History Daily - Rockefeller Donates His Fortune to Charity
Episode Date: March 3, 2025March 3, 1910. John D. Rockefeller commits to donating the bulk of his fortune to charitable causes, which leads to the establishment of the Rockefeller Foundation and makes John one of the biggest ph...ilanthropists in American history. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's a cold fall morning
in 1854
at the Erie Street
Baptist Mission
church in Cleveland, Ohio. A 15-year-old boy strikes a match and lights several candles sitting in sconces
hanging on the wall. Then he grabs a fire poker and shifts the wood burning in the small fireplace at the
front of the church. The boy and his family haven't been in Cleveland long, but already he's found a home
at this small Baptist church where he serves as a volunteer. This morning, the boy's getting the chapel
ready for his favorite weekly event, a Sunday service. Excitedly, the boy walks to the front door,
pushes it open and steps outside where members of the church are gathered.
Then he rings the small bell hanging above the entrance.
The congregants begin to file inside, greeting the boy as they pass.
Once everyone is settled, the boy finds a spot in one of the front pews eager for the service to begin.
But as the pastor takes the altar, the boy's excitement turns to despair.
The pastor announces that the church is in dire financial straits.
He says that if they can't come up with $2,000 soon, he'll be forced to close its doors.
So getting to his feet, he reaches into his jacket pocket and pulls out a pen and paper.
He moves to the back of the church, slipping through the congregation before they leave.
Then as the churchgoers do begin to file out, he announces that he's coordinating a fundraising effort.
And he'll start by writing down the pledges of every single person in the hall.
The congregation breaks into applause and some cheer and shout their encouragement.
encouragement. But the boy isn't trying to be a hero. For him, the Erie Street Baptist Mission
has become a second home. And he's determined to do everything in his power, to save the church
and do God's will. The young boy, John D. Rockefeller, makes good on his promise. In the coming
weeks, he works tirelessly to collect pledges until he secures every penny of the $2,000. But this is
just the beginning of John's philanthropic journey. He will go on to found the renowned Standard Oil
company and become one of the wealthiest people in the world. In business, he will earn a reputation
for cold-blooded cruelty and a willingness to destroy any competitor who stands in his way.
Still, John never loses touch with that 15-year-old boy who raised money for what he believed was a
good cause. During his story business career, John D. Rockefeller decides it's his duty to give back
to people and organizations in need. And as John grows into one of the world's most powerful
industrialists. He also becomes a leading philanthropist, a pursuit that reached its pinnacle
when John announced his plan to donate the bulk of his wealth to charity on March 3rd, 1910.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is March 3, 1910. Rockefeller donates his fortune to charity.
It's late 1886 in John D. Rockefeller's Brownstone in Manhattan.
John sits at a desk reading through a stack of letters from individuals and organizations all across the country.
All of them are asking for the same thing, money.
At just 47 years old, John is worth over $18 million, over half a billion today.
As his company, Standard Oil, continues to thrive, and as John's wealth increases,
he spends a considerable amount of time every week determining how bad,
to donate portions of his wealth.
For a decade, he's adhered to the same process.
He reads the letters that arrive, decides on who to help,
and then sends off checks to the lucky recipients.
It's not a sophisticated system,
and John has finally come to realize that his practices are inefficient and ineffectual.
Two things he will not abide.
John isn't making the sort of impact to which he aspires.
He wants to benefit people on a grand scale that will last beyond his lifetime,
and he knows he can't make that happen all on his own.
So recently John enlisted the help of a friend, a Baptist minister, and leading American theologian, Dr. Augustus Strong.
So today, John puts down the letters and instead welcomes Dr. Strong into his office.
After the two friends catch up, Augustus tells John that he has an idea for his next charitable endeavor.
John should start a Baptist university in New York, made to rival institutions like Harvard and Yale.
The mention of those schools immediately sets John on edge, though.
He never attended college, and he thinks a degree pales in comparison to real-world experience.
John tells his friend he's not interested.
But Augustus won't take no for an answer.
He presses his case and argues that a major Baptist university will ensure the next generation of young professionals
enter the workforce with a strong moral core, and their beliefs will help influence business practices in every industry.
John admits he likes the sound of that.
A university could make a bigger impact than the small one-off checks he's been.
writing, an impact that would last beyond his lifetime. So John tells Augustus he'll consider
funding the project, but he doesn't like to put his money into any venture until he's done his due
diligence. So to get a sense for how colleges function and operate, John heads up state to
Ithaca to spend some time at Cornell University. John finds his time there fruitful. He likes
seeing young people engage with their education and the world around them. He also enjoys
talking to faculty members about their different approaches to teaching. By the time John,
returns to Manhattan, he has gained a newfound respect for institutions of higher learning.
And in the spring of 1887, John tells Augustus he's now committed to helping create a Baptist
university. But as the months go on, John's passion for the project wanes. It's not so much
the idea that doesn't inspire him anymore. It's the personality of his partner. Eventually, John
comes to suspect that Augustus is involved for the wrong reasons. He spends most of his time talking about
what his role will be at the university. John fears that Augustus only cares about propping himself
up as a national religious figure. John accepts that a man's desire for power is a fundamental
part of business, but he can't abide that mentality in leaders of the church. So John parts ways with
Augustus and goes in search of a new partner to help him with his new endeavor. It takes over a year,
but eventually John finds the perfect candidate. When in October 1888, John gets his hands on a copy of a speech
from an up-and-coming preacher named Frederick Gates.
Among other things, Frederick's speech calls for a Baptist university to be built in Chicago.
Frederick claims the East Coast is overrun with colleges, and it's time to give Midwestern Baptists
a school of their own. John is persuaded, and days later, he invites Frederick to come see him.
At their first meeting, John tells Frederick that although he lives in New York, he still considers
Cleveland, a Midwestern city, his true home. And he loves the idea of the Midwest having a Baptist
university that could rival the big schools out east.
So in the coming months, John and Frederick meet often.
Over the course of their conversations, John determines that, unlike his previous partner,
Augustus, Frederick's motivations are pure.
To John, it seems that Frederick wants to help others more than he wants to help himself.
So in the spring of 1889, John funds Frederick's plan.
He secures a gift of land for the school from a Chicago entrepreneur.
Then John makes an initial donation of $600,000.
almost 18 million today.
In October 1892, the University of Chicago opens for its first classes.
Despite calls from university leadership to name a building after John, he refuses,
saying charity should never be used for public relations.
John's founding of the University of Chicago will lead him to seek other causes
that will benefit people on a grand scale.
And soon Frederick will introduce John to a new opportunity,
supporting the fields of science and medicine.
And before long,
John will make what many considered
to be the most important philanthropic decisions
of his life.
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It's early Tapiolan vahinko and aloeuvres' home in Manhattan.
John sits in his office with his 27-year-old son, financier John D. Rockefeller Jr.
Together, father and son are reading a note from Frederick Gates.
In the memo, Frederick proposes the funding of a world-class scientific and medical research
center, one that would focus on discovering the causes and potential cures for a range of diseases.
Since working together on the University of Chicago, Frederick has helped facilitate much of John's charitable giving.
But Frederick hasn't proposed anything to rival the scale of the university until now.
After John and Jr. read the memo, Junior is excited.
He thinks Frederick's idea is brilliant.
Over the past several years, the press has attacked his father over Standard Oil's allegedly ruthless business practices,
and Junior says that funding medical research would be a great way to deflect some of that negative publicity.
But John reiterates that he doesn't like to use charity for PR,
and more to the point, he doesn't like Frederick's proposal.
John has always taken a practical, tangible approach to business and charity.
Oil is tangible.
Keeping a church's doors open is tangible.
Even a university provides students with a tangible piece of paper they can use to find jobs.
But John thinks a research center sounds like something for dormant philosophers.
Junior understands his father's concerns,
but he pleads with John to meet with Frederick and at least hear him out.
But grudgingly, John acquiesces and summons Frederick to his home.
After a meeting, John makes the same argument he previously made to his son.
But Frederick is persuasive.
He urges John not to focus on the research itself, but on the people that research will
tangibly benefit.
After talking with Frederick, John is more open to the idea.
But like he did with the University Project, John wants to understand what he's funding
before he funds it.
So once again,
He does his due diligence.
At the time, there are only two facilities in the Western world
that are comparable to Frederick's proposed research center,
the Pasteur Institute in Paris and the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin.
With the help of his international connections,
John gathers intelligence on those facilities
and learns about the impact they've made overseas.
He quickly starts to see the benefit
that an American Scientific Research Institute
could provide at home and abroad.
The research could push medical knowledge forward,
and that knowledge could.
could have practical value for doctors and their patients.
After learning all this, John decides to support Frederick's project.
Eager to begin, Frederick suggests to John that they attach the Research Institute to the University
of Chicago.
But John says no.
He wants the institute to be seen as a benefit to everyone, not as a feather in the
cap of the college he founded.
So John chooses New York City as a home for the center instead.
And he tasks Frederick and Jr. with finding leading scientists from around the world to work
there.
As John tells his son, we have money, but it will have value for mankind only
if we can find able men with ideas, imagination, and courage to put it to productive use.
In early summer, 1901, John D. Rockefeller makes a donation of $200,000,
almost $7 million today, to establish the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research.
With that money, John's team gets to work building the facility
and assembling their group of researchers.
And after visiting the Institute and meeting with its scientists, John gains an even better
understanding of the work they plan to do.
His time there further solidifies in his mind how important the Institute could be for all
mankind.
Over his lifetime, John will give roughly $60 million to ensure the Institute's survival
and success.
And these donations prove invaluable.
By the early 1900s, the Rockefeller Institute makes breakthroughs in the treatment of
pneumococcal pneumonia, heart disease, and diabetes.
Later, it will play an integral part in discovering DNA's role in transmitting hereditary information.
And in 1950, the Institute will serve as a model for the U.S. Government's National Science Foundation.
Within years of its founding, the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research demonstrates to John the positive global impact his money can have.
So John develops a new plan to ensure that his wealth would be used for deserving causes long after he dies.
On March 3rd, 1910, John announces his intention to give the bulk of his personal fortune to charity
in order to establish what will come to be called the Rockefeller Foundation.
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It's the morning of March 3rd, 1910,
at Standard Oil's offices in Manhattan.
John D. Rockefeller meets with his personal counsel,
Starr J. Murphy.
For the past months,
John, Starr, and a team of attorneys
and financial advisors have been advising a plan
for John to donate a large chunk of his personal wealth
to establish the Rockefeller Foundation,
an organization designed to promote the well-being of humanity throughout the world.
John knows the legal and financial gauntlet of starting a foundation will take years to navigate,
but still he feels a sense of urgency.
His personal net worth is approaching $900 million, over $28 billion in today's money.
But his company, Standard Oil, is on the brink of being declared a monopoly and broken up by the U.S. government.
John's public image is also at an all-time loan.
newspapers around the world often depict him as a dictator or a greedy king.
Normally, John doesn't like the idea of using charity for personal PR,
but now even he admits that a little positive attention would do his legacy good.
In their meeting, John tells his attorney Star Murphy that it's time to announce his plan.
John says that to get the foundation up and running,
within the first year he'll donate $100 million, equivalent of $3 billion today.
Following those initial gifts, John will establish an annual endowment.
In their conversations, Starr suggests that the best way to win over the press is for John to make the announcement himself.
But John believes the opposite.
He thinks if he appears in the press, they'll say he only wants attention.
So John orders his attorney to make the announcement instead.
Starr follows orders, drafts a release, and contacts newspapers across the country.
That evening and the following day, papers like the Boston Herald,
and Ohio's Democratic banner
feature front-page headlines reading
J.D. Rockefeller plans to give fortune away,
and Oil King plans to aid mankind.
The very same day, John's son makes a second announcement.
He will be stepping up to manage the establishment
of his father's foundation.
John was right to suspect that it would take time
for his plans to come to fruition.
Just over three years later, on May 14, 1913,
the Rockefeller Foundation officially begins its work.
The foundation will go on to become one of the most preeminent charitable organizations in the world,
giving away over $17 billion to thousands of groups and individuals.
In addition, John will personally give away hundreds of millions of dollars in his lifetime.
Still throughout John's career, many in the media question his motives for giving up so much of his fortune.
But John maintains he was guided by his faith and not selfish motives.
In 1932, on his 93rd birthday, John urges others to find out of his first birthday, John urges others to
follow his path. Let us, with faith in God, in ourselves and in humanity, go forward, courageously
resolved to play our part worthily in building a better world. John D. Rockefeller's legacy is complicated.
Many of the tactics he used to grow Standard Oil, destroyed a number of his competitors and workers' lives.
But regardless of John's business dealings, many historians consider him to be the greatest philanthropist in American history, a title John D. Rockefeller earned when he committed to donating the majority of his wealth to charity on March 3, 1910.
If you'd like to learn more about the rise and fall of oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller, check out the 18th season of my other podcast, Business Movers.
Next on History Daily, March 4, 1519.
The conquistador Hernan Cortez arrives in Mexico in search of the Aztec civilization and its wealth.
From Noiser and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazib, sound design by Molly Bach, music by Thrum.
This episode is written and research by Michael Federico.
Executive producers are Stephen Walters for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
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