From: The humbugs of the world. An account of humbugs, delusions,impositions, quackeries, deceits and deceivers generally, in all ages. By P. T. Barnum (1866)
MONEY MANIAS
CHAPTER XXIV.
THE PETROLEUM HUMBUG.-THE
Every sham, as has often been said, proves some reality. Petroleum exists, no
doubt, and is an important addition to our national wealth. But the Petroleum
humbug or mania or superstition, or whatever you choose to call it, is a
humbug, just as truly, and a big one, whether we use the word in its milder or
its bitterer sense.
There are more than six hundred petroleum companies. The capital they call for
is certainly
not less than five hundred million dollars. The money invested in the notorious
South Sea Bubble was less than two-fifths as much - only about $190,000,000.
Now, this petroleum business-very much of it is just as thorough a gambling
business as any faro bank ever set up in Broadway, or any other stock
speculation ever conjured up in
I shall here tell exactly how those well known and enterprising financiers,
Messrs. Peter Rolleum and Diddle Digwell
proceeded in organizing the New-York and Rangoon Petroleum Company, of which
all my readers have seen the advertisements everywhere, and of which the former
is the Vice President and managing officer, and the latter Secretary. In June
1864, neither of these worthy gentleman was worth a
cent. Rolleum shinned up and down in some commission
agency or other, and Digwell had a small salary as
clerk in some insurance or money concern. They barely earned a living. Now, Rolleumn says he is worth $200,000 and Mr. Secretary Digwell, besides about $10,000 worth of stock in the
Mr. Rolleum was the originator of the scheme, and let
Digwell into it; and together they went to work. They
had a few hundred dollars in cash, no particular credit, an entirely unlimited
fund of lies, a good deal of industry, plausibility, talk, and cheek,
considerable acquaintance with business, and an instinctive appreciation of
some of the more selfish motives commonly influential among men.
First of all, Rolleum made a trip into the oil
country. Here, while picking up some of his ordinary agency business, he looked
around among the wells and oil lands, talking, and examining and inquiring of
everybody about everything, with a busy, solemn face, and the air of one who
does not wish it to be supposed that he has important interests in his care.
Then he talked with some men at (we will say)
"You can have a good many shares of a first class new oil company about to
be formed just for permitting your name to be used in its interest, and for
being a trustee." A thousand shares apiece, he said; to be valued at five
dollars each, the par value however, being ten dollars. Five thousand dollars
each man, and to be made ten thousand, as soon as the proposed puffing should
enable them to sell out. After a little hesitation, a sufficient number
consented. There was nothing to pay, something handsome to get, and all they
were asked for it was, to let a man talk about them. What if he did lie? That
was his business.
This fixed four out of the nine intended trustees.
Rolleum also obtained memoranda or printed circulars
showing the amounts for which a number of oil land owners would sell their
holes in the ground or the room for making others, and describing the premises.
He now flew back to
"Here are these wealthy and distinguished oil men right there on the ground
who are going to be trustees of my new company.
"You serve too, won't you? One thousand shares for your trouble - five thousand dollars. No money to pay - I will see to all that. Here are the lands we can buy,"-and he showed his lists. The bribe, and the names of those already bribed, influenced them, and this secured three more trustees. Two more were needed, namely the President and Vice President. Rolleum himself was to be the latter; his next move was to secure the former.
This, the most critical part of the scheme, was cunningly delayed until this
time. Rolleum went to the Honorable A. Bee, a
gentleman of a good deal of ability, pretty widely known, not very rich,
believed (perhaps for that reason) to be honest, no longer young, and of a
reverend yet agreeable presence. Him the plausible Rolleum
told all about the new Company; what a respectable board of trustees there was
going to be - and he showed the names; all either experienced and substantial
men of the oil country, or reputable business men of
"My dear Sir," urged Rolleum, sweetly,
"this legitimate business enterprise must succeed, and must secure wealth,
reputation, and influence to all connected with it. We know that you are above
pecuniary considerations, and that you do not need our influence, or anybody's.
We need yours. And you need not do any work. I will do that. We only need your name.
And merely as a matter of form, because the officers are expected to be
interested in their own company, I have set apart two thousand shares, being at
half par or $5 a share, $10,000 of stock, to stand in your name. See how
respectable all these Trustees are!" And he showed the list and preached
upon the items of it.
"This man is worth so many millions, that man is such an influential editor. Could I have obtained such names if this were not a perfectly square thing? Ten thousand dollars will go some ways towards squaring almost anything, with many people, even if it is a mere matter of form " and so the old gentleman consented. This fixed the whole official "slate."
Now to set up the machine.
In a few days of sharp running and talking, Rolleum and
Digwell accomplished this, as follows:
First, they hired and furnished
handsomely, paying cash whenever they couldn't help it, a couple of pleasant
first floor rooms close to Wall Street. No dingy desk-room up in some dark
corner or attic, for them. Respectability is the thing for Rolleum.
Second, they hired a lawyer to draft
the proper papers, and had the
Third, they now had every requisite
of a powerful, enterprising and highly successful corporation, except the small
trifles of money, land and oil. But what are these, to such geniuses as Rolleum and Digwell? Singular if
having invented and set the trap, they could not catch the birds!
They bought about three pints of oil,
for one dollar; and that settled one part of the question. They bought it ready
sorted and vialled and labelled;
some crude and green, some yellowish, some limpid as water, half a dozen or so
of different specimens. These, in their tall vials of most respectable
appearance, they placed casually on the mantel-piece of the outer office. They were
specimens of the oils which the company's wells are confidently expected to
yield- when they get 'em!
Last of all - land and money. Subscriptions to capital
stock are to furnish money, money will buy land. And saying we've got land will procure
subscriptions.
"It's not much of a lie, after all," said Rolleum, confidentially, to brother Digwell. "When we've said we've got it for awhile, we shall get it. It's not a lie at all. It's only discounting the truth at sixty days!"
So he and Digwell went to work and made a splendid prospectus
and advertisement, the latter an abridged edition of the former. This
prospectus was a great triumph of business lying mixed with plums and spices of
truth, and all set forth with taking "display lines." It began with a
stately row of names: New York and Rangoon Petroleum Company; Honorable Abraham
Bee, President; Peter Rolleum, Esq., Vice President;
Diddle Digwell, Esq., Secretary; and so on. With cool
impudence it then gave a list headed "Lands and Property" - not saying
"of the Company for fear of a prosecution for swindling. But the list
below began with the words "the oil lands to be conveyed to the Company
are as follows: "that's exactly it" quoth Rolleum - "no lie there, at any rate. They are to 'to
be conveyed' to us - if we choose - just as soon as we can pay for them."
And then the list went on from "No. 1 " to
"No. 43," giving in a row all those memoranda which Rolleum had obtained in Venango County and the region round
about, of the descriptions of the real estate which the landsharks
up there would be glad to sell for what they asked for it.
The Prospectus said the capital of the company was one million dollars, in one
hundred thousand shares at ten dollars each. But in order to obtain a WORKING CAPITAL,
twenty thousand shares are offered for a limited period at five dollars each,
not subject to further assessment.
And it added, though with more phrases, something to the following effect:
Hurry! Pay quick! Or you will lose your chance! In
conclusion the whole was wound up with many wise and moral observations about
legitimate business, interests of stockholders, heavy capitalists, economical
management, and other such things; and it bestowed some rather fat compliments
upon the honorable Abraham Bee and the Trustees.
Having concocted this choice morsel of bait, they set it in the great stream of
newspapers, there to catch fish. In plain terms, with some cash and some
credit--for their means would not even reach to pay in advance the whole of
their first advertising bill—they managed to have their advertisement published
during several weeks in a carefully chosen group of about thirty of the
principal newspapers of the United States.
The whole web was now woven; and Rolleum and Digwell, like two hungry spiders, squatted in their den, every
nerve thrilling to feel the first buzz of the first fly. It was natural that
the scamps should feel a good deal excited: it was life or death with them. If a
confiding public; in answer to their impassioned appeal, should generously
remit, they were made men for life. If not, instead of being rich and respected
gentlemen, they were ridiculous, detected swindlers.
Well - they succeeded. So truthful is our Great American Nation - so confiding,
so sure of the truth of what is said in print, even if only in the advertising columns
of a newspaper-so certain of the good faith of people who have their names
printed in large capitals and with a handle at one end -that actually these fellows
had a hundred thousand dollars in bank within ten weeks -before they owned one
foot of land, or one inch of well, or one drop of oil, except those three pints
in the vials on the office shelf!
And remember this is no imaginary case. I am giving point by point the exact
transactions of a real Petroleum Company.
Everything I have told was done, only if possible with a more false and
baseless impudence then I have described. And scores and scores of other
Petroleum Companies have been organized in ways exactly as unprincipled. Some
of them may perhaps have proceeded as real business concerns. Some have stopped
and disappeared as soon as the managers could get a handsome sum of money into
their pockets for stock.
What the result will be, in the present case, I don't know. The
I shall not make any "moral" about this story. It teaches its own. It
is a very mild statement of what was done to establish an actual specimen, -and
far from being of the worst description - of a great part of the Petroleum
Company enterprises of the day.
It is whispered that somehow or other the trustees and officers of the New York
and Rangoon do not own so much stock of their company as they did, having managed
to have their stock sold to subscribers as if it were company stock. If this is
so, those gentlemen have made their reward sure; and Mr. Peter Rolleum, having the cash in hand for that very liberal
allotment of stock which he gave himself for his trouble in getting up the New
York and Rangoon Petroleum Company, is very likely half or a quarter as rich as
he says.