Aubrey McClendon

CEo

Birthday July 14, 1959

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2016, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S. (57 years old)

Nationality United States

#55466 Most Popular

1959

Aubrey Kerr McClendon (July 14, 1959 – March 2, 2016) was an American businessman and the founder and chief executive officer of American Energy Partners, LP.

He also co-founded Chesapeake Energy, serving as its CEO and chairman.

He was an outspoken advocate for natural gas as an alternative to oil and coal fuels, and a pioneer in employing fracking.

McClendon was born July 14, 1959, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the son of Carole Kerr and Joe Connor McClendon.

He was the great-nephew of Robert S. Kerr, a governor of Oklahoma and U.S. senator from the state.

McClendon spent his childhood in Belle Isle, a neighborhood in Oklahoma City and attended Belle Isle Elementary School, a public school.

1977

He graduated from Heritage Hall School in 1977 as senior class president and co-valedictorian.

As a teenager, McClendon started a lawn mowing business, through which he had an early encounter with Shannon Self, who later became a founding board member of Chesapeake Energy Corporation.

1981

McClendon graduated from Duke in 1981 with a B.A. in history.

His favorite area of study was the post-Civil War Reconstruction Era.

McClendon minored in accounting and was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

He also met his wife, the former Kathleen Upton Byrns, while at Duke.

McClendon's first job after Duke was as an accountant.

He was inspired to move from accounting to the energy business after reading an article in The Wall Street Journal about two men selling their Anadarko Basin well stake for $100 million.

1982

McClendon worked as a landman at Jaytex Oil and Gas, a public company in Oklahoma City founded by his uncle, Aubrey M. Kerr, Jr. McClendon left Jaytex in November 1982 to pursue his own business in the oil and natural gas industry.

1983

In 1983, McClendon and Tom L. Ward "threw in together" in their initial venture into oil and natural gas.

1989

Together, they co-founded Chesapeake Energy Corporation in 1989.

McClendon and Ward were both 29 at the time.

McClendon began as chairman and chief executive officer of Chesapeake, while Ward served as president and chief financial officer.

The company began drilling its first two wells in Garvin County, Oklahoma, in May 1989.

With Chesapeake, McClendon focused on drilling wells into unconventional reservoirs such as fractured carbonates and shales and was an early adopter of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing techniques, which helped accelerate the company's fast early growth.

His focus on these new and unconventional techniques later led to him being called a "visionary leader" in the oil and natural gas industry.

1993

He took the firm public in 1993, and in the following three years its stock was the most successful in the country, rising 274% in value from 1994 to 1997, according to The Wall Street Journal.

2005

In 2005, Forbes Magazine named McClendon one of the country's top-performing executives for his role at Chesapeake.

2008

McClendon was a part-owner of the National Basketball Association (NBA)'s Oklahoma City Thunder franchise, and was part of the ownership group that moved the Seattle SuperSonics to Oklahoma City in 2008.

A few years later, he was the highest paid CEO of all the S&P 500 companies in 2008, receiving a compensation package totaling $112 million.

In 2008, McClendon was notified that his shares were no longer valuable enough to back a margin loan with Goldman Sachs and other banks.

In response, McClendon was forced to sell a majority of his 31.5 million shares, comprising 94% of his stake in Chesapeake and 6% of the company.

The following year, Chesapeake offered McClendon a five-year retention contract, including a $75 million bonus.

The profile noted his high risk tolerance and cited the sale of his shares in 2008 as a reckless move.

The same year, the magazine named McClendon to its 20-20 Club, comprising the eight CEOs of public companies who had delivered annualized returns of more than 20% over a 20-year period.

McClendon dismissed those who described him as a risk-loving wildcatter.

2009

Chesapeake continued to grow its gas production under McClendon from 5 million to 2.5 billion cubic feet per day from 2009 to 2013.

Chesapeake's discovery of large reserves of natural gas was reported to have helped reduce natural gas prices to consumers in the U.S.

2011

In 2011, Forbes called McClendon "America's most reckless billionaire" in a cover story on his career.

2012

"If I wanted to always do the most popular thing, then I'd be a follower," he said in 2012.

"The funny thing is that I don't consider myself a gambler at all. A gambler is somebody who just closes their eyes and rolls the dice. We don't do that".

In a 2012 opinion piece discussing the development of the domestic oil and natural gas industry of the U.S. in the first decade of the 21st century, the former United States Secretary of Energy and Houston mayor Bill White described McClendon as "at the forefront of those heroes" of the American natural gas industry.

2016

On March 1, 2016, McClendon was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring "to rig bids for the purchase of oil and natural gas leases in northwest Oklahoma".

He died the following day, March 2, 2016, in a single-vehicle collision.