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Jay Cooke

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Jay Cooke Veteran Famous memorial

Birth
Sandusky, Erie County, Ohio, USA
Death
16 Feb 1905 (aged 83)
Elkins Park, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Elkins Park, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.0711191, Longitude: -75.1320814
Memorial ID
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Business Magnate. Born in Sandusky, Ohio, his family's estate was named Ogontz in honor of an Indian chief who once lived on the same land. The limestone dwelling overlooked Sandusky Bay and Lake Erie. Jay's father, Eleutheros Cooke a lawyer, and mother Martha Caswell, were well educated easterners and very active politically. They braved a difficult journey from the east before settling in the untamed region around Sandusky in 1827. Eleutheros went on to serve in Congress as a Whig. The area was a paradise of teeming deer, waterfowl and fish. While growing up here, Jay developed his lifelong passion for hunting and fishing. His early education was mainly from home schooling. At age 14, he began work at a Sandusky dry goods store where he became the head clerk while the owner taught him business and financial procedures. Then barely sixteen, a job led him to St. Louis and employment with Seymour & Bool where he earned an unheard sum of $600 a year. He was on his way at age 18, landing a clerk position with the banking firm E.W. Clark & Company which five years later led to a full partnership. Upon retirement, Cooke founded his own banking house known as Jay Cooke & Company of Philadelphia. His Bank was chosen by Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase (former Ohio senator and governor) to issue United States bonds to finance the Civil War. He raised over a billion dollars with the sale of various types of treasury bonds which allowed the Union to finance the war providing horses, guns and supplies while paying the men until victory over the South was achieved and the Union restored. In the postwar, Cooke became interested in the development of the Northwest and his bank financed the construction of the Northern Pacific Railway which was his undoing. In advancing money for the project, funds were lacking and during the Panic of 1873, the project was suspended with Cooke himself forced into bankruptcy. However, some six years later, he was again solvent and managed to meet all the financial obligations incurred during his insolvency. He was a Philanthropist on a grand scale, with the Episcopal Church receiving the bulk with donated funds for the construction of a number of churches. One is located at Put-in-Bay, Ohio. Legacy...He was the creator of municipal bonds. The practice where bankers stabilize the price of new bond issues and still used today by investment institutions was pioneered by Cooke. His residency and construction of a palatial home in Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania which he dubbed Ogontz (Ohio Indian Chief) after his boyhood home in Sandusky influenced the naming of many area Philadelphia landmarks. Two decades later, the estate and dwelling became the exclusive Ogontz School for Girls and the surrounding area became the city of Ogontz, Pennsylvania. Ogontz Avenue is a main avenue transecting the city of Philadelphia. The Jay Cooke Elementary School in the Logan section of the city bears his name and further away near Duluth, Minnesota lies the jewel of state parks: The Jay Cooke State Park, originated from land donated by the Northern Pacific Railroad, which Cooke owned. However, the Cooke Castle in Ohio is the ultimate; Cooke constructed the many room limestone dwelling on Gibraltar Island located in the harbor of South Bass Island on Lake Erie, which he purchased. He and his family spent every summer here until his death. The island has the highest land elevation in the Put-In-Bay area which became the lookout point for Commander Oliver Perry in the fight against the British during the War of 1812 when he and his men defeated a fleet of British vessels during the famous Battle of Lake Erie. Today, Gibraltar Island and the Castle belong to Ohio State University and is a lake laboratory for the purpose of teaching, learning and research. The Castle is a Federal Historical Site and is currently being refurbished. Many books pertaining to Jay Cooke and his financial expertise have been written, but the best was "Jay Cooke, Financier of the Civil War" author E.P. Oberholtzer published in 1907.
Business Magnate. Born in Sandusky, Ohio, his family's estate was named Ogontz in honor of an Indian chief who once lived on the same land. The limestone dwelling overlooked Sandusky Bay and Lake Erie. Jay's father, Eleutheros Cooke a lawyer, and mother Martha Caswell, were well educated easterners and very active politically. They braved a difficult journey from the east before settling in the untamed region around Sandusky in 1827. Eleutheros went on to serve in Congress as a Whig. The area was a paradise of teeming deer, waterfowl and fish. While growing up here, Jay developed his lifelong passion for hunting and fishing. His early education was mainly from home schooling. At age 14, he began work at a Sandusky dry goods store where he became the head clerk while the owner taught him business and financial procedures. Then barely sixteen, a job led him to St. Louis and employment with Seymour & Bool where he earned an unheard sum of $600 a year. He was on his way at age 18, landing a clerk position with the banking firm E.W. Clark & Company which five years later led to a full partnership. Upon retirement, Cooke founded his own banking house known as Jay Cooke & Company of Philadelphia. His Bank was chosen by Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase (former Ohio senator and governor) to issue United States bonds to finance the Civil War. He raised over a billion dollars with the sale of various types of treasury bonds which allowed the Union to finance the war providing horses, guns and supplies while paying the men until victory over the South was achieved and the Union restored. In the postwar, Cooke became interested in the development of the Northwest and his bank financed the construction of the Northern Pacific Railway which was his undoing. In advancing money for the project, funds were lacking and during the Panic of 1873, the project was suspended with Cooke himself forced into bankruptcy. However, some six years later, he was again solvent and managed to meet all the financial obligations incurred during his insolvency. He was a Philanthropist on a grand scale, with the Episcopal Church receiving the bulk with donated funds for the construction of a number of churches. One is located at Put-in-Bay, Ohio. Legacy...He was the creator of municipal bonds. The practice where bankers stabilize the price of new bond issues and still used today by investment institutions was pioneered by Cooke. His residency and construction of a palatial home in Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania which he dubbed Ogontz (Ohio Indian Chief) after his boyhood home in Sandusky influenced the naming of many area Philadelphia landmarks. Two decades later, the estate and dwelling became the exclusive Ogontz School for Girls and the surrounding area became the city of Ogontz, Pennsylvania. Ogontz Avenue is a main avenue transecting the city of Philadelphia. The Jay Cooke Elementary School in the Logan section of the city bears his name and further away near Duluth, Minnesota lies the jewel of state parks: The Jay Cooke State Park, originated from land donated by the Northern Pacific Railroad, which Cooke owned. However, the Cooke Castle in Ohio is the ultimate; Cooke constructed the many room limestone dwelling on Gibraltar Island located in the harbor of South Bass Island on Lake Erie, which he purchased. He and his family spent every summer here until his death. The island has the highest land elevation in the Put-In-Bay area which became the lookout point for Commander Oliver Perry in the fight against the British during the War of 1812 when he and his men defeated a fleet of British vessels during the famous Battle of Lake Erie. Today, Gibraltar Island and the Castle belong to Ohio State University and is a lake laboratory for the purpose of teaching, learning and research. The Castle is a Federal Historical Site and is currently being refurbished. Many books pertaining to Jay Cooke and his financial expertise have been written, but the best was "Jay Cooke, Financier of the Civil War" author E.P. Oberholtzer published in 1907.

Bio by: Donald Greyfield



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/225/jay-cooke: accessed ), memorial page for Jay Cooke (10 Aug 1821–16 Feb 1905), Find a Grave Memorial ID 225, citing Saint Paul's Episcopal Churchyard, Elkins Park, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.