Truth and Honor

Truth and Honor
Author: Robert Daniel Ricketts
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1988
Genre:
ISBN:

In 1640, the Good Ship Hopewell arrived in America carrying Edward, Michael and William Ricketts to Virginia. James, Miles and Thomas Ricketts came to Maryland in the 1600's. Includes biographical notes and sketches of Ricketts families throughout the United States.

Ricketts Families

Ricketts Families
Author: William Neal Hurley (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN:

"Most if not all of the individuals reported in this text are presumed to descend from one Thomas Ricketts, Jr., born about 1685 in Anne Arundel County. The majority of the text is concerned with known descendants of this individual. However, chapters are included on the descendants of Jeremiah Ricketts (died c. 1818) and Verlinda Ricketts (born c. 1798) through whom the Ricketts are connected to the Trail families of Montgomery County"--Verso of back cover.

A Ricketts Family History

A Ricketts Family History
Author: Nina L. Rose
Publisher:
Total Pages: 150
Release: 1975
Genre:
ISBN:

William Ricketts was born in Twyford, Hampshire, England and immigrated to New Jersey and later to Baltimore, Maryland about 1637. He married Mary Walton of New York, and died about 1700.

Genealogy of the Ricketts Family

Genealogy of the Ricketts Family
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 98
Release: 19??
Genre:
ISBN:

Genealogy of the Ricketts of Europe (England, Ireland, France) and America. Five different members of the same branch of the Ricketts family appeared independently in America as pioneers between the years 1639 and 1654. All of them came to Virginia and some later migrated to Maryland. Christopher and Francis Rickett(s), sons of John Ricketts, settled in Charles River Co., Va. Nothing more is known about them. Edward Ricketts, third son of John Ricketts, settled in the Isle of Wight Co., Va. Another Frances Ricketts first immigrated to Westmoreland Co., Va. in 1654 and later to Elizabeth City Co., Va. William Ricketts, son of Capt. William, of Ridgeland Plantation on the Island of Jamaica, West Indies, immigrated to Charles City Co., Va. in 1650. He lived in New Jersey and Maryland. Family members live in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Ohio, Kentucky and elsewhere.

The Harder You Work, the Luckier You Get

The Harder You Work, the Luckier You Get
Author: Joe Ricketts
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2019-11-05
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1501164783

Joe Ricketts, founder of TD Ameritrade, shares the epic inside story of how a working-class kid from the Nebraska prairie took on Wall Street’s clubby brokerage business, busted it open, and walked away a billionaire. Joe Ricketts always had the gift of seeing what others missed. The son of a house builder, he started life as a part-time janitor, but by the age of thirty-three he saw the chance to challenge the big brokerage firms by offering Americans an inexpensive way to take control of their own stock trading. Nowadays, we take for granted that Main Street is playing right there on Wall Street, but Ricketts made that happen. His company, begun with $12,500 borrowed from friends and family, took off like a rocket thanks to an early embrace of digital technology and irreverent marketing. But Ameritrade also faced a series of near-disasters: the SEC almost shut him down; his partners tried to force him out because of his relentless risk-taking; penny brokers swindled the company; the crash of 1989 nearly cost him everything; and he was almost shut down again when a customer committed massive fraud. By the time of the dot-com bust, he had proven that his strategy based on frontier values could survive just about anything. The Harder You Work, The Luckier You Get offers a view inside Joe Ricketts’ mind, giving readers a visceral understanding of how entrepreneurs think and act differently from the rest of us—how they see the horizon where we just see a spreadsheet. As unvarnished as the prairie he comes from, Ricketts also talks honestly about his shortcomings as a manager, the career sacrifices his wife made for his business, the complexity of being a father, and the pain of splitting with his mentor and of his brother’s death from AIDS. Overcoming these and other challenges, he built a company now worth $30 billion. A must-read for anyone who’s ever dreamed of starting their own business, The Harder You Work, The Luckier You Get is the ultimate only-in-America story.