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  1. Charles Milford Bergstresser (June 25, 1858 – September 20, 1923) was an American journalist and, with Charles Dow and Edward Jones, one of the founders of Dow Jones & Company at 15 Wall Street in 1882.

  2. Jan 30, 2023 · Key Takeaways. The Wall Street Journal was founded in 1889 by Charles Bergstresser, Charles Dow, and Edward Jones. It was taken over by Clarence Barron in 1902, who passed it down after his...

    • Here are the 44 new members of The Forbes 400 (net worths are as of September 3, 2021)
    • Miriam Adelson. Net Worth: $30.4 billion. Source of wealth: Casinos. Adelson inherited her late husband’s 57% stake in Las Vegas Sands, the publicly traded gambling empire with casinos in Singapore and Macau, after his death in January.
    • Sam Bankman-Fried. Net Worth: $22.5 billion. Source of wealth: Cryptocurrency. The 29-year-old MIT grad owes most of his $22.5 billion fortune to his stake in the cryptocurrency derivatives exchange FTX—which he cofounded in 2019—and his share of its FTT tokens.
    • Jeff Yass. Net Worth: $12 billion. Source of wealth: Trading, investments. The former pro gambler joins The Forbes 400 thanks to his stake in trading firm Susquehanna International Group, which he cofounded in 1987 and built into one of the most successful firms on Wall Street.
  3. Forbes' Real-Time Billionaires rankings tracks the daily ups and downs of the world’s richest people. The wealth-tracking platform provides ongoing updates on the net worth and ranking of...

  4. Oct 31, 2019 · The Wall Street Journal is now a worldwide brand, with a European edition coming out of Brussels and a Hong-Kong-produced Asian version, but it actually evolved from a little newsletter aimed at the clients of three journalists named Charles Dow, Edward Jones and Charles Bergstresser.

  5. Jul 7, 2014 · The name "The Wall Street Journal" was the idea of Charles Bergstresser, the "forgotten" third man who teamed with Dow and Jones to create the news company that started publishing this...

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  7. The company’s big competitive advantage was a special stylus developed by a third, and now-forgotten, founder, one Charles M. Bergstresser (I think of him as the third tenor of Dow Jones), which could produce more than two-dozen copies with a single impression.

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