Financial History Issue 128 (Winter 2019) | Page 38
never went, through, and in 1974 the firm
declared bankruptcy.
Before it went out of business, New-
burger, Loeb & Co. made its mark on Wall
Street history when it admitted Joseph
Louis Searles III as a partner in 1970 and
proposed him as a NYSE member, making
Searles the first African American member
in the history of the Exchange. (At the time,
the NYSE had one African American allied
member, Clarence B. Jones, who was a
member of Cogan, Berlind, Weill & Levitt,
Inc.) A native of Ford Hood, Texas, and the
son of a “career Army man,” Searles was a
1963 graduate of Kansas State University,
where he was a football star. He played
for the New York Giants and then went to
work as an aide for New York Mayor John
Lindsay in 1967 before resigning to join the
Newburger firm at the age of 30.
According to The New York Times,
Robert Newburger said that “his firm
wasn’t attempting to make a racial break-
through on the 178-year-old exchange.
‘This is strictly an economic thing,’ he
declared, praising Searles for intelligence
and sincerity.” Searles told the press “he
was proud of the opportunity to ‘penetrate
a bastion of the white financial structure.’”
At the time, Searles also said, “I don’t
believe I’ll become a token black. I think
there will be more black members at the
exchange. Hopefully, my presence will
increase the credibility of the financial
community, as far as blacks are concerned.”
In 2014, Searles told the Wall Street
Journal, “I didn’t try make myself unique;
I just wanted to be a friend and another
fellow broker that the other brokers
would respect and want to do business
with.” When Searles first joined, however,
he said that the Exchange confronted
a particular problem having to do with
“the second most important place in the
Stock Exchange…the luncheon club.”
The Exchange gave Searles his own table
because they did not know how to seat
him. Searles remembered that this meant
he was served more quickly, allowing him
to get back on the floor, which later made
his table more attractive to other brokers.
Searles was only a member of the NYSE
for about nine months, however, before
he resigned after Newburger Loeb & Co.
ran into trouble and later sold his seat.
He then went into business for himself.
According to The New York Times, “Sear-
les said that at times he detected some
‘built in prejudices against blacks, since
90% of the members have no social con-
tacts with blacks.’ But the big dividing
line, he came to feel, was not skin color
but money.” Searles went on to work with
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co.
The Philadelphia house of Newburger
& Co. also ran into problems of its own
in the early 1970s. In February 1970, New-
burger & Co. was suspended after the SEC
charged the firm with “engaging in alleg-
edly illegal types of reciprocal arrange-
ments with Porteous & Co…. a broker-
age affiliate of the Provident Fund for
Income, Inc.” Several partners including
Frank Jr. and Richard Newburger were
suspended. The outcome of these difficul-
ties was not bankruptcy, however, but a
merger. Later that month, Newburger &
Co. announced that it was consolidating
with the Advest Company of Hartford.
(Advest was founded in 1967 when the
firms of Doolittle & Co. and Putnam,
Coffin & Co. merged. Putnam, Coffin
& Co. was the descendant of a merger
between Putnam & Co., a Hartford firm,
with the Boston firm of Coffin & Burr in
1964. According to The New York Times,
the merger was unusual in that the firms
picked another name to act as the survi-
vor firm rather than picking one of the
merging firm’s names, as was tradition in
securities mergers).
With the Advest merger, the name of
Newburger & Co. was lost to history, but
the individual members of the firm con-
tinued in business. Frank Newburger Jr.
joined Advest Group Inc. as managing
partner of a Newburger & Co. division. He
became senior vice president of the divi-
sion in 1977 and remained until 1984; he
died in 1998. Richard Newburger became
a senior vice president of Advest Inc.; he
died in 1979. Allen Weintraub, Richard’s
son-in-law, who had been a member of
Newburger & Co. since 1955, went on to
become the chairman, president and chief
executive officer of The Advest Group,
36 FINANCIAL HISTORY | Winter 2019 | www.MoAF.org
Inc. (Weintraub married Linda Hano, the
daughter of Mrs. Richard Newburger and
Lester Hano, in 1958). Nicholas G. Hano,
Linda’s brother, who was a member of
Newburger & Co., also joined Advest & Co.
Despite the passing of their firms, the
generations of Newburger bankers who
were active in the original firms continued
to work on Wall Street. When Newburger,
Loeb & Co. closed, Robert Newburger
joined the Wheeling, West Virginia firm
of Hazlett, Burt & Watson as a broker. He
continued to work on the NYSE floor until
1995, when he retired from trading and
joined the Alliance of Floor Brokers.
In 2009, Newburger told The New York
Times that the demise of his family firm
showed him, “All you really have [is] the
ability to be able to cope with whatever
is presented to you.” He was thankful
for the support of his friends, including
those who had been his competitors on
the Exchange. He said, “The New York
Stock Exchange is not a cold, heartless
organization. It isn’t eighths and quarters
or decimal points—it’s people. There are
so many people that I love, and that I dare
say love me.” In 2013, when he turned 100
years old, he rang the NYSE closing bell.
He died two years later at the age of 102.
Susie J. Pak is an Associate Professor in
the Department of History at St. John’s
University (New York). A graduate of
Dartmouth College and Cornell Uni-
versity, she is the author of Gentlemen
Bankers: The World of J.P. Morgan
(Harvard University Press), a Trustee of
the Business History Conference, co-chair
of the Columbia University Economic
History Seminar and a member of the
editorial advisory board of the Business
History Review. She is also a member
of the Financial History editorial board.
About Where Are They Now? The
“Where Are They Now?” Series traces the
origins and histories of 207 of the under-
writers of the 1956 Ford Motor Company
IPO. The research for this series has been
generously funded by Charles Royce of
The Royce Funds.