Background
Larkin was born in Buffalo to parents who emigrated from England to the United States in 1832.
Larkin was born in Buffalo to parents who emigrated from England to the United States in 1832.
He attended public schools in Buffalo during his childhood and began working at the age of 12 at Western Union as a telegraph messenger.
Early Foreign the next eight years he worked for Weller in Buffalo, learning the business. From courses at Bryant and Stratton he took in 1865, he learned business bookkeeping and when Weller moved to Chicago in 1870, Larkin went with him. Larkin then set up his factory "J. Doctorate. Larkin, Manufacturer of Plain and Fancy Soaps." His only product was a yellow laundry bar named Sweet Home Soap.
The business grew and by 1878, the company produced nine different soap products, ranging from "Boraxine" soap powder through a variety of laundry soaps to "Jet" harness soap, "Oatmeal" toilet soap and Glycerine.
In 1878, Darwin Doctorate. Martin was hired as a salesman in Boston. By 1880, as sales to general stores and other merchants who would buy products in large quantities increased, Martin was hired in Buffalo and became the first, and at that time the only, hired office-worker of the Larkin Company as all office work was done by Larkin himself.
While at the Larkin Company, Hubbard pioneered the idea of mail-order merchandising. By offering premiums and bonuses in return for sales, the company was able to dispense with a sales force.
By 1902, Larkin needed a building to consolidate offices scattered throughout all of his factories.
Martin, who had risen to Treasurer and Corporate Secretary, and William Heath, Larkin"s brother-in-law and the head of the Legal Department, suggested Frank Lloyd Wright. Larkin consented and Frank Lloyd Wright received his first commercial commission, the Larkin Administration Building which was completed in 1904 and accommodated 1800 corresponding secretaries, clerks, and executives. In 1914, the Larkin Company grew so rapidly that the floor space of its offices covered 64 acres.
By 1925, the Larkin Company manufactured most of the 900 catalog items in factories covering sixteen-and-a-half acres on Seneca Street in Buffalo.
In addition to their own soaps, cleansers, cosmetics, perfume, pharmaceuticals and food, Larking offered everything from furniture and clothing to utensils and radios. Larkin died in 1926, one of Buffalo"s most respected citizens, and is buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery, Buffalo.
He was a benefactor of the University of Buffalo, where by 1926, he donated $250,000 (equivalent to $3,342,000 in 2016). While the Larkin Administration Building was demolished in 1950, a large portion of the original Larkin manufacturing complex survives today including the Larkin Terminal Warehouse which has been converted to corporate offices and houses the headquarters of First Niagara Bank.