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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Samuel_SachsSamuel Sachs - Wikipedia

    Samuel Sachs (/ z ɑː k s /; July 28, 1851 – March 2, 1935) was an American investment banker. He is most known for co-founding Goldman Sachs along with Marcus Goldman . [2] He is noted for changing the nature of merchant banking by underwriting of the flotation of many major companies through the use of these sales to raise funds.

  2. Ann Sachs; Patricia Sachs; Christopher Michael Sachs; James Sachs; Robert Donal Sachs; Thomas Dudley Sachs ; Louisa Goldman Sachs married to Samuel Sachs (1851–1935) Paul J. Sachs (1878–1965), art historian, married to Meta Pollak (–1960) Elizabeth Sachs; Celia Sachs Robinson, married to Charles A. Robinson, Jr. (1900–1965), classical ...

  3. Born in 1851 in Maryland, Samuel Sachs had begun working at 15 as a bookkeeper and went on to run a small boards, glass, and mirrors business. When Samuel accepted his father-in-law’s offer, Marcus renamed the firm M. Goldman & Sachs. The firm became Goldman, Sachs & Co. in 1888.

  4. Great American Business Leaders of the 20th Century. Request the Data. Samuel Sachs. Goldman, Sachs and Company. 1904–1928. Industry: Finance. Era: 1900. Sachs, together with his friend Philip Lehman of Lehman Brothers, was one of the first to realize the potential of issuing stock as a way for new companies to raise funds.

  5. Harry Sachs. When Marcus Goldman brought his son-in-law Samuel Sachs on as his business partner in 1882, neither man could know that it would be the beginning of a partnership that would last for more than a century and a half, employing generations of both families.

  6. Oct 10, 2008 · Marcus Goldman, aged 47, established M Goldman in 1869; he was joined by a junior partner, Samuel Sachs, in 1882 and formed the company Goldman Sachs. It became one of the great independent...

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  8. With the addition of his son-in-law, Samuel Sachs, in 1882, and his son, Henry Goldman, in 1885, Marcus Goldman’s enterprise became a partnership with a new name: Goldman, Sachs & Co. By the time the firm joined the New York Stock Exchange in 1896, Goldman Sachs was a leader in commercial paper sales. As the firm’s clients grew in number ...

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