- Joseph Wharton
Infobox Person
name = Joseph Wharton
other_names =
caption = Joseph Wharton, 1902
birth_date = birth date|1826|3|3|mf=y
birth_place =Philadelphia ,Pennsylvania
death_date = death date and age|1909|1|11|1826|3|3|mf=y
death_place =Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
death_cause
known =
occupation =entrepreneur ,industrialist
title =
salary =
term =
predecessor =
successor =
party =
boards =
religion =Society of Friends (Quaker )
spouse = Anna Corbit Lovering
children = Joanna W. Lippincott, Mary L. Wharton, Anna W. Morris.
relatives =
website =
footnotes =Joseph Wharton (
March 3 ,1826 –January 11 ,1909 ) was a prominentPhiladelphia merchant, industrialist and philanthropist, who was involved in mining, manufacturing and education. He founded the Wharton School at theUniversity of Pennsylvania , co-founded theBethlehem Steel company, and was one of the founders ofSwarthmore College .Early years
Wharton was born in
Philadelphia ,Pennsylvania in 1826, the fifth child of ten in a liberal Hicksite Quaker family. His parents William Wharton andDeborah Fisher Wharton were both from prominent early American immigrant families ofQuaker descent. Interestingly, both of Wharton's grandmothers were named Hannah and were from Newport,Rhode Island . Wharton's maternal grandfather, Samuel R. Fisher ran a prosperous mercantile business and shipping packet line between Philadelphia andLondon, England . Wharton's youth was spent in the family's house near Spruce and 4th Streets in downtown Philadelphia and at the country mansion "Bellevue". Wharton's father was a typical gentleman, and did not hold a regular job because he had several illnesses, but oversaw his estate, served on the Philadelphia School Board, and was active with his wife Deborah in the Hicksite ministry. From their country estate, the family often went to the nearbySchuylkill River , visited neighboring estates such as Deborah's grandfatherJoshua Fisher 'sThe Cliffs , and went on weekend horse and carriage excursions to the countryside surrounding Philadelphia, sometimes attending the smaller Quaker Meetings.Schooling
As a boy, Wharton attended two Quaker boarding schools in the towns outside of Philadelphia and also several private schools in the city. Between the age of 14 and 16, Wharton was prepared for college by a private
tutor . However, when he was 16, he went on the advice of his parents to mature and learn the life of a farmer, a common dream of city-borne Hicksite Quakers at the time, and boarded with Joseph and Abigail Walton on their family farm nearWest Chester, Pennsylvania for three years. By that time, Wharton had matured to a strong frame, convert|6|ft|m in stature, with a serious but cheerful outlook. He was accomplished in sports such as horseback riding, swimming, and rowing on the Schuylkill River. During the winter Wharton returned to his parents' home in Philadelphia and studied languages such as French and German, which were useful for learning aboutscience andtechnology . He also studiedchemistry at the Philadelphia laboratory of Martin Boye. Wharton and his brothers in their early years identified with inventors and builders such asCyrus McCormick andSamuel F. B. Morse .Starting in business
When he was 19, Wharton apprenticed with an accountant for two years and became proficient in
business methods andbookkeeping . At 21, he partnered with his older brother Rodman to start a business manufacturingwhite lead . Wharton's chemistry mentor, Martin Boye, had developed a method to refinecottonseed oil and the Wharton brothers tried but failed to develop a profitable method to extract it. In 1849 Wharton started a business manufacturingbrick s using apatent ed machine which pressed dry clay into forms. There was substantial competition in the brick business, which was affected by cyclical business swings, and after several trips to sell bricks and the brick-making machines, Wharton found the prospects for making good profits were dim. However from the endeavor he gained valuable experience. In 1853, Wharton joined the Pennsylvania and LehighZinc Company nearBethlehem, Pennsylvania , first managing the mining operation and later thezinc oxide works. Wharton proved himself by negotiating a newcharter for the works, and in the difficult financial environment of 1857–1858 he took over control of the zinc works and managing it carefully turned a profit. In 1860 Wharton, after some challenging negotiations with the directors of the company, developed for Lehigh Zinc the first plant to manufacture metallic zinc in America. Looking into the next business cycle, he leased the plant for four years and eventually made a robust profit from the sale of metallic zinc, used in makingbrass , which picked up in the Civil War years.Family life
Wharton married Anna Corbit Lovering, a fellow Quaker and the younger sister of his brother Charles' wife, in 1854 in a Quaker ceremony. After living with Anna's family for several months the couple moved into a house belonging to his mother near 12th and Walnut Streets in Philadelphia, but Anna often continued to stay with her parents while Joseph was out of town. She preferred a life of comfort but evidently did not wish to stifle his ambition. During this time Wharton lived a spartan life, boarding at a hotel and managing the zinc works in Bethlehem, and Anna cared for their first child Joanna at their home in Philadelphia. Although Joseph returned as often as possible and they communicated often by letter, they felt much stress during this period and their marriage suffered. Later, when Joseph was more secure in his job manufacturing zinc, Anna and Joanna came to live with him in Bethlehem, where they lived a happier life for two years, partaking in social events and exploring the local rivers and countryside. After Wharton sold his interest in zinc, they returned to Philadelphia, and although he often traveled to oversee his properties or develop business connections, he never again lived apart from the family. He purchased a country estate several miles north of Philadelphia, called "Ontalauna", and bought a
donkey for their three children, Joanna, Mary, and Anna, to ride along on horseback expeditions. Wharton often studied at night or played history games with the children.Nickel manufacture
Hoping to profit from the use of
nickel in coins, Wharton in 1863 sold his interest in zinc and started the manufacture of nickel at Camden,New Jersey , taking over a nickel mine and refining works atNickel Mines, Pennsylvania . The Camden plant was located on the east side of 10th Street, adjacent to Cooper Creek, and had several large brick buildings and smokestacks. Wharton renamed the Camden plant the American Nickel Works, and his office there became his center of operations. However, the use of nickel in coinage was temporarily halted, and soon the Camden plant burned. Wharton rebuilt it in 1868 and made excellent profits from producing nickel because it became favored for coinage. Wharton won wide acclaim for his malleable nickel, the first in the world, and also for nickelmagnet s, and received the Gold Medal at the Paris Exposition of 1878. His factory produced the only nickel in the US and a significant fraction of the world supply. Eventually the surface deposits at the Gap mine were depleted and Wharton was obliged to purchase nickel ore from a mine in Sudbury,Ontario ,Canada . This experience was a challenge to Wharton, who learned about market economics and protection when foreign nickel manufacturers opposed his nickel purchasing and manufacture efforts. Wharton by then had learned the value of meeting personally with his managers and regularly inspecting the mines and manufacturing plants with them. He was successful because he worked hard to increaseefficiency andprofitability of the businesses he acquired, and energetically pursued markets for his products. Wharton made a robust profit from his nickel business over its 40 year duration, but by 1900 its outlook was fading due to foreign competition. Wharton and a group of otherUnited States and Canadian nickel enterprises formed the International Nickel Company (Inco) in 1902. He sold his American Nickel Works in Camden and the Gap mine for a share in the new company, and was named one of the dozen board members. By this time the profitability of his business empire did not depend on the manufacture of nickel because he had already diversified into other profitable businesses.Estate, water and New Jersey
In 1854 Philadelphia increased its tax base by expanding its borders to include the surrounding suburbs, and after the Civil War its population swelled. By 1870 the
Centennial Exposition was upcoming, and Philadelphia was rapidly changing. It was suffering from a water crisis because it required more water, but there was no appropriate method forwater purification and the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers were heavily polluted. Philadelphia'styphoid fever rate was among the highest in the nation, and most well-to-do families drank bottled spring water. The Wharton family's "Bellevue" estate, along with several others nearby that had been annexed into the city, was threatened with condemnation by the city for the construction of a newreservoir to hold potable water. Wharton saw a potential solution to both of these problems. He started purchasing land in southern New Jersey in the 1870s, eventually acquiring convert|150|sqmi|km2 in the Pinelands which contained anaquifer replenished by severalriver s andlake s. The water from the Pinelands was relatively pure and he planned to export the water to Philadelphia. Wharton suggested that a city-controlled company could develop the necessary water mains andpump , funded by public purchase ofstock s and bonds. There was opposition to the plan by others in Philadelphia and in New Jersey, and eventually a law was passed in New Jersey preventing the export of water. The Wharton Bellevue estate was taken by the city, but the planned reservoir was never constructed, because of local politics and also because by 1890 water could be purified byfiltration , obviating the need for an extra reservoir. Instead the estate was sold to developers for construction of new housing for the newly organizedindustry nearby inNorth Philadelphia .Summers
Wharton's family had long roots in Newport, Rhode Island and he summered there with his extended family at the family house on Washington Street for many decades. When his children were young, Wharton enjoyed taking them rowing and sailing about the harbor. Often they would sail across the bay to
Conanicut Island to picnic and explore the cliffs and beaches. In 1882 Joseph Wharton, his brother Charles, and other friends purchased plots inJamestown, Rhode Island , across the bay from Newport and built summer homes there. Wharton constructed a large stone house with a prominent tower overlooking the entrance to Narragansett Bay. He named the house "Marbella" but it was later called "Horsehead" after a rock formation on the cliffs below that looked like the head of a horse from a certain angle. The family was active in swimming and sailing, and the grandchildren enjoyed playing on the rocks and tidal pools below the house. Wharton and his wife Anna enjoyed socializing but preferred the company of a few selected people to many, and avoided balls and late hours. In the early 1890s, the government surveyed sites on Conanicut Island for a coastal fort that would command the entrance to the bay, and took some of Wharton's property along with other nearby summer estates, starting construction of nearby Fort Wetherill in 1896. The fortress took several years to finish and during this time the Horsehead property continued to be threatened so Wharton purchased 247 additional acres in the southern part of Jamestown including several farms, one at Beavertail in 1899. The threatened action did not happen and the well-kept Horsehead property stands today as a glorious testament to the achievements of Wharton and the care of his descendants.Business empire
Wharton traveled widely and became involved in many industrial enterprises such as mines, factories and
railroad s. He started several enterprises on the South New Jersey property, including amenhaden fish factory that produced oil and fertilizer, a modern forestry planting operation, andcranberry andsugar beet farms. Wharton also purchased land containingore and aniron furnace in northern New Jersey at Port Oram, New Jersey (now Wharton, New Jersey) which was located close to theMorris Canal and railroads. He purchased a coal mine in western Pennsylvania, constructing for the workers a town of 85 houses and stores along the railway. He also purchased coal land inWest Virginia , iron andcopper mines inMichigan , and gold mines inArizona andNevada . Wharton became involved in the Reading and Lehigh railroads and several others, arrangingspur line s with the railroads to carry ore and finished metal products. He maintained an extensive business correspondence and in later life maintained this practice through his vacations. Wharton was a colleague of leaders such asinventor sEzra Cornell ,Elias Howe andThomas Edison , andentrepreneur Cornelius Vanderbilt . His management style evolved throughout the latter half of the 1800s, making use of new technology forcommunication ,transportation , and production, so that he controlled many industries profitably on a larger scale than was previously possible.Bethlehem Steel
Through the 1870s Wharton began to buy into Bethlehem Iron Company which produced
pig iron andsteel rails, gradually investing more of his own time and energy, but without involvement in the day-to-day operations. He became the largest shareholder with a position on the board of managers, and eventually purchased a controlling share of the company. In 1885, Wharton successfully bid a contract with theUnited States Navy for forged steelarmor , and in 1886 he visited England (Whitworth Co.) and France (Schneider Co.) to research the designs for a plant toforge steel of higher quality. With these designs, Bethlehem Iron built the first plant to forge high-strength steel in America. The plant fabricated armor plates and guns forwarship s. Similar contracts gave the company, renamed the Bethlehem Steel Company, a consistent source of income, and Wharton made slow but steady profits. In 1901 he sold the company but continued to be the largest producer of pig iron in the country because of his extensive iron and coal mines and refining works.Washington politics and distinguished guests
Over several decades, Wharton lobbied successfully in
Washington, D.C. fortariff laws protecting U.S. manufacturing. He was a defender of large business and evolved into a staunch Republican. He successfully lobbied for the use of nickel in the U.S. coinage, but his lobbying for nickel tariffs was only partially successful, probably because he had a virtualmonopoly on production in the U.S. In 1873 the world was in a very tryingeconomic depression and many industrial firms went bankrupt. Wharton became widely known as a leader of the Industrial League of manufacturing concerns, and the main lobbyist and President of theAmerican Iron and Steel Institute . He was a personal friend and consultant with several presidents including Grant, Hayes, and Harrison. Wharton entertained distinguished internationally-known guests such asbiologist sThomas Huxley andJoseph Leidy ,astronomer Samuel Langley ,scientist Lord Kelvin, SenatorsJames Blaine andJustin Morrill , industrialistAndrew Carnegie , and metallurgistAlfred Krupp . Wharton successfully lobbied for a bill in thePennsylvania General Assembly supporting Limited Partnerships to allow more participation of capital in enterprises with risk.Science
Wharton was a scientist interested in the natural world, and wrote scientific papers on a variety of topics including
astronomy and metallurgy, presenting several to theAmerican Philosophical Society . In the winter of 1883–1884 there was a period of several months whensunset s were extraordinarily red worldwide. Some imagined that the red color was fromdust dispersed in theatmosphere worldwide by thevolcano Krakatoa which had recently erupted. Others imagined that the reddish hue might come from iron and steel furnaces because they were known to create a reddish-brown dust. Wharton was curious, and one morning when a lightsnow was falling, collected some from a field near his house, melted and evaporated it, studying the remaining particles under amicroscope which he had on hand for metallurgy. The particles looked like "irregular, flattish, blobby"glass particles. He visited a ship that had come to port in Philadelphia, having sailed fromManila , a course that had taken it a few hundred miles from Krakatoa. It had been slowed by a huge amount ofpumice floating in the ocean, evidently spewed out by Krakatoa. Wharton obtained some pumice from one of the ship's crew, compared it with the dust he had collected, and found almost identical particles. In 1893 he presented a paper about the dust to the 150th anniversary meeting of the American Philosophical Society. Wharton also wrote a paper about the use of theDoppler effect on the color oflight emitted bybinary star s to determine their distance fromEarth , and made the analogy to a train whistle which changes tone as it passes. Wharton was one of the most accomplished metallurgists in America during his lifetime, certainly the most widely known.Swarthmore College
In 1869, Wharton along with his mother Deborah Fisher Wharton and a group of like-minded Hicksite Quakers from Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New York were the founders of
Swarthmore College , a Hicksite Quaker college outside Philadelphia. Swarthmore filled an important need of a college where both men and women could receive a high-quality education in the tradition of Friends not dominated by religion. Wharton gave generously, building a Friends Meeting on campus and also contributing to a science building. His mother Deborah served on the Swarthmore Board of Managers from 1862–1870, and Joseph served on the board from 1870–1909, and from 1883–1907 as its president. He was often on campus and gave many commencement addresses.Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
Wharton wrote extensively on economic matters, including protective tariffs and business cycles. In the last half of the 19th century, business education typically consisted mainly of training on the job or an
apprentice ship. Wharton conceived of a school that would teach how to develop and run a business, and to anticipate and deal with the cycles of economic activity. In 1881 Wharton donated $100,000 to theUniversity of Pennsylvania to found a "School of Finance and Economy" for this purpose. He specified that the Wharton School faculty advocate economic protectionism, as he had when lobbying for American businesses in Washington. However, the school soon began broaden its outlook to a global one and to teach other disciplines such as politics and the developingsocial science s, and introduced the teaching of business management andfinance as these disciplines gradually coalesced. The Wharton School was the first to include such a practical focus on business, finance, and management.Last years and death
Wharton was active to near the end of his life both physically and in business affairs. Until he was 72, he skated with guests on the pond at his Ontalauna estate near Philadelphia and would often go on walks with his family after dinner. His good health throughout his life was likely due in part to his enjoyment of physical exercise, total abstinence from tobacco and restricted use of even mild alcoholic drinks. When he was nearly 80, he visited his Nevada silver mine by canoing down the
Colorado River and descending into the mine in a bucket, and when he was 81, he traveled to Germany with his grandson,Joseph Wharton Lippincott , to visitKaiser Wilhelm II and had dinner on the Kaiser's yacht. He read widely in literature and was an accomplished poet. He continued to oversee his holdings in coke manufacture in Pennsylvania and iron in northern New Jersey. In 1907 he was incapacitated bystroke and gradually worsened until his death in 1909. [cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Joseph Wharton is Dead. Prominent Ironmaker Expires at Home in Philadelphia. |url= |quote= |publisher=New York Times |date=January 12 ,1909 , Tuesday |accessdate=2007-07-21 ]Legacy
Wharton's daughter Joanna married noted Philadelphia publisher, J. Bertram Lippincott, in 1887 and named their eldest son
Joseph Wharton Lippincott ; Anna married Harrison S. Morris, who was associated with thePennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts , in 1896; but Mary never married. In 1908, Wharton created Fisher Park, a 23 acre park in the Olney neighborhood in Philadelphia, donating the land on his deathbed to the City of Philadelphia as a "Christmas gift". The Wharton family continued to hold gatherings at the family mansion at Batsto, New Jersey until the 1920s, and in 1954 sold Wharton's vast Pinelands properties in southern New Jersey to the state, forming the core ofWharton State Forest .Mr. Wharton was inducted into the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame in 2004.
References
* Yates, W. Ross. "Joseph Wharton: Quaker Industrial Pioneer". Bethlehem: Lehigh University Press, 1987. ISBN 0934223009.
* Lippincott, Joanna Wharton. "Biographical Memoranda Concerning Joseph Wharton, 1826–1909 by His Daughter Joanna Wharton Lippincott". Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1909. Printed for private circulation.
* Joseph Wharton Family Papers, 1691–1962, Library of Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.
* Richardson, Charles Henry. Description of nickel mining in "Economic Geology". McGraw-Hill, 1913.
* Weigley, Russell F. (editor), Nicholas B. Wainwright, and Edwin Wolf, 2nd (associate editors)."Philadelphia: A 300 Year History". New York: W.W. Norton, 1982. ISBN 0393016102.
* Wharton, Joseph. Article on nickel magnets in "American Journal of Science", 1877, p 415.
* Wharton, Joseph. Article on zinc manufacture in "American Journal of Science", Sept 1871, p 168.
* Wharton, Joseph. "Dust from the Krakatoa Eruption of 1883", pp. 343–345 in "Proceedings commemorative of the 150th anniversary of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for Promoting Useful Knowledge", May 22–26, 1893, American Philosophical Society, 1894, digitized by Google.
* Wharton, Joseph. Letter to the editor on plans for water supply, "Evening Bulletin",June 17 ,1891 .
* Wharton, Joseph. "On Two Peculiar Products from Nickel Manufacture", pp. 365–368 in "American Journal of Science and Arts", Series II, 49:365–368, digitized by Google.
* Wharton, Joseph. "Speculations Upon a Possible Method of Determining the Distance of Certain Variably Colored Stars", "American Journal of Science and Arts: Series II", Vol 40:190–192, digitized by Google.
* "Hall of Fame: Joseph Wharton 1826–1909", "Engineering & Mining Journal", February, 1998.Notes
External links
* [http://www.jamestownri.com/library/history.htm Historic and Architectural Resources of Jamestown, Rhode Island] at the Jamestown Philomenian Library
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1092&pt=Joseph%20Wharton Joseph Wharton's gravesite] at Find a Grave
* [http://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/search_by_name.cfm Philadelphia Architects and Buildings] : For the location of Bellevue mansion, search for Bellevue as a guest
* [http://www.philageohistory.org/rdic-images/HGSv24/HGSv24.2344-2345.htm Plan of Wharton's American Nickel Works in Camden, NJ, Survey #23442345] by Hexamer and Son, Inc. 419 Walnut St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1890
* [http://www.wharton.upenn.edu/ Wharton School website]
* [http://virtualology.com/apthomaswharton/ Biography at virtualology.com] under his great-great-grandfather, Thomas Wharton (1664-1718).
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