IBRGBC · NYSE · $284.17 ▲ 1.2%
Our Founder

Sidney "Riptide" McMingus

1899 – 1973

A great life, from humble beginnings.

Sidney 'Riptide' McMingus, age 10
A Life of Service

The man who would come to be known and beloved the world over as "Riptide" was born Sidney McMingus in Effervescence, Texas on March 15th, 1899. To this auspicious date he would later attribute his lifelong suspicion of both business partners and business underlings, from a persistent fear that they were secretly planning to "do me like Caesar."

There weren't much to it.
Riptide
On Building His Global Empire
Riptide at his desk
Riptide at his desk, c. 1952.

A timeline of remarkable service.

From his first day of life to his last, Riptide's path was one defined by conviction, industry, and a willingness to make the difficult choice when the moment called for it.

1899
Birth
A versatile boy with a giant heart
Sidney "Riptide" McMingus is born in Effervescence, Texas, with an enlarged heart measuring two times the size of the average newborn at the time — a feature that would come to define him in both spirit and physiognomy.
1907
Early Recognition
Awarded "Most Obtuse"
At the age of eight, Riptide is awarded Most Obtuse in a statewide mathematics competition, catching the keen eyes of Pinkerton Detective Agency scouts and marking his first brush with national recognition.
1910
A Principled Refusal
Declines Pinkerton "early commit" offer
Two weeks after his eleventh birthday, Riptide declines an early commit offer from the Pinkertons, electing instead to serve his community by taking a position at the Effervescence bank — where he works tirelessly to remind local farmers to pay their mortgages.
1913
Character-Defining Moment
The decision no young man should ever have to make
At fourteen, Riptide is faced with an impossible choice: evict his parents and seven siblings from their family farm, or no longer work at the bank. His resolve — and his unshakable conviction that financial contracts be upheld at any cost — would foreshadow the principled business philosophy that continues to guide IBRGBC today.
1915
Public Service
Service to the United States Military
Riptide relocates to New York City, accepting a position as a recruiter with the US Military. Over the ensuing four years he will enlist over 700 Serbians, drawn largely from the meatpacking plants of the greater metropolitan region.
1919
Enterprise
A formative career in private corrections
Upon returning to Texas, Riptide takes a position as a Kicker/Spitter for the United States' first private prison — a role that would spark his lifelong passion for free enterprise. He would remain in the position for nearly three decades, a tenure unparalleled in the field.

During this same period, Riptide also devoted considerable time to volunteer work with the Pinkerton Detective Agency. His duties included befriending local union organizers and, once their guard was down, encouraging them into violation of any number of the so-called "social cohesion" laws of the time — chief among them interrupting while Irish, chewing gum on line, and thinking in Catholic.

In response to such misbehavior, Riptide — renowned region-wide for his extraordinary finger strength — would grab the offender by the ear and haul them on down to the police station, or, as location and weather accorded, to Ratholio: a large hole in the ground operated and guarded by the Pinkertons.

1940
Family
The birth of Quick Red and Buster John
Riptide's wife, Mary McMingus (née Mudge), gives birth to twin sons. In their twenties, Quick Red and Buster John would go on to make their name in show business with the global phenomenon that was their "tap and snap" routine, Just Brothers — delighting nations the world over. In 1979, the pair would make history as the first pair of brothers ever elected to share the position of Sheriff of Yucker County, Texas.
1950s
Higher Learning
A double MBA, earned on his own terms
Later in life, Riptide returns to the classroom, earning not one but two Master of Business Administration degrees — the first from the Gomer-Laibe Business College of Fresno, California, and the second from the Gomer-Laibe Business Finishing College of Lima, Ohio. The dual credential, unusual even by today's standards, reflected his conviction that a business education, however expertly delivered in Fresno, could only be properly finished in Lima.
1973
In Memoriam
A nation mourns
Riptide attends a screening of Sydney Pollack's The Way We Were, having erroneously believed that the Vocation Cinema would be playing the Dirty Harry sequel, Magnum Force, that evening. He repeatedly urges the projectionist to "shut this crap off" before threatening to kick and spit on him in the parking lot after the film. Tragically, Riptide chokes on his popcorn before this can happen, leaving us too soon — at just seventy-four.

The McMingus legacy lives on.

More than half a century after his passing, Riptide's values of community service, free enterprise, and decisive action continue to guide every decision made at IBR Glennfield BrilCo.