Daniel Drew
After Vanderbilt, whose portrait
has been given elsewhere, Daniel
Drew is the most prominent
figure in the banking quarter,
and perhaps the most reckless.
Though now in his seventy-second
year, he is as energetic,
persevering, shrewd (and
unscrupulous, his enemies would
add), as he was in the prime of
life. He gives no sign of
physical or mental failure,
notwithstanding his constant
activity and the perpetual
strain upon his brain and
nerves.
Drew was born on a small farm
in Carmel, Putnam county, and
received a very limited
education. He learned to read,
write, and cipher while working
on he sterile land his father
owned; but beyond that cared
very little for books. At
fifteen he lost his father, and
at once determined to set up in
life for himself, a step he was
qualified for by his force of
will, strength of character, and
natural astuteness, very
remarkable in one so young. He
began by driving cattle to
market and selling them, first
in a small way, but gradually
increasing his trade until it
grew to be of considerable
value. For sixteen or seventeen
years he was a cattle-drover;
but, after he had reached
thirty-two, he moved to this
City, and established a depot
for their sale, sending agents
to the country to purchase
stock. He gained money rapidly,
and, in 1834, made an
investment, with others, in a
steamboat, which resulted in a
great interest in the
transportation of passengers on
the Hudson River.
Drew's line
was so ably managed that it
became popular, though it
entered into competition with
the lines owned by Vanderbilt
and others. The rivalry was very
sharp for a long while, the
steamers, at one time, carrying
passengers from here to Albany
at a shilling apiece. Drew was a
large stockholder in the company
formed by Isaac Newton, in 1840,
which was the origin of the
People's Line. He refused to
dispose of his vessels when the
Hudson River Railway was
completed, though his friends
advised him to, declaring he
would be ruined if he did not.
The road increased the patronage
of the boats, as he had
foreseen, and to this day, they
are most desirable property. The
Drew, finished year before last,
is the finest steamboat that
floats on any interior waters.
She is more elaborate and
gorgeous even than the famed
Bristol and Providence, running
between New York and Boston.
For
ten or twelve years Drew was a
banker and stock broker, having
formed a partnership with Nelson
Taylor and his son-in-law. He
has been a daring and active
operator in Wall street ever
since, and is the most
formidable opponent Vanderbilt
has had. He lost $500,000 in the
famous Harlem corner some years
ago; but he is not likely to be
caught so again. He has long
been a heavy stockholder in Erie
and other prominent roads, and
he plays bull and bear, and
sells short and long, as his
interest demands, quite
confounding those who don't
understand his multifarious
shifts.
Drew's foes accuse him
of numerous
"irregular"
transactions; but he claims that
he does nothing that the Stock
Exchange and Wall street morals
do not sanction. He has a wide
reputation for charity, having
founded the Drew Theological
Seminary at Morris, N. J., by
giving it half a million of
dollars, and having contributed
to various religious and
educational institutions. Drew
is in no way noticeable in face
or figure. He is six feet high,
slender, with limbs loosely put
together, and rather awkward in
his movements. He has a rustic
appearance, is careless in his
dress, and unconventional in his
manners.
David Groesbeck
David
Groesbeck, of the firm of David
Groesbeck & Co., the
well-known bankers in Broad
street, is, like Drew, wholly
self-made. He was born in Albany
county; had a hard struggle with
fortune; picked up a slender
education, was apprenticed to a
shoemaker, went to the capital
afterward, and was clerk in a
policy office. Failing to be
satisfied there, he came to New
York, where he soon evinced such
remarkable capacity for business
that he attracted the attention
of Jacob Little, so long the
great bear of Wall street. He
went into Little's office, and
rose from one position to
another, until he became the
eminent banker's confidential
clerk. He showed such remarkable
financial ability that his
employer advised him to go into
business for himself, and lent
him money for the purpose. For
years Groesbeck has been a
banker, and though he has failed
several times, he has always
preserved his reputation for
honor, and his house is today
one of the wealthiest in the
City. He is not a reckless
speculator; but he buys and
sells stocks, and lends money on
them; some of his operations
being immense. Last year he is
reputed to have made $2,000,000,
and his private fortune is
estimated at $10,000,000. He is
about fifty-two, tall, dark, and
looks like an anxious,
overworked man. He is liberal to
a fault, and does many generous
acts, of which few ever hear.
Jay
Cooke
Jay Cooke is known
everywhere as the agent of the
Government during the issue of
the 7-30 and 5-20 bonds. By that
loan he made a vast fortune, and
is now one of great bankers of
Wall street. He is a native of
Ohio, having been born in
Portland, now Sandusky, in the
Summer of 1821. His father was a
member of Congress (this is not
mentioned to cast any discredit
on the banker, but merely as a
fact for which he can not be
held responsible), and having
the name of Eleutheros, which
nobody could pronounce or spell
properly, he determined to give
his children short names. So the
future financier was called Jay.
The
elder Cooke having suffered some
adversity, and his son finding
it out, determined to help
himself. So he went to the store
of an acquaintance in town, and
without the consent or knowledge
of his parents got a situation
as clerk. He proved himself
excellently qualified for
business, and after acting as
book-keeper and salesman in St.
Louis and Philadelphia, he went,
in his seventeenth year, into
the banking house of E.W. Clark
& Co. (in the latter city),
of which he was afterward a
partner. Remaining in the firm
twenty years, he retired, and in
the early part of 1861 opened a
banking establishment of his own
with his brother-in law, Wm. G.
Moorhead, under the name of Jay
Cooke & Co. The financial
ability of the new firm,
displayed in negotiating
different loans, attracted the
attention of the Government.
Secretary Chase made Cooke &
Co. the agents in Philadelphia
for the three series of 7-30,
and also special agents of the
$500,000,000 5-20 loan.
The
risk was great, and large
capital was required, but when
it is remembered that 5/8 of one
per cent. was paid, on the whole
amount, the profit will be seen
to have been handsome. The firm
made several millions, and Cooke
himself, now doing business at
the corner of Wall and Nassau
streets, is supposed to be worth
$15,000,000 to $20,000,000.
Cooke is very fresh in his
feelings, and remarkable for his
cheerful and genial disposition.
He has the reputation of a very
charitable man, having given
freely to churches and colleges.
He has a fine country seat on
one of the islands of Lake Erie,
near Sandusky, and dispenses a
lavish hospitality. He has a
bright, sympathetic face,
agreeable manners, and a firm
month that represents his
character.
Fisk & Hatch
Another
firm that has made a fortune by
acting as agents of government
loans is Fisk & Hatch.
Before the War they were both
living on salaries; Hatch being
an officer in a Jersey City
bank, at $1,200 a year. Soon as
they began to negotiate the
bonds they found themselves on
the high road to fortune. They
now do a very large business in
Nassau, near Wall street, and
have cleared $1,000,000 a year.
They are both young and born
financiers. They are much
esteemed; do a strictly
legitimate business; are
conscientious members of the
church, and liberal in their
charities.
August Belmont
August
Belmont came here originally as
the agent of the Rothschild's,
and is, perhaps, better known as
a politician than as a banker.
His office is at No. 50 Wall
street, in a great, dingy
granite building, where the
largest transactions are made.
He does most of his business on
foreign account; is very
wealthy, and one of the
shrewdest of financiers. His
wife is the daughter of
Commodore Perry, and his home in
Fifth avenue, corner of
Eighteenth street, is interiorly
one of the most elegant and
luxurious in town. His picture
gallery alone is said to be
worth $400,000 or $500,000. He
is the President of the
Democratic National Committee,
and has always taken a very
prominent part in politics. He
is small, heavy set, with a
short, thick nose, not inviting
in appearance, nor conciliating
in manner. Though a man of brain
and character, he is not at all
popular, nor does he wish to be,
satisfied with his position and
his unquestionable power. He is
a German by birth, though he has
French blood, and is often
alluded to by those who like him
not, as a "Dutch Jew."
He walks lame, having been
wounded in a duel while living
on the Continent; but in the
peculiar understanding of Wall
street he is not likely to be
crippled. He is too sagacious
and far-seeing to become
financially halt.
Brown
Brothers & Co.,
Brown
Brothers & Co., 59 Wall
street, is one of the most
eminent houses in America. Their
great marble banking-house is
not surpassed by any similar
establishment on this or the
other side of the Atlantic. It
cost over a million, and is an
architectural ornament to the
monetary quarter. The founder of
the house, James Brown, is still
in it. He is from the North of
Ireland; began life as a
linen-draper, and having made a
fortune, established the
banking-house with his brother,
who had been knighted for his
services to the British
Government. James Brown is
regarded as a high type of
business honor; is probably
worth $12,000,000 or
$15,000,000; is a devout
Presbyterian, and prominent in
numerous charities. He is nearly
sixty, but in excellent health
and one of our most useful
citizens.
James G. King's
Sons
James G. King's Sons
have a very quiet, plain
establishment at No. 54 William
street. James G. King has been
dead for some years, and the
business is continued by his
sons. It is one of the oldest
firms in the City, and in the
very best standing. It deals
largely in foreign exchange and
grants letters of credit
available in all the principal
cities of Europe. The Kings are
an old New York family, and
their commercial honor has never
been tarnished. They are very
rich, but wholly without
ostentation.
Leonard W.
Jerome
Leonard W. Jerome
is quite a contrast to such men
as the Browns and Kings. He
belongs to the present day
school of bold, often reckless
operators; represents the fast
financiers of the street. He was
formerly a newspaper publisher
in Rochester, but has for years
been a prominent operator in
stocks. He is shrewd, resolute,
full of expedients and
resources; makes and loses
fortunes every twelve months,
but manages to float conspicuous
on the financial tide. He is a
noted person; a man of the world
and fond of pleasure; dresses
showily; drives fleet horses;
has fast friends; enjoys
display; gives expensive
entertainments; is extravagant
and careless; is called
good-looking; lives with a free
hand and a liberal heart in the
sunshine of the passing hour.