Leonard Shoen | |
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Born | Leonard Samuel Shoen (1916-02-29)February 29, 1916 McGrath, Minnesota, U.S. |
Died | October 4, 1999(1999-10-04) (aged 83) Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, U.S. |
Education | Oregon State University (BS) Northwestern College of Law (LLB) |
Occupation | Entrepreneur |
Spouse(s) | Anna Carty (until her death) Suzanne Gilbaugh (divorced) Suzanne Whitmore (divorced) Unknown spouse (divorced) Carol Schoen (until his death) |
Children | with Carty: 6, including Joe and Mark with Gilbaugh: 5 with Whitmore: 1 with Schoen: 1 |
Leonard Samuel Shoen (February 29, 1916 – October 4, 1999) was an American entrepreneur who founded the U-Haul truck and trailer organization in Ridgefield, Washington. After growing up in the farm belt during the Great Depression, he envisioned the market for rental vehicles for families who wished to avoid the expense of professional transfer and storage companies and move around the country.
Early life
Shoen (pronounced "shown") was born on February 29, 1916, in McGrath, Minnesota, to Sophie (née Appert) and Samuel J. Shoen. His father moved the family to Oregon in 1923 to farm in the Willamette Valley near Shedd.
Shoen worked his way through Oregon State University by running a chain of beauty parlors and barber shops in Corvallis and nearby Albany, and later at Camp Adair north of Corvallis and at the Hanford Reservation in Washington. Sam earned a B.Sc. in General Science (a pre-med degree) from OSC in 1943, and entered the University of Oregon Medical School in Portland. Shoen was suspended from medical school during his fourth year after he "called out present during a roll-call for an absent classmate", and never returned.
Shoen served in the U.S. Navy as a Hospital Apprentice First Class in Bayview, Idaho and Seattle, and was given a medical discharge in 1945 for rheumatic fever. After starting the U-Haul Company, Shoen earned an LL.B. at the Northwestern College of Law, later known as the Lewis & Clark Law School, in Portland in 1955.
Founder of U-Haul
Shoen began his career as a barber while attending Oregon State University in the years leading up to World War II.
In 1945, at the age of 29, Shoen co-founded U-Haul with his wife, Anna Mary Carty (1922–1957), in Ridgefield, Washington, just north of Vancouver. Anna Mary was the mother of Shoen's first six children. The company was started with an investment of $5,000. In the early years, the Shoens routinely worked 16-hour days and reinvested all their earnings back into the business. He began building rental trailers at the Carty Ranch in Ridgefield, owned by his parents-in-law, and splitting the fees for their use with gas station owners whom he franchised as agents. The first U-Haul Rental Agent was a Mobil station on Interstate St. in Portland. These early deals were based on little more than a wink and a nod. He developed one-way rentals and enlisted investors as partners in each trailer as methods of growth. In 1951, Shoen reorganized the U-Haul Trailer Rental Company under a new holding company, ARCOA (Associated Rental Companies of America) Inc.
By 1955, there were more than 10,000 U-Haul trailers on the road and the brand was nationally known. The corporate offices were in Portland, until a 1967 relocation to Phoenix, Arizona. While distracted to some extent by growing his business, Shoen also managed multiple marriages after the death of his first wife from a congenital heart defect, and eventually had a total of 12 children, each of whom he made a stockholder. Shoen married Suzanne Gilbaugh in 1958, and they had five more children. Shoen divorced Gilbaugh, and married Suzanne Whitmore in 1978 to have one last child. Some observers say that Shoen saw it as his duty to confer upon his children the fruits of his labors, others say it was to avoid taxes. In either case, he had transferred all but 2% of control to his children when two of them, Joe and Mark, launched a successful takeover of the business in 1986.
In the 1960s, Shoen diversified his holdings by creating AMERCO Inc., from Advanced Management Engineering and Research Company. He pronounced the acronym, "a miracle". AMERCO remains the parent company of U-Haul and related businesses which support U-Haul operations, and is publicly traded.
Personal life and death
Shoen resided in Las Vegas, Nevada. He died on October 4, 1999, at the age of 83, when he crashed his car into a telephone pole near his Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, home in what the Clark County Coroner's office ruled a suicide. Shoen was survived by his fifth wife, Carol, and all his children.
See also
- Legend City, a Phoenix-area amusement park once owned by Shoen
References
- ^ Ravo, Nick (October 7, 1999). "Leonard S. Shoen, 83, Founder Of U-Haul, the Trailer Company". The New York Times. Retrieved December 25, 2017.
- Private communication with the Oregon State University Alumni Office on 21 Feb 2012.
- ^ Grant, Gordon; Nicholson, Nigel (2008). Family Wars: Classic conflicts in family business and how to deal with them. London, U.K.: Kogan Page. pp. 192–208. ISBN 9780749446307.
- ^ L.S. Shoen, You and Me, AMERCO Inc., 1980, (no ISBN) pp. 1-5, 14, 25-26, 186, 187, 218.
- ^ Luke Krueger, A Noble Function: How U-Haul Moved America, Barricade Books Inc., 2007, ISBN 978-1-56980-329-5; p 9-14, 24, 50-51, 132-133, 177.
- Private communication with the Lewis & Clark College Alumni Office on 29 Feb 2012.
- Rubin, Paul (March 29, 1989). "Hit the Road, Daddy". Phoenix New Times. Archived from the original on January 24, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2020.
- 1916 births
- 1999 deaths
- People from Aitkin County, Minnesota
- Businesspeople from Las Vegas
- American transportation businesspeople
- Lewis & Clark Law School alumni
- Oregon State University alumni
- Road incident deaths in Nevada
- Suicides in Nevada
- American people of Scottish descent
- American people of English descent
- American people of Swiss descent
- American people of French descent
- 20th-century American businesspeople
- Shoen family
- American company founders
- Transport company founders
- People from Ridgefield, Washington
- United States Navy corpsmen
- 1999 suicides