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  1. Goldman Sachs leads the Ford Motor Company’s US$657 million IPO in 1956, the largest common stock offering to date in the United States. Sidney Weinberg, a long-time friend and informal advisor to the Ford family, becomes one of Ford Motor’s first outside directors.

    • Sidney Weinberg

      Sidney J. Weinberg, who would go on to become the firm’s...

    • Clients

      Sidney Weinberg, a long-time friend and informal advisor to...

    • Globalization

      Sidney Weinberg Helps Set the Standard for Corporate...

  2. Sidney James Weinberg (October 12, 1891 – July 23, 1969) was a long-time leader of the Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs, nicknamed “Mr. Wall Street” by The New York Times and "director's director" by Fortune magazine.

  3. Sidney Weinberg Leads the Firm for More than Three Decades. Theme: Leadership. In 1930, Sidney Weinberg becomes senior partner, presiding over the firm’s recovery from the 1929 financial crash and more than three decades of growth and innovation.

  4. Apr 30, 2016 · Intuition and smarts helped Sidney Weinberg propel Goldman Sachs from a respectable spot on Wall Street to a dominant perch over 20th-century finance.

  5. THE Wall Streeter whose advice is most often sought by U.S. businessmen is Sidney J. Weinberg, 67, who now has the oracle’s seat once occupied by Bernard Baruch.

  6. Jun 1, 2009 · The following excerpts from The Partnership look at two of its greatest leaders, Sidney J. Weinberg and John C. Whitehead (MBA 11/ ’47), and the impact they had both on Goldman and Wall Street itself.

  7. Nov 2, 2008 · Sidney Weinberg was born in 1891, one of eleven children of Pincus Weinberg, a struggling Polish-born liquor wholesaler and bootlegger in Brooklyn. Sidney was short, a “Kewpie doll,” as the New...

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