Roger Babson
Roger W. Babson | |
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Babson pictured in The Babsonian 1920, Babson yearbook
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Born | Gloucester, Massachusetts, USA |
July 6, 1875
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Lake Wales, Florida, USA |
Education | MIT (1898) |
Occupation | Entrepreneur, Businessman, Economist, Writer, Philanthropist |
Known for | Business forecasting, founding of universities, predicting Wall Street Crash of 1929 |
Political party | Prohibition Party |
Spouse(s) | Grace Margaret Knight (m. 1900 - d. 1956) Nona M. Dougherty (m. 1957 - d. 1963) |
Children | Edith Low Babson |
Parent(s) | Nathaniel Babson and Ellen Starns |
Roger Ward Babson (July 6, 1875 – March 5, 1967), remembered today largely for founding Babson College in Massachusetts, was an entrepreneur and business theorist in the first half of the 20th century. He also founded Webber College, now Webber International University, in Babson Park, Florida, and the defunct Utopia College, in Eureka, Kansas.
He was born to Nathaniel Babson and his wife Ellen Stearns as part of the tenth generation of Babsons to live in Gloucester, Massachusetts. Roger attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology and worked for investment firms before founding, in 1904, Babson's Statistical Organization, which analyzed stocks and business reports. It continues today as Babson-United, Inc..[1]
On March 29, 1900, Babson married his first wife, Grace Margaret Knight, who died in 1956. In 1957 he remarried to Nona M. Dougherty, who died in 1963. Babson died in 1967.
Contents
Work on financial theory
Babson's success as an investor was based on unorthodox views of the operation of markets. According to biographer John Mulkern, Babson attributed the business cycle: to Sir Isaac Newton's law of action and reaction.... His pseudoscientific notion, that the gravity can be used to explain movement in the stock markets. His market forecasting techniques are in articles in Traders World Magazine and the Gravity Research Foundation he founded. http://gravityresearchfoundation.org/pdf/awarded/2005/Jaenisch_Jaenisch_2005.pdf
While attending MIT he received a degree in Engineering. He lobbied the dean to include a business course, which resulted in a course known as "Business Engineering". This was the start of Business being taught at an American University. Eventually the Business Engineering program was expanded and it is now seen as the fore runner of the MBA degree.[2]
Babson authored more than forty books on economic and social problems, the most widely read being Business Barometers (eight editions) and Business Barometers for Profits, Security, Income (ten editions). Babson also wrote hundreds of magazine articles and newspaper columns. He was a popular lecturer on business and financial trends.
Babson was an investor and sometimes director of many corporations, including some traded on the New York Stock Exchange. He established an investment advisory company Babson's Reports which published one of the oldest investment newsletters in America.
Babson's "Ten Commandments" of investing
Babson had "ten commandments" he followed in investing and encouraged his readers to do the same. These were:
- Keep speculation and investments separate.
- Don't be fooled by a name.
- Be wary of new promotions.
- Give due consideration to market ability.
- Don't buy without proper facts.
- Safeguard purchases through diversification.
- Don't try to diversify by buying different securities of the same company.
- Small companies should be carefully scrutinized.
- Buy adequate security, not super abundance.
- Choose your dealer and buy outright (i.e., don't buy on margin.)[3]
On September 5, 1929, he gave a speech saying, "Sooner or later a crash is coming, and it may be terrific."[4] Later that day the stock market declined by about 3%.[citation needed] This became known as the "Babson Break". The Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression soon followed.
Role in development of Andrews Pitchfork
He learned to draw a nominal line through zigzagging market action on charts from George F. Swain, a Professor of Engineering when he worked with him and later taught this technique to Allan H. Andrews who further refined it into "Andrews Pitchfork" a now commonly used trendline indicator.[5]
Political career
Babson was the Prohibition Party's candidate for President of the United States in 1940. Election was won by incumbent President Franklin Delano Roosevelt of the Democratic Party. Babson was surpassed by two other unsuccessful candidates:
- Wendell Lewis Willkie of the Republican Party.
- Norman Mattoon Thomas of the Socialist Party of America.
Role in development of the parking meter
In the late 1920s, Babson filed several patents for a parking meter.[6] The meters were suggested to operate on power from the battery of the parking vehicle and required a connection from the vehicle to the meter. In 1932, Carl Magee began to work on the parking meter and since his parking meter was the first to be installed for actual use on July 1935 in Oklahoma city, Magee is known as the inventor of the parking meter.
Establishment of the Gravity Research Foundation
Babson founded the Gravity Research Foundation in 1948.[7] The Foundation established a research facility in the town of New Boston, New Hampshire after Babson determined that this location was far enough away from the city of Boston, Massachusetts to survive a nuclear attack.
The "Babson Boulders" of Dogtown, Mass.
Babson was interested in the history of an abandoned settlement in Gloucester known as Dogtown. To provide charitable assistance to unemployed stonecutters in Gloucester during the Great Depression, Babson commissioned them to carve inspirational inscriptions on approximately two dozen boulders in the area surrounding Dogtown Common. The Babson Boulder Trail exists today as a well-known hiking and mountain-biking trail. The inscriptions are clearly visible. The boulders are scattered, not all are on the trail, and not all of the inscriptions face it, making finding them something of a challenge. Samples of some of the two dozen inscriptions include: "HELP MOTHER", "SPIRITUAL POWER", "GET A JOB", "KEEP OUT OF DEBT", and "LOYALTY".[8][9]
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.: A Short History of Roger L. Babson's firm
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Ken Fisher, 100 Minds That Made the Market, Wiley, 2007, pages 129-132.
- ↑ John Kenneth Galbraith, The Great Crash, 1929 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1997, page 84.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ US patent 1,731,839
- ↑ Jon Mooallem (2007, October). A curious attraction. Harper's Magazine, 315(1889), pp. 84-91.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.: Photos of boulders, downloadable PDF map of boulders with GPS coordinates, image of Roger Babson
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Actions and Reactions, autobiography by Roger W. Babson
External links
- Works by Roger Babson at Project Gutenberg
- Lua error in Module:Internet_Archive at line 573: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Works by Roger Babson at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- biographies of several Babsons including Roger Babson
- Pages using infobox person with unknown parameters
- Infobox person using religion
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2013
- Articles with Internet Archive links
- 1875 births
- 1967 deaths
- American Congregationalists
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
- Massachusetts Prohibitionists
- People from Gloucester, Massachusetts
- Prohibition Party (United States) presidential nominees
- United States presidential candidates, 1940
- Webber International University