Christopher Gardner is the owner and CEO of Christopher Gardner
International Holdings with offices in New York, Chicago, and San
Francisco. Surmounting acute obstacles on his road to success, Gardner
is an avid motivational speaker, addressing the keys to self-empowerment,
beating odds, and breaking cycles. Gardner is also a passionate
philanthropist committed to many charitable organizations.
The amazing story of Gardner’s life was published as an autobiography,
The Pursuit of Happyness, (Amistad/Harper Collins) on May 23, 2006,
and became a New York Times #1 bestseller. Gardner is also the inspiration
for the movie The Pursuit of Happyness, released by Columbia Pictures
on December 15, 2006. Will Smith stars as Gardner, and Gardner is
an associate producer. The movie was #1 at the box office its opening
weekend.
Always hard working and tenacious, a series of circumstances in
the early 1980’s left Gardner homeless in San Francisco and
the sole guardian of his toddler son. Unwilling to give up Chris
Jr. or his dream of financial independence, Gardner started at the
bottom. Without connections or a college degree, he earned a spot
in the Dean Witter Reynolds training program. Often spending his
nights in a church shelter or the bathroom at a Bay Area Rapid Transit
station in Oakland, Gardner was the sole trainee offered a job at
Dean Witter Reynolds in 1981. He spent 1983-1987 at Bear Stearns
& Co., where he became a top earner, and then in 1987, he founded
the brokerage firm Gardner Rich & Co in Chicago.
Born February 9, 1954 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Gardner never knew
his father. He lived with his mother, Bettye Jean Gardner, whom
he adored, and, when necessary, in foster homes. Despite a life
of hardship and emotional scarring, his mother provided him with
strong “spiritual genetics” and taught him some of the
greatest lessons of his life, which he follows to this day. Bettye
Jean convinced him that in spite of where he came from, he could
attain whatever goals he set for himself by saying, “If you
want to, one day you could make a million dollars.” Gardner
believed this to be fact, and knew he would have to find a career
he could be passionate about, and one that would allow him to “be
world-class at something.”
Straight out of high school, Gardner enlisted in the Navy, just
like his uncles, his role models, had done. After the military,
Gardner went to San Francisco and took a job as a medical supply
salesman. Then he reached a turning point in his life. In a parking
lot, he met a man driving a red Ferrari. "He was looking for
a parking space. I said, 'You can have mine, but I gotta ask you
two questions.' The two questions were: What do you do? And how
do you do that? Turns out this guy was a stockbroker and he was
making $80,000 a month."
¬¬
That pivotal encounter gave Gardner a clear career goal and he began
knocking on doors, applying for training programs at brokerages
even though it meant he would have to live on next to nothing while
he learned. When he was finally accepted into a program, he left
his job in medical sales. But his plans collapsed when the man who
offered him the training slot was fired, and Gardner had no job
to go back to. Then he was put in jail for $1,200 in parking violations
he couldn't pay. Chris Jr.’s mother left and Gardner, despite
his circumstances, fought to keep his son because, as he says, "I
made up my mind as a young kid that when I had children they were
going to know who their father is, and that he isn’t going
anywhere."
Finally managing to enter the training program at Dean Witter Reynolds,
Gardner’s meager stipend as a trainee meant he, like so many
working poor in America, had a job but couldn't make ends meet.
Chris’s co-workers never knew he spent his evenings trying
to arrange day care, find food and a safe place for him and his
son to sleep. After spending nights in a locked bathroom at an Oakland
subway station, Gardner persuaded Rev. Cecil Williams, founder of
a new shelter program for homeless women at Glide Memorial United
Methodist Church, to let him and Chris Jr. stay at the shelter.
Gardner passed his licensing exam in 1981on the first try. He arrived
early, stayed late and worked the phones day after day to lure new
clients. He and Chris Jr. got an apartment, and in 1983 he joined
Bear, Stearns & Company. After becoming a top producer, first
in San Francisco and later in New York, Gardner left in 1987 to
establish Gardner Rich & Company, Inc., an institutional brokerage
firm specializing in the execution of debt, equity and derivative
products transactions for some of the nations largest institutions,
public pension plans and unions. The company has expanded into Christopher
Gardner International Holdings and now has a business project underway
in South Africa.
Gardner reaches out to many programs serving the homeless, donating
time, assistance, and funds. Foremost among these are the Glide
United Methodist Church in San Francisco and The Cara Program in
Chicago. At Glide, Gardner assists with fundraising, donates clothes
and shoes, and speaks at services and events. He is also involved
in a plan to revitalize and provide new housing in the neighborhood
around Glide. At Cara, which assists the homeless and at-risk populations
in Chicago with comprehensive job training and placement, Gardner
speaks at counseling sessions, assists with permanent job placement,
and also donates clothing and shoes.
Gardner serves as a board member of the National Fatherhood Initiative,
whose mission is to improve the well-being of children by increasing
the proportion of children growing up with involved, responsible,
and committed fathers. Gardner was the recipient of the group’s
Father of the Year Award in 2002.
Gardner is particularly committed to educational organizations.
He serves on the board of the National Education Foundation and
sponsors two annual awards: the National Education Association’s
National Educational Support Personnel Award and the American Federation
of Teachers’ Paraprofessionals and School-Related Personnel
(PSRP) Award. He is also involved with the Chicago Teachers’
Union, sponsoring activities and outings for Chicago public school
kids.
In addition to the father of the Year Award, Gardner has also been
honored by the Los Angeles Commission on Assaults Against Women
(LACAAW) with the 25th Annual Humanitarian Award, and by the Continental
Africa Chamber of Commerce with the 2006 Friends of Africa Award.
Chris Gardner’s remarkable story of struggle, faith, entrepreneurialism,
and fatherly devotion has catapulted him beyond the notoriety he
has found on Wall Street. He has been featured on the Evening News
with Dan Rather, 20/20, Oprah, Today Show, The View, Entertainment
Tonight, CNN, CNBC, Fox News Channel as well as being the subject
of profiles in numerous newspapers and magazines including People,
USA Today, Associated Press, New York Times, Fortune, Jet, Reader’s
Digest, Trader Monthly, Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle,
The New York Post and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He is also
a highly sought-after speaker.
Gardner has two children and resides in Chicago and New York.
|