John F. Seiberling from Wikipedia

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John F. Seiberling

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John Frederick Seiberling, Jr.
John F. Seiberling 93rd Congress 1973.jpg
1973
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Ohio’s 14th district
In office
January 3, 1971 – January 3, 1987
Preceded by William Hanes Ayres
Succeeded by Thomas C. Sawyer
Personal details
Born September 8, 1918
Akron, Ohio
Died August 2, 2008 (aged 89)
Copley, Ohio
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Behr
Children three
Alma mater
Military service
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1942-1946
Battles/wars World War II
Awards Legion of Merit

John Frederick Seiberling, Jr. (September 8, 1918 – August 2, 2008) was a United States Representative fromOhio. In 1974, he helped to establish what later became the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, and served on the House Judiciary Committee that held the impeachment hearings against President Richard Nixon.[1]

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Biography[edit]

Born in Akron, Ohio, Seiberling attended the public schools of Akron, and Staunton Military Academy in Virginia. He received his A.B. from Harvard University in 1941. His parents, Lieut. John Frederick Seiberling (1888–1962) and Henrietta McBrayer Buckler (1888–1979), had been wed on October 11, 1917 in Akron, Ohio. He had two sisters: Mary Gertrude Seiberling (born 1920) and Dorothy Buckler Lethbridge Seiberling (born 1922). His paternal grandparents were Frank Seiberling, the founder of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, and Gertrude Ferguson Penfield. His maternal grandparents were Julius Augustus Buckler and Mary Maddox.

During World War II he served in the United States Army from 1942 to 1946. He was subsequently awarded theLegion of Merit for his participation in the Allied planning of the D-Day invasion.[2]

He married Elizabeth “Betty” Behr, a Vassar graduate, in 1949. They have three sons: John B., David and Stephen.

Seiberling received his LL.B. from Columbia Law School in 1949. In 1950, Seiblerling was admitted to the New Yorkbar and went into private practice. He became an associate with a New York firm from 1949 to 1954, and then became a volunteer with the New York Legal Aid Society in 1950. From 1954 to 1970, he was an attorney with Goodyear. He once took a leave of absence rather than cross the picket lines during a United Rubber Workers strike.[2][3] During this time he was a member of the Tri-County Regional Planning Commission in Akron from 1964 to 1970.

In 1970, Seiberling won the Democratic nomination for Ohio’s 14th congressional district, based in Akron. Running on an anti-Vietnam War platform, he then defeated 10-term Republican William H. Ayres by 12 points in a major upset. He would be reelected seven more times from this district,[3] He never faced substantive opposition in what became a solidly Democratic district. Indeed, he won each of his seven reelection bids with over 70 percent of the vote.

His political legacy in the House includes playing a key role in a number of successful major, bipartisan parkland and environmental protection legislative efforts, including enactment of the massive Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act of 1980.[4] He also participated in the 1975 Congressional delegation meetings in the Middle East that helped precipitate the 1979 Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty.[2] He did not run for reelection in 1986, and endorsed Akron Mayor Tom Sawyer as his successor.

After his time in Congress, Seiberling served as faculty at the law school of the University of Akron from 1992 to 1996.

On January 8, 2001, he was presented with the Presidential Citizens Medal by President Clinton.[5]

On Thursday, October 12, 2006, President George W. Bush signed into law H.R. 6051, which designates the Federal building and United States courthouse in Akron as the John F. Seiberling Federal Building and United States Courthouse.[6] Seiberling died of respiratory failure at his home in Copley, Ohio on August 2, 2008.[1]

John Seiberling’s cousin, Francis Seiberling, was also a U.S. Representative from Ohio (Republican). His mother, Henrietta Buckler Seiberling, was a seminal figure in Alcoholics Anonymous’ founding and core spiritual ideals.[7][8] His paternal grandfather was Frank Seiberling, founder of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company.[7] The family’s one-time home, Stan Hywet, is now a national museum.[7]

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References[edit]

Howard Metzenbaum from Wikipedia

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Howard Metzenbaum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Howard Morton Metzenbaum (June 4, 1917 – March 12, 2008) was an American politician who served for almost 20 years as a Democratic member of the U.S. Senate from Ohio (1974, 1976–1995). He also served in the Ohio House of Representatives and Senate from 1943 to 1951.

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Early life and education[edit]

Metzenbaum was born 1917 in Cleveland, Ohio, to a poor family, the son of Anna (née Klafter) and Charles I. Metzenbaum.[1] His paternal grandparents were Jewish immigrants from Poland and France, and his maternal grandparents were Hungarian Jews.[2] He attended Glenville High School, for whom he ran track, while also working odd jobs after hours.[1] He graduated from Ohio State University, receiving a bachelor‘s degree in 1939 and a law degree in 1941.[3] During the 1940s, he practiced law in Cleveland. After initially facing discrimination due to his Jewish heritage, he found acceptance representing large labor unions, first with the Communications Workers of America and later the International Association of Machinists.[4]

Business career[edit]

Metzenbaum became independently wealthy through investments, particularly in real estate near what became theCleveland Hopkins International Airport, which Metzenbaum and his partner, Alva “Ted” Bonda, correctly envisioned would make for extremely profitable, 24-hour, well-lit parking lots. The business expanded to become Airport Parking Company of America (APCOA), the world’s largest parking lot company.[5] By 1970, he had sold his interest in APCOA Parking for $20 million.[6] In the early 1970s, Metzenbaum also co-owned the Sun Newspapers chain of weeklies which covered the Cleveland suburbs, a venture undertaken after his first senatorial election defeat.[7]

Political career[edit]

Ohio legislature[edit]

Metzenbaum served in the Ohio House of Representatives from 1943 to 1947. He then served in the Ohio Senate from 1947 to 1951.[4]

In 1958, he served as the campaign manager for future U.S. Senator Stephen M. Young, who, in a major upset, narrowly unseated incumbent Senator John Bricker, the Republican Party’s 1944 Vice Presidential nominee. He returned to assist Young in a successful re-election campaign in 1964.[4]

U.S. Senate[edit]

220px-John_Glenn_Low_Res.jpg

John Glenn, former rival and later ally to Metzenbaum

In 1970, Metzenbaum ran for the Senate seat vacated by Young, who chose not to run for a third term. He defeatedastronaut John Glenn in the Democratic primary by a 51% to 49% margin, but narrowly lost to Robert Taft, Jr. in thegeneral election. In 1974, when Senator William B. Saxbe (R-OH) resigned from his seat to accept the nomination asU.S. attorney generalGovernor Jack Gilligan appointed Metzenbaum to serve the remainder of Saxbe’s term. Metzenbaum ran for election to the seat, but in a bitter Democratic primary, Metzenbaum lost to Glenn, who subsequently won the general election by a landslide.

In the 1974 Senate primary, Metzenbaum contrasted his strong business background with Glenn’s military and astronaut credentials, saying his opponent had “never worked for a living”. Glenn’s reply came to be known as the “Gold Star Mothers” speech. He told Metzenbaum to go to a veterans’ hospital and “look those men with mangled bodies in the eyes and tell them they didn’t hold a job. You go with me to any Gold Star mother and you look her in the eye and tell her that her son did not hold a job.” Many felt the “Gold Star Mothers” speech won the primary for Glenn, which he won by 54 to 46%.[5]

In 1976, however, Metzenbaum sought a rematch against Taft. The race was close again, but this time he won, riding on Jimmy Carter‘s coattails. Taft resigned the seat a few days before his term ended, allowing Metzenbaum to be sworn in a few days early and hence have a small edge in seniority over other senators newly elected in 1976. He was reelected in 1982, comfortably defeating Republican state Senator Paul Pfeifer. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Glenn and Metzenbaum had strained relations. There was a thaw in 1983 when Metzenbaum endorsed Glenn for president. In 1981 Metzenbaum was insulted on the floor of the Senate when Senator Ernest Hollings of South Carolinacalled him the “senator from B’nai Brith“.[8] Some interpreted this as a slur on Metzenbaum’s Jewish faith.[8] Hollings later apologized to Metzenbaum and the remarks were stricken from the record.[9]

In 1988 Metzenbaum was opposed by Cleveland mayor George Voinovich. Voinovich accused Metzenbaum of being soft on child pornography.[10][11] Voinovich’s charges were criticized by many, including Glenn, Metzenbaum’s old-time rival in the Democratic party and then-Senate colleague, who recorded a statement for television refuting Voinovich’s charges.[12] Metzenbaum won the election by 57 to 43%, even as George H. W. Bush won Ohio’s electoral votes by 11 percent.[13]

Issues[edit]

Metzenbaum did not run for reelection in 1994. His son-in-law Joel Hyatt was nominated by the Democrats to replace him, but Hyatt lost to Lieutenant GovernorMike DeWine, who had been elected as Voinovich’s running mate in 1990.

While in the Senate, Metzenbaum was a powerful liberal. He was known as “Senator No” (a nickname shared by Republican Jesse Helms of North Carolina) and “Headline Howard”[5][14] due to his ability to filibuster bills by offering scores of amendments as well as blocking hidden special-interest legislation.[14]Metzenbaum took a particular interest in antitrust and consumer protection issues, often threatening to repeal the antitrust law exemption given to Major League Baseball. Since his retirement, however, the issue has gone largely unaddressed. Metzenbaum became well known for his service on the Senate Judiciary Committee, particularly because of his dedicated efforts to keep stringent antitrust laws and his pro-choice stance on abortion.

Metzenbaum was skeptical of corporations and agencies promoting aspartame. An allegation was that the G. D. Searle & Company was trying to bring aspartame to market and get it approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by submitting false data. Senator Metzenbaum berated Searle’s fabricated tests and also faulted the American Medical Association (AMA), whose Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reported, with some significant disclaimers, that aspartame was safe for most people. Senator Metzenbaum, referring to the report said, “I wish that this [JAMA] report could ease my concerns. It does not. It merely restates the FDA position, which relies solely on the Searle tests. As I have indicated these tests are under a cloud. In addition, the concerns raised recently by the scientists…were not even included in the report.” In 1985, the U.S. Senate heard testimony relating to an amendment by Senator Howard Metzenbaum which would require the quantity of aspartame in a product to be labeled.

Cleveland Stokers[edit]

In January 1968 Metzenbaum and Bonda purchased the Cleveland Stokers soccer club from Cleveland Indians executives Vernon Stouffer and Gabe Paul. Under their leadership, the team played one year in the North American Soccer League, and even won their division, before departing the league due to differences in business philosophy with the other owners.

Retirement[edit]

After leaving the Senate in 1995, Metzenbaum served as the chairman of the Consumer Federation of America. He died at his home in AventuraFlorida on March 12, 2008.[15] He was buried at Mayfield Cemetery in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.[16]

Refuting urban legends to the contrary, Metzenbaum asserted that he never represented the Communist Party.[17] When the National Republican Senatorial Committee suggested in 1987 that he had “Communist sympathies”, Chairman Rudy Boschwitz apologized for the insulting smear.[18]

Metzenbaum’s cousin, James Metzenbaum, was a prominent Ohio attorney who wrote a noted text on zoning law and once ran for a seat on the Ohio Supreme Court.

Legacy[edit]

220px-Old_Federal_Building_and_Post_Office,_Cleveland.jpg

The Old Federal Building and Post Office, now Howard M. Metzenbaum United States Courthouse

Metzenbaum was behind several important pieces of enacted legislation during his Senatorial career. These laws included the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, which required warning periods for large factory closures,[19][20] the Brady Law, which established a waiting period for handgun purchases,[5][21] and the Howard M. Metzenbaum Multiethnic Placement Act of 1994 (MEPA) (U.S. Public Law 103-82), which prohibits federally subsidizedadoption agencies from delaying or denying child placement on grounds of race or ethnicity.[22]

On May 27, 1998, the Old Federal Building and Post Office in downtown Cleveland was renamed the Howard M. Metzenbaum United States Courthouse in his honor.[23]

In popular culture[edit]

Metzenbaum was referenced in the Space Ghost Coast to Coast episode “Switcheroo”. Space Ghost mentioned him as a guest, but his staff had forgotten to book him.

Metzenbaum had a cameo in the 1993 film Dave. He was also referenced in numerous Cleveland-area advertisements.

References[edit]

30px-Commons-logo.svg.png Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Howard Metzenbaum
  1. a b Kroll, John (December 4, 1994). “Howard’s End: Metzenbaum was true to form through his last days in the Senate”The Plain Dealer. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  2. ^ “Ancestry of Howard Metzenbaum”. Wargs.com. Retrieved 2012-11-11.
  3. ^ Brudney, James J. (September 2008). “Memorial Service Honors Sen. Howard Metzenbaum ’41”This Month @ Moritz. The Ohio State University. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  4. a b c “METZENBAUM, HOWARD MORTON”The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Case Western University. July 24, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  5. a b c d “Howard M. Metzenbaum, 1917-2008: Ohio Senator was a champion of labor and master of rules”Los Angeles Times. 2008-03-13. pp. B9.
  6. ^ “Upset Time: POLITICS”TIME magazine. May 18, 1970. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
  7. ^ “Sun Newspapers,” Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, David D. VanTassel, ed., 1997. Retrieved 13 Mar. 2008
  8. a b Shanahan, Mike (November 14, 1981). “Prayer Issue Sparks Fiery Senate Debate”The Dispatch (Lexington, NC). Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  9. ^ “Hollings issues apology”Associated Press. The Augusta Chronicle. October 16, 1998. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  10. ^ Clements, Chase (September 8, 1988). “TV ad on child-porn legislation stirs up U.S. Senate race in Ohio”Toledo Blade. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  11. ^ Miller, Robert E. (October 20, 1988). “Metzenbaum Far Ahead Of Challenging Cleveland Mayor”Associated Press. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  12. ^ “In Ohio’s Senate race, the low road crosses the campaign trail. Negative TV ads roil Metzenbaum-Voinovich race but fail to stir voters”The Christian Science Monitor. October 6, 1988. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  13. ^ Hallett, Joe (November 9, 1988). “Metzenbaum scores a big victory over Voinovich”Toledo Blade. Retrieved May 6, 2013.
  14. a b Sullivan, Patricia (March 14, 2008). “Ohio Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum, 90; Fought Special-Interest Bills, Tax Breaks”The Washington Post. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
  15. ^ Howard M. Metzenbaum, Who Battled Big Business as Ohio Senator, Dies at 90
  16. ^ “METZENBAUM, Howard Morton – Biographical Information”. Bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2012-11-11.
  17. ^ Personal correspondence, Jan. 5, 2006, from Harold S. Stern, Metzenbaum’s law partner after 1953
  18. ^ “American Notes: POLITICS”TIME magazine. August 10, 1987. Retrieved 2007-02-18.
  19. ^ “Bill Summary & Status, 100th Congress (1987 – 1988), S.2527”. The Library of Congress. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  20. ^ “29 USC Chapter 23 – WORKER ADJUSTMENT AND RETRAINING NOTIFICATION”Legal Information Institute. Cornell University Law School. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  21. ^ Associated Press, “Former Ohio Sen. Howard Metzenbaum dies,” 13 Mar. 2008. Retrieved 13 Mar. 2008
  22. ^ http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Icons-mini-file_acrobat.gif); padding-right: 18px; background-position: 100% 50%; background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat; “>”Multiethnic Placement Act: Submission of Recruitment Plans”. Administration for Children and Families. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. October 11, 1995. Retrieved May 9, 2013.
  23. ^ “Howard M. Metzenbaum U.S. Courthouse”. U.S. General Services Administration. Retrieved May 9, 2013.

Rockefeller’s Right Hand Man: Henry Flagler

 

                       rc13909 Photo: Florida Memory

Rockefeller’s Right Hand Man: Henry Flagler

By Michael D. Roberts

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History can be fickle.  Take the story of the two men who walked Euclid Avenue in the days when its magnificent mansions made it one of the grand boulevards of the world.  They were often seen together in deep conversation about their work.

One man, the taller of the two, would go on to become part of American folklore, while the one of brisk step would become an historical afterthought, obscured by the myopia of chroniclers who overlooked his importance in creating the world’s largest business venture.

The taller man was John D. Rockefeller, destined to become the richest man in the world, and the more vigorous at his side was Henry M. Flagler who played no small role in the accumulation of that wealth.  They were neighbors walking to their offices where they were business partners, sharing a large partner’s desk.

They lived in a period of Cleveland history that spanned the years between the Civil War and the turn of the 20th Century.  It was a period marked by achievement and wealth, one that would never be duplicated here.

The era was the catalyst for the industrialization of America, and made Cleveland the international focus for electricity, steel, oil, paint, communications, chemicals and machine tools.   For the most part, history has been generous to the makers of this remarkable time.  They were the predecessors of the Fortune 500.

Their names read like a manifest of industry itself: Rockefeller of Standard Oil, Wade of Western UnionGliddenSherwin and Williams of paint, Chisholm and Otis of steel, Brush of the electric light, White of sewing machines and trucks, Warner and Swasey of optics and machine tools, and Grasselli of chemicals.

But one notable figure of the era has not been celebrated by local historians to the extent he deserves. Largely because of his retiring demeanor and preference for the more obscure side of business along with anonymity as a hallmark of his charitable efforts, Henry M. Flagler has not been accorded a significant place in the mosaic of Cleveland history.  In many city histories he has gone unmentioned.

 Even the titan of the times, John D. Rockefeller, once remarked that he wished he had Flagler’s brains.  Rockefeller knew better than most this man’s capabilities and some say Flagler had as much to do with making Standard Oil the most powerful company in the world as did Rockefeller himself.

By most accounts, Flagler was a dapper, good humored man whose manner radiated an ease that could be disarming, for in many ways he was a rogue, a man made for the times.  Behind this charm was a cunning and toughness that was managed by an extraordinary mind.  He kept an amusing, but prophetic sign on his desk that read:

Do unto others as they would do unto you—and do it first.

Flagler was nearly ten years older than Rockefeller having been born in Hopewell, New York, in February of 1830, the son of a traveling Presbyterian minister. At 14, with little formal education, but sharp of wit and a quick study, Flagler set out to make his way in the world, leaving a small town in New York to seek similar surroundings in Northwestern Ohio in a place called Republic near Sandusky.

 He was able to get a job clerking for $5 a month plus room and board.  It soon became evident that Flagler had a keen eye for the intangibles needed to be successful in the world of commerce.  Within the year, his pay was increased to $12 monthly, but more importantly storekeeping was nurturing the flair he was developing for business.

Later, he liked to tell friends how he learned how to apply the concept of value to business deals, by selling brandy from the same barrel to customers based on what they would pay for it and not a standard price.

In 1853, Flagler married the niece of Stephen V. Harkness a prominent citizen of Bellevue who owned several businesses including a distillery. Liquor was a valued commodity and easily made in stills using the abundant grain found in rural areas.  While beer was selling for 13 cents a quart, whiskey sold for half as much and it was in the liquor business that Flagler made his first fortune a few years before the Civil War.

With his strong religious upbringing, Flagler abstained from alcohol, but saw no sin in selling as much as he could to others. He had no moral aversion to profit.

Harkness was related through Henry’s step-brother, Dan Harkness, who was older. They had grown up together.  Flagler’s affiliation with the Harkness family would have a fortuitous effect upon his future.

It was in the late 1850s that Flagler met John D. Rockefeller who was working for a Cleveland grain broker and traveled the hinterlands in search of business. By the start of the Civil War in 1861, Rockefeller was brokering most of the Harkness grain.

As the grim realities of war approached, Flagler did two things.  He bought his way out of military service, paying $300 for a substitute to take his place in the ranks. The other thing he did was to abandon the liquor business for yet another venture, salt.

The enormous army being assembled needed to be fed and salt was a much needed preservative.  And there were abundant salt springs just north in Saginaw, Michigan. In 1862, Flagler and another family member started a salt company.

At first, the Flagler salt venture was successful as the demand for it by the war drove prices up followed by the creation of many competing companies.  But as the war came to an end, the demand for salt collapsed, resulting in the demise of many businesses including Flagler’s.

            With the reduced demand for salt there began an effort on the part of the industry to control the price and flow of the product.  Flagler witnessed the formation of a cartel intended to squeeze out competition.  In fact, in later years he would become an expert in this “squeeze” and used the word to describe the elimination of competitors.

His experience in the salt business, particularly his failure to anticipate the drop in prices and the formation of anti-competitive coalition, cost him the fortune he made in liquor and proved to be an indelible lesson. He was $50,000 in debt and needed a job.

  Failure never prevented him from pursuing what he enjoyed most: making money. After the demise of his salt business, he moved to Cleveland where he joined a merchant commission house, prospered, paid off his debt and bought the business.

The move to Cleveland would prove to offer an even greater fortune, one that destined Flagler to become an integral, if not principal figure, in creating the greatest industrial company the world had known. What sparked this adventure was Flagler’s reunion with his acquaintance from his merchant days in Bellevue, John D. Rockefeller.

            With the discovery of oil in Pennsylvania in 1859, there began a frenzy among speculators as to how to best generate wealth from the geysering, black liquid that would change the world.  It was only natural that Rockefeller’s attention would be drawn to those oil fields and the fortune that beckoned.

The main use of oil at the time was for lighting.  Refined into kerosene, oil changed the way people lived, making the days longer and brighter. The demand for such an illuminator was worldwide.

Finding the oil was one thing, but extracting it from the ground, shipping it and refining it into a product that was safe and inexpensive, presented quite another set of problems.  These were the problems that Rockefeller dealt with daily when he and Flagler joined in business in 1867.

Their bond had been cemented by a large investment in the fledgling company on the part of Flagler’s uncle, Stephen V. Harkness.  In a short time, the firm of Rockefeller, Andrews and Flagler owned two refineries and a sales office in New York.

Samuel Andrews was a refining expert, having developed several different processes to give oil a distinctive quality at an economical cost.  Rockefeller was a man of frugality and detail.  He had intricate knowledge as to how many staves were in a barrel or the number of drops of solder that it took to seal a can.

Rockefeller also had an eye for talent, too, and in Flagler he found an alter ego, a man of verve and spirit that fit the reckless, if not lawless, days that characterized the Gilded Age and the robber barons that made it.  Simply said, Flagler was the smartest man that Rockefeller had ever met.

This was providential, for the task before them was mercurial, presenting one financial hazard after another with no effective way to control the rapid rise and fall in prices caused by increasing competition and over production of crude oil. Within a few years the price of a barrel could fluctuate from 10 cents to $13.25.   It seemed that anyone with a few dollars could open a refinery, even if it was nothing but a shed where a few barrels a day could be distilled.

In the meantime, Flagler was put in charge of the firm’s transportation issues, a key responsibility since the cost of shipping oil could make a large difference in the profit margin. Years later this would be the crux of the government’s case against the company’s efforts to become a monopoly.

Flagler’s basic job was to negotiate the rates with railroads, canal boats and pipelines.  He was doing this as Rockefeller was consolidating the thirty-some refineries in Cleveland by adding them through buyouts or force.

As the firm’s capacity to produce refined oil increased, the need for cheaper freight rates became imperative to fend off competitors.   The crude oil was shipped from Pennsylvania to Cleveland where it was refined.  The finished product was then shipped to New York where it was sold for export.

Flagler was deft and precise in his dealings with the railroads.  He guaranteed to ship a substantial amount of oil on a given line in a timely manner in return for a secret rebate. The results of an early negotiation with one line showed that the regular freight fee was $2.40 a barrel and Flagler had engineered a preferential rate of $1.65.  He became expert at playing the railroads off against each other, particularly during their frequent rate wars.  Secrecy was essential because other oil firms were being charged more to ship on the same line.

By 1870, the firm’s business had burgeoned enormously.  Investors and other oil companies were eager to join the ranks of the prospering enterprise.  Recognizing the need for more capital, but fearing the loss of control, the partners were faced with a dilemma.

Years later Rockefeller would attribute the solution to the dilemma to Flagler’s brilliance.   On January 10, 1870, a company called Standard Oil was created in a brief 200-word incorporation document written by Flagler, who had no legal training, but whose idea created one of the greatest commercial ventures of all time.

At the time of the incorporation Rockefeller owned 2,667 shares. Flagler had 1,333 shares, but he voted the Harkness shares giving him equal status in the leadership of the company.  There was never a serious dispute between the men over the company.

Once the new company was in existence it was voracious in its acquisitions of refineries, first dominating the Cleveland market and then reaching out into other regions. By the spring of 1872, Standard Oil was refining 10,000 barrels of oil daily, employing 1,600 workers with a weekly payroll of $20,000.  Cleveland was well on its way to becoming the oil capitol of America.

Flagler liked to use the term “sweat” in association with the acquisition of competitors.  That meant that there was little room for negotiation. They either had to sell to Standard or simply go out of business.  The offer for these “sweated” businesses was consistent.  The deal was cash or Standard Oil stock.  Ironically, nearly all who took stock prospered far beyond their expectations.  Many of those who had taken cash became bitter as they witnessed the rise of Standard Oil.

The immense volume of oil spawned ever more favorable freight rates and became the tool which Rockefeller and Flagler used to acquire more and more competitors. The precise date of Standard Oil’s rise to the domination of the nation’s oil industry was October 17, 1877 when it purchased Empire Transportation Company and the Columbia Conduit Company thus becoming the primary provider of oil traffic to Europe. These companies owned a combination of rail cars, shipping and pipelines. Not only did Standard Oil control the nation’s refining industry, it now was poised to control the transportation of oil.

By 1877, Cleveland could no longer contain the vast reach of Standard Oil’s international business and the company began to shift its headquarters to New York. In the fall of that year, Flagler moved to New York, thus bringing to an end his years in Cleveland.

These had been good years in Cleveland which he had enjoyed socially and as a leading member of the First Presbyterian Church.  His wife, Mary, who had been ailing most of her life, was the focus of his personal concerns.  At night he would return to his mansion on Euclid Avenue in the evening and read to her. One account said that he only missed two such evenings in 17 years.

As Standard Oil extended its grip on the industry, it began to be challenged by legal issues. The company was authorized to do business only in the state of Ohio.  To operate a refining business in another state, on the face of it, was illegal. To skirt the law, Flagler devised a series of trusteeships to operate these businesses acquisitions.

 He also conceived several plans that would consolidate the oil industry to give the company an advantage.  While the initial plans failed, they drew the attention of competitors and the authorities.  In April of 1879, Rockefeller, Flagler and others were indicted in Pennsylvania in connection with an attempt to create a monopoly.

 While nothing came of this legal action, it was the beginning of a string of investigations and media inquiries that would extend into the next century and force anti-trust action to break the company into 33 entities.

The legal manipulations and subsequent investigations were chronicled by Ida Louise Tarbell, the foremost muckraker of her day, and author of the famous book The History of the Standard Oil Company.

Flagler’s ties with Standard Oil slowly gave way, although he remained active when it became clear that the only way for the company to keep its dominance over the oil business was to gain favored cooperation of the pipeline companies that were being built in the east.

 Negotiating for the control of pipelines was Flagler’s last daily involvement with Standard Oil.  He would remain linked to the company as a consultant and stockholder, but his attention and fortune was being ever more drawn to Florida where he had first visited prior to Mary’s death in May of 1881. He married twice more, having had three children by his first wife.

Flagler had always been remote and elusive with the media and his timely exit from the operations of Standard Oil allowed him to be a peripheral figure in the anti-trust scandal that would be shouldered by Rockefeller in the coming decades.

 In time, the Flagler name would be more associated with the development of Florida and the construction of its railroads.  He invested $50 million in the state.  His days in Cleveland, from 1867 to 1877 were overshadowed by the audacity of his efforts in Florida, particularly the construction of a railroad from Daytona over the ocean to Key West.

No one was more responsible for the development of that state than was Henry Flagler.  Sensing the potential of tourism, Flagler first built the 54-room Hotel Ponce de Leon in St. Augustine.

He built a bridge over the St. Johns River, opening Southern Florida to rail traffic, and purchased a hotel near Daytona.  He then expanded his burgeoning rail system to Palm Beach which became the winter Mecca for American society.

He built his house, the Whitehall in Palm Beach which is now the Flagler Museum.  His rambling Breakers Hotel continues as the city’s dominant hostelry.

Unwilling to bask in the sunshine of achievement, Flagler extended the Florida East Coast Railway to Biscayne Bay by 1896.  Here he paused to create a city, carving out streets, installing water and electricity, and even funding the town’s first newspaper.

Famed and revered, Flagler remained a modest man and when the townspeople urged that the city be named after its benefactor, he turned it down, insisting that the better name would be that from Indian lore— Miami.

Envisioning trade with Latin American and access to the Panama Canal, he pressed on with his railway to Key West, taking seven-years of hop scotching from key to key on bridges that were engineering marvels.  In 1935, a fierce storm destroyed the 107-mile railroad. As a commercial venture, it never succeeded.

            In 1902, Rockefeller, now somewhat distant from his old friend and business partner, wrote Flagler the following:

You and I have been associated in business upwards of thirty-five years, and while there have been times when we have not agreed on questions of policy, I do not know that one unkind word has ever passed or unkind thought existed between us. I feel my pecuniary success is due to my association with you, if I have contributed anything to yours I am thankful.

Flagler died on May 20, 1913 in Florida at the age of 83.

 The memory of Rockefeller and Flagler walking to work on Euclid Avenue and plotting their world-wide dominance of the oil industry amid the clatter of hoofs and the cry of coachmen is an image that deserves preservation as a unique moment in Cleveland history. Flagler was a personage never to be underestimated, especially by the hindsight of history.

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