- James Buchanan Duke
James Buchanan Duke (
December 23 ,1856 –October 10 ,1925 ) was a U.S.tobacco andelectric power industrialist best known for his involvement withDuke University .Personal life
James Buchanan Duke, known by the nickname "Buck", was born near
Durham, North Carolina , onDecember 23 ,1856 to Washington Duke and his second wife, Artelia Roney Duke. [cite web| url=http://www.dukeendowment.org/about/history|title=The Duke Family and its Legacy| publisher=Duke Endowment|accessdate=2008-06-02] Duke was married twice, the first in 1904 to Lillian Fletcher McCredy, but they divorced in 1906 and had no children. In 1907 he married the widow Nanaline Holt Inman, with whom he had his only child, a daughter, Doris, bornNovember 22 ,1912 . Doris was raised atDuke Farms , where her father had worked with landscapers such as James Greenleaf (a member of the firm ofFrederick Law Olmsted ), and Horatio Buckenham to transform more than convert|2000|acre|km2|0 of farmland and woodlots into an extraordinary landscape. containing 2 conservatories, 9 lakes, 35 fountains, 45 buildings, countless pieces of sculpture, over convert|2|mi|km|0 of stone walls and more than convert|18|mi|km of roadway [cite web| url=http://www.dukefarms.org/page.asp?pageId=4|title=History | publisher=Duke Farms|accessdate=2008-02-11] . James Buchanan Duke died in New York City onOctober 10 ,1925 and is interred with his father and brother in the Memorial Chapel on the campus ofDuke University .Business career
Washington Duke (1820-1905), had owned a tobacco company which his sons James Buchanan Duke andBenjamin Newton Duke (1855-1929) took over in the 1880s.In 1885, James Buchanan Duke acquired a license to use the first automatedcigarette making machine (invented byJames Albert Bonsack ), and by 1890, Duke supplied 40% of the American cigarette market (then known as pre-rolled tobacco). In that year, Duke consolidated control of his four major competitors under one corporate entity, theAmerican Tobacco Company , which was amonopoly in the American cigarette market.In the 1890s, he forged an agreement with his British competitors to divide the market, with Duke controlling the
American trade , the British companies controlling the trade in British territories, and a third, cooperative venture between the two - the British-American Tobacco Company - controlling the sale of tobacco to the rest of the world. During this time, Duke was repeatedly sued by business partners and shareholders. In 1906, the American Tobacco Company was found guilty of antitrust violations, and was ordered to be split into three separate companies: American Tobacco Company, Ligget and Myers, and theP. Lorillard Company .In 1892, the Dukes had opened their first textile firm in
Durham, North Carolina that was run by Benjamin Duke. At the turn of the century, Buck Duke organized the American Development Company to acquire land and water rights on theCatawba River . In 1904, he established theCatawba Power Company and the following year he and his brother founded theSouthern Power Company which became known asDuke Power , one of the companies making up theDuke Energy , Inc. conglomerate. The company supplied electrical power to the Duke'stextile factory and within two decades, their power facilities had been greatly expanded and they were supplying electricity to more than 300cotton mills and other industrial companies. Duke Power established an electrical grid that supplied cities and towns in the Piedmont Region of North andSouth Carolina .Lake James , a power-generating reservoir in Western North Carolina, was created by the company in 1928 and named in Duke's honor.In 1911, the
United States Supreme Court upheld an order breaking up theAmerican Tobacco Company 's monopoly. The company was then divided into several smaller enterprises, of which only the British-American Tobacco Company remained in Duke's control. After his death in 1925, there was a great deal of controversy, and some historians suspect that some resentfulImperial Tobacco executives were feeling some anger at Duke for having lost the Tobacco War between Duke's company andImperial Tobacco .Philanthropy and Wills
In December 1924, Duke established
The Duke Endowment , a $40 million trust fund (about $430 million in 2005), some of which was to go to Trinity College. The University was renamed "Duke University " in honor of his father.On his death, he left approximately half of his huge estate to
The Duke Endowment which gave another $67 million (about $725 million in 2005) to the trust fund. In the Indenture of Trust, Duke specified that he wanted the Endowment to support Duke University,Davidson College ,Furman University ,Johnson C. Smith University ; not-for-profit hospitals and children's homes in the two Carolinas; and ruralUnited Methodist churches in North Carolina, retired pastors, and their surviving families.The remainder of Duke's estate, estimated at approximately $100 million (about $1 billion in 2005), went to his twelve-year-old daughter, Doris, making her literally "the richest girl in the world" [Cite news
last = Pace
first = Eric
title = Doris Duke, 80, Heiress Whose Great Wealth Couldn't Buy Happiness, Is Dead
publisher=New York Times
date = 1993-10-29
pages =
accessdate = 2008-05-07
url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE1DB153CF93AA15753C1A965958260] . Doris sued her mother for control of the Duke Farms estate and won. Associating Duke Farms with fond memories of her father, Doris Duke made few major changes to the property other than the adaptation of her father’s Conservatory to create Display Gardens in his honor [cite web| url=http://www.njskylands.com/atdukgar.htm|title=The Gardens at Duke Farms| publisher=Skylands Visitor Guide|accessdate=2008-06-02] . These Gardens showcased her father's extensive sculpture collection and were open to the public from 1964 until closed by her Foundation Trustees in May 2008 [cite press release |title=Duke Farms Promotes “Greener” Future |publisher=Duke Farms |date=2008-03-02 |url=http://www.dukefarms.org/page.asp?pageId=523 |format= |language= |accessdate=2008-04-14 |quote= it’s the final months of the gardens being on display in the greenhouses that have enchanted visitors since 1964] .References
Further reading
*
Robert Sobel "The Entrepreneurs: Explorations Within the American Business Tradition"*(Weybright & Talley 1974), Chapter 5, "James Buchanan Duke: Opportunism Is the Spur"
*Robert F. Durden "Bold Entrepreneur: A Life of James B. Duke" (Carolina Academic Press, 2003)
*John Wilber Jenkins "James B. Duke: Master Builder" (George H. Doran Company 1927)
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