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| Article Page url: http://www.thehistorybox.com/ny_city/society/printerfriendly/nycity_society_gossip_scandals_pt_1_article0069.htm | |||||||||||||
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A Shock to Wall Street 1885 Part I Henry N. Smith and William Heath & Co. Fail.
Wall-street had another sensation
yesterday. Following close in the
wake of the suspension of Soutter
& Co. came the announcement early
in the day of the failure of
another conspicuous bear house,
preceding only by an hour or so
the news that one of the biggest
bear operators in the market had
been pushed to the wall. Two
failures in one day representing
losses estimated at many hundreds
of thousands of dollars were
enough to keep the Street in a
hubbub till long after business
hours. Other failures were predicted in abundance. Houses that have been known for years in the Street as of the staunchest and most conservative character were named in the sensational rumors that were sent flying helter-skelter through all the Stock Exchange district. Friends of the unfortunate house of Heath & Co. were heard making bold assertions to the effect that it was through the fault of a customer prominent on the Street that they had been forced into disaster; and going further, the Heath people declared that this customer was none other than the famous bear leader Henry N. Smith, Jay Gould's old partner and Jay Gould's old dupe in more than one big stock rigging operation. It was about one hour after the Stock Exchange had listened to the reading of the confession of Heath & Co., that the Chairman rapped again with his heavy gavel in the trading room for attention once more. This was what he read then: To the President of the New
York Stock Exchange: So far did the dealings of the
two houses reach, so scattered
were the claims against them, that
it kept the Chairman hard at work
for over two hours and a half in
buying and selling stock on
account of the failures. Though
Henry N. Smith is a member of the
Stock Exchange, he had no
outstanding contracts to be
settled in his own name by the
Exchange. Everything in this line
was done for the account of Heath
& Co., with whose interests his
own seemed to be too closely
interwoven to permit of any
analysis for a long time to come.
Affairs were in a condition far too much tangled for the giving our of any statement, he explained to hordes of brokers who came pouring in on him for information; when they would be so straightened out to permit of an official statement he could not say. From another person claiming knowledge of the matter was quoted the assertion that the losses through Heath & Co. to Stock Exchange firms on speculative account would not rise above $100,000 or $150,000. But in their stock account was involved only a comparatively small fraction of the entire loss. The firm has done one of the largest banking businesses in Wall-street, and the heavy losers by their suspension will be individuals and firms who have made deposits with them. At least $1,000,000 is said to have been placed in their hands in this way. One man was reported to have had something over $400,000 on deposit with the firm. Another operator was a depositor to the tune of $150,000, and a number of the most conspicuous firms on the Street are placed in the list of depositors quoted in the gossip heard on the Exchange. Two of the most entertaining stories that went the rounds among the interested brokers related to the real cause of the failures. It was admitted on all sides that Smith's non-provision of funds to protect his holdings was the cause of the smash-up of the Heath people. The Heath failure was chiefly interesting for two things, one that a house long established and having a well earned reputation for conservatism should have been overtaken by such a disaster, and the other that Heath & Co. have for years been credited with standing high in the good graces of Jay Gould. A notable thing, indeed, has been the fact that the houses which fall most frequently are those which have enjoyed confidential relations with Gould himself or some one of his clique. This was what gave an extra interest to the failure the other day of Soutter & Co. But even a more interesting story than this which was premised upon the well worn theory of Gould's duplicity was listened to and given confidence. That used the name of William H. Vanderbilt. Mr. Smith began his business career in Buffalo as a wholesale clothing merchant, amassing a competence while still very young. In 1860 he left Buffalo and came to New York, and in a small way began to operate in the stock market. His operations were from the start successful, and when, after the beginning of the civil war, gold became a speculative article, he transferred his operations to the gold market, his ventures being enormous and characterized with a dash that made his name a famous one in the street. He at this time formed a partnership with Jay Gould, under the name of Smith, Gould & Martin. The house became the Wall-street speculative firm of its day. A hair dozen of the big corners of the time when it was in existence were concocted by the estimable gentlemen who composed the firm. Erie's famous manipulations in the day of Fisk were ordered in the office of Smith, Gould & Martin. The Gold Corner and Black Friday were their contributions to history, too. And in the end, after fleecing all the lambs that were within reach, the good partners fell out over a corner in Northwest. Mr. Jay Gould was on top: under
him was red-mustached, portly Mr.
Henry N. Smith. That was 16 years
ago. Much of Mr. Smith's property,
something like $4,000,000 was
swept away by Mr. Gould's
trickery. From that day on Smith
and Gould have been pronounced
enemies, though again and again
Wall-street deals have necessarily
placed them somewhat in the
position of allies. Gould saw
Smith badly worsted in a combat
with old Commodore Vanderbilt just
after the old firm of Smith, Gould
& Martin had been dissolved. Smith was plucky. He did not stop his visits downtown. People who used to bow to him as Mr. Smith got into the habit of familiarly calling him "Hen," and old sufferers from his shrewdness thought they saw the thread of Providence running through life. Smith became a skirmisher. He was found in every deal, big and little. He had enough of secrets to make him still a power of a certain sort and made by little his bank account swelled into comely proportions even to the Wall-street eye. A couple of years or so ago he went over to Europe for a little trip. He had not lost his memory, and he wore abundant smiles on his face when he came across Commodore Vanderbilt' estimable grandson William K. In his persuasive way he opened up to the gaze of young Mr. Vanderbilt beautiful visions of fortunes to be doubled and quadrupled by following one or two simple little rules. William K. was captured. One of the simple little rules was to put a boundless trust in Mr. Henry N. Smith. William K. came home bankrupt; Henry N. didn't. The Western Union scoop suffered at the hands of the old Commodore was avenged. Mr. William H. Vanderbilt assumed his son's obligations, and put the young man so Wall-street says on a pension of $70,000 a year. But William H. Vanderbilt is only human, and it is not strange, says Wall-street in its palliating way, that Mr. William H. Vanderbilt should look forward to using a bit of the whip himself when the proper time came. That time is believed to have arrived yesterday, when Mr. Smith a second time went toppling over, once knocked over by Cornelius, and now knocked over by Cornelius' son, the father of William K. Continue Part II
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