Aaron Nusbaum
Aaron Nusbaum | |
---|---|
Born | January 8, 1859 |
Died | July 1, 1936 | (aged 77)
Occupation | entrepreneur philanthropist |
Aaron Nusbaum (January 8, 1859 – July 1, 1936) was an entrepreneur and philanthropist who is best known as one of the two men who acquired 50% of the stock in the fledgling Sears, Roebuck and Co. from Richard Sears and started it on the road to becoming a retail giant.
Early career[]
By 1893 he was a successful businessman in Chicago and earned his first fortune when he obtained a concession to sell soda water soft drinks at the World’s Columbian Exposition. He received the contract by doing a favor for Marshall Field, a member of the Fair’s planning commission. His profit for the summer’s work was $150,000.00. ($3,750,000.00 in 2010). He invested part of that money in Bastedo Tube Company, a pneumatic tube manufacturer whose product is used to deliver messages and money in department stores between floors and departments.[1] A sales call in 1895 led to his investment in Sears.
Purchase of Sears[]
In 1895 Aaron Nusbaum had a meeting with Richard Sears, the co-founder of Sears Roebuck and Company. Nusbaum thought the meeting would involve selling pneumatic tubes to Sears however Richard Sears had other plans. The company was short of cash and Sears offered to sell Nusbaum half of the company for $75,000.00.[2] In 1890 Julius Rosenwald had married Augusta Nusbaum, Aaron’s sister.[3] Nusbaum asked his brother-in-law if he would be willing to buy a quarter of Sears Roebuck for $37,500.00. Rosenwald agreed and they paid Richard Sears $75,000.00 for one-half interest in Sears Roebuck and Company.[4] The sale took place in 1895[5] and at that time the company was grossing about $800,000.00 a year. By 1900 that figure had grown to $11,000,000.00.[6]
In 1901 Sears and Rosenwald had a dispute with Nusbaum, bought him out for $1.25 million[7] and Nusbaum resigned as Secretary and Treasurer.[8] He was succeeded as Secretary by the Company’s outside lawyer, Albert Henry Loeb of Loeb & Adler (now known as Arnstein & Lehr, LLP) who had prepared the papers for Nusbaum’s departure and had also had structured the original sale to Nusbaum and Rosenwald and the incorporation of Sears in Illinois.[9] The decision to oust Nusbaum was difficult for Rosenwald. Despite repeated attempts by his wife Gussie for reconciliation, Nusbaum never spoke again with his brother-in-law or sister.[10]
Later years[]
After Nusbaum left Sears, he took an extended trip to Europe. On returning, he changed his name to Aaron Norman and his investments added to his wealth.[11] He founded Abacus & Associates, a wealth investment firm, which is still operated by his family.[12] Upon his death in 1936, Nusbaum willed a million dollars to the Assistance Fund, Inc, a New York charitable organization.[13]
References[]
- ^ EmigrantEntreprenueship.org; Daniel A. Wren and Ronald H. Greenwood, Management Innovators (1988).
- ^ Gregory D.L. Morris, Financial History, Spring 2007; EmigrantEntreprenueship.org.
- ^ Sears Archives.
- ^ Livingston, J.A. (April 27, 1950). "Employee morale is secret of Sears, Roebuck success". St. Petersburg Times.
- ^ EmigrantEntreprenueship.org; Peter M. Aseoli, Julius Rosenwald (2006).
- ^ Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History.
- ^ Emmet and Jeuck, Catalogues and Counters (1950) pp 47-53
- ^ Encyclopedia.com; Daniel A. Wren and Ronald B. Greenwood, Management Innovators (1988); Gregory D.L. Morris, Financial History, Spring 2007.
- ^ Daniel A. Wren and Ronald Greenwood, Management Innovators (1988); EmigrantEntreprenueship.org.
- ^ Julius Rosenwald | Immigrant Entrepreneurship
- ^ Stephanie Deutsch; You Need a Schoolhouse: Booker T. Washington, Julius Rosenwald, and the Building of Schools for the Segregated South (2011).
- ^ "The BeeHive Fund". Retrieved 13 November 2013.
- ^ "Leaves Million to Charity Fund". Rochester Journal. Associated Press. July 22, 1936.
External links[]
- Julius Rosenwald entry at Immigrant Entrepreneurship
- American businesspeople
- American philanthropists
- 1859 births
- 1936 deaths