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| When Money Was In Fashion: Henry Goldman, Goldman Sachs, and the Founding of Wall Street |  | Author: June Breton Fisher Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Category: Book
List Price: $27.00 Buy New: $7.60 as of 9/9/2010 09:05 CDT details You Save: $19.40 (72%)
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Seller: Milltag-uk Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 173,179
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.1
ISBN: 0230617506 Dewey Decimal Number: 332.66092 EAN: 9780230617506 ASIN: 0230617506
Publication Date: April 27, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
This epic biography tells the story of the rise of Wall Street and the growth of Goldman Sachs from a small commercial paper company to the international banking business we know today. At its heart is the story of Henry Goldman, a man who spoke out passionately for his beliefs, understood the importance of the bottom line, and was known to chuckle, draw on his cigar, and remind his young protégés, "Just keep in mind . . . Money is always in fashion." Though you will rarely find a mention of him in the official history of Goldman Sachs, it was Henry who established many of the practices of modern investment banking. He devised the plan that made Sears, Roebuck Co. the first publicly owned retail operation in the world, helped convince Woodrow Wilson to pass the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, and became a power player in the world of Wall Street finance at a time when Jews were considered outsiders. The book traces Henry Goldman's hard-fought and often frustrating career with Goldman Sachs, a company founded by his father Marcus and fraught with professional rivalries. The tensions between the Goldman and Sachs families extended outside of the boardroom and into the larger world as the United States went to war. Henry’s steadfast support for Germany during World War I would tarnish his reputation and drive him from the firm. But his involvement with finance would continue throughout his life, as would close friendships with luminaries like Albert Einstein, whom he would later join in outspoken denunciation of Hitler’s atrocities against European Jews. Here, June Breton Fisher, Henry Goldman’s granddaughter, tells his whole story for the first time—a story that has shaped contemporary finance and continues to resonate with us today.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
Fascinating Story June 3, 2010 Neil Kottler (Palo Alto, CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I can understand the frustration many book buyers may have had with this book. It is misnamed. Someone looking for information about the history of Wall Street has to go elsewhere; it's not really covered in "When Money Was In Fashion." Now unless the author had control over naming the book, which is highly unlikely, the fault lies with the publisher. However, what June Fisher has written is not only utterly fascinating, it is so beautifully told; very lyrical. And the subject of the title is absorbing. Henry Goldman was much more than a Wall Street figurehead or tycoon. He led a complete life, involved in the arts, music, science, a true Renaissance man. Yet the rupture between him and his kinsmen, the Sachs family, is mystifying to me; how such a close-knit family--the Goldmans and Sachs are related to each other--could become so distant that it would last a century or more. Wonderful tales of Albert Einstein and the child prodigy Yehudi Menuhin, obviously a gifted musician who lacked a backbone when he declined to play his Strad for Goldman when the old gentleman was blind and dying--the same Strad Goldman had benevolently purchased for him. The story about his relationship with Germany before, during and after World War I, his views on German society and his impatience with those who sought to subjugate Germany at the Treaty of Versailles, are also fascinating. Anyone interested in an excellent biography would delight in June Fisher's wonderful tale of her grandfather.
Gotta read this! April 16, 2010 Beatrice Izzey (Los Angeles) If you are the kind of person who reads the newspapers but finds they are not in depth enough about how our current mess came to be, this is for you. Gave me a sense of how the context was created by some self-serving people. Finance, stocks, the idea of trading are all artifices. Lending and borrowing and risk are all fictions.
When Money Was The End June 17, 2010 Erol Esen (Webster, NY United States) Some writing, regardless of its content, is written so well that it pulls me in to read some more. This book is one of those books. The content proved to be no less interesting: The Goldman family of the Goldman Sachs fame.
The book starts off with many generations ago in Germany between the 18th and the 19th centuries; even then the Jews were harshly treated with freedoms curtailed and quotas set as to how many could live in a town. Those who had the smarts and the energy left their familial orbits to travel far places like the United States for happier and more successful lives. The Goldman, who escaped the gravity of the familiar back in Germany, was Marcus. First in San Francisco, then in Philadelphia, and finally in New York City, everywhere Marcus went he recognized a new technology, learned it, improved it, sold it in services and goods. Story of Marcus gradually fades out and the story of Henry fades in, but the two men were very much alike in their hard work and hard play, and it should be said that Marcus' father, Wolf, was not different characteristically from his descendants, minus the opportunities.
With every great success story, such as the Goldman wealth, there is at least one really big innovation. Marcus had created the Initial Public Offering (IPO) mechanism in the stock exchange process. He was at the fountainhead of innovation gushing out talent, and he took a cut out from each drop. The drops accumulated to an immense wealth we all know about today.
Towards the end of the book there is a whole chapter on a violinist I had no conscious knowledge of: Yehudi Menuhin. A child prodigy, the chapter is titled, and talks about the relationship of this twelve-year old and the Goldman family. The latter's financial support of this 'kid' made me curious to learn more about Menuhin. I immediately went to youtube and listened...Einstein was right, listening to him play makes one believe in a higher being. While Menuhin's interpretation of Beethoven is sublime, his playing "Brahms Hungarian Dance No. 5" resonates the most with my soul. Henry Goldman cared nothing of the sixty-thousand dollars he paid in the midst of the great depression for Menuhin's violin. Because what he paid for delivered something priceless, and endless.
A highly personal account of Henry Goldman - his business, travels, art and family April 15, 2010 Angela M. Hey (Portola Valley, CA USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Henry Goldman's grand-daughter, June Breton Fisher, writes a highly personal account of her grandfather. She starts with his German roots, his grandfather, parents and their relationship with the Sachs family. The author emphasizes the influence a German heritage had on Henry's values and actions throughout the book.
The second chapter goes into how banks started to flourish in New York as wealth moved from California to the Eastern US. Three chapters document the Goldman Sachs investment bank, it's growth, clients and conflicts.
Henry is then free to wander around Europe, meeting people, discussing ideas and picking up art. Much is written about his relatives, his upstate New York camp and his blindness in later life. There's plenty to interest genealogists - a gold mine for those interested in family, a distraction for those looking for a business biography.
Henry's role in building Goldman Sachs is only part of the story. Indeed although the book mentions how hard he worked and names companies that Goldman Sachs took public, it is not a book that dwells on his business strategies and strengths.
The writing flows and it's an easy read. The structure is clear and well-organized. The book is full of anecdotes and tidbits - about restrictions on Bavarian Jews, Duveen's art business, Einstein's friendship, Yehudi Menuhin's childhood and interpersonal relationships.
The author paints vivid pictures of Henry's wife, Babette, especially in Chapter 10 where Henry dies. By the book's end Henry's character is so familiar, that the reader is left feeling sad and sorry.
I recommend this book to anyone wanting to understand the environment in which Henry Goldman operated, during war time, roaring twenties and depressed thirties. If you are looking for a business biography then this book is not it, but it's a good account of his personal life and contributions.
Regarding the title - has money really gone out of fashion?
Great look at how Wall Street was formed but a few tangents... March 7, 2010 Lehigh History Student 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
June Breton Fisher the granddaughter of Henry Goldman, who founded Goldman Sachs, provides an intimate look into the life of her grandfather and the way in which he invented Wall Street. This book contains many fascinating accounts of the early days of Wall Street, the trials of an immigrant, the lifestyle of the new rich class in the post Gilded Age world and a look at how America's financial potential was shaped. There are few books that offer such a close view to how the company was formed and a look at the man who did it. The book is very easy to read and provides an almost diary overview of the life of Henry Goldman showing all of the talents he had in the creation of a new way to make money. Not the ponzi schemes or scandals of today's Wall Street but a way to develop assessments of a companies' financial health such as a P/E ratio. The biggest complaint about this book comes in two areas. The first that there are long tangents that have very little to do with the actual topic itself and get deep into World War II history with no real relevant tie in other than the participants being German like Henry Goldman. The second is the lack of sources that are readily identifiable. A bibliography of further readings would be very helpful and crystallize an interesting narrative. Overall for those who want a personal look at how Wall Street's rise came about this is a great place to start.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
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