The money kings : the epic story of the Jewish immigrants who transformed Wall Street and shaped modern America
(Book)
332.0973 SCHUL
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332.0973 SCHUL
1 available
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Published Reviews
Choice Review
Schulman, author of Sons of Wichita (2014), a biography of the Koch family, and deputy Washington bureau chief of Mother Jones, has written a detailed, and perhaps definitive, account of how German Jewish immigrants to the US went from being peddlers and shopkeepers to the founders of many of the world's largest investment banks. Goldman Sachs; Kuhn, Loeb & Co.; Lehman Brothers; and J. & W. Seligman & Co. were all Jewish-owned banks that financed such major companies of the 20th century as General Motors, Macy's, and Sears. This lengthy history provides details about the relationships, politics, and marriages among Schulman's subjects, among whom banker Jacob Schiff is the central figure. Schiff, whose name may be almost forgotten to contemporary Jews, was a philanthropist who led the fight against Czarist Russia's anti-Semitic policies toward its Jewish population. Between the late 19th century and his death in 1920, Schiff and Louis Marshall were the unofficial but most powerful spokesmen for American Jewry during a period that witnessed the rise of anti-Semitism and nativism in American life. This book is indispensable for understanding the currents of bigotry that characterized the early 20th century in the US, a period not unlike the present. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students and faculty. --Jack Robert Fischel, emeritus, Millersville University
Publisher's Weekly Review
Biographer Schulman (Sons of Wichita) delivers an ambitious and captivating group portrait of Jewish financial dynasties "with profound legacies" in the U.S. from the 1830s to the present. Delving into the genealogy of prominent "members of a close-knit German-Jewish aristocracy of New York," Schulman describes how the nation's unregulated "fledgling financial system" during the Civil War created an opportunity for these immigrants to rise from peddlers to Wall Street moguls. In addition to providing in-depth profiles of well-known families like Goldman, Sachs, Guggenheim, and Lehman, he spotlights Jacob H. Schiff, the "greatest Jewish philanthropist of the 20th century." An early head of Kuhn Loeb (a major investment bank until the 1980s), Schiff was dubbed the "Little Giant" after he "plunged" the company into the railroad business. Already successful when he joined the firm in 1875, Schiff built Montefiore Hospital, funded both the Henry Street Settlement and Barnard College, and brought Russian Jews to the U.S. during the pogroms. Schulman presents a wealth of fascinating detail (the blockade-running Lehman brothers supplied the Confederate army with black-market cotton) and details how, despite their status, these financial titans faced antisemitism. Full of vivid personalities and intriguing tales of alliances and rivalries, this is a sensitive and compassionate portrait of the families that built Wall Street. (Nov.)
Kirkus Book Review
Spirited account of the first great American financiers, many of them German Jewish immigrants. Lehman, Goldman, and Sachs are well-known names, writes Schulman, deputy Washington bureau chief of Mother Jones and author of the Koch family biography Sons of Wichita. Less well known are the American Warburgs and the Seligmans, but all built the nation's first modern banking system. Many of these families first landed in the South. Henry Lehman, for example, was born in Bavaria but moved to Montgomery, Alabama, where he traded in that most valuable regional commodity, cotton. The need to establish a northern entrepôt brought some of the Lehman brothers to New York, "the nation's financial capital" and "primary shipping link to European ports such as Liverpool, through which much of Britain's cotton imports from the United States passed." (So extensive was their network that it contributed to Ulysses S. Grant's later-reversed, infamous order that Jews be expelled from the vast military district under his command.) Building family dynasties through intermarriage, Lehman and other Jewish entrepreneurs found opportunity in the post--Civil War need for financing through bonds. The deployment of the transatlantic telegraph cable soon internationalized the American market, requiring banking and trading services. Though Schulman is keenly aware of how antisemitic tropes have arisen from the financiers' activities--which gave birth, he notes, to "the first American-Jewish lobby"--he points to plenty of gentiles who took the lead, including the Morgans, Harrimans, and Rockefellers. Many of their firms thrived for more than a century. However, as the author points out in this wide-ranging history, "Of the mighty German-Jewish financial houses that had defined an epoch of American finance, only Goldman Sachs, which waited until 1999 to go public, survived…to become the world's preeminent investment bank." A welcome, highly readable contribution to American financial and social history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Reviews
Goldman, Sachs, Kuhn, Loeb, Warburg, Schiff, Lehman, Seligman. You know their names, now here are the stories of the German Jewish immigrants who launched modern finance, helping to lift the United States from debtor nation to financial giant and capitalizing its industry. They also shaped the fate of the millions of eastern European Jews who reached New York harbor in the early 1900s, among them the New York Times best-selling Schulman's paternal grandparents. Prepub Alert. Copyright 2023 Library Journal
Copyright 2023 Library Journal.Publishers Weekly Reviews
Biographer Schulman (Sons of Wichita) delivers an ambitious and captivating group portrait of Jewish financial dynasties "with profound legacies" in the U.S. from the 1830s to the present. Delving into the genealogy of prominent "members of a close-knit German-Jewish aristocracy of New York," Schulman describes how the nation's unregulated "fledgling financial system" during the Civil War created an opportunity for these immigrants to rise from peddlers to Wall Street moguls. In addition to providing in-depth profiles of well-known families like Goldman, Sachs, Guggenheim, and Lehman, he spotlights Jacob H. Schiff, the "greatest Jewish philanthropist of the 20th century." An early head of Kuhn Loeb (a major investment bank until the 1980s), Schiff was dubbed the "Little Giant" after he "plunged" the company into the railroad business. Already successful when he joined the firm in 1875, Schiff built Montefiore Hospital, funded both the Henry Street Settlement and Barnard College, and brought Russian Jews to the U.S. during the pogroms. Schulman presents a wealth of fascinating detail (the blockade-running Lehman brothers supplied the Confederate army with black-market cotton) and details how, despite their status, these financial titans faced antisemitism. Full of vivid personalities and intriguing tales of alliances and rivalries, this is a sensitive and compassionate portrait of the families that built Wall Street. (Nov.)
Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Schulman, D. (2023). The money kings: the epic story of the Jewish immigrants who transformed Wall Street and shaped modern America (First edition.). Alfred A. Knopf.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Schulman, Daniel. 2023. The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Schulman, Daniel. The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2023.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Schulman, D. (2023). The money kings: the epic story of the jewish immigrants who transformed wall street and shaped modern america. First edn. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Schulman, Daniel. The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America First edition., Alfred A. Knopf, 2023.