Bill Gates's Dad Tells All...About Raising His Future Mogul Son

Gates Sr., a World War II veteran and former Seattle attorney, now serves as co-chair of the Gates Foundation, his son's $30 billion philanthropic enterprise. The Foundation was inspired in large part by the wishes of Mary Gates, Bill Sr.'s wife and Bill Jr.'s mother, who passed away in 1994. In the interview, the elder Gates reveals details of the tumultuous relationship between his wife and son that began when Bill Jr. started exhibiting intellectual maturity and strong feelings of independence at a young age.
After one particularly explosive encounter between the mother and 12-year-old son, which resulted in Bill Sr. dousing Bill Jr. with a glass of water, the couple took actions which would eventually steer Bill Jr. toward his Microsoft destiny. After sending Bill Jr. to a therapist to discuss his growing need for independence, the parents enrolled him in the private Lakeside School, where the future mogul would discover computers and begin his climb to technological prominence.
Bill Sr. also describes some of Bill Jr.'s early ventures into technology, including the invention of his "Traf-O-Data" road-traffic-counting device, the move of fledgling Microsoft from New Mexico to Washington, and the birth of what has now become the world's largest private philanthropic organization. The book should provide even more fascinating details, as well as welcome insight not only into the early years of Bill Jr. -- a fiercely private man that one generation may equate more with wealth, philanthropy and charity than with computers -- but also into the family behind him. [From: The Wall Street Journal]



Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
ettucat said 9:26AM on 4-28-2009
A good family, I'm sure. Too bad he turned out to have a liberal point of view when it comes to the rest of us. He got his, but let's put the clamps on everyone else to ensure they do not have the freedom to be all they can be. Government will tell us how to live our lives.
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