Clarence W. Barron
Clarence W. Barron | |
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Born | Clarence Walker Barron July 2, 1855 Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | October 2, 1928 Battle Creek, Michigan, U.S. | (aged 73)
Occupation | Financial journalist |
Spouse | Jessie Waldron (m. 1900) |
Children | 2 adopted daughters (Jane & Martha) |
External image | |
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Photo of Clarence W. Barron from The Wall Street Journal site. |
Clarence Walker Barron (July 2, 1855 – October 2, 1928) was an American financial editor and publisher who founded the Dow Jones financial journal, Barron's National Financial Weekly, later renamed Barron's Magazine.
He was one of the most influential figures in the history of Dow Jones. As a career newsman described as a "short, rotund powerhouse",[1] he died holding the posts of president of Dow Jones and de facto manager of The Wall Street Journal. He is considered the founder of modern financial journalism.
Early life and education
Barron was born in Boston and graduated from Boston English High School in 1873.[2][3]
Career
Barron began his journalism career as a reporter for the Boston Daily News from 1875 to 1878 and the Boston Evening Transcript from 1878 to 1887.[3] At the Transcript, Barron gradually focused on financial news.[3] He founded the Boston News Bureau in 1887 and the Philadelphia News Bureau in 1897, supplying financial news to brokers.[3] Barron sought to improve objectivity in financial journalism to reflect what he called "the public interest, the financial truth for investors and the funds that should support the widow and the orphan."[3]
In 1902, Barron purchased Dow Jones & Company for $130,000, following the death of co-founder Charles Dow.[3] In 1912, he appointed himself president of Dow Jones and its newspaper The Wall Street Journal.[3] Under Barron, The Wall Street Journal gained new printing presses and expanded reporting staff, with circulation increasing from 7,000 in 1912 to over 18,000 in 1920 to beyond 50,000 by 1930.[3]
In 1913, he gave testimony to the Massachusetts Public Service Commission regarding a slush fund held by the New Haven Railroad. In 1920, he investigated Charles Ponzi, inventor of the Ponzi scheme, for The Boston Post. His aggressive questioning and commonsense reasoning helped lead to Ponzi's arrest and conviction.[3][4]
Barron also established the financial advertising agency Doremus & Co. in 1903.[5] In 1921, he founded the Dow Jones financial journal, Barron's National Financial Weekly, later renamed Barron's Magazine, and served as its first editor. He priced the magazine at 10 cents an issue and saw circulation explode to 30,000 by 1926, with high popularity among investors and financiers.
Personal life
Barron married Jessie M. Waldron in 1900 and adopted her daughters, Jane and Martha. Mrs. Barron died in 1918. After Jane married Hugh Bancroft in 1907, Jane Barron became a prominent member of the Boston Brahmin Bancroft family. Martha Barron married H. Wendell Endicott, heir apparent to the Endicott Shoe Company. Mr. and Mrs. Barron and the Endicotts are buried in a joint family plot at the historic Forest Hills Cemetery in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston.
Barron was a prominent lay member of the Massachusetts New Church (Swedenborgians).[6][7]
Barron died in 1928 in Battle Creek, Michigan.[2]
Legacy
After his death, Barron's responsibilities were split between his son-in-law Hugh Bancroft, who became president of Dow Jones, and his friend Kenneth C. Hogate, who became the managing editor of the Journal.
They Told Barron (1930) and More They Told Barron (1931), two books edited by Arthur Pound and S. T. Moore were published that showed his close connections and his role as a confidant to top financiers from New York City society, such as Charles M. Schwab. As a result, he has been called "the diarist of the American Dream." (Reutter 148) This has led to allegations that he was too close to those he covered.
The Bancroft family remained the majority shareholder of Dow Jones & Company until July 31, 2007, when Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. won the support of 32 percent of the Dow Jones voting shares controlled by the Bancroft family, enough to ensure a comfortable margin of victory.
Books
- The Boston Stock Exchange (1893)
- The Federal Reserve Act: A discussion of the principles and operations of the new Banking Act as originally published in the Wall Street Journal and the Boston News Bureau, including a description of the financial, commercial and industrial characteristics of each of the Federal Reserve Districts and the Federal Reserve Act fully indexed, with pertinent legislation (1914): a.k.a. "Twenty-Eight Essays on the Federal Reserve Act".
- The Audacious War (1915)
- The Mexican Problem (1917)
- War Finance, As Viewed From the Roof of the World in Switzerland (1919)
- A World Remaking; or, Peace Finance (1920)
- Lord's Money (1922)
- My Creed (unk.)
- They Told Barron (1930)
- More They Told Barron (1931)
See also
Notes
- ^ Robert McG. Thomas, Jr., "Mary Bancroft Dead at 93; U.S. Spy in World War II", The New York Times, January 19, 1997. (The subject of this Times obituary was Barron's step-granddaughter.)
- ^ a b "Clarence W. Barron". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Geisst, Charles R. (2006). Encyclopedia of American Business History. New York: Facts On File. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-4381-0987-9.
- ^ Goebel, Greg (February 1, 2008). "The Confidence Artists". VectorSite. Archived from the original on October 25, 2008. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- ^ Sold to BBDO in 1974, Doremus became a unit of Omnicom in 1986. "Doremus & Co.", Advertising Age Encyclopedia, September 15, 2003.
- ^ Fisher, Kenneth L. (24 August 2007). 100 Minds That Made the Market. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-13951-6. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
- ^ "Church On The Hill". Retrieved 23 April 2023.
References
- Roberts, John B. Rating the First Ladies. ISBN 0-8065-2608-4
- Reutter, Mark. Making Steel. ISBN 0-252-07233-2