Financial History Issue 128 (Winter 2019) | Page 35

was renamed Newburger, Loeb & Co. and had branches in Philadelphia and New York. Among the Newburger family members, Frank, by then the president of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, and his brother-in-law, Horace Loeb, were based in Philadelphia. Lester and his nephew, Morton J., were based in New York, along with Jacob and Daniel Loeb, Jacob and Horace’s nephew. Alfred’s son, Morris, a Harvard graduate, and Frank’s son, Frank Jr., also joined the firm at that time. Frank Lieberman Newburger, Jr., born in 1908, was a Cornell University gradu- ate. His brother, Richard Langfeld New- burger, who was three years younger, graduated from the University of Virginia before joining the family firm as a broker. In 1935, they were joined by their cousin, Robert Lester Newberger, Lester’s son. Robert’s brother, Andrew, a Princeton graduate, also joined the family firm. As the new generation took over the helm of the firm, the older generation began to step down. The year Robert joined the firm, Frank Sr., Horace and Jacob F. Loeb, and Morton J. became special partners in the firm. (Horace died later that year, and Jacob died in 1937.) Richard was made a partner in 1937, and Robert was made a “The New York Stock Exchange is not a cold, heartless organization. It isn’t eighths and quarters or decimal points—it’s people.” —Robert Lester Newburger partner in 1938. He became a floor broker on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in 1940. In 1939, the partners signed a new part- nership agreement that extended until 1942. With the outbreak of World War II, the partnership was modified as members of the firm joined the armed forces. Frank Sr. and his sons, Frank Jr. and Richard, were based in Philadelphia, while other family members, notably Lester and his sons, Robert and Andrew, and Morris, Alfred’s son, were based in New York. During this time, the Philadelphia and New York partners became conflicted over how to proceed during wartime, which led the family business to split into two separate firms. According to the findings of fact in a tax case that emerged from this period, Frank Jr., who was based in Philadelphia, “became concerned in the spring of 1942 over the possibility that the Philadelphia business might be lost during the war if he were to follow Richard, then on active duty, into the armed forces.” He wanted to combine the firm with the Philadelphia firm of Content, Hano & Co., “their prin- cipal competitor.” According to the court, “This effort resulted in a division between the Philadelphia partners and the New York partners. The latter wanted the firm to continue alone, as formerly.” Frank Jr. “proposed that the firm be dissolved immediately” and that the New York and Philadelphia houses split the business. Initially, the New York part- ners were opposed to this suggestion, but eventually the two branches negotiated an agreement regarding the withdrawal of capital, usage of the firm’s name and good will, and agreed to separate their New York stock transfer memorandum from Newburger, Henderson & Loeb, dated January 13, 1922. www.MoAF.org  |  Winter 2019  |  FINANCIAL HISTORY  33