been fairly successful in life, and the inquirer wanted 
 to know if Mr. Gould wouldn't tell the secret of it. 
 
 " There isn't any secret,'' said Mr. Gould. " I avoid 
 bad luck by being patient. Whenever I am obliged 
 to get into a fight I always wait and let the other fel- 
 low get tired first." 
 
 Any student o( the history of Mr. Gould's career 
 in the corporation world will appreciate how again and 
 again he found this quality of patience a prime invest- 
 ment. He never seemed to be in a hurry about any- 
 thing. One of his enemies has remarked that during 
 his last twenty years Jay Gould spent $1,000,000 
 hiring lawyers and paying court fees to accomplish 
 nothing except to have lawsuits postponed. 
 
 TiConard Jerome's Kuins. 
 
 Pacific Mail w^as always one of Mr. Gould's specula- 
 tive favorites. He had been more or less directly Iden- 
 tified with it ever since the time when A. B. Stockwell 
 was its picturesque controller. Stockwell is the his- 
 toric gentleman who, in reciting die story of his Wall 
 street career, has graphically put it in this way: 
 
 •'When I first came to Wall street I had $10,000, 
 and the brokers called me ' Stockwell.' I scooped 
 some profits, and it was • Mr. Stockwell.' I got to 
 dealing in a thousand shares at a time, and they hailed 
 me as ' Captain Stockwell.' I went heavily into Pacific 
 
 ■m 
 
 Si^iii 
 
 wm 
 
50 of 
 
 le had 
 /anted 
 
 fit. 
 [ avoid 
 )bliged 
 tier fel- 
 
 career 
 ain and 
 ; invest- 
 ut any- 
 
 during 
 cx)0,ooo 
 omplish 
 
 pecula- 
 ly iden- 
 ockwell 
 the his- 
 lis Wall 
 
 J 1 0,000, 
 
 scooped 
 
 orot to 
 
 |y hailed 
 
 lo Pacific 
 
 INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 
 Mail, ana folks lifted their hats to * Commodore Stock- 
 well.' 
 
 "Then one day Jay Gould came along. Smash 
 went Pacific Mail, and I went with it. They did not 
 call me * Commodore 
 Stockwell ' after that. 
 Then it was the ' red- 
 headed son of a gun 
 from Ohio.' " 
 
 In the course of his 
 Pacific Mail campaign- 
 ing Mr. Gould was 
 much more frequently 
 a bear than a bull. He 
 used to say he had 
 never found but one un- 
 erring bull point on 
 Pacific Mail, and that 
 was to report that the 
 company had lost one 
 of its ships. Perhaps George j. gould. 
 
 his biororest drive at this stock was when he discomfited 
 Leonard Jerome and played smash with the up-town 
 corps of speculators who made up wliat was once 
 " the Fifth Avenue Hotel party." 
 
 Just after that famous clean-out Leonard Jerome 
 went abroad. In the course of his meanderings he 
 came upon the famed Temple of Karnak. 
 
 "There, Mr. Jerome," quoth a companion, "are the 
 most remarkable ruins in the world." 
 
 M 
 
 f 
 
 i 1; 
 
 
 i 
 
n 
 
 !ff^(li|i 
 
 U 
 
 328 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 " No, oh no ; don't tell that to me," answered 
 Leonard Jerome feelingly : " you ought just to have 
 seen Pacific Mail last summer! " 
 
 III his Father's Place. 
 
 It will be disclosed that Mr. Gould some time before 
 his death put much of his property into the hands of 
 trustees. It is likely to be found, however, that this 
 means much less than on the surface it seems. Mr. 
 Gould's eldest son, George J. Gould, is to be in a strict 
 sense his father's successor. Co-trustees may help him 
 manage certain properties, but George Gould none 
 the less becomes masterful. 
 
 He is likely, too, to grow upon Wall street. Men 
 of affairs who have been close to him respect his 
 ability. Conservative opinion upon this score was 
 reflected in a dispatch which Mr. Henry Allen of the 
 Stock Exchange house of Henry Allen & Co. sent to 
 a Chicago bank president. The dispatch said : 
 
 "George Gould has the opportunity to make a 
 great business record for himself, and business men 
 who know him best believe he will speedily make it. 
 He is already an experienced man of affairs. He is 
 used to handling big questions. He is an intelligent 
 worker, and he works all the time. All the Gould 
 stocks, in being strong to-day, testify to the public faith 
 that Georcre Gould's manaofement will be able and 
 safe, prudent and progressive." 
 
 Not a Heartless Man. 
 
 For the financiers and speculators who bestow their 
 
 ample selves in the easy-chairs of the Windsor Hotel 
 lobby in the evening and placidly discuss the possi- 
 
vered 
 have 
 
 before 
 ids of 
 at this 
 . Mr. 
 a strict 
 ilp him 
 1 none 
 
 Men 
 
 ect his 
 
 re was 
 
 I of the 
 
 sent to 
 
 nake a 
 ;ss men 
 lake it. 
 He is 
 lelhgent 
 Gould 
 \,\\c faith 
 )le and 
 
 )\v their 
 
 ir Hotel 
 
 possi- 
 
 TNCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 029 
 
 bilities of early dividends there was practically only 
 one topic on the evening after Mr. Gould's death. 
 Mostly those who debated the subject were men 
 beyond the middle age, and mostly, also, they were 
 disposed to speak kindly of the dead millionaire. 
 
 " Oh ! " one of them said, when the experiences of 
 
 Mr. Gould with Erie 
 
 Railroad affairs and 
 gold were touched up- 
 on, " it is undoubtedly 
 true that he did not 
 exercise then the same 
 calm discretion and the 
 same conservative 
 judgment which in 
 later years character- 
 ized his course." 
 
 It was interestinof to 
 hear acts which have 
 often been denounced 
 as unscrupulous and 
 
 unlawful thus described 
 
 ^1 u r *i MRS. GEORGE T. GOULD, 
 
 as the result ot the •' 
 
 lack of discretion, but it indicated how death may 
 
 dull the edge of the axe of recrimination. 
 
 " Gould," said another speculator, •' was a most 
 
 gende and kindly man personally. He never spoke 
 
 loudly, and I think that few will recall any public 
 
 display of anger or even annoyance by him. His 
 
 smile was ready and his frown rare. Of course, 
 
 it;. 
 
-:<l*'*!e**l- 
 
 oil ;i 
 
 330 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 '■; ! 
 
 m 
 
 I can speak only of his demeanor before people. 
 How he conducted himself when alone if disappointed 
 or hindered I don't know, but publicly he was 
 admirably self-contained under all conditions. 
 
 '•And I do not believe that he was heartless, as he 
 was often accused of being. I know of men who 
 have been his stanch and loyal friends for years, and 
 I am sure he was a most affectionate father. I dined 
 at his house one evening, and after the dinner his two 
 boys, George and Eddie — they were both full grown 
 — when they said good-night to him kissed him, which 
 seemed to please him. ' 
 
 '•What Gould did," said a third gentleman, ''that 
 was susceptible of criticism was always known. I 
 may say that few of his acts that warranted praise 
 were ever published. Now I recall that during the 
 great Missouri Pacific strike a man who was ofuardinof 
 the railroad property was shot and killed. The day 
 after I walked into Mr. Gould's private office in the 
 Western Union Buildincr. He was sittinof at his desk 
 and had just signed a check. 
 
 "Without thinkino- of what I was doin^f, I Hanced 
 at it and saw that it was for f 5,000, and that it was 
 drawn to the order of the widow of the murdered 
 watchman. Mr. Gould, nodcing that I was observing 
 it, smiled at me and turned the check face down. 
 
 "•You're too late,' I said, •! saw it.' 
 
 "'Well,' he said, still smiling, 'we must look after 
 the families of those who stand by us, you know.' " 
 
 As indicating that Mr. Gould was aware some years 
 
iople. 
 
 )inted 
 
 was 
 
 as he 
 I who 
 •s, and 
 
 dined 
 lis two 
 
 arown 
 
 hich 
 
 w 
 
 I, " that 
 )\vn. I 
 
 praise 
 ng the 
 Liarding 
 |he day 
 
 in the 
 .is desk 
 
 rlanced 
 it was 
 iirdered 
 Iserving 
 in. 
 
 ik after 
 
 > >» 
 ►w. 
 
 |e years 
 
 INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 .331 
 
 aofo that his lunofs were weak and his stomach unreli- 
 able, this gentleman said that one morning as he was 
 leaving the Windsor Hotel he saw Mr. Gould, to 
 whom he wished to speak, walking down town very 
 rapidly. !Mr. Gould was about a half block from him, 
 and although he hurried he did not catch the railroad 
 king until Forty-second street was reached. There 
 he com.plimented him on his abilities as a pedestrian. 
 
 "Ah ! " he replied, " if the upper half of me were 
 as orood as the lower half I should be all rioht." 
 
 It was said by persons in the Windsor Hotel that 
 Mr. Gould had told a few friends that he had in a tin 
 box $10,000,000 or $ 1 1,000,000 worth of Manhattan 
 Elevated Railway stock, and that the box was not to 
 be opened until after his death. As to Mr. Gould's 
 holdings of Western Union and Missouri Pacific, it 
 was estimated that he owned §20,000,000 worth of 
 the securities of the former and that his investments 
 in the latter were fully $50,000,000. 
 
 The Comforts of Life. 
 
 Although personally unpretentious in his mode of 
 living, Jay Gould took great satisfaction in providing 
 for the use of his family all of the comforts and 
 luxuries money could buy. He spared no expense 
 in making his town and country residences attractive. 
 
 The Gould mansion on the northeast corner of 
 Fifth Avenue and Forty-seventh Street is one of the 
 most handsomely furnished homes in New York. 
 Compared with some of the modern city palaces, this 
 house, of course, presents a very modest appearance. 
 
 4 
 
 m 
 
 t. ; :• t 
 
 I 1; - 
 
 1 ,1 
 
'f! 
 
 Ml 
 
 
 If ' 
 
 
 333: 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD, 
 
 It is a plain brownstone building, double die ordinary 
 widdi and diree stories in heio^ht. Considerinor the 
 fact that the Goulds have never attempted to figure 
 in fashionable society, the mansion has abundantly 
 supplied all of their needs and desires of home. Its 
 interior has been decorated by artists of note, and the 
 rooms are full of choice tapestries, quaint furniture, 
 rich and rare, and some oil paintings of great value 
 and unquestioned merit. Mr. Gould was an intelligent 
 and liberal collector of paintings, books, and bric-a-brac. 
 The Gould house at Irvington-oii-the-Hudson, 
 which, by the way, stands near the Tarrytown line, is 
 one of the finest places on the river. The grounds, 
 which contain about 200 acres, are unsurpassed for 
 picturesque beauty in that vicinity. The house, 
 although plain in st\'le, is a large and handsome struc- 
 ture of granite, with a veranda overlooking the river, 
 which flows a quarter of a mile distant. 
 
 Beautiful and Rich Furniture. 
 
 This house also is richly and tastefully furnished 
 and supplied with every known modern convenience. 
 Mr. Gould is said to have expended <;200,ooo on the 
 building after he purchased it. 
 
 A notable feature of the Gould estate at Irvington 
 is the magnificent conservatory, with its hothouse. 
 The conservatory is an eighth of a mile long and its 
 contents embrace the choicest specimens of floriculture. 
 A few years ago Mr. Gould proudly exhibited what 
 he declared to be the finest collection of orchids in 
 this vicinity. In recent years his gardener has paid 
 
 .Hi^ 
 
INCIDENTS IN HIS LIFE. 
 
 .33;? 
 
 Inary 
 y the 
 leure 
 lantly 
 :. Its 
 id the 
 iiiture, 
 
 value 
 Uiorent 
 a-brac. 
 [udson, 
 Une, is 
 rounds, 
 sed tor 
 
 house, 
 e struc- 
 e river, 
 
 irnished 
 :nience. 
 on the 
 
 •vino^ton 
 )thouse. 
 ir and its 
 liculture. 
 led what 
 Irchids in 
 las paid 
 
 much attention to chrysanthemums. In the hothouse 
 a variety of choice fruits and vegetables is raised out 
 of season. 
 
 It was Mr. Gould's desire to give his family and his 
 friends pleasure that induced him several )ears ago to 
 build what at that time was the larq^est and costliest 
 steam yacht afloat. The Atalanta was and is still a 
 palatial steamship, and to keep it in commission cost 
 Mr. Gould a small fortune each year. 
 
 The fittinors and furnishinors of the vessel were of 
 
 o o 
 
 the most modern and expensive kind, and the os- 
 pitality dispensed on board was also of a lavish char- 
 acter. 
 
 Mr. Gould and his family tired of their luxurious 
 yacht after a few years of enjoyment, and for the past 
 two years the Atalanta has been out of commission. It 
 is now in the market for sale. 
 
 Mr. Gould's private car, the Atalanta, is very much 
 like the private cars of other railroad Presidents, with 
 the possible exception that it is more homelike and 
 comfortable than most of the cars of this khid. A 
 fine library, luxurious couches, and an unsurpassed 
 culinary department are conspicuous features of Mr. 
 Gould's car. 
 
 
CHAPTER XXI. 
 
 P :'' 
 
 M"! 
 
 A Many-Sided Man. 
 
 In downright dramatic interest, in its exhibition of 
 results achieved through the exercise of intellectual 
 qualities which were themselves an achievement, and 
 in the examples which it furnishes of the consistent 
 development of traits which can scarcely be consid- 
 ered as the dower of heredity and yet were already 
 apparent at the outset, the life story of Jay Gould sur- 
 passes by far the histories of any of the great finan- 
 ciers, speculators and railway managers with whom he 
 was either direcdy or remotely associated in a career 
 which practically embraced the whole modern phase 
 of financial operations. 
 
 Like Drew, Vanderbilt and Fisk he was of humble 
 origin and began at an early age to carve out his for- 
 tune on lines which lay far from those to which his 
 youthful surroundings seemed to direct him. But his 
 first exhibitions of independent and original activity 
 were directed toward the acquiring of an intellectual 
 equipment of an entirely different order to that which 
 his great rivals in Wall street boasted. 
 
 Nothing is plainer than that he was a born money- 
 maker, but it is easily possible that if early success in 
 this direction had not encouraged him to bend his en- 
 
 (334) 
 
ion of 
 llectual 
 nt, and 
 isistent 
 consid- 
 already 
 uld sur- 
 t finan- 
 
 lom he 
 I career 
 
 1 phase 
 
 humble 
 
 his for- 
 
 liich his 
 
 But his 
 
 activity 
 
 bllectual 
 
 tt which 
 
 money- 
 
 Iccess in 
 
 his en- 
 
 A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 335 
 
 ergies solely to the acquisition of wealth, he might 
 have devoted himself not only successfully but much 
 to his own satisfaction to higher pursuits. Though 
 he was an absolutely tireless worker in the field of 
 money-getting, one can scarcely study his operations, 
 whether as a mere speculator or as the creator and 
 developer of great industrial enterprises, without be- 
 coming convinced that the incitement to many of his 
 colossal operations was quite as much love for a intel- 
 lectual application as for money. 
 
 He had a Hobby. 
 
 He himself said as much when testifying before the 
 U. S. Senate Committee on Education and Labor in 
 September, 1883. He said (speaking of his purchase 
 of the control of the Missouri Pacific Railway) : 
 " Railroads had got to be sort of a hobby with me ; — I 
 didn't care about the money I made, I took the road 
 more as a plaything to see what I could do with it ; I 
 had passed the time when I cared about mere money- 
 making. My object in taking the road (if you can 
 appreciate that) was more to show that I could make 
 a combination and make it a success." 
 
 One need not subscribe to a declaration of general 
 belief in Jay Gould's truthfulness in giving credence 
 to such a statement. Human nature is generally set 
 down as a universal possession, and Mr. Gould was 
 yet a young man when the scope of his financial 
 operations was such as to give clear evidence that the 
 material things of this world were abundantly cared 
 for in his possessions. He had, of course, the instincts 
 
 
 1 
 
 
 i( 
 
 I 
 
 fPHa 
 
336 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 W 
 
 ^ 
 
 of a born spf!ciilator, yet his was not the disposition to 
 let results depend simply on the accidental fall of the 
 dice or the turn of a card. 
 
 A 3l!iker of Clianros. 
 
 "He loved hazard, but he loved better to compel 
 chance to enter the channels he had dug for it. It 
 would be folly to deny the vast value of his work in 
 the development of the Western and Southwestern 
 States, but perhaps as great a folly to attribute a 
 philanthropic or patriotic motive to it. 
 
 The education which he acquired through his own 
 energies as a youth found its best application in this 
 work of development ; in his purely speculative ven- 
 tures he was aided by a chsposition whose traits, as 
 has already been intimated, were formed in his youth 
 or early manhood. It is impossible to contemplate 
 without astonishment and even admiration the spec- 
 tacle of so stable a character as one must admit Mr. 
 Gould's to have been, fixed in boyhood and remain- 
 inof unchancjed all through a career which extended 
 from a condition of the most mo(](,'st kind (not to call 
 it absolute poverty) to a position from which practi- 
 cally he ruled the financial world of this continent 
 and materially affected the fortunes of the other. 
 
 With untold wealth at his command he was as 
 simple in tastes, as unaffected in manner, as abstemi- 
 ous in habits, as industrious, as self-dependent and 
 self-reliant as when he set out in boyhood to make 
 himself a rich man. Nor did any of his less amiable 
 characteristics undercro a change. 
 
 '■'nv- 
 
litlon to 
 11 of the 
 
 compel 
 ii- it. It 
 work in 
 western 
 ribute a 
 
 his own 
 n in this 
 ive ven- 
 ;raits, as 
 is youth 
 empkite 
 le spcc- 
 mit Mr. 
 
 remain- 
 ;xtended 
 )t to call 
 1 practi- 
 ontinent 
 lier. 
 
 was as 
 abstemi- 
 lent and 
 to make 
 
 amiable 
 
 337 
 
 A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 secretiveness touchi,,,. i° '' "' .'"fna"c-," ,he same 
 
 ;'etya„d elaborateness of IT n';\"" "'"^ -''- 
 ference to the fcelin<.s or Z " '^'"^ '"dif- 
 
 ■"-'^ed the tremenSo.: peSr"! °[ °"'^'-^' - 
 chmaxes of his purelv Jfr, '"''"'' ^'^ t'>e 
 
 over Erie and thf^d op 1' h""' f-"""-""^ "- 
 
 'S69, w),ich is written bti n^' '" S<-'Pten,ber. 
 
 T-'- striking feat! eTo M^g:",,"''^"^'^^'' 
 pearance n-cre those ,W id, v'^ ' P""'""^' ^^P" 
 
 equipment. PhysicalUe vv '"'"' '"'^ "^^ntLl 
 
 to his head. He )n 1 . ' /' '"'"" "'^" «ave as 
 
 tmuaily, there was yet a .1 , T" 'P''"''^''=d ^o"- 
 
 ;;-• His nose wL We :S H°;'^'"''-' '°°^ ■" 
 H.s manner was exceedin^X ^ ^^™" '" "'°"'d. 
 -;e ,ow and n^odrj? ' rettVl? '°"?^ ''''^ 
 
 caS^:5.r'J ;; '^■•^; own fami,, circle he 
 
 d"'.?ent, affecdonate Zl ll^ •P"'''"' '^'■"'^' '"- 
 
 ceaseless mental toil beJn to ° „"" "'''' "^^'■" of 
 
 powers, many years after ,e°„f' "P°" '"'^ Pl^J-'^f 
 
 P"ted dominion over the fin. ''"" ^'"^"^^ ""dis- 
 
 any thought to rest n !, "' "'°''''^' "'« he gave 
 
 "-ally sought by men ;ft:r'°",T ''''' '^"--^°" 
 jj y men of vast wealth. Prior to that 
 
 % 
 
 ■:lj I 
 
 II it 
 
 u r 
 
3;J8 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 time books were his chief sources of recreation. 
 When he put his steam yacht Atalanta in commission 
 he creatcil a sensation among yachtsmen, but it is 
 doubtful \vli(!ther he ever enjoyed his superb plaything 
 with the spirit of a sportsman. 
 
 Untold Wealth. 
 
 There was perhaps never a time in Jay Gould's 
 career when it was possible to estimate his wealth 
 with anything approaching correctness. His secretive 
 disposition stood in the way of a general acquaintance 
 with the outcome of his many ventures. Long after 
 he had gained control of th(! Wabash system of rail- 
 ways, the Manhattan Elevated and the Western Union 
 Telegraph Company, during a little flurry in Wall 
 street in which everybody thought the finger of Jay 
 Gould was hidden but nobody knew, a broker sagely 
 observed : ** Mr. Gould has many properties, but a 
 brass band is not one of them." He never went forth 
 trumpeting his affairs. 
 
 Moreover, his wealth always consisted of stocks 
 and bonds which were subject to the fluctuations of 
 the market and which unquestionably derived a con- 
 siderable proportion of their value from the fact that 
 he controlled the property which they represented. 
 
 Mr. Gould's secretiveness was exhibited quite as 
 strikingly in his benefactions as his speculations. He 
 never achieved a reputation as one in the habit of 
 doing good to his fellow-man, and yet few rich men 
 were more charitable than he. Only once did he 
 forego his customary reticence and then it was in a 
 
A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 n30 
 
 eation. 
 nission 
 Lit it is 
 lything 
 
 Gould's 
 wealth 
 ecretive 
 lintance 
 ne after 
 I of rail- 
 n Union 
 in Wall 
 pr of Jay 
 r sagely 
 s, but a 
 nt forth 
 
 .f stocks 
 ttions of 
 bd a con- 
 fact that 
 lented. 
 quite as 
 >ns. He 
 habit of 
 Irich men 
 did he 
 I was in a 
 
 time of great public calamity. Yellow fever was rag- 
 ing in Memphis and subscriptions were raising in all 
 the large cities of the country. Gould did not wait 
 but telegraplied to the authorities of Memphis to 
 draw on him for all the money they needed. 
 
 GratoruUy RpinoiiibrriMl in Moinpliis. 
 
 A dispatch of the Associated Press from Memphis, 
 Tenn., December 2, 1S92, reads as follows: "The in- 
 telligence of the death of Jay Gould was b>:Vletined 
 here this morning, and there were general expressions 
 of recrret from leading: merchants and citizens. The 
 people of Memphis have not forgotten that in 1879, 
 when Memphis, after having been scourged with yel- 
 low fever in 1S78, was again visited by an epidemic 
 of the same disease, Mr. Gould, hearing of the ex- 
 hausted condition of the treasury of the Howard As- 
 sociation of Memphis, sent by telegraph $5000, and 
 authorized the association to draw on him for as much 
 more as was needed to aid the association in its work 
 of nursing the sick and burying the dead. 
 
 " Mr. Gould came to Memphis on October 21, 1886, 
 and a public reception was tendered to him on the 
 floor of the Memphis Merchants' Exchange. On the 
 larcre blackboard of the Exchancre was written in 
 chalk his memorable teleoram, and as he entered the 
 room his eyes caught the few brief words his gener- 
 ous nature had prompted him to send, and which have 
 ever since been held in grateful remembrance." 
 
 As a rule, like William H. Vanderbilt, Mr. Gould 
 dispensed his benefactions through a trustee. This 
 
mil 
 
 > ii 
 
 540 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 during the last few years of his own life was Thurlow 
 Weed. '* I am Mr. Gould's philanthropic adviser," 
 said this remarkable man on one occasion in 1879; 
 " whenever a really deserving charity is brought to 
 my attention, I explain it to Mr. Gould. He always 
 takes my word as to when and how much to con- 
 tribute. I have never known him to disregard my 
 advice in such matters. His only condition is that 
 there shall be no public blazonry of his benefactions. 
 He is a constant and liberal giver, but doesn't let his 
 right hand know what his left hand is doing. Oh, there 
 will be a full page to his credit when the record is 
 
 opened above." 
 
 The Boy's View of Honesty. 
 
 There has been preserved by his teacher a little 
 composition, which is in Mr. Gould's own handwriting, 
 and which, in die light of subsequent events, is per- 
 haps worth reproducing. The composition, as handed 
 in to the principal and approved by him, was as fol- 
 lows : 
 
 composition. 
 
 Jason Gould. 
 
 BEECIIWOOD SEMINARY, April 9, 185O. 
 
 " Honesty is the Best Policy.'* 
 
 " By this proposition we mean that to be honest, to 
 think honest, and to have all our actions honestly per- 
 formed, is the best way, and most accords with the 
 precepts of reason. Honesty is of a self-denying 
 
A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 341 
 
 ^f 
 
 urlow 
 
 ;iser, 
 
 -1879; 
 
 rht to 
 
 ilvvays 
 o con- 
 rd my 
 is that 
 LCtions. 
 let his 
 1, there 
 :cord is 
 
 a little 
 writing, 
 IS per- 
 landed 
 as fol- 
 
 nest, to 
 5tly per- 
 vith the 
 denying 
 
 nature; to become honest it requires self-denial; it 
 requires that we should not acquaint ourselves too 
 much with the world ; that we should not associate 
 with those of vulgar habits ; also, that wc should obey 
 the warnings of conscience. 
 
 "If we are about to perform a dishonest act, the 
 warnings of conscience exert their utmost iniluence 
 
 o 
 
 to persuade us that it is wrong, and we should not do 
 it, and after we have performed the act, this faithful 
 agent upbraids us for it ; this voice of conscience is 
 not the voice of thunder, but a voice gende and im- 
 pressive ; it does not force us to comply with its re- 
 quests, while at the same time it reasons with us and 
 brinors forth arofuments in favor of riixht. 
 
 "Since no theory of reasoning can be sustained 
 without illustration, it will not be unbecominix for us 
 to cite one of the many instances diat have occurred, 
 whose names stand high upon the scroll of fame, and 
 whose names are recorded on the pages of history — 
 George Washington, the man * who never told a lie 
 in all his life.' 
 
 "In youth he subdued his idle passions, cherished 
 truth, obeyed the teachings of conscience, and * never 
 told a lie.' An anecdote which is much related, and^ 
 which occurred when he was a boy, goes to show his 
 sincerity. Alexander Pope, in his ' Essay on Man,' 
 says *an honest man is the noblest work of God.' 
 
 "And again we find numerous passages in the 
 Scriptures which have an immediate connection to 
 
 Ij 
 
 «• * 
 
 lA i\\ 
 
 Mm 
 
 • 
 
 ^\'a\1 
 

 ^"tts*»*.--4v'-,ij 
 
 342 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 I 
 
 ^^V 
 
 this, and summing up the whole we cannot but say 
 * Honesty is the best poHcy.' Jason Gould." 
 
 His Work us an Aiitlior. 
 
 During his vacations young Gould was always busy 
 and managed generally to do something by which he 
 made money. As a civil engineer he made surveys 
 of land for his neiohbors and did some work for the 
 country when he was a very young man. This led to 
 his only work as an author, which was a history of 
 Delaware County, New York, of some 400 pages, 
 of which the following was the title: "A Sketch of 
 the early Settlement in the County and a History of 
 the Anti-Rent Difficulties in Delaware County, with 
 Miscellaneous Matter Never Before Published." 
 
 The book was printed in 1856 and now, by reason 
 of its author's achievements, possesses some value 
 among lovers of rare books, and it is sold at auction 
 at from $25 to J30. The copy belonging to the State 
 of Pennsylvania was purchased at auction in New 
 York and cost $24. 
 
 Few very great men are willing to have the books 
 of their youth treasured up against them. Here is 
 one extract from his history of Delaware County. 
 
 Blood-Cimlliiig' Deserii)tioii. 
 
 In descrioing an attack upon his father's house by a 
 lot of white men disguised as Indians he says: 
 
 " The savage horde sprang from their hiding places 
 and with demon-like yells rushed up and surrounded 
 Mr. Gould, who was standing with his little son in the 
 Open air In front of the house. We were that son, 
 
A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 343 
 
 t say 
 
 LD." 
 
 s busy 
 ich he 
 jrveys 
 "or the 
 led to 
 ory of 
 pages, 
 :tch of 
 ory of 
 y, with 
 
 reason 
 value 
 
 Luctlon 
 State 
 New 
 
 books 
 ere is 
 
 e by a 
 
 places 
 unded 
 in the 
 t son, 
 
 and how bright a picture is still retained upon the 
 memory of the frightful appearance they presented as 
 they surrounded that parent with fifteen guns poised 
 within a few feet of his head, while the chi('f stood 
 over him with fierce gesticulations and sword drawn. 
 Oh ! the agony of my youthful mind as I expected 
 every moment to behold him prostrated a lifeless 
 corpse upon the ground ! " 
 
 A former friend and neighbor of the Goulds, now a 
 successful business man in Cleveland, in an interview 
 had this to say of the boy and his family : 
 
 " I was well acquainted with the whole family, and 
 they were very nice people. Mr. Gould was small in 
 stature, like his son, and lame. He took great in- 
 terest in local politics, attending every town meeting 
 and electioneerincr with the orreatest earnestness. The 
 male members of the Gould family were remarkable 
 for their precocity. They came into manhood much 
 earlier than most boys, and at 15 Jay was as sharp as 
 most young men at 22. Jay's mother and sisters were 
 all intelligent, refined women. 
 
 He was a Tinner. 
 
 "Young Jay had a desire to attend the village 
 school, so he offered to work for me for his board, 
 and I kept him all winter. He was an excellent boy. 
 His habits were all crood and he devoted most of his 
 evenings to study. He was always the first one up in 
 the morning, and he had the fire burning and the tea- 
 kettle boiling by the time my wife was ready to pre- 
 pare breakfast. 
 
^j^smmm ^m 
 
 344 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 "M 
 
 i : ■ 
 
 "The next spring I moved to the farm and Jay's 
 father took possession of my house in town. I was 
 running a tin shop, and, as I could not very well at- 
 tend to that and the farm. Jay bouglu me out, and for 
 a year turned his attention to selling pans and milk 
 pails and doing jobs of tinkering. The business did 
 not suit his tastes, however, and he disposed of the 
 shop. He was a fine penman and a first-class ac- 
 countant, and he soon secured a position as confi- 
 dential clerk to a merchant, who combined the real 
 estate business with his mercantile pursuits quite ex- 
 tensively." 
 
 3Ir. Gould an Affable Man. 
 
 Mr. Gould's manner, even to strangers, was as 
 gentle as a woman's. He was never in a hurry, and 
 was quiet and refined, with an entire absence of the 
 brusque and husding wealthy man. His voice was 
 low and pleasantly modulated, and he betrayed his 
 Yankee origin in his speech. During business hours, 
 when in active business, Mr. Gould always stood or 
 sat where he could look at the tape on which stock 
 quotations were recorded, but after 1884 he took less 
 interest in the ups and downs of the market. 
 
 During his whole lite Mr. Gould seemed to avoid 
 rather than seek observation. At his office, on the 
 street, and even in his own liouse, he was never ob- 
 trusive, and at a meeting of the railway presidents he 
 generally slid into an out-of-the-way corner, and very 
 rarely took part in the proceedings. 
 
 This shyness was not born of an effort to avoid re- 
 
m 
 
 A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 345 
 
 Jay's 
 I was 
 ell at- 
 md for 
 \ milk 
 2SS did 
 of die 
 iss ac- 
 ; con fi- 
 le real 
 jite ex- 
 
 was as 
 :ry, and 
 
 of die 
 ce was 
 'ed his 
 
 hours, 
 ood or 
 
 stock 
 
 k less 
 
 avoid 
 
 Ion die 
 
 ^er ob- 
 
 ints he 
 
 |d very 
 
 )id re- 
 
 sponsibility, for Mr. Gould was a very courageous 
 little man, and he was always at the front in a contest, 
 forcinof the fi^htino- and bearinof the brunt and the 
 odium. His methodical daily movements bec^an at 
 about 7.30 o'clock, at which hour he arose. He ace 
 his breakfast at v.l'An o'clock and then attended to his 
 correspondence with the aid of a secretary. At 9.30 
 o'clock Mr. Gould ofcnerallv entered a Sixth Avenue 
 elevated train and arrived at his office a few minutes 
 before ten o'clock. He was often accompanied in the 
 cars by his son, Geori^e J. Gould, and Mr. Sage, or 
 Mr. Sloan or S)dney Dillon. 
 
 Daily Hubits. 
 
 A veracious chronicler of Mr. Gould's habits says: 
 " About noon or a little after. Dr. Norvin Green, 
 president of the Western Union, came down for a half 
 hour's chat with his principal. There were no two 
 men on earth more exactly unlike than Norvin Greea 
 and Jay Gould, yet Dr. Green was the only one with 
 whom Mr. Gould seemed to be upon entirely cordial 
 terms. After these two ofentlemen discussed the af- 
 fairs of the Western Union Company they nearly 
 always locked arms and went to lunch together, either 
 in the lunch-room of the Western Union building, the 
 Astor House, or the Cafe Savarin. 
 
 •' It was at th(^ latter place that Mr. Gould contracted 
 his fondness for snails, a taste which he gratified to 
 such an extent once as to contract a severe case of 
 dyspepsia, which in turn threatened him with apoplexy, 
 and bid fair at one time to end his career. Afterward 
 
 
 
S4C 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 he ate no more snails, his lunch consisting, as a rule, 
 of a light soup, a broiled fowl, a chop or a piece of 
 steak, a salad, with a bottle of claret or Burgundy, 
 and, when he and the doctor felt in a specially jovial 
 mood, a small botde of champagne. Mr. Gould 
 usually took a short drive in the afternoon behind a 
 very ordinary pair of coach horses, and immediately 
 after dinner joined his family in the library. He gen- 
 erally retired before eleven o'clock." 
 
 As already stated, Mr. Gould was exceedingly fond 
 of flowers, and his conservatory was one of the finest 
 in the country. It was greatly damaged by fire, a 
 circumstance which gave rise to the following capti- 
 vating poem : 
 
 Tlie Flower of Flame. 
 Written by MiNNA Irving on the Burning of Gould's Greenhouses, iSSl. 
 
 [From the Century, January, 1882.] 
 
 At Lynclhurst of the tall wlrite towers 
 Was built a Palace of the Flowers, 
 
 That in the time of frost and snow 
 The chiUlren of the sun might blow. 
 
 And there, upon a winter's night, 
 A strange plant blossomed into light. 
 
 An elfin flower it was, in truth — 
 
 No human eye had watched its growth. 
 
 When all the world was still as death 
 It burst its bonds and broke its sheath, 
 
 M 
 
 And climbed upon the crystal tower, 
 Unfolding in a gorgeous flower. 
 
 A running rose with burning briers. 
 And Icaflcl-. tipped with its own fires. 
 
m 
 
 cren- 
 
 A MANY-SIDED MAN. 347 
 
 , A living light shone from it, far 
 
 More bright than beam of moon or star. 
 
 On naked hill and barren dell 
 And leafless wood its glory fell. 
 
 And on the kingly Hudson's flood, 
 Red with a redness like to blood. 
 
 But soon this wonder, that had made 
 The stars grow pale, began to fade. 
 
 Its crimson petals fell as fast 
 
 As leaves before an autumn blast. 
 
 Thus, ere the dawning of the day, 
 It sprang to life and passed away. 
 
 And still we know not whence it came, 
 Or whither went the Flower of Flame. 
 
 In 1883 ^^^- Gould built the big steam yacht Ata- 
 lanta, and for several years he was well known in 
 yachting circles. He was elected a member of the 
 Eastern and Larclnnont Yacht Clubs, and applied for 
 membership in the New-York Yacht Club. The op- 
 position to his name which was developed in the club 
 was so strong, however, that his friends withdrew his 
 name. This furnished a sensation at the time. 
 George J. Gould, who had for some time taken an 
 active interest in yachting, and was a member of the 
 club, at once resigned. Mr. Gould at one time had 
 an idea of making a cruise around the world in the 
 Atalanta, but abandoned it. 
 
 Fastest Yacht Afloat. 
 
 Soon after the launching of the Atalanta Mr. Gould 
 
 and others formed the American Steam Yacht Club. 
 The Atalanta developed remarkable speed and is 
 
 ''1 
 
 I : 
 
348 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOCLD. 
 
 'h I 
 
 to-day the fastest large steam yacht afloat. Mr. 
 Gould had her built because he felt his health to be 
 failing, and thought yachting would be beneficial to 
 hmi. Until within the last two years of his life he 
 spent much time on board of her. She was used 
 principally as a means of transportation between 
 Lyndhurst, his home on the Hudson, and New York, 
 though he made several extended cruises in her. It 
 was not often that Mr. Gould would allow the 
 Atalanta to be raced, but on the occasions when he 
 did permit this she made records. 
 
 Mr. Gould presented to the Larchmont Club a cup 
 called the Gould Cup, which is racc^d for every year. 
 He also contributed largely to the Int(!rnational Chal- 
 lenge Cup, offered by the American Yacht Club for 
 competition by steam yachts of different nations. I 'e 
 was always anxious to see a challenge for this cup, 
 but so far no nation has challenged, owing to the 
 great superiority in point of speed of the American 
 steam yachts. 
 
 Mr. Gould seldom ent(M"tained people on board the 
 Atalanta, but when he did entertain, his hospitality 
 was perfect. He had the happy facult)' of making 
 his guests feel that tlie yacht was theirs and he him- 
 self was a guest on board. There was an excellently 
 well selected library on the yacht and the craft was 
 fitted throughout with quiet and substantial elegance. 
 
 The Atalanta is 243 feet long, 26^/^ feet beam and 
 I5j^ feet deep. She is built of iron and was designed 
 and constructed by \V. Cramp & Son, of Philadelphia. 
 
Mr. 
 
 h to be 
 icial to 
 life he 
 s used 
 letween 
 V York, 
 icr. It 
 ow the 
 hen he 
 
 b a cup 
 •y year, 
 al Chal- 
 l\[\h for 
 
 T 
 
 IS. 
 
 e 
 
 ,1 
 
 lis cup, 
 to th(i 
 
 mcrican 
 
 )arcl tlie 
 siMtality 
 
 makinir 
 
 le 
 
 him- 
 lUently 
 raft was 
 
 :( 
 
 leoance. 
 
 am and 
 esiirned 
 delphia. 
 
 A MANT-SIDED MAN. 
 
 349 
 
 In June of 1886 she ran over the 85-knot course of the 
 American Yacht Chib, from Mikon Point to New 
 London, in 4 hours 34 minutes and 57 seconds. 
 
 Jjiy Gould's Travels. 
 
 Measured in miles, perhaps no man ever travelled 
 mere than Jay Gould. He was on the go a lars^e 
 part of the year. While he was in Fuirope many 
 times, yet by Hir the [greater part of his travelling was 
 done in the United States. It is also safe to say 
 that rarely, if ever, was a man who travelled through 
 a country catching a car-window glimpse of it more 
 capable than he of forming a correct judgment as to 
 its wealth and resotu'ces. 
 
 He looked at the country through which he travelled 
 with an eye single to its railroad usefulness. Its 
 topographical features impressed thems(,'lves upon his 
 mind in a similar manner. A river would be reached, 
 and casting his eye from bank to bank, he estimated 
 what it would cost to throw a bridge across, how many 
 spans would be necessary, what, if any, engineering 
 difficulties would be met witliin the foundations, and 
 the distance from the nearest rollin</ mill as an element 
 in affecting the transportation of the material. 
 
 If he passed through a hilly country he looked at 
 it with the eye of an engineer. Me knew every pass 
 through the Rocky Mountains, and exactly what en- 
 gineering difficulties would be met with in putting 
 through another Pacific railroad, and the various 
 routes that were possible for such an enterprise were 
 present in his mind as on a map. 
 
 N 
 
 
 ii ' 
 
S60 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ' I 
 
 Toiii'H of Iii.spcction. 
 
 Similarly, in travelling over his own lines Mr. Gould 
 had an accurate eye for the way in which his property 
 was being managed. Me relied more upon what he 
 saw in this manner than upon what people told 
 him, and that explains in a measure the great amount 
 of railroad travellino: he did. Althoui^rji the office of 
 the general manager of i-;:: system was in St. Louis, 
 in the Gould Buildin^r, and althouLrh none of the 
 Gould roads run east of the Mississippi, nothing of 
 importance was transacted there without his knowl- 
 edge. Private wires ran to the Western Union 
 Building in this city and into Mr. Gould's private 
 office, where he spent some hours each day at a cheap 
 wooden desk. St. Louis, however, was the starting 
 point of all his tours of inspection, and they occupied 
 generally a period of about three weeks. 
 
 Mr. Gould travelled many times over every mile 
 of his railroads. His special car was named the 
 Convoy. When word was flashed over the wires of 
 the Gould system that the Convoy had started on one 
 of her trips, every official of the system packed his 
 head full of information, and there was unwonted 
 activity from Omaha to Galveston and from Fort 
 W^orth to San Antonio. On these trips he was 
 generally accompanied by General-Superintendent 
 Kerrigan, born in New York, but bred in the South- 
 west. He was supposed to know everything about 
 the Gould system and to be a walking railroad ency- 
 clopedia. He had the topographical features of the 
 
A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 851 
 
 Gould 
 
 operty 
 hat he 
 e told 
 mount 
 "fice of 
 Louis, 
 of the 
 iiiiif of 
 knowl- 
 Union 
 private 
 , cheap 
 tarting 
 cupied 
 
 y mile 
 td the 
 ires of 
 on one 
 :ed his 
 vonted 
 Fort 
 e was 
 indent 
 South- 
 about 
 ency- 
 of the 
 
 Southwest at his fingers* ends, and had been employed 
 on railroads there for over thirty years. 
 
 Always an Object of Curiosity, 
 
 Upon arriving at a station at which it had been de- 
 cided to make an ins{)ection Mr. (}ould woukl ask 
 how long a stop was to be made. The answer might 
 be "an hour." Mr. Goukl woukl k)ok at his watch. 
 Then he would accompany the superintcMnk'Ut on a 
 part of his rounds, listening quietly to his talk with the 
 railroad officials of the place, and having heard all he 
 cared to listen to would wander around b\' himself 
 while the superintendent picked u[) the information 
 which later he would irive to his chief. Mr. Gould 
 would manifest no impatience until the full hour had 
 been exhausted. 1 hen if the engineer was not ready 
 to start on the minuter and all hands in their places 
 in the car, he would be<>in to fidoet and would be rest- 
 less until a fresh start! was made. 
 
 Mr. Gould was a strong advocate of methodical 
 work. The day's work was all laid out in the morn- 
 ing, and almost before the train started he had settled 
 how many stops could be made during the day and 
 where the night should be spent. I Ic would dine and 
 sleep on the car from the start to the finish of the 
 three weeks' trip. At night the Convoy would be run 
 to the quietest part of the yard, as Mr. Gould objected 
 to more noise than was absolutely necessary. 
 
 In some parts of the country through which his 
 roads ran Mr. Gould was quite as much of a curiosity 
 in the eyes of the country folks as a circus. Occasion- 
 
 ^^11 
 
S52 
 
 LITE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ally he stood upon the back platform like a statesman 
 
 on a campaign trip, and thus had his photograph 
 
 taken. He never, however, courted popularity of this 
 
 kind. 
 
 Siiiu'iiliir Iviiul of ICxi'iN-lse. 
 
 Mr. Gould travelhxl like a rocket while ins|)ecting 
 his roads. He often travelled in the Convoy at a fifty 
 mile gait, and during such a trip has been known to 
 b(j thr(nvn from one; side of the car to the other. 
 When somebody asked him once if he did not object 
 to this he said, " (.)h no, it gives mc! a kind of (^\ercise." 
 If tlie trip was undertaken during the spring Mr. 
 Gould would keep a sharp eye out for the condition 
 and prospects of the crops. In every county he would 
 secure accurate fii^ures as to the number of acres 
 planted with the different cereals, and these were all 
 entered on tables prepared for the purpose. 
 
 Then when the trip would be finished he would 
 have absolute data upon which to base his estimates 
 of the probable earnings of his road for the year, and 
 no one better knew the intimate relationship between 
 crops and coupons and the influence of one upon the 
 other. 
 
 In his later years he used in addition to the Convoy, 
 a private car bearing the same name as his yacht, the 
 Atalanta. Dr. Munn, with Geor^fe or other of his sons, 
 would generally be alo ig, but Dr. Munn invariably. 
 In his trip during the fall of 1891, which extended over 
 10.000 miles, Mr. Gould had also aboard the car his 
 son Howard and his daughters Helen and Anna. In 
 
A MANY-SIDED MAN. 
 
 ar>i^ 
 
 i 
 
 »i 
 
 and 
 
 the 
 
 ivoy, 
 L the 
 pons, 
 kbly. 
 lover 
 his 
 In 
 
 July of 1892 Mr. Gould walked from Hoise, Idaho, over 
 to Halley Hot Sprinors and back a«^^ain. lie was fond 
 of the mountain air, which he brlieved was nuich 
 better for him with his lun^ trouble than the sea, 
 and this is one reason why his yacht was not more 
 used. 
 
 Many people could not understand how Mr. Gould, 
 with a beautiful yacht capable of takinj^ him to any 
 part of the world, could prefer travcllinir in the wilder 
 sections of the West. One reason was, however, that 
 he had become thorou<^hly accustomed to railroad 
 travelling, and found no more inconvenience about it 
 than if he were in his own house in the city. The con- 
 stant variety and opportunity for speculative reflection 
 was, moreover, diverting. 
 
 Operations in St. Louis. 
 
 Jay Gould was essentially a man whose business 
 was his amusement. He found the report of the earn- 
 ings of a railroad more interesting than any work of 
 fiction, and it has been said that his pimble mind ran 
 through the tables of statistics like mercury through a 
 bag of emery. He saw many more opportunities for 
 gaining wealth than he was ever able to take ad- 
 vantage of, and he had absolute confidence in the 
 steady advance and growth of all the Western country. 
 This he knew could not but enure to the enhance- 
 ment of his own fortune, but beyond that he fre- 
 quently forecasted in his mind the probable lines of 
 development for many generations to come. 
 
 Jay Gould was a distinctively St. Louis man. His 
 
 23 
 
 ill 
 
^ .11 .I'lMIIIIWJIlj 
 
 jm 
 
 p 
 
 354 
 
 LIFE UF JAY GOULD. 
 
 aim was to centre his railroad interests In that city, 
 and he failed only when he met with such powerful 
 opposition as to make it practically impossible for him 
 to carry out his project without entailing disastrous 
 loss. That this is true is shown in his heavy holdings 
 in Missouri Pacific and Iron Mountain, Wabash, Cot- 
 ton Belt, 'Frisco, Missouri, Kansas, and Texas, and 
 oth(^r St. Louis lines, in his efforts to construct an ele- 
 vated railroad into the city of St. Louis, that the Pop- 
 lar street surface track might be removed, and in 
 many other ways. 
 
 The new Union Depot project was one of Mr. 
 Gould's ambitions for many years. He was a fighter, 
 and if he could not have his way to a certain extent, 
 nothing in the world could turn him. He named his 
 terms on a dozen or more propositions, the considera- 
 tion of which would have benefited St. Louis, and even 
 made concessions, but would never accept the terms 
 dictated, which he considered meant heavy losses for 
 him. He made no complaint — simply abandoned the 
 project. 
 
 Jay Gould's holdings in St. Louis were numerous 
 and extensive. He owned a controlling Interest in 
 the Eads Bridge and the terminal Company, and also 
 owned a large personal interest In the Union Pacific 
 Company. 
 
 He had full control, practically, of the Western 
 Union Telegraph Company, and had extensive hold- 
 ings of real estate, most of which is in trust for the 
 Iron Mountain and Missouri Pacific systems. The 
 
at city, 
 )\verful 
 for him 
 astrous 
 loldings 
 sh, Cot- 
 Las, and 
 : an ele- 
 :he Pop- 
 l, and in 
 
 of Mr. 
 a fighter, 
 n extent, 
 amed his 
 onsidera- 
 and even 
 he terms 
 osses for 
 oned the 
 
 A MANV-SIDED MAN. 
 
 355 
 
 Equitable Building, in which the offices of the latter 
 are situated, was a part of this valuable property. In 
 addition to these properties, there are many other 
 valuable parcels of ground in different parts of the 
 city and contiguous to his railroad properties which 
 belonged to Mr. Gould. 
 
 The "Wizard" was never at ease unless eno^aofed 
 in devising schemes for the acquisition of new lines 
 and territory, but in his last great deal secured control 
 of the Wabash system, with its immense and extensive 
 ramifications. Gould was also interested in the Mis- 
 souri, Kansas, and Texas, and the Cotton Belt. Be- 
 sides the properties above mentioned he was the 
 owner of a vast amount of stocks and bonds of St. 
 Louis corporations. 
 
 f 
 
 W 
 
 
 ^111 
 
 numerous 
 
 iterest in 
 
 I, and also 
 
 Ion Pacific 
 
 Western 
 live hold- 
 Ist for the 
 IS. The 
 
Vl0* 
 
 CHAPTER XXII. 
 In the Valley of Death. 
 
 In the purple glow of a perfect December morning 
 the soul of Jay Gould went to the Undiscovered 
 Country, whither it had been trending for many 
 months. 
 
 He died not as he had feared to die, by the hand of 
 the assassin or the dynamite crank, but as peacefully 
 as any babe whose lamp of life has dwindled to a 
 spark ere it flickers and goes out. He died surrounded 
 by his children in the plain, rear extension bed-room, 
 with a window looking down upon the conservatory and 
 the Windsor Hotel, across the way. It was the room 
 in which his wife died before him and which he after- 
 ward occupied always whenever he was in the city, and 
 which led to the little st idy where only his most inti- 
 mate friends were admitted. And here, on December 
 2, 1892, the last remnant of his strength ebbed away, 
 and even while an attendant turned him he was gone, 
 and more than ^170,000,000 were without a master. 
 
 For two years or more the great financial manipu- 
 lator had been batdinof with the knowledcre that in his 
 system lurked the seeds of man's most insidious foe — 
 consumption. He had phthisis pulmonaris in both 
 lungs. He batded with the knowledge, and he took 
 
 (366) 
 
IN THE VALLEY OF DEATH. 
 
 357 
 
 iiiorning 
 icovered 
 ir many 
 
 hand of 
 eacefuUy 
 led to a 
 •rounded 
 ed-room, 
 itory and 
 he room 
 he after- 
 city, and 
 lost inti- 
 )ecember 
 ed away, 
 vas gone, 
 laster. 
 
 manipu- 
 liat in his 
 OLis foe — 
 5 in both 
 d he took 
 
 no hian into his confidence besides his private physi- 
 cian, who became a sort of trained body-servant to 
 him, and was always within easy call to watch him 
 when he had acute attacks, and his two elder sons, 
 George J. Gould and Edwin. 
 
 Unbroken SilcMice. 
 
 A very master of silence himself, he imposed silence 
 upon these confidants, and it became their bounden 
 duty to deceive all others as to the giant which had 
 laid its grip upon his life. 
 
 And so the story went forth that Jay Gould was 
 afflicted with nervous dyspepsia merely, and every 
 now and then he had a bilious attack which " was not 
 dangerous," a cry which was repeated even when he 
 had entered the shadow of the dark valley. Up to 
 within twelve hours of his death the same cry was re- 
 peated. And even after death there were strenuous 
 efforts made for some inexplicable reason to shroud 
 the cause in mystery — a mystery which could have 
 wrought no good to the dead man's peace and that of 
 his surviving family. 
 
 But it was not dyspepsia which sent him to the 
 South of France, in the Atalanta, under the watchful 
 eye of his medical guardian, Dr. John P. Munn. It 
 was not dyspepsia which sent him to Florida and 
 Southern California, and El Paso, and the grand re- 
 sorts of Colorado, nor which caused him two weeks 
 before his death, to plan a trip to Mexico — for he did 
 not think he was going to die, even then, and no man 
 
 !v 
 
 4 
 
 !il: 
 
 li 
 
358 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ever clung to '.'.f^j more fiercely than this frail and 
 silenr. cnibociiint^iit of intellect. 
 
 The Truth N<>t !\iu>\vii. 
 
 lie knew the truth, but he bit liis teeth upon it. 
 He would not let men into the secrt;t, and sometimes 
 put himself to actual pain in order to conceal the truth, 
 as when, on October 26, he appeared among the guests 
 at ')r. Shrady's house and took a quiet part in the 
 Gould-Shrady wedding, which had been somewhat 
 hurried at his request. 
 
 This was his last aj^pcarance in public, unless you 
 can count a visit or iwo to the Western Union Build- 
 ing, to which he went from his home in a closed car- 
 riage*, and dodged in by way of tiie basement office 
 before any one could see him. No one who saw him 
 at the wedding would have suspected that he was so 
 near to death, and perhaps he would not have been 
 had not an injudicious ride, in company with Dr. 
 Mnnn, on the day before Thanksgiving, caused a cold 
 which settled on his lungs, brought on a hemorrhage 
 and paved the way to death. 
 
 Koiuly for Doatli. 
 
 The story of Mr. Gould's last night on earth is 
 one easily told. It was as simple as any tale could 
 be. He was prepared, and so weie all the members 
 of his family. His going off was merely a question 
 of time. All understood how it would be. He had 
 laid his earthly house in order, had explained to his 
 older sons exactly what his pr()j)erty was, how he had 
 
^j^S5^@5e9^^". 
 
 IN rHK VALLKY OF DEATH, 
 
 359 
 
 111 and 
 
 jpon It. 
 netimes 
 le truth, 
 t guests 
 : in the 
 mevvhat 
 
 less you 
 n Huiia- 
 >sed car- 
 nt office 
 saw hini 
 i was so 
 ve been 
 Ivith Dr. 
 d a cold 
 orrhage 
 
 earth is 
 lie could 
 Inembers 
 question 
 He had 
 led to his 
 Iv he had 
 
 made it, and what he should do to develop it if he 
 
 1 
 
 ;.|. 
 
 iivc 
 
 Hfi h; d p'issed the distressing stage of his disease 
 and he roughed but little, and that weakly. The 
 bean! upon his face hic^ to some extent the terrible 
 ema Nation, but the chalky pallor of the swarthy skin 
 was shar[) and startling. He dozed at times, but 
 never seemed to lose consciousness. He did not 
 suffer physically. There was nothing to fight against 
 now but the lassitude of utter exhausdon, and this 
 the doctors — Munn and Janeway — did with the most 
 powerful stimulants, thus prolonging life by a few 
 hours, but doin^r no fjood that could be measured. 
 
 Several times durinor the nigfht it was thou^-ht that 
 he was going, and the family were hastily summoned 
 to the bedside. But h:^ rallied each time with won- 
 derful vitality, and his wil! remained strong and under 
 control to the last. 
 
 Siirrouiuh'd by bis I aiiiily. 
 
 Those in the house besides the medical attendants 
 r.ad nurses were the children — G(^orgc ]. Gould, who 
 is already enthroned as his father's successor in busi- 
 ness ; Edwin, the second son ; Heh n Miller ( iould, 
 the young heiress, who was the aj-pk; of her lather's 
 eye; Howard, who is just coming to manhood; ihr. 
 sclioolgirl (laughter Ann(^ and Mie yo*. hful I'^-ank, 
 with Mrs. George Gould, Mrs. Edwin Gould and a 
 lady intimately connected with the family. 
 
 Daylight brought an apparent renewal of the lease 
 of life. It was not; much of a rally, but it was enoui^h 
 
 I). I 
 
' .' -aa 
 
 '} 
 
 360 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 to give liope that the invaHd would struggle along 
 throiiL^h ;i great part of the clay. Windows were 
 raised and curtains drawn in |)arts of the house, giving 
 it an animated and lively look which it had not worn 
 when all the shades were down. 
 
 TJie Coming of Death. 
 
 Shordy after the night v/atch of newspaper men 
 
 had gone away young Mrs. Gould appeared and drove 
 away in her carriage for a brief stay. She said that 
 her father-in-law was much the same as he had been 
 and perfectly conscious. An early caller was General 
 Manager Main, of the Elevated road system. He 
 stayed but a moment, and when he resumed his trip 
 down-town he little realized that the messa<»e of death, 
 which was to be followed by the draping of all the 
 Elevated road engines, would reach the office almost 
 as soon as he. 
 
 The December sun came up and gilded the roof 
 of the extension in which the multi-millionaire lay 
 gasping out the remnant of his life. It caught in the 
 glass of the conservatory and sent baftling lights into 
 the eyes of passers gazing curiously up at the win- 
 dows which shrouded tht^ drama of life and death 
 within. Audacious, it trickled in between the shutters 
 imtil a hand closed them tight, and it saw. what few 
 have seen, the cf^eat maLrician of Wall street bent low 
 by a power greater than his own. 
 
 Tho 8had«'s l>niwii. 
 
 Just then, as if moved by some sympathetic force, 
 all of the raised shades were lowered and the rrreat 
 
along 
 were 
 
 riving 
 worn 
 
 r men 
 
 drove 
 
 d that 
 
 i been 
 
 ieneral 
 
 1. He 
 
 lis trip 
 
 f death, 
 
 all the 
 
 almost 
 
 le roof 
 ire lay 
 t in the 
 Its into 
 Ihe win- 
 death 
 h utters 
 lat few 
 lent low 
 
 force, 
 
 trreat 
 
 IN THE VALLEY OF DEATH. 
 
 361 
 
 11 
 
 house assumed a sombre aspect. This was just after 
 nine o'clock in the mornincr. A few moments later a 
 messenger boy came out of the iiouse bearing a tele- 
 phone message from Dr. Munn to his wife stating that 
 Mr. Gould had died at a quarter past nine o'clock. And 
 thus the news that a kin<r was dead trickled out un- 
 willingly, as it were, through the massive oaken doors 
 that front his palace. If Jay Gould's secret could 
 iiave been longer kept it doubtless would have been, 
 but Death sounds a tocsin which even a master of 
 silence cannot muffle. 
 
 In all the si)acious palace where this rich man died 
 there was no room more plain and simple than his 
 own. There was nothing garish, nothing to attract 
 or astonish the eye, none of the rare and beautiful 
 bric-a-brac or articles of toilet which have made Miss 
 Helen's boudoir famous in the social world. The 
 lurniture was massive, but simple; the colors were 
 subdued. Through the open door the railroad man- 
 ipulator could see his beloved study — a study, indeed, 
 where he has pored with such relentless zeal by day 
 and night over law books and other weighty tomes, 
 planning the campaigns which made him a Napoleon 
 in his line, and which were so disastrous to those who 
 opposed him. They were fading now from his sight. 
 He should plan no more. 
 
 The Lij,^lit Goes Out. 
 
 He indicated with a whisper and a gesture that he 
 was glad his children were all there. And then he 
 showed a wish to change his position, and, as the at' 
 
JLi...,eqvcVK 
 
 362 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GUULD. 
 
 tendawt turned him over, the spark of his Hfe went 
 out as if some breath had blown it. 
 
 With the slightest echo of a rattle in his throat Jay 
 Gould was dead. 
 
 As soon as all was over George and Edwin took 
 charge of matters and began to prepare for the fu- 
 neral. Messages were sent to Mrs. Northrup, of Cam- 
 den, N. J., and Mrs. Palen, of Philadelphia, Mr. Gould's 
 sisters, and to other friends, apprising them of the 
 death, and a telephone message summoned the under- 
 taker and assistants who had been waiting the word 
 from their headquarters in Forty-fourth street. Vice- 
 President Clark, of the Union Pacific road, who had 
 been waiting for a week at the Windsor to confer with 
 his chief, dropped over to the hotel and sent a num- 
 ber of messages. 
 
 Symbols of Moiiriiiiif*'. 
 
 Then a huge cravat of black crape was placed upon 
 the door-bell to warn passers by that Death had en- 
 tered at the door. One by one the flags on the hotels 
 of the city, on the Western Union, and some other 
 buildings were raised to half-mast. The Elevated 
 road engines were draped in black, and soon the 
 voices of the newsboys crying their extras spread the 
 tidings through the city. 
 
 Persons loitered about the house where death was 
 master and gazed up curiously at the windows. There 
 was but one Jay Gould, and in his going out lay an 
 infinity of food for curiosity and comment. 
 
 The Rev. Dr. John R. Paxton, pastor of the church 
 
went 
 
 at Jay 
 
 1 took 
 :he fu- 
 f Cam- 
 iould's 
 of the 
 uiuler- 
 e word 
 Vice- 
 ho had 
 er with 
 a num- 
 
 d upon 
 nad en- 
 hotels 
 .e other 
 llevated 
 >on the 
 lead the 
 
 Lth was 
 There 
 lay an 
 
 church 
 
 IN TUE VALLKY OF DEATH. 
 
 36.3 
 
 attended by the Gould family, called at about 1 1 
 o'clock, but did not stay long in the house. When 
 asked later in the day he said that he could tell all he 
 knew in a very few words. 
 
 '• Mr. Gould died peacefully," he said, " without 
 struggle or pain. He was conscious durini: the niLdit, 
 and recognized his sons and daughters and physicians 
 around his bed until within a short time of his d(.'ath. 
 The funeral services would be conducted by hinis(.'h', 
 assisted by Chancellor McCracken, and be of the 
 simplest possible character. The interment would be 
 private and at the convenience of the family." 
 
 Iiitorinoiit ill AVoiMllawii. 
 
 It was learned from the undertaker that the body 
 
 would be laid beside that of Mrs. GouUl in the great 
 marble sarcophagus at Woodlawn Cemetery. The 
 tomb is a massive structure and as lar^e as a <jood- 
 sized house. The casket would be a fac-simile of that 
 which holds the remains of Mrs. Gould. It would be 
 of oak, with rounded corners, covered with black 
 broadcloth and with silver handles — at once the 
 strongest and simplest style of wooden casket made. 
 All day long a stream of callers left their cards at 
 the door, nine-tenths of whom were women. Few 
 souQrht to enter, not even those who were intimate 
 friends of Miss Helen Gould, who was looked upon as 
 chief mourner. Few of the Wall street associates of 
 the dead man called at all. Even Mr. Sage kept 
 away from the house, and said that he knew nothing, 
 
 1 i 
 
 : I 
 
 
''f 
 
 'm:i 
 
 364 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOL'LD. 
 
 absolutely nothing, of what had transpired at the 
 house. 
 
 Dr. John P. Munn, who as Mr. Gould's physician 
 successfully fooled the world for two years as to the 
 nature antl s(!riousness of the ij^reat financier's ailment, 
 seemed to think it necessary to continue to surround 
 the i se with a halo of mystery and to all requests 
 for information sent forth a stereotyped reply : — " I 
 have nothiut; to say." 
 
 Dr. Janeway was equally reticent as to the cause of 
 death, and already the uc^ly tongue of rumor was 
 bt.'ginninqf to ask the reason for the mystery when 
 wiser counsel prevailed and the secret was officially 
 j^nven out. It would have crept out any way throu<^h 
 the death certificate, which had to be filed with the 
 Bureau of Vital Statistics. 
 
 I'rostratod by Gric;!*. 
 
 It was learned that Dr. Munn had considerable on 
 his hands in takini^ care of some members of the 
 family who were overcome by long watching and grief. 
 Miss Helen Gould was greatly prostrated. She was 
 ill when her father was taken sick and the blow fell 
 upon her with crushing force. Her love for her 
 father, who was always kind and indulgent to her, was 
 very great. 
 
 Fully one hundred ladies left their cards at the door 
 and hastened away. Telegraphic messages of condo- 
 lence were received over the private wires which run 
 into the Gould residence, and the ticker in the study, 
 which had been stopped in the morning, was allowed 
 
IN THE VALLEY OF DEATH. 
 
 366 
 
 It the 
 
 ^sician 
 to the 
 hiicnt, 
 r round 
 quests 
 y :— " 1 
 
 uise of 
 or was 
 \f when 
 ffficially 
 throu^^h 
 vith the 
 
 able on 
 of the 
 cl i^rief. 
 She was 
 jlow fell 
 for her 
 icr, was 
 
 he door 
 f condo- 
 lich run 
 lie study, 
 allowed 
 
 to run again and brought the tidin^-> of his death into 
 
 tlie house, together with its effect, or strange lack of 
 
 effect, upon the securities which have long borne his 
 
 name. 
 
 Faced Death Calmly. 
 
 "Jay Gould," said an old friend, •• possessed but 
 little physical courage, and, indeed, his physique was 
 scarcely fitted for it. But when it came iiis time to 
 die he looked flcath quietly in the face. He culled 
 his children about his bedside and toKl them the secret 
 he liad been harboring — told it to them quietly and 
 '•t;.'adily — bidding them keep the secret to the end, as 
 he should do, and bear up bravely, as he should do, 
 when it came his time to die. He kept his promise, 
 and it seems that it took courao^e to do so." 
 
 The certificate of Mr. Gould's death was filed with 
 General Emmons Clark, secretary of the Board of 
 Health. It was signed by Dr. Munn, who gave the 
 cause of death as phthisis pulmonaris. It was taken 
 to General Clark by an undertaker and was duly 
 placed on file in the Bureau of Vital Statistics. 
 
 The hush of death brooded next day over what was 
 the city residence of the king of finance. The massive 
 door of oak and pflass, somc^liow suofcrestive of a 
 burial casket even without the huge cravat of crape 
 which hung upon the silver handle of the bell, was 
 softly opened many times, and quickly, but as softly, 
 shut to by the sleek butler, who was not above selling 
 news of his dying master for good American money, 
 as the friends of the big Gould circle came to leave 
 
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 WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 
 
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 366 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
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 their cards and messages, and sometimes great gifts 
 of flowers, as if it were possible with radiant and liv- 
 ing blooms to soften the black shadows that must 
 needs surround the rich man dead. 
 
 Profound MourDing-. 
 
 A house of mourning? No tenement in all the 
 city wailing the loss of its bread winner could be more 
 truly so. That was the blossom which bloomed most 
 brightly in the character of Jay Gould. He loved his 
 children tenderly, and he taught them to love him. 
 On the side he turned toward the world he wore a 
 steely armor, but with his children, his flowers and his 
 books he could unbuckle his cuirass and bare his heart 
 with no fear of a deadly blow. And he did so, too, 
 and made them his joy and his recreation. 
 
 And so they mourned him — the young men who had 
 kissed him good night after they had come to man- 
 hood's estate, and the fair heiresses to fortunes who 
 had known only his gentler side. 
 
 The body lay in a patent rosewood ice casket in 
 the chamber where Mr. Gould had died, -^.nd flowers 
 were heaped upon it in prodigal profusion. There 
 was a strange commingling of asceticism and luxury 
 in the room, and yet it was in harmony with the life 
 of the man who had so many millions that they seemed 
 to be a mist in his system of arithmetic. He had 
 always lived a simple life, apart from the splendor 
 with which, for the sake of others, he surrounded him- 
 self. He, who could command the luxuries of princes, 
 
 
IN THE VALLKV OF DEATH. 
 
 367 
 
 .t gifts 
 id liv- 
 t must 
 
 all the 
 e more 
 :d most 
 ved his 
 i/e him. 
 wore a 
 and his 
 lis heart 
 so, too, 
 
 ho had 
 
 o man- 
 
 nes who 
 
 asket in 
 flowers 
 There 
 luxury 
 the life 
 J seemed 
 He had 
 splendor 
 ded him- 
 princes, 
 
 had been joyful over bread and milk when appetite 
 went with them. 
 
 So he lay in death, amid the simplest furnishings, 
 while loving hands piled regal flowers upon him and 
 sought to hide him amid their super-abundance and 
 profusion. Ah, futile task, that seeks to blot out the 
 presence and the atmosphere of death ! 
 
 The House Guarded. 
 
 Besides ministering to the physical wants of the 
 mourning household Dr. Munn took a leading part in 
 arranging for the funeral, and it was by his request 
 that Superintendent Byrnes detailed a number of de- 
 tective sergeants to watch the house, day and night, 
 until the obsequies were ended, and fend off objection- 
 able characters, crank or beggar, who might cause 
 dancrer or annoyance to the inmates. 
 
 It was a happy thought and all day there was an 
 alert looking man upon the corner of Fifth avenue and 
 Forty-seventh street, keeping watch and ward upon 
 the stately edifice. A uniformed policeman was de- 
 tailed to assist in keeping off suspicious characters, 
 and altogether Jay Gould was better guarded in death 
 than he had ever been in life, though he r.^^ver went 
 abroad unprotected. 
 
 The detectives reported that they had had no signs 
 of trouble. Thousands of people paused to look up 
 at the shaded windows, the only one open being the 
 silent bedroom wherein lay the dead, and one old 
 negro woman went up the steps under the impression 
 that the Gould mansion was the Windsor Hotel, but 
 
368 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 if 
 
 no one looking like a crank appeared upon the scene 
 or disturbed the even tenor of life upon the avenue. 
 
 The mystery as to the nature of the ailment which 
 wrecked Mr. Gould's health was one of the features 
 of his last illness. It may be stated as a peculiar fact 
 that his most trusted friends and even the members 
 of his family were not aware of the disease from which 
 he was sufferincr until it became evident that he could 
 only a little longer withstand its ravages. 
 
 The Fatal Disease. 
 
 Mr. Gould was variously reported as a victim of 
 
 neuralgia, of nervous dyspepsia, and of severe bilious 
 attacks, and the announcement that what caused his 
 death was consumption will be received with a great 
 deal of surprise. But the statement is true. 
 
 It is further said that the disease was of several 
 years' standing; that Mr. Gould was aware that he 
 had it and that his instructions to his physician, Dr. 
 Munn, were that it should be kept a secret between 
 them as long as possible. When, therefore, inquiries, 
 no matter by whom, were made of Dr. Munn as to 
 Mr. Gould's ailment, he replied that it was nervous 
 dyspepsia, and truthfully, for all consumptives suffer 
 more or less from that complaint. 
 
 To aid his physician in concealing all signs of the 
 disease the somewhat extravagant assertion is made 
 that Mr. Gould was able to prevent himself, by an ef- 
 fort, from coughing. 
 
 The secret was well kept, and Mr. Gould is said to 
 have had confidence that Dr. Munn's efforts to delay 
 
 ;<: 
 
scene 
 enue. 
 ; which 
 satures 
 iar fact 
 embers 
 [1 which 
 le could 
 
 ictim of 
 e biUous 
 used his 
 a great 
 
 f several 
 that he 
 lician, Dr. 
 between 
 inquiries, 
 nn as to 
 nervous 
 es suffer 
 
 rns of the 
 is made 
 by an ef- 
 
 is said to 
 Is to delay 
 
 IN THE VALLEY OF DEATH. 
 
 369 
 
 the progress of the disease would be attended with 
 some measure of success, and that he would be able 
 to keep up and get around for some years. But when 
 he came down from Irvinofton some weeks before his 
 death he was not so confident. A sliofht hemorrhaire 
 was followed by several more severe. 
 
 His Pliysic'iaii. 
 
 Dr. John P. Munn, Mr. Gould's physician, is prob- 
 ably the one man in the world who knew Mr. Gould 
 really well. 
 
 There is a story that Dr. Munn's acquaintance with 
 Mr. Gould was the result of accident. He had come 
 to New York to practice after graduating from a 
 medical school in the interior of the State, and put up 
 his sign near Mr. Gould's house. One day Mr. Gould 
 was taken ill, and, his family physician not being at 
 home,, the young Dr. Munn was called in. His treat- 
 ment was quickly efficacious, and Mr. Gould, liking 
 him, a few months later made him a flattering offer 
 to look after his physical welfare all the time. The 
 doctor agreed, and had not, therefore, a very extensive 
 general practice. But as compensation for that loss, 
 he has seen many parts of the world from the bridge 
 of Mr. Gould's yacht, and by following hints dropped 
 from the lips of the great manipulator he acquired a 
 beautiful home on West Fifcy-eighth street and a 
 handsome income to keep it going. 
 
 Mr. Gould had every confidence in Dr. Munn and 
 
 liked him personally, and had him made a Director 
 
 in the Western Union Telegraph Company. 
 24 
 
 W' 
 
 i! 
 
 ■i* 
 
 '( 
 
Il# 
 
 CHAPTER XXIII. 
 Effect of Mr. Gould's Death. 
 
 Causing scarcely a tremor in the stock market, 
 where his name had for so many years been alter- 
 nately a terror and an inspiration, the news of the 
 death of Jay Gould came to puoHc knowledge sud- 
 dently. The end was reached of a life unparalleled in 
 the history of this country in its picture of the possi- 
 bility of what may be accomplished here in the accu- 
 mulation of wealth by individual effort, in the control 
 and direction of great business enterprises and in the 
 attainment of position in spite of the hostile arrows of 
 enemies made in a long career of speculative con- 
 test. 
 
 In Mr. Gould's death a career was closed of a man 
 whose stamp on the railroad and telegraph history of 
 the United States may never be effaced, but about 
 whom there will probably be long controversy over 
 the methods involved in most of the sensational events 
 with which his name was identified. And the closing 
 of his life found alive a generous judgment as to his 
 achievements and character that will help history 
 in the making up of its story of his personality. 
 
 There had been no expectation of Mr, Gould's death 
 until within a few days before it occurred. For m.ore 
 
 (370) 
 
EFFECT OF MR. GOULDS DEATH. 
 
 371 
 
 market, 
 en alter- 
 s of the 
 dge sud- 
 alleled in 
 the possi- 
 the accu- 
 le control 
 nd in the 
 rrows of 
 tive con- 
 
 of a man 
 [history of 
 Ibut about 
 rersy over 
 nal events 
 he closing 
 It as to his 
 Ip history 
 
 jhty. 
 
 aid's death 
 For more 
 
 dian two years his physical decline was apparent to 
 his friends, but numerous sensations in Wall street 
 were based on his attacks of illness without sufficient 
 justification through that period. 
 
 The FinaiicMiil Worhl Prepared. 
 
 The sudden death of a man like Mr. Gould, identi- 
 fied with many important properties, and, still more, 
 the central figure of stories, theories and disputes, 
 founded upon the remarkable sides of his varied char- 
 acter, might have been a severe shock to the financial 
 situation. But the last fatal illness of Mr. Gould fol- 
 lowed premonitions which had fully prepared his 
 friends for the end, and Mr. Gould hmiself had been 
 putting his affairs into such an order that death 
 would bring about no important disturbance in any 
 of the interests with which he was even indirectly con- 
 nected. 
 
 The death of Mr. Gould gave no shock to the stock 
 market. The speculative traders on his illness were 
 disappointed, as they w^ere when William H. Vander- 
 bilt died. It was noted as somethinor of a coincidence 
 that the two men, giants in the speculative and invest- 
 ment world, both died in December, Mr. Vanderbilt's 
 end preceding Mr. Gould's only by seven years, less 
 six days. 
 
 But different as were the circumstances attending 
 the death of the two men, there is some resemblance 
 in the fact that both of them had secured their estates 
 in such a manner as to baffle the work of the specu- 
 
n 
 
 372 
 
 UFK OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 lators who sought to trade upon the death oi each of 
 the two men. 
 
 Great PropertieH Secure. 
 
 It was understood that Mr. Gould had left his estate 
 in such a form that it would involve no menace to the 
 properties from which most had been feared in a 
 mortuary liquidation. Facing the possibilities of his 
 end, Mr. Gould put the bulk of his holdings in securi- 
 ties in trust, with a flexibility, of course, required by 
 the circumstances, but with restrictions that will pre- 
 vent the disintegration of the properties left as his in- 
 heritance and will avert the danger of sales for a long 
 time. It is a great estate which is tied up. 
 
 There is a fortune winch wa:* born out of the work 
 
 of one inspiring personality ; an accumulation that 
 
 represents an average acquirement in the twenty-five 
 
 years of Mr. Gould's active operations in the financial 
 
 and railroad world of $3,000,000 a year. When it is 
 
 considered that this wealth does not represent a 
 
 dollar of inheritance, when it is realized that only a 
 
 fraction can have come from *' unearned increment " 
 
 in real estate ; when it is appreciated that the figures 
 
 stand for investment in stocks and bonds, it may 
 
 safely be said that Mr. Gould's fortune stands for 
 
 the largest sum of money ever accumulated by a 
 
 single individual. 
 
 No Radical Changfes. 
 
 Nor is it believed that Mr. Gould's death will result 
 in any radical change in the management of the prop- 
 erties with which he has so lone been identified. 
 
each of 
 
 is estate 
 ;e to the 
 ed in a 
 es of his 
 n secu ri- 
 ll i red by 
 will pre- 
 as his in- 
 or a long 
 
 the work 
 tion that 
 venty-five 
 
 financial 
 Vhen it is 
 present a 
 lat only a 
 crement " 
 le fip"ures 
 s, it may 
 
 tands for 
 ited by a 
 
 will result 
 the prop- 
 identified. 
 
 EFFECT OF MR. GOULD S DEATH. 
 
 373 
 
 His oldest sons are young men, but they have been 
 put in places of trust where they have become 
 thoroughly familiar with their duties. Their holdings, 
 undisturbed to any material extent by the terms of 
 their father's will, must remain a bulwark upon which 
 they can lean for support, while the two men have 
 shown qualities of mind and character which will 
 retain for them the advice, guidance and instruction 
 of older and more experienced men who are also 
 identified with the Gould properties. Modifications 
 may come in the course of time in the control of the 
 great properties that owed their direcdon to the 
 genius of Jay Gould, but in none of them is it evident 
 that there will be a change ot importance. 
 
 There was much sympathetic comment on the 
 passing away of Jay Gould. His friends had only one 
 word to say as to the qualities in the dead man which 
 commanded a tribute from them — his ability, his fore- 
 sight, his wonderful patience in the working out of 
 his aims, his fidelity to friends, his good faith with his 
 business associates, and his generosity to subordinate 
 
 workers. 
 
 Not so White or Black as Painted. 
 
 The name of this great financier has been so long 
 associated with the ups and downs of stocks that even 
 those who consider themselves in the inner circle ex- 
 pected at least a temporary disturbance of prices. 
 That this expectation was not realized was a matter 
 of sincere congratulation to every one interested 
 directly or indirectly in the world of finance. This 
 
 us 
 
 Ml 
 
 m 
 
 i 
 
 M 
 
 !!;'■* I 
 
374 
 
 LIFE OF JAV GOULD. 
 
 P 
 
 can be saiJ without the least renection on either the 
 melhods or the character of Mr. Gould, for now that 
 he is gone there are man)- who will begin to see 
 the good that was in the man. 
 
 In this hurrying, hustling world when a person once 
 secures a reputation, that reputation, whether it be 
 good or bad, is apt to cling to him until death. The 
 truth of the matter is that few men are either quite 
 as white or quite as black as they are painted. For 
 this reason a great many thoughtless things are said 
 and done and a great many mistakes are made that 
 are rarely, if ever, corrected. 
 
 However, the day seems to be past when a panic 
 can be precipitated on the individuality of one person, 
 and that is where the cause for (reneral con<^ratulation 
 comes in. There is no man who fills the peculiar 
 position held so long by Mr. Gould, and for that rea- 
 son investors and others can place their money with 
 more confidence and breathe more freely while waiting 
 for the results of their investments. 
 
 Easily Scared. 
 
 There seems to be no class of men who allow 
 themselves to be so frightened by shadows and carried 
 away by myths as a certain portion of those who 
 deal in stocks. It has been stated, and there is no 
 reason for discrediting the statement, that Mr. Gould 
 was not actively in the market for nearly six years 
 before his death, and yet during that time men allowed 
 themselves to be carried away by countless stories of 
 his operations and machinations in this and that direc- 
 
licr the 
 5w that 
 to see 
 
 311 once 
 :r it be 
 L The 
 2r quite 
 J. For 
 ire said 
 ide that 
 
 a panic 
 person, 
 Uulation 
 pecuHar 
 hat rea- 
 ley with 
 waiting 
 
 allow 
 
 1 carried 
 )se who 
 re is no 
 
 Gould 
 IX years 
 
 allowed 
 lories of 
 
 at direc- 
 
 EFFECT OF MR. GOULDS DEATH. 
 
 376 
 
 tion. Now that the bears are deprived of the cloud of 
 myst(!ry wherein they were wont to clothe the man of 
 millions, they ought to have a hard road to travel. 
 
 The KrtVM't oil AVall Street. 
 
 Half an hour before the Stock Exchange opened on 
 the mornino- of December 2d, it was known in Wall 
 street that Jay Gould was dead. The information was 
 first received from the Western Union building, and 
 while no doubt was entertained that it was true, con- 
 firmations were secured before the Stock Exchange 
 was opened. A larger number of brokers than usual 
 was gathered on the floor to watch the effect of the 
 news. Some of them appeared to be anxious. A 
 feeling of general confidence, however, prevailed, al- 
 though it was believed that there would be a bear raid 
 from some quarter. 
 
 There was some excitement at the opening, and for 
 a few minutes it appeared as if a stampede might re- 
 sult. Most of the interest at the opening of the Ex- 
 change was concentrated in Missouri Pacific, which 
 was regarded as the key to all the Gould stocks. It 
 had closed the night before at 55I. The first bid 
 made for Missouri Pacific was for 500 shares at 54. 
 This was sold at once by a commission broker, but 
 at the same time an offer of stock at 55 was taken. 
 Then the first seller wanted to cancel his transaction, 
 but was not allowed to do so. 
 
 About the other Gould stocks there were many 
 brokers, but few transactions were made. The de- 
 clines in Wabash and Western Union were of only ^ 
 
 .\i =»•*»« 
 
^p 
 
 37G 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 per cent. The general list was not affected by the 
 
 announcement of Mr. GouUl's death. Surprise was 
 
 expressed that the Gould stocks w(Te affected so 
 
 litde. 
 
 KrtV'ot ill Washliif^ffoii. 
 
 The deadi of Jay Gould, which was bulletined in 
 Washini^^ton, made a great slir in liiiancial circles, 
 though it did not appear to have any appreciable effect 
 on stocks. Secretary Foster, of the Treasury Depart- 
 ment, in discussing Mr. Gould's death, said: "The ac- 
 counts of Mr. Gould's illness served to discount the 
 effect of his death on the money market. 
 
 •'In preparation for the end Mr. Gould's affairs had 
 been placed in the hands of his son, George, and other 
 persons who can be relied upon, and such good judg- 
 ment has been shown in delefratln^f these various 
 trusts that there can be no danger of anything going 
 wrong. I do not believe Mr. Gould's death will have 
 any marked effect in financial circles anywhere." 
 
 Mr. Gould is kindly remembered for a public- 
 spirited act which, but for the formalities necessarily 
 attending it, might never have been made public. 
 While on a visit to Washington in his yacht he landed 
 at Mount Vernon and inspected the old home of 
 Washington and the restorations made in recent years 
 by the Association of Regents having charge of the 
 place. He was greatly impressed with what he saw, 
 and, upon learning that the association was very 
 anxious to secure a considerable tract of land which 
 
 had form 
 for$i7,5( 
 
 The a I 
 
 great exc 
 
 in specul 
 
 to be tha 
 
 sensitive 
 
 "In m; 
 
 little q((c( 
 
 president 
 
 Railroad. 
 
 has taken 
 
 his death 
 
 isting arn 
 
 " Beside 
 
 kept intac 
 
 competent 
 
 carefully ti 
 
 which he 
 
 such actioi 
 
 soon. Of 
 
 among the 
 
 such actioi 
 
 Mr. Gould 
 
 Even if he 
 
 estate inta< 
 
 ble of Iool< 
 
 "Jay Go 
 
!!! 
 
 EFFKCT OF MR. GOULDS DEATH. 
 
 377 
 
 had forincTly belonged to Washington, d»*ew his check 
 for jii 7,500 and presented the tract to the Regents. 
 No Panic Caused in CIii<'a^«». 
 
 The announcement of Jay Gould's death created 
 great excitement in Chicago, but there was no panic 
 in speculative circles. The general opinion seemed 
 to be that Mr. Gould long before disposed of his most 
 sensitive stocks of all kinds. 
 
 "In my opinion the death of Mr. Gould will have 
 little effect upon the railroads," said R. R. Cable, 
 president of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific 
 Railroad. "Mr. Gould has been ill a long time and 
 has taken no really active part in railroad matters, so 
 his death is not likely to cause any disturbance of ex- 
 isting arrangements. 
 
 " Besides, there is no doubt that his estate will be 
 kept intact and managed by the sons, who are fully 
 competent to take charge of affairs, and have been 
 carefully trained with such an end in view. Stocks in 
 which he was interested are likely to go down, but 
 such action will be temporary, and recovery will follow 
 soon. Of course, if the property should be divided 
 among the heirs the effect would be more serious, but 
 such action would lessen the value of the estate, and 
 Mr. Gould was too good a business man to allow that. 
 Even if he has made no provision for keeping the 
 estate intact, his sons would do so, for they are capa 
 ble of looking out for their own interests." 
 How it Affected Union Pacific. 
 
 "Jay Gould is dead" was the message which Mr. 
 
 »»,^>J « w» " 
 
OIO 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Orr, chief factotum in the office of the president, and 
 assistant general manager of the Union Pacific system, 
 received by telegraph at Omaha, shortly after the 
 death of ]\Ir. Gould, and the old flag, which has 
 heralded the death of Union Pacific officials many 
 times, was hoisted half way up the staff. Little groups 
 of clerks and heads of departments gathered in the 
 offices of the system and discussed the death of the 
 railroad king and the effect it would have upon the 
 property to which they were attached. The opinions 
 were varied. When work was resumed it was in a 
 rather perfunctory manner. The workers were seem- 
 ingly wondering what changes would occur, and in 
 what manner they would affect those who are now in 
 authority. It was agreed that the policy of the Union 
 Pacific management would be little affected by Mr. 
 Gould's death. 
 
 On the other hand, the death of Mr. Gould may 
 bring an entire reversal of the Union Pacific policy 
 and change of the management. Yet there was 
 perfect unanimity among the employees that his 
 death was most untimely, parti ularly as he was so 
 intent upon some important combinations in the West 
 that would have resulted in the development of much 
 railroad property now regarded as of little impor- 
 tance. 
 
 Thomas L. Kimball, one of Gould's oldest associates 
 in the West, said : " Those people who have an idea 
 that Gould's relation with the Union Pacific was that 
 of the mere speculator do not know the calibre of the 
 
 
It, and 
 iystem, 
 er the 
 ch has 
 ; many 
 groups 
 
 in the 
 I of the 
 )on the 
 (pinions 
 as in a 
 •e seem- 
 
 and in 
 i now in 
 e Union 
 
 by Mr. 
 
 c 
 
 Id may 
 pohcy 
 ere was 
 hat his 
 was so 
 he West 
 of much 
 impor- 
 
 ssociates 
 an idea 
 was that 
 i)re of the 
 
 EFFECT OF MK. GOULDS DEATH. 
 
 379 
 
 man. While he always said he was purely a specula- 
 tor, still he was vitally Interested in the improvement 
 of the system, and I know he had a dream of some 
 day s Smg the railroad free of the Government debt 
 which now hanLTs over it." 
 
 The News in LoikIoii. 
 
 The announcement of the death of Jay Gould stirred 
 the pulses of the dealers, both inside and outside of 
 the London Stock Exchanoe. Althoujjh the news had 
 no notable influence on prices at the close, the first 
 momentary tendency in the American department was 
 to sell, but it was soon checked by New York orders 
 to buy. The progress of dealings in nowise repre- 
 sented the immense interest felt in Mr. Gould's death. 
 Business was interrupted in the Stock Exchange by 
 members grouping to talk of Mr. Gould, and the bear- 
 ing of his death on the Gould stocks. 
 
 A mob of people blocked the approaches to the 
 Exchange, all talking on the same theme and waiting 
 to see how the news affected prices. The scene in 
 Throckmorton street after the Stock Exchangee r] )sed 
 was as lively and exciting as if a speculative crisis was 
 impending. 
 
 A representative of the Associated Press, in glean- 
 ing the opinions of several dealers in the American 
 market and some prominent street operators, found 
 that they concurred in expecting a boom in the stock 
 of all American railroads except Gould roads. Re- 
 garding the future of Gould stocks, few cared to 
 hazard a prediction. ** Probably," said one dealer, 
 
 
 it 
 
f 
 
 380 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 '' Mr. Gould's death will benefit all Western roads, 
 gready enhance Manhattan Elevated in the opinion 
 of the public, and vasdy improve the posidon of West- 
 ern Union Telegraph." 
 
 (^ 
 
 
roads, 
 opinion 
 f West- 
 
 CHAPTER XXIV. 
 
 
 Tributes to the King of Wall Street. 
 
 Upon the announcement of Mr. Gould's death, 
 formal action was taken by several of the great stock 
 companies of which he was the most conspicuous 
 member and the ruling spirit. 
 
 Dr. Norvin Green p* 2sided at the meeting of the 
 Western Union Executive Committee. The other 
 members present were General T. W. Eckert, John 
 Van Home, John G. Moore, John T. Terry, Russell 
 Sage, and Sam Sloan. 
 
 Mr. Sloan proposed the resolutions, which were 
 adopted. They were as follows : 
 
 In Memoriam. 
 
 Jay Gould died at his residence in the city of New York, 
 on Friday, December 2, 1892, in the fifty-seventh year of his 
 age. 
 
 He has been a director of this company for about twelve 
 years and was such at the time of his death. It is fitting, 
 therefore, that it shall place upon its records its estimate of 
 Mr. Gould's character and services, and its sorrowful sense of 
 its great loss in his death. 
 
 Familiarity with him acquired through years of constant 
 intercourse enables the members of its directory to speak con- 
 cerning him with knowledge and confidence. What follow 
 
 (381) 
 
 ii' 
 
 i;1 
 
 !l 
 
.^e 
 
 G82 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ill 
 
 
 .1 
 
 tl 
 
 are words not of eulogy, but of just and considerate estimate. 
 Among the eminent men who in the history of this com- 
 pany have had a place in its counsels, Mr. Gould was in some 
 respects the most remarkable. The intelleciual qualities to 
 which he owed his almost unexampled success are not far to 
 seek. Underlying all was his faith in the continued growth, 
 advancement, and prosperity of our country. He forecast the 
 future with confidence and saw in their earlier stages the com- 
 ing values of such great properties as the Union Pacific, Kan- 
 sas Pacific, Missouri Pacific, Manhattan Railway, and Western 
 Union. 
 
 An Unrivalled Genius. 
 
 He boldly risked all on the soundness of his judgment. 
 His judgment concerning the values of corporate properties 
 singly and of their possibilities for profitable combination 
 amounted to positive genius — a genius in these lines probably 
 never surpassed if equalled. Acquiring these properties, he 
 gave his energies to their development. 
 
 This was not the hasty work of a day, but the slow work 
 of years, as he died in the ownership of the large interests in 
 these properties to the growth and development of which he 
 had so largely contributed. He was not merely or chiefly a 
 speculator. He was a practical and expert manager of rail- 
 ways. He was at home in every department of the service. 
 He knew his properties intimately. He could instantly detect 
 anything wrong. He inspected them in person regularly. 
 He gave to his properties the benefit not only of his genius, 
 but of his diligence and industry, which, until his health gave 
 way, never tired. 
 
 He did not always receive the praise to which he was en- 
 titled. He did not invest his wealth in lands, or buildings, or 
 governments, or established securities, and content himself 
 with idly receiving their income. His industries gave daily 
 
TRIBUTES TO THE KING OF WALL STREET. 
 
 383 
 
 estimate, 
 lis com- 
 in some 
 alities to 
 ot far to 
 growth, 
 ecast the 
 the com- 
 fic, Kan- 
 Western 
 
 udgment. 
 )roperties 
 nbinatioii 
 probably 
 erties, he 
 
 ow work 
 terests in 
 hich he 
 chiefly a 
 r of rail- 
 service. 
 ly detect 
 eguhirly. 
 s genius, 
 ilth gave 
 
 2 was en- 
 dings, or 
 himself 
 ive daily 
 
 employment to more than one hundred- thousand men and 
 
 support to their families. His enterprise contributed more 
 
 largely to the opening and development of the Western and 
 
 Southwestern parts of our country than that of any other 
 
 man. 
 
 "His Word was Law." 
 
 At his death probably no man in the United States possessed 
 more power His word was law throughout the vast interests 
 in his control established in many States and Territories almost 
 from ocean to ocean. But with all this he ever bore himself 
 modestly, without any ostentation or vulgar display of wealth 
 or power. He was a model of parental and domestic virtue. 
 So much is known of all men. 
 
 But the members of this body desire to record their knowl- 
 edge of the warmth and steadiness of Mr. Gould's friendship, 
 of his noble impulses and disinterested and generous deeds, 
 some of which without murmur or complaint from him were 
 popularly distorted so as to become matters of blame instead 
 of praise. 
 
 Resolved, That in the death of a counsellor so wise, saga- 
 cious, and faithful as Mr. Gould ever proved himself to be, this 
 company feels it has sustained not only a deep but an irrepara- 
 ble loss; that it tenders its sincerest sympathy to his surviving 
 sons and daughters ; that its directors will attend his funeral 
 in a body ; that this minute be spread upon its records, and 
 that a copy thereof suitably engrossed and authenticated be 
 sent to his children. 
 
 Mis.soiiri Pacific's Action. 
 
 The gentlemen present at the meeting of the Mis- 
 souri Pacific's directors wer^ A. H. Calef, General 
 Eckert, ex-Judge Dillon, J. W. Clendinnin, J. T. Terry, 
 Russell Sage, and Sam Sloan. In the absence of any 
 higher official Mr. Calef, who is the secretary and 
 
* *flB|BjH|^Qf s- 
 
 384 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ;! 1 
 
 treasurer of the company, presided. Upon motion 
 Messrs. Calef and Dillon v/ere appointed a committee 
 to draw up a series of resolutions. These were as 
 follows : 
 
 The Board of Directors of the Missouri Pacific Railway 
 Company, assembled this day upon the announcement of tiie 
 death of the president, recalling with gratcfijl sensibility his 
 long and eminent services and his distinguished achievements 
 in the interest of this company, C(;nscious of its irreparable 
 loss, and sensible of their own personal bereavement, desiring 
 to leave a lasting tribute to the memory of the able and faith- 
 ful officer, the beloved associate and friend, and the great man 
 who has passed away, do hereby make this record : 
 
 In l^Teinory of Jay Ooiild. 
 
 On the 17th day of >J\.vember, 1879, Jay Gould became the 
 President of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. From 
 that time until his death, on Friday last, the history of this 
 company has illustrated the sagacity and loyal zeal of this wise 
 and devoted executive. In a little more than a decade, under 
 the impulse of his energy and the spell of his genius, a prop- 
 erty of small proportions has expanded into a vast and majes- 
 tic system. 
 
 But the energy and genius of this remarkable man were 
 bounded by the fortunes of no single enterprise. His has been 
 one of the foremost figures in the great enterprises which have 
 marked the age in which he lived. The career of no other 
 one man has borne such a relation as his to the growth and 
 material prosperity of the country and to the development of 
 its great resources. 
 
 Of the personal qualities of Mr. Gould we may record the 
 just estimate of those who by long and intimate association 
 with him have been made, as we believe, fit judges. 
 
TRBUirS TO THE KING OF TTAT.T; STREET. 
 
 385 
 
 I motion 
 ►mmittee 
 were as 
 
 : Railway 
 ent of tiic 
 nihility his 
 lievenicnts 
 rreparable 
 t, desiring 
 and faith- 
 great man 
 
 »ecame the 
 ly. From 
 ry of this 
 )f this wise 
 ade, under 
 IS, a prop- 
 ind majes- 
 
 man were 
 s has been 
 
 hich have 
 f no other 
 
 owth and 
 Dpment of 
 
 ecord the 
 issociation 
 
 Mr. Gould's Attributos. 
 
 Mr. Gould was a man of tried personal and moral courage, 
 a kind, considerate and generous friend, modest and gentle in 
 demeanor, moderate in speech, judicial and just in his judg- 
 ments. To those whose business and personal relationship 
 to him had been lonfjest and closest he was most cndeaied. 
 
 History will record a judgment of those qualities which are 
 known to the world, and \\hich in the estimate of the world 
 distinguislied him as a great man. To us lie was known as 
 a man with these other and high.T personal qualities. This is 
 the estimate which we make and which we hand down to such 
 as may in future desire to consult the judgment of those 
 among his contemporaries who were also his associates. 
 
 To the members who arc present to-da\' the death of Mi. 
 Gould comes as the loss of a friend, associate and adviser. To 
 those of our Board whose relationship to him was nearer and 
 who to-day lament the loss of a loving father the affliction is 
 one to which we can do no more than refer in words of in- 
 adequate condolence. 
 
 Resolved, that the foregoing record be spread on the 
 minutes of this Board, and that copies, suitably engrossed 
 and signed by members of the Board, be transmitted to the 
 family. A. H. Calef, Secretary. 
 
 3Ianli{ittan Tribute. 
 
 The resolutions adopted by the Board of Direc- 
 tors of the Manhattan Railway Company are as fol- 
 lows : 
 
 At a special meeting of the Board of Directors of the Man- 
 hattan Railway Company, held on Saturday, December 3, the 
 following action was taken. 
 
 The president of this company has been taken from it. 
 
 Elected on November 9, 188 1, to be its official head, Jay Gould 
 25 
 
 m 
 
38G 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 !( Il 
 
 I 
 
 has uninterruptedly from that time to thisgiveri to the service 
 of this company a large part of his thoughts and of his inter- 
 est. No one of the many other great enterprises in which he was 
 concerned enlisted to a greater degree his close attention and 
 best energies. Although in many States of the Union loco- 
 motives rode on railways he had contributed to construct, the 
 corporation that furnished him with the means of daily access 
 to his home had no superior in its rank in his mind. Iw the 
 management of its affairs he displayed the qualities to which 
 he owed his success in many fields. 
 
 Kemarkable Business QujiliftC.itioiis. 
 
 He was clear in his perceptions, swift in judgment and 
 prompt in action. Patient in investigation and in the accu- 
 mulation of details, his mastery of them was complete imd his 
 memory accurate and tenacious. He was self-relant, yet ever 
 seeking information and correction of his views from others. 
 While disposed to adhere strongly to his own plans and ideas 
 he was always ready to yield his judgment to a superior rea- 
 son. 
 
 He expected full performance of his duty from each one 
 who undercook responsibility, but he fully trusted those who 
 were engaged in the duties of execution and left them large 
 latitude in the discharge of their functions. Never elated by 
 success, he was cool and courageous in defeat. He acted in 
 accordance with well considered and far reaching plans and 
 possessed the strength of will to adhere to his purpose through 
 difficulties and apparent repulses. 
 
 Kind and Consldorato. 
 
 In his personal intercourse with those who were associated 
 with him in his great endeavors he was kind, considerate, a 
 good listener and willing to modify his plans to serve the com- 
 mon interest. 
 
 He found the Manhattan Railway Company in the hands 
 
TRIBUTr.S TO THE KING OF WALL STIILKT. 
 
 387 
 
 ic service 
 his intcr- 
 ch he was 
 itioii and 
 lion loco- 
 struct, the 
 lily access 
 J. Ill the 
 to which 
 
 rment and 
 
 > 
 
 1 the accu- 
 :te 'jnd his 
 nt, yet ever 
 om others. 
 5 and ideas 
 perior rea- 
 
 i each one 
 those who 
 hem large 
 
 elated by 
 le acted in 
 
 plans and 
 sethror^rh 
 
 associated 
 isiderate, a 
 [e the coin- 
 
 Ithe hands 
 
 of receives, substantially bankrupt and in a condition where it 
 was doubtful whether or not its system was to be disintei^-ratcd 
 and resolved into its orir^inal elements. He leaves it pros- 
 perous, in excellent j)liysical condition, its different lines con- 
 solidated and indissolubly bound together, performing an 
 indispensable service to the public in the city of his business 
 life. 
 
 In his home life and in his relations to his children he found 
 his happiness. As fellow directors with him he insured the 
 companionship and the affectionate support of his s()ns in his 
 business hours. To his sorrowing family, and especially to 
 those members of this Board who have not only lost their 
 president but an affectionate and tender father whose domestic 
 circle furnished him with his only solace amid responsibilities 
 greater than those that have been borne by many rulers of 
 empires, the S)'mpath}' of this Board is tendered. 
 
 Resolved, that the foregoing minute be adopted and in- 
 scribed on the minutes of this Board of Directors, and that a 
 copy thereof duly certified be sent by the secretary to the 
 family of the deceased president. 
 
 Resolved, That the general offices of the company be closed 
 on the day of the funeral, Monday, December 5, 1892. 
 
 A true copy. D. W. IMcWTLLIAMS, Secretary. 
 
 The Manhattan Elevated Railroad showed Its sense 
 of mourning' for Mr. Gould's demise by draping- all the 
 engines on its lines with black and white. Knots of 
 black and white streamers floated from the cab o( 
 every locomotive as it bore its load of humanity down 
 to business, while many of them had their standing 
 rods and headlights twisted and draped in similar^ 
 fashion. 
 
 
 Hit 
 
38r5 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 ' t; 
 
 II 
 
 Cioiihrs Art Instinct. 
 
 Many of the men in the financial quarter of the city 
 devoted their time to forming accurate estimates of 
 Mr. Gould':- ' Actf^as a man and relatinof anecdotes 
 of his life. In reference to the general subject under 
 discussion, Colonel Henry T. Chapman, the art con- 
 noisseur of the Stock T^xchange, said : 
 
 " Gould's art collection was little known, for he 
 rarely ever figured personally in buying pictures and 
 went so little into social life that the public had no 
 knowledge of his gallery. It is very choice, however, 
 consisting of about one hundred paintings. Many of 
 them are representative works of the Barbizon and 
 modern French school. He has one of the finest 
 examples of Corot in the country, and masterpieces 
 by Rousseau, De Neufville and others. 
 
 " I purchased for him at the Stewart sale the finest 
 example of Knaus in the country. It is a famous 
 work, known as ' Knaus' children,' and cost $25,000. 
 Works by that artist have brought higher prices in 
 this country, but no one has a finer example. This 
 illustrates one thing that I would like to say about Mr. 
 Gould. He did not buy a painting on account of its 
 price, but because he appreciated its beauties. He 
 had a fine, highly cultivated artistic sense and showed 
 a wonderful appreciation of color, tone and treatment 
 in a picture. 
 
 *' He knew the inspirational works of an artist from 
 the mediocre productions, and showed a nice discrim- 
 ination in his selections. He never bought a picture 
 
*rx. 
 
 >f the city 
 mates of 
 inecdotes 
 ect under 
 J art con- 
 
 m, for he 
 :tures and 
 ic had no 
 , however, 
 
 Many of 
 bizon and 
 
 the finest 
 asterpieces 
 
 the finest 
 a famous 
 
 5t $25,000. 
 
 r prices in 
 pie. This 
 about Mr. 
 ount of its 
 uties. He 
 md showed 
 1 treatment 
 
 artist from 
 ice discrim- 
 ht a picture 
 
 TKIBUTES TO TUE KING OF WALL STREET. 
 
 .'ISO 
 
 for a Iiousehold decoration nor to fit a recess in the 
 wall, but for the love of tlie art it displayed and the 
 enjoyment it gave him. His was the true artistic 
 spirit." 
 
 CoiidoloiicM' and S.vnipatli.v. 
 
 All day long after Mr. Gould's death a procession 
 of messenger boys mounted the steps with telegrams 
 of condolence and sympadiy. Many of l\vm\ came 
 from railroad men in the West connected with Gould 
 roads or from relatives and personal friends. One was 
 from ex-Governor Huckner, one of the government 
 directors of the Union Pacific. Some were of a 
 nature to warrant publication. The higher officers 
 of the Union Pacific and Missouri Pacific who would 
 be able to reach New York in time for the funeral tele- 
 graphed that they would come on. 
 
 Vice-President Clark, of the Union Pacific, was 
 accorded a view oi Mr. Gould's face. He came out 
 of his house wiping his eyes and seemed to be con- 
 siderably affected. 
 
 Insured his Family's Fortunes. 
 
 *T have just seen the remains," he said, "and I 
 found that the face looked quite natural and much 
 more full than I had been led to expect. Indeed it 
 was hardly any thinner than when I last saw him 
 alive. The expression on the face is peaceful. I 
 think his consumption was not an inherited disease, 
 but that he caught it as a result of an attack of pneu- 
 monia from which he suffered five or six vears aero." 
 
 "There is one act in the life of Jay Gould which I 
 
 i 
 
 
HKO 
 
 LIFE OF JAY COULD. 
 
 
 1 
 
 
 i 
 t 
 
 
 1 
 
 ■ 
 
 do not Uiiiik lias ever yet been made public," said an 
 old Wall street man, who paused at the corner ot 
 l''orty-sev(Mith street and looked up at tlu^ many 
 windows with .^ray shades drawn. "It shows how 
 car(;ful he was for the welfare of his family and how 
 determined to make their future assured, no matter 
 what the vicissitudes of his own fortune mioht be. 
 
 Some years a^-o he i^ot caught in a scpieeze, and 
 had a oreat friijht lest his fortune should take wini^s 
 and II)' awa)'. If Russell Sa<^^e, who always believed 
 in Gould's genius, had not come to his rescue with 
 several millions of dollars he would most certainly 
 have gone to the wall. When Gould got upon his 
 feet a'>ain he remembered the dan<ifer which he had 
 passed through, and determined to lay aside a penny 
 for a rainy day. lie took a lot of Manhattan railway 
 and Missouri Pacific — I am told this amount was 
 eleven millions — and locked them up in a safe deposit 
 vault, and he made a vow that that vault was not to 
 be opened until he was dead. That vow has been 
 kept. This story comes to me from one who knows 
 Gould w'ell, and I have every reason in the world to 
 believe that it is true. 
 
 A (iroat Ofneral in Finance. 
 
 " Yonder window," said the gentleman, pointing to 
 the rear extension on the second floor, *' has furnished 
 the light for some of the greatest campaigns ever 
 planned in the battles of finance. You may not know 
 3uld was not onlv the (jreatest purchaser 
 
 Jay 
 
 of leeal talent who ever lived, but he himself was a 
 
 great k 
 he delv( 
 how far 
 of the la 
 he took 
 gettinor : 
 
 digging 
 
 the prize 
 
 small ro( 
 
 coined tl 
 
 Ex-Gc 
 
 to a Kar 
 
 " In th 
 
 Jay Goui 
 
 when set 
 
 threaten( 
 
 man abo 
 
 was inve: 
 
-,^ ,tT^i-~»*^ - 
 
 TRIKUTES TO THE KIXG OF WALL STREET. 
 
 :191 
 
 great lawyer. When he had any enterprise on I )»)t 
 he delved dee[) into th(^ law books, antl he knew jiusL 
 how far he could go with safety and what loojdioles 
 of the law were o[H'n to him. lie knew it all before 
 he took a step, and often while the other side were 
 getting hold of their lawyers and lli<; lawyers were 
 dietiiniTf into the books Gould was crcttinLi* away with 
 the prize and distancing them in the race. That is a 
 small room over there, but many millions have been 
 coined there." 
 
 Ex-Governor John P. St. John wrote the following 
 to a Kansas newspaper : 
 
 " In the midst of all that is being published against 
 Jay Gould, please allow me space to say that in 1880, 
 when settlers in Western Kansas were penniless and 
 threatened with starvation, I wrote to this much abused 
 man about it. He promptly sent me ^^5,000 which 
 was invested in bread and meat for their relief." 
 
 i!« 
 
 !i| 
 
*. WiVjWWf^fcRJ*:,!^ i , 
 
 F"V!W<*-V» 
 
 CHAPTER XXV. 
 Preparations for the Obsequies. 
 
 Ir was arranged that the funeral of Jay Gould 
 should be private. The public was not invited to at- 
 tend. Its presence would have been deemed an in- 
 trusion on the family's privacy. Such was the word 
 which came from the stately palace in Fifth avenue 
 after all preparations had b('en made to give all who 
 wished a view of the dead millionaire's face. 
 
 What wonder is it that brings so man)' out upon 
 the avenue? What is it that draws so great a multi- 
 tude, as if it w^ere a miirhtv lodestone, to a corner of 
 the city crowned by a stately mansion marked with 
 the blaclc habiliment of woe — which sends swollen 
 streams of curious humanity up and down F'ifdi 
 avenue, and causes it to swell and eddy about tliat 
 corner and to look up with eager curiosity at dark- 
 ened windows and unspeaking walls ? 
 
 Only a little man who has died in what should have 
 been the prime of life, and who has left behind for the 
 foundino- of a vast estate or the scatterino- to the four 
 winds of heaven, as the future may determine, a pro- 
 dio'ious fortune which he had (gathered with marvel- 
 lous skill and success. 
 
 What men had tried in vain to do — divorce him 
 
 (39-2) 
 
PREPARATIONS FOR THE OBSEQUIES. 
 
 3U3 
 
 J Gould 
 ;cl to at- 
 lI an in- 
 ;hc word 
 1 avenue 
 t all who 
 
 )ut upon 
 ; a multi- 
 :orncr ot 
 kcd with 
 
 swollen 
 ,vn Fit\h 
 Dout that 
 
 at dark- 
 
 >uld have 
 id for the 
 die four 
 ic, a pro- 
 i marvel- 
 
 orce him 
 
 from his millions — Death with one cut of his keen 
 scythe had accomplished. 
 
 Poor as the Poorest. 
 
 And thouirh the thousands and tens of thousands 
 who went out of their way to look upon the mansion 
 which was his temporary mausoleum knew that they 
 could see nothing more than they had been able to 
 see any day they went there, nevertheless, they seemed 
 to take a sort of satisfaction in realizing that the great 
 field-marshal of finance, the shre\vd(;st and mbst strat- 
 eijic oeneral who ever came into that tragic battlefield 
 which we call speculation, lay helpless — poor as the 
 poorest — behind those walls. 
 
 All daylong the mighty current swirled and eddied, 
 swirled and eddied about this common centre, and 
 gaped up at the black bow upon the bell and passed 
 its varied comments upon the event which was making 
 the nations ring for a nine days' wonder. 
 
 All sorts and conditions of men and women were 
 In the throno;, from the milHonaire railroad kinof ; the 
 stock operator whose name was a familiar one to 
 newspaper readers, and who had fought in the ranks 
 with Gould, or against him ; the great banker who 
 had sneered at him and been only too glad to honor 
 his signature for vast amoimts, down through the 
 gamut of success and failure to the clerks, the laborers 
 and the oamins of the street, who rolled his millions 
 under their tonoues like sweet morsels, and talked of 
 them as they would of Aladdin's cave, or heaven, or 
 any other unknown quantity which appealed to their 
 
394 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 M 
 
 imaginations and gave promise of unknown de- 
 li^^hts. 
 
 A common impulse moved diem all — curiosity. 
 
 Imps tit tho Door. 
 
 When Russell Sage, the gray-bearded friend of the 
 dead man, mounted the ste[)s and touched the bell a 
 quartet of small boys crept up behind him on tiptoe 
 of expectation. As he turned to allow the crystal 
 outer door to swing open he nearly knocked them 
 down, and turned toward them with an expression of 
 impatience. But this did not diminish their ardor 
 nor their audacity, and as he passed in through the 
 oaken doorway — a solid piece of timbering stout 
 enough to resist the blows of a battering-rani — they 
 llattened their noses against the fdass and eaijerly 
 drank in the quick vanishing sight of the rich in- 
 terior. 
 
 Many who saw the incident and commented roughly 
 
 on the rudeness of the oramins would have given 
 
 money for their fleeting glimpse. Earlier in the day 
 
 those who were in the neiohborhood saw a middle 
 
 aged man, well dressed and of well to do appearance, 
 
 and evid(^ntly on a footing of acquaintance with the 
 
 Goulds, trot up the steps and fumble for the bell as if 
 
 he thought it was a handle to be pulled instead of an 
 
 electric button. 
 
 The Crape Drops. 
 
 Suddenly the big bow of crape became unloosed 
 and fell to the flacrcrlne. The caller looked at it 
 aghast. He had evidently heard the superstition re- 
 
 
wn 
 
 slty. 
 
 de- 
 
 id of the 
 he bell a 
 on tiptoe 
 e crystal 
 :ed them 
 ession of 
 eir ardor 
 ough the 
 incr stout 
 am— they 
 .1 eagerly 
 e rich in- 
 
 ;d roughly 
 
 ive given 
 
 n the day 
 
 a middle 
 )pearance, 
 ; with the 
 ; bell as if 
 
 ead of an 
 
 unloosed 
 )ked at it 
 rstition re- 
 
 PREPA RATIONS FOR THE OBSEQUIES. 
 
 n05 
 
 garding the knocking down of crape and the ill for- 
 tune it is supposed to bring to him who docs the act. 
 He started to ring the bell a second time, paused with 
 his finger in the air and ilcd incontinently down the 
 steps, iollowed by the derisive laughter of some of 
 those who witnessed the incident. 
 
 In such petty fashion as this did humanity's waves 
 lap the door of the dead master of silence, while the 
 Arabs of the street peeped in at the opened door as 
 if some great spectacle awaited tlieir unmannerly en- 
 terprise. Happily the mourners within knew nothing 
 of the motley drama which was enactinij: outside their 
 door, for the kindlv shades were drawn and the thick 
 walls shut out the sounds which would ill comport 
 with the grief of those to whom the dead was not the 
 multi-milliunaire, but the o;entleand orenerous father. 
 
 III tlio Cliuiiibcr of Detitli. 
 
 The body of Jay Gould still lay in the chamber 
 whence its spirit fled. Night ar.d day a sleepless 
 watcher guarded it. A black pall covered the casket 
 in which it rested upon a bed of ice, and flowers were 
 heaped high upon the bier. Now and then a member 
 of the family came into the room, but for the most 
 part it was untenanted save by the watchers and the 
 watched. The hours dragged by with leaden feet to 
 the occupants, for there are few hors more long and 
 dreary than those between a death and burial. 
 
 The silence of the room was broken in the after- 
 
 noon by the entrance of George Gould 
 by Russell Sage, who had asked permis 
 
 accom 
 sion 
 
 pa 
 
 nie( 
 
 i 
 
 in 
 
 u 
 
 see 
 
 th( 
 
396 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Ill 
 
 face of his friend of many years, the man he had be- 
 friended in the time of trouble and distress, when the 
 latter's gigantic fortune was trembHng in the balance, 
 and who believed that Jay Gould was a man worthy 
 of respect and esteem. 
 
 The pall was gendy pulled aside and the living 
 millionaire ^•azed through the glass at the features 
 of the dead one. He looked long and earnestly with 
 compressed lips and moistened eyes. At length he 
 turned aside with a siijh. 
 
 "How natural he looks!" he said. ** You would 
 almost think he was asleep." 
 
 The Features Natural and Peaceful. 
 
 Mr. Sage said afterward that death had left no 
 trace upon the face unless it were the unusual pallor 
 of the skin. There w^as not a wrinkle in it. The 
 sallow, bilious look w'hich Mr. Gould had worn in life 
 was gone, and the color, thou^li there was the waxen 
 hue of death, was exceedingly good. The features 
 were natural and peaceful, and there was almost a 
 smile upon them, as if his last glimpse of his children 
 had sent him away to the undiscovered country with 
 pleasure in his heart. 
 
 "There will be many friends here from out of town 
 — from Boston and the West," said Mr. Sage, "who 
 will be anxious to take a farewell look at the remains. 
 I have arranoed matters with Geor^je so that all of 
 them will have an opportunity after the brief services 
 to enjoy this privilege. Indeed, I may say that it has 
 been decided to eive all who come to the house de- 
 
lad be- 
 lie n the 
 valance, 
 worthy 
 
 e living 
 features 
 itly ^vilh 
 ;noth he 
 
 fU ^v 
 
 ould 
 
 \ left no 
 lal pallor 
 it. The 
 rn in life 
 le waxen 
 features 
 almost a 
 children 
 ntry with 
 
 t of town 
 oe, " who 
 I remains, 
 lat all of 
 services 
 hat it has 
 house de- 
 
 PREPARATTOXS FOR TIIK OBSEQUIES. 
 
 39' 
 
 cently garbed a similar opportunity. As the burial 
 will not take place until Tuesday niorning there will 
 be plenty of time to accommodate all comer^. Even 
 if the crowd be crreat it will be oiven a chance to see 
 Mr. Gould's remains. We have arranged for plenty 
 of police protection in case there should be a crowd." 
 Mr. Sage, Mr. S. H. Vl. Clark, of the Union Pa^ ic, 
 and General Samuel Thomas held a whispered confer- 
 ence in the Windsor Hotel, and when they parted the 
 former said he thouoht the arranorements for the 
 funeral were as complete as they could possibly be 
 made. 
 
 Few Callers. 
 
 There were few callers at the house, whose late 
 master was such a universal theme not only on the 
 popular tongue but in the pulpit and in the press. 
 Save for those who came on business connected witli 
 the simple ceremonies the friends and acquaintances 
 held aloof and permitted the family, who for the next 
 few months, and until their future status is fixed, were 
 to occupy a position in the fierce light of publicity, to 
 be alone with their sorrow. The oaken door was not 
 opened so often as it had been, and the Central Office 
 detectives who were on duty on the sid *walk in front 
 and opposite had no special call upon their services. 
 
 No crime greater than curiosity — if that be a crime 
 — besieofed the door of the Qrreat Gould mansion, and 
 that was harmless and not arrestable. 
 
 Telecrrams were received from Mr. Abraham Gould, 
 the only brother of the deceased, and from two of 
 
 , ) 
 
 ! 
 
 H^^ 
 
398 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 /i;:i I 
 
 
 ¥■ 
 
 ii^ 
 
 rl' 
 
 his sisters, Mrs. Northrup, of Camden, and Mrs. 
 Palen, of Tuckg-iink, Pa., that they would reach New 
 York in time for the obsequies. Mrs. Haugh, the 
 sister who hves in Cahfornia, was too far away to 
 reach New York in time for the funeral. 
 
 Mr. Abraham Gould, who holds the modest office 
 of the purchasing agent of the Missouri Pacific Rail- 
 road, with headquarters at St. Louis, is a good natured, 
 generous man and immensely popular along the line. 
 
 Came to tlie Kesciie. 
 
 Mrs. Northrup is the elder sister. She lives in a 
 
 handsome house in the city of Camden, which her 
 brother Jay is credited with having given her. Many 
 years ago she married Northrup, a poor tanner in the 
 Pennsylvania hills. He was a widower, with six 
 young children. When his wife had added five boys 
 and three girls to the number Northrup gave up the 
 battle of life and killed himself. 
 
 It was then that the wealthy brother came to the 
 rescue and gave the overburdened widow a helping 
 hand and educated her children. 
 
 The kindness of Jay Gould toward his oldest sister 
 was not wholly in the nature of charity. Gratitude 
 entered into it also. They had been almost insepa- 
 rable companions when they were young, and to her 
 he owed his first knowledoe of fioures and much 
 of the shrewd sense with which he started out to buck 
 the tigerish world. 
 
 The followino- officers of the Missouri Pacific Rail- 
 road telegraphed their intention of attending the 
 
d Mrs. 
 ch New 
 Ligh, the 
 iway to 
 
 ;st office 
 
 ific Rail- 
 
 natured, 
 
 the Une. 
 
 lives in a 
 vhich her 
 r. Many 
 ner in the 
 with six 
 five boys 
 c^e up the 
 
 c to the 
 helpin 
 
 a 
 
 or 
 
 lest sister 
 Gratitude 
 St insepa- 
 .nd to her 
 nd much 
 It to buck 
 
 Lcific Rail- 
 iding the 
 
 PREPARATIONS FOR THE OBSEQUIES. 
 
 399 
 
 funeral: — Assistant-General Manager Smidi, General 
 Auditor Warner, Local Treasurer Smith, General 
 Solicitor Cockran and Assistant General Solicitor 
 Waggeman. Director of the Union Pacific Millard, 
 of Omaha, was the only Western represi^ntative of that 
 road, besides Mr. S. H. H. Clark, who would be able 
 to reach the city in time lor the obsequies. Most of 
 these named held confidential relations toward Mr. 
 Gould. 
 
 The final preparations for the funeral were com- 
 pleted, there being only one or two points left unsettled, 
 as, for instance, whether the entire top of the coffin 
 should be removed when the body is exposed for 
 viewing, and some minor question as to the style of 
 top to be employed. The undertaker's assistant said 
 that he had had pictures taken of the casket, but that 
 until the latter questions were settled no one was to 
 be permitted to see them. 
 
 Strictly Private. 
 
 No one not personally acquainted with the Goulds 
 would be expected or permitted to enter the house 
 for the funeral services. This was the final conclusion 
 reached by the family after carefully canvassing all the 
 possibilities. The casket would be placed in position 
 in the morninof between the two side windows in the 
 front parlor nearest to Fifth avenue. Camp chairs 
 would be placed as close together as possible through- 
 out the halls and rooms of the parlor Ooor. It was 
 expected that there would be seating accommodations 
 for between two and three hundred persons. 
 
 • r 
 
 ^\m 
 
m 
 
 I'i I 
 
 400 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 The clergymen, Drs. Paxton, IMacCracken and 
 Terry, wcire to stand in the hall beside the foot of the 
 stairs and the quartet choir would be near the door 
 of the parlor. An or^an, played by tlu^ organist of 
 the West Presbytt^rian Church, would furnish the 
 accompaniment. 
 
 The services would begin promptly at four o'clock 
 in the afternoon of December 5th, and the programme 
 would be as follows : 
 
 Andiem by choir. 
 
 Hymn, " Lead, Kindly Light." 
 
 Presbyterian Burial Service. 
 
 Hymn, '• Nearer My God to Thee." 
 
 Prayers. 
 
 Benediction. 
 
 The friends would then be permitted to pass in 
 review beside the casket, and then the family w^ould 
 descend from the upper floor and bid farewell to the 
 remains of the father, brother and grandfather, and 
 the coffin would be sealed. 
 
 liiiii 
 
^en and 
 ot of the 
 the door 
 ivanist of 
 •nish the 
 
 'clock 
 
 ir o 
 
 ooramme 
 
 to pass m 
 i-iily would 
 well to the 
 father, and 
 
 rPi-APTHR XXVI. 
 "K«irtb to Earth, Ashes to Ashes." 
 
 On tne 5tii of Uccember, in the kindly presence of 
 men and wcn'ien who had known him in the ])usiness 
 a''"1 Gorinl walks of life and amid the hushed splendor? 
 of his stately home in Vihh Avenue, the sim[)lest oi" 
 funeral rites were practised over the clay of the dead 
 Jay Gould, and it was sealed away forever from the 
 siorht of man. 
 
 All that was decorous and seemly marked that fu- 
 neral of the millionaire. The shaded rooms were lit 
 by incandescent globes, which threw a rich and gen^ 
 erous glow upon the magnificent furniture, the tapes- 
 tries, the walls clothed in silk and velvet, and blossom- 
 ing with paintings from great masters, the sombre 
 silver mounted casket buried in a magnificent mass 
 of dowers from which looked forth a strong and peace- 
 ful face. 
 
 From out the solemn hush, with just the echo of a 
 roar sounding from the street through padded walls 
 and doors, came the notes of rich and solemn music, 
 and the tones of clergymen in invocation and the read- 
 ing of solemn lessons of hope and admonition from 
 the Scriptures. And when all the seemlv service was 
 
 ended the seemly company passea ouc into the streec 
 26 (401) 
 
 li 
 
 I 
 
 m 
 
 
402' 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ""lii 
 
 once more and left tli(! dust ot rue de^in m tne cnrp: 
 and tears of those wlio loved it. 
 
 Thus was the funeral of Jay Gould. 
 
 A .^loth-y l>rama. 
 
 But what a drama it was whieh was beinnr enacted 
 on tlie stai'C widiout the house ! No seemliness her(i, 
 and no decorum ! No solemnity nor hush. The worst 
 elements of our poor human nature seemed to have 
 
 THK FAMILY TOMB AT WOODLAWN. 
 
 coiicentrated on the corner of Pifth Avenue and Forty- 
 seventh c'ft-r-.-=.f pnd it required an actual show of force 
 to keep tne crowd m bounds. 
 
 Like bees abo''*- " ^'lear ^arrel the horde of the un- 
 washed buzzed around tins palace of the rich man 
 dead. Here was as modey a crowd as that of the 
 Mother Goose rhyme when the " beggars have come 
 to town." 
 
ne care 
 
 enacted 
 
 he worst 
 to have 
 
 ,nd Forty- 
 )\v of force 
 
 I of the un- 
 rich man 
 hat of the 
 have come 
 
 KARTU TO EARTH, ASHES TO ASHES. 
 
 '10:j 
 
 It seems as if an imi)rcssion liad q^onc abroad 
 throughout the shuns lliat there was to be a (/rand 
 distributioi. of the dollars at Jay (lould's hnieral, for 
 nothing else, assuredly, could have brought together 
 such a ragtag and bobtail of the city's population. 
 
 Men out at elbow stood shoulder to shouldcrr with 
 men literally walking on their uppers. W^omen with 
 hooded shawls about their heads whis[)ered togetlu r 
 as to " when they'd be let in to see the corpse," and 
 men with villanous countciuances dodged restively 
 about or betook th* mselves to discretion and retreat 
 when they saw the sharp eyes of bispector McLough- 
 lin's men fixed intently upon them. The carrion birds 
 of prey had gathered at the rich man's door, hoping 
 perchance to find an opportunity to get away with 
 plunder when the stout doors were unloosed. 
 
 But they reckoned without their host, every one. 
 
 AVoinan's Curiosity. 
 
 SliOulder to shoulder with these foul Q-utter birds 
 \vere men and women decently apparelled wHo schemed 
 to be overcome with a mad frenzy of curiosity. i ne 
 women especially were determined to get in, and the 
 way their tongues wagged fables as they sought to 
 pass the guardians at the door was amusinor as well 
 as somewhat disgusting. vSome of them were so per- 
 sistent in their efforts that it needed forceful persua- 
 sion to dislodge them from the vestibule, and if ever 
 Dr. Munn passed a bad sixty minutes it was during 
 the hour that he stood euard before the great door 
 which opened only at his knock. 
 
 5 ! " ! 
 
404 
 
 LIFE OF JAV GOULD. 
 
 :? 
 
 i 
 
 C! 
 
 A biL,^ policeman v/as the Iloratius who k^pt the 
 stcjjs, and Hfe became a burden to him. He was 
 fillr'd with the milk of human kindness when Captain 
 Reilly sc:t him the task of siftinj; out the sheep from 
 the goats, but the unwashed adventurers quickly 
 sound it, and he developed into a first class cynic 
 before the day was spent. 
 
 Once, when one of the five Central Office detectives 
 who stood betwe('n the gutter birds and possible loot- 
 ing, cam(.' out upon the st('ps, the crowd took it for a 
 sign that they were to be allowed to enter and satisfy 
 their curiosity. A hundred women broke the bounds 
 and streamed up the steps and clogged the vestibule. 
 Others followed them, until the sidewalk in front of 
 the Gould residence was packed with a struir^linor 
 crowd, and not until the police massed their forces 
 and charged down the steps was a way cleared for 
 more welcome quests. 
 
 Ai'rsiy<'(l ill Red, 
 
 Police Captain Reill) had a large force of reserves 
 ready for an emergency, but he wisely kept them out 
 of sight until their services were needed, so as not to 
 inflame the crowd and turn a orood-natured thronir 
 into a mob. He recognized the self-evident fact that 
 there were dangerous spirits in the throng, and he 
 made no more show of force than was necessary to 
 Iiandle the obstreperous women. 
 
 There was one man in the crowd on whom the 
 detectives kept a close and wary watch. He seemed 
 to be a full-fledged anarchist. He wore a pair of 
 
EAKTII TO EAKTII, ASHES TO ASHES. 
 
 403 
 
 »pt the 
 \c was 
 Captain 
 ep fr()ni 
 quickly 
 5S cynic 
 
 :tcctivcs 
 iblc loot- 
 k it for a 
 id satisfy 
 c bounds 
 I'estibule. 
 I front of 
 true'-!li"2: 
 
 .->r> 
 
 '.1 
 
 r forces 
 eared for 
 
 reserves 
 them out 
 
 as not to 
 d thronf,^ 
 t fact that 
 g, and he 
 cessary to 
 
 ,vhom the 
 le seemed 
 a pair ol 
 
 skin-tiL-ht trousers antl ihuiiUcil ihr. socialistic cok)rs 
 in a huj^u! red handkerchief about his neck. 1 h; was 
 unwashed, unshaved and as scurvy a lookin;^^ fehow 
 as you coukl fnid in ImUIi street or Avenue A. lie 
 scowled upon tlu; bi^- house, but made no other 
 
 r[fl'Jl*ti'H''i''i.''"'l!|'; 
 
 c -- M pi' 
 
 SCENE IN THE PARLOR AT THE I'UNERAL. 
 
 demonstration until a reporter asked him if he spoke 
 EnMish, and then he broke out into a strincr of shock- 
 ing lanc^uage and retreated up the avenue snarling 
 like a dog of evil temper. 
 
 As he was shamblincr across the avenue this unmis- 
 takably bad citizen was nearly ridden down by a 
 
''■iXSlf! 
 
 4G6 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 carriage in which John Jacob Astor and his young 
 
 wife were riding-. He turned and cursed them, too, 
 
 but he would have cursed them a thousand times 
 
 more bitterly if he had known that it was the wheels 
 
 of the Astors which so narrowly missed him. 
 
 Of the two thousand or more who souo-ht to cain 
 
 entrance perhaps one hundred and fifty were passed. 
 
 Many of those refused admission were well-dressed 
 
 men and women. Some were gray haired and 
 
 pleaded that they were old friends. A number came 
 
 armed with the visiting cards of Edwin Gould, and it 
 
 looked as if some one had engaged in a profitable 
 
 speculation. 
 
 Frio^ids aiul Foos. 
 
 Most of those wlio entered were men well known 
 in fmancial and railroad circles, whose faces alone 
 were passports. And no one who had any real busi- 
 ness to be in the house was refused admittance. 
 
 Bankers and brokers, high officials of the Gould 
 roads, and the Vanderbilt roads also, of the Pacific 
 Mail and the Western Union, millionaires and multi- 
 millionaires — men who had fought side by side with 
 Gould and foucrht against him — these and their ladies 
 made up the funeral company. 
 
 Some of them, perhaps, were just as full of curiosity 
 as those wdio beat upon the door without the pass- 
 word, but If they were they hid their curiosity under 
 the cold cloak of decorum. But the bulk, un- 
 doubtedly, were personal friends and acquaintances 
 cither of the man or his family, and their presence 
 
EARTH TO EARTH, ASHES TO ASHES. 
 
 407 
 
 5 young 
 lem, too, 
 d times 
 e wheels 
 
 t to gain 
 2 passed. 
 I-dressed 
 red and 
 ber came 
 Id, and it 
 profitable 
 
 1 known 
 es alone 
 real bu sl- 
 ice. 
 
 le Gould 
 le Pacific 
 nd multi- 
 side with 
 eir ladies 
 
 curiosity 
 the pass- 
 ,ity under 
 )ulk, un- 
 aintances 
 
 presence 
 
 was animated by a desire to pay a meed of respect 
 to his remains. 
 
 The first comers were ushered into the s{:)acious 
 dining hall, sentinelled by a fine portrait of Jay Gould 
 in his prime of life. Here they were seated until the 
 room was full. 
 
 Notables Who Wore Present. 
 
 Amonof those in the room was the followinof dele- 
 ofation from the Gould roads in the West: 
 
 B. B. Wagner, Western general attorney of the 
 Missouri Pacific, of St. Louis ; E. T. Atkins, vice- 
 president of the Union Pacific, of Boston ; Oliver P. 
 Mink, controller Union Pacific, of Bostou ; .\lexander 
 Millar, secretary of the Union Pacific; Jtxseph T. 
 Harris, treasurer of the Union Pac:ific ; Joseph II. 
 Millard, Western director of th(t Union Pacihc, of St. 
 Louis, and John C. Ward, director of the Union 
 Pacific, and John C. Wands, director of the Union 
 Pacific, from St. Louis. 
 
 When the dinino;-room was filled the late comers 
 were placed in the back parlor and the spacious hall, 
 turned for the nonce into a sanctuary, and a few were 
 placed in the front parlor beside the coffin and its 
 splendid fai^ade of flowers. 
 
 Collis P. Huntington took a seat beside the coffin, 
 but changed it by request and was given a front sc^at 
 near the clergymen and next to Chauncey ]\L Depew, 
 who, with H. W^alte'r W^ebb, came partly to represent 
 the absent Vanderbilts. Judge Rufus B. Cowing took 
 the chair he vacated. Mr. Whitelaw Reid sat near 
 
 ,'.'11 
 
' I 
 
 •408 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 the remains of his old tinie friend and his face durln£r 
 tlie simple services showed much emotion. 
 
 The broad hallway was well adajjted for the pur- 
 poses to which it was put. The stairs ran at right 
 angles to it, halfway between the front and re'ar, and 
 in the recess beside them was plenty of room for a 
 cabinet organ and the quartet choir, composed of Mrs. 
 Charles Herbert Clarke, who took the place of Mrs. 
 Clementine de Vere Sapio, who will not sing at 
 funerals: Mrs. Carl Alves and Messrs, Clark and 
 Bushnell. Organist P. A. Schuecker, of Dr. Paxton's 
 church, presided at the organ. The clergy ukmi stood 
 at the foot of the stairs, where their voices could be 
 heard in all parts of the house, while the mourning 
 family with Dr. and Mrs. Munn, Mrs. Northrop, Mrs. 
 Palen and their children, Mrs. Shrady ami Mr. Abra- 
 ham Gould sat at the head of the stairs and out of 
 sight of those below. 
 
 Profusion of Flowors. 
 
 What pen can do justice to the wealth of flowers 
 wdiicn surrounded the casket of the Man of Silence, 
 silent lorever more ? Me was a lover of llowers, and 
 they buried him in them. Their radiance and their 
 redolence lilled the room. There were in all nearly 
 forty pieces. 
 
 From Mr. and Mrs. George Gould came a floral 
 broken column, which stood on a floral pedestal at the 
 head of the casket. The column proper was about 
 four feet hicrh and a foot and a half thick. It was one 
 mass of beautiful full white roses, white carnations, 
 
 P 
 
 'M 
 
- during 
 
 the pur- 
 at right 
 •ear, and 
 )m for a 
 1 of Mrs. 
 : of Mrs. 
 
 sinuf cit 
 lark and 
 Paxton's 
 KM! stood 
 could be 
 mourning 
 rop, Mrs. 
 
 Ir. Abra- 
 d out of 
 
 if dowers 
 If Silence, 
 iwers, and 
 land their 
 all nearly 
 
 a floral 
 ;tal at the 
 
 Ivas about 
 t was one 
 
 larnations, 
 
 I 
 
 EARTH TO EAIiTIl, ASHES TO ASHES. 
 
 4i)0 
 
 Roman hyacinths and delicate ferns. Springing from 
 the pedestal at the base were pink hucd orchids of the 
 
 SCENE IX FRONT OF THE GOULD MANSION. 
 
 Catdeya, Laelia and Cypripedium varieties. A bed of 
 beautiful Parma violets formed the broken top of the 
 column. The supporting pedestal was of white roses 
 
 f 
 
f 
 
 410 
 
 LIFE OF JAT GOULD. 
 
 m 
 
 :.A: 
 
 and Roman li3'acinths, intcrspe^rscd with ferns, and 
 palm leaves and palms were grouped around the 
 entire supporting base. Across the upper portion of 
 the pc^destal, on a ground of white roses, in letters 
 formed of Parma violets, was the word, " P^ither." 
 
 Miss Helen Gould's offeriuLT was a laro^e cross of 
 magnificcMit, delicately hued orchids. The cross stood 
 about three feet high, with broad arms of proportionate 
 diniensions. The beautiful exotics of which it was 
 formed were set in a background of (^reen moss and 
 fern tips. 
 
 A wreath, fully four feet in diameter, and constructed 
 mainly of wlute roses and lilies of the valley, was sent 
 b\' Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gould. A i^round of maid(Mi- 
 hair ferns backed the [lowers, and clustered toci^ether 
 at one part of the wreath, near the broad, white satin 
 ribbon, was a bunch of purple orchids. 
 
 Siini»l.v Boaiiiirul. 
 
 Miss Anna Gould's offerinof was beautiful in its 
 
 simplicity. It was probably the most expensive 
 tribute among the many there, and was couriposcd of 
 rare white orchids. The varieties represented in the 
 bunch included the Phalvenopsis, Dendrobium, Cat- 
 tU^ya, Lar:lia and others of extreme rarity. For two 
 da\'s a llorist had been en^-aoed in collectino- the 
 flowers, which were gathered from private as well as 
 florists' conservatories. The bunch was tied with a 
 white satin ribl)on. 
 
 Another simple, though exquisite, gift was a large 
 
EARTH TO EARTH, ASIIKS TO ASHES. 
 
 411 
 
 ns, and 
 ind the 
 rtlon of 
 I letters 
 ler. 
 
 cross of 
 ss stood 
 )rtionate 
 1 it was 
 loss and 
 
 istructed 
 was sent 
 f maiden- 
 tof^-cther 
 lite satin 
 
 I in its 
 X pensive 
 
 jOS!.:d of 
 ed in the 
 
 II m, Cat- 
 l^\^r two 
 
 the 
 s well as 
 ed with a 
 
 ctmg 
 
 1 
 
 ,s a large 
 
 bunch of beantlful, fragrant white roses, the token of 
 Howard (]ould. 
 
 A cluster of lilies of the valle)' ncai-jy live feet in 
 length and witli more than five huiK h-ed sepai'ate 
 sprays was the offering of .Master h^rank (h)uld. 
 
 Restinqr against the coffin was a bank of rare llowers 
 nearly four feet long and a foot and a half wide. It 
 bore the name of " Grandpa" worked in violets upon 
 a oround of white. 
 
 And here it lay, amid tlie friends and (lowers, the 
 
 chastened hijhts, the works of art, the Bouij;uereaus 
 
 ^'h1 Benjamin Constants, the iNIunkacsys, the Gustave 
 
 J acquets, the Adolph Schreyers, and all the rest — the 
 
 empty casket which had held a might)' and puissant 
 
 genius ! Surely, if a fimeral could be happy this man's 
 
 ought to be ! 
 
 Last Siul l{it<'s. 
 
 A merry little French clock in thc^ dining-hallsounded 
 the hour of four. Anon the; dee[) voice of a cathedral 
 clock in tlu^ parlor repeated the call more fune'realh'. 
 Then Dr. Paxton, of the sih'er hair, followed by 
 Chancellor McCrackin, whom some mistook for 
 Edmund Clarence Stedman, and tlu; florid Dr. Terr)', 
 took their stations in the hallwa)' and the brief services 
 beoan. 
 
 Mr. Schnecker's arrangement of the anthem, " There 
 Is a Land Immortal," with solos for soprano and 
 contralto, was touchingly and bc^autihilly sun^-. .Vs 
 the sweet and tender notes went through the hall the 
 sound of weeping was Iv^ard up-stairs. But few of 
 
 }'r' 
 
 ill 
 
412 
 
 LIFK OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 the auditors below were visibly a. itjctcu by the pathetic 
 suororestions of the scene or the ineltinij" music. 
 
 Dr. Paxton followed with an eloquent invocation, 
 which was as follows : — 
 
 "O eloquent, just and mighty death! whom none 
 
 TAKING THE BODY FROIM THE HOUSE. 
 
 couldst outwit. Thou takest in thy toils, whom none 
 could convince. Thou persuadeth, whom none could 
 overthrow. Thou subdueth. Mighty death ! 
 
 "Dire discouragement of human end, we bless God 
 for our Christian faith in which Jesus Christ hath abol- 
 
; pathetic 
 
 ic. 
 
 vocation, 
 
 om none 
 
 'imMli 
 
 lom none 
 one could 
 
 bless God 
 hath abol- 
 
 \ 
 
 EARTH TO EARTH, ASIIE>; TO ASHES. 
 
 'il3l 
 
 ished death. We bless Thee that He plucked the 
 stain from sin, that He robbed the i^rave oi its victory 
 and that He filled th(; heavens with the ministrations 
 of our heavenly hope in His s[)l(jndor, where we hope 
 to renew life beyond the tomb. 
 
 "We bless our Heavenly Father for Thy Son, our 
 Lord Jesus Christ, for our knowledge that the grave 
 is not a dungeon, but a door opening into other worlds 
 and a new and hiirher life. We bless Thee tliat the 
 grave is not a terminal, the final resting place, the be 
 all and end all of man, but that it is only the stopping 
 place, an inn where we humble travellers sleep the long, 
 sweet sleep on the way to our new Jerusalem. 
 
 •' May the Divine Spirit be present with us in these 
 sad, solemn services, and may the light of the resur- 
 rection morn shine into this darkened and bereaved 
 house, and may comfort that which God comforteth 
 His own touch with heavenly and helpful grace the 
 hearts of our friends here wounded, sore and bleeding 
 still for the loss of him they all loved so well." 
 
 Service for the Dead. 
 
 Dr. Paxton then read the Presbyterian modification 
 of the Episcopal service for the dead, including the 
 thirty-ninth Psalm, while Dr. Terry read the ninetieth 
 Psalm, and Chancellor McCracken offered a solemn 
 prayer, calling upon God to comfort those who were 
 both fatherless and motherless and beora-inor for "such 
 peace as the riches of this world cannot give." 
 
 Two more numbers, " Lead, kindly light," and 
 
 m 
 
 il|!'K 
 
 1 
 
414 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 i 
 
 " NcaiTT, my God, to Tluif," wcru sun^' by the choir 
 aiul the services \ver(^ endixl. 
 
 As th(! mourners filed out of tlie liouse many of 
 them stoi)[)ed to look at the silent face in the coffin. 
 It was as Mr. Russell Sai^t' had reprtisented it to be 
 the da\' [before. It was full and fair to look upon. It 
 bore none of the pinching' fini^er marks usual in dcadi 
 b)- consnin{)tIon. 'Hk^ electric liL;ht cast quite a ruddy 
 tint upon it and it lackcjd thc! ashen [)allor of death. 
 It was a strong;- face, a determined tace, and yet some- 
 how th(;re was a kindly look in the eagle-like features. 
 
 " lie was as kind a man as you ever met," said Dr. 
 Munn, looking down into the coffin. 
 
 When all had departed from the house the members 
 of the famil\' came down the stairs and sat with the 
 dead and told pleasant things about him. Wdiat bet- 
 ter can we ([o than leave him in such loving company ? 
 
 AVlioro Gould l?osts. 
 
 On the highest point of beautihil Woodlawn Ceme- 
 ter*)', overlooking Woodlawn Lake, is the Gould mau- 
 soleum. The Ionic temple of the dead was ready for 
 him who had been its master. The massive bronze 
 doors stood wide to receive the clay of the millionaire. 
 
 In the hall between the double tiers of niches or 
 spaces which are to receive the Goulds a scaffolding 
 had been erected. Upon and under this workmen 
 polished the marble and granite anci burnished the 
 bronze. 
 
 There is room for twenty caskets in the tomb, two 
 tiers of five on each side of the hall. In the second 
 
 -.;i ( 
 
le 
 
 choir 
 
 nanv of 
 c coffin. 
 
 it to be 
 pon. It 
 
 in death 
 
 a riuUly 
 3f death, 
 'et some- 
 features. 
 
 said Dr. 
 
 members 
 with the 
 
 Hiat bet- 
 ►mpany ? 
 
 \n Ceme- 
 uld mail- 
 ready for 
 bronze 
 Ihonaire. 
 iches or 
 affolding 
 Ivorkmen 
 hed the 
 
 )mb, two 
 second 
 
 EARTH TO KAKTII, A.^HKS TO ASHES. 
 
 4ir, 
 
 space from the iloor on the; left, fu i-tJK^r from tlie (h^or, 
 is the casket containing- the remains of Ia\' ( iould's 
 wife. The dead millionaire rcists in the same space on 
 the ri('ht. 
 
 li!ach space is covered l)v a ijreat slal) o( li-'ht 
 sliaded marl3I(^ In theljronzc cHsks fixed in llw, sioiu! 
 are attached bronze rini^s, which serve, as handh-s in 
 removinij^ the slabs. On one; of theses was traced for 
 the direction of the marble cutt('r's chisel the inscrip- 
 tion : — 
 
 JAY GOULD, 
 
 Born Ma)' 27, 1836, 
 
 Died December 2, 1892. 
 
 Outside laborers cleared away the snow from the 
 paths leading- from Central avenue to the mausoleum 
 and drained off the water. 
 
 Fow Visitors. 
 
 There were few visitors to tlie tomb on the day be- 
 fore the interment. A carriage passing' along Central 
 avenue stopped for a moment and a woman, heavily 
 veiled, its only occupant, gazed for a moment upon 
 the tomb and then drove on. The workmen said that 
 only a few persons had been there during the morn- 
 ing, though the tomb was open to die inspection of all 
 who wished to see. 
 
 Inquiry was made whether any precautions were tf^ 
 be taken to cruard the tomb ao^ainst crrave-robbers, 
 
 
4\Q 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 and it was ascertained that there would be none. 
 The mausoleum is as secure asj^ainst desecration of 
 this kind as a safe deposit vault against the attack of 
 burglars. The two L»reat irranite blocks formin**- the 
 ceilino- of the tomb wei'di six tons each, while the 
 solid bronze doors are more than an inch thick. Mr. 
 Gould during life had more than once expressed his 
 horror of the outrage upon the body of A. T. Stewart, 
 and so when he asked for desi^ins from the architects 
 
 SERVICES AT THE TOMB. 
 
 strength and security were the features which he par- 
 ticularly demanded. 
 
 The Gould mausoleum is one of the most classical 
 specimens of mortuary architecture in the country. 
 The desiQfn is said to be derived from the famous 
 Maison Carre, at Nimes, France, built two thousand 
 years ago and to-day one of the best preserved and 
 
EARTH TO KAKTll. ASHKS TO ASHES. 
 
 417 
 
 ii 
 II 
 
 none, 
 tion of 
 tack of 
 /mLT the 
 lilc the 
 ^. Mr. 
 ;sed his 
 Stewart, 
 rchitects 
 
 he par- 
 
 1 classical 
 Icountry. 
 famous 
 Ihousand 
 Ived and 
 
 most beautiful specimens of Grecian architecture in 
 existence. 
 
 Mr. Gould years ago owned a big plot in Wood- 
 lawn near the entrance at the raih'oad station. He 
 sold this, howevM, and bought the present site of the 
 tomb, paying 5^50,000 theretor. It 's a circuhir mound, 
 sloping gently, and takes in about an acre. It was 
 Mrs. Gould, it is said, who suggested the mausoleum, 
 and also tlrat it be built somewhat after the style of 
 the old Parthenon. 
 
 The temple is built of Westerly (R. I.) granite. 
 Thirty columns support the roof, which consists of 
 granite slabs thirty-two feet long, each weighing fifteen 
 tons. The slabs are so joined as to be impervious to 
 water. The whole tomb weighs more than three 
 hundred tons, resting on a solid concrete foundation 
 eight feet thick. It was finished in December, 1883, 
 each step of its progress having been carefully super- 
 vised by an art committee. The cost of the tomb and 
 the plot amounted to nearly *J 150,000. 
 
 Jay Gould EntoiiilxMl. 
 
 The road which all men must travel was travelled 
 
 on Tuesday, December 6th, by Jay Gould, and that 
 night he slept in the city of the dead, while men's 
 thoughts turned from his personality to the millions 
 that h^ left behind. 
 
 The burial was over. Now what of the last will 
 
 and testament? The man was dead; the puissant 
 
 intellect which had steered the bark of fortune amid 
 
 so many strong seas and dangerous shoals had ceased 
 
 27 
 
 IM 
 
 H,'l 
 
imim 
 
 418 
 
 LIKE OF JAV (iUULD. 
 
 ii 
 
 to be amonor the things that be, but the millions still 
 HMiiained to torment the world and wei^rh down the 
 shoulders of the possessors who, none tiie less, were 
 eager for the burden. How had those millions been 
 disposed? That was the question on all lips. Had 
 Jay Gould, who has done so many surprising things, 
 done one more thing surprising and left some hand- 
 some portion of his fortune to public or charitable 
 uses, or was it all left in the circle of his family? 
 
 Perhaps it was not any of the public's business, 
 but the public, none the less, was interested mightily, 
 and so were the members of the family, too, until 
 they had heard the reading of the testamentary docu- 
 ment. 
 
 But all things must be done decently and in order, 
 and it is not decent to think of monetary matters until 
 the ending of the funeral. 
 
 Ready for Burial. 
 
 We can safely say that few mercenary thoughts 
 crept into the new Gould mansion in the early hours 
 when he who had been master — and such a kindly 
 one — was about to leave it forever. 
 
 For the last time the cover was removed from the 
 neat and tasteful little casket and the orphaned chil- 
 dren gathered around in a solemn silence to take 
 their farewell look at features which were beloved to 
 them. Let us not intrude upon that parting. God 
 grant that the lesson in it sank deep in the hearts of 
 those who are to become stewards of so great wealth 
 
J> 'Wl 
 
 EAKTII TO KAUTH, A-IIKS TO ASUES. 
 
 41U 
 
 ions still 
 own the 
 'ss, were 
 jns been 
 )s. Had 
 g things, 
 ne hand- 
 :haritable 
 
 ily? 
 business, 
 
 mightily, 
 too, until 
 :ary docu- 
 
 l in order, 
 tters until 
 
 thoughts 
 
 irly hours 
 
 a kindly 
 
 from the 
 
 ined chil- 
 
 to take 
 
 Leloved to 
 
 Ing. God 
 
 1 hearts of 
 
 tat wealth 
 
 
 and who can work ill or well with it in such great 
 measure. 
 
 Only one or two of the most intimate friends out- 
 side the imm(!diate family — Dr. Munn, Russdl Sa^e 
 and President Clarke — were permitted to share in the 
 last view, but all of them w^ere deeply and sincerely 
 affected. It is idle to say that Jay Gould did not have 
 real friends. It is also false and slanderous to say 
 that they did not truly mourn his death, albeit their 
 friendship may not have been wholly unselfish. Whose 
 is ? Ask of the winds ! 
 
 Dr. Munn, faithful to the last, tried to throw the 
 public off the track reg-arding the time when the re- 
 mains would be borne out upon the universal journey. 
 He said on Monday that it was to be at one r. m., 
 though, strange to say, the detectives were ordered to 
 be at the house at nine in the mornincr. At the latter 
 hour he fixed the time of departure at noon, and 
 later at eleven or half-past the hour. Yet ten o'clock 
 was the hour set. 
 
 Boj;inniii<ir of tlio End. 
 
 The first sign of preparation which fell upon the 
 public eye was at nine a. m., when Sexton Main's 
 supply wagon drew up at the house and the gorgeous 
 floral offerinofs were brouMit down and loaded on 
 board. The broken column, the pillows, the great 
 banks of roses and orchids filled the w^aofon to the 
 cover, and the crowd, which had been attracted to the 
 scene, breathed great " Ohs ! " and "Ahs ! " of satis- 
 
420 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 M. 
 
 i 
 
 ■!iH, 
 
 i 
 
 lr. 
 
 faction and envy. It was almost worth dying- for, to 
 have such a fortune of flowers laid upon your 
 coffin ! 
 
 Of the ten carriajjes sent the last was turned 
 away, as it was not needed. The others were filled 
 as follows : — 
 
 In the first Chancellor MacCracken and the under- 
 taker. 
 
 In the second Mr. and Mrs. George Gould, Miss 
 Helen Gould and Harold Gould. 
 
 In the third Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gould, Miss Anna 
 Gould and Frank Gould. 
 
 The fourth carriage was filled by the two sisters 
 
 and brother of the deceased and one of the daughters 
 
 of Mrs. Northrup, and the remainder by nephews 
 
 and nieces, Dr. and Mrs. Munn and Mr. S. H. H. 
 
 Clark. 
 
 Journey to the Cemetery. 
 
 The long ride to the cemetery was marked by no 
 striking incidents save when about a mile below Wil- 
 liamsbridge a battery of about twenty huge dynamite 
 charges was exploded. The horses drawing the hearse 
 began to dance with excitement, and some of the 
 occupants of the carriages became very nervous lest 
 some catastrophe should follow, but the driver held 
 them with a stout rcAU and they arrived in safety at 
 the chapel entrance, from which the pure outlines of 
 the Grecian temple on Lakeview Hill could be plainly 
 seen. 
 
 Four strokes upon the silvery bell marked the pass- 
 
EARTH TO EARTH, ASHES TO ASHES. 
 
 421 
 
 g for, to 
 )n your 
 
 5 turned 
 ere filled 
 
 le under- 
 
 uld, Miss 
 
 iiss Anna 
 
 wo sisters 
 
 daughters 
 
 nephews 
 
 S. H. H. 
 
 ■ked by no 
 •elow Wil- 
 dynamite 
 the hearse 
 e of the 
 :>rvous lest 
 river held 
 n safety at 
 outlines of 
 A be plainly 
 
 id the pass- 
 
 Inor of the millionaire from the land of livinor man to 
 the monumental land of the dead. His body had 
 passed forever from the v;orld where poor men com.e 
 and go, for on the tidy heights where it lies now none 
 but the rich are welcome. 
 
 All was ready at the beautiful tomb. The door was 
 opened, and on either side were shcdlike tents to pro- 
 tect the mourners from the cold. The outer box of 
 oak, zinc lined, and with a double cover, stood on a 
 bier between the tents. A tinker's stove, with its 
 blazinor charcoal fire, a set of solderinof tools and a 
 new bar of silver solder stood beside it. For in the 
 modern form of burial there is no min^linnf of dust 
 with dust, but the dead are hermetically sealed and 
 locked away in vaults of marble and of granite. 
 
 The wind blew chill as the mourners oathered about 
 the casket, but the men bared their heads while Chan- 
 cellor McCracken read the conimittal. Then with a 
 sonorous voice he prayed peace upon the dead and 
 peace to the living. Cemetery guards and a mounted 
 policeman kept back the crowd, which numbered fifty 
 persons. 
 
 The following appropriate and beautiful prayer 
 will hcive an interest to many readers of this volume: 
 
 O mighty Father of mercy, thou only art perfectly 
 wise and kind and just and true and good. Therefore 
 it is our hearts turn to thee in every trying hour. 
 Strengthen us now as thou dost make us feel how 
 short a t\mv. thou dost grant for us to live. 
 
 O kindly light, lead thou us on, that we may be 
 
 m 
 
 
maiSb 
 
 
 422 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 more like thee; quicken our hearts in faith that we 
 may strive to be hke thee: make us to cast an anchor 
 in that land beyond death that we may not drift away 
 nor be very greatly tossed in the direction and con- 
 duct of our business and our lives. Make us as thou 
 hast commanded us in the words ot that holy apostle 
 which we have heard, to be steadfast and immovabh,' 
 antl always abounding in the work of the Lord. 
 
 Our Father in Heaven, pity thos(i that mourn, ha\c 
 special compassion upon the chiklren of this home 
 whom thou hast sorely grieved. As a father pitieth 
 his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him. 
 And because thou hast taken from the children of this 
 family in their early life both mother and father, do 
 thou now comfort them, O divine Comforter, as one 
 whom his mother comforts; pity them as one whom 
 the loving father i)itieth ; grant unto them faidi and 
 hope and love, thine abiding and most precious gifts. 
 
 Saviour and Father of grace, who wast here at one 
 time in this earth, the human imacre of the eternal 
 Father; speak thou such words as thou didst speak to 
 one and another of thy children when thou wert here 
 among them. " Brother, be of good cheer, tin' faith 
 hath saved thc^e. Son, be of good cheer. 'J'o the 
 little children, a new commandmcuu I give unto you, 
 love one another." 
 
 Grant unto the bereaved ones of this household 
 that peace which this world with all its treasures does 
 not give, that good part which cannot be taken away, 
 and errant to us that after this life we may be united 
 with those whom we have loved and who have gone 
 before in the life immortal, in the heavenly city by the 
 river of life and the tree of life, where God shall wipe 
 away all tears from their eyes, where there shall be no 
 
EARTH TC EARTH, ASHES TO ASHES. 
 
 423 
 
 L that we 
 n anchor 
 rift away 
 [\nd con- 
 s as thou 
 y apostle 
 miovabU: 
 )rd. 
 
 urn, have 
 his honit: 
 er pitieth 
 fear him. 
 ran of this 
 father, do 
 er, as one 
 one whom 
 
 faidi and 
 ous gifts. 
 
 re at one 
 le eternal 
 |t speak to 
 wert here 
 
 , thv faidi 
 to die 
 
 unto you, 
 
 IhousehoUl 
 ,11 res does 
 Ik en away, 
 be united 
 lave gone 
 ity by the 
 Ishall wipe 
 hall be no 
 
 more sorrow, neither crying, neither shall there be any 
 more pain. 
 
 Our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy 
 name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as 
 it is in Heaven ; give us this day our daily bread and 
 forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those that tres- 
 pass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but 
 deliver us fror^ evil, for thine is the kingdom and the 
 power and the glory forever. Amen. 
 
 Coiniiiittal to the Tomb. 
 
 When the Chancellor had finished the service a 
 cover of zinc was placed upon the lining and the un- 
 dertaker's man began the tedious process of soldering 
 it on. It was a long operation. 
 
 George Gould broke down and wept into his hand- 
 kerchief. Time and again he turned away, overcome 
 by his emotion, and peered out through a crevice in 
 the tent while mastering his emotion. The rest of the 
 children were more or less overcome. 
 
 At length the work was done and the oaken cover 
 screwed tightly down. Then the coffin was borne in 
 side and placed in the cell reserved for it, the one 
 opposite that wherein lies the body of '' Helen Miller 
 Gould, wife of Jay Gould." A beautiful resting place ! 
 A palace of the dead ! 
 
 Gathered about the door were the mourners, who 
 watched the placing of the coffin, the swinging of the 
 slab and the piling up against it of the commemora- 
 tive flowers. A brief benediction followed and the 
 thing was done. Jay Gould was history ; he was im- 
 mured for time and eternity. 
 
 i^l 
 
JiMMMyMM 
 
 Ul 
 
 i 
 
 'M 
 
 i. ^^ 
 
 It' 
 
 CHAPTER XXVII. 
 Mr. Gould's Last Will and Testament. 
 
 A FULL abstract of the hst will and testament of Jay 
 Gould, which was read to nis family on Tuesday night 
 at No. 579 Fifth Avenue by Judge Dillon, was given 
 to the press the same afternoon by order of the ex- 
 ecutors, George J., Edwin, Howard, and Helen M. 
 Gould. The lion's share of the vast estate o-oes to 
 George J. Gould. He gets a round $5,000,000 in 
 cash and securities, an equal share of the residuary 
 estate, and is expressly given the control of the 
 proxies of all the securities. George's eldest boy, 
 little Jay Gould, is the only grandchild put down for 
 a bequest. He gets $500,000 in cash. 
 
 In the special bequests Miss Helen Gould gets the 
 family residence, No. 579 Fifth Avenue, and its con- 
 tents, and also has the use of the place at Irvington, 
 with $6,000 a month to keep it up. She is expected 
 to keep a home for Anna, Frank and Howard, until 
 the youngest comes of age, when *' Lyndhurst " will go 
 into the creneral estate. 
 
 Edwin is the only other child to have a special be- 
 quest. He gets the house No. i East Forty-seventh 
 street, with its contents. Mr. Gould's sisters and 
 
 (424) 
 
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 425 
 
 lent. 
 
 nt of Jay 
 day night 
 as given 
 if the ex- 
 ^elen M. 
 d ofoes to 
 DO.ocx) in 
 residuary 
 )l of the 
 dest boy, 
 down for 
 
 \ gets the 
 
 d its con- 
 
 rvington, 
 
 expected 
 
 'ard, until 
 
 " will go 
 
 iDecial be- 
 y-seventh 
 ters and 
 
 brother get $25,000 apiece in cash and an annual in- 
 come of ;^2,ooo each for their lives. 
 
 Very Strict Provisions. 
 
 The remainder of the great property is to be divided 
 
 into six equal parts, and George, Edwin, Helen, Ho- 
 ward, Frank and Anna Gould will receive the income 
 for their lives. They cannot dispose of it, except by 
 will to their issue, and if one should die without issue 
 the share will be divided among the remaining chil- 
 dren. 
 
 George, Edwin, Howard and Helen are appointed 
 executors and trustees of the will, and in case of 
 death the vacancy shall be filled by Frank or Anna 
 when they become of age. A curious provision is 
 that any child marrying without the consent of a ma- 
 jority of the other children shall forfeit half of his or 
 her share of the estate to them. 
 
 Abstract of the Will. 
 
 The full text of the abstract given out by Judge 
 Dillon yesterday is here given: 
 
 The original will is dated December 24th, 1885, 
 during the lifetime of his wife, Helen D. Gould. It 
 made various provisions for her benefit, which failed 
 in effect by reason of her death before the death of 
 her. husband. After and in consequence of her death 
 Mr. Gould, on the i6th day of February, 1889, exe- 
 cuted the first codicil to his will, making such changes 
 as became necessary by the death of his wife. A 
 second and a third codicil to his will were executed on 
 the 2 1st of November, 1892. Taking the will and 
 
426 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 i^M^ 
 
 ■fS 
 
 ' n :^ 
 
 w 
 
 codicil together, the following is an accurate and full 
 summary of the provisions thereof: 
 
 First, the specific legacies. There is given to his 
 sister, Mrs. Northrup, and her daughters the three 
 lots of ground in Camden, N. J., on which his sister 
 lives. There is also a specific bequest to Mrs. North- 
 rup of ^25,000 and the further sum of ^2,000 annually 
 to be paid to her during her life in equal quarterly 
 payments. 
 
 To his sisters, Mrs. Anna G. Hough and Mrs. 
 Elizabeth Palen, and to his brother, Abraham Gould, 
 there is given the sum of $25,000 each and also the 
 further sum of j2,ooo annually during their lives, pay- 
 able in equal quarterly payments. To his daughter, 
 Helen M. Gould, he gives in fee simple absolute the 
 house in which he lived, No. 579 Fifth Avenue, and 
 all of the furniture, books, paintings, statuary, silver 
 plate and household contents therein. 
 
 Providing- for the Children. 
 
 To his son Edwin he gives in fee simple absolute 
 the house No. i East Forty-seventh street, with all the 
 furniture and household contents therein. To his 
 daughter Helen he made a special bequest of his por- 
 trait painted by Herkomer. He also gives to his 
 daughter Helen, until his youngest child shall arrive 
 at age, the use of his residence at Irvington, commonly 
 called " Lyndhurst," free of taxes, with the use of all of 
 the furniture, books, paintings and household contents 
 therein ; and also the sum of $6,000 per month, stat- 
 ing that this was done in the expectation that his. 
 
 
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 427 
 
 and full 
 
 n to his 
 
 he three 
 riis sister 
 s. North- 
 annually 
 quarterly 
 
 and Mrs. 
 n Gould, 
 
 also the 
 ives, pay- 
 daughter, 
 olute the 
 
 nue, and 
 ry, silver 
 
 absolute 
 
 ith all the 
 
 To his 
 
 If his por- 
 
 Is to his 
 
 ill arrive 
 
 )mmonly 
 
 of all of 
 
 contents 
 
 |nth, stat- 
 
 that hia 
 
 minor children, Anna and Frank, as well as his son 
 Howard, will, during the period above provided for, 
 make their home with his daughter Helen. 
 
 To his namesake and grandson. Jay Gould, son of 
 George J. Gould, he gives the sum of $500,000, to be 
 held in trust for the said grandson by George J. 
 Gould, with authority to apply the same to the sup- 
 port and education of the said grandson, and to pay 
 one-fourth of the same to him at the age of twenty- 
 five, one-fourth at the age of thirty and the remaining 
 half at thirty-five, with power to pay the same at ear- 
 lier periods in the discretion of his father. 
 
 The Lion's Sluiro. 
 
 To his son, George J. Gould, he makes a bequest 
 substantially in the following words : 
 
 " My beloved son, George J. Gould, having devel- 
 oped a remarkable business ability and havin^^ for 
 twelve years devoted himself entirely to my business 
 and during the past five years taken entire charge of 
 all my difficult interests, I hereby fix the value of his 
 services at $5,000,000, payable as follows : — $500,000 
 in cash, less the amount advanced by me for the pur- 
 chase of a house for him in Fifth avenue, New York 
 city; $500,000 in Missouri Pacific six per cent, mort- 
 gage bonds ; $500,000 in St. Louis, Iron Mountain and 
 Southern Railway Company's consolidated five per 
 cent, bonds ; $500,000 in Missouri Pacific Railway 
 trust five per cent, bonds ; 10,000 shares of Manhat- 
 tan Railway stock ; 10,000 shares of Western Union 
 
 iHI 
 
 I 
 
 11 
 
■MbM 
 
 
 428 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Stock, and 10,000 shares of Missouri Pacific stock, all 
 to be taken and treated as worth par." 
 
 He appoints as executors and trustees of his will 
 his sons Gt'orge J. Gould, Edwin (iould and Howard 
 GouJd, and his dauLrhter Helen M. Gould, with a pro- 
 vision that in case a vacancy shall happen by death or 
 otherwise his son Frank J. Gould is to be an executor 
 and trustee when he shall have reached the age of 
 twenty-one years, and in case of another vacancy he 
 appoints his daughter Anna Gould to fill such 
 vacancy when she shall have reached the age of 
 twenty-one years ; no bonds to be required of the 
 executors and trustees. 
 
 Guorge J. Gould and Helen M. Gould are appointed 
 
 guardians of Anna Gould and Frank J. Gould during 
 
 their minority. 
 
 All in Trust. 
 
 All the rest of his estate is devised and bequeathed 
 to the said executors and trustees in trust, first to 
 divide the same into six equal parts or shares and to 
 hold and invest one of such shares for each of his 
 said children — George J. Gould, Edwin Gould, How- 
 ard Gould, Frank J. Gould, Helen M. Gould and Anna 
 Gould — with authority to collect and receive, pay and 
 apply the income thereof to each child for life, with 
 power to each to dispose of the same by will in favor 
 of issue and in case of death without issue the share 
 of the one so dying to go to the surviving brothers 
 and sisters and to the issue of any deceased child, 
 share and share alike per stirpes and not per capita. 
 
 I 
 
tock, all 
 
 his will 
 Howard 
 th a pro- 
 death or 
 executor 
 e age of 
 :ancy he 
 fill such 
 
 age of 
 d of the 
 
 ippolnted 
 d during 
 
 queathed 
 ^t, first to 
 ss and to 
 Lch of his 
 lid, How- 
 md Anna 
 , pay and 
 • life, with 
 1 in favor 
 the share 
 brothers 
 ed child, 
 er capita. 
 
 
 LAST WILL AND TKSTAMKN'T. 
 
 421i 
 
 He directs that these trusts shall be kept separate and 
 distinct and that the accounts thereof shall be sepa- 
 rately kept ; that no deductions shall be made by rea- 
 son of any j^^ifts or advancements heretofore made to 
 or for any of his children. 
 
 In case of differences of opinion aiiionnr the execu- 
 tors and trustees as to holdinix and retaininof securi- 
 ties or investments in manao^incr the estate, he directs 
 that so long as there shall be five executors and trus- 
 tees the decision of four shall be conclusive, and 
 when four that the decision of three shall be conclu- 
 sive, with a further provision in the codicil of Novem- 
 ber 21, 1892, as follows: 
 
 "His Judgment Shall Control.'* 
 
 "The better to protect and conserve th(^ values of 
 
 my properties it is my desire, and I so direct and pro- 
 vide, that the shares of any railway or other incor- 
 porated companies at any -time held by my executors 
 and trustees or my said trustees shall always be voted 
 by them or by their proxies at all corporate meetings 
 as an unit ; and in case my said executors and trustees 
 or my said trustees do not concur as to how such stock 
 shall be voted, then, in view of the fact that my son, 
 George J. Gould, has for years had the management 
 of my said properties and is familiar with them and 
 with other like properties, I direct and provide that in 
 such an event his judgment shall control, and he is 
 hereby authorized and empowered to vote the said 
 shares in person or by proxy in such manner as his 
 judgment shall dictate." 
 
 1, 
 
 I i 
 
 ii- 
 
 \ ''\\. 
 
 I.'fl 
 
m 
 
 4.']0 
 
 IJFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 There is the usual provision in the will that the 
 property of his daughters is for their sole and separate 
 use, free from an) state or control of their husbands, 
 and prohibiting- all dispositions or charges by any of 
 the legatees by way of anticipation or otherwise. 
 
 There is a provision that if any of his children 
 marry without the consent of a majority of the exe- 
 cutors and trustees then the share allotted to such 
 child shall be reduced one-half, and the other half shall 
 be transferred to such persons as, under the laws of 
 the State of New York, would take the same if the 
 testator had died intestate. 
 
 Judge Dillon refused absolutely, and so did George 
 and Edwin Gould, to give any further particulars of 
 the will. They would not even give the names of its 
 three witnesses, and professed to have no idea as to 
 when or where the will would be probated. They 
 also refused to give any idea of the amount of income 
 which each of the Gould children will enjoy, and would 
 not tell what the provisions in Mrs. Gould's favor in 
 the body of the will were. 
 
 But on Monday, December 12th, the will of the 
 great railroad king was admitted to probate and its 
 full provisions became known. 
 
 $72,000,000. 
 
 In an affidavit accompanying the will the total value 
 
 of the estate is estimated at J7 2,000,000 — $2,000,000 
 in real estate and the remainder in pf^rsonal property. 
 The collateral inheritance tax, which will go to the 
 State, will amount to about $700,000. If paid within 
 
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 4ai 
 
 I i 
 
 that the 
 
 separate 
 
 jsbands, 
 
 J any of 
 
 ise. 
 
 children 
 
 the exe- 
 
 to such 
 lalf shall 
 
 laws of 
 lie if the 
 
 i George 
 
 :ulars of 
 
 lies of its 
 
 ea as to 
 
 . They 
 
 f income 
 
 nd would 
 
 favor in 
 
 111 of the 
 and its 
 
 Ital value 
 !, 000,000 
 |:)roperty. 
 to the 
 lid within 
 
 six months the law allows a rebate of five per cent., 
 or j^35,ooo. The comptroller's fees for collecting the 
 tax will be about $10,000. 
 
 Ex-Judge Dillon, counsel for the executors, brought 
 the will and papers to Surrogate Ransom's chambers 
 Tiie Surroofate called in a Probate Clerk and the docu- 
 ment?^. were turned over to him. The people interested 
 were cited to appear December 27th. 
 
 Where the Gouhl iMillions Will Go. 
 
 The names of the heirs and the estimated amounts 
 they will receive are : 
 
 George Gould about $15,000,000. Of this $5,000,- 
 000 is a specific bequest in payment for his services in 
 managing his father's business. 
 
 Edwin Gould, $10,000,000 and the house where he 
 lives, valued at $60,000. 
 
 Helen Gould, $10,000,000, besides the family 
 residence on Fifth Avenue, the use for life of the 
 country house and $6,000 a month for household ex- 
 penses. 
 
 Howard Gould, $10,000,000. 
 
 Anna Gould, $10,000,000. 
 
 Frank Gould, $10,000,000. 
 
 Jay Gt^uLD, son of George, $500,000. 
 
 Sarah North rup, sister, $25,000 cash, a house val- 
 ued at $15,000 and a life annuity of $2,000. 
 
 Anna G. Hough, sister, $25,000 and a life annuity 
 of $2,000. 
 
 Elizabeth Palen, sister, $25,000 and a life annuity 
 of $2,000. 
 
 1 
 
432 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 Adraiiam Gould, brother, #25,000 and a life annu- 
 ity of ;j^2,ooo. 
 
 The will is dated Dec. 24, 18S5. There are three 
 codicils, the first made shordy alter the death of the tes- 
 tator's wife. The others were added Nov. 21, 1892, 
 only a few days before Mr. Gould's deati Indications 
 are that they were i>repared in a hurry. The will and 
 the first codicil evidently were drawn carefully by a 
 clerk from some rou<jh draft. The last two codicils 
 were written roughly in Mr. Dillon's own hand, and 
 the signatures of Mr. Gould were scrawly and 
 almost illegible — very unlike his unvarying, well- 
 balanced autograph as attached to the will itself. 
 
 Codicils Drawn in a Hurry. 
 
 It is easy to imagine that on that day in November 
 Mr. Gould believed his end was close at hand and 
 sent post haste for his lawyer. The disposition of his 
 entire estate had been made in the former codicil, 
 providing finally that the residuary estate be divided 
 between the sons and daughters. But as a farewell 
 token to his kinsmen, it would seem, Mr. Gould added 
 first an annuity of J^2,ooo each for his brother and 
 three sisters, and then came the bequests to his little 
 ofrandson and namesake and to Georo^e and Helen. 
 This codicil was signed and sealed, and the witnesses 
 were Mr. Dillon, the drawer; Dr. Munn, the family 
 physician and Margaret Terry, a servant. 
 
 Later in the day it must have occurred to Mr. 
 Gould that he had omitted something, for the second 
 codicil was drawn, leaving the contents of the Fifth 
 
LAST WII.L AND TESTAMKNT. 
 
 433 
 
 e annu- 
 
 re three 
 f the tes- 
 21, 1892. 
 dications 
 
 will and 
 illy by a 
 
 codicils 
 land, and 
 wly and 
 ng, well- 
 
 1 itself. 
 
 |sIov ember 
 hand and 
 ion of his 
 er codicil, 
 divided 
 farewell 
 Id added 
 •other and 
 o his little 
 d Helen, 
 witnesses 
 he family 
 
 id to Mr. 
 
 Ihe second 
 
 the Fifth 
 
 »e 
 a 
 
 avenue house to his dautrhter Helen, and j/ivinc: his 
 son lulwin the house in Forty-seventh street. 
 
 Mrs. Gould, Brother-in-law Daniel S. Miller and 
 Thomas T. PIckert were to have been aniongr the 
 executors under the original will. The death of 
 Mrs. Gould changed the disposition of the estate en- 
 tirely. 
 
 Certain provisions of the will occasioned much pub- 
 lic comment, particularly those concerning the mar- 
 riage of the younger children. The following is the 
 text of the document relating to the prospective hrs- 
 bands of the daughters : 
 
 The beneficial interest of each of my daughters in 
 
 the trust property and in the trusts hereby created is 
 
 hereby declared to be for her sole and separate use, 
 
 entirely free from any right, es<-ate or control of her 
 
 husband, and her separate receipt and acquittances 
 
 shall be sufficient without the assent or joinder of her 
 
 husband. 
 
 l?<'<HH'st to a Graiulsoii. 
 
 To my son George J. Gould I give and bequeath 
 the sum of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), 
 in trust, however, for the use and benefit of my name- 
 iould, son of the said Georo-e 
 
 Jay 
 
 J- 
 
 Said George J. Ciould, trustee, may apply the sair.e, 
 
 in his discretion, to the support and education of my 
 
 said grandson (luring his minority, and when the said 
 
 grandchild shall attain the age of twenty-five (25) 
 
 years the said trustee shall pay over to him one-fourth 
 
 of the said bequest, and when he shall attain the age 
 28 
 
 li-i 
 
m 
 
 m 
 
 434 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GUULI). 
 
 of thirty (30) years another fourth, and when he shall 
 attain the age of thirty-five (35) years the remaining 
 half thereof; but .subject to a power in the said trus- 
 tee to pay over the same, or any proportion thereof, 
 at an earlier period or periods after my said grandson 
 shall attain his majority, if in the judgment of the 
 said George J. Gould he deems it wise and best to do 
 so. 
 
 " Jay II." it was remarked, " will have quite a fair 
 start when he is old enough to handle his own affairs. 
 If he shows any of the ability of his grandfather and 
 father in financial transactions, mark my word, he will 
 be the third ruler of the House of Gould." 
 
 No Contest P.^obable. 
 
 Jay Gould's will, so far as his nearest relatives are 
 concerned, will rem jn uncontested. Philadelphians 
 were waiting with natural interest to observe how 
 much his sisters, Mrs. Sarah B. Northrup, and Mrs. 
 Gilbert S. Palen, who lives very modestly, but with 
 cosy comfort in Germantown, would get out of their 
 dead brother's ^72.000,000. 
 
 They were surprised, of course, that the ladies got 
 so little : only j^25,ooo each and an income of j^20oo 
 for life, with the lots on which Mrs. Northrup's resi- 
 dence and school stands, thrown in with her share. 
 The cash legacy will not go far in either family, for Mrs. 
 Palen and her husband have two chiUh'en, and Mrs. 
 Northrup, who is a struggling widow, has eight chil- 
 dren, five sons and three daughters, to distribute the 
 money among. The income, of course, will be useless 
 
LAST WILL AND TKSTAMENT. 
 
 135 
 
 he shall 
 
 maining 
 
 lid trus- 
 
 thereot, 
 
 rrandson 
 > 
 
 It of the 
 ,est to do 
 
 ite a fair 
 vn affairs, 
 ather and 
 rd, he will 
 
 atives are 
 
 idelphians 
 
 erve how 
 
 and Mrs. 
 
 but with 
 
 ut of their 
 
 ladies got 
 
 3 of $2000 
 
 irup's resi- 
 her share, 
 ly, for Mrs. 
 , and Mrs. 
 
 ei^ht chil- 
 tribute the 
 
 be useless 
 
 so far as the sons and daughters arc concerned, unless 
 their parents live long enough to save something out 
 of it, for it ends with the lives of the present legatees. 
 None of the children have received any specific lega- 
 cies from their celebratt.'d uncle. 
 
 The Sisters jire Satislii'd. 
 
 Nevertheless both of Mr. Gould's sisters are alto- 
 gether satisfied with the way he has disposed of his 
 fortune. Mrs. Northrup gave this assurance so far as 
 she was concerned again and again, and deplored a 
 rumor which had been set afloat to the effect that she 
 purposed contesting the will, 
 
 "Such a rumor is more than annovin^f," she said 
 earnestly. " There is absolutely no foundation what- 
 ever for it. I am satisfied w^ith what has been done 
 for me, for really all that has been done is more than 
 the world will ever know, My brother was very dear 
 to me." 
 
 Mrs. Northrup's relations with her dead brother 
 durinof his lifetime were of the most cordial character 
 and the news of his death caused her intense ii^rief 
 She has many of his characteristics, strong will, an 
 aversiou to notoriety, a disinclination to depend on or 
 even seek favor, and a sturdy self-reliance that prefers 
 to make its own place in the world. 
 
 A Fri<'iul ill X<m'(1. 
 
 Her husband has ])een dead some years and as she 
 was left with so lars^c; a famiK' of children h(;r finrht 
 for existence and place was naturally a hard one. 
 Jay Gould, who beneath his crust had a kind of admir- 
 
436 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ation for those who were williiiij^ to help themselves 
 and was himself willin<j^ to aid them, extended a siip- 
 portinor hand to his striiL^^lini^^ sister, and built the 
 school in Camden in which she, helped by her daugh- 
 ters, has earned an independer;: livelihood. It was 
 always supposed indeed among their friends that Mr. 
 Gould had given this property to her outright, and 
 there was some little surprise manifest when it was 
 found that the lots must have remained in his possession 
 until death, as he bequeathed them to her by his will. 
 Dr. Gilbert S. Palen, Mr. Gould's brother-in-law, 
 was as positive as Mrs. Northrup in his expression of 
 satisfaction with the will. He said : " My v/ife is not 
 at all inclined to question her late brother's action to- 
 ward her. It is all ncrht and there is no fault to be 
 found with what Mr. Gould has seen fit to order. The 
 discussion of the will is not a matter for the public, 
 though, unfortunately, the will had to be published." 
 
 Why Charities were Left Out. 
 
 The fact that Mr. Gould gives not a dollar to charity 
 in his will has awakened even wider comment than 
 the circumstance that relatives so near as his own 
 sister received so litde. But his relatives are altoiT^ether 
 satisfied on that point too. Dr. Palen said : " Why 
 Mr. Gould did not leave any money to charities is not 
 
 mown 
 
 to us. He had his ov/n way of dis 
 
 ;pen 
 
 sme 
 
 charity and no doubt his family will follow h 
 
 But he was a man who n 
 
 m 
 
 thii 
 lefth 
 
 an 
 
 respect, 
 know 
 
 exam 
 ever let 
 
 pie 
 his 
 
 what his risjht hand did. 
 
 (< 
 
 But did his right hand ever do anything 
 
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 437 
 
 imselves 
 •d a sup- 
 built the 
 T claugh- 
 It was 
 
 that Mr. 
 -icrht, and 
 en it was 
 lossession 
 y his will, 
 ler-in-law, 
 ression of 
 afe is not 
 
 action to, 
 Lult to be 
 rder. The 
 the public, 
 
 .lished." 
 
 to charity 
 
 luient than 
 
 Is his own 
 
 altogether 
 
 id : " Why 
 
 itics is not 
 
 dispensing 
 
 lis example 
 
 bver let his 
 
 •* Yes " — with some fire — "a ereat deal, but he did 
 not speak of his benevolences and it is not for his 
 friends to speak of them." 
 
 Mrs. Northrup, however, was not quite so vigorously 
 silent on this point. She said: " I do not know what 
 his charities were when he was alive. He wanted no 
 one to know about his doings in this r(;s[)ect. There 
 are no public bequests. But his children understand 
 wliat he was accustomed to do in a charitable way and 
 wliy should not they do the same ? One thing is to 
 be considered in connection with the will. It is this: 
 or the 100,000 men in the employ of interests con- 
 trolled by my brother during his lifetime, not one will 
 lose his position or be affected b\- Mr. Gould's death. 
 The estate will not be given into hands of people 
 whose plans might clash and disturb affairs. Many 
 people may not look on this as benevolence on the 
 part of Mr. Gould, but it certainly means much to the 
 men who were employed indirectly by him." 
 
 TIh' >IaiTi;ijL»c Clause. 
 
 The marriaoe clause' in the will was also a matter 
 
 of wide comment. The mind of the financier, after 
 determining the hard cash interests of his children, 
 turned to the hc^art im{)ulses of his sons and daughters 
 who are still unmarried, and dictated a clause of his 
 will which, if violated, means a forfeiture of millions 
 on the part of the son or daughter who marries with- 
 out the consent of a majority of the other members 
 of the Gould family. There are four of Mr. Gould's 
 
 
fiy.-a«;aj'il.Bp-,:i-'; 
 
 m 
 
 438 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 children aftectcd by this codicil — Miss Helen Gould, 
 Miss Anna, Howard and Frank. 
 
 As both the marriages of George I. Gould and his 
 brother Edwin were said to be the result of love 
 matches, approved by their taUier, speculation is heard 
 on what possessed the elder (]ould to act in such a 
 manner toward his unmarried children. That Jay 
 Gould had a definite object in taking such a course 
 was learned from Mrs. Nuorthrp. 
 
 *' I have no right to speak of the secrets which have 
 been intrusted to me in that respect," she said, when 
 the marriaoe of her brother's children was touched 
 on. "That is something the public have no right to 
 ask about. Mr. Gould had a reason but I cannot ex- 
 plain it." 
 
 Mrs. Northrup's manner indicated that she was 
 thoroughly familiar with her brother's views on the 
 marriage of his offspring. The secret, how^^ver, which 
 she was criven in confidence in her relation as a sister, 
 was held by her to be inviolable. 
 
 Dr. Palen, when interrogated on the same subject, 
 did not intimate that he was in possession of a knowl- 
 edge of Mr. Gould's motive, but said : " Hie Gould 
 family is a sympathetic and a harmonious one. It is 
 not at all likely that a member of it would act con- 
 trary to the judgment of th(? olIvts. And to preserve 
 this feeling of mutual respect. Mr. Gould may have 
 thought it proper to make a provision in his will, cov- 
 ering the point in question." 
 
n Gould, 
 
 1 and his 
 of love 
 I is heard 
 in such a 
 That Jay 
 a course 
 
 hich have 
 aid, when 
 i touched 
 ) riirht to 
 an not ex- 
 she was 
 ^s on the 
 ver, which 
 s a sister, 
 
 e subject, 
 a knovvl- 
 he Gould 
 ne. It is 
 act con- 
 ) preserve 
 may have 
 will, cov- 
 
 LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 439 
 
 Many people were inclined to the opinion that the 
 
 codicil was added to keep the Gould millions as nearly 
 
 intact as possible. "The House of Gould has been 
 
 formed," said one man who was displeased with the 
 
 idea. •' Gould has left his affairs in such a condition 
 
 that his son George is the dictator, the head of the 
 
 family, and the spirit who will rule with as strong a 
 
 hand as his father did before him, and everything has 
 
 been done to hold the Gould securities in one big 
 
 lump." 
 
 Just Like Royalty. 
 
 The family council created by Gould was likened by 
 another observer to the restrictions by which royal 
 families marry, and the means taken to preserve the 
 succession to crowns without taint of plebeian blood. 
 " In the case of the Goulds," he said, " it is money 
 which is being watched more than a pedigree." The 
 members of the royal family of Great Britain, when 
 about to marry, have other interests to consult than 
 those of their own personalities. 
 
 Touching this matter a lawyer said, after delving 
 into Blackstone: "The king or queen has the right tc 
 sanction or oppose marriage of royal personages. 
 There is one provision which states that when they 
 have passed beyond the age of twenty-five years they 
 may appeal to the king's council, giving a notice of 
 twelve months, and should Parliament not interfere 
 the marriage may take place without the king's con- 
 sent." In the case of the Goulds, however, unani- 
 mous consent of the family council is required, or if any 
 
 ^^1. 
 
 If 
 
■■-ti?* 
 
 440 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 member marries without it he or she forfeits one-half 
 of his or her inheritance. 
 
 Gossip ill Wall Street. 
 
 The lack of charitable bequests did not surprise 
 
 Wall street, but there was no dearth of comment on 
 the matrimonial board into which four of the children 
 have been constituted, with the two Mrs. Goulds as 
 ex-officio advisory members. Bets were offered that 
 if the other members of the household attempted to 
 act as a conimittee of the whole when an engagement 
 was to be announced that in some shape the interven- 
 tion of lawyers would be necessary, and all the possi- 
 bilides of this selection of bride and bridegroom by 
 arbitration were discussed. As it stands now an ob- 
 stinate love match without family consent may cost 
 Howard or PVank, or Helen or Anna, a round sum of 
 nearly $8,000,000, and put this amount into the other 
 five pockets of the present sextette. 
 
 In Wall street the Gould will is accepted with 
 something akin to a vote of thanks. The satisfaction 
 is in the fact that there is to be no partition sale, with 
 the flinging upon the market of such a batch of easily 
 affected stocks as Jay Gould had gathered. Even a 
 partition of the securities in the will would have made 
 many owners and possibly clashing of interests, wherf! 
 now one hand will cast the vote represented by this 
 enormous aggregate of stocks. This voting power 
 rests absolutely and individually with George, and 
 makes him even more than his father a power in Wall 
 street, at least for a time. 
 
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 441 
 
 )ne 
 
 half 
 
 surprise 
 ncnt on 
 children 
 oulds as 
 red that 
 npted to 
 airement 
 interven- 
 ;he possi- 
 room by 
 )w an ob- 
 may cost 
 d sum ot 
 le other 
 
 ed with 
 isfaction 
 
 sale, with 
 of easily 
 Even a 
 
 Hve made 
 ts, where 
 d by this 
 
 mg power 
 »rge, and 
 r in Wall 
 
 No Lite Insurance. 
 
 The most magnificent bloclv of life insurance that 
 mortal man ever carried was held by Jay Gould. The 
 financier may not have been aware of its existence, 
 but the chances are that he was. He could look a 
 great ways into the future, Mr. Gould could, if there 
 was any money in it. He had to pay no cash pre- 
 miums on his insurance and no agents ever g^ot com- 
 missions on it. When he died the loss did not fall on 
 any of the companies with big office buildings down- 
 town, and it was lucky for them, for Mr. Gould's 
 life insurance amounted to several million dollars. 
 
 Wall street people and those familiar with the 
 world of stocks and the ticker will understand this in- 
 surance story more readily than those less sophisti- 
 cated persons who do their speculating with cards and 
 chips and on green tables, or who do not speculate at 
 all, and know no more of finance than is required to 
 buy or sell groceries or draw a weekly salary for ser- 
 vices rendered. For this latter class an explanation 
 
 is required. 
 
 Immense Increase of Values. 
 
 Here it is : When Jay Gould died the bulk of his 
 estate consisted of the securities of three great cor- 
 porations — the Manhattan Elevated Railroad, the 
 Western Union Telegraph Company and the Missouri 
 Pacific Railroad. These stocks had a certain value on 
 Thursday, Dec. 2, when Jay Gould lay on his death- 
 bed. When he was no lontjer a liviner, breathino- 
 speculator, but a mere lump of clay, incapable of in- 
 
•ij^fv^vjs^-:^ 1 
 
 442 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 M 
 
 '*.i: 
 
 I. nmRR^T" 
 
 fluencing the stock market, these three stocks began 
 to increase in vahie. 
 
 Eight days after his death the actual cash value of all 
 the stock of these three corporations was $15,831,335 
 greater than on Dec. 2. The simple change from the 
 man Gould to Jay Gould's corpse carried with it the 
 enormous increase in the value of his securities which 
 Lr/ undisturbed in his strong box, mere bits of printed 
 p^per, all the while. If that isn't a princely sort of 
 lift insurance, what is it? It is certainly something 
 whicii takes a money value at death in fact, when be- 
 fore it had only been in prospect. 
 
 Fluctuations in Stocks. 
 
 On the day the will was probated the Gould stocks 
 started in for another climbing spell. The pace was 
 getting too brisk and was liable to break away into a 
 wild rush, so a sharp rap on the knuckles of the mar- 
 ket, such as moneyed operators know how to adminis- 
 ter, brought about a slump of a couple points in 
 Western Union and the upward movement was 
 checked. A lot of late buyers on small margins were 
 shaken out and a steadier tone given to the stock. 
 There was really no foundation for the rise. 
 
 Jay Gould was dead, therefore he was incapable of 
 harming the market. Operators who refused to sit 
 in boards where he occupied a chair are now willing 
 to become identified with the two really valuable prop- 
 erties he had gathered in, and so both Western 
 Union and Manhattan come bobbing up like corks 
 released from some leaden sinker. 
 
:s began 
 
 ilueofall 
 
 5.83I035 
 from the 
 
 nth it the 
 
 ties which 
 
 of printed 
 
 :ly sort of 
 
 something 
 
 when be- 
 
 uld stocks 
 pace was 
 
 way into a 
 
 )f the mar- 
 o ad minis- 
 points in 
 
 ment was 
 rgins were 
 the stock. 
 
 ie. 
 
 capable of 
 used to sit 
 low wiUing 
 uable prop- 
 Western 
 Uke corks 
 
 LAST WILL AND TKSTAMENT. 
 
 443 
 
 The increase in Western Union. Manhattan and 
 Missouri Pacific was $16,952,710. Of course all this 
 incrcasii is not so nuicli more wcahh for the young- 
 Goulds, since tiiey do not own aP the stock of the 
 corporations named, but assume that a (piarter or a 
 third is in the stron^ boxes of the dead millionaire, 
 now sealed by law, and the increment rises to over 
 $4,000,000 — a heap of life insurance such as no man 
 ever left before to enrich his sorrowinof heirs. 
 
 As to the IiiluM'Uaiicc Tax. 
 
 There was joy ''n the Comptroller's office when it 
 was learned that Ja Gould's will had been filed in 
 New York coun./, and that the personal estate sworn 
 to was }j> 70,000,000. 
 
 Controller Myers said it was wholly discretionary 
 with the trustees under the will when they should 
 apply to the Surrogate for the appointment of ap- 
 praisers to ascertain the taxable sum. 
 
 '* But the law gives an incentive for prompt action 
 in that regard," he said; *• if the tax is paid within six 
 months there is a rebate of 5 per cent., which would 
 amount to <^35,ooo. After six months a penalty of 6 
 per cent, is added, running from the day of the de- 
 cedent's death. After eighte(.'n months the penalty is 
 increased to 10 per cent. As the trustees may save 
 J^35,ooo by paying die tax within six months they will 
 hardly miss the oj)portunity to do so." 
 
 Itli'lits of the Heirs. 
 
 The application to the Surrogate for the appoint- 
 ment of appraisers to decide upon the value of the 
 
 '1 
 
 iiiJ 
 
 I 
 
 « 
 
444 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 estate is entirely separate from the proceedings to 
 appoint appraisLTs to ascertain the anion iit of thti 
 inheritance tax. I'he former appHcation mnst be made 
 within three months after the testator's death. The 
 Compiroll(T, or County Treasurer, as well as the 
 State and the heirs, has a right to be represented at 
 the j)roceedings before the apprais(.'rs ; he may even 
 appeal from the ap[)raisers' judgment to the Surrogate, 
 and on (juestions of law to the Supreme Court and 
 Court of App(;als. 
 
 The Comptroller's fee upon inheritance tax collected 
 for the State is 5 per cent, on the; first ^50,000, 6 per 
 cent, on the second ^50,000 and 1 per cent, on all 
 sums additional. 
 
 How liis ICiiorinoiis F<n*tuiie was 3Ia<le. 
 
 Mr. Gould viewed life solely from the standpoint 
 of success, and no man in his line ever succeeded 
 more. Whether that success was worth the sacrifices 
 he made for it each must decide for himself. He 
 began his career in W^all street with a mou'.e trap and 
 ended it with a fortiuie of more than ^70,000,000. 
 This is an achit-vement that commands a certain 
 amoimt of respect regardless of the methods by which 
 it was accomplished. Mr. Gould achieved his wealth 
 almost entirely by speculation ; he was successful far 
 beyond any other speculator that ever lived, and 
 earned the title of the Wizard of Wall street. Others 
 have amassed greater fortunes, as Commodore Van- 
 derbilt through his combination of small n-kllroads 
 into a mighty system, and Rockefeller through petrc 
 
LAST WILL AND TKSTAMKXT. 
 
 lir, 
 
 ^clings to 
 [It of the 
 t be made 
 ith. The 
 t\\ as the 
 sented at 
 may even 
 Surrogate, 
 Jourt and 
 
 X collected 
 ,000, 6 per 
 ent. on all 
 
 do. 
 
 standpoint 
 
 succeeded 
 e sacrifices 
 Tiself. He 
 e trap and 
 70,000,000. 
 a certain 
 s by which 
 his wealth 
 ccessful far 
 lived, and 
 t. Others 
 xlore Van- 
 1 n-ill roads 
 ugii petrc 
 
 leum, but no man ever followinl out Mr. (Mould's 
 policy widi such amazing results. 
 
 Mr. (iould v(!ry ni^arly resembled Napoleon in his 
 methods in that he used every nK.'aus at hand to 
 achi<tve results ; boUi were exceedingly fertile in re- 
 sources and both were audacious to a superlative de- 
 gree. The difference' lay in the fact that GouUl never 
 undertook ;i Russian campaign nor fought a Water- 
 loo ; neither did he spend his last years in philosoph- 
 ical C()ntem[jlation at St. Helena. As the character 
 of Napoleon was not w^ithout its excellent parts, so it 
 may be presumed that the arch-speculator was not 
 wholly bad, akhough it has never fallen to the lot of 
 any man in this country to meet with so much execra- 
 tion and so little honest praise. When a certain point 
 was to be gained he spared neither friend nor foe ; 
 indeed, his foes were in by far the best position, for 
 they counted on his enmity and respected his abilities. 
 And yet Mr. Gould differed from very many of his 
 craft only in degree. There were others who would 
 have done the same — indeed, tried it, only to fail or 
 to succeed moderately. 
 
 A Slirowd Roiiiark. 
 
 Many stories are told of his financial deeds, and 
 many, perhaps, apocryphal; but the remark that he 
 made after he squeezed his life-long friend, Cyrus W. 
 Field, out of almost his entire fortune seems to be 
 authentic: "I left him his real estate/' said Mr. 
 Gould. 
 
 Mr. Gould was a power. No man has ever exer- 
 
14G 
 
 UFE OF JAY GOUI.I). 
 
 ciscd such control over speculation. He was feared 
 when he was actively engaged ; he was feared more 
 when he was not, for so Machiavelian was he in his 
 methods that no one believed what he said, even when 
 he told the truth, and so mysterious were his ways of 
 operating that he was accounted a factor at all times 
 in the speculative market, whcthL-r resting in New 
 Mexico or sailing the Caribbean in his yacht. 
 
 He was known and feared as much for what he did 
 not do as for what he accomplished. He was long 
 the banshee of Wall street. His methods were usuallv 
 aggressive, and every man who had a "bull" move- 
 ment on hand feared him, often with good reason, and 
 more often without, for it would have been physically 
 impossible for one man to accomplish a tithe of what 
 was attributed to him. 
 
 Brilliant Successes. 
 
 Aside from his speculations Mr. Gould took a posi- 
 tive course in regard to three or four great corporate 
 interests. The foundations of his great fortune were 
 laid in gold speculation, in which he was marvelously 
 successful. He made fortunes in Erie and other 
 stocks, but it was in the Missouri Pacific and the rail- 
 roads connected with his Southwestern systems, in 
 Western Union and Manhattan elevated, and some- 
 what less in Wabash, Pacific Mail and Union Pacific 
 that he was directly interested in originating and build- 
 ing up, although he speculated largely in these stocks 
 at the time he was in control of them. 
 
 In the first three he retained practically a con- 
 
 
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 
 
 447 
 
 IS feared 
 ed more 
 iie in liis 
 iren when 
 i ways of 
 all times 
 in New 
 
 lat he did 
 was long 
 re usually 
 1 " move- 
 iason, and 
 physically 
 e of what 
 
 )k a posi- 
 
 corporate 
 
 une were 
 
 rvelously 
 
 id other 
 
 the rail- 
 stems, in 
 nd some- 
 n Pacific 
 
 nd build- 
 se stocks 
 
 
 y a con- 
 
 trollinnf interest until his death, and this control Is to 
 
 be held intact by his children. The financial world 
 
 took his death very philosophically, and nearly all 
 
 stocks advanced. Time was not so lon:^ aero that his 
 
 death would have precipitated a panic; but, partly 
 
 b<-cause he speculated very litde just b(;fore his death, 
 
 pardy because his interests are to be held too^cther, 
 
 but, more dian all, because this country is now inhn- 
 
 itely larger than even a Gould and his w(^alth, there 
 
 was scarcely a ripple on the sea of finance. Rather 
 
 there was from many quarters a sigh of relief that a 
 
 disturbing element was r(;moved from the street and 
 
 that the dreaded name of Gould would no longer be 
 
 one to conjure with. 
 
 A Biij^bear. 
 
 " I do not believe in ghosts, but I am awfully afraid 
 of them," said a brilliant woman. This is something 
 of the feeling which the street has entertained towards 
 Mr. Gould for some time, for, although he did litde 
 active speculation for some )'ears, the name of Gould 
 was always one to conjure with and will not be for- 
 ofotten in this greneration. Fortunate is it that the 
 fear of one man has passed and that his power to do 
 harm even by the magic of his name is gone. 
 
 Now that Mr. Gould is dead there will be an ava- 
 lanche of unmeasured obloquy called down upon his 
 devoted head. It seems to us that this is scarcely 
 called for now, since his life-work is ended. It is 
 rather the duty of every one to study his career and 
 reflect upon his character, to rf i lember with satisfac- 
 
• II 
 
 448 
 
 LIKK OF JAV GOULD. 
 
 tion that h(,' was an extreme example of a type of men 
 who are not numerous, and to remember that he is 
 being borne to a premature grave because he won 
 the success that others would have had if they could 
 have achieved it. 
 
 'Tis not in mortals to command success, 
 
 I'ut we'll do more, Sempronius ; we'll deserve it. 
 
)e of men 
 :hat he is 
 (2 ha won 
 hey could 
 
 CHAPTER XXVIII. 
 Who is to Succeed Jay Gould? 
 
 Who is the coming Jay Gould? is die query now 
 frequently put in Wall street. Not the man with as 
 much money, not the man who will be a great power 
 b(!cause of that money, but the man who in methods 
 of [planning and in carrying out those plans will take 
 the place left vacant by the great arch-millionaire. 
 No two agree upon a name; in fact, it is doubtful 
 whether there will be a successor. Gould's methods 
 would not work now as when he carried them out. 
 
 Wall street has not now, as when Gould was in his 
 heyday, a great mob of lambs ready to follow any 
 clever bell-wether, about whose neck he had cleverly 
 tied die misleading bell. As a direct trader, or rather 
 as an operator on and in the Exchange, Gould was 
 outwitted acrain and a'-ain. I lis schemes were " <jot 
 onto" almost every time, antl professional operators, 
 such as Cammack, Woerislioeff(,'r and Jim Keene, 
 were more clever than Gould in the sharp decep- 
 tions and th(! bright l)ol(l ruses necessary to win in 
 such a batilefic^ld as die Stock Exchancre floor has 
 been for years. 
 
 Out in tlie open railroad world — allowing for the 
 
 liff( 
 
 tremendous diiterence 
 
 21) 
 
 betw( 
 
 een the men o 
 
 f b 
 (4iy) 
 
 rams. 
 
■i 
 
 450 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOFLD. 
 
 pocket, and years — Henry S. Ives is the nearest pro- 
 totype of Gould now in existence. They followed the 
 same code of morals, the same conception about vicitni 
 and tiium. They were both likely to strike at a time 
 and point very little expected, and while Ives has 
 already felt the arm of the law tappiniL^ him on the 
 shoulder, and is to that ext(;nt discounted in future 
 operations, he has the same plan of rigging the stock 
 market, while he is really playing for the control of 
 this or that property, the same plan of making big 
 bluff purchases and promises which marked Gould 
 when he was the active speculator instead of the 
 broken-down consumptive of the last few years. 
 
 No OiM» to W<'ar the 3Iaiitlo. 
 
 It is certain, so far as they can now be judged, that 
 neither of the sons will take the place of Gould, Sr. 
 The big fortune he made will grow. Tlu^y could 
 hardly check its growth if they wouUl, but the power 
 which that wealth gives will not bt; used to draw other 
 wealth to it. It is not thought that the (jould boys 
 could use it in such a way even if they would. I'Alwin 
 is the son of his father to a greater extent than George 
 in looks and in the secretive fashion of hiding his step 
 and doinofs. But he indulqfes in hobbies, and with a 
 young, ambitious wife will lose the one sole consuming 
 ambition to pile up money, which was the keynote to 
 the dead millionaire's life-work. 
 
 The coming Gould may come up out of th(; flock of 
 husding young fellov;s who are crowding forward in 
 
 
wnO IS TO SUCCEED JAY GOULD? 
 
 451 
 
 arest pro- 
 lowed the 
 )oiit inciini 
 \ at a time 
 Ives has 
 iin on the 
 I in future 
 •• tlie stock 
 control of 
 lakini^ bii^ 
 :ed Gould 
 ad of die 
 ears. 
 
 idofed, that 
 Gould, Sr. 
 h(!y could 
 the power 
 Iraw other 
 (ndd boys 
 d. Edwin 
 in Geor«;e 
 1^- his step 
 and with a 
 :onsununp^ 
 xeynote to 
 
 lie flock of 
 Iforward in 
 
 financial ranks, each anxious to strike the crood thincf 
 which is to make him a millionaire in a month. 
 
 An lOra of New 31 ct hods. 
 
 The tendencies, however, are not to an extension or 
 repetition of the Gould methods. The modern method 
 is to the suppression of rivalry by the absorption of 
 the rivals, one by another. This is the era of trusts. 
 It is seen just as clearly now as Gould, or Stewart, or 
 the elder Vanderbilt saw it that the bii^^ fortunes must 
 be taken out of the pockets of the people, and the 
 modern combiners say that that pocket is bii:; and di^ep 
 enough to give a fortunes to any one who will delve 
 deep enough into it. Without the opposition of a 
 healthful competition, protected by statute or by tariff 
 law the new monopoly magnat(!s sit, a dozen litde 
 Goulds, about a board room table instead of being a full 
 board, all in one, as Gould always was in every enter- 
 prise he appeared in, little as h(! was. 
 
 Russell Sage really knows mor(i of Gould ways and 
 fashion of wealth (jatherinijf than any otlu^r man alive. 
 Me has the inclination to continue them, but with Jay 
 Gould not about to consult it is doubtful whether vSage, 
 who so often did Gould a good turn as a backer, will 
 be heard of in speculativ^e circles. 
 
 His CanMT Cannot bo Krpoatod. 
 
 It IS an open qu(?stion. therefore, whether there is 
 any one who will take I\Tr. Gould's place and absorb 
 public attention as he has done for the past twenty- 
 five years, and the best informed men are inclined to 
 think that it would be Impossible for a man even of 
 
452 
 
 LIFE OF Jj^Y GOULD. 
 
 Mr. Gould's ability to repeat M:3 experience In the 
 first place the conditions are entirely different from 
 those which existed when iie Ik gan his speculative 
 career. Then the country had just emerged from a 
 civil war which had been dcmoralizini^ lo business 
 niediods as it had to political life to some extent. 
 
 Moreover, when Gould bet^an his career railway 
 speculation and development was in its infancy. 
 Commodore Vanderbilt had just discovered the essen- 
 tial law of railway development, and had demonstrated 
 it by the consolidation of half a dozen small railroads 
 into one great corporation. 
 
 Wall street mediods were quite different then from 
 those that exist to-day. The ticker was unknown, the 
 telegraph was not very grcidy used, legislation was 
 entirely at the command of the operators of Wall 
 street, and the legal bars had not been put up to pre- 
 vent certain movements then regarded as lawful, 
 although a very low standard of business morality 
 
 J 
 
 ustified it then. 
 
 The Ciiaiu'os Gone. 
 
 MoreG\ ci\ die number of men of great ability en- 
 gaged in speculative effort was comparativc^ly less then 
 than now. Mr. Gould was therefore one of the first 
 In die field. He believed in the later years of his life 
 that it was impossible nowadays for any man or set 
 
 of men to eneineer a ereat corner or to 
 
 man 
 man 
 
 IDU 
 
 late 
 
 the market as was done frequently between 1865 and 
 when last done in 1884. The Northwest corner out 
 of which Mr. Gould made so much money he believed 
 
WHO IS TO SUCCEED JAY GOULD? 
 
 453 
 
 (\\ Tn the 
 ferent from 
 speculative 
 ■ged from a 
 lO business 
 extent, 
 -cer railway 
 its infancy, 
 id the essen- 
 cmonstrated 
 lall raih-oads 
 
 nt then from 
 mkno\vn,the 
 rislation was 
 ors of Wall 
 ut up to pre- 
 d as lawful, 
 ess morality 
 
 at ability en- 
 ^dy loss then 
 e of the first 
 nrs of his life 
 y man or set 
 manipulate 
 :en 1S65 and 
 t corner out 
 y he believed 
 
 could not be again manipulated, c\ en by vlic ablest 
 brokers with vast amounts of pum. _y a;; I'^cir com- 
 mand. 
 
 In addition to this, railroad building !ms reached its 
 climax, probably having touched th;-r pr.ir.t in 1885. 
 The problems of to-day are rather i.osc: which con- 
 cern tlie iinanci'.'rin'' of the (j1)1 illations which were 
 entailed to nav for the buildinij of these roads. New 
 ideas respecting soukj of these obligations prevail. 
 It is comparatively recently' that owners of mortgage 
 securities have come to rcLrard them, not as something:' 
 that can be foreclosed, nor as something that will ever 
 be paid, but as a permanent lien upon the property, 
 representing permanent obligations, something as the 
 
 stock does. 
 
 Tlu' Pr<»bl<'iiis of To-Day, 
 
 The problems of to-day are not so much liow to get 
 control of railroads as how to command traffic which 
 yields the railroads ihr.'iv profits. Mi McLecjd, Pres- 
 ident of the Reading Railroad s\stem, is coming to be 
 regarded as ilie later and in soi c n .;j'>ects th.e finest 
 exami)le of this new develo' ^.-nt of the railwavs. 
 
 1 A ^ 
 
 He is not seeking to control \Miioiis s)'st< nis so that 
 he ma\' unload them on tlui markt' <>r create new on- 
 ligations which may be used wiiii speculative benefit, 
 but he is aiming to obtain for his parent system as 
 great an amount of traffic as is possible, or in other 
 words, to use a familiar Wall street term, to increase 
 its earning capacity. 
 
 Mr. Gould realized this later tendency at least ten 
 
 
tl,lm*MJMTr^ 
 
 454 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 years before his death, for it was about that time that 
 he abandoned speculative demonstration and changed 
 his methods so as to make the properties which 
 he controlled great and perman(jnt profit earners. 
 
 Thci impression on Wall street is that there will be 
 no more great fortunes made swiftly through railroad 
 manipulation. Speculative endeavor must seek other 
 fields, and while the quality of the great speculator 
 must in the main resemble that which made Mr. 
 Gould's successes possible, yet it will have entirely 
 different problems to master. Some men think that 
 there will be great speculation in the industrials. 
 
 Tho (irojit Wostorii Fiold. 
 
 Others believe that before the beorinnina- of the 
 
 twentieth century speculation will be directed toward 
 the great lands of the West. Ikit the best impression 
 is that while the speculative element will always be 
 with us, die men of greater ability in the future will 
 be found operating in the direction of colossal organi- 
 zation, consolidation, the overcoming of competition, 
 and the mastery of different kinds of producing indus- 
 tries. The impression is that while there are not 
 likely to be so many great fortunes created by any 
 one individual in his business career, a much lari^er 
 number of persons will nevertheless be able to make 
 sufficient fortunes. 
 
 As a great master of his peculiar methods in busi- 
 ness, Mr. Gould leaves no successor. Many will at- 
 tempt to imitate him in varied degrees, but there was 
 only one Jay Gould in tlv -^-'ntry as there was only 
 
 
WHO IS TO SUCCEED JAY GOULD? 
 
 455 
 
 ; time that 
 
 d chaiiL-ed 
 
 ies which 
 
 rners. 
 
 :re will be 
 
 rh railroad 
 > 
 
 seek other 
 speculator 
 made Pvlr. 
 ve entirely 
 think that 
 trials. 
 
 one Napoleon in luirope, and their methods perish 
 witii them. The ij"(Miius that created the ''Teat Gould 
 system out of next to nothino is not now a neccssit)* 
 to perpetuate what he conceived and created ; and 
 under the direction of Cuorg-e Goidd, conserved by 
 the liberal exj^erience he has had undt.-r his father, the 
 Gould properties will doubtless be maintained to 
 the full measure of tlieir intrinsic merits. Be)ond 
 this there is little to discuss over the grave of Jay 
 Gould. 
 
 '1 
 
 ine of the 
 ted toward 
 impression 
 always be 
 future will 
 5sal organi- 
 m petition, 
 :inor Indus- 
 Ire are not 
 ted by any 
 uch larger 
 le to make 
 
 )ds in busi- 
 lany will at- 
 It there was 
 was only 
 
1 
 
 CMAITKR XXIX. 
 What was Said of the Railroad King. 
 
 CiiAUNrEY M. Depfw passed the house of Mr. 
 Gould on the way to his office just afl(T the announce- 
 ment of the death had been made. Later in the day 
 Mr. Depew said : 
 
 ** I first met Mr. Gould when he entered the railway 
 world by getting possession of the Erie road. The 
 New York Central and Erie were soon in such bitter 
 antagonism that Commodore ^anderbilt made up his 
 mind that the only way to protect his Central interest 
 was to control the lilrie. L'rom that came the lonof 
 litigation and various laws which were passed by the 
 legislature, the history of which is so well known. 
 The interests which Mr. Gould accpiired in Western 
 Union and in railroads more or less competitive with 
 the Vanderbilt system brought me in frequent con- 
 tact with him, and gave me an opportunity of estimat- 
 ing his powers and the elemcMits of his success. 
 
 •* I have known very well all the great operators of 
 the last quarter of a century. They necessarily had 
 suggestiveness and quickness of resource; but Mr. 
 Gould's peculiar power was in his courage and won- 
 derful coolness under the most trying circumstances. 
 He had no faith in chance or luck in any enterprise 
 
 (45G) 
 
WHAT WAS SAID OF THE UAII.KOAI) KING. 
 
 457 
 
 I of Mr. 
 nnounce- 
 
 II the clay 
 
 e railway 
 
 ad. The 
 
 jch bitter 
 
 de up his 
 
 il interest 
 
 the long 
 
 d by the 
 
 known. 
 
 Western 
 
 itive with 
 
 ent con- 
 
 cstimat- 
 
 'SS. 
 
 rators of 
 ;arily had 
 but Mr. 
 and won- 
 nstances. 
 nterprise 
 
 in whicli lu^ was engaged or any cause which he was 
 fighting. I le mastered not on!)- the general conditions, 
 but every dt'tail. 
 
 " Me was like a general who has ascertained from 
 the most trustworthy sources the position and re- 
 S(3urces of the enenu', the dc:fensive and offensive 
 0[)portunities of the territory, antl hail then made a 
 mathematical calculation of what can be accom[)lished 
 by the forces which he can bring into action. 
 
 ( iM'atcd Stroll*;- CoiiilMiiatioiis. 
 
 "In determining upon a railwa)- management wliich 
 should cover a large territory he selected a field where 
 he would not have to contest with old, well-established, 
 thoroughly eipiipped, ami ably managcid lines. In- 
 stead of takiuLT the ordinary course of riskimjf his for- 
 tune in fi<'htino" into the Pc:nnsylvania, or the New York 
 Central, or the Baltimore and Ohio systems, he took 
 in hand the disorganized Southwest, created a combina- 
 tion of great strength and covering very large territory, 
 and netted an enormous fortune from it. 
 
 " He possessed in a remarkable degree the genius 
 for making money and of making it without the 
 assistance of other people. If the matter upon which 
 you had an appointuKMit with him was one which 
 could be adjusted, and both sitles were willing, it was 
 a pleasure to transact the business. 
 
 "He was so clear and direct, so intelligent upon the 
 matter in hand that no time was wasted in useless 
 discussion on irrelevant facts, but the point was 
 arrived at at once and the possible concessions on 
 
aW^KgFI-'-^'Hgt'^-'BW ^WL^ICfS 
 
 irxS 
 
 LIIK uF JAV GOULD. 
 
 cither si(l(i were coiisiderecl and in.ulc. If the sub- 
 ject, lu)\v(.'ver, was oiu: which h(.' did not care to bring 
 to a heat! and his intert.'sts wer(; advf^rse to the atljust- 
 nieiit which )(ni had called to briiiL;' about, he could 
 be as vagu(.', and iiuh linite and nnsatisfactor}' as any 
 man who v.vv.r lived. 
 
 ('«uihl l\r<'i» as WrII as ; 'H. 
 
 "That he has left one of the <4re;.J: fortunes of the 
 world demonstrates both his abiliU' to accumulate and 
 the very much j^rcater ability to kt.-ep. 
 
 " 1 nu-'t him about eiijht weeks aij^o. lie struck mv. 
 then as bein^- in fee-ble health, and he made no con- 
 cealment of his apprehensions in rei^ard to himself. 
 He said that he had tr.iined his boys into familiarity 
 with every detail of his business, and had devolved 
 upon them responsibilities which had prepared them 
 for the event of his dying in a minute; Uiat if he 
 should so die — and from what he had been told it 
 might happen — liis affairs would go on without dis- 
 turbance; or interruption under the management of 
 his sons, who knew what his ideas were, and in whom 
 he had confidence that they could carry them out. 
 
 "The death of a man like Mr. (jould, who owes no 
 debts and has great properties, creates no disturbance 
 in the fmancial world. The properties remain under 
 the guidance and control of the same mind, substan- 
 tially, as before. The managers of the companies 
 continue in their places and power, and the sons step 
 so naturally into the father's place that the public never 
 
 ^''^lii^. 
 
WUAT WAS SAID OF THE HAILUOAD KING. 
 
 l.')!) 
 
 the sub- 
 to i)ring 
 ic atljust- 
 lic could 
 ry as any 
 
 les of the 
 ulate and 
 
 Uruck in(; 
 le no con- 
 ) himself, 
 familiarity 
 devolved 
 red them 
 hat if he 
 en told it 
 thout dis- 
 L^ment of 
 in whom 
 n out. 
 
 owes no 
 sturbance 
 lin under 
 substan- 
 ompanies 
 sons step 
 ^lic never 
 
 discovers any halt or friction in the movement of the 
 well-appointed machinery. 
 
 *• I lad Mr. (iould dietl in th(! midst of ont.' of his 
 great campaii^ns, there would have been a finaiuial 
 revolution, because only the master mind who has 
 conceived can successfully carry out the scheme. Ihit 
 of late years he had so far retired and become an 
 investor that the business world will not be disturbed 
 in any noticeable way by his death. 
 
 "Mr. (iould was sociall)' a »;enicd, pleasant man, a 
 good conversationalist, and sini^ularly well u[) on 
 political questions and public ?iien. lie was well 
 read in general literatur(\ and talked like a specialist 
 upon some questions, such as the cultivation of tlowers, 
 which interested him. 1 le had a dr)' humor, with a 
 sarcastic tinge which came out unexpect<idly and 
 struck like a burr. 1 le v ill lak(? his place among the 
 remarkable men of this gmcraiion." 
 
 Trihiitr fVoiii an Aii(:ii;oiiist. 
 
 K. I'lllery Anderson luul inmmate legal connections 
 with Mr. Ciould, but alwavs as an antano-onist. He 
 was counsel in the suits of the holders of the 
 income boiuls of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas 
 Railroad and those in connection with the reori-aniza- 
 tion of that line. Vic \^'as also one of th(.' commission 
 appoint(;d by President Cleveland to investigate the 
 Union Pacific's affairs in 1887. 
 
 "The developments before the Conimission," said 
 Mr. Anderson, "were dramatic sometimes and always 
 intensely interesting. It gave me an insight into the 
 
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 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 characteristics of Mr. Gould. Many intimate busi- 
 ness connections with him have, as they continued, 
 intensified interest in the man. One thing ahvays im- 
 pressed me, and it is interesting in connection with 
 current statements and some popular impressions of 
 the man. It is this: I have* always found, even to the 
 most trivial detail, that Mr. Gould lived up to the 
 whole nature of his obh^ations. 
 
 "Of course, he was ahvays reticent and careful about 
 what he promised, but that promise was invariably 
 
 fulfilled. 
 
 Not a 3Icre Speculator. 
 
 " Contrary to the popular impression, I do not think 
 that the basis of Mr. Gould's fortune was made as a 
 constructor or operator of railroads, or as a specula- 
 tor, as we generally understand the terms. In that 
 sort of speculation I think he lost as often as he won. 
 But his siccesses were In an art which makes his 
 genius rank higher than those which are generally 
 recognized as his successes could do. 
 
 "Jay Gould was the absolute master of the art of 
 creatinof co-ordinate boards of directors Lhat had com- 
 plete control of adverse interests. He persuaded 
 himself that it was just — to put it mildly — to allow his 
 representatives in both to vote upon both sides of 
 transactions in which interests were adverse. 
 
 "This characteristic was the kernel of the genius of 
 his successes, and his manipulations, first in the Erie ; 
 then in the Wabash securities ; in the consolidation of 
 the Kansas and Denver Pacific with the Union Pacific; 
 
WHAT WAS SAID OF THE RAILROAD KING. 
 
 4G1 
 
 ate busl- 
 ontinued, 
 Iways im- 
 :tion with 
 sslons of 
 /en to the 
 up to the 
 
 •eful about 
 hwariably 
 
 not think 
 made as a 
 . a specula- 
 s. In that 
 as he won. 
 makes his 
 e generally 
 
 f the art of 
 at had corn- 
 persuaded 
 ;o allow his 
 th sides of 
 
 ) 
 
 ie. 
 
 te genius of 
 in the Erie ; 
 olidation of 
 nion Pacific ; 
 
 in the deal between the Missouri Pacific and the Mis- 
 souri, Kansas and Texas; in the International and 
 Great Northern, and also, but perhaps not so directly, 
 in the transactions with Manhattan Railway stocks 
 and bonds in this city proved it. 
 
 "These great business movements created no excite- 
 ment in the outside world. The climaxes were not 
 dramatic outside of stock circles. Yet in these he 
 made fortunes. In some of them his profits aggre- 
 gated from <^io,ooo,oou to |; 15,000,000. 
 
 A Shrew<l M<>ti(>ii. 
 
 "This financial art, of which he was such a master, 
 was best illustrated by the subsequent disclosures of the 
 proceedings by which the consolidation of the Kansas 
 Pacific and Union Pacific was accomplished. While 
 Gould was a director in the Union Pacific he acquired 
 the Kansas Pacific securities at 10 cents. With this 
 line and its adjuncts in his complete control he moved 
 at a meetinof of the Union Pacific directors the con- 
 solidation upon equal terms of dollar for dollar. 
 
 ** Boston men were in control of the directory, among 
 them Gordon Dexter. They objected to the proceed- 
 ing and Gould's motion failed to carry. Gould had 
 probably expected this refusal, and his foresight had 
 some useful plans. He came back to New York, and 
 within three weeks he had bought, at low prices, secu- 
 rities of the Missouri Pacific, Kansas Central, and 
 minor roads with Western extensions. Then he an- 
 nounced his intention of immediately building to the 
 Pacific by way of Salt Lake City. 
 
 M 
 
462 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 i:i 
 
 1'^ 
 
 "The Union Pacific people were startled at this 
 prospect of a parallel road and hurried to New York. 
 A meeting was held at Jay Gould's liouse. On half a 
 sheet of note paper, which I saw, were written the 
 terms of consolidation of the Kansas Pacific and 
 Union Pacific. By these terms not only, as was first 
 proposed by Gould, was Kansas Pacific and Denver 
 Pacific stock exchanofed, dollar for dollar, for Union 
 Pacific stock, but the Union Pacific acfreed to take 
 from Gould's hands, at the price he paid for them, the 
 Kansas Central and other securities he had secured as 
 his weapons. 
 
 "With this in mind Mr. Gould was asked durin^f the 
 investigation, if it was in conformity with the ethics 
 of Wall street for the director of one road to build a 
 rival to the one in which he, with others, was inter- 
 ested. 
 
 " Mr. Gould hesitated perhaps twenty seconds and 
 then replied : * No, that would have been wrong. I 
 gave up that plan and made other arrangements.' 
 
 " By those other arrangements, which I have ex- 
 plained, he made a profit of §10,000,000. 
 
 ^raster of 31<'ii. 
 
 " This Illustrated, too, Gould's capacity for managing 
 men, and playing them on the financial chess-board. 
 He was always so far-siglited and adroit, that gener- 
 ally unconsciously to those with whom he was asso- 
 ciated, he made a combination of arrangements so 
 that it was to their interest to work with him. With 
 such conditions, cleverly planned, it was easy for 
 
id at this 
 lew York. 
 On half a 
 ritten the 
 acific and 
 s was first 
 d Denver 
 for Union 
 d to take 
 - them, the 
 secured as 
 
 durinof the 
 the ethics 
 to build a 
 was inter- 
 
 iconds and 
 wrong. I 
 bents.' 
 have ex- 
 
 imanagmg 
 
 ess-board. 
 
 hat gener- 
 
 was asso- 
 
 iments so 
 
 im. Widi 
 
 easy for 
 
 WHAT TTAS SAID OF THE RAILROAD KLVG. 
 
 463 
 
 Gould in a meeting to point out real advantages to be 
 gained by his propositions with roseate prospects of 
 success. 
 
 " Mr. Gould knew every detail of the management 
 of his railroads and minute facts about obscure locali- 
 ties which they traversed. I happened by chance to 
 call upon him once regarding the traffic of a little 
 way station. Mr. Gould just leaned forward in his 
 chair extended the middle fmoers towards some 
 neady folded papers in a pigeon-hole, and from the 
 midst in a second drew out one which related to the 
 subject then of interest. 
 
 " He was always courteous in personal relation- 
 ships, but not talkative. I think one of the most 
 pointed things he ever said was in answer to a ques- 
 tion upon the tariff which was put to him regarding 
 the increased cost of clothinor as the result of the tariff 
 tax and what the w^orkincrman w^ould do. That an- 
 swcr was that where the workinor^an used to have 
 two pair of trousers he would have to content himself 
 with one. 
 
 "That answer was printed in big letters upon 
 Cleveland posters during election, and I think that 
 it won a great many thousand votes for tariff re- 
 form." 
 
 Gould Lost Ttloucy in his Big- Deals. 
 
 From the date of his earliest appearance in Wall 
 street, Mr. Gould was constantly engaged in litigation 
 concerning- the interests with which he was identified. 
 His counsel has been varied because each of his mul- 
 
464 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 H|;i 
 
 titude of business interests was represented by its 
 own legal counsellor, and rarely in those cases in 
 which the public took some interest did the same 
 attorneys appear in more than one. For nearly ten 
 years prior to fifteen years before his death Thomas 
 G. Shearman was ]\Ir. Gould's counsel. 
 
 Mr. Shearman was asked for his reminiscences 
 and impressions of the great financier. He said: 
 
 " Mr. Gould was, even with those intimately asso- 
 ciated with him, a reticent, quiet-appearing man. He 
 was a very hard worker in point of application, and 
 worked a good deal. In times of financial excitement 
 or uneasiness he was at his desk by 8 o'clock each 
 morning, and often remained until 1 1 o'clock or mid- 
 night. 
 
 Power of Concentration, 
 
 "I have frequently known him to go with no more 
 than four or five hours sleep. When intensely inter- 
 ested in any matter, he devoted his whole concentra- 
 tion of thought upon that one thing, and would seem to 
 lose interest in things, often of greater pecuniary im- 
 portance but of not so much commercial fascination. 
 Gould loved the intricacies and perplexities of finan- 
 cial problems. 
 
 " While his success was owing, of course, to his 
 shrewdness and sagacity, it was because these quali- 
 ties were applied to different efforts than those which 
 the world has generally credited as the source of his 
 success. I am satisfied that he lost money by some 
 
 of th 
 
 ose 
 
 sp 
 
 ecu 
 
 latio 
 
 ns, 
 
 ipi 
 
 ure ana smipie, which eave 
 
WHAT WAS SAID OF THE RAILROAD KING. 
 
 465 
 
 nted by its 
 ie cases in 
 
 I the same 
 r nearly ten 
 ath Thomas 
 
 miniscences 
 rie said : 
 nately asso- 
 r man. He 
 hcation, and 
 
 II excitement 
 o'clock each 
 
 :lock or mid- 
 
 vith no more 
 ensely inter- 
 ie concentra- 
 lould seem to 
 ecuniary im- 
 
 fascination. 
 
 ies of finan- 
 
 iirse, to his 
 
 [these quaii- 
 
 those which 
 
 loLirce of his 
 
 ley by some 
 
 which gave 
 
 him the widest prominence. All his gold specula- 
 tions, his stock speculations — I speak of those which 
 were purely speculative as brokers use the term — 
 generally resulted in losses. This is the most mis- 
 understood fact in Mr. Gould's career. 
 
 Foresij'ht and Executive Ability. 
 
 " His shrewdness was in foresight and execution. 
 He possessed the art of building up, as well as pulling 
 down, a railroad. He had an eye for the future and 
 measured his plans by what he thought v»rould be its 
 demands. It was along these lines that he made his 
 money. 
 
 "One of the most important factors in his execution 
 of a deal was in concealing from others even an inti- 
 mation of what he was going to do. Manipulation, 
 alone and unaided, of men and concerns was his 
 forte. 
 
 " Mr. Gould was personally neither bold nor timid. 
 
 He was not extreme in any personal emotions or 
 
 habits. 
 
 Russell Sajje says Business. 
 
 Mr. Russell Sage was asked if he thought it likely 
 that the surviving members of the Gould family would 
 in any way alter their course of life ; whether the sons 
 would withdraw from the active prosecution of their 
 father's theories of business, and as to the likelihood of 
 the family cultivating the social side of New York life, 
 as the younger generations of the Vanderbilt and 
 other wealthy families had done. 
 
 "Not the slightest danger of that," remarked Mr. 
 
 30 
 
 il 
 
46*j 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 m 
 
 Sage. " Mr. Gould was a wise man, a very wise man, 
 and his sons are wise young men — they are their 
 father's sons. I know them all — George, Eddie and 
 Howard — and I see them every day. 
 
 "They are business men by instinct and training. 
 They have, that is the older boys, familiarized them- 
 selves with every detail of their father's affairs and they 
 will carry out his ideas as nearly as they can. They 
 are all boys of good habits and fairly worshipped their 
 father. There is no nonsense about them, as there is 
 about some young men, sons of wealthy parents. 
 
 " Look at the power," continued Mr. Sage, "of ac^ 
 cumulated wealth retained in one family. Look at the 
 Rothschilds for an exaniple of what one family can d'> 
 by continuing a successful course in banking and by 
 holding together. Now they are the wealthiest family 
 in the world, and kings and emperors and vast coun- 
 tries have to come to them when they want to raise 
 large loans, either to carry on a war or develop home 
 improvements," 
 
 Saj»e's Estimate of Gould. 
 
 Mr. Sage did not predict that the Gould family 
 would attain the power of the bankers of wh' -h he 
 spoke, but he was certainly convinced that they could 
 do so if they developed their enormous holdings in 
 common, and there was one thinof certain, that he was 
 thoroughly convinced that no young Gould would ever 
 leave business to go into this "society nonsense." 
 
 Referrinor to Mr. Gould Mr. Saq-e said: — "He was 
 a wonderful man — sagacious, farseeing, considerate of 
 
TTHAT WAS SAID OF THE RAILROAD KING. 
 
 167 
 
 wise man, 
 
 are their 
 
 Eddie and 
 
 \ training, 
 ized them- 
 rs and they 
 :an. They 
 ipped th(;ir 
 
 as there is 
 arents. 
 ge, **of ac- 
 i.ook at the 
 imily can d^^ 
 :\n<-i' and by 
 
 hiest family 
 vast coun- 
 fant to raise 
 
 velop home 
 
 ould family 
 
 of wh' -h he 
 
 t they could 
 
 holdings in 
 
 that he was 
 
 1 would ever 
 
 isense." 
 
 ; " He was 
 
 n side rate of 
 
 the opinions of others. If he was not so he and I 
 could never have ijotten aloncr so well toijether for 
 twenty years. I don't feel like talking about his char- 
 acter now, while he lies unburied in his home up the 
 street. Some time I'll do so. I'd like to let the peo- 
 ple know what a great man has gone. 
 
 " It seems to me," he added, in a pessimistic vein, 
 •' that all the great men are dying off. The young 
 men are bright and will take the places of the others, 
 but somehow I don't think that they can fill them as 
 their fathers did. But the world will ^ret along with- 
 out them, I suppose, in the future as it did in the 
 
 past." 
 
 Aiding" Men Ui Trouble. 
 
 Mr. Sage was visibly affected as he spoke of his 
 dead associate. 
 
 " The Mr. Gould of 1872," he remarked, "was a dif- 
 ferent man from the Gould of 1892. He was mis- 
 understood, misrepresented, maligned and abused. 
 People said he was a wrecker. On the contrary, he 
 was a developer, not only of his properties, but of the 
 whole country. People seem to have lost sight of 
 this. He has saved more men than any other man I 
 ever knew. He averted more panics than any one 
 else. 
 
 " He carried many a large operator through the 
 panic of 1884 at great personal loss to himself, and 
 I know of countless other occasions when many of us, 
 thinking that the commercial interests of the country 
 were jeopardized, got together and relieved the money 
 
 • I 
 
408 
 
 LIFE OF .TAT GOULD. 
 
 
 market upon the suggestion of Mr. Gould. His judg- 
 ment ac such times was remarkable. He had a 
 wonderful faculty of solving difficult problems and of 
 extricating men and corporations from situations that 
 seemed hopeless. The same faculty led him to guard 
 aq^ainst rocks in the current of events that would have 
 dashed any other person or corporation to pieces. 
 
 " His judgment of men was also most remarkable. 
 In selectinof members for various boards he exercised 
 this, and with what result ? Why, in the various cor- 
 porations that he controlled are to be found many of 
 the most prominent and wealthy, as well as some of 
 the most capable men in the country. It is an error 
 to believe that he drove men ; he was guided by them. 
 When he was convinced that he was in error he 
 always admitted it frankly, and he always invited the 
 most free expression of opinion or criticism." 
 
His judg- 
 He had a 
 :rns and of 
 atlons that 
 111 to guard 
 would have 
 > pieces, 
 -em ark able. 
 ,G exercised 
 various cor- 
 iid many of 
 IS some of 
 
 is an error 
 ;ed by them, 
 in error he 
 
 invited the 
 
 m. 
 
 >? 
 
 CHAPTER XXX. 
 Views of the Press Concerning the Wizard. 
 
 Upon the announcement of Mr. (Mould's death the 
 newspapers throughout the land published ext(Mided 
 notices and bio^^raphical sketches. The press of (ir(jat 
 Britain devoted large space to the event which startled 
 the whole financial world. Opinions resj)ecting the 
 man and his achievements varied ; this was only to be 
 exnected. Many severe criticisms expressed the con- 
 demnation of those persons who lookeil upon Mr. 
 Gould as an unprincipled speculator, a wrecker of 
 other men's fortunes, a destroyer rather than one who 
 built up and benefited. 
 
 Yet many warm words of eulogy were written, and 
 the old adage that nothing except what is good should 
 be spoken of the dead was regarded by journals that 
 had frequently disapproved of the great financier's 
 schemes and methods. 
 
 The reader will be interested in the followinor ex- 
 •racts from the press. 
 
 Oil the A^erge of Kuiii. 
 
 From the A^C7ii Vor/: Herald. 
 
 Mr. Gould's feet were on the verge of ruin during 
 the second week of May, 1884, that period of wild 
 financial dread and distrust following the failure of 
 
 (4G9) 
 
470 
 
 LIFE OK JAY (iOULD. 
 
 Ipii 
 
 ■!ti 
 
 I'^VkH^RT 
 
 Grant c^ Ward. lie was nearer beinn;- •'l)rok(!n" tlicn 
 than at any period since Black I'riday. Then he 
 threw the burden by wily manipulation on his oppo- 
 nents and ruined th(Mn, Now he found thos(! oppo- 
 nents cond)ini;d to compass his undoiuL;', il it were; pos- 
 sible, and all thint^s sc^enieti possible in those; days, 
 when the panics of 1S57 and 1873 bade fair to find 
 their pandKd in Wall street. 
 
 It was (generally known that Ciould was heavily in- 
 volvetl in the smash of (irant ^ Ward, and he soon 
 found arraycul against him every bear operator in the 
 "street." The events of W' ednesday, May 15th, were 
 alarmiiiij-. The Marine Bank had been drair<Jed down 
 by Ward days before. The Metropolitan National 
 Bank closed its doors that ch\y. There was panic in 
 the Stock Kxchanoe. Seven commission houses had 
 been forced to suspend. There were runs on every 
 national and savings bank in town, and a run was just 
 beirinniii''' on Ciould's close friend and business asso- 
 ciate, Russell Sage. 
 
 A dead set was made on Gould. His enemies de- 
 cided, if possible, to crush or cripple him or drive him 
 from the street. It did seem as if the ground was 
 giving way beneath his feet. His old-time rival, Cam- 
 mack, expected to see him go to the wall. An effort 
 was made to buy off his partner, Washington E. Con- 
 nor, who held the key to the situation. Had Connor 
 gone Gould would have been overwhelmed, but he 
 stood by his master. 
 
 Missouri Pacific had been beaten away down to 65 
 
VIKWS OF THK rUKSS. 
 
 171 
 
 )k(!n" then 
 Then hci 
 his oppo- 
 U)S(! op|)o- 
 ; were pos- 
 hos(; clays, 
 air to find 
 
 heavily iii- 
 
 tl he soon 
 
 •ator in the 
 
 15th, were 
 
 ofiied clown 
 
 n National 
 
 as panic in 
 
 louses had 
 
 on every 
 
 in was just 
 
 ness asso- 
 
 icmies de- 
 drive him 
 round was 
 rival, Cam- 
 An effort 
 n E. Con- 
 ad Connor 
 ed, but he 
 
 lown to 65 
 
 and his other stocks had fallen in j. portion. He 
 could not go off as he did on lilack Friday and seek 
 se(lusif)n. He had to remain and " face th(^ music." 
 He hail to take his securities from the vaults of the 
 Mercantile Sale I )ep()sit Company and put them up 
 as collateral. Then by a niit^hty effort he keyi-d Mis- 
 souri Pacific up to par and ruinc^d many of the nuMi 
 who had soui;ht to ruin him. To do it \\v. had to throw 
 stocks overboard like men unloadin_L( a shi[) at sea. 
 At this tinu; he. was also seriously handicapptnl by the 
 effect the layini^^ of the n(^w Commercial Cable had on 
 West(.'rn Union stock, b'or tlu; first ti..vj th(^ stock 
 sank to 4gJ<, and ;js8o.ooo,ooo of stock was selling at 
 onc!-half its nominal valu(\ 
 
 Before Mr. (iould (;xtricatcd himself from his diffi- 
 culties he sold out his entire holdinof of stock in the 
 Mercantile Trust Company. It was understood that 
 owiuLi- to the repeated rumors of Mr. Gould's strujif- 
 gles to kec^p his li(\'ul above water the company had 
 refused to renew his loans. bVom company after com- 
 pany Mr. (iould retired, and it was not until the sum- 
 mer of 1S84 was well advanced that he rested easily 
 and couUl look with complacency on the market ai.d 
 call it his own. 
 
 During the year more than forty railroads had 
 passed into the hands of receivers, among them the 
 New York and New Enoland road, in which Mr. 
 Gould had been particularly interested. The Wabash 
 system, which was at that time a Gould favorite and 
 which Mr. Gould was preparing to lease to the Iron 
 
472 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 Mountain, then a part of the Missouri Pacific, also 
 reached a receivership. In common with other secu- 
 rities all his properties had shrunk in value, and it is 
 probable that, while he was safe and secure, he was 
 worth at least a third less than when the year began. 
 
 The; Ii'viiij^ton Kesidciice. 
 
 From the New York Sun. 
 
 Of the two residences maintained by Mr. Gould 
 that at Irving^ton is worthy of more than a passin<^ 
 description. The ^ij^reater portion of his house and 
 grounds there were open to the inspection of the 
 public at all times. The visitor looking for the house 
 is tcid to ascend the hill as far as the road croes, then 
 turn to the left and pursue the avenue for a mile until 
 he comes to a pair of gate-posts of white stone which 
 mark the entrance to the orounds of the millionaire. 
 Endless gate-posts that are nearly white and that are 
 all of stone meet him on either hand as he passes 
 aloncr the maiinlficent thorouorhfare. 
 
 Handsome residences do not crowd, but follow one 
 upon another without interruption. The Episcopal 
 Church, which is not a third as lofty as the most mod- 
 est Broadway edifice, will make uiybody stop for five 
 minutes to look at It. The crest of the hill sweeping 
 up from the roadway and further inland is crowned 
 with stone mansions whose windows overlook the foli- 
 age, the villas, and the churches below, and command 
 an uninterrupted view of the river. 
 
 At the mile's end the gate-posts which mark the 
 entrance to the Gould estate are reached. They are 
 
XI ri Pacific, also 
 
 with other sccu- 
 
 1 value, and it is 
 
 d secure, he was 
 
 the year began. 
 
 ce. 
 
 d by Mr. Gould 
 3 than a passing 
 )f his house and 
 inspection of the 
 :in(~^ for the house 
 e road goes, then 
 ue for a mile until 
 white stone which 
 )f the millionaire, 
 'hite and that are 
 ind as he passes 
 
 'd, but follow one 
 The Episcopal 
 las the most mod- 
 body stop for five 
 |the hill sweeping 
 iland is crowned 
 loverlook the foll- 
 ow, and command 
 
 which mark the 
 Lched. They are 
 
 VIEWS OF raE PKESS. 
 
 473 
 
 taller than those wliich have preceded them, but they 
 are not exactly w^hite. They are of handsome granite. 
 Just beyond them is a porter's lodge built of stone. 
 A br id roadway, smooth and shining as the pave- 
 ment of a Parisian boulevard, sweeps into what seems 
 to be a vast park. 
 
 The o^round is undulatini^f and covered wnth a rich 
 sward. Clumps of ancient trees break the smooth- 
 ness of the surface here and there. A herd of cattle 
 of rare breed is permitted to roam without hindrance. 
 At one distant point a gossamer-like tower, surmounted 
 by a dome and a gilded ball, rises above a low white 
 structure an eii^hth of a mile in lencrth. This is a hot- 
 house, in w-hich in midwinter are forced flowers and 
 vegetables of every sort. 
 
 At another distant point a gray tower and a series 
 of slender minarets lift above a knoll in an opening 
 among the trees. The road sweeps in great curves, 
 and, finally descending, gently leads through a dense 
 grove of evergreens and thence suddenly into an open 
 space in which stands the wonderful mansion th 't was 
 inhabited by Mr. Jay Gould in the summer season. 
 
 It is built of dark gray stone, which is shot with 
 bluish tints. The many parts which go to make it up 
 are picturesquely grouped together, and afford a mul- 
 titude of orraceful anoles. Rich traceries cover it, and 
 the whole is like lacework cut in stone. The Gothic 
 double doors are stone, even to the sashes in their 
 upper part, which are set with diamonds of glass, as 
 are the windows. 
 
 :it!| 
 
474 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 On one side a lawn sweeps upward, ending in a 
 narrow vista between the trees. On the other side a 
 hill, in parts heavily wooded and in parts covered with 
 grass only, stretches far downward to the river. The 
 view takes in the stream, which at this point is broad 
 as a lake for miles to the north and to the south. The 
 Palisades are set forth in their full sweep and Nyack 
 glimmers like a toy city on the further shore. 
 
 Here Mr. Gould lived from May until December. 
 The stables are filled with fine horses. He had a 
 library that he bought as it stood from a gentleman 
 who had collected it in all the literary markets of the 
 world, and the house is filled with objects of art that 
 h'tve been obtained in the same princely way and at 
 the cost of untold dollars. 
 
 eJay (JouLl's dosod Career. 
 
 I'lMiii llir New ^'()l■k Rccuiilcr. 
 
 One of th(.' phenomenal men of his time has 
 just passed into history. Jay Gould is dead, and 
 there is no financial panic, nor is there any likelihood 
 of one. There was a time wdien the announcement of 
 his death would probably have been the signal for a 
 convulsion on Wall street which would have been 
 sympathetically echoed in all the stock exchanges of 
 the world. But that time has passed. The Jay 
 Gould properties are no longer in the creative and 
 speculative stage ; they are on a solid footing, and the 
 life of their creator is not now essential, as it once 
 was, to their development. 
 
 Harsh things were said of this remarkable man 
 
VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 
 
 475 
 
 irkable man 
 
 while he lived, and there will be a flood of severe 
 moralizing- over his career now that it is closed. It is 
 easy to say that he was a man with but one all-absorb- 
 ing passion — the acquisition of wealth for its own 
 sake and the sake of the power which it gave him 
 over the great material enterprises of his day. It will 
 have to be conceded, no doubt, that his character, as a 
 whole, was not one to be held up for emulation and 
 imitation to the youth of America. There was not 
 enough of human sympathy and philanthropic impulse 
 in it for that. 
 
 Nevertheless there were strong lines of purpose 
 and faculty in the intellectual make-up of Jay Gould 
 which gave him rank among really great men. He 
 had courage, grit, insight, foresight, tireless energy, in- 
 domitable will — all great qualities. He conceived his 
 gigantic operations boldly and executed them with 
 consummate coolness and skill. He was the peculiar 
 and unprecedented product of a peculiar and unpre- 
 cedented epoch of material growth, expansion, enter- 
 prise and development. 
 
 No other country and time than the United States 
 during the past thirty years could have evolved him. 
 It was a period of colossal undertakings, of enormous 
 railroad construction, of vast telegraphic and telephonic 
 enterprises. Speculation was its key-note — bold, vast, 
 hazardous, and, to the losers, often enough ruinous 
 speculation. Jay Gould was the master mind of this 
 period. He won where others lost ; and those who 
 lost hated and denounced. The game was desperate 
 
 * I 'I 
 
 iill 
 
476 
 
 LIFE OP JAY GOULD. 
 
 
 ( . I 
 
 and merciless, and if the tables had been turned, and 
 the losers had been the winners, we should have 
 heard far less about Jay Gould's sordid and soulless 
 nature. 
 
 It is eminendy a case for the old proverb — De mor- 
 tiiis nil nisi bomim. Jay Gould played a great part in 
 a great age. He was neither a saint, a reformer, nor 
 a philanthropist, and he made no pretensions to be. 
 But at least it must be said of him that, with untold 
 wealth at his command, his private life was clean and 
 reputable, and his moral example as a husband and 
 parent was wholesome. 
 
 It has been widely insisted that the accumulation of 
 stupendous fortunes is one of the prime evils and dan- 
 gers of modern American life ; but, even if this be true, 
 Jay Gould was not alone in his offense. In common 
 fairness it may properly be borne in mind that he was 
 neither the first, the only, nor will he be the last, of 
 our multi-millionaires. Byron's line on Napoleon fits 
 him — *' Neither the greatest nor the worst of men." 
 
 A Wonderful Career. 
 
 From the New York Tribune. 
 
 The death of Jay Gould ends a career which the 
 world unites in pronouncing wonderful. It ran its 
 course in channels widely different from those along 
 which the vast majority of human lives are directed. 
 This man was endowed with a genius for speculation 
 as eminent and obvious as the genius of Bonaparte 
 for war, of Talleyrand for diplomacy, and of Pitt for 
 administration. 
 
VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 
 
 477 
 
 turned, and 
 lould have 
 nd soulless 
 
 3 — De mor- 
 reat part in 
 former, nor 
 ions to be. 
 with untold 
 s clean and 
 .isband and 
 
 mulation of 
 ils and dan- 
 this be true, 
 In common 
 that he was 
 
 the last, of 
 apoleon fits 
 
 of men." 
 
 which the 
 
 It ran its 
 
 hose alons: 
 
 'e directed. 
 
 speculation 
 
 Bonaparte 
 
 of Pitt for 
 
 He discerned his own special aptitude at an early 
 age and thereafter was never tempted for a moment 
 to adventure in any other field than that to which 
 nature had assigned him. He suffered temporary 
 reverses, but he possessed an amazing capacity for 
 arresting their normal consequences and extorting 
 from them the conditions of ultimate advantage. 
 Like many great masters of opportunity he possessed 
 only meagre physical resources. Penetrating intellect 
 and indomitable will are seldom in more strikinof con- 
 trast with the material organism which they inhabit 
 and control. It is not the least amazincr fact of Mr. 
 Gould's career that he could compel that feeble frame 
 to endure so much and so long. 
 
 However men may choose to agree or differ as to 
 the life which has ended in peace after multifarious 
 exploits and mutations, there is no doubt that it was 
 profoundly interesting. Perhaps not more than half 
 a dozen persons have lived in our day whose names 
 and activities have been so familiar to the civilized 
 world, and who at the same time have been personally 
 known to so few of their fellow-beings. His persist- 
 ent reticence, cultivated and applied for his own pur- 
 poses, may have concealed traits and emotions which 
 actually existed in the man. 
 
 But though he truly loved his own family and fire- 
 side and inspired a tender attachment in return, he 
 gave few signs of longing for the affection and praise 
 of mankind, or even of the community in which he 
 lived. It was his business to utilize for personal ends 
 
478 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 the follies and passions of his fellow-men, and he prob- 
 ably accepted philosophically whatever penalties his 
 vocation imposed. Me at least preserved dn outward 
 serenity which did not suggest the idea that he was 
 pained by obloquy, or shared in any degree either the 
 bitterness which he provoked or the suffering which 
 he sometimes indicted. 
 
 And c(M"t,unly, whatever feelings he may have in- 
 tlulged in private, he rarely permitted them to inter- 
 fere with the execution of his designs. And yet, 
 though Mr. Ciould was widely accused of failing to 
 keep faith, there were many among his harshest crit- 
 ics who were ready to admit that he seldom if ever 
 turned upon an associate without having liad previous 
 reason to believe that the associate was turning upon 
 him. The man who set out to play that game with 
 Mr. Gould needed to move with lightning rapidity. 
 
 He orathered about him a laroe number of devoted 
 and faithful followers. They rarely failed to speak of 
 him as always courteous, always considerate and often 
 generous, and the friendship of many of them he 
 retained through numerous stormy periods and great 
 vicissitudes. He had also a few associates almost as 
 powerful pecuniarily as himself, with whom relations 
 of mutual support and unbroken confidence subsisted 
 for many years. 
 
 Mr. Gouki accumulated enormous riches, but it is 
 easy to believe that lie enjoyed their possession far 
 less than the acquisition of them. He loved to sur- 
 mount and circumvent barriers, to make a conquest 
 
 
VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 
 
 470 
 
 d he prob- 
 nalties his 
 111 outward 
 lat he was 
 : either the 
 rincj which 
 
 ly have in- 
 
 n to inter- 
 
 And yet, 
 
 faiHng to 
 
 rshest crit- 
 
 om if ever 
 
 d previous 
 
 'ning" upon 
 
 o-ame with 
 
 apidity. 
 
 A devoted 
 
 :> speak of 
 
 and often 
 
 them he 
 
 and ofreat 
 
 almost as 
 
 1 relations 
 
 subsisted 
 
 ;, but it is 
 ession far 
 ed to sur- 
 conquest 
 
 of adverse forces, to conduct a complicated campaign, 
 to apply all his strategic powers to the resolution of 
 difficulties, to employ all the weapons of aggression 
 and defence in his armory, and fmall)- to win a victory 
 which he thought worthy of his [)owers. And then 
 he loved to seclude himself from the public gaze 
 among llowers and books and pictures, with the few 
 whom he loved around him and the world at a dis- 
 tance. 
 
 lie had cultivated tastes and varied information, 
 but he was not desirous of imposinij- or incurrin*'- so- 
 cial obligations, nor solicitous of distinction in n.ny 
 sphere of action except the one which lie dominnted. 
 He was apparendy contented to be what he was — the 
 most daring, brilliant and triumphant sjieculator of the 
 age in the eyes of the world, and the most loyal and 
 devoted husband and father in the eyes of his wife and 
 children. 
 
 Certainly this was not a career which in many of its 
 aspects at least tended to make mankind better and 
 happier, or which the world can afford to exalt as a 
 model and an inspiration. But even those who put 
 the lowest estimate upon the character and work of 
 Mr. Gould are bound to acknowledge tliat in at least 
 one respect he set an example which some of his bit- 
 terest censors might profitably imitate. He never 
 stooped to hypocrisy. He never sought to delude 
 himself or others with a show of counterfeit philan- 
 thropy. His charities, there is reason to know, were 
 numerous. They certainly were unobtrusive. He 
 
,TT"'"'""i^r'rTi'ra7r 
 
 480 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 m 
 
 iil| 
 
 bought many thlncrs, but he never boMglit a eulogy. 
 He played the great game of speculative fmance for 
 all it could be made to yield, without disguise or 
 apology. lie has gone where he will be jusdy 
 judged. 
 
 A Great Operator. 
 From the New York Times. 
 
 A career in the least comparable with that of Jay 
 Gould not only has never been run, but has never been 
 possible before our time. It is in our time that the 
 "operator" has been born, and Jay Gould was an 
 " operator " pure and simple, although, in a general way 
 of speaking, he was as far as possible from pure and 
 as far as possible from simple. Wliat we mean to say 
 is that he was nothing else but an operator, a trader 
 in the values of the Stock Exchange. There were, of 
 course, men of the same ambitions and pretensions in 
 Wall Street before him, there have been such men 
 with him, there will be such men after him. 
 
 But nobody has been so prodigiously successful in 
 the same line. No man has ever grasped the leader- 
 ship of Wall Street anything like so firmly, nor held it 
 anything like so long. Nobody has ever escaped from 
 it, or been withdrawn from it by death, Avlth anything 
 like the same amount of booty to his credit. The 
 total of his gains is currently estimated at something- 
 like seventy millions. This is one of the great fortunes 
 of America, and there is no other gre^t fortune com- 
 parable to it in amount that has bee', attained by the 
 same means. The Astor fortune, originally acquired 
 
VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 
 
 181 
 
 t a eulogy. 
 
 finance lor 
 
 ;lis!j;uisc or 
 
 be justly 
 
 that of Jay 
 never been 
 lie that the 
 Lild was an 
 general way 
 11 pure and 
 mean to say 
 or, a trader 
 ire were, of 
 ^tensions in 
 such men 
 
 ccessful in 
 the leader- 
 nor held it 
 caped from 
 1 anything- 
 edit. The 
 something 
 at fortunes 
 rtune com- 
 ned by the 
 ly acquired 
 
 in adventurous mercantih; enterprise, has been in- 
 creased during two gent;rations by a saf(.' and far- 
 sighted calculation of the probable growth of the city 
 of New York. The Vanderbilt fortune was built by a 
 similarly safe and far-sighted calculation of the future 
 increase of the traffic of the country and by the saga- 
 cious taking of measures adapted to confirm and 
 secure its proper share of this increase to the route 
 that commanded the greatest natural advantaofcs for 
 this traffic. The Gould fortune has not been acquired 
 by such means. It is simply the measure of the suc- 
 cess that has attended the skill of its founder in inter- 
 cepting the earnings of other people and diverting 
 from their natural destination. 
 
 The common term of reproach against an "operator" 
 is that he is a gambler, but it would be very unjust to 
 apply this term to Gould. It is not properly applicable 
 to a player who stocks the cards or loads the dice 
 beforehand. The effort of Gould throughout his 
 whole career was to eliminate the element of chance 
 from his operations. Of course, it entered more or 
 less, and from time to time, but in so far as it was al- 
 lowed to enter at all it was a disappointment and a 
 grievance to him. What he aimed at, and what he 
 often attained, was as great a certainty in the opera- 
 tions of the Wall Street game as is attainable in the 
 most legitimate lines of business. Of course it is 
 difficult to attain this degree of certitude, and the 
 difficulty is enhanced by the restrictions of the criminal 
 law. These restrictions he evaded with remarkable 
 
 31 
 
482 
 
 MFK OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 M 
 
 ^W 
 
 success. Throughout his entire career he remained 
 at large, and this fact, considering the nature of his 
 operations, is a high tribute to his skill. 
 
 It ough' to pass unnoticed that Gould never 
 
 sought to propitiate public opinion. His spasmodic 
 efforts to affect it in favor of his interests in any one 
 of the newspapers which he from time to time owned 
 or controlled were singularly maladroit and uncouth, 
 and amonir all his investments those in these "orcrans 
 of opinion " were the least judicious or successful. 
 He never gave largely to any public and unselfish 
 cause. 
 
 The one exception that he made in favor of the 
 Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions was commonly 
 accepted as eccentric to the point of grotesqueness. 
 He seems to have relied upon the American worship 
 of money, however got, as sufficient to secure his 
 "position," and, at any rate, he never gave himself the 
 trouble of making any false pretenses. Accordingly, 
 any remarks upon him, now that he is dead, which 
 do not sharply distinguish him from men who have 
 acquired wealth in the pursuit of useful ends by honor- 
 able means, must have a corrupting and demoralizing 
 effect upon the young men of the United States. 
 
 His Peculiar Genius. 
 
 From the Baltimore Sun. 
 
 He was pre-eminent as a manipulator of the stock 
 market, and for many years was the controlling spirit 
 in Wall street. His operations in the stock of the 
 Erie Railroad first revealed the peculiar nature of his 
 
VIEWS OF TlIK PRESS. 
 
 483 
 
 e remained 
 .ture of his 
 
 iould never 
 } spasmodic 
 in any one 
 time owned 
 nd uncouth, 
 esc '•' organs 
 r successful, 
 nd unselfish 
 
 favor of the 
 as commonly 
 otesqueness. 
 ican worship 
 D secure his 
 himself the 
 Accordingly, 
 dead, which 
 n who have 
 ds by honor- 
 emoralizing 
 States. 
 
 of the stock 
 rolling spirit 
 I stock of the 
 hature of his 
 
 genius for making the most of corporate properties 
 under iiis control. The fluctuation of valurs during 
 and for some years aftt-r the civil war gave him oppor- 
 tunities lie knew how to improve. His " corner " in 
 gold and the consequent panic of " Black Friday," 
 Sept. 24, 1869, won for Mr. Gould the kind of fame for 
 which he most cared. 
 
 For many years his attention was given to the ac- 
 quisition of control in various important railway- 
 systems in the West and Southwest. In 1880 he con- 
 trolled, it is said, i 0,000 miles of railroad, or one-ninth 
 of the entire railroad mileage of the country at that 
 time. 
 
 Played for Great Stakes. 
 
 From the Philadelphia Press. 
 
 In an age of rich men, Jay Gould died yesterday 
 one of the five or six richest men in its history. 
 Among them his wealth alone was the fruit of specu- 
 lation unaccompanied by any service to society or any 
 share in the improvement of its material resources. 
 Rothschild was a banker for States and a trafficker on 
 every sea. So were the Barings. Vanderbilt organ- 
 ized the first great railroad system on this continent. 
 The Astor and Westminster fortunes are the fruit of 
 capital invested in the acquisition and development of 
 real estate in the two orreatest cities of the civilized 
 world. 
 
 Jay Gould manipulated. He died the controlling 
 owner of three great systems of organized capital — 
 the 11,000 miles of railroad centring about the 
 
Ifufel 
 
 484 
 
 I.IFK OF JAY GOUM). 
 
 Missouri Pacific, the Western Union Telegraph Com- 
 pany and the New York elevated system. All were 
 in existence before he acquired them. Each was 
 wrecked bt^fore it was bouirht. 
 
 The worst of his acts can all be matched in the for- 
 tune hunting of less successful men. He did nothing 
 which is not daily done on a lesser scale and with 
 smaller stakes. The man scarcely lives who, when 
 he is buying something, shrinks at doing what he can 
 *' legitimately " to show up the defects in the object 
 he is buying. But when Gould did this to a railroad 
 fortunes were lost and panics fell and he emerged 
 from successive wrecks worth 5^72,000,000. 
 
 Great properties and wide interests brought him 
 conservatism. In 1884 ^^^ appeared for the first time 
 sustaining the market, and for eight years he was 
 chiefly engaged in conserving values. His millions won 
 respect and the public began to forget, but he never 
 gained full acquittal and a modest contribution to a 
 Presbyterian cause drew general condemnation. The 
 public, which has shrewd sense in these matters, dis- 
 criminated between fortunes built by creating values 
 and won by manipulating them. With all the advance 
 he made in public favor he never won public respect, 
 yet it is a narrow view which deems him worse than 
 his class and kind, simply because he was vastly more 
 successful. 
 
 The Chaiiipioii Money-Maker. 
 From the Boston Journal, 
 
 Whatever may be thought of the career of Jay 
 
VIEWS OF THE I'RESS. 
 
 485 
 
 ^graph Com- 
 
 n. All were 
 
 Each was 
 
 id in the for- 
 i did nothing 
 lie and with 
 s who, wlien 
 what he can 
 n the object 
 to a railroad 
 he emerged 
 
 o. 
 
 brought him 
 the first time 
 ears he was 
 millions won 
 )ut he never 
 ribution to a 
 nation. The 
 matters, dis- 
 rating values 
 the advance 
 blic respect, 
 worse than 
 vastly more 
 
 i'eer of J?.y 
 
 Gould, it was one that was only possible under the 
 free opportunities of a country like this. In luirope 
 traditions and family fortune count for all. Mere in- 
 fluential connections and original cai)ital arc; important 
 factors. But the want of them is no bar to success, 
 and it may prove the spur that is need^'tl to secure it. 
 It has been said that determination and i)(Tseverance 
 are the only things requisite to the accomplishment of 
 any task. George Eliot's definition of genius as a 
 capacity for sticking to work is but a modification of 
 this same idea. Whether formulated in that way or 
 not, it was with such a spirit that Mr. Gould went 
 forth into the world. He was filled with the sinMe 
 purpose of amassing wealth. Every step was directed 
 to that end. In the face of all obstacles — and there 
 were many of them — and with a daring and perform- 
 ance that were worthy of higher things, he held to his 
 one course. Measured by his aim he, of course, was 
 more than successful, and yet we imagine that there 
 is not a great man in this country upon whose career 
 so many qualifying phrases would have to be used as 
 upon this one just closed. 
 
 A Master of Opportunities. 
 
 From the New York Mail ami Express. 
 
 Mr. Gould's success in the acquirement of immense 
 wealth was the result, not only of his energy, adroitness 
 and skill, but also of his opportunities, some of which 
 he created and others of which came at times almost 
 unbidden. Slight in physique, he had a constitudon 
 of iron, made rugged and strong by out-door life in 
 
^^^ 
 
 488 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 If rQPHBRS' 
 
 ;?:.i 
 
 the early days of his career as a surveyor and maker 
 of coup.ty maps. Later his physical strengdi was put 
 to the severest strain, and finally gave way before the 
 allotted period of human life had been passed. 
 
 Mr. Gould undertook gigantic enterprises, first 
 planning adroitly theii success and then hazarding 
 everything upon the possibilities of his own resources. 
 There are many young men with ambitions that 
 equalled Jay Gould's with equal resolution, courage 
 and ingenuity, but they failed where he succeeded, 
 because they lacked what he had in an eminent de- 
 gree — fertility of resources to meet and overcome 
 every emergency. Furthermore, they lacked what 
 Gould possessed — an attribute of his character always 
 noticeable and conspicuous — the balance wheel of an 
 even temper and a judicial cast of mind. 
 
 Traits of Cliaractor. 
 
 From t:ie New York Daily News. 
 
 Mr. Gould's career as a manipulator and manager 
 of great corporations is, of course, the one by which 
 the vast majority of persons knew him and judged 
 him. He made money rapidly and In enormous sums, 
 so that he naturally aroused envy, which doubtless 
 often led to calunmy. Be this as it may, however, no 
 one ever questioned the stanchness of his friendships 
 or the persistence of his enmities. Of him it can be 
 truly said that he loved those who loved him and he 
 hated those who ever deceived him or tried to get the 
 better of him. 
 
 Next to his loves and his hates, or perhaps even 
 
■ and maker 
 igth was put 
 y before the 
 .ssed. 
 
 'prises, first 
 n hazarding 
 n resources, 
 ibitions that 
 ion, courage 
 t succeeded, 
 
 eminent de- 
 id overcome 
 lacked what 
 acter always 
 
 wheel of an 
 
 nd manacrer 
 
 tie by which 
 
 and judged 
 
 mous sums, 
 
 h doubtless 
 
 lowever, no 
 
 friendships 
 
 lim it can be 
 
 him and he 
 
 to oret the 
 
 rhaps even 
 
 VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 
 
 487 
 
 coming before them in importance in his character, 
 was his dogged perseverance in anything he under- 
 took. Failures, of which he knew very few in his later 
 years, where quite numerous earlier, but they never 
 disheartened him — in fact, they were mere spurs to 
 his vaulting ambition to become a power in the land 
 through the possession of immense wealth. 
 
 Whatever his enemies and critics may say about 
 the methods sometimes employed by him to obtain 
 his wealth it is admitted that he used it for no bad 
 end after he had obtained it, unless employing it to 
 get more is considered such. Unlike other rich men 
 who had hard struggles in early life, he had no fond- 
 ness for the ostentatious display of his riches. On 
 the contrary, his mode of living was of the simplest 
 possible. He was devoted to his family, his books 
 and his flowers, and beyond the region of Wall street 
 he was conceded to be a model citizen. 
 
 Great Executive Capacity. 
 
 From the New York Press. 
 
 It is hardly an exaggeration to say that what the 
 first Napoleon was to the art of war Jay Gould was 
 to the art of speculation. He seemed the mast<r of 
 circumstances, not their creature. He had a courag 
 that was dauntless, an eye that saw afar, an executi\ < 
 capacity that has had few parallels in history, a tal-iu 
 for swift and daring manipulation that confounded his 
 ablest rivals and astonished the world at larofe. 
 
 Fortunes dissolved or doubled at his touch, great 
 properties, the product of years of toil and scheming 
 
1)i. 
 
 488 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 on the part of the country's keenest financiers, grew 
 in value or crashed into ruin as the result of his bold 
 movements and wide extended combinations. Other 
 speculators might quail in the face of threatened 
 disaster. Jay Gould always maintained his imperturb- 
 able coolness and his grasp of events. Other specu- 
 lators might pause aghast at the risks involved in a 
 great financial undertaking. Jay Gould, his shrewd 
 and sweeping plans once formed, moved forward with 
 the nerve and strategic skill shown by the conqueror 
 of Austerlitz on a different field. Success apart from 
 moral considerations was his goal ; and he seldom 
 failed to command it. 
 
 Jay Gould's extraordinary genius must be acknowl- 
 edged even by those who condemn most strongly the 
 uses which it served. He was an excellent husband 
 and father. His death will not influence the course 
 of financial affairs to any considerable extent, for he 
 practically withdrew from active participation in the 
 campaigns of the stock market several years ago. 
 
 An Eiig^lisli View of Jay Gould. 
 
 From the London Times. 
 
 The death of Mr. Jay Gould brings to an end one 
 of the most active and successful business careers 
 that the world has ever witnessed. Mr. Gould was a 
 self-made man. The colossal fortune which he leaves 
 behind him was gained by his own exertions during 
 the last five-and-thirty years of his life. He began 
 practically with nothing. In 1856 his entire fortune 
 was about ;^iooo. From that date onward it advanced 
 
inciers, grew 
 t of his bold 
 ions. Other 
 f threatened 
 is im perturb- 
 Other specu- 
 involved in a 
 , his shrewd 
 forward with 
 Ke conqueror 
 5S apart from 
 d he seldom 
 
 ; be acknowl- 
 I strongly the 
 ent husband 
 the course 
 xtent, for he 
 >ation in the 
 ars ago. 
 
 an end one 
 less careers 
 rould was a 
 :h he leaves 
 tions during 
 
 He began 
 tire fortune 
 
 it advanced 
 
 VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 
 
 489 
 
 by leaps and bounds to the millions which it ultimately 
 reached. It has been partly the reward of daring, 
 judicious and far-sighted speculations, and partly it 
 has been won by less creditable means. The great 
 railway panic of 1857 gave Gould his first great op- 
 portunity. The small sum which he then had at com- 
 mand he invested in railway property; and as the 
 panic gradually subsided he had the satisfaction of 
 seeing his money grow and multiply several times 
 over. This success encouraged him to bolder efforts 
 and furnished him with the means of makinof them. 
 
 The same man and the position which he held have 
 been the products of American life. Hardly in any 
 other country could so vast a fortune have been got 
 together from so small a becjinninof and in the lifetime 
 of one man. Nowhere else would the power of wealth 
 have been so great and so widely felt. Wealth is a 
 power everywhere ; the difference is that in the United 
 States there is little or nothino- to ballast it or to set 
 bounds to its influence. Class distinctions are unknown 
 or are of little account. Money is thus raised to a 
 rank higher than it can righdy or usefully occupy. 
 To gain it is the great object to which the energies of 
 the people are given up. It is a tangible thing, and 
 the man who possesses most of it, and is known to 
 possess it, enjoys a distinct ad antage over his less 
 successful competitors in the race, and one f*;r which 
 there is no such obvious set-off as exists ia the Old 
 World, where class distinctions have not yet been done 
 away with. 
 
490 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 m^ 
 
 In this country, of course, there are numerous other 
 titles to honor than either rank or wealth can bestow. 
 It is none the less a grave question how long they 
 would survive the abolition of distinctions of rank, 
 and the consequent rise of wealth into a place of 
 honor which it does not now hold. We must look at 
 things not only as they ought to be, but as they affect 
 the popular mind. So viewed, would it be a change 
 for the better or for the worse to the dead level of a 
 democracy, in which the struggle for money was the 
 chief concern of most, and the acquisition of money 
 the chief reward of their exertions, and its possessions 
 their chief claim upon the respect of their fellow-men ? 
 
 It deserves remark, too, that wealth in America 
 does not take quite the same form as it does here. 
 It Is used not so much for the purchase of landed 
 property, which would bring in but a slender yearly 
 return, as for stocks and shares, which are very much 
 more fruitful sources of income. The man who gets 
 money in this country soon makes it his object to be- 
 come a great landed proprietor, and he is content to 
 sink his wealth in this somewhat unremunerative out- 
 lay and to submit willingly to the loss of income which 
 it involves. 
 
 In the United States this Instnct or motive is so 
 weak as to be ineffective and the wealthy man be- 
 comes all the wealthier for want of it. The presence 
 or absence of class distinctions is largely at the root 
 of this difference in popular sentiments. Land is, in 
 this country, a recognized attendant on rank. To 
 
Tierous other 
 I can bestow, 
 ow long they 
 3ns of rank, 
 
 a place of 
 nust look at 
 IS they affect 
 
 be a change 
 :d level of a 
 ney was the 
 n of money 
 
 possessions 
 fellow-men ? 
 in America 
 t does here, 
 e of landed 
 nder yearly 
 ; very much 
 m who o-ets 
 ibject to be- 
 
 content to 
 erative out- 
 :ome which 
 
 VIEWS OF THE PRESS. 491 
 
 possess it is a distinction in itself, but perhaps not one 
 which would long outlast the abolition of that which 
 1 as had much to do with givinjr it its original charm. 
 Ihese are considerations not unworthy the notice of 
 some energetic would-be levellers. Those efforts if 
 they were ever successful, would produce results v-lry 
 different from what they either look for or affec to 
 Wish. 
 
 lotive is so 
 ly man be- 
 e presence 
 at the root 
 Land is, in 
 rank. To 
 
■ffb 
 
 CHAPTER XXXI. 
 Hobbies of Millionaires. 
 
 Jay Gould is said to have spent ^40,000 a year 
 upon his yacht. This was his one great extravagance, 
 for in other respects, although he Hved handsomely, he 
 lived far less luxuriously than many men of much 
 smaller fortunes. Yet this one extravagance has been 
 seized upon by statisticians of a certain class, who in- 
 sist that it was pure waste, inasmuch as Mr. Gould did 
 not really use the yacht very often, and that the bulk 
 of the money was spent in keeping the yacht in har- 
 bor in such a condition that on receipt of a telegram 
 steam could be got up at once. Now, they urged, it 
 is clear that a large, perhaps the largest, proportion 
 of the annual sum expended on the yacht was sheer 
 waste. And then the statisticians go on to speculate 
 how many worthy families might have been supported 
 upon this wasted sum. 
 
 It is unnecessary to stop and ask why Jay Gould 
 should have devoted to the support of wordiy families 
 any proportion of the sums which he had won. Com- 
 plaints about the unnecessary luxuries of the rich 
 have always formed a staple with those who were not 
 rich. But complaints are useless. Power turns all 
 heads more or less, and the absence of resistance de- 
 
 (492) 
 
),ooo a year 
 ^travagance, 
 idsomely, he 
 en of much 
 lice has been 
 :lass, who in- 
 r. Gould did 
 lat die bulk 
 /acht in har- 
 a teleo^ram 
 ley urged, it 
 , proportion 
 It was sheer 
 to speculate 
 n supported 
 
 y Jay Gould 
 rdiy families 
 won. Com- 
 of the rich 
 lo were not 
 r turns all 
 sistance de- 
 
 HOBBIES OF MILLIONAIRES. 
 
 493 
 
 velops wilfulness, till, as we often see in the East, it 
 becomes monstrous caprice. 
 
 Now, there is no power in modern times which is 
 so like executive volition as that of tlie r^'illionaire — 
 of the man with a really great fortune to use outside 
 his usual w^ants. He has only to will strongly 
 enough to draw his check, and all mankind is eager to 
 carry out his wishes. 
 
 How Others Profit. 
 
 Architects, builders, painters, landscape gardeners, 
 mechanics in hundreds, workmen in tribes, are only 
 too glad that he has been graciously pleased to will. 
 They profit by his whim, and indirccdy the butchers, 
 bakers and candlestick-makers of these various artists 
 and artisans profit also. A miser, according to politi- 
 cal economists, is probably doing a great deal of good 
 by his investments, while the spendthrift is damaging 
 himself. 
 
 But the spendthrift is the popular character, because 
 the immediate and tangible results of his conduct are 
 apparently advantageous. So any approach towards 
 the mood of mind of the spendthrift, even though it be 
 in but a single direction, rather elevates than degrades 
 a millionaire in the popular estimation. And as the 
 rich man recognizes this he feels that there Is wnthin 
 himself a potentiality of patronage above that even of 
 a newly elected President, with no fear of the civil ser- 
 vice reform law before his eyes. Perhaps this nat- 
 ural love of power, of swaying and ordering their fel- 
 low-men, has been at the bottom of many extravagan- 
 
-r-- 
 
 494 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 I 
 
 cies of which they have been guilty. They will collect 
 at great cost something which, when collected, inter- 
 ests no one but themselves. They will spend 
 unheard-of sums in perfecting an interior which 
 would be far more perfect were much less money 
 
 wasted. 
 
 A Unique Dinner. 
 
 There is said to be a noble in Europe whose daily 
 dinner is served in Spain as if he were present, though 
 he is absent in Russia or the antipodes. The servants 
 and their dependents are all pleased ; the men who 
 furnish the supplies are pleased ; every one who 
 somehow or other gets a slice out of the nobleman's 
 cake is pleased. And who is there to complain save 
 the sentimentalists ? And what business is it of the 
 sentimentalists, anyway? 
 
 Granting that the duties of life, including the altruis- 
 tic duties, are fully performed, and that the money is 
 gained without oppression, cheating or sharp practice, 
 it is difficult to make a sin out of the mere scale of 
 an expenditure which in moderation every one not 
 essentially ascetic would approve. We could all eat 
 with horn spoons instead of silver and give the differ- 
 ence to the poor, but if we did civilization would be 
 lost under an ocean of manufactured pauperism. 
 Ivory chairs and golden dishes are follies — blamable 
 follies if you like, because they degrade the standard 
 of aspiration, but they are not moral evils any more 
 than silver forks. Indeed, did not a clergyman of 
 Queen Elizabeth's time denounce the monstrous lux- 
 
HOBBIES OF MILLIONAIHKS. 
 
 405 
 
 /" will collect 
 ected, inter- 
 will spend 
 erior which 
 less money 
 
 whose daily 
 sent, though 
 rhe servants 
 le men who 
 •y one who 
 
 nobleman's 
 mplain save 
 
 is it of the 
 
 the altruis- 
 
 le money is 
 
 rp practice, 
 
 re scale of 
 
 ry one not 
 
 mid all eat 
 
 e the differ- 
 
 would be 
 
 pauperism. 
 
 -blamable 
 
 e standard 
 
 any more 
 
 gyman of 
 
 strous lux- 
 
 ury of using any forks at all when God had so 
 visibly provided men with five fingers to eat with ! 
 
 Live 3Ioii«'y Versus Dead. 
 
 There is always danger of running an argument of 
 this sort into the ground. And who is to judge at 
 what point the argument is kept above ground? In- 
 deed, as the diversifying of industries, and so pre- 
 vendng the labor market from being congested at any 
 one point, is a benefit to the honest workman, a safe- 
 guard against the oppression of the capitalists, it might 
 even be argued that the rich man with an expensive 
 fad is a benefit to the world at large. 
 
 Of course, this argument, too, must not be run into 
 the ground. It is evident that if the rich man has 
 either throuofh his riches or through some adventitious 
 accident the power of drawing too many artisans out 
 of their legitimate lines of activity, the necessaries of 
 life must diminish and the price rise in accordance 
 with the inexorable law of supply and demand. When 
 the Grecian Cheops employed 360,000 men for the 
 space of twenty years in building that great pyramid 
 which was to be his tomb, there may have been 360.- 
 000 bread-winners, but who was to make the bread 
 for them to win ? No wonder that after a succession 
 of Pharaohs, each with his little fad for an expensive 
 sepulture, the entire Egyptian empire crumbled into 
 decay and ruin. 
 
 Even an isolated case like that of Mausolus of Caria 
 must have drawn extensively upon the resources of 
 that kingdom. Mausolus, it will be remembered, was 
 
4% 
 
 LIFK OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 the gentleman who is etymologically responsible for 
 the existence of the word maiisoleuiii. When lie died, 
 in the year 353 u. c, his widow, Artemisia, decided to 
 erect to his memory a structure which should be more 
 magnificent than anything known in the past. It con- 
 sisted of a pyramid and pedestal inclosed in columns 
 and adorned with statues and bas-reliefs — the whole 
 so beautiful that it was reckoned amon<r the seven 
 wonders of the world. 
 
 Whims of American Millionaires. 
 
 American millionaires also have their fads. Mr. 
 
 Russell Sage loves horses. He has stables in New 
 York and at Lawrence, L. I., wherein he keeps a dozen 
 fast steeds, which have never, however, been allowed 
 to figure on the trotting track in public. Far different 
 is the case of Mr. Bonner, who for a period made it 
 his business to own the fastest known trotter in the 
 country, and bought up one famous record-breaker 
 after the other at fabulous prices. Mr. William C. 
 Whitney's passion is for dogs. Several of them are 
 kept at his home in this city. Others are at New- 
 port and at Washington. He often visits Wall street, 
 accompanied by a huge mastiff. When he was Sec- 
 retary of the Navy he paid $500 for a magnificent St. 
 Bernard, "Gyp," and when she had a litter of puppies 
 he presented several to his personal friends. 
 
 Mr. Lorillard, another dog fancier, fancies them as 
 much for profit as for pleasure, and makes money out 
 of his extensive dog kennels in New Jersey. As 
 much as $1,000 has been brought in to Mr. Lorillard's 
 
HOBBIES OF MILLIONAIRES. 
 
 497 
 
 onsible for 
 u'li he died, 
 
 decided to 
 lid be more 
 St. It con- 
 in columns 
 —the whole 
 
 the seven 
 
 fads. Mr. 
 
 les in New 
 
 cps a dozen 
 
 en allowed 
 
 ^ar different 
 
 od made it 
 
 )tter in the 
 
 ird-breaker 
 
 A^illiam C. 
 
 if them are 
 
 e at New- 
 
 A^all street, 
 
 e was Sec- 
 
 nificent St. 
 
 of puppies 
 
 IS. 
 
 s them as 
 money out 
 rsey. As 
 Lorillard's 
 
 pockets from the sale of a sin^^le dog. Cyrus W. 
 
 Field used to love domestic fowls, and his henneries, 
 
 full of hunc'reds of high-bred fowls, were a famous 
 
 feature of his summer residence at Ardsley-on-the- 
 
 Hudson. 
 
 Stephen Girard. 
 
 But there is a nobler side to the picture. There are 
 eccentricities which we call eccentric only, alas ! be- 
 cause human nature is so selfish that it rarely burgeons 
 out into any great deed of kindness. Yet, though 
 rare, we may be thankful they are increasing in num- 
 ber, as the world grows better and kindlier. 
 
 When Stephen Girard, of Philadelphia, died, he left 
 a fortune of ^^9,000,000 wliich he had acquired in the 
 usual way by strict attention to business. In his life- 
 time Girard was not noted for his hospitality ; in his 
 manners he was crabbed and unapproachable. In 
 small affairs he was miserly to the last degree and 
 penurious even to meanness. He spent little money 
 on himself, was careless about his own appearance or 
 the shabbiness of his surroundings, and found the 
 keenest delio^ht in hard and unremitLino- labor. 
 
 A Peculiar Character. 
 
 Yet in a large public way he was generous to the 
 extent of lavishness. During his lifetime he gave 
 liberally to the improvement of Philadelphia and made 
 munificent contributions to chanties. One of his no- 
 table deeds was the organization of a yellows-fever 
 hospital in the epidemic of 1793, over which he exer- 
 cised personal supervision. 
 32 
 
'•^p*- 
 
 M^ 
 
 lif^^^tF 
 
 498 
 
 LIFF, OF JAY G(HILD. 
 
 By the provisions of his will his fortune was be- 
 queathed to charitable and educational institutions, 
 $2,000,000 i^oin^,^ to the college for orphans. The 
 peculiar nature of the man is best exemplified by a 
 certain clause in the will which provided that no min- 
 ister should hold any connection with the college or 
 even be admitted as a visitor. As a further illustra- 
 tion of Girard's eccentric and positive views on spiritual 
 matters, it may be recalled that when he was in the 
 West India trade he named his ships after the most 
 noted free-thinkers. 
 
 Of the men of the present day the most notable 
 millionaire engaged in the generous and equitable dis- 
 tribution of his wealth is Baron Hirsch. It is some- 
 thing to have an income of j^ 10,000,000 a year, and it 
 is somethinor to know what to do with it. The Baron 
 has proved himself equal to the emergency. 
 
 In the first place, he is a man of education and has 
 been accustomed for many years to see life and enjoy 
 it in the most attractive worldly way. He lives in a 
 palace, whether in London, Paris, or Berlin. His 
 houses are sumptuously furnished and the Baron goes 
 in for all the enjoyments that can come from the grati- 
 fication of aesthetic tastes. But it is for his charitable 
 enterprises that his fame has spread over the world. 
 He likes to spend money on other people, and in Paris 
 he maintained a large office as headquarters for his 
 beneficent schemes. To attempt to enumerate his 
 good works would be an almost endless task. Their 
 moneyed value runs far up ?nto the millions. 
 
HOIUUES OF MILMONAIUKS. 
 
 H)0 
 
 line was be- 
 institutions, 
 bans. The 
 iplified by a 
 that no min- 
 e college or 
 [lier illustra- 
 son spiritual 
 i was in the 
 ,er the most 
 
 nost notable 
 iquitable dis- 
 It is some- 
 year, and it 
 The Baron 
 r. 
 
 ;ion and has 
 |fe and enjoy 
 e lives in a 
 erlin. His 
 Baron goes 
 m the grati- 
 iis charitable 
 Ir the world, 
 and in Paris 
 Irters for his 
 jmerate his 
 ask. Their 
 lis. 
 
 A Cirrat Beiiof 'actor. 
 
 To the people of his own race he has devoted him- 
 self with untiring generosity, not by scores or by 
 hundreds, but by thousands. I \r has established free 
 etlucational institutions in I'^gypt. .\siatic Turkey, and 
 in nearly all the Kuropean countries, and wherever 
 there is a large Hebrew population h(! founds schools 
 and trade institutes. What he has done for the He- 
 brews of Russia and Poland has been the theme of 
 comment for the past year, aiul what he; proposes to 
 do further can be well gathered from the past, bi all 
 his good deeds he has the support of a wife no less 
 charitable and sympathetic than he, and thousands of 
 people who have gone to them in distress can bear 
 witness to the listeninir ear and the helping hand. 
 This is a short story of the laudable way in which 
 some millionaires do crood while livini^. 
 
 MajyiiUicont Oil't. 
 
 Henry Shaw, who is regarded by St. Louis as the 
 greatest benefactor, was an Englishman by birth, who 
 made his fortune in the hardware business and retired 
 at the age of forty. Passionately fond of flowers he 
 established a botanical garden just outside the corpo- 
 rate limits of St. Louis, and there he lived in the sum- 
 mer time, returning to the city in winter. He con- 
 stantly improved and added to the territory of Iiis 
 flower-land, until "Shaw's Garden" became one of 
 the most famous resorts for visitors in the Southwest. 
 His residence and grounds were at all times open to 
 sight-seers and his hospitality was unbounded. 
 
500 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 ■'5 ■?. 
 
 In 1870 Mr. Shaw gave to the city Tower Grove 
 Park, adjoining his garden, and enriched and beauti- 
 fied it at his own expense. He also gave hberally to 
 Washington University, and in all schemes for public 
 improvement and charities he held out an open hand. 
 By the terms of his will the beautiful garden came 
 into possession of the city and is the best monument 
 to a well-spent life, and to the enjoyment of simple 
 pleasures. 
 
 James Lick, of San Francisco, was an unlovable 
 millionaire, of whom a curious story is told. When a 
 poor youth in Pennsylvania he was rejected by the 
 daughter of a wealthy miller on account of his pov- 
 erty. He vowed at that time that he would some day 
 build a mill that would far surpass that of his sweet- 
 heart's father. Many years later he kept his vow and 
 constructed at San Jose a mill of highly polished Cal- 
 ifornia wood valued at $200,000. During his lifetime 
 Mr. Lick had few friends and apparently cared for 
 none. He lived plainly and was seen very little in 
 
 public. 
 
 The Lick Observatory. 
 
 The larger part of his fortune was left to charities 
 and public institutions, one notable bequest being the 
 sum of j^6o,ooo for the erection of a statue to Key, 
 the author of the "Star-Spangled Banner." While 
 many institutions profited by Mr. Lick's posthumous 
 gifts, his most famous achievement was the establish- 
 ment of the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton, 
 under the management of the University of Califor- 
 
HOBBIES OF MILLIONAIRES. 
 
 501 
 
 wer Grove 
 
 md beaiiu- 
 li be rally to 
 3 for public 
 open hand, 
 rden came 
 monument 
 t of simple 
 
 unlovable 
 L When a 
 :ted by the 
 of his pov- 
 d some day 
 ' his sweet- 
 lis vow and 
 3lished Cal- 
 his lifetime 
 / cared for 
 
 ry little in 
 
 :o charities 
 being the 
 
 ue to Key, 
 " While 
 
 osthumous 
 establish- 
 Hamilton, 
 
 of Califor- 
 
 nia. Mr. Lick's body was placed, in 1887, under the 
 base of the pier sustaining the great telescope. 
 
 A noble type of the man who knows how to do 
 good with his money was John Plankinton, of IVIilwau- 
 kee. Mr. Plankinton's charitable deeds beo^an in 
 early life from the very generosity of his nature and 
 were continued uninterruptedly. What he has done 
 is best attested by the fellow-citizens of the great pork- 
 packer who had shared his public munificence and 
 were thoroughly cognizant of his many private chari- 
 ties. 
 
 In illustration of the esteem and love in which he 
 was held, it is related that when President Cleveland 
 visited Milwaukee, in 1887, the applause which greeted 
 him as his carriaofe drove alono" the streets was as 
 nothing compared to the ovation given John Plankin- 
 ton, who rode in the procession. When, a year or 
 two later, Mr. Plankinton's body was borne to the 
 cemetery, all the houses along the line of the funeral 
 march were draped in mourning, and expressions of 
 personal sorrow were heard on every hand. It was a 
 tribute to a rich man who spent his money wisely and 
 who knew what was beautiful in a life worth living. 
 
 Good Uses for Money. 
 It will be hard work to convince the patient people 
 
 who ride or try to ride on the North Side Chicago 
 cable cars that Mr. Charles T. Yerkes is a philanthro- 
 pist, yet he sometimes finds very laudable uses for his 
 money. Mr. Yerkes has set apart $250,000 for an 
 observatory and telescope for the use of the Univer- 
 
a ,-nBr i l iii. -t 
 
 502 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 sity of Chicago. His order was particularly Chicago- 
 esque : ** Go ahead and construct the biggest and 
 most powerful telescope in the world. 1 will be re- 
 sponsible for the cash." 
 
 But Mr. Yerkes does not put all his money in tele- 
 scopes. He lives well, furnishes his house lavishly 
 and has an eye to paintings far beyond the ordinary 
 purse. Moreover, Mr. Yerkes has consideration for 
 his future residence and is not to be outdone by 
 Cheops, or Mausolus, or any other extravagant an- 
 cient. So he has put J>50,ooo into a tomb that will 
 some day welcome him to its hospitable embrace. 
 This provision sheds quite a lustre on Mr. Yerkes's 
 forethought, and shows how easy it is to spend money 
 when one has the money and the accompanying bril- 
 liant ideas. 
 
 A Chicago Millionaire. 
 
 Philip D. Armour is a Chicago man who makes 
 more money than the average American citizen would 
 know what to do with. But Mr. Armour, while a man 
 of simple tastes, with no desire to throw money into 
 Lake Michigan for the sole purpose of seeing it sink, 
 contrives to disburse large sums yearly for the better- 
 ment of the human race. In a public way, excepting 
 the Armour mission, kindergarten, dispensary, etc., 
 Mr. Armour has done little as yet to immortalize him- 
 self among the great benefactors, but his list of pri- 
 vate charit'es is a long one. Many a boy has he 
 helped through school and college, and many a poor 
 family has he relieved from distress. 
 
HOBBIES OF MILLIONAIRES. 
 
 503 
 
 ly Chicago- 
 
 i^^gest and 
 
 will be re- 
 
 iiey in tele- 
 se lavishly 
 le ordinary 
 eration for 
 utdone by 
 vagant an- 
 b that will 
 : embrace, 
 r. Yerkes's 
 -lid money 
 nying bril- 
 
 ho makes 
 zen would 
 lile a man 
 oney into 
 ig it sink, 
 le better- 
 excepting 
 iry, etc., 
 alize him- 
 st of pri- 
 y has he 
 a poor 
 
 His personal appearance is that of a man who is in 
 close contact with the good things of life, and a glance 
 at his home shows that he knows how to spend money 
 for the comfort of his family and for the gratification 
 of the better tastes. 
 
 New Yorkers need not be reminded of what they 
 owe to good old Peter Cooper, who began life in 
 earnest when a boy in a hat factory, and who died 
 lamented by the thousands whom his earnest, charit- 
 able life had blessed. It might be said that Peter 
 Cooper made his money solely for the good he could 
 do with it. At all events he lived to a great age, and 
 saw the practical benefits that arose from his well- 
 directed efforts. To have died knowing that a whole 
 city was in mourning, and that a great nation was 
 sounding his praises, was in itself a reward for money 
 rightly spent and time consumed. 
 
 Too Great to be a Baronet. 
 
 George Peabody spent his money alike for England 
 and America, and his seventy-five years of life gave 
 him ample opportunity to give vent to his instincts of 
 benevolence. Like Peter Cooper, he did not wait for 
 death to come before he parted with his surplus 
 fortune. Peabody was American born, and to his 
 glory he declined the offer of a baronetcy from the 
 Queen. Far more grateful to the good man was the 
 resolution of thanks passed by the Congress of the 
 United States. That was a distinction, coming from 
 the whole people, of which he was justly proud. 
 
CHAPTER XXXII. 
 Other Rich Men. 
 
 New York has many rich men left. Indeed, the 
 fortunes of some of them are greater than that left by 
 Mr. Gould. In the minds of solid financiers there has 
 always been a question as to the character of Mr. 
 Gould's fortune. To some of them it consisted to a 
 very large extent in what they said was " paper," that 
 is, that it was made up principally of railroad stocks 
 liable to the shifting changes of Wall street, and bonds 
 equally changeable in value. 
 
 Those who were very close to Mr. Gould say that 
 Mr. Gould's fortune rested on as sound a foundation 
 as any. The purpose of this chapter is to show that 
 what may be considered the youngest nation on the 
 face of the earth has any number of very rich men, 
 and that New York city, which, compared to London, 
 Berlin, Paris, and St. Petersburg, is a toddling infant, 
 holds the greater number of them. 
 
 Mr. Gould's fortune was not made in Wall street, 
 strictly speaking. He never once put foot in the New 
 York Stock Exchange. His fortunes grew out of his 
 knowledge of railroads, and he pushed this knowledge 
 for all it was woi th. It must be said that the fortunes 
 of the remaining rich men in New York city were also, 
 
 (504) 
 
OTHER RICH MEN. 
 
 505 
 
 Indeed, the 
 n that left by 
 iers there has 
 acter of Mr. 
 onsisted to a 
 ' paper," that 
 ilroad stocks 
 ^t, and bonds 
 
 )uld say that 
 a foundation 
 o show that 
 ation on the 
 ry rich men, 
 to London, 
 lling infant, 
 
 Wall street, 
 in the New 
 w out of his 
 ; knowledore 
 the fortunes 
 y were also, 
 
 in the majority of instances, the direct result of the 
 vast railroad development of the country. 
 
 Enoriiioiis Kailroad Dcvel()i>nieiit. 
 
 The railroad development of America lias been 
 vaster and more rapid than in any of the nations of 
 Europe. The fortunes of the Vanderbilts, which col- 
 lectively now approximate 5^200,000,000, gained their 
 first headway when Commodore Vanderbilt started in 
 the transportation business, first in a sloop, then in 
 river and ocean steamers, and later in the Harlem and 
 New York Central railroads. 
 
 It may be said, in fact, that the fortunes of the Van- 
 derbilts were not stricdy assured until the old Com- 
 modore gained complete control of the Harlem and 
 the New York Central. He made William H. Van- 
 derbilt, his elder son, the chief custodian of his great 
 fortune, and it was multiplied by him and by natural 
 causes until he died, and it was left to Cornelius, W^il- 
 liam K., Frederick, and George, Mrs. Shepard, Mrs. 
 Sloane, Mrs. Webb, and Mrs. Twombly. 
 
 The women of the Vanderbilt family are probably 
 the richest individual women in the country. The 
 fortunes of the Astors came principally from trade, 
 and later from investments in real estate. It is be- 
 lieved that the Astor fortune is also in the neiorhbor- 
 hood of $200,000,000, and it has for a foundation vast 
 real estate properties in the best parts of New York 
 city and in the suburban towns. The Astors very 
 seldom sell a parcel of real estate. 
 
606 
 
 ..^■*l 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GO^LD. 
 
 A 3Iaii of Ready Cash. 
 
 Russell Sage is one of the very rich men of New 
 York. It has been frequently said and at times de- 
 monstrated that Mr. Sage could raise more ready cash 
 in a given time than others who are counted richer 
 than he. Mr. Sage is probably worth $50,000,000. 
 His fortune was also made in railroads. 
 
 He had a hand in the development of the Union 
 Pacific, the Wabash, the Missouri Pacific, and other 
 railroads which have been known as the Gould prop- 
 erties. Mr. Sage first met Mr. Gould in 1853, when 
 Mr. Gould, then a very young man, went to Troy to 
 attend a meeting of the old Rensselaer and Saratoga 
 road. 
 
 From that day to the day of Mr. Gould's death Mr. 
 Sage and Mr. Gould were inseparable. Mr. Sage 
 was twenty years Mr. Gould's senior. Mr. Gould 
 was the genius of the combination, and Mr. Sage was 
 the economic scholar, wise in counsel, and strong to 
 carry out a line of policy. He once shed tears in say- 
 ing that Mr. Gould had sons to come after him, while 
 he, Mr. Sage, had no one to carry on the great for- 
 tune which he had accumulated. 
 
 J. Pierpont Morgan has a fortune of $40,000,000, 
 part of it the direct result of conservative banking re- 
 lations with the great railroad properties of America. 
 Mr. Morgan will always be remembered for the char- 
 acter and substantial qualities imparted by his bank- 
 ing house to railroad properties. The Rockefellers, 
 John D. and William, the former with a fortune of 
 
OTHER RICH MEN. 
 
 507 
 
 en of New 
 Lt times de- 
 ready cash 
 nted richer 
 50,000,000. 
 
 the Union 
 
 and other 
 
 iould prop- 
 
 1853, when 
 
 to Troy to 
 
 d Saratoga 
 
 ^ death Mr. 
 Mr. Sage 
 
 Mr. Gould 
 Sage was 
 strong to 
 
 ;ars in say- 
 him, while 
 great for- 
 
 1-0,000,000, 
 
 nking re- 
 America, 
 the char- 
 his bank- 
 ckefellers, 
 rtune of 
 
 j^ 1 00,000,000 and the latter with something like ^60,- 
 000,000, can also ascribe their great wealth to the 
 great development of America. 
 
 Millions ill Petroleum. 
 
 They were the first to recognize the wealth that 
 would come from the petroleum fields of Pennsylvania. 
 They gathered around them young men of industry 
 and keenness, one of the first being Charles Pratt, 
 and, later on, Henry H. Rogers, John D. Archbold and 
 others. Henry M. Flagler stands side by side with 
 the Rockefellers, and so do the Paines of Ohio and 
 New York. The Standard Oil men, taken as a group, 
 may be put down as worth collectively nearly $300,- 
 000,000. 
 
 D. O. Mills is certainly worth $10,000,000, made 
 primarily out of the gold and silver mines and the 
 railroad properties necessary to their development in 
 the far West. Collis P. Huntington maybe set down 
 for ;j20,ooo,ooo, more the result of the development 
 of the far Western railroads than to the mines. The 
 Goelets, like the Astors, got their wealth principally 
 from real estate investments. The Goelet family may 
 be put down for about $50,000,000. 
 
 Austin Corbin's fortune of $10,000,000 is due to 
 great railroad enterprises. So are John S. Kennedy's 
 accumulations. Adrian Iselin has derived his fortune 
 of $10,000,000 in the banking business, while Elbridge 
 T. Gerry and his people can trace their wealth to 
 shrewd mercantile industry. There are others in the 
 calendar of very rich men in New York, and it is all 
 
508 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 a Story which has from thc2 beginning been dazzling 
 in its interest. 
 
 Fortmio's Slaves. 
 
 On learning of Mr. Gould's death many said they 
 would be satisfied with a very insignificant part of his 
 fortune ; their one comment was that Mr. Gould was 
 a vC!ry young man to die. They wondered why long 
 since he had not relinquished all interest in his vast 
 enterprises and studiously given his time to recuperate 
 the inroads made upon his health by the severe strain 
 of business. 
 
 The same was said of Alexander T. Stewart when 
 he died, and of Charles Pratt. The same will be said 
 when other very rich men die. These comments came 
 from people who fail to appreciate the enormous re- 
 sponsibilities resting on men with great fortunes. 
 Commodore Vanderbilt once said that it is the easiest 
 thing possible to make a fortune here in New York, 
 but after that it is the most difficult thinor in the world 
 to keep it. 
 
 Unless it is watched carefully, unless all the influ- 
 ences bearing upon it are personally controlled, there 
 is great danger that it will melt. Another point is 
 that these men, after laboring for a lifetime, cannot 
 shut off steam and rest in idleness. It would affect 
 them mentally and physically to do so. 
 
 A Hard Worker. 
 
 Mr. Gould once said at the time of the great Wa- 
 bash strike : " I am afraid the employees on our road 
 think they work too hard. Work never hurt any- 
 
)een dazzling 
 
 any said they 
 nt part of his 
 Ir. Gould was 
 red why long 
 ist in his vast 
 to recuperate 
 severe strain 
 
 Stewart when 
 le will be said 
 )mments came 
 enormous re- 
 peat fortunes, 
 is the easiest 
 n New York, 
 r in the world 
 
 all the influ- 
 itrolled, there 
 )ther point is 
 fetime, cannot 
 t would affect 
 
 he great Wa- 
 js on our road 
 ^er hurt any- 
 
 OTHER HTOIl MKN. SOl) 
 
 body. I am glad to work, and I will bet a silver dol- 
 lar to an apple that I work harder in a day than any 
 twenty men on our road do in a week." It is the 
 same with most rich men. Tiieir work is different, 
 but it is qrrindinof and wearincr on the nervous 
 system, and no man knew this better than Mr. Gould. 
 
 When John Jacob Astor died in 1848 worth $25,- 
 000,000, he left 5J 1 0,000,000 more than the richest 
 American before him. Stephen Girard, and the Astor 
 fortune was the only one of its size in the country. 
 Jay Gould died worth 5^72,000,000. 
 
 The lists of rich men are easy to make and impos- 
 sible to regard as more than the merest approxima- 
 tions. William Astor's estate paid a legacy duty, for 
 instance, which indicated a fortune twice that assigned 
 him by the public. The New York World gave a list 
 of 125 fortunes of over ^^5,000,000. This was, 
 curiously enough, about the number of such fortunes 
 assigned to the United States by M. C. de Varigny in 
 an article in the Revue des Deux Mondes for May, 
 
 1890. 
 
 Number of Rich Men. 
 
 M. Varigny placed the fortunes of $5,000,000 and 
 over, in the United States, at 100, and in the world at 
 700, distributed as follows : — 
 
 England 200 
 
 United States loo 
 
 Germany and Austria 100 
 
 F'rance 75 
 
 Russia 50 
 
 India 50 
 
 Other Countries 1 25 
 
 Total 700 
 
olO 
 
 LIFE OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 The number of such fortunes in this country is, we 
 believe, nearer 200, and they are probably about a 
 quarter of those in the world. The United States is in 
 proportion to population by far the richest of the world's 
 oreater countries, though the per capita wealth of the 
 Australian colonies is greater, reaching in Victoria 
 nearly twice the ordinary estimate for this country of 
 j^iooo a person. 
 
 In the size and number of very great fortunes, no 
 country approaches the United States. Great Britain 
 has, Mr. Goschen said in a speech in 1887, ninety-five 
 persons who have an income of over $250,000 a year. 
 This is 4 per cent, on $6,250,000, and implies less than 
 100 persons of a fortune of this and over in a country 
 where the income tax is closely collected on great for- 
 tunes : but there must, judging from various estimates, 
 be in the United States over 100 and perhaps 150 or 
 200 persons who are receiving 5 per cent, on $5,000,- 
 000 and over. 
 
 Baron Kotlischild'iii Wealth. 
 
 The largest fortune in personal property left in 
 England from 1870 to 1880 was Baron L. N. de Roths- 
 child's, of $13,500,000. In this time there were 
 only thirteen men who left over $5,000,000 ; fifty-six 
 who left over $2,500,000, and 195 who left $1,250,000. 
 This, it is true, makes no account of real estate, but 
 except in the Astor and Westminster and Bedford 
 estates, the fabulous fortunes of to-day are not in 
 real estate. 
 
 English fortunes are more largely in realty than 
 
oil n try is, we 
 ibly about a 
 :d States is in 
 of the world's 
 wealth of the 
 ;■ in Victoria 
 s country of 
 
 fortunes, no 
 
 jreat Britain 
 
 7, ninety-five 
 
 D,ooo a year. 
 
 lies less than 
 
 in a country 
 
 on great for- 
 
 s estimates, 
 
 aps 150 or 
 
 on $5,000,- 
 
 erty left in 
 . de Roths- 
 lere were 
 )0 ; fifty-six 
 $1,250,000. 
 estate, but 
 d Bedford 
 are not in 
 
 ealty than 
 
 OTHKK HIGH MEN. 
 
 511 
 
 
 those of any other country, and in 1873 sixteen English 
 landholders were estimated to have rent-rolls outside 
 of London of $175,000 a year or more. Of these, 
 three, the Duke of Northumberland, Iiarl Derby and 
 Sir J. W. Ramsden, were credited with $800,000 an- 
 nually; three, the Dukes of Devonshire and I^edford 
 ■\nd Sir Lawrence Polk, with $600,000, and the rest 
 A'ith lesser sums. This list leaves out the Duke of 
 Westminster, a London landholder, and the reduction 
 in English rents in the last twenty years has been at 
 least 25 per cent. 
 
 Kii^Iisli >Icr<'liaiit Priiicos. 
 
 English mercantile fortunes are certainly no larger 
 than in this country. When Mr. Rylands, the great 
 Manchester merchant, whose widow bouMit the 
 Spencer library, sold his business fourteen years before 
 his death, it was capitalized at $10,000,000. Holloway 
 left $15,000,000, and the owner of Tranby Croft was 
 credited with $25,000,000, won in the shipping trade; 
 and no Eno^lish railroad fortune is lareer. 
 
 The average of European fortunes is below that of 
 England and this country. Prince Schwartzenberg, 
 the richest man in Austria, with 170 square miles of 
 territory, was said to have left $55,000,000 when he 
 died a few years ago. There are two or three noble- 
 men in Germany who own over 100 square miles, but 
 the largest German income is Herr Krupp's, of 
 $1,090,500, and the next, a little smaller, is the income 
 of the Berlin Rothschild. 
 
 The Orleans family is said to have a fortune of 
 
 'fM^ 
 
Ilfl 
 
 f 
 
 512 
 
 LIFK OF JAY GOULD. 
 
 $150,000,000, but it is widely divided, though the 
 members of the family own a common tie. If the 
 Orleans were poorer, the chances of seeing one of 
 them on the throne would be better. The Duke of 
 Galliera, a Franco-Italian railway magnate, left $SSr 
 000,000 in France and j^i 5,000,000 in Italy in the past 
 decade, and this is by far the largest personal fortune 
 mentioned in Latin Europe. M. Leroy Beaulieu, a 
 high authority, estimated that in Paris, with its 2.500,- 
 000, only 8000 persons spent over j^ 10,000 a year. 
 There are thrice this number in New York, and tiie 
 n'jmber in Philadelphia must be as large. From 
 1876 to 1886, eleven years, 15,565 estates went 
 through the Orphans' Court in Philadelphia of an 
 average value of ^^3 6,000. At thirty years to a gen- 
 eration, this would be only one-third the number of 
 such estates in the city. It is certainly not over half, 
 and there are therefore from 30,000 to 45,000 persons 
 in Philadelphia worth an average of $36,000, whose 
 aggregate wealth is from ten to fifteen times that left 
 by Mr. Jay Gould alone. 
 
 The Armour property of Chicago takes rank among 
 the great fortunes of the United States. It has been 
 mostly acquired in the produce business, and is the 
 result of great financial ability and enterprise. Mr. 
 Armour's gift of J 1,500,000 to the city of Chicago 
 for a university shows the spirit of the man. 
 
ed, though the 
 
 ion tie. If the 
 
 seeing one of 
 
 The Duke of 
 
 rnate, left $55,- 
 Italy in the past 
 »ersonal fortune 
 roy Bcaulieu, a 
 
 with its 2.500,- 
 U 0,000 a year. 
 
 York, and the 
 
 large. F"rom 
 estates went 
 adelphia of an 
 ^ears to a gen- 
 the number of 
 r not over half, 
 45,000 persons 
 $36,000, whose 
 
 times that left 
 
 es rank among 
 3. It has been 
 3SS, and is the 
 iterprise. Mr. 
 ty of Chicago 
 man.