Pirate's Gold
By (Author) Andrew Coe
Four Winds Press
Four Winds Press
16th November 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
973.910922
Paperback
400
Width 203mm, Height 203mm
"Pirate's Gold" is story of a great American fortune, a man with the Midas touch, and his descendants who inherited more money than was good for them. A small-town boy from Massachusetts, Henry Huttleston "Hell-Hound" Rogers helped build Standard Oil into the worlds largest oil company, gaining renown as a notorious Wall Street pirate. After he died, his children inherited $49,000,000--billions in today's money. None of his descendants lived so large as Rogers son, Colonel Henry Rogers Jr., and his two children, Millicent and Harry. During the 1920s, the public was fascinated by the saga of Millicents ill-fated marriage to Count Salm, the Austrian tennis champion with matinee idol good looks. In the 1930s Harrys involvement in the death of an actress at a drunken party was front page news in every city in the country. "Pirate's Gold" looks beneath the headlines to uncover the roots of these stories: the struggles over money and love, and the difficulties of living up to ones famous family name.
Andrew Coe is a writer and independent scholar. He and his wife, Jane Ziegelman, are co-authors of "A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression," which won a James Beard award. His "Chop Suey: A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States" was a finalist for a James Beard award and named one of the best food books of the year by the Financial Times. He has appeared in documentaries such as the National Geographic Channel's "Eat: The Story of Food" and "The Search for General Tso." He is a direct descendant of Henry Huttleston Rogers.