Special Report

The Richest Person of All Time From Your State

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Throughout the 21st century, wealth in America has become increasingly concentrated at the top, and during the pandemic, that gap has only widened. Since February 2019, the estimated net worths of billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and Elon Musk have increased by tens of billions of dollars while wage and job cuts have disproportionately affected minority groups and low-wage workers.

Even before the effects of the pandemic were felt, the United States was the home of extreme wealth inequality. The least wealthy half of Americans were worth a combined $255 billion in 2016, according to the Institute for Policy Studies. The two richest Americans — Tesla CEO Musk and Amazon founder Bezos — are today worth more than $364 billion.

Yet neither Bezos nor Musk is the richest American of all time. That title belongs to John D. Rockefeller, whose personal net worth peaked at nearly $285 billion when adjusted to 2020 dollars. Extremely wealthy Americans have often had significant influence on their community, city, or state. Several buildings in New York bear the Rockefeller name, for example. Similarly, Bill Gates’ success with Microsoft helped build Seattle’s reputation as a tech hub. 

There are many examples of the nation’s extremely wealthy becoming a significant part of an area’s identity. While not every state was the childhood home of one of the nation’s billionaires, every state has produced at least one person worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

To determine the richest person of all time from every state, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed sources such as the Forbes real-time billionaires list and historical lists of the wealthiest Americans of all time. We considered the state where the individuals spent the majority of their childhood to be their state of origin. When information about where an individual spent his or her childhood was not available, birthplaces were used.

Many of the people on this list took advantage of the unique conditions provided by their home state to become titans of an industry. Some relied on favorable conditions to start a business, while others found a large labor pool of quality employees to help their company grow, or they were able to take advantage of natural resources in their state, like coal or oil, to make their fortune. This is the top selling product from every state.

Click here to see the richest person of all time from your state.
Click here to see our methodology.

Courtesy of Auburn University

Alabama: Jimmy Rane
> Est. net worth: $900 million

Lumber magnate Jimmy Rane, who advertises his company Great Southern Wood Preserving by posing as his alter ego Yella Fella, is Alabama’s wealthiest person. Rane, whose net worth is estimated at $900 million, continues to live in his small hometown of Abbeville.

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Courtesy of JL Properties

Alaska: Leonard Hyde, Jonathan Rubini & Families (tied)
> Est. net worth: $300 million

Jonathan Rubini and Leonard Hyde are two of Alaska’s biggest names in real estate. The two own real estate development and management company JL Properties, which controls many properties in Anchorage, including the state’s tallest building, the ConocoPhillips Tower. With equal ownership of the business, Rubini and Hyde are worth an estimated $300 million each.

Courtesy of DriveTime Automotive

Arizona: Ernest Garcia II
> Est. net worth: $18.6 billion

Arizona’s Ernest Garcia has made his fortune in the automotive business. He owns major used car retailer DriveTime Automotive and is the largest shareholder of online used car selling platform Carvana. Garcia’s net worth has skyrocketed in recent months — from $2.4 billion in April 2020 to $18.6b as Carvana’s stock price climbed from less than $30 a share in March to nearly $300 as of February.

Arkansas: Alice Walton
> Est. net worth: $67.4 billion

Alice Walton is the daughter of Walmart founder Sam Walton and an avid art collector. Walton opened the Crystal Bridges modern art museum in Bentonville, Arkansas — the location of Walmart’s headquarters — filled it with the works of modern masters such as Andy Warhol, Mark Rothko, and Jackson Pollock.

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Alex Wong / Getty Images

California: Mark Zuckerberg
> Est. net worth: $81.9 billion
> Resides: Palo Alto

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s co-founder and CEO, edged out Oracle’s Larry Ellison to become the wealthiest person in California. Zuckerberg had a net worth of nearly $100 billion as of February 2021. He is also the country’s fourth richest person, according to the Forbes real-time billionaires list. The sixth, seventh, and eighth richest people in America also live in California — Ellison, and Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

Bruce Bennett / Getty Images

Colorado: Philip Anschutz
> Est. net worth: $10.1 billion

Philip Anschutz has become one of the wealthiest people in the world by investing in several businesses, including oil, railroads, real estate, and entertainment. His Anschutz Entertainment Group owns and operates arenas and stadiums across the globe. The Denver resident has donated over $100 million to the University of Colorado’s medical center, which was named in his honor.

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Connecticut: J.P. Morgan
> Est. net worth: $47.4 billion

J.P. Morgan was an American businessman who dominated banking and finance during America’s Gilded Age and the early 20th century. Morgan, who was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1837, was instrumental in the formation of some of the nation’s most prominent companies, such as General Electric and U.S. Steel. He was also one of the driving forces behind the economic expansion of the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Morgan died in Rome, Italy in 1913. Today, his fortune would have the buying power of about $47.4 billion.

Public Domain

Delaware: Alfred du Pont
> Est. net worth: $1.5 billion

Alfred du Pont was worth an estimated $100 million in 1928, the equivalent of nearly $1.5 billion in 2020 dollars. Hailing from the prestigious du Pont family, Alfred guided the family business through World War I, which turned out to be especially lucrative for the DuPont company because it manufactured gunpowder. The company has since pivoted into making consumer goods such as textiles and plastics.

Larry Busacca / Getty Images

Florida: Ken Griffin
> Est. net worth: $15.0 billion

Ken Griffin founded global investment fund Citadel in 1990. With an estimated net worth of $15.0 billion, Griffin is the richest person in Illinois and one of the 40 wealthiest people in the United States. Griffin has donated an estimated $900 million throughout his life, much of which went to nonprofits in his home of Chicago.

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Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

Georgia: Dan & Bubba Cathy (tied)
> Est. net worth: $7.1 billion each

Brothers Dan and Bubba Cathy operate the fried-chicken fast-food chain Chick-fil-A, the biggest chicken chain in the United States with 2,370 stores. The company’s owners are deeply religious and do not open their stores on Sunday. In the past, Chick-fil-A has been criticized and even boycotted over its opposition to same-sex marriage. Criticism of the company has eased as the company has shifted to address issues such as education and homelessness.

Courtesy of Cox Enterprises

Hawaii: Jim Kennedy
> Est. net worth: $8.2 billion

Though he made his fortune from his family’s Atlanta-based telecom company Cox Enterprises, Jim Kennedy spent his childhood in Hawaii. His grandfather founded Cox Enterprises over 120 years ago, and Kennedy himself served as the company’s CEO for 20 years and remains its chairman.

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Jeremy112233 / Wikimedia Commons

Idaho: Frank VanderSloot
> Est. net worth: $3.5 billion

Idaho’s richest person is Frank VanderSloot, the founder and long-time head of consumer products and supplements company Melaleuca. VanderSloot has helmed the company since he started it in 1985. Melaleuca now reports annual revenue of over $2 billion.

Kimberly White / Getty Images

Illinois: Larry Ellison
> Est. net worth: $88.0 billion

Though he was born in New York City and made his fortune in California’s Silicon Valley, Larry Ellison, co-founder of Oracle Corporation, spent nearly all of his childhood in Illinois. After dropping out of both the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of Chicago, Ellison moved to California and co-founded the software giant. Ellison served as Oracle’s CEO for nearly 40 years, before relinquishing the position in 2014. He still owns over one-third of the company and remains one of the 10 richest people in the world.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology

Indiana: Carl Cook
> Est. net worth: $10.5 billion

Bloomington’s Carl Cook is the CEO of Cook Group, a long-time maker of medical equipment. The company specializes in devices used in minimally-invasive surgery such as stents and filters. Carl inherited control of Cook Group from his parents, who founded the company. With a net worth of $10.4 billion, Cook is the wealthiest person in Indiana.

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Astrid Stawiarz / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

Iowa: Julia Koch & Family
> Est. net worth: $44.9 billion

Julia Koch became one of the wealthiest people in the world after inheriting a 42% stake in Koch Industries from her late husband David Koch, who died in 2019. Born and raised in Iowa, Koch worked as a fashion designer’s assistant after moving to New York City, where she met David Koch in 1991. Koch now serves as the president for the David F. Koch Foundation, which has donated nearly $200 million to various philanthropic causes such as medical research and the arts.

Courtesy of Koch Industries

Kansas: Charles Koch
> Est. net worth: $44.9 billion

Kansas’ Charles Koch, along with his late brother David, made their fortune running and growing Koch Industries, which has operations in many industries, including paper products, chemical manufacturing, and oil pipelines. The Koch brothers have been known for their philanthropy, their participation in the American political system, and for their financial support of conservative candidates.

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Courtesy of Tamara Hughes Gustavson

Kentucky: Tamara Gustavson
> Est. net worth: $5.5 billion

Tamara Gustavson is the largest shareholder of self storage company Public Storage, which was started by her father, B. Wayne Hughes, in 1972. Controlling 11% of the company, Gustavson has a net worth of $5 billion. She also sits on Public Storage’s board as well as on the board of American Homes 4 Rent, which was also founded by her father. Gustavson lives on her family’s horse breeding farm, Spendthrift Farms, in Lexington, Kentucky.

Jonathan Bachman / Getty Images

Louisiana: Gayle Benson
> Est. net worth: $3.3 billion

Gayle Benson became the wealthiest person in Louisiana following the death of her husband, Tom Benson, in 2018. A legal battle with Tom’s children and grandchildren, who claimed he was mentally unfit when he gave her control of his assets, was eventually settled. Benson now owns both of New Orleans’ pro sports teams, the Pelicans and the Saints.

Bain / Library of Congress / Wikimedia Commons

Maine: Cyrus H.K. Curtis
> Est. net worth: $3.5 billion

Cyrus H.K. Curtis has been called the founder of the modern magazine. Curtis launched magazines such as Ladies’ Home Journal and later bought other publications, including The Saturday Evening Post and The Philadelphia Inquirer. He was also a noted philanthropist who donated to universities in the Philadelphia area, medical schools, hospitals, and the Franklin Institute.

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Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Maryland: Sergey Brin
> Est. net worth: $88.0 billion

Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, was born in Moscow in 1973. His family immigrated to the United States to escape discrimination against Jews and settled in Maryland. Brin and Larry Page, another Stanford computer science student, created Google together. Their mission was to create an internet search engine that would rank the results according to what was most popular. Brin has been a billionaire since 2004, when Google went public.

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Massachusetts: Marshall Field
> Est. net worth: $84.4 billion

Even though Marshall Field is associated with Chicago, he was actually from Massachusetts, born on a farm in the town of Conway. Field earned a fortune from his eponymous chain of department stores. He moved to Chicago at 19 and started a job at a mercantile house and worked his way up the store ranks to become a partner of the firm.

He eventually bought out his partners and renamed his enterprise’s stores Marshall Field and Company at age 46. The company’s famous six-story store in Chicago catered to the tastes of urban women and operated under the slogan, “Give the lady what she wants.”

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Chris Hondros / Getty Images

Michigan: Larry Page
> Est. net worth: $90.7 billion

Born in Lansing, Michigan, Larry Page is the son of a computer scientist and a computer programming teacher. He and Sergey Brin invented the search engine Google while studying at Stanford University.

Courtesy of Cargill

Minnesota: Whitney MacMillan
> Est. net worth: $6.3 billion

Whitney MacMillan, who died in March at age 90, was the heir to Minneapolis-based food and agricultural company Cargill Inc., one of America’s largest privately held companies by revenue. The company has customers in more than 125 countries. He served as company CEO before he retired in 1995 after serving for 19 years. The company was founded by his great-grandfather, W.W. Cargill, in 1865.

Courtesy of The University of Southern Mississippi / Kelly Dunn

Mississippi: James Duff & Thomas Duff (tied)
> Est. net worth: $1.4 billion

Brothers James and Thomas Duff inherited their father’s tire business, Southern Tire Mart, in 1983 and turned it into the largest truck tire distributor in the nation. The brothers diversified their interests, funding in 2007 Duff Capital, which acquired several businesses over the years. The billionaire brothers are the richest people in Mississippi, each with a net worth of $1.4 billion.

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Missouri: John Doerr
> Est. net worth: $12.9 billion

John Doerr, who was born in St. Louis, was chairman of Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins, which helped finance Amazon, AOL, Electronic Arts, and Google. It was Doerr, a disciple of semiconductor pioneer Andrew Grove, who helmed the investment in Google in 1999 that helped propel the company to today’s internet search engine giant. Doerr left Kleiner Perkins in 2016 and has devoted his time since to issues such as climate change, public education, and global poverty.

Courtesy of The Washington Companies

Montana: Dennis Washington
> Est. net worth: $6.3 billion

With an estimated net worth of $6.3 billion, Dennis Washington is the wealthiest person in Montana. Through Washington Companies, he owns a diversified group of businesses that span several industries such as shipping, rail transport, and diamond mining.

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Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Nebraska: Warren Buffett
> Est. net worth: $91.1 billion

One of the most successful investors in history, Warren Buffett is worth an estimated $88.3 billion. “The Oracle of Omaha” is not only the wealthiest person in Nebraska, but also the seventh richest person in America. Buffett is the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, a conglomerate that partly or wholly owns dozens of companies. Buffett was born in Omaha in 1930 and has lived there with his family continuously since 1956.

David Becker / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

Nevada: Frank & Lorenzo Fertitta (tied)
> Est. net worth: $2.1 billion

Brothers Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta have built their fortune by operating and expanding mixed martial arts promoter UFC. They purchased UFC in 2001 for $2 million and sold it to an investment group in 2016 for $4 billion. The brothers own Red Rock Resorts, which was founded by their father, Frank. They took the company public in 2016.

Frederick M. Brown / Getty Images

New Hampshire: Adam Sandler
> Est. net worth: $420 million

New Hampshire is one of just a handful of states that has yet to produce a billionaire. Even the state’s wealthiest resident, Andrea Reimann-Ciardelli, is from Germany. The wealthiest person from New Hampshire is comedian and actor Adam Sandler, who was raised in Manchester, New Hampshire. In 2020, Sandler’s production company, Happy Madison, has signed a third nine-figure movie deal with Netflix. Altogether, these deals have been worth more than $775 million. This pushed Sandler’s net worth to an estimated $420 million.

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Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

New Jersey: John Insley Blair
> Est. net worth: $53.7 billion

John Insley Blair, the son of Scottish immigrants, was born and raised in western New Jersey in the early 19th century and became an entrepreneur, banker, and railroad builder. At one point, Blair owned 2 million acres and was the largest individual landholder in the United States. Blair was a devout Presbyterian who donated his wealth to churches and educational institutions such as Princeton University, Lafayette College in Pennsylvania, and Grinnell College in Iowa. Blairstown in Warren County, New Jersey, is named after him.

Alex Wong / Getty Images

New Mexico: Jeff Bezos
> Est. net worth: $188.8 billion

Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of e-commerce juggernaut Amazon, is the wealthiest person in the world, with a current net worth of $190.3 billion. Though Bezos lives in Seattle where he made his fortune, he spent his early childhood in Albuquerque, New Mexico. As e-commerce has taken on an increasingly important role in day-to-day life, already before the pandemic and certainly since, Bezos’ net worth has skyrocketed, up from $113 billion in April.

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Hulton Archive / Getty Images

New York: John D. Rockefeller
> Est. net worth: $284.7 billion

John D. Rockefeller is one of the most successful businessmen of all time. His last name has even become synonymous with extravagant wealth and power. Rockefeller grew his vast empire in the 19th century and early 20th century by establishing a standard for oil quality and strived to run his company, Standard Oil, at peak efficiency. He gained his wealth at a time when the U.S. was expanding rapidly and building up its manufacturing and transportation infrastructure. Rockefeller was probably the nation’s first billionaire and possibly the wealthiest American ever. His wealth represented 2% of the U.S. gross domestic product in 1916.

Brad Barket / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

North Carolina: James Goodnight
> Est. net worth: $6.5 billion

With an estimated net worth of $6.5 billion, James Goodnight is the wealthiest person in North Carolina. Goodnight made his fortune in the software industry, founding analytics software company SAS in 1976. The company is currently one of the largest employers in Cary, North Carolina, where Goodnight lives.

Courtesy of Tharaldson Hospitality Management

North Dakota: Gary Tharaldson
> Est. net worth: $1.0 billion

Gary Tharaldson, the Fargo-based builder and operator of hundreds of hotels across the country through Tharaldson Companies, is the only billionaire in North Dakota. Tharaldson sold 130 of his hotels for $1.2 billion to Goldman Sachs in 2006.

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Ohio: Les Wexner & family
> Est. net worth: $5.8 billion

Les Wexner is the founder and CEO of L Brands, a fashion retailer that owns flagship brands such as Victoria’s Secret. In February 2020, Wexner announced he would step down as the CEO and sell a majority stake in L Brands to a private equity firm, but the firm said in April it intends to back out of the deal.

walmart.com

Oklahoma: Sam Walton
> Est. net worth: $63.6 billion

Walmart is America’s largest brick-and-mortar retailer, and its success has largely been guided by its founder, Sam Walton, who showed that a large discount store could flourish in rural areas of the United States. Walton expanded his first retail efforts from overseeing a single franchised store of the Ben Franklin chain in Arkansas into managing 15 outlets of the chain.

After he butted heads with the chain’s management, he decided to open his own stores. The first Walmart opened in 1962, and by 1976, the company was worth more than $176 million. The company was the world’s largest retailer by 2010.

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Drew Angerer / Getty Images

Oregon: Phil Knight & family
> Est. net worth: $53.0 billion

Oregon native Phil Knight is also the state’s wealthiest resident. Knight and his former University of Oregon track coach founded the company that would become footwear behemoth Nike. Today, Nike is one of the largest employers in the state. Knight is also one of the state’s biggest philanthropists, having given more than $2 billion to several universities.

Courtesy of National Photo Company Collection via Wikimedia Commons

Pennsylvania: Richard Mellon
> Est. net worth: $115.9 billion

With an adjusted net worth of $115.9 billion in 2020 dollars, Richard Mellon is one of the 10 wealthiest Americans of all time. Mellon, along with his brother Andrew, made his fortune in banking, as the head of Mellon Bank in the early and mid-20th century. Mellon also diversified his wealth among other banks, as well as steel, railroads, coal, and oil.

Courtesy of Providence Equity

Rhode Island: Jonathan Nelson
> Est. net worth: $2.0 billion

Providence, Rhode Island, resident Jonathan Nelson is the co-founder and CEO of Providence Equity Partners. The company owns stakes in dozens of companies, largely in media, communications, and information.

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northcharleston / Flickr

South Carolina: Anita Zucker
> Est. net worth: $1.9 billion

Anita Zucker is CEO of the Charleston-based InterTech Group, a chemical manufacturing company. Zucker took over the position after her husband Jerry Zucker, who founded the company, passed away in 2008. In addition to her work, Zucker is also a noted philanthropist, giving millions of dollars to various educational causes throughout her home state of South Carolina.

Courtesy of Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute

South Dakota: T. Denny Sanford
> Est. net worth: $1.6 billion

T. Denny Sanford made much of his fortune with First Premier Bank. Sanford is now CEO of the bank’s holding company, United National Corporation. Sanford has committed much of his immense wealth to improving the lives of children in and around South Dakota.

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Eagledj / Wikimedia Commons

Tennessee: Thomas Frist Jr & family
> Est. net worth: $15.0 billion

Thomas Frist Jr. founded Hospital Corporation of America with his father, Thomas Frist Sr., in 1968. Today, the company owns dozens of hospitals in the U.S. and the U.K. Frist’s net worth had dropped from $12 billion in 2019 to $7.5 billion in April 2020, mirroring the dip in HCA’s share price at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it has since increased above its prior level.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Texas: Michael Dell
> Est. net worth: $42.9 billion

Born and raised in Houston, Michael Dell dropped out of the University of Texas at Austin after selling computers out of his dorm room proved to be profitable. He founded what is now Dell Technologies in 1984, and by 2001, the company was the largest PC manufacturer in the world. Dell is one of the 40 richest people in the world.

Chris Gardner / Getty Images

Utah: Gail Miller
> Est. net worth: $1.9 billion

Gail Miller is the head of the Larry H. Miller Group, which she started with her late husband, Larry. The group owns a wide variety of companies, including car dealerships and theater complexes. Miller was also the long-time owner of the state’s only major sports franchise, the NBA’s Utah Jazz. It has since been purchased by Ryan Smith.

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ter-burg / Flickr

Vermont: John Abele
> Est. net worth: $640 million

Though John Abele is retired, he still has a small stake in Boston Scientific, a medical device company he co-founded in 1979. Abele was once a billionaire, but he donated much of his wealth, leaving him with $640 million.

John Stillwell - WPA Pool / Getty Images

Virginia: John Mars
> Est. net worth: $28.9 billion

Like the other billionaires in his family, the vast fortune of John Mars stems from his stake in the company his grandfather founded, Mars, Inc. The company makes some of the world’s most recognizable candies, including M&Ms, Snickers, and Twix. John and his sister Jacqueline each own a third of the company, and the rest is divided among the four daughters of his late brother Forrest Jr.

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Jack Taylor / Getty Images

Washington: Bill Gates
> Est. net worth: $123.4 billion

Though he is one of the three wealthiest people in the world, Bill Gates is not the wealthiest Washington resident — as Jeff Bezos also resides in the Seattle area. However, Bezos is from New Mexico, so Gates ranks as the wealthiest person from Washington state. Gates made his fortune co-founding the world’s largest PC software business, Microsoft, in 1975. As of March 2020, Gates no longer serves on Microsoft’s board. He currently chairs the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation, the world’s largest private charity foundation.

Governor Jim Justice / Wikimedia Commons

West Virginia: Jim Justice II
> Est. net worth: $1.2 billion

West Virginia’s wealthiest resident, Jim Justice II, owes his fortune to coal. He inherited a coal business from his father and still owns mines in five states. Justice was elected state governor, running as a Democrat, in 2016. He flipped parties to become a Republican six months after taking office. He ran for reelection in 2020 and won.

Tom Pennington / Getty Images Sport via Getty Images

Wisconsin: John Menard Jr
> Est. net worth: $14.2 billion

John Menard, Jr. derives his fortune from the home improvement store bearing his name, Menard’s. The business has over 300 locations around the Midwest.

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Courtesy of Walton Family Foundation

Wyoming: Lukas Walton
> Est. net worth: $17.2 billion

Lukas Walton, grandson of Walmart founder Sam Walton, grew up in both Wyoming and California, and today he resides in the Jackson, Wyoming, area. After studying environmentally sustainable businesses in college, Walton now serves as the chair for Walmart’s environmental program committee.

Methodology: 

To determine the richest person of all time from every state, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed sources such as the Forbes real-time billionaires list and historical lists of the wealthiest Americans of all time. 

Those on this list who are alive were ranked based on their current net worth, as of February 2020, while the deceased were ranked based on their net worth at the height of their wealth, adjusted for inflation. When estimates for net worth were not adjusted for inflation, we used the Bureau of Labor Statistics consumer price index inflation adjustment calculator. Data on residency and net worth came from the Forbes list, which is updated regularly to reflect changes in stock prices and company valuations. Data is current as of Feb. 2 2021. For states that have no billionaire, information on the richest person came from the Forbes list of the Richest Person in Every State, which was published on June 26, 2020. 

We considered the state where the individuals spent the majority of their childhood to be their state of origin. When information about where an individual spent his or her childhood was not available, birthplaces were used.

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