Ventureology

Ventureology

The stories of funders and builders who forged markets. Ventureology is a deep-format podcast covering how venture capital markets outside Silicon Valley and New York originated, grew, and scaled. Each season traces a single city's entrepreneurial history from its earliest foundations to its modern ecosystem — the founders who built companies from nothing, the capital that funded them, and the infrastructure decisions that compounded into billion-dollar industries. Season One: Chicago. From 82 grain merchants who founded the Chicago Board of Trade in 1848 to the $106 billion exchange conglomer...

Autor

Ventureology

Categoría

Business

Web del podcast

ventureology.co

Último episodio

21 de jun. de 2026

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Episodios

Julius Rosenwald: The Vanishing Philanthropist 21.06.2026

How the man who scaled Sears turned his fortune into nearly 5,000 schools, then gave it away on a deadline. Julius Rosenwald never invented anything. He bought a quarter of a struggling mail-order house in 1895 for $37,500 and made the founder optional. When the post-war crash of 1921 nearly killed Sears, Rosenwald backstopped the company out of his own pocket and made the clerks and packers who h...

Gustavus Swift: The Cold-Chain King 21.06.2026

In 1855, a Cape Cod farmer counted twenty-five dollars onto a kitchen table and offered them to his sixteen-year-old son. Forty-eight years later, the son died in a Chicago mansion at the head of a $160 million-a-year business (roughly $6 billion in today's dollars) with the architecture still running 146 years later inside JBS, Lineage Logistics, Tyson, and Cargill. Hammond had the patent. Armour...

Chicago #4: The Catalog Kings 07.06.2026

How Ward, Sears & Roebuck Invented Modern Retail In 1872, a traveling salesman named Aaron Montgomery Ward printed a single sheet of paper with 163 items and mailed it to forty members of a farmers' Grange. By 1913, more than half of every parcel mailed in the United States began as an order to one of two Chicago firms: Montgomery Ward and Sears, Roebuck. Neither owned a railroad. Neither owne...

Chicago #3: Blood & Ice: How Chicago Fed America 17.05.2026

How Chicago's Meatpackers Built the Template for American Manufacturing and Proved That Infrastructure Beats Invention In 1875, Gustavus Swift arrived in Chicago from Cape Cod with a plan to ship dressed beef east in refrigerated cars. Every railroad in America refused. His workaround through Canada launched a system that by 1900 controlled 82% of America's meat supply, employed 25,000 workers at...

Chicago #2: The Fire That Built Chicago 04.04.2026

October 8, 1871. A barn catches fire on the Southwest Side of Chicago. By Tuesday morning, 2,124 acres are gone. 17,500 buildings. $200 million in property (~$4.8 billion today). The entire business district: ash. Every other city that burned came back roughly the same. Chicago came back bigger. This is that story. 📧 Full written episode with source citations, maps, and data: https://ventureology...

Chicago #1: The Merchants Who Invented Modern Finance 15.03.2026

In April 1848, 82 merchants climbed the stairs above a flour store attic and signed a charter that would become the foundation of an $846 trillion global derivatives market. This is that story. 📧 Full written episode with source citations, maps, and data: https://ventureology.co The first 100 paid subscribers get founding member pricing for life: - https://ventureology.co/founding-partner 🎧 YouT...

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