William Wallace Cargill

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Born
William Wallace Cargill

December 15, 1844
DiedOctober 17, 1909(1909-10-17) (aged 64)
OccupationBusinessman
KnownforFounder of Cargill
William W. Cargill
Shoulder high portrait of middle aged man with dark hair wearing Chesterfield styled jacket, bow tie and white shirt
Born
William Wallace Cargill

December 15, 1844
DiedOctober 17, 1909(1909-10-17) (aged 64)
OccupationBusinessman
Known forFounder of Cargill
Spouse
Ellen Theresa Stowell
(m. 1868)
Children4, including Austen
FamilyCargill family

William Wallace Cargill (December 15, 1844 October 17, 1909) was an American businessman. In 1865, he founded Cargill, which by 2008 was the largest privately held corporation in the United States in terms of revenue, employing over 150,000 people in 68 countries.[1]

William Wallace Cargill was born on December 15, 1844, in Port Jefferson, New York. He was the third of seven children of Scottish sea captain William Dick Cargill, who had emigrated to New York in the late 1830s. His mother, Edna Davis, was a native of New York. In 1856, Cargill's parents relocated to Janesville, Wisconsin, to pursue an agricultural life.[2][3][4]

Career

In 1865, William W. Cargill started a small grain-storage business in Conover, Iowa, which eventually grew to become Cargill, Incorporated.[5]

In 1867, he was joined by two of his younger brothers, Sam and Sylvester, in Lime Springs, Iowa, where Cargill built a grain flat house and opened a lumberyard. In 1875, another younger brother, James F. Cargill, joined the company.[6]

Personal life

Later life and death

References

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