The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish
Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America
November 14, 2023
by Daniel Schulman (Author)
The
incredible saga of the German-Jewish immigrants—with now familiar names like
Goldman and Sachs, Kuhn and Loeb, Warburg and Schiff, Lehman and Seligman—who
profoundly influenced the rise of modern finance (and so much more), from the
New York Times best-selling author of Sons of Wichita
Joseph
Seligman arrived in the United States in 1837, with the equivalent of $100 sewn
into the lining of his pants. Then came the Lehman brothers, who would open a
general store in Montgomery, Alabama. Not far behind were Solomon Loeb and
Marcus Goldman, among the “Forty-Eighters” fleeing a Germany that had relegated
Jews to an underclass.
These
industrious immigrants would soon go from peddling trinkets and buying up
shopkeepers’ IOUs to forming what would become some of the largest investment
banks in the world—Goldman Sachs, Kuhn Loeb, Lehman Brothers, J. & W.
Seligman & Co. They would clash and collaborate with J. P. Morgan, E. H.
Harriman, Jay Gould, and other famed tycoons of the era. And their firms would
help to transform the United States from a debtor nation into a financial
superpower, capitalizing American industry and underwriting some of the
twentieth century’s quintessential companies, like General Motors, Macy’s, and
Sears. Along the way, they would shape the destiny not just of American finance
but of the millions of Eastern European Jews who spilled off steamships in New
York Harbor in the early 1900s, including Daniel Schulman’s paternal
grandparents.
In The
Money Kings, Schulman unspools a sweeping narrative that traces the
interconnected origin stories of these financial dynasties. He chronicles their
paths to Wall Street dominance, as they navigated the deeply antisemitic upper
class of the Gilded Age, and the complexities of the Civil War, World War I,
and the Zionist movement that tested both their burgeoning empires and their
identities as Americans, Germans, and Jews.
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