Dow Jones Bergstresser Industrial Average

Dow Jones Bergstresser Industrial Average

Back on June 4th, I had a piece on the formation of the Dow

Jones Industrial Average and the founder of the average, Charles

Dow. Both Dow and Edward D. Jones had established Dow

Jones & Co. in 1882. The two decided to later convert an

afternoon newsletter, titled “Customer”s Afternoon Letter,” into a

full-fledged newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, which

commenced publication on July 8, 1889.

Well, in the history of Dow Jones & Co., one individual gets the

shaft, Charles Bergstresser. It was Bergstresser who bankrolled

the cash-starved Dow and Jones, beginning in 1882. The

Bergster, however, was not interested in working for Dow and

Jones. He wanted to be the silent partner. The trio did think

about a few names; Dow, Jones, and Bergstresser. Berger, Dow

and Jones. But they were too long and they settled on Dow

Jones & Company. He thus missed out on having his name

somewhere when the Dow Jones Average was introduced in

1896.

Bergstresser was born in 1859, a Pennsylvania Dutchman. He

worked while attending Lafayette College and saved much of

what he earned. [Which means he wasn”t drinking much beer].

After graduation in 1881, he moved to New York City and took a

job covering the stock market as a reporter for the Kiernan News

Agency.

In a 1996 article for the Journal, Vanessa O”Connell writes of

Bergstresser and these times.

“Stocky with thick-lens glasses, Mr. Bergstresser easily won the

confidence of Wall Street executives who were his news sources,

and he wowed his colleagues early on in his career by landing an

interview with the great financier John Pierpont Morgan Sr. A

pugnacious reporter, Mr. Bergstresser had a knack for getting

bigwigs to spill details of their deals. ”He could make a wooden

Indian talk – and tell the truth,” Edward Jones used to say.”

At the time, both Dow and Jones were working for Kiernan as

well. The two of them were looking to start their own news

agency when “Buggy” (his real nickname, not the Bergster)

heard of their plans. He wanted in. It was within 3 months (July,

”82) that the Customer”s Afternoon Letter was first published

from a basement next to the New York Stock Exchange.

Bergstresser”s savings were the seed money. Professor Richard

J. Stillman, author of a book on the DJIA, said that Buggy was

“the driving financial force behind the company during its

formative years.” When Dow Jones & Co. turned its newsletter

into a full-fledged paper in 1889, it was Bergstresser who dubbed

it The Wall Street Journal. Incidentally, the Journal sold for two

cents back then and had four pages of text.

And what of Edward Jones? While Charles Dow was known to

be a rather calm, albeit tough journalist, Jones was a hot-

tempered sort and the more visible of the two. He wrote and

edited the bulletins while spending his nights looking for tips at

the watering holes frequented by his racy friends, the

wheelerdealers of Wall Street. Stillman writes of Jones that he

was “excitable, emotional and you never knew when he might

explode” in profanity.

It was Dow who eventually grew uncomfortable with Mr. Jones

circle of friends and both Dow and Bergstresser disapproved of

his profane outbursts in the newsroom. Jones gradually felt

estranged from his two partners. In 1899 he left the Journal for

the glitter of Wall Street. But, no, sports fans, this Edward Jones

has nothing to do with the present-day brokerage firm of Edward

D. Jones & Co. That was an entirely different man.

And now you know..the rest of the story.

Sources:

The Wall Street Journal.

Dow Jones & Company..various articles. I”d list the authors if

I could find them. Vanessa O”Connell is the only one I found.

Brian Trumbore