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・ Joshua Galvin
・ Joshua Gamson
・ Joshua Gans
・ Joshua Gardner
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・ Joshua Gilbert
・ Joshua Girling Fitch
・ Joshua Glenn
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・ Joshua Gomez
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・ Joshua Green (academic)
Joshua Green (businessman)
・ Joshua Green (journalist)
・ Joshua Green River
・ Joshua Greenberg
・ Joshua Greene
・ Joshua Greene (psychologist)
・ Joshua Greene (wine)
・ Joshua Gregory
・ Joshua Grenier
・ Joshua Gros
・ Joshua Guest
・ Joshua Gwillen Doan
・ Joshua H. Berkey
・ Joshua H. Marvil
・ Joshua H. Ritchie


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Joshua Green (businessman) : ウィキペディア英語版
Joshua Green (businessman)

Joshua Green (October 16, 1869 – January 24, 1975〔(The Green Family in Seattle ), Joshua Green Corporation. Accessed 2009-10-16. Much of article is verbatim identical to James R. Warren's article on HistoryLink, which it credits.〕) was an American sternwheeler captain, businessman, and banker. He rose from being a seaman to being the dominant figure of the Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet, then sold out his interests and became a banker.〔〔, pp. 34–39, 55, 60, 62.〕〔James R. Warren, (Green, Joshua (1869-1975) ), HistoryLink, September 27, 1999. Accessed 2009-10-16.〕 Living to the age of 105 and active in business almost to the end of his life, he became an invaluable source of information about the history of Seattle and the Puget Sound region.〔〔〔 According to Nard Jones, Green was one of the city of Seattle's last fluent speakers of Chinook Jargon, the pidgin trade language of the Pacific Northwest.〔.〕
==Life and career==

Born in Mississippi, Joshua came with his family to the Puget Sound region of Washington in 1886 at the age of 17. The family formed a connection with Seattle mayor Bailey Gatzert, who helped Green begin his career. He worked as a chainman, surveying for the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway, then on the sternwheeler ''Henry Bailey'', a Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet vessel that also went up the Skagit River.〔
In late 1889, using a $5,000 loan from Seattle banker Jacob Furth, an associate of Gatzert's, Green and three fellow officers of the ''Henry Bailey'' purchased their own sternwheeler,〔〔 the ''Fanny Lake''〔 (or ''Fannie Lake''〔). Bill Speidel describes it as "…a funny little thing… She looked like a scow with a big box, topped by a smaller box, topped by a deluxe model outhouse."〔Speidel (1989), p. 35.〕
Green's innovative business practices〔Speidel (1989), p. 36–37.〕 soon allowed him to become a fleet owner, president of what was named the La Conner Trading and Transportation Company,〔 owning some rather more elegant vessels, such as the sidewheeler ''George E. Starr''.〔Newell, Gordon R., ed., ''H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest'', at 14, 67, n.2, 87, 99, 184 n.4, Superior Publishing, Seattle, WA 1966 ISBN 0-87564-220-9〕 He established Seattle's dominance of the Mosquito Fleet, relative to Olympia or Tacoma,〔Speidel (1989), p. 37.〕 which Speidel considers to be a key factor in Seattle's emerging and continued dominance of the Puget Sound region.〔 He continued to be a master and captain, serving on several of his own company's sternwheelers.〔
The company survived several ship fires, as well as the Depression that followed the Panic of 1893, then prospered greatly in the Klondike Gold Rush, transporting miners and their gear to Alaska. Green continued to invest his profits. In 1903 he merged his firm with Charles E. Peabody's Alaska Steamship/Puget Sound Navigation Company, which soon brought the Mosquito Fleet to a new level. Ships were retrofitted to be able to carry automobiles, notably for the Seattle-Bremerton route.〔 From 1913, the company was known as the Puget Sound Navigation Company.〔
In 1925, Green purchased the distressed Peoples Savings Bank for US$200,000, and in 1927,〔〔 believing that the rise of the automobile limited the future of Puget Sound area water transport,〔〔 he resigned from the Puget Sound Navigation Company to dedicate himself fully to banking.〔 Puget Sound Navigation would continue to dominate Puget Sound transportation until it was bought out in 1951 by the state of Washington, as the centerpiece of Washington State Ferries.〔〔
He changed the name of the bank to Peoples Bank and Trust Co,〔〔 later People's National Bank of Washington.〔(Stimson-Green House ), National Park Service. Accessed online 2009-10-16.〕 With branch banking not allowed at the time, he began or acquired several other banks as wholly owned subsidiaries. In 1949, when he passed the presidency of the bank to his son Joshua Jr., deposits stood at $128 million. By 1969, when Joshua Green turned 100, deposits had reached $400 million. In 1988, the bank was purchased by U.S. Bancorp and renamed U.S. Bank of Washington.〔〔
Joshua Green died at age 105 in 1975.〔〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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