Financial History Issue 130 (Summer 2019) | Page 12

EDUCATORS’ PERSPECTIVE The Pit, as it appeared in the January 24, 1903 edition of The Saturday Evening Post. big change,” and he instructs Gretry to begin buying wheat contracts. Eventually, as wheat conditions worsen, Jadwin, real- izing a corner is possible, begins his epic battle with the bears led by Calvin Crooke. As the battle intensifies and Jadwin becomes more obsessed with his corner 6 , he begins to lose a grip on reality. He neglects his wife and spends most of his time at his office planning his next move. When his wife asks him to take an evening off and go to the theatre with her, he retorts, “You think I am willfully doing this! You don’t know, you haven’t a guess. I corner the wheat! Great heavens, it is the wheat that has cornered me! The corner made itself. I happened to stand between two sets of cir- cumstances, and they made me do what I’ve done. I couldn’t get out of it now, with all the good will in the world. Go to the theatre to-night with you and the Cresslers? Why, old girl, you might as well ask me to go to Jericho.” Clearly, the corner is beginning to weigh on Jadwin, but he continues to believe he has the situation under control. Recalling his initial entry into speculation, Jadwin remembers his sus- picions and fear. “Now,” wrote Norris, “he had discovered that there were in him powers, capabilities, and a breadth of grasp hitherto unsuspected. He could control the Chicago wheat market; and the man who could do that might well call himself ‘great,’ without presumption. He knew that he over-topped them all—Gre- try, the Crookes gang, the arrogant, sneer- ing Bears, all the men of the world of the Board of Trade. He was stronger, bigger, shrewder than them all.” In this foolish state of arrogance, Jad- win believes he can hold his corner even in the face of bumper wheat crops, but his corner fails spectacularly, leaving him destitute and mentally unhinged. As a deluge of wheat hits the market, Jadwin’s corner comes crashing down. In a final act of desperation, he rushes into the pit himself, as if his mere presence can stem the inevitable. As the floor traders cheer Jadwin’s demise, Crooke, the bear leader, is heard to say, “They can cheer now, all they want. They didn’t do it. It was the 10    FINANCIAL HISTORY  |  Summer 2019  | www.MoAF.org wheat itself that beat him; no combination of men could have done it—go on, cheer, you damn fools! He was a bigger man than the best of us.” In the next edition of Financial History, we will explore timeless concepts in The Pit that make it a relevant read today. We will also examine Norris’s life and death, his attitude towards women and his anti- Semitic remarks that have caused him to fall out of favor today.  Brian Grinder is a professor at Eastern Washington University and a member of Financial History’s editorial board. Dr. Dan Cooper is the president of Active Learning Technologies. Sources Crisler, Jesse S. and Joseph R. Mcelrath. Frank Norris Remembered. Tuscaloosa, AL: Uni- versity of Alabama Press. 2013. Fraser, Steve. Every Man a Speculator: A His- tory of Wall Street in American Life. New York: HarperCollins. 2005. “Joseph Leiter, Financier, Dies at Age of 63.” Chicago Daily Tribune. 1932.