American Decades
Durant, William C. 1861-1947
FOUNDER OF GENERAL MOTORS
Big Dreams.
William C. "Billy" Durant was not the typical automotive executive of the 1910s—an engineer or designer who liked to tinker with cars. Durant, rather, was a man of big dreams, a master stock market manipulator, charmer, and intense individual. He was a wealthy entrepreneur and salesman who fell in love with a Buick in 1904 and decided that he wanted to become a car baron. Fortunately, he had the initiative and access to money to pursue his dream. Durant wanted to create a group of independent car companies that cooperated with one another and could take control of the industry, following the pattern of consolidation in railroads and banking. Durant's greatest trait was as an empire builder. If he did not have the resources to achieve his goals, he would engage the imaginations of others who were powerful and wealthy.
Founds GM.
On 16 September 1908 Durant...
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1910's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Big Business: The Modern Corporation
- Creating the Federal Reserve System
- Economic Diplomacy in the 1910s
- The Five-Dollar Day
- Labor in the 1910s
- The New Freedom and the Trusts
- Organized Labor and the Wilson Administration
- Postwar Labor Distress
- The Retail Industry
- Seamstresses and Strikes: Women Organizers and the Garment Industry
- Taxation, Tariffs, and the National Economy
- The War Industries Board
- World War I and the Economy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1910–1919
