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Sam Walton the Inside Story of Americas Hardcover – January 1, 1990
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length319 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherA DUTTON BOOK
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1990
- ISBN-100525249842
- ISBN-13978-0525249849
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Product details
- Publisher : A DUTTON BOOK
- Publication date : January 1, 1990
- Edition : First Edition
- Language : English
- Print length : 319 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0525249842
- ISBN-13 : 978-0525249849
- Item Weight : 1.54 pounds
- Best Sellers Rank: #684,868 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Vance H. Trimble was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1960 in recognition of his exposé of nepotism and payroll abuse in the U.S. Congress. For this work, Trimble also was awarded the other two top prizes for "distinguished Washington correspondence," the Raymond Clapper and the Sigma Delta Chi, honoring him as a rarity in American journalism-- "a Triple Crown winner."
Born in Arkansas in 1913, Vance Trimble grew up in Oklahoma where at age 14 he became a cub reporter: on The Okemah Daily Leader. He went on to reporting and desk work on daily newspapers in Wewoka, Seminole, Muskogee, Okmulgee, and Tulsa.
During the Depression, Trimble freelanced as a typewriteradding machine repairman, traveling the South for a year in a rusty $35 1926 Chevy.
Fired from The Tulsa Tribune for joining a writers union, Trimble went to Texas, where he worked on newspapers in Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Houston. In World War II, Trimble was a Signal Corps staff sergeant, and edited the Army newspaper at Camp Beale, California.
In 1955, Trimble was promoted from managing editor of The Houston Press to news editor of the Scripps-Howard national bureau in Washington, D.C.
"I grew a little restless by my desk job," says Trimble. "In Houston, I was under deadline pressure, working fast. My new job seemed to slow. So in my spare time, I began roaming Capitol Hill."
Soon his digging unearthed scandalous nepotism and payroll shenanigans in Congressional offices. The Scripps-Howard news wire planted his daily stories on page ones from New York to San Francisco. These exclusives continued for six months. TIME magazine admiringly profiled him as "The Digger on Capitol Hill." The cheating revelations outraged the public. Because of this grass roots outcry, the U. S. Senate, for the first time in 31 years, voted to relax its secrecy on office payrolls. In its page 1 headline, The Washington Daily News hailed this as "A Victory for the Taxpayers and Vance Trimble."
From the nation's capital, Vance Trimble became editor of daily newspapers in El Paso and Covington, Kentucky. He was editor of the Kentucky Post for 17 years.
Trimble is author of 13 hardcover books, the first being a history of the use of hyperbaric medicine. Others include biographies of Sam Walton, FedEx founder Fred Smith, publisher E.W. Scripps, baseball commissioner "Happy" Chandler, entrepreneur Chris Whittle, and chiefs of the Oklahoma Seminole and Choctaw Indian tribes. He has written 69 published true detective mysteries and many other magazine articles. "And a few million words of newspaper copy," Trimble says.
In 1974 Trimble was inducted into the Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame. His papers are in the Western History Collections at the University of Oklahoma, and at Ohio University.
When his wife of 67 years, Elzene Miller Trimble, died in 1999, Trimble retired to Wewoka, Oklahoma, where she is buried beside her mother. Their only child, Carol Ann Nordeheimer, is a business consultant in Wilmington, Delaware.
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2021enjoyed the venture of his life
- Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2018Enjoyed reading Sam Walton's biography. It was written within a year or two of his death. Amazing American story of someone who worked hard and made a major impact.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2019Good quality
- Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2013oklahoma
SAMUEL MOORE WALTON - 3/29/1918
to
4/5/1992-74...Born in Kingfisher,OK.
1735 wal-marts/212 sams cubs/13 super saver stores.
1 wife--4 kids.... ON TIMES list of 100 most influential
people of the 20th century.
in 1992 he employed 380,000 people and had BILLIONS
in sales.
he was ____ PROUD TO BE AN------o k i e !
bp okc 64 aries
- Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2017Great
- Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2016great book. fast shipping!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2012Vance Trimble's book "Sam Walton" is an easy-to-read biography of America's richest man upon to 1990. Trimble narrates Sam Walton's rise from the owner of a five-and-dime store in Bentonville [Arkansas] to the chairman of Wal-Mart, America's greatest chain of discount stores.
Walton [who died of cancer at age 74 (March 29,1918--April 5, 1992) two years after the publication of Trimble's biography] had three passions: a) building up Wal-Mart to become America's greatest chain of discount stores; b) flying solo [or in company of his executive vice-presidents] to visit each of the Wal-Mart stores, often unannounced and/or incognito; and c) quail hunting, either solo or with guests such as President-to-be Jimmy Carter.
His single lifetime objective was to become Number One in retail in America, out-spacing Sears and K-mart. Walton is remembered for a) his personal frugality and thriftiness, not necessarily stinginess as he gave away a lot of money for education and scholarships; he had knack for negotiating the lowest possible purchase price from his suppliers; b) for his passion for everyday low prices to satisfy customers' expectations; c) for treating his Wal-mart employees as "one-big-family," insisting on calling them "associates," and his staff and administrative assistants responded accordingly; and d) for seeing and grabbing new opportunities for expansion of his retail empire.
When I was teaching in China [2002-2009], I was surprised to see American-style Wal-Mart stores opening in relatively small Chinese cities (i.e., small by Chinese standards, i.e., cities with populations of 1-2 million people). Within a short time of the opening of one of the Wal-Mart stores, it became a well-known destiny for taxi drivers and foreigners alike. Foreigners simply had to say, "Waallmaat, please!", and the driver knew exactly where to go.
Ironically, the Chinese government required Chinese people working at Wal-Mart stores to be unionized, contrary to both China's official and Wal-Mart's national anti-union policy. Even though Sam Walton may be impressed with Wal-Mart's overseas expansion, he may turn over in his grave knowing that Wal-Mart/China can only hire unionized workers. Yet pragmatic as he was, he may turn back to sleep in his grave, conceding to the Chinese government the right to impose unions on Wal-Mart's overseas outlets.
= END =
- Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 1999Amazon CustomerAn outsider provides insights into Sam Walton who believed in slogans like We Sell For Less and Satisfaction Guaranteed. The book contains some photographs which are now on display at the Walton's Wal-Mart Museum in Bentonville, Arkansas.
Top reviews from other countries
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on July 14, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional leadership book
Great book