Hetty Green was the only woman in America who could destroy entire railroad empires with a single investment decision, yet heated her room with a single candle to save on coal costs.
This contradiction defined her life—unlimited financial power paired with pathological cheapness that made her the foundation of the greatest fortune in history.
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TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Introduction
1:07 Chapter One: The Abandoned Heiress
5:43 Chapter Two: The Woman Who Bought America's Debt for Pennies
10:23 Chapter Three: Black Dresses and Borrowed Desks
14:52 Chapter Four: The Miser's Millions Find Their Purpose
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Henrietta Howland Robinson was born on November 21, 1834, in New Bedford, Massachusetts, into whaling wealth and Quaker austerity that would forge the most unlikely financial genius of the Gilded Age.
Her father Edward Mott Robinson had wanted a son and refused to see his wife or newborn daughter in his disappointment, while her mother sank into depression after Hetty's younger brother died in infancy.
The rejected toddler was sent to live with her grandfather Gideon Howland, whose failing eyesight transformed six-year-old Hetty into his personal reader of financial reports and stock market listings instead of fairy tales.
By age eight, she had opened her first bank account with hoarded nickels, and by thirteen, she served as her father's bookkeeper, managing accounts of one of New England's most successful maritime enterprises.
While her contemporaries learned to curtsy, Hetty mastered compound interest, accompanying her father to counting houses and stockbrokers rather than attending social teas.
When twenty-year-old Hetty was sent to New York with $1,200 to purchase a trousseau and attract a husband, she spent only $200 on clothes and invested the rest in government bonds.
The defining crisis came when her beloved Aunt Sylvia died in 1865, leaving an estate worth $2 million that was split between charities instead of going entirely to Hetty.
Driven by fury, Hetty produced what she claimed was an earlier will from 1862 that left her the entire estate, but mathematician Benjamin Peirce's statistical analysis proved the document was a forgery.
In 1867, at age thirty-three, Hetty married Edward Henry Green with a prenuptial agreement keeping their finances completely separate—an arrangement so unprecedented that lawyers had to draft entirely new language.
Living in London, Hetty executed one of history's greatest contrarian trades, buying deeply discounted U.S. government bonds when investors feared they would be redeemed in depreciated paper money rather than gold.
When President Grant signed the Public Credit Act in 1869 guaranteeing gold redemption, Hetty netted $1.25 million in profit, discovering her life's philosophy of buying when things are low and nobody wants them.
Returning to America, she worked from a desk provided free by Chemical National Bank, maintaining huge cash reserves and swooping in during panics to buy distressed assets.
Her marriage crumbled when Edward secretly used some of her securities as collateral for his failed railroad speculation, leading her to sue to protect her assets rather than bail him out.
The newspapers christened her the "Witch of Wall Street," reinforced by her austere black dress worn for years and her habit of carrying lunch in a metal box to avoid restaurant expenses.
The most shocking story involved her son Ned's leg injury, where she reportedly dressed him in rags and took him to charity clinics, leading to amputation when gangrene set in.
During the Panic of 1907, Hetty stepped forward when even J.P. Morgan's consortium ran short of funds, lending freely at reasonable rates and functioning as a one-woman Federal Reserve.
Her feuds with male financiers became legendary, particularly pointing a pistol at railroad magnate Collis Huntington and declaring she would put a bullet through his heart if he harmed her son.
Hetty died on July 3, 1916, at age eighty-one, supposedly after a stroke triggered by arguing with a maid over the price of skim milk.
Her estate, valued between $100-200 million, was divided equally between her children, finally releasing the wealth she had guarded more carefully than dragons guard gold.
Her son Ned immediately embarked on a spending spree that would have horrified his mother, building opulent mansions and throwing legendary parties with showgirls and unlimited champagne.
When daughter Sylvia died in 1951, she shocked everyone by leaving her entire $200 million fortune to sixty-four different charities, hospitals, libraries, and educational institutions.
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