C. W. Post

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C. W. Post
File:Post 5416186694 12003bd602 o.jpg
Born (1854-10-26)October 26, 1854
Springfield, Illinois
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Santa Barbara, California
Cause of death Suicide
Resting place Oak Hill Cemetery, Battle Creek, Michigan
Nationality American
Occupation Breakfast cereal magnate
Net worth US$33 million at time of death[1]
Children Marjorie Merriweather Post

Charles William "C. W." Post (October 26, 1854 – May 9, 1914), was an American breakfast cereal and foods manufacturer and a pioneer in the prepared-food industry.

Biography

Early years

Charles William Post, commonly known as "C. W.", was born October 26, 1854 in Springfield, Illinois. He was the son of Charles Rollin Post and the former Caroline Lathrop and grew up in the hometown of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States during Post's boyhood years.[2]

Post graduated from the public schools of Springfield and enrolled at Illinois Industrial University (known today as the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign), where he remained two years before leaving without a degree.[3]

After a brief stay in Independence, Kansas, Post returned to Springfield, where he remained for over a decade working as a salesman and manufacturer of agricultural machinery.[3] During this interval Post invented and patented several farm implements, including a plow, a harrow, and a hay-stacking machine.[3]

In November 1874, Post married Ella Letitia Merriweather; they had one daughter.[3] The couple were later divorced.[3] Post married his second wife, Leila Young, in November 1904.[3]

Career

File:Cw post marj.jpg
C.W. Post holding his only child, daughter Marjorie Merriweather Post

Post suffered a mental breakdown in November 1885, the result of the stress and overwork which accompanied his job as a farm implement manufacturer.[3] Post made a break with his previous life, moving to the state of Texas in 1886, where he came into association with a group of real estate developers in Fort Worth, who were attempting to establish a new community on the eastern outskirts of a town called Riverside.[3] In 1888, Post began a real estate development of his own in Fort Worth on 200 acres (81 ha) that he had obtained, platting the land for streets and homes and constructing two mills.[3]

The stress of this work again proved too much for Post's constitution, and a second breakdown followed in 1891.[3] Post began a period of extensive travels in search of a cure, coming to take particular interest in the chemistry of digestion.[2] After a period traversing Europe, Post visited the Battle Creek Sanitarium of Battle Creek, Michigan, a facility operated by John Harvey Kellogg. He was inspired to start his own company based upon the dietary products used there.

In 1895, Post founded Postum Cereal Co., with his first product, Postum cereal beverage. Post's first breakfast cereal premiered in 1897, and he named the product Grape-Nuts cereal because of the fruity aroma noticed during the manufacturing process and the nutty crunch of the finished product. In 1904, he followed up the Grape Nuts label with a brand of corn flakes, which was first called Elijah's Manna before being renamed Post Toasties in 1908.

In 1906, Post invested some of his substantial earnings from his food products manufacturing into Texas real estate, purchasing a massive 225,000-acre (91,000 ha) tract in Garza and Lynn Counties.[3] Post platted a new town, which he called Post City.[3] Shade trees were planted, farm parcels laid out, and a hotel, school, churches, and a department store were constructed for the new Garza County seat.[3]

In 1907 Collier's Weekly published an article questioning the claim made in advertisements for Grape Nuts that it could cure appendicitis. Post responded with advertisements questioning the mental capacity of the article's author, and Collier's Weekly sued for libel. The case was heard in 1910, and Post was fined $50,000. The decision was overturned on appeal, but advertisements for Postum products stopped making such claims.[4]

Post was a staunch opponent of the trade union movement and was remembered by the National Association of Manufacturers as one who "opposed bitterly boycotts, strikes, lockouts, picketing and other forms of coercion in the relations between employer and employee."[2] Post was also a leading public advocate of the open shop system.[2]

Death and legacy

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A statue of C.W. Post in front of the Garza County Courthouse

At the end of 1913, the chronically ill Post's health deteriorated to the point that he canceled public appearances, which prompted speculation in the press regarding his well-being.

In early March 1914, Post was believed to be suffering from appendicitis and was rushed via a nonstop train from California to Rochester, Minnesota to be operated on by William and Charles Mayo, regarded as the preeminent surgeons of the day.[2] Upon examination the Mayo brothers deemed Post to be inoperable, however, and the breakfast cereal magnate returned home to Santa Barbara without surgical remedy, still plagued by stomach pain.[2] In the 1995 book The Life and Times of Majorie Merriweather Post, author Nancy Rubin claims that Post did indeed have the Mayo brothers operate successfully sometime between March 5 and 10, 1914.

On May 9, 1914, despondent over his ongoing stomach issues, Post took his own life with a self-inflicted gunshot. His 27-year-old daughter, Marjorie Merriweather Post, inherited his company along with most of his vast fortune, one of the largest of the early 20th century .[5]

Marjorie Merriweather Post later married financier E.F. Hutton and owned a 177-acre (72 ha) estate on Long Island's North Shore called "Hillwood." Marjorie sold the estate in 1951 for $200,000 to Long Island University, which founded its C.W. Post Campus in 1954, marking the 100th anniversary of C. W. Post's birth. Currently the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University has about 8,500 full- and part-time students and over 100,000 alumni.

See also

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Obituary: C.W. Post," American Industries, vol. 14, no. 11 (June 1914), pg. 43.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 William M. Pearce, "Charles William Post," The Handbook of Texas Online, Texas State Historical Society, www.tshaonline.org/
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Further reading

  • Charles Dudley Eaves and Cecil Allen Hutchinson, Post City, Texas: C.W. Post's Colonizing Activities in West Texas. Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1952.
  • Nettie Letich Major, C.W. Post: The Hour and the Man: A Biography with Genealogical Supplement. Washington: Judd and Detweiler, 1963.
  • Jan Reid, "C.W. Post," Texas Monthly, March 1987.
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External links