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On $11 an hour, Jersey man made millions

Posted Jan 17 2008, 02:29 PM by Karen Datko
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Paul Navone is one of those quiet millionaires next door. His friends had no idea he had money until he started giving it away -- $1 million to a college and another $1 million to a prep school. The 78-year-old retiree never made more than $11 an hour while working in the New Jersey mills, according to a story by Joe Logan in the Philadelphia Inquirer, and to this day Navone buys his clothing at thrift stores, and doesn't have a TV or a phone.

Navone, the son of Italian immigrants, quit school and went to work at age 16. He lived at home and saved. After two years in the Army, he bought the first of several rental properties. He lived off that income, saved his wages and turned to investing, the Inquirer story says. "Paul has always been the perfect client. He gave me money and never took it out," said broker R. Douglas Smithson, senior vice president for investments at Wachovia Securities in Vineland. "He took my advice, he stuck to a plan, and he reaped the benefits of it."

Navone, who lives in a small house in Millville, said, "My motto back then without realizing it -- and it is now -- is that I'll work for the money, and then I want the money to work for me."

Comments

 

This is impressive evan for his day.  However,  the cost of inflation has not kept up with wages.  So, evan if we saved the way this man does there is no way my family could do this.  I have two children and a "small" house and yes we over spend but if we were to cut all but the necessities out we would still not be able to save that way.

The old rules don't apply today. You have to get creative and think global.

Mr. Navone comes from an era when most folks knew the value of a dollar; they knew that pennies added up to nickels, nickels to dimes, etc.  Now it seems that most of us are so interested in impressing people and "keeping up with the Jones" we spend a buck and a quarter for every buck we make.  It isn't about saving for a rainy day anymore, it is about feeling and looking good right now.  Mr. Navone and his whole generation of "workers and savers" are to be greatly admired. What a sage and generous man!

what a cheapskate! I would never want to live this cheap just to have millions, whats the point of having that kind of money and never spending it on a nice home, or nice car, or vacations, etc.

An inspiring story of the long lost American commitment to hard work, modest lifestyle, and disciplined investing.  Mr. Navone’s story is inspiring and a wonderful lifetime achievement.  Today, it is tragic to consider the impact of American consumerism on stories such as these.  It is tragic to consider the impact of high interest debts our youth accept as a young adults to establish employability.  It is tragic to consider how this debt distorts the future of American success stories such as these.  As an investor it is fundamental to consider that a young persons greatest asset is time and investment discipline.   Mr. Navone started at 16.    

of course this could be duplicated however it is more relevant to winning a lottery.      right place right time sort of thing. the vast majority of us live a very active lifestyle that requires a constant flow of money even if it is not ours to spend. i agree that we could all learn from the self disipline of this gentleman, but are we willing to give up the polished image that we try to pretend that we have. finally i believe that all of us including the government have forgotten that people like paul navone are from a generation of people that gave their labor unselfishly for the common growth of what once was the perfect country!

Live a poor life then die with money.  Exciting.

"The old rules don't apply"? Since when? If the "old rules" are live within your means, invest wisely, live frugally, etc, they still apply.

The secret in life is to find the right balance between saving for tomorrow and living for today.   This man, gave up to much in life to accomplish his goals, yet we all can learn something from him.  

money alone does not make a full life. he never married or went on vacation. worked 6-7 days a week. did not treat himself to much. what is the point of making money, if not to spend it?

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