|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
July
Charles Yerkes, telescope
benefactor, a stellar scoundrel, author says
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
7/25/06
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
U.
of I. archivist John Franch, is the author of “Robber
Baron: The Life of Charles Tyson Yerkes” (University
of Illinois Press). It is the first biography of the
Quaker-born tycoon, who gave Chicago its “el”
trains, and
according to Franch, perfected corruption in that
city. |
|
|
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Robber barons apparently didn’t come by their titles
easily. Just how hard they had to work – on both sides of the
law –
to hold on to their empires is revealed in a new book about one particularly
ingenious and controversial tycoon.
Even by Chicago’s standards at the turn of the 19th century, “streetcar
magnate” Charles Tyson Yerkes was an outlaw, a scoundrel who never
met a rule, regulation or obstacle he couldn’t march over, under,
around or through.
So says John Franch, the author of “Robber Baron: The Life of
Charles Tyson Yerkes” (University of Illinois Press). It is the
first biography of the Quaker-born tycoon, who gave Chicago its “el”
trains, London its “tube” system and the world its largest
refractory telescope.
According to Franch, Yerkes didn’t invent corruption in Chicago.
He merely perfected it, “bringing order to what had been a chaotic
system of bribery.”
“After Yerkes’ emergence on the scene, corruption in Chicago
moved to another level.”
Franch, a freelance writer and an archivist at the University
Library of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, traces
the roller-coaster ride of the “traction king” through
newspapers, memoirs, credit reports, court filings and bankruptcy
records.
Yerkes (1837-1905), a man Franch variously calls “the magnate”
and “the financier,” won and lost vast sums of money as
a broker and later a pioneer in public mass transit, but like the proverbial
cat, he somehow managed to land on his – or someone else’s
– feet. In his early career he spent seven months in prison for
larceny, which instead of persuading him to clean up his act, served
as a lesson for how to avoid – at any cost – incarceration
for far greater infractions in the future.
From the time of his imprisonment in Philadelphia’s Eastern State
Penitentiary, “Charles was consumed by an almost pathological
need for power – power that would give him mastery over his environment,”
Franch wrote. “He did not intend to become a victim again.”
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
|
“Streetcar magnate” Charles Tyson Yerkes
was an outlaw, a scoundrel who never met a rule, regulation
or obstacle he couldn’t march over, under, around
or through, according to the new biography by John
Franch. |
|
|
Yerkes’ ruthless
risk-taking, backstabbing, bribe-paying, take-no-prisoners’ reputation
earned him the starring role in a muckraking book, “If Christ
Came to Chicago,” and gritty-realist novelist Theodore Dreiser
used him as a model for Frank Cowperwood in what became known as his
Trilogy of Desire: “The Financier,” “The Titan”
and “The Stoic.”
“Yerkes definitely belongs in the pantheon of robber barons,”
Franch said. “He was incredibly unscrupulous, routinely using
bribery and at times even employing professional vamps to seduce lawmakers.
He even looted his own companies for his personal gain.”
Yerkes’ Consolidated Traction operations in Chicago demonstrate
“his fundamental unscrupulousness,” Franch wrote.
“The magnate had bequeathed to the city a magnificent streetcar
system – but one that groaned under the load of an insupportable
and bewildering thicket of securities. It would take Chicagoans decades
to unravel this traction tangle – in a poisonous political climate
of distrust and hostility that was another one of Charles’ legacies.”
Bad as he was, the magnate did have some good qualities. Unlike J.P.
Morgan, John D. Rockefeller and others, Yerkes eschewed self-serving
justifications to excuse his actions.
“He was honest in his dishonesty,” Franch said. “Yerkes
once admitted that
self-satisfaction was his primary aim in life.”
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Charles
Yerkes' paramour, Emilie Grigsby, was 19 or 20 years
younger, but his equal in sophistication, charm and
intelligence. The mansion he built on Park Avenue,
a few blocks from his Fifth Avenue palace, was for
Emilie – the daughter of a Kentucky slaveholding
father and a Cincinnati brothel-running mother. |
|
|
The magnate even
satisfied his soul, that through art. Yerkes put together a “notable
collection” of fine art, Franch said – replete with works
by Raphael, Rembrandt, Rubens and Van Dyck. He built fabulous mansions
in New York City to display his art, tapestries and rugs, the latter
collection judged by art connoisseur Bernard Berenson as “unrivalled.”
Described as charismatic, a brilliant conversationalist and devilishly
handsome, with “wonderful” blue eyes, Yerkes also was, not
surprisingly, a ladies man.
One of his greatest love affairs began during his second marriage and
led to his second divorce.
His paramour, Emilie Grigsby, was 19 or 20 years younger, but his equal
in sophistication, charm and intelligence. The mansion he built on Park
Avenue, a few blocks from his Fifth Avenue palace, was for Emilie –
the daughter of a Kentucky slaveholding father and a Cincinnati brothel-running
mother.
Yerkes also financed the building of a magnificent fountain in Lincoln
Park, donated animals to a local zoo and loaned paintings and sculpture
to the Art Institute of Chicago. As a director on the board of the Chicago
World’s Fair he helped make that event “an artistic and
financial success,” Franch said.
But arguably his greatest contribution was to astronomy – by subsidizing
the 40-inch-telescope and observatory for which he was genuinely praised
in his own time. Franch’s book was sparked by a visit to the Yerkes
Observatory in Lake Geneva, Wis., when he was an undergraduate at Illinois.
He and other members of the astronomy club were given a tour by Richard
Dreiser, said to be a distant relation of Theodore Dreiser.
“The magnificent observatory inspired in me an interest in the
structure’s namesake. I subsequently read Theodore Dreiser’s
‘Trilogy of Desire’ and was hooked.”
Then, after learning that “there was as yet no non-fiction biography
of Yerkes, I decided to write one,” Franch said.
It would take him about 10 years, squeezing writing in while working
full-time.
Franch finds it “somewhat amazing, considering what a fascinating
figure he was,” that there hasn’t been a biography of Yerkes
until now.
Part of that he attributes to the fact that most of Yerkes’ personal
papers were burned shortly after his death. But, there were other ways
to reconstruct Yerkes’ life.
“Because he was often in trouble with the law, he left a long
paper trail winding through the courtrooms of Philadelphia, Fargo, Chicago
and London,” Franch said, adding that “most of these court
records had never been tapped by historians.”
|
 |
 |
|