What did thomas durant die of
Durant, Thomas Clark
As a financier and an executive of the Union Pacific Railroad in the early 1860s Dr. Thomas C. Durant (1820–1885) was instrumental in building the first railway spanning the western United States. He ended his career, however, in scandal and financial disaster, having greatly enriched himself at the public's expense.
The Durants were a wealthy and distinguished western Massachusetts family. Bowing to the wishes of his parents, Thomas Durant graduated from Albany Medical College in upstate New York in 1840. But he never practiced medicine, choosing instead to devote his career to business.
After a period of working in his uncle's grain and flour export business, Durant moved to New York City and became involved in the stock market. The 1850s saw the wide-spread building of railways, the "superhighways" of that time. Durant recognized railroads as a good investment, and soon he began to concentrate his entire resources on financing railroad construction.
Together with engineer Henry Farnum, he orchestrated the construction of numerous major rail lines, including the Mississippi and Missouri railroad across Iowa. In 1862 he negotiated a contract with the U.S. government to build the Union Pacific. a rail line that would go westward from Omaha, Nebraska. It was expected to join the Central Pacific, which was moving eastward from California to create a transcontinental railroad. Durant joined the company as vice president and general manager mainly in order to protect and extend his own financial interests.
The Union Pacific soon fell into financial difficulties. Durant attempted to solve the problem by creating a construction and finance company called the Crédit Mobilier of America to complete the building of the railroad. The Crédit Mobilier was a complex and corrupt scheme in which a small group of financiers contracted with themselves or their associates to construct the railroad, charging exorbitant prices for their services. Durant and his cronies pocketed huge profits for construction that was often faulty. Crédit Mobilier became a symbol of corruption in an era when illegal manipulation of large contracts was often the standard operating procedure.
Durant was instrumental in obtaining support and financing at every level of government. He lobbied President Abraham Lincoln (1861–1865) and both houses of Congress and with every favorable decision he pocketed more cash. He played on the fascination with the West during the war-torn 1860s and also exploited people's ignorance of the value of the vast area of land between the Mississippi River and California, which maps called the "Great American Desert." Therefore he was able to persuade Congress to pass the Pacific Railway Act of 1862 with a promise that the railroad would receive 10 square miles of land for every mile of track it laid.
In 1864 Crédit Mobilier took over the Union Pacific's construction contracts. Durant persuaded Congress to double the size of the land grants the railroad was previously awarded. He later sold some of this land but retained much more. This land holding added greatly to his wealth as did an elaborate scheme for padding his expenses. The original estimates for construction of the Union Pacific line had accurately set the cost at around $30,000 per mile of track. The Crédit Mobilier doubled this figure, with Durant and a few others pocketing the difference. Construction methods were shoddy. Shortly after the 1869 track completion ceremonies construction crews were forced to undertake several years' worth of additional work rebuilding the tracks.
Durant's reign as the leading robber baron of the Union Pacific and Crédit Mobilier did not last long. In 1865 Durant and his associates faced a severe financial problem, which Oakes and Oliver Ames, who amassed a fortune in the pick and shovel business, promised to ameliorate. They invested more than a million dollars of their own money in the railroad and raised an additional $1.5 million upon the credit of their businesses. Shortly thereafter it was discovered that Oakes Ames, a member of Congress from Massachusetts, distributed shares of Crédit Mobilier stock as political favors. He and a colleague were censured by the House of Representatives. Vice President Schuyler Colfax, Speaker of the House James C. Blaine, and future U.S. President James A. Garfield (1881) were all implicated but were later absolved in the scandal.
Durant had managed to accumulate some $23 million by defrauding the railroad's investors with his Crédit Mobilier scheme. An associate later called him "the most extravagant man I ever knew in my life." But, deeply involved in the worst financial scandal of his time and justifiably accused of bribery and fraud, Durant saw his fortune dwindle to virtually nothing following the financial Panic of 1873. He spent his latter days living quietly on his property in upstate New York, where he died on October 5, 1885.
See also:Oakes Ames, Oliver Ames, Central Pacific Railroad, Mississippi River, Panics of the Late Nineteenth Century, Transcontinental Railroad, Union Pacific Railroad, Westward Expansion
FURTHER READING
Ames, Charles Edgar. Pioneering the Union Pacific: aReappraisal of the Builders of the Railroad. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1969.
Galloway, John D. The First Transcontinental Railroad: Central Pacific, Union Pacific. New York: Arno Press, 1981.
Ingham, John N. Biographical Dictionary of AmericanBusiness Leaders. Westport: Greenwood, 1983, s.v. "Durant, Thomas."
Johnson, Allen and Dumas Malone, eds. Dictionary ofAmerican Biography. Volume 5, Cushman-Eberle. New York: Scribner's, 1930, s.v. "Durant, Thomas."
McCabe, James Dabney. Behind the Scenes in Washington: Being a Complete and Graphic Account of the Crédit Mobilier Investigation. New York: Continental, 1873.
Biography of richard thomas For 65 years Richard Thomas has been a working actor, first making his Broadway debut when he was a seven-year-old in 1958’s “Sunrise at Campbell,” later earning an Emmy as John-Boy in the ‘70s TV’s hit series “The Waltons,” and then following his adult life with scores of performances on TV, film and stage.