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The
Erie Railroad, Part I...the early years
Brian
Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
A loyal reader of this space, Joseph
Fisher, once asked me to explore doing a piece on
the demise of the Erie Lackawanna railroad. Frankly,
I didn't know if there would be much there, but I
purchased a book by H. Roger Grant titled "Erie Lackawanna:
Death of an American Railroad, 1938-1992" and perused
a few pages. It was then I realized I could easily
tie in the great robber barons of the 1800s, since
their story is part of Erie Railroad, the predecessor
operation. In a series on Jay Gould that I once did,
I touched on Erie's history, but there is far more
to tell?and before I even really get into Grant's
book.
While
you will read different dates in various sources,
for our purposes the Erie Railroad was founded in
1833, but didn't really get cranking until 1851, upon
completion of the longest railroad in the world at
that time, the 480-mile stretch between Lake Erie
and New York City, connecting the lakes to the ocean.
Within a few years some of the great speculators/dirtballs
in Wall Street history had discovered that the Erie,
like other railroads, was easy pickings, Daniel Drew
being among the first.
There
was a saying on Wall Street involving Drew, "When
Daniel says 'up' - Erie goes up. Daniel says 'down'
- Erie goes down. Daniel says 'wiggle-waggle' - it
bobs both ways."
When
Drew was a director of Erie back in the 1850s he used
to sell short more shares than the company actually
had. You wouldn't think that this would work, except
to obliterate Drew, but "he had a reserve of stock
unbeknownst to the rest of the market?convertible
bonds," which he then used to cover his position,
thereby ensuring his killing.
Charles
Geisst has a great story along the same lines. "In
order to get the price of the stock as high as possible
before beginning to sell it short, (Drew) visited
a New York City club where stock traders congregated.
Sitting down on a particularly hot day, he pulled
a handkerchief out of his pocket to mop his brow.
As he did so, a small piece of paper fell onto the
floor, but no one bothered to tell him. After he left,
the other traders pounced on the paper, which just
happened to contain a 'bullish' piece of news on the
Erie. They then proceeded to frantically buy the stock,
pushing it to new highs in the market. It was only
then that Drew began selling it short, wiping many
of them out in the process as the stock price dropped
precipitously."
Folks,
you just can't make this stuff up. Later, Jim Fisk
and Jay Gould hooked up with Drew and as Paul Johnson
writes, "If two men came close to deserving the title
of Robber Barons, it was (these two)." Nothing exemplified
this better than the struggle over the Erie.
For
his part, Fisk had quite a background before he entered
the world of high finance. In his youth he was actually
a carnival barker, before he began buying cotton in
the South and selling it up North following the Civil
War. It was said he could "spot a sucker at a hundred
yards" and it was Jim Fisk who coined the phrase,
"Never give a sucker an even break." According to
Johnson, Fisk "was also reputed to have been the first
man habitually to pinch girls' bottoms." Along the
same lines Edward Chancellor adds that Fisk always
had a female executive assistant on the payroll, including
one who was actually paid $1,000 for "services rendered."
But
it was on October 8, 1867 that the real fireworks
commenced. As the gang of three, Drew, Fisk and Gould,
went after the Erie and Cornelius Vanderbilt (who
was vying for control as well), Vanderbilt played
his hole card, George C. Barnard, a judge tied to
Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall fame. Gould then started
the "Erie Panic" by throwing 100,000 shares into the
market, whereupon they "exploded like a mine" and,
according to Drew, "Erie went down like a dead heifer,"
as the three then picked up the pieces and the railroad.
At
the climax of the battle, as Edward Chancellor relates,
"Drew, Fisk, and Gould, who had taken over the Erie
HQ in New York, gathered up $8 million of greenbacks
there, tied them in bundles, threw them into the back
of a hackney cab, drove to the New Jersey ferry, crossed,
collected an army of thugs, and fortified Taylor's
Hotel on the Jersey City waterfront, renamed Fort
Taylor, with their armed men and three cannon. They
also had a shore patrol in four lifeboats, each containing
a dozen gunmen. All this was to fend off the naval
assault of the Commodore (Vanderbilt) who, it was
said, 'could be heard roaring from the New York shoreline.'"
Chancellor
describes another classic move, this one by Fisk when
he was director. "He sold short the stock of the United
States Express Company, which had a contract with
the Erie, and then cancelled the contract. Once the
express company's share price had fallen, Fisk covered
his shorts, bought more shares, and then reinstated
the contract."
Now
how do you like them apples? To digress a bit, Chancellor
also describes a similar situation involving the gambler
and speculator John "Bet-a-Million" Gates, who once
shut down a Chicago steel plant that he owned during
boom times, putting thousands on the street, claiming
that business was awful. Well, it turns out all he
was doing was covering his short position in the company.
Once this was accomplished, presto, he reopened the
operation. And you thought Bernie Ebbers and Dennis
Kozlowski were bad?!
Back
to Fisk, he was known as "the Prince of Erie" after
his seizure of the railroad, and there was also a
real sense of danger about him. As David Bain writes
in "Empire Express," once he "arranged for a judge
to have the Springfield Republican editor, Samuel
Bowles, arrested and jailed in New York for libel,
bribing officials to make themselves scarce so that
Bowles could not be bailed out."
Fisk
also carried the moniker "Jubilee Jim" for his extravagant
ways. His office was always open to all, with boxes
of cigars and bottles of whiskey prominently displayed
on his desk. Well, following the takeover of Erie
Railroad, Fisk and Gould, having pocketed more than
$20 million (along with Drew and another partner Frederick
Lane) went on a shopping spree, as David Bain describes,
"buying theaters and opera houses and palatial mansions
on Fifth Avenue."
Of
course you have to figure this ends badly, at least
for Erie Railroad, and by 1877 it was bankrupt, as
Fisk, Gould et al bled it dry. Erie was nonetheless
able to limp along until the 1940s, at which point
it was finally in a position to pay out dividends
once again to the shareholders. We, too, are going
to fast forward next week, to a time when yours truly
would pick up two hot dogs and two beers before boarding
the Erie-Lackawanna for my grueling commute home from
Hoboken.
Sources:
"Devil
Take The Hindmost" Edward Chancellor
"Empire Express" David Haward Bain (sic)
"A History of the American People" Paul Johnson
"Wall Street: A History" Charles R. Geisst
"The Growth of the American Republic" Samuel Eliot
Morison, Henry Steele Commager, and William E. Leuchtenburg
"America: A Narrative History" George Brown Tindall
and David E. Shi
Brian
Trumbore
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