*Baruch's faith helped him make his fortune. During his Wall Street days, Baruch sold short, to the limit of his resources, a stock he believed to be overvalued. He expected a quick profit on the next business day, believing the directors would declare a dividend to support the stock which was being boosted to the limit. He knew, however, that if they did so, and the stock rose, he would have to cover instantly or lose everything. The day before the dividend declaration day, his mother reminded him that the next day was the high Jewish holiday Yom Kippur, and he had promised to maintain the solemnity of the annual occasion and "keep" the holiday holy. Keeping his promise, Baruch ignored the multiple phone calls and telegrams from his friends who urged him to take his profit and cover. After Yom Kippur had passed, he read the telegrams and learned that, indeed, the dividend had passed. Rather than rising on the news, however, the stock had fallen precipitiously. In the hours he had chatted with his mother, keeping his promise, he had become a millionaire.
*His winter residence was his 17,500
acre (70 km²)
Hobcaw Barony on the coast of South Carolina, which was turned into a wildlife refuge after his death. At Hobcaw House he was host to such world leaders as
Winston Churchill and
President Roosevelt, who visited for a month in 1944. Other guests included World War I
General "Blackjack" Pershing and
Mrs. Woodrow Wilson.
*:Latitude (33.35) Longitude (-79.18)
*In 1931, Sir Winston Churchill was hit by a taxi, while on his way to meet Bernard Baruch.
*He made a $50,000 contribution to
Woodrow Wilson's 1912 presidential campaign.
*Upon appointment to his first post by Woodrow Wilson, he divested his considerable financial holdings and sold his New York Stock Exchange seat to serve in government unencumbered.
*Baruch endured days of grilling testimony from
Alger Hiss, Counsel for the
Senate Munitions Committee (the Nye Committee), answering innuendoes about personal finances and wartime profiteering.
*Bernard Baruch was the first to coin the term "
Cold War" in reference to the conflict between United States and the Soviet Union while giving a speech on
April 16, 1947. By September 1947 it was picked up by journalist
Walter Lippmann and became standard. See
Origins of the Cold War on more information about the origin of the term.
*Baruch owned a
tungsten (wolfram) mining community named Atolia in California's
Mojave Desert. During the years 1906 to 1926, Baruch spent one month a year at Atolia. The once thriving community of 4,000 individuals became a ghost town when, after World War I, tungsten was no longer considered a strategic material, and lower-cost sources were developed.
*Secretary of Defense
James Forrestal had this diary entry about a lunch meeting with Baruch on
February 3 1948: "He took the line of advising me not to be active in this particular matter and that I was already identified, to a degree that was not in my own interests, with opposition to the United Nations' policy on Palestine. He said he himself did not approve of the 'Zionists
actions, but in the next breath said that the Democratic party could only lose by trying to get our government’s policy reversed, and said that it was a most inequitable thing to let the British arm the Arabs and for us not to furnish similar equipment to the Jews." (The Forrestal Diaries,
Walter Millis, editor, 1951, p. 364.) Correspondence from Baruch to his friend, Forrestal, can be found in the Forrestal papers collection at Princeton for every year from 1940 to Forrestal's death in 1949. http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/finding_aids/forrestal/index.html
* The 1949 Warner Brothers Merrie Melodies Cartoon Rebel Rabbit
features a scene in which Bugs Bunny uses paint to vandalize a park bench, changing it from Barney Baruch's Private Bench
to Bugs Bunny's Private Bench
.
*Baruch College, in Manhattan, New York has a statue of Bernard Baruch sitting on a bench inside of its entrance center. This statue is often mistaken to be a real person.
*He was on the cover of TIME magazine a total of three times in his life.
*"In Wall Street it is always ba-rook''', but his friends say
bahr'ook [with the stress on the first syllable]." (Charles Earle Funk,
What's the Name, Please?, Funk & Wagnalls, 1936.)
*His grave is at
Flushing Cemetery, Flushing, Queens, New York City, USA
*:Latitude (40.7522) Longitude (-73.7994)
*Mentioned in the musical
Annie by Oliver Warbucks in Act 1 Scene 5