Darwin D. Martin (University Archives (SUNY) |
John D. Larkin (Courtesy of Daniel I. Larkin) |
John D. Larkin built the Larkin Soap Company into a nationally
powerful mail order business through a combination of hard work, a passion for
plowing profits back into the business, and an uncanny knack for hiring the
right underlings. Bringing thirteen year old Darwin Martin to Buffalo as
bookkeeper for the business at $3 per week was risky, however, and Larkin proceeded
cautiously as this passage from Martin’s autobiography attests:
Mr. Larkin’s safe was
a small affair but it held the ledger and order-books and tissue letter-books
with which I had to work. The safe had to be locked overnight. I was never
given the authority to unlock it. Every morning I chafed at the loss of time waiting
for the arrival of the horse-and-buggy which always marked the beginning of Mr.
L’s business day. I stood over him so many times while he worked the
combination that I quite unconsciously absorbed the secret of the three numbers.
One
morning I grew so impatient that I tackled the combination, and lo and behold
it opened and I went to my work.
Mr.
Larkin said nothing, but the next morning I found that the combination had been
changed. Weeks and months ensued and I found that I was no better off for my
safe-opening. But history repeated itself, I tackled the combination again, as
impatiently, and again behold I had the safe unlocked!
Nothing
was said but the combination was not changed again and I opened the safe
daily. As I reflected on it, it
was a silent comedy. When a new, larger Osgoodby safe replaced the Barth safe I
was invited to supply the numbers of the combination. Mr. Larkin lived at 218
Swan Street. Mr. Hubbard at 234 South Division Street; therefore I at once
suggested a combination none of us could forget, i.e., 21-82-34.
Young Martin eventually won John Larkin’s confidence and
when in 1893 Elbert Hubbard, Larkin's partner, decided to quit the business, Martin
took his place and eventually became the highest paid executive in the United
States. The Darwin Martin House (1903-1906) soon followed.
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