Samuel J. Murray


Samuel J. Murray was a New York printer's apprentice of humble origin, who rose to become an inventor who revolutionized the printing business, and one of the most successful businessmen of his time. At the time of his death at age sixty-five, Murray was vice president and treasurer of the United States Playing Card Company, and a director of the W. B. Oglesby Paper Company of Middletown, Ohio. His block of stock in the United States Playing Card Company was said to be worth $1,000,000.
Called "a mechanical genius, the marvel and admiration of the technical and inventive world," Murray made his mark on the United States Playing Card Company by creating and installing manufacturing equipment, such as an automatic punch machine which "increased the output of cards fourfold" and reduced labor costs by sixty-six percent. With the automatic punch machine, great sheets of paper were fed into the machine and came out as complete packs of playing cards, printed in four colors.

Early life

Samuel J. Murray was born in New York City on March 7, 1851. He grew up in Brooklyn and was childhood friends of Timothy Sullivan who Introduced him to John F. Ahearn whose daughter married his son William. His father died when he was 12 years old. To help support his mother, two younger sisters, Catherine and Elizabeth, and younger brother, William, Murray found a job after school as a newsie delivering newspapers. His mother died when he was thirteen, leaving him to raise his younger siblings on his own.
He was hired as a printer's devil by Victor Eugene Mauger, who was so impressed with the young Murray, that he paid for him to go to England to learn the playing card printing business at the Goodall plant in London.

Rising fortunes

After his attempt to start a small playing card plant in Montreal, Quebec, Canada was thwarted by a money panic, Murray was recruited in 1881 by Colonel Robert J. Morgan of the Russell & Morgan Company, to assist in the manufacture of playing cards at their plant in Cincinnati.
Here, Murray thrived and with him, the fortunes of Russell & Morgan.
"The advent of Mr. Murray marked the advancement of the concern to the first rank as a playing card manufacturing establishment. He not only made the plant highly efficient, but when he found that any device was needed he evolved it himself and astounded his company by his ability to meet any emergency no matter how difficult."
Murray had a falling out with Russell & Morgan and in 1886 went off on his own to form the National Playing Card Company in Indianapolis – a move that Russell & Morgan came to regret.
According to one source, as a competitor, Murray "was a serious menace to the Russell & Morgan Company and as a matter of self preservation, the latter bought him out, consolidating the Indianapolis concern with the United States Playing Card Company."
As a concession, Murray was given a "block of stock in the merger" and "unrestricted charge of the manufacture of playing cards." After this, he was steadfast in his loyalty to the United States Playing Card Company, even turning down an offer of $2 million by a big printing house in New York.
Murray is credited with several inventions including the box, , and a streamlined process for .

Marriage and family

Samuel J. Murray married childhood sweetheart Annie E. Reilley. They had five children: Victor C. Murray, who followed him into the United States Playing Card Company;
William J. Murray, a well known businessman in New York, married to the daughter of John F. Ahearn, a member of the New York State Senate from 1890 to 1902;
Jane Murray Egan, married to Clifford Egan, son of Thomas P. Egan of Cincinnati manufacturer J.A. Fay & Egan Company;
Miss Geneva M. Murray; and Samuel J. Murray, Jr.
William J. Murray was survived by his two sons John F. Murray and Samuel J. Murray and his grandchildren William Murray, Julie Murray, Margo Murray, Samuel J. Murray II, Frank H. Murray, Stephen C. Murray, Marcia Murray and Evelyn H. Murray.

Death

On August 19, 1915, Murray died of pneumonia. He is buried in the Old St. Joseph's Catholic Cemetery in Cincinnati.