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After the Ball

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Glamorous, cultured, and ambitious -- but fatally young and naive -- James Hazen Hyde was twenty-three when he inherited the majority shares in the billion-dollar Equitable Life Assurance Society in 1899. Five years later, at the pinnacle of social and financial success, he made a fatal miscalculation, and set in motion the first great Wall Street scandal of the twentieth century.

On the last night of January 1905, Hyde gave one of the most fabulous balls of the Gilded Age. Falsely accused of charging the party to his company, he was sucked into a maelstrom of allegations of corporate malfeasance that involved the era's most famous financiers and industrialists. The shocking revelations that followed commanded hundreds of front-page stories and led to a government investigation that became a nationwide obsession and changed the law.

Set against a backdrop of magnificence, excess, and corrupting glamour, "After the Ball's" themes are stunningly fresh: greed and chicanery, flawed love between fathers and sons, and contradictory American attitudes about wealth.

418 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 1, 2003

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Patricia Beard

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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Jeslyn.
309 reviews13 followers
August 26, 2023
Excellent history on the corruption involving the Big Three life insurance companies at the dawn of the 20th century, though Equitable is the focus of this book. Beard did a terrific job of organizing her information into shorter chapters that helped me stay on track (no simple feat, with all of the blind trusts, circuitous business transactions, and tangled affiliations amongst the MANY players). Perhaps the best move, Beard shifts gears about midway to write about the ball that touched off the firestorm - the recklessly expensive fluff of these parties to show off one's financial and social power was mind-boggling, and also hilarious at times. Two incidents, one involving imported butterflies and the other decorative swans, had me laughing out loud at the humbling of the hosts. The Gilded Age really was off the charts - in both the social scene and the financial dealings. This book also reads as very contemporary, of course - this scandal wouldn't look dated at all on the front page of any newspaper today. Kudos to Ms. Beard for her excellent research and writing here.
Profile Image for Melissa.
603 reviews27 followers
September 28, 2010
When I picked this book for book club, I was really excited about it--what a great way to talk about past and present! And it started off really good--all the juicy details of the power people at the turn of the last century. And then it just sorta fizzled. I think part of my issue is I just don't know that much about economics and buisness. Part of me wishes the Planet Money team could just explain the Equitable Life Insurance thing.
But it's still fascinating and well written. I just felt like some stuff went over my head. And the similiarities between today and then are pretty amazing.
Recommended, but only if you are already a fan of Wall Street scandals
Profile Image for Darla Ebert.
1,198 reviews6 followers
February 22, 2022
An eye-opener when it comes to once-wealthy moguls. Though James Hyde pillaged his father's hard-won money via a big insurance agency at the turn of the 20th century, Hyde's sad story could as easily be written today. While the craving for more and a hankering after enormous purchases of items that were "hot" at the time, the materialism and obsessions are the same today. Hyde panted and salivated after carriages and other lesser modes of transport, while within a handful of years those items were virtually obsolete. The wealthy contemporaries of current lust-ers for MORE are the same concerning cars and jewels, the latter of which will at least increase in value. Or theoretically.
Profile Image for Tiffany Garcia.
83 reviews7 followers
November 27, 2007
Interesting insight to life in the early 20th century and the beginning on big corporations.
35 reviews1 follower
December 15, 2008
This is a very interesting biography about my Aunt's grandfather, Henry Hyde.
Profile Image for Heather.
375 reviews9 followers
March 30, 2011
A great book! If you're into Wall Street, the early 1900s, power plays, you'll enjoy this.
Profile Image for Terri.
251 reviews
June 17, 2016
Pretty dry and objective. Most of the research was taken from newspapers and court records. The book would have been improved with sources such as personal letters.
22 reviews3 followers
October 20, 2018
A story of a man who, at the age of 23 in the year 1899, inherited a majority of shares in a mammoth Equitable Life Insurance Society but was much more interested in being a socialite, housing grandiose balls, and admiring French art. It only took several years for his business empire to fall apart in a scandal oddly similar to the demise of Drexel Burnham Lambert or Enron decades later. And Patricia Beard knows how to tell a story of glamour and greed at the beginning of the twentieth century.
Profile Image for Jordan Lamb.
22 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2025
From the lens and perspective of an amateur historian the writing was too detailed on topics that were either not important or became confusing with a conflicting narrative among too many 'players'- would not recommend
5 reviews1 follower
Want to read
November 15, 2012
Tegnan odporučil,
vraj ak chcem byť podnikateľ.
5 reviews
February 19, 2018
I enjoyed this book. It gave me a window into a different time (well, a few different eras). The details were things I never knew from history books (like the carriage racing hobby some rich gentlemen had, as an example). The author did a great job of fleshing in what could be (and sometimes was, a bit) boring financial details with really interesting color about people's social hobbies, looks, habbits, and so on, mostly of the very wealthy and of industry leaders from the early 1900s. Extremely well researched. I've never read a book like this before, don't know that I will again, but I liked it!
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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