Tom Monaghan
Monaghan's father died when he was four, and he and his younger brother were put into care by their mother so that she could attend nursing school. They remained in care, foster homes and orphanages, for the next seven years, but then returned to their mother. A few years later he was sent to live on a farm because of problems between him and his mother.
He was not successful in school, and graduated bottom of his high school class, but he showed business flair from an early age, and he and his brother bought a failing pizza parlor in 1960 for $975, which became the foundation of his Domino's Pizza franchise empire.
He owned the Detroit Tigers baseball team from 1984 to 1992.
He is a major supporter of Catholic, conservative and anti-gay causes.
References
Monaghan, Tom, and Anderson, Robert. Pizza Tiger. (New York: Random House, 1986) "Monaghan, Thomas," Current Biography Yearbook, 1990 Engber, Andrea. "Raised without Daddy," Single Mother, 13 (July/August 1993).
Dottie, Enrico. "Roots of Ambition: Famous Businessmen Who Were Adopted." Available at: please check their site Originally published in USA Today, 5 September 1997
Indexes
European/ USA/ 20th Century/ 21st Century/ Business and Industry/ Philanthropists/ Restaurants/ Self-made Men and Women/ Formal, American/European-Type Fostering/ Pre-school Years/ Unmarried Mother, Single Parent (Mother or Father) Unable to Cope/ Others ("Strangers")/ Temporary Care/ Institutional Care/ Parent(s) Died, Disappeared or Became Incapacitated