Colgate. A name that has stood the test of time. That endured wars, crises, and revolutions.
Today, valued at over 70 billion dollars, Colgate has become synonymous with cleanliness, health, and trust… And it’s now present in over 200 countries, inside the cabinets of billions of people. But this story didn’t start with toothpaste tubes or modern laboratories. It began with a poor immigrant boy, his hands burned by lye… Working in silence, in the foul basement of a factory in New York City.
This is the story of William Colgate. A man with no inheritance. No connections.
No diploma. But who saw in soap — a product most people ignored the chance to build something everlasting. In this video, you’ll discover how a boy who fled England founded a global empire, survived fires, wars, and ruthless competition, and left behind a legacy that still lives on… in every smile.
Get ready for a journey of strategy, resilience, and purpose. Why is this is the true story of how Colgate was born. Now sit back and relax.
Let’s travel back to the year 1783 and relive the path of William Colgate. CHAPTER 01: THE ORIGINS OF WILLIAM COLGATE William Colgate was born on January 25, 1783, in the village of Hollingbourne, in the English countryside. He was the son of Robert Colgate, a humble farmer and candle maker, and Sarah Bowles, a homemaker.
William was the youngest of three siblings. His childhood was marked not only by hard work in the fields, but also by an atmosphere charged with political and religious tension. His father was a strong advocate of ideals considered revolutionary at the time a vocal critic of the monarchy and a devout follower of the independent Baptists, in an England dominated by the Anglican Church.
That stance came at a high cost. Accused of spreading radical ideas and fearing arrest for sedition — Robert saw his small rural property threatened by local authorities. William was only 15 years old when his father made a desperate decision: to abandon everything, gather his wife and children, and emigrate to the United States.
The family set sail for the New World with almost no resources and no certainty The Atlantic crossing was a nightmare: weeks battling storms, rats in the lower decks, rationed food, and disease. By the time they finally arrived at the port of Baltimore, they were weak, exhausted… but alive. In their first months on American soil, the situation was desperate.
The family tried to start over however they could first in Maryland, then in upstate New York. Robert found work as a candle and soap maker, but financial instability followed them wherever they went. And it was in this setting of extreme poverty that William, still a teenager, began to take on any job he could find: he cleaned stables, delivered milk, made small repairs.
But he wanted more. At 21 years old, in 1804, he made a decision that would change his life: he moved alone to New York City. At the turn of the 19th century, New York was a booming metropolis a hub for immigrants, merchants, and emerging industries.
A minefield for anyone without money, a diploma, or a powerful last name. But William had something rare: discipline and vision. He landed a job as an apprentice in a small soap and candle factory located on the outskirts of Manhattan.
His work was grueling: hauling barrels of tallow, stirring caustic soda in steaming vats, slicing soap into bars with sharp blades. His hands were constantly injured. The stench of animal fat clung to him for days.
But he watched everything closely. While the other apprentices just wanted to finish their shifts and go home, William stayed a little longer. He memorized ingredients, cooking times, and chemical reactions.
He paid close attention to how the owners negotiated with suppliers, how they priced their products, and how they built relationships with local merchants. And it was there — in the midst of smoke and blistered hands — that William had his first strategic insight: “Soap doesn’t have to be just an anonymous commodity. It can be a brand.
It can carry a name. It can carry my name. ” At the time, products like soap and candles were sold in bulk without standardization, without labels, and with huge variations in quality.
William realized that the key was offering consistency, trust, and identity. But vision alone doesn’t build a business. William was still a laborer — poor, unknown, with no family or institutional support.
Even so, he began saving every cent he could. He gave up meat during the week. Slept in cramped basements.
And studied on his own — chemistry, accounting, even calligraphy to write proper business letters. He was still just a worker. But he thought, acted, and dreamed like someone who already knew exactly where he wanted to go.
CHAPTER 02: THE FORMULA FOR SUCCESS In 1806, at just 23 years old, William risked everything he had and rented a small space on Dutch Street, in the commercial heart of Manhattan. There, with basic tools, a borrowed cauldron, and sacks of tallow bought on credit, William Colgate & Company was born. He started out selling handmade soap and candles to small merchants, laundresses, and local hotels.
And he insisted on stamping his own name on the wooden boxes a simple detail, but unheard of at the time. William had no idea that this small gesture would mark the beginning of a revolution. He was still a poor young man, soaked in sweat, his fingers burned by lye.
But he had laid the foundation of an empire that would one day become synonymous with hygiene for billions of people around the world. At the time, products like soap were sold generically no brand, no standard. But Colgate saw something few others did: the power of brand identity.
He understood that in a rapidly urbanizing world, people valued trust and predictability. If his soap maintained consistency in quality, scent, and durability and carried a reliable name he wouldn’t just be selling a product, he’d be selling a promise. But growth didn’t come easily.
In the early years, William did almost everything himself: he produced, packaged, delivered, and negotiated. He worked late into the night, lit only by the very candles he made. At times, he walked miles with boxes strapped to his back to ensure on-time deliveries.
Even so, his reputation kept growing. By 1812, just six years after its founding, Colgate was already supplying soap to multiple states along the East Coast. His operation had expanded enough to employ dozens of workers and move tons of tallow, lye, and ashes every week.
That same year, however, the War of 1812 broke out between the United States and England, directly impacting small manufacturers. The British naval blockade made it difficult to import raw materials and drastically increased production costs. Many companies were forced to shut down.
William, however, responded strategically. He diversified his suppliers, negotiated advance inventory deals, and most importantly kept his prices stable, even with tight profit margins. The result?
He earned even greater respect from local merchants and solidified his reputation as a trustworthy businessman in hard times. In the following years, as the war ended and the economy began to stabilize, William invested in expansion. In 1820, he opened a new manufacturing facility and began producing starch and aromatic extracts, broadening his product line and tapping into new markets.
He was no longer just a soap maker — he had become an entrepreneur with a full brand vision. Over the years, William remained true to his values: hard work, consistent quality, and ethical business practices. He often donated a portion of his profits to social and religious causes, helping to build schools, churches, and aid programs for immigrants people just like he once was.
By this point, he was no longer just a manufacturer. He had become a symbol of integrity and success in New York. But the greatest test of his journey was still to come.
CHAPTER 3: SURVIVING THE CHAOS In the years following Colgate’s initial growth, the challenges began to take on a new shape. If before the goal was simply to survive as a small manufacturer, William Colgate now had to face the pains of rapid expansion. His company was gaining more and more ground in the market — but that required something few could maintain: consistency at scale.
With rising demand came operational difficulties. Maintaining product quality at high volumes was no easy task. There were no clear standards, and training new employees didn’t always keep pace with production needs.
William, ever attentive to detail, realized that the future of the company would depend on more than just good intentions. That’s when he introduced rigorous training programs and developed manuals that standardized every step of the process from handling lye to cutting soap bars. This internal discipline was essential to sustaining the reputation he had built.
While many competitors looked for shortcuts to earn quicker profits cutting quality or superficially copying his brand identity — William stayed focused on quiet efficiency. He knew that customer trust was the most valuable asset he had. Even so, external challenges persisted.
By the late 1820s, Colgate faced one of the most critical moments in its history: a fire destroyed part of the production facilities. For many, that would have been the end. But William turned the tragedy into a turning point.
He rebuilt with improvements installing ventilation systems, reorganizing factory workflows, and increasing overall operational safety. In the 1830s, the United States went through another economic crisis, marked by inflation and banking instability. Many companies went under.
William, once again, acted with caution: he avoided risky loans and systematically reinvested profits into factory modernization. His strategy was simple, yet powerful: sustainable growth and unshakable trust. Thanks to this approach, William Colgate & Company endured for decades without ever abandoning its core pillars: quality, ethics, and consistency.
Every crisis, every competitor, every obstacle became an opportunity for improvement. By the end of that turbulent period, William was no longer just a manufacturer. He had become a symbol of resilience, leadership, and vision.
And he was ready to reap the rewards of everything he had built with his own hands. CHAPTER 4: THE LEGACY THAT ROSE After decades of weathering crises, wars, and relentless competition, William Colgate was finally reaping the rewards of his tireless discipline. By the 1840s, his company was recognized across all the northeastern states as a leader in soaps, starches, and candles a name synonymous with reliability, efficiency, and quality.
But time takes its toll. At 60 years old, William no longer had the energy he once did. Although he maintained the same austere routine and ironclad ethics that had guided him throughout his life, he knew his mission had shifted: to ensure that what he built wouldn’t die with him.
Among his children, one name stood out: Samuel Colgate. From a young age, Samuel showed a genuine interest in the business he accompanied his father on visits to the factory, listened in on conversations with suppliers, and asked questions about chemical compositions, costs, and strategy. William, strict as ever, didn’t hand anything over easily.
He made sure his son learned every step of the process from handling raw ingredients to calculating profit margins. That preparation became even more intense starting in 1847, when William suffered a minor stroke. He recovered, but the incident was a final wake-up call.
A year later, in 1848, at the age of 65, William Colgate stepped down from leadership, handing control of the company to his son. This marked the beginning of a new generation for the brand now under the command of a young man who shared his father’s strength of character, Samuel took over during a time of major transformation. The Industrial Revolution was accelerating production processes, new machinery was arriving from Europe, and consumer habits were shifting.
He understood that if he wanted to preserve his father’s legacy, he had to go beyond soap. But Samuel didn’t stop there. He invested in machinery, increased production scale, and began laying the foundation for what would become a global brand.
His approach was both strategic and emotional: he didn’t just want to keep the business alive — he wanted to honor his father’s name. On March 25, 1857, William Colgate passed away at the age of 74, in his home in New York City. He was buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, in a simple ceremony just as he had lived.
His death marked the end of an era but also the beginning of a new chapter. Shortly after his passing, the company was officially renamed Colgate & Company, marking the moment when the founder’s name ceased to represent just a man and began to represent a brand. An identity that would grow far beyond its origin.
Because although William was gone, what he built not only endured it grew, evolved, and transformed. Thanks to the preparation, the succession planning, and the discipline he had instilled throughout his life, Colgate was ready to move into the next century… and step into the world as a giant. CHAPTER 5: THE NAME THAT STOOD THE TEST OF TIME By the time William Colgate died, his name was already well known throughout much of the United States.
But what he couldn’t have imagined was that his legacy — shaped by ethics, discipline, and vision — was still only just beginning. Under the leadership of Samuel Colgate, the company took bold steps forward. He not only preserved his father’s business but transformed Colgate into one of the most innovative companies in 19th-century America.
A decisive milestone came in 1873, when the company launched its first flavored toothpaste, sold in small glass jars. The smooth mint taste unheard of at the time revolutionized the act of brushing one’s teeth. Before that, the few who cared about oral hygiene used abrasive powders or even ordinary soap.
Colgate’s toothpaste was a breakthrough: it didn’t just clean — it made brushing a pleasurable experience. That small, but powerful, detail would make all the difference. The public response was so overwhelmingly positive that, in 1896, Colgate became the first American company to sell toothpaste in a tube an innovative format inspired by artists' paint tubes.
It made the product easier to use, preserved it better, and enabled much larger-scale production. Meanwhile, the world was changing. In 1914, World War I broke out.
Thousands of American soldiers were sent to Europe, and with them came hygiene kits provided by the military. Inside those kits was Colgate toothpaste. This firmly established the brand as a symbol of trust even in times of war.
When the soldiers returned home, they continued using what had accompanied them in the trenches. And just like that, Colgate became a part of everyday life for American families. The company survived the war and grew.
But it didn’t stop there. Over the following decades, Colgate expanded to dozens of countries, opening branches, factories, and distribution centers all over the world. In 1928, a historic merger took place: Colgate joined forces with Palmolive-Peet, giving birth to the giant Colgate-Palmolive uniting two hygiene product empires into one global brand.
Now, in addition to soap and toothpaste, the portfolio included shampoos, deodorants, household cleaners, and skincare products. It was the beginning of a global empire that would power through the 20th century. at full strength.
During World War II, Colgate once again supported the war effort, supplying hygiene products to American troops across various fronts Once again, the brand proved its resilience and its presence in humanity’s most critical moments. By the end of the war, Colgate had become a global reference. It was present in more than 50 countries, with factories on four continents and a product line that served everyone — from everyday workers to the world’s biggest markets.
But above all, it carried a name. The name of a young English immigrant who arrived in the United States with no money, no diploma, and no connections. A man who believed in the power of consistency, trust, and ethics.
A soap maker who became a symbol of health, hygiene, and respect. Today, Colgate is present in over 200 countries, is the global leader in oral hygiene, and its market value exceeds 70 billion dollars. But what makes it eternal isn’t just its scale it’s the strength of its principles.
The same principles William Colgate carried in his lye-burned hands. He didn’t live to see his name in billions of households. But he left something far greater than a company.
He left an example. Because those who build with purpose… build forever. What do you think was the key to William Colgate’s success?
His perseverance in the face of hardship or his business vision from a young age? Let us know in the comments! If you enjoyed this story, don’t forget to like the video, share it with someone who appreciates great stories, and subscribe to the channel so you don’t miss the next episode of História dos Grandes.
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