LEFT TO RIGHT: AP; AFP/GETTY IMAGES; TODD WILLIAMSON/GETTY IMAGES; PLANET NEWS ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
During our centennial year, we’re unearthing our favorite covers.
CRYSTAL-BALL CALLS
Forecast: Cloudy
Some of Forbes’ predictions for
the 30 years following 1947 were a
little wide of the mark. Among our
botched prophecies: widespread
helicopter use, outright bans on
monopolies and the ability to
regulate the weather.
The Postwar Dream:
Nov. 15, 1947
AMAZING ADS
For the Long Haul
By encouraging truck driving as a
profession—you too could become
a “Gentleman of the Highway”—
International Harvester, a maker of
truck parts, primed the pump for
future generations of customers.
32 | FORBES ASIA OCTOBER 2017
FAST-FORWARD
Kings of Capitalism
1947: A package of stories on America’s “50 Foremost” business leaders listed
such luminaries as Henry Ford II, David Sarnoff, Samuel Goldwyn, Thomas J.
Watson and Nelson Rockefeller.
2017: Our recently published centennial issue featured a similar concept—essays
from the “100 Greatest Living Business Minds”—but centered on a much different
group of people: almost no heirs and very few hired hands, mostly investors and
entrepreneurs like Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey and Elon Musk.
AS AMERICANS RETURNED home from
war, the suburbs were born.
Published the same year the first 35 0 homes
were sold in Levittown, New York, Forbes’
3 0th anniversary issue spotlighted Lancaster,
Ohio, a “progressive American” city of 24 ,000
people 3 0 miles southeast of the state capital. It
had “all the advantages of a rural as well as an
urban life.” Small-town commerce thrived at
the intersection of Main and Broad Streets. Ex-
G.I.’s such as the “conscientious, unassuming”
Jack Fisher filled jobs at local manufacturers.
Fisher, a brawny six-foot-three, had once ex-
celled on the local high-school basketball team;
now he tended machinery at Anchor Hocking,
a glassware maker that was the biggest business
in town, with annual sales of $64 million
(some $700 million today).
Just as the Lancaster of 19 4 7 offered a snap-
shot of postwar success, the Lancaster of 2017
is a picture of the drastic change of fortune
suffered by parts of industrial America ever
since. More than 2 0% of Lancaster sits below
the poverty line today, compared with 1 4 % in
Ohio overall. Anchor Hocking has recently
been through bankruptcy and traded hands
from one private-equity owner to another. And
earlier this year, Lancaster’s local newspaper,
the Lancaster Eagle-Gazette, published an
investigation titled “Seven Days of Heroin: This
Is What an Epidemic Looks Like.” It featured
two numbers uglier than any from even the
most indebted balance sheet: In just one week,
in greater Cincinnati, 1 8 0 overdoses and 1 8
deaths.
BY ABRAM BROWN
FORBES ASIA
FORBES@100