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THE ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVENTURE
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| Guest post by: Nelson Davis |
Article Overview: In a week when the big media stories have been about disasters involving an oil spill off Louisiana, immigrant legislation in Arizona and bomb plots in Times Square, my “story of the week” was quite different. It was written in a San Francisco newspaper on April 29th, 1852.
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THE ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVENTURE
In a week when the big
media stories have been about disasters involving an oil spill off Louisiana,
immigrant legislation in Arizona and bomb plots in Times Square, my “story of
the week” was quite different. It was written in a San Francisco newspaper on
April 29th, 1852. The story is a tale of a business adventure under the headline
“San Francisco Girls Receive San Diego Cats.”
I believe that
entrepreneurial opportunities are all around us and that they only need an
adventuresome spirit to unlock them. I also believe that we now have several
generations of Americans who don’t realize that. We have legions of people from
college students to retirement ready folks who simply are not attuned to
thinking like entrepreneurs even though in reality they should.
Let’s get back to that
favorite story of mine from 1852. “It was reported that “Terrance “Phatty” Boden
brought in a wagonload of cats the other night and cleared 50 dollars in profit
by selling them to lonely dance-hall girls. Phatty says that he conceived the
idea when he noticed the loneliness of the dance-hall girls when he was here
(San Francisco) before as a stage driver. Upon his return to San Diego, Phatty
resigned his job and bought a spring wagon and six mules to do some “shotgun
freightin.” He offered two boys two bits (25 cents) apiece for all the cats they
could find and he left with 250 or more cats---practically the entire cat
population of San Diego. Setting up shop below Auggie’s Saloon, Phatty sold his
cats for prices ranging from two to three dollars depending on their
size.”
The story is a simple
classic demonstrating the magic combination of perceiving an opportunity,
figuring a way to fill a need or interest and assuming a bit of a risk. I doubt
that Mr. Boden had ever heard the word entrepreneur or that he had an extensive
education but he certainly knew how to act on a hunch based on something he’d
seen. In the California of 1852 just about everyone had the ability to succeed
grandly or fail miserably without a lot of interference or support.
To put this into context,
I should mention that the California Gold Rush was in full frantic swing from
1848 through 1855 and was one of the great entrepreneurial adventures of the
19th century. As we have recently seen with the Wall Street meltdown, unguided
capitalism can attract some of the best and worst human behavior. When James
Marshall discovered gold at Sutter’s Mill in Coloma it unleashed a torrent of
300,000 people of all ages and many nationalities coming to California. It was
all about the perceived opportunity to get rich quickly from gold or from the
other people who were seeking it.
The California
that we now know began to emerge because the intense business activity
surrounding the Gold Rush. San Francisco grew from a small settlement into a
booming town. It was a period when other towns, churches, schools and roads were
built up and down the state. The wild frontier was tamed by a system of laws and
levels of government that lead to the admission of California as a free state
within the union in 1850. During this period, names that we recognize today on
street signs and public buildings such as Collis Huntington, Charles Crocker,
Mark Hopkins and Leland Stanford began to earn their reputations as “robber
barons”. Some of them weren’t digging for gold, but they were selling the
shovels and pick axes that the prospectors needed. These were hard driving and
sometimes ruthless people who among other accomplishments built chunks of our
railway system. I don’t agree with some of their most rapacious ways, but it
took large doses of the can-do American spirit for them to push past almost
unimaginable difficulties. Like Steve Jobs, Walt Disney and Bill Gates in the
20th century, they began as ambitious small business owners whose visions became
very big. They were people who made things happen instead of waiting for things
to develop. For example, if you wonder how Stanford University was born, thank
Leland Stanford who founded Leland Stanford Junior University with the
equivalent of $400 million (in 2005 dollars) as a tribute to his late son.
While Terrence “Phatty”
Boden’s name is not on street signs, performance venues or a great university I
love his story and his spirit nonetheless. Whether dealing in gold nuggets or
feral cats, the essential lesson is the same. The young men and women of today
could benefit from realizing that they have to take that kind of initiative to
make thing happen and realize their ambitions, no matter how modest or grand. At
some level, everybody is a business owner of at least one enterprise---yourself.
If you see it as an adventure, not some fearsome and impossible journey, you’ll
be following in the footsteps of people who helped make our country great. If we
want a future of greatness, entrepreneurial adventurers will have to be an
important part of it.
Article Tags: entrepreneur, legislation, leland stanford, oil spill, san francisco newspaper, small business, times square
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About the Author: Nelson Davis RSS for Nelson's articles - Visit Nelson's website Nelson Davis is creator and executive producer of the multi-Emmy winnning small business TV show, "Making It!" During its 20 years on-air, Nelson Davis and his team have profiled over 1000 entrepreneur success stories on air! Nelson Davis now brings the inspiration and knowledge from your TV screen to your computer screen at makingittv.com. Features streaming video of entrepreneur success stories, national business events, professional advice and an abundance of other business resources. Click here to visit Nelson's website THE ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVENTURE America vs Canada | Small Business Blog Twitter and the Pet Rock Relationships and the NWord Messy Brand Management | Charlie Sheen and Muammar Muhammad Gaddafi |
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