The story of youthful entrepreneurs is older than Forbes itself
Howard Hughes
Image: Bettmann /Getty Images
1910s
Walter L Jacobs
Founder, Rent-A-Car
In 1918, 22-year-old Chicagoan begins renting fleet of 12 Model T Fords; revenues top $1 million by 1925; sells out to John Hertz, remains president of Hertz Corp until 1960.
1920s
Howard Hughes
Film Producer
The wealthy oil-patch heir storms Hollywood; by 1927, the 22-year-old has financial, critical hits with Everybody’s Acting and Two Arabian Knights. Later: Hughes Aircraft, RKO, TWA, Vegas casino, recluse.
1930s
Ernest and Julio Gallo
Co-Founders, E&J Gallo Winery
Following Prohibition, 24-year-old Ernest borrows $6,000 from his mother-in-law in 1933 to start a winery; with brother Julio, they make E&J into America’s largest winemaker; perennial members of Forbes 400.
1940s
Patrick J Frawley
Founder, Frawley Pen Co
As a teenager, the Nicaraguan-born American sells tyres to Panama; in 1949, at 26, buys failing ballpoint-pen maker and develops leakproof Paper Mate, sells to Gillette. Second act: Schick razors.
1950s
Dan and Frank Carney
Co-Founders, Pizza Hut
Two Wichita State students, 27 and 20, borrow $600 from mom to open Pizza Hut in 1958; start franchising 1959; delivery pioneers sell to PepsiCo in 1977 for $300 million.
1960s
Saul Steinberg
Founder, Leasco
Brooklyn-born financier starts by leasing IBM mainframes, becomes infamous as corporate raider; 1968 hostile takeover of Reliance Insurance makes the 29-year-old rich; unsuccessful runs at Chemical Bank, Disney; finally, bankruptcy.
1970s
Debbi Fields
Founder, Mrs Fields
In 1977, the recently married 21-year-old secures a high-interest loan to start a bakery in Palo Alto; her warm cookies soon win over millions; still the company spokesperson at 61.
1980s
Steve Jobs
Co-Founder, Apple
At 27, member of 1982 Forbes 400 is worth $100 million; introduces Mac in 1984; fired in 1985. Founds NeXT, Pixar. Comes back with a vengeance: iPod, iPhone, iPad.
1990s
Jonathan Coon
Co-Founder, 1-800-CONTACTS
Frustrated by high costs and waits at eye docs, BYU grad teams with optician in 1995 to sell lenses directly to consumers; at 28 took company public; financed Napoleon Dynamite.
2000s
Mark Zuckerberg
Co-Founder, Facebook
Nineteen-year-old Harvard sophomore hacks together social networking site in 2004. Hypergrowth: Company worth $15 billion by 2007; now 2 billion active users; Zuck is world’s fifth-richest person.
2010s
Patrick and John Collison
Co-Founders, Stripe
At 29 and 27, the Irish-born, California-residing brothers are among world’s youngest self-made billionaires thanks to their entrepreneur-friendly internet payment processor Stripe, which they started in 2011.
(This story appears in the 10 November, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)