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  1. James E. Casey (March 29, 1888 – June 6, 1983) was an American businessman, known for being the founder of the American Messenger Company, today known as UPS. In 1907, 19-year-old James Casey founded the American Messenger Company in Seattle, Washington. He served as president, CEO and chairman. Claude Ryan was his partner and his messengers ...

    • Beginnings
    • The Entrepreneur
    • New Partners
    • Beyond Seattle
    • Innovations and Principles
    • Selling Out and Buying Back, Tragedy and Growth
    • Going National
    • Jim Casey’s Legacy: Ups
    • Jim Casey The Man and Philanthropist
    • “The Bottom Line”

    Henry Casey came from County Galway, Ireland. Annie Sheehan was the daughter of immigrants from Ireland’s County Cork. The two met in Chicago, where they were married. The young couple soon moved to the mining district of Candelaria, Nevada, where they ran a saloon. Henry prospected for silver, but contracted a miner’s lung disease. On March 29, 18...

    By 1903, Jim had saved up $30; he and two friends founded the City Messenger Service to deliver “telephone messages.” Few Seattle residents had phones, but City Messenger Service had two phones, one each from the two early phone companies serving businesses and the wealthy. Business was slow, and after two years the young men sold the company. Jim ...

    “Partnering up” with other messenger services rather than using scarce cash to buy them out became a modus operandi for the realization of Jim’s bigger dreams. In 1913, American Messenger merged with Evert “Mac” McCabe’s Motorcycle Delivery Company. Mac was an extroverted salesman and had as much energy as Jim and Claude. Mac’s wife, Garnet McCabe,...

    The partners discovered that Motor Parcel Delivery of Oakland, California, was in financial trouble and acquired the company with little cash outlay. In nearby San Francisco, there was already a Merchants Parcel company, so they could not use that name in the Bay Area. George liked the word “United” as in United Fruit. Mac suggested United Parcel, ...

    The 1920s saw UPS’s introduction of automatic car washes for its vehicles, conveyor belts for sorting, and the now-famous brown uniforms. From the start, Jim was obsessed with the appearance of his drivers. The company had (and has) strict rules on appearance. Jim himself was always impeccably dressed in a pressed, conservative suit. Other key idea...

    At Mac McCabe’s urging, UPS took a plunge into air delivery, creating the nation’s first air parcel service, United Air Express, in February 1929. The company contracted with four passenger airlines to carry its packages between Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, Phoenix, and El Paso. At the same time, Jim and his friends lus...

    Having developed city-wide retail delivery services in many cities, UPS wanted to deliver into more remote areas and across state borders. Jim Casey and partners also wanted to carry larger loads on longer hauls, including business-to-business traffic. This required “common carrier” trucking rights, which were closely regulated by state agencies an...

    Our “American Originals” series of short biographies has covered some of the most impressive and focused men and women in American history. Walt Disney and Estee Lauder created lasting global brands. George Eastman created Kodak, one of America’s greatest tech companies. Each of these companies has changed in various ways since its founder’s depart...

    The paragraphs above tell little of the personal life of this humble, somewhat shy, but very curious man. Jim Casey never married. He did not have a house, living out of hotels most of his life. He obsessed on UPS. But was he one dimensional? In 1948, he and his siblings used their UPS stock to set up the Annie E. Casey Foundation to honor their mo...

    This story above all else proves that “determined men, working together, can do anything.” The history of UPS proves that one (enormous) company can serve the public, serve its employees, and serve its stockholders at the same time. It proves that a clear, correct, foresighted vision need not be “reinvented” with each passing fad. That great compan...

  2. It all started with $100. In 1907, two teenage entrepreneurs created what would become the world's largest package delivery service. Starting in a Seattle basement with a $100 loan, Claude Ryan and Jim Casey opened the American Messenger Company.

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  4. Mar 2, 2016 · His vision led him to create Casey Family Programs. Jim Casey, born in 1888, was the eldest of four children. Their father died while they were young, and he dropped out of junior high to help his mother, Annie E. Casey, support the family. He started delivering packages by bicycle, borrowed $100 from a friend and launched American Messenger ...

    • 42 sec
  5. Jim Casey, the founder of United Parcel Service, established Casey Family Programs in 1966 to help improve the safety and success of vulnerable children and their families across America. Thanks to his leadership and vision — and the commitment of his brothers and sister — Casey Family Programs is able to carry on this important mission ...

    • 42 sec
  6. James E. ("Jim") Casey was born on March 29, 1888 in Pick Handle Gulch, Nevada. As a teenager he worked for local delivery companies in Seattle in Washington State. After a friend loaned him 100 dollars, Casey founded on August 28, 1907 the American Messenger Company, a messenger and delivery service in Seattle.

  7. Sep 20, 1999 · United Parcel Service (UPS), the international package delivery company, grew out of a messenger service established in Seattle in 1907 by an enterprising 19-year-old named James E. "Jim" Casey and his friend, Claude Ryan. Beginning with two bicycles, one phone, a tiny office in the basement of a saloon, and $100 borrowed from Ryan's uncle, the ...

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