DuPont invests in General Motors
In the early twentieth century, among the most consequential corporate investments in American industrial history took shape in the state of Delaware, when the DuPont company began acquiring a controlling interest in General Motors. This transaction not only reshaped two of the country's most powerful corporations but also cemented Delaware's role as a hub of corporate power, finance, and industrial strategy. The investment, initiated around 1917 and expanded over subsequent years, gave DuPont significant influence over General Motors at a pivotal moment in the development of the American automobile industry, with effects that reverberated through the national economy for decades.
History
The relationship between DuPont and General Motors grew out of wartime necessity and corporate opportunism in equal measure. During World War I, DuPont had accumulated substantial profits from the manufacture of explosives and other war materials. With the war drawing to a close, DuPont's leadership recognized the need to diversify the company's revenue streams and invest its surplus capital in growing industries. The American automobile sector, still in its formative years but expanding rapidly, presented an attractive opportunity. General Motors, founded in 1908 by William Crapo Durant, was in a period of financial turbulence and was actively seeking outside investment to stabilize its operations and fund expansion.
Pierre S. du Pont, then chairman of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company and a resident of Delaware, played a central role in orchestrating the investment. He had already developed a reputation for financial acumen and organizational restructuring, and he saw in General Motors a company that could benefit from the kind of rigorous management and capital infusion that DuPont was in a position to provide. The initial investment gave DuPont a meaningful stake in General Motors, and over the following years the company increased its holdings considerably. By the early 1920s, DuPont held approximately twenty-three percent of General Motors stock, a position that gave it effective influence over major corporate decisions. Pierre S. du Pont himself became president of General Motors in 1920, serving in that role until Alfred P. Sloan took over in 1923.
The investment proved to be highly productive for both companies in the short term. DuPont supplied General Motors with paints, fabrics, and other materials that went into automobile manufacturing, creating a symbiotic commercial relationship that critics would later characterize as an improper restraint of trade. General Motors, under improved management, grew to become the dominant automobile manufacturer in the United States, surpassing the Ford Motor Company in market share during the 1920s. The organizational innovations introduced during this period, including the decentralized divisional structure associated with Alfred Sloan, became models for large American corporations in subsequent decades.
Economy
The DuPont investment in General Motors had profound economic consequences, not only for the two corporations involved but for the broader Delaware economy and the national industrial landscape. DuPont's headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware made the state an unlikely nerve center for decisions that would shape American manufacturing policy, labor relations, and consumer culture for a generation. The company's success with General Motors reinforced Wilmington's status as a city of significant corporate importance, attracting legal, financial, and professional services firms that catered to large industrial enterprises.
Delaware's favorable corporate laws, which had been developing since the late nineteenth century, made the state an attractive home for major corporations seeking legal stability and administrative flexibility. The state's Court of Chancery, with its specialized expertise in corporate law, offered a reliable forum for resolving complex business disputes. DuPont's long presence in Delaware and its deepening entanglement with General Motors further underscored the importance of the state's legal and regulatory environment to national corporate activity. Delaware's reputation as a preferred state of incorporation grew in parallel with the prominence of its resident corporations, including DuPont.[1]
The commercial relationship between DuPont and General Motors also generated significant revenue and employment in Delaware. DuPont's various manufacturing and research operations employed thousands of Delaware residents, and the company's investment income from General Motors contributed to capital that was reinvested in research and development in the state. The nylon, synthetic rubber, and other materials that DuPont developed in subsequent decades owed something to the financial stability that came, in part, from the General Motors investment. Delaware workers in DuPont facilities thus participated, indirectly, in the broader transformation of American industry during the mid-twentieth century.
Notable Residents
Pierre S. du Pont stands as the most prominent Delaware figure in the story of the DuPont investment in General Motors. Born in 1870 into the du Pont family dynasty, he rose through the management of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company to become its chairman, transforming a gunpowder manufacturer into a diversified chemical corporation. His personal residence, Longwood Gardens in nearby Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, reflected his wealth and his interest in horticulture and landscape design, though his professional center of gravity remained firmly in Delaware. His leadership of General Motors during the early 1920s gave him a unique position in American corporate history as a figure who simultaneously headed two of the country's largest industrial enterprises.
Alfred P. Sloan, while not a Delaware resident in the way that the du Pont family was, became deeply connected to the story of the DuPont-General Motors relationship through his tenure as General Motors president and later chairman. Sloan's management philosophy, which emphasized divisional autonomy, financial controls, and consumer market segmentation, owed something to the organizational culture that DuPont had helped to instill at General Motors. The family of management ideas that flowed from the DuPont-General Motors partnership influenced American business education and corporate practice well beyond the automobile industry. Delaware's role in incubating these ideas, through the presence of DuPont's leadership class in Wilmington, is part of the state's broader contribution to national economic development.[2]
Culture
The DuPont family's influence on Delaware culture is inseparable from the company's economic history, and the General Motors investment was a significant chapter in that broader story. The wealth generated by DuPont's industrial and financial activities funded an array of cultural and civic institutions in Delaware that remain central to the state's identity. Museums, gardens, libraries, and educational foundations bearing the du Pont name or funded by du Pont money reflect the degree to which the family's corporate success shaped the cultural landscape of their home state.
The Hagley Museum and Library, located along the Brandywine River in Wilmington, preserves the original DuPont powder mills and provides a detailed record of the company's industrial and corporate history, including materials related to its investment in General Motors. The museum serves as an important resource for researchers studying the intersection of Delaware's corporate culture with national economic history. Its collections document the management decisions, financial records, and personal correspondence that illuminate how the DuPont leadership approached the General Motors investment and the subsequent decades of corporate partnership. The presence of such an institution in Delaware reflects the state's awareness of its distinctive place in American business history.
The broader culture of Wilmington and the surrounding Brandywine Valley was shaped significantly by the du Pont family's tastes and philanthropic priorities. The arts, landscape architecture, and education received substantial support from du Pont-affiliated foundations over the course of the twentieth century. This patronage created a cultural environment in Delaware that was unusually rich for a small state, with world-class gardens, museums, and educational institutions that attracted visitors and scholars from across the country. The General Motors investment, by securing DuPont's financial position during a critical period, contributed indirectly to the family's capacity for this kind of cultural generosity.
See Also
The story of DuPont's investment in General Motors connects to several broader themes in Delaware history and American corporate development. The eventual legal challenge to the investment, brought by the United States Department of Justice as an antitrust case, resulted in a Supreme Court ruling in 1957 that ordered DuPont to divest its General Motors holdings. The case, known formally as United States v. E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, concluded with DuPont completing its divestiture of General Motors stock by 1965. This legal outcome marked the end of among the most significant inter-corporate relationships in American industrial history and had substantial tax and financial implications for Delaware residents who held du Pont shares.
The legacy of the DuPont-General Motors relationship endures in discussions of corporate governance, antitrust law, and the history of American manufacturing. Delaware's role in that history, as the home state of one of the principal actors, gives the state a distinctive perspective on questions of corporate power and responsibility. The state's legal infrastructure, particularly its Court of Chancery and its body of corporate law, continues to reflect lessons learned from cases like the DuPont-General Motors antitrust dispute. For students of Delaware history, the investment represents a moment when decisions made in Wilmington offices helped determine the shape of the American economy for a generation.[3]