John D. Rockefeller: American Industrialist
John D. Rockefeller: American Industrialist
John D. Rockefeller: American Industrialist
Rockefeller
American industrialist
Rockefeller was the eldest son and second of six children born to traveling physician and
snake-oil salesman William (“Big Bill”) Avery Rockefeller and Eliza Davison Rockefeller.
He moved with his family to Moravia, New York, and, in 1851, toOswego, New York,
where he attended Oswego Academy. The family relocated to Strongsville, a town
near Cleveland, Ohio, in 1853, and six years later—after attending and later dropping
out of Cleveland’s Central High School, taking a single business class at Folsom
Mercantile College, and working as a bookkeeper—Rockefeller established his first
enterprise, a commission business dealing in hay, grain, meats, and other goods. Sensing
the commercial potential of the expanding oil production in western Pennsylvania in the
early 1860s, he built his first oil refinery, near Cleveland, in 1863. Within two years it
was the largest refinery in the area, and thereafter Rockefeller devoted himself
exclusively to the oil business.
In 1870 Rockefeller and a few associates, a group that included American financierHenry
M. Flagler, incorporated the Standard Oil Company (Ohio). Because of Rockefeller’s
emphasis on economical operations, Standard prospered and began to buy out its
competitors until, by 1872, it controlled nearly all the refineries in Cleveland. That fact
enabled the company to negotiate with railroads for favoured rates on its shipments of
oil. It acquired pipelines and terminal facilities, purchased competing refineries in other
cities, and vigorously sought to expand its markets in the United States and abroad. In
1881 Rockefeller and his associates placed the stock of Standard of Ohio and
its affiliates in other states under the control of a board of nine trustees, with
Rockefeller at the head. They thus established the first major U.S. “trust” and set a
pattern of organization for other monopolies. By 1882 Standard Oil had a near
monopoly on the oil business in the United States.
The aggressive competitive practices of Standard Oil, which many regarded as ruthless,
and the growing public hostility toward monopolies, of which Standard was the best-
known, caused some industrialized states to enact antimonopoly laws and led to the
passage by the U.S. Congress of the Sherman Antitrust Act in 1890 (see also antitrust
law). In 1892 the Ohio Supreme Court held that the Standard Oil Trust was a monopoly
in violation of an Ohio law prohibiting monopolies. Rockefeller evaded the decision by
dissolving the trust and transferring its properties to companies in other states, with
interlocking directorates so that the same nine men controlled the operations of
theaffiliated companies. In 1899 these companies were brought back together in
a holding company, Standard Oil Company (New Jersey), which existed until 1911, when
the U.S. Supreme Court declared it in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act and
therefore illegal. Standard Oil’s questionable ethics were also taken to task by American
journalist Ida Tarbell in her 19-part exposé and commentary called The History of the
Standard Oil Company, which was released in installments by McClure’s
Magazine between 1902 and 1904.