Leo W. Pierce Sr. '39C, '99HON is a Man of Substance

February 09, 2009

It’s funny to think now, but for Leo W. Pierce Sr. ’39C, ’99HON success began with just a few boxes in his basement. As former chairman emeritus of Iron Mountain Incorporated, he founded what would become one of the largest and most successful record storage and information management companies in the world. But his legacy isn’t limited to just the boardroom. Philanthropically, he and his family have set a standard of excellence in giving and Pierce has served as a shining example to his eight children, 26 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren (with more on the way).

It was for his family that he worked so hard to build his business and it was for them that he triumphed over personal struggles which he now views through a lens colored with the appreciation of the many blessings bestowed upon him. Leo Pierce’s story is both unique and typical of the St. John’s experience. Born at home in Brooklyn to Kathryn, an Irish immigrant, and John Pierce, who despite leaving school in the sixth grade was self-educated and well read, he early on learned the value of faith and family. His mother’s strong Catholic faith and his father’s urging that a young Pierce do well in school combined to spur him on academically during his Catholic school education and he was often first in his class. Impressed with Pierce’s bright mind and good grades, a priest offered to pay the tuition so the then-teenaged Pierce could attend Harvard University, but Pierce’s father declined because he couldn’t afford the living expenses. Pierce attended St. John’s University on academic scholarships and says he appreciates the aid which enabled him to earn his degree. “In the 1930s, even though tuition was peanuts, my father couldn’t afford to send me to school,” recalls Pierce. “I went to St. John’s during the summer so I was able to graduate in just three and a half years, but with a four year education.” He earned his degree with honors and landed a job with a bookstore in Manhattan named “Barnes & Noble.” “I have no idea if it’s the same Barnes & Noble of today,” he laughs. “I like to say I started Barnes & Noble on their way.” He also worked a stint at Price Waterhouse and had planned to attend graduate school before Uncle Sam came calling in 1941 and he was drafted into the Army. A month before leaving for basic training, he married the former Marjorie (Peggy) Kinnaly who was a childhood schoolmate destined to be his wife for more than 60 years. 

After four years in the military, during which he and his wife had three children, Pierce left with the rank of major and was recruited to work for Marshall Fields by his former superior in the Army who was comptroller for the company. There, Pierce headed the payroll department before being promoted to accounts receivable. He then left to work briefly for LeFebure Corporation which made custom built bank and filing equipment and he was ecstatic when they asked him to open an office in Philadelphia. “I jumped at the opportunity because at 90 miles from New York it was just close enough to the family,” Pierce says. While he represented LeFebure, the corporation allowed him to start his own business as an outside representative and so he founded L.W. Pierce Company, Inc. 

During the following years, five more children were born to the Pierces and they settled into life in Philadelphia. Things were going well for Pierce. He was a successful businessman selling filing systems and related equipment through L.W. Pierce and his family was thriving. But while working hard, Pierce says he began to reward himself with drinking. “By the time I was 40, I was a full blown alcoholic,” he recalls. “But I was still a workaholic and I would never drink before 5 p.m. — those were 10 tough years for my wife and family.” Fortunately, Pierce recognized the damage that was being done and with the help of a 12 step recovery program, was able to attain sobriety. He marks that as the point at which his life turned around. “I haven’t had a drink since,” he says proudly. “Getting sober changed my life physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. Shortly after, I started a new business which was Pierce Business Archives.” The year was 1969 and the new company — which evolved from L.W. Pierce Company — specialized in archives records management and storage. The first client was Scott Paper Company and with no storage building initially, Pierce kept the records in the basement of his Philadelphia home. Then he purchased a warehouse, and his children came to work for him, doing everything from driving trucks to stacking boxes. The business soon grew to include offices in Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and Maryland. 

Pierce’s pitch to major corporations was simple: rather than wait weeks for an employee to comb through two or three years of active files, store with his company, save money on the space and employees needed for record storage and receive a guarantee that what was requested would be delivered by the next day or same day if needed. It worked and Pierce Business Archives became more and more well known. In 1990, Pierce purchased New York based competitor Leahy Business Archives and the new business emerged as the Pierce Leahy Corporation.

The newly formed company became the largest business records storage and management business in North America with over 250 warehouse record centers running coast to coast, in Canada and the United Kingdom. Sales continued to increase and Pierce continued to make acquisitions. 

In 1997, financial gains came when the company went public on the New York Stock Exchange. Always dogged in its organization and wanting to offer the best to its clients, Pierce Leahy attracted the attention of its largest competitor, Iron Mountain. In 2000 the firms merged, with Iron Mountain as the surviving name. By then, Pierce and his wife had retired to Vero Beach, FL, and their son Peter was heading up the company.  Pierce and his wife reveled in having the time and resources to do for others, and they turned more of their attention to the L.W. Pierce Family Foundation which they had set up to offer support for worthy causes. One of the first recipients of their generosity, Pierce says, was alma mater where the couple established the Leo W. and Marjorie L. Pierce Scholarship Endowment Fund. “I feel that the education I got at St. John’s was very important to the rest of my life,”  Pierce now says. “If I hadn’t gone to college, I am sure I wouldn’t have gotten the job at Price Waterhouse. The fact that I got a scholarship, and I was a young man who couldn’t have afforded attending if not for that scholarship, is a big reason for my wanting to offer support.” offer support.” St. John’s is not the only organization that has benefited from his generosity. He has a longstanding relationship with the Visiting Nurse Association (VNA) of the Treasure Coast based in Vero Beach. Spurred by the memory of his mother dying in a public hospital ward in Brooklyn when he was 13 and touched by the home care they offered his beloved wife Peggy before she passed away in 2001, Pierce has remained close to the organization. Because of his professional achievements and tremendous generosity, Pierce is held in high esteem at the University. In 1995, he was awarded the Pietas Medal and three years ago he received the Medal of Honor, the highest award that the University can present to an alumnus. 

Pierce is also respected as an elder statesman in his industry and was one of the founders of the Association of Commercial Records Centers in the 1970s. In 2005, he received the first Lifetime Achievement Award presented by PRISM International (Professional Records and Information Services Management). He has also helped scores of people maintain sobriety through his many years of volunteer work in the alcohol recovery field. Yet with all of his many accomplishments, Pierce more than likely would take a visitor to his home first to stand before a large framed family tree on the wall that contains the names of his beloved. For it is his family that has given Leo Pierce his roots.