Category: Politics, History & Leadership
The legal profession once operated on a smaller scale—folksy
lawyers arguing for fairness and justice before a judge and jury. But by
the year 1900, a new type of lawyer was born, one who understood
business as well as the law. Working hand in glove with their clients,
over the next two decades these New York City “white shoe” lawyers
devised and implemented legal strategies that would drive the business
world throughout the twentieth century. These lawyers were architects of
the monopolistic new corporations so despised by many, and acted as
guardians who helped the kings of industry fend off government
overreaching. Yet they also quietly steered their robber baron clients
away from a “public be damned” attitude toward more enlightened
corporate behavior during a period of progressive, turbulent change in
America.
Author John Oller, himself a former Wall Street
lawyer, gives us a richly-written glimpse of turn-of-the-century New
York, from the grandeur of private mansions and elegant hotels and the
city’s early skyscrapers and transportation systems, to the depths of
its deplorable tenement housing conditions. Some of the biggest names of
the era are featured, including business titans J. P. Morgan and John
D. Rockefeller, lawyer-statesmen Elihu Root and Charles Evans Hughes,
and presidents Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow
Wilson.
Among the colorful, high-powered lawyers vividly portrayed, White Shoe
focuses on three: Paul Cravath, who guided his client George
Westinghouse in his war against Thomas Edison and launched a new model
of law firm management—the “Cravath system”; Frank Stetson, the
“attorney general” for financier J. P. Morgan who fiercely defended
against government lawsuits to break up Morgan’s business empires; and
William Nelson Cromwell, the lawyer “who taught the robber barons how to
rob,” and was best known for his instrumental role in creating the
Panama Canal.
In White Shoe, the story of this small but influential band of Wall Street lawyers who created Big Business is fully told for the first time.