Marshall Field Net Worth


In January of 1865, Field and a partner, Levi Leiter, accepted an offer to become senior partners at the dry goods establishment of Potter Palmer. The new firm, that was eventually known as Field, Leiter & Co. was badly affected by the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, but reopened relatively quickly. The company also survived the Panic of 1873 because of relatively low levels of debt, and by 1881, Field had forced Leiter to sell his share of he business changing the name to Marshall Field and Company. Field’s innovations were centered around the notion of caveat emptor, or the “buyer beware” mentality. Unconditional refunds, consistent pricing and international imports were among the Field innovations, and employees were instructed not to push products on uninterested customers, which was common practice at the time. The phrases, “give the lady what she wants” and “the customer is always right” are attributed to Field, though the latter may also be an invention of Harry Gordon Selfridge while he was employed by Marshall Field. As a businessman, Marshall Field was highly suspicious of organized labor and prohibited unionization amongst his employees. He avoided political and social intrigue, instead focusing on his work and on supporting his family and favorite philanthropies. The Field Museum of Natural History was named after him in 1894 upon an endowment of one million dollars to the organization. The University of Chicago was also founded by both Field and New York’s, John D Rockefeller to rival Evanston’s Northwestern University. He married Nannie Douglas Scott in 1863 and they raised two children.