How The Sc Johnson Family Became One Of The Wealthiest Families On The Planet With A Combined Net Worth Of 28 2 Billion


Samuel Curtis Johnson was born in 1883. He spent the first five decades of his life working in the Midwest in a variety of industries ranging from retail to railroad. In 1882, he moved to Racine where he became a parquet flooring salesman. Then, in 1886, Samuel bought Racine Hardware Manufacturing Company, a parquet flooring business based in Racine, Wisconsin. This was the very beginning of the company that still bears his name and is run by his heirs today. Naturally, for the first few years of his new parquet flooring business, Samuel worked insane hours. He was the company’s salesman, business manager, and bookkeeper. Five days a week he traveled to and from selling flooring to contractors. On Saturdays, he went back to Racine to fill orders and tend to the management of the company. After his first year in business, the company had a profit of $268.27. (That is more than $6,852 adjusted for inflation at 1913 rates, the earliest year data is available). His business continued to grow with sales of his flooring coming in from Colorado to the west, New England to the east, and Mississippi to the south. As sales grew, letters from customers poured in asking Samuel how to care for their new parquet floors. Cleaning them with soap and water ruined the wood’s finish as well as warped the small planks that made up the parquetry pattern. Samuel started looking for the best way to help his customers. Legend has it that he mixed batches of floor wax in his bathtub. He was inspired by the castles of France. Their floors lasted for centuries without wearing out. He knew wax had to be the answer, so he kept experimenting with various formulas. When he landed on the right wax, he made sure every parquet flooring customer also got a can of Johnson’s Prepared Paste Wax. Soon, people without Johnson floors started calling and writing him, hoping to buy some of his wax. As current trends evolved from parquet flooring to maple and oak floors—Johnson’s floor wax sales grew even more. He started advertising nationally and business boomed. By 1898 his only child Herbert Fisk Johnson had joined him in the family business and sales of Johnson floor wax, finishes, and wood fillers were selling more than the company’s flooring. Samuel Curtis Johnson died in 1919 at the age of 85. His son Herbert carried on the family business. Under Herbert, the family business expanded worldwide with its first subsidiary in England in 1914. Herbert died suddenly in 1928 at the age of 59. He did not leave a will, so SC Johnson was divided between his two children Herbert Fisk Johnson Jr. and Henrietta Johnson Louis. Herbert Jr. was the third generation to lead the company. That same year, Herbert Jr.’s son Samuel Curtis Johnson, Jr was born. He went on to become the fourth generation to run the family business. His son Herbert Fisk Johnson III is the current Chairman and CEO of SC Johnson. Today, SC Johnson sells more than just floor wax. It is the company behind Shout, Windex, Ziploc, Glade, Pledge, Raid, OFF!, Scrubbing Bubbles, Mrs. Meyers, Drano, Fantastic, Saran Wrap, and more. SC Johnson remains privately held by the Johnson family today, and operates in more than 70 countries, employs 12,000 people, and provides products in more than 110 countries around the world. The company is one of the oldest family-owned businesses in the U.S.