Isidor Straus
Isidor Straus
The American merchant Isidor Straus (1845-1912) was the owner of the department store R. H. Macy and Company and a U.S. congressman.
Isidor Straus was born on Feb. 6, 1845, in Otterberg, Germany, of a cultivated family. His father, a successful landowner and merchant, suffered political repression and emigrated to America in 1852. After traveling as a merchant in the South, he established a general store in Talbotton, Ga., bringing his wife and four children over in 1854. Isidor was the eldest of this family which was destined for distinction. He took responsibility for family affairs and was the real business head.
Straus was educated in local public schools but was prevented from going to West Point by the Civil War. He first worked in the family store; then a local business group sent him to Europe to buy ships and run the Union blockade, exporting cotton directly. This plan was abandoned, and Straus was left stranded in London with his life savings ($1,200 in gold) stitched into his underwear. He worked for 6 months in a Liverpool office and began trading Confederate bonds on the Amsterdam and London markets. He returned home with $12,000 and set up in business with his father, importing crockery.
L. Straus and Son (1866) did very well. His brother Nathan decided to reach more customers by opening departments inside existing great stores. They took over R. H. Macy's basement in 1874 and soon were doing over 10 percent of all Macy's business. Outlets were opened in big department stores in Chicago, Boston, and Philadelphia (Wanamaker's). They bought factories in Europe and began domestic crockery manufacture also. In 1888 the two brothers became partners in Macy's and in 1896 sole owners. Isidor reorganized the store; he was the business brains, Nathan the idea man. Straus' careful management built Macy's into the "biggest department store in the world."
Straus emphasized underselling, advertising, and the use of odd prices. From 1893 to 1919 the brothers also controlled a Brooklyn department store, and the two stores cooperated in joint purchasing, foreign buying, joint ownership of drug and food processing, and, in general, exchange of information. But the Straus family fortune was built essentially on Macy's.
Straus was a warm friend of President Grover Cleveland and a Gold Democrat of the Carl Schurz variety. He fell out with the party when it adopted free silver under William Jennings Bryan. He worked for Cleveland's reelection in 1892 and declined the office of postmaster general. Straus also firmly opposed the protective tariff. He served in Congress (1893-1895) but refused renomination. He worked for various charities and was a founder-member of the American-Jewish Committee. He drowned when the Titanic went down on April 15, 1912.
Further Reading
The best source on Straus is Ralph M. Hower, History of Macy's of New York (1943), which makes use of Straus's unpublished autobiographical essay. Isidor's brother Oscar S. Straus produced his own recollections, Under Four Administrations, from Cleveland to Taft (1922), but devoted little space to Isidor. □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions.(Review)
Magazine article from: Journal of Economic Issues; 12/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...over time in four major industrial nations. And the book accomplishes...of the three industrial revolutions that are widely recognized...emerging early on as an industrial nation due to the economic...international dominance by the Industrial Revolution and by its important textile...
|
|
As Time Goes By: From the Industrial Revolutions to the Information Revolution. (Book Reviews).
Magazine article from: Business History; 7/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; CHRIS FREEMAN and FRANCISCO LOUCA, As Time Goes By: From the Industrial Revolutions to the Information Revolution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. Pp.xv + 407. ISBN 0 19 924107 4, [pounds sterling]50). The authors of this...
|
|
The Industrial Revolution
Newspaper article from: New Straits Times; 8/28/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...Times 08-28-2001 The Industrial Revolution Byline: Compiled by Shareem...explain the causes of the Industrial Revolution, the inventions that spurred...international.com/industrial- revolution.htm Suitable for teachers...
|
|
Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions
Magazine article from: Business History Review; 4/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions. Edited by Thomas K. McCraw. Cambridge: Harvard...sense(s) was Wedgwood both a preindustrial and an industrial company? What were the pros and cons of industrialization...
|
|
Pursue the new industrial revolutions
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 2/23/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Global Opportunities Fund, has positioned the portfolio into companies likely to benefit from this 21st-century industrial revolution. It is not an average global growth fund; it is a spicy portfolio containing 50 to 60 of Mr Thomson's best...
|
|
Putting biotech to work for cleaner ports.(Spotlight On CLF Ventures)(Industrial Revolutions LLC )(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Conservation Matters; 9/22/2004; 700+ words
; CLF VENTURES HAS PARTNERED with investment group Industrial Revolutions LLC to promote an environmentally-sound pollution prevention system that uses natural biological processes to clean ship bilge...
|
|
THIRD INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN FAST-FORWARD.(Living Today)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 4/22/1990; 700+ words
; ...Also, unlike the first two revolutions, the third is not centered...at the heart of the first Industrial Revolution in the United States. He...About the third Industrial Revolution, Finkelstein is an optimist...the first two industrial revolutions to proliferate during the...
|
|
Britain's Industrial Revolution.
Magazine article from: Business History; 4/1/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...unfashionably, that there was an Industrial Revolution. Although recent measurements...a wider conception of the Industrial Revolution, in which social...contribution of women to the Industrial Revolution has been overlooked until...
|
|
The Industrial Revolution in World History.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: The Historian; 3/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...describes the global processes of the industrial revolution. According to Peter Stearns, the industrial revolution is comparable to the Neolithic...essay rather than a monograph on the industrial revolution. Stearns' strength is narrative...
|
|
The Industrial Revolution and British Society.
Magazine article from: Business History; 4/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...that arise in studying the Industrial Revolution. The contributors, all leading...nature and causes of the Industrial Revolution. Nor is it unexpected...general historiography on the Industrial Revolution, particularly in the light...
|
|
Industrial Revolution
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Industrial Revolution term usually applied...the vast changes. The Industrial Revolution did not in fact end...later lagged behind in industrial development, and the...away from France. The revolution did not make the rapid...
|
|
Industrial Revolution, The
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
Industrial Revolution, The This term is used to refer...the causes and consequences of the Industrial Revolution (see, for example, R. M. Hartwell ( ed.) , The Causes of the Industrial Revolution in England , 1967...
|
|
Agriculture Since The Industrial Revolution
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Food and Culture
AGRICULTURE SINCE THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AGRICULTURE SINCE THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. It is difficult...promises to continue the revolution well into the future. Agricultural advances after the Industrial Revolution greatly increased...
|
|
industrial revolution
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
industrial revolution. In 1837 Louis-Auguste Blanqui used...Arnold Toynbee's Lectures on the Industrial Revolution of the Eighteenth Century...and manufacturing. Symbolic of the industrial revolution was the use of coal as a...
|
|
Second Industrial Revolution
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
Second Industrial Revolution See INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION .
|