How Elon Musk Became Elon Musk: A Brief
Biography
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By DAN BLYSTONE
Updated Jan 29, 2021
TABLE OF CONTENTS
• Born in South Africa
• Bullied as a Child
• Moving to Canada
• Musk's Education in the U.S.
• Tesla and Beyond
• The Bottom Line
Visionary entrepreneur Elon Musk is the co-founder of PayPal (PYPL) and
Tesla Motors (TSLA) as well as the founder of SpaceX.1 His astounding
success has given rise to comparisons of Musk and Steve Jobs, Howard
Hughes, Henry Ford, and Bill Gates. Amid an often difficult childhood, Musk
developed a relentless work ethic (he is known to work as many as 80 to 120
hours per week) and a tenacious single-minded vision.2
On Sept. 7, 2018, Musk appeared to be smoking marijuana while interviewing
for a podcast.3 Coupled with the exit of Tesla's head of human resources and
chief accounting officer, that news saw the stock drop in trade.4 This was just
another addition to the string of bad news for the company, including a
shareholder lawsuit against Musk and the company for his infamous tweet on
Aug. 7.5 Musk had tweeted that he is considering taking Tesla private.6 The
company later decided against the move.7
Despite these incidents, Tesla's stock has only continued to climb higher under
Musk's leadership, increasing his wealth along with it.8 In Jan. 2018, Tesla
announced a compensation structure in which Musk would not receive an
annual salary but would instead earn cash based on the increasing market
caps the company hoped to achieve over the next ten years.9 As of Jan. 26,
2021, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, he has an estimated total
net worth of $209 billion, surpassing Jeff Bezos as the richest person in the
world.1 0
We look at the early life and education of the man behind a string of
companies that have disrupted multiple industries.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Elon Musk is the charismatic founder and CEO of electric car maker
Tesla as well as SpaceX and the Boring Company.1 1
• Born and raised in South Africa, Musk spent time in Canada before
finally moving to the U.S.
• Educated at the University of Pennsylvania in physics, Musk started
getting his feet wet as a serial tech entrepreneur with early successes
like Zip2 and X.com.
Family Background and Youth in South Africa
Elon Reeve Musk was born in 1971 in Pretoria, one of South Africa's three
capital cities.1 2 His father was an engineer and his mother was a model and
nutritionist. He is the oldest of three children in an ambitious family. His brother
Kimbal Musk is currently a venture capitalist and environmentalist.1 3 His sister
Tosca Musk is an award-winning producer and director.1 4
After his parents divorced when he was a child, Musk lived primarily with his
father.1 5 Musk started school a year early, attending the private Waterkloof
House Preparatory School and later graduating from Pretoria Boys High
School.1 6 He read voraciously and was also an avid fan of comics. Self-
described as a bookworm and something of a smart aleck, he was bullied in
school and withdrew to his books at the expense of his social life.1 7
Bullied as a Child
Musk’s intellectual aptitude did him few favors as a child. He found few friends
in the tough-minded Afrikaner culture he encountered in school.1 7
"I had a terrible upbringing. I had a lot of adversity growing up. One thing I
worry about with my kids is they don't face enough adversity," he would later
say in an interview.1 8
Musk attended the English-speaking Waterkloof House Preparatory School,
and later graduated from Pretoria Boys High School.1 9 The years were lonely
and brutal, from his descriptions.
“They got my best friend to lure me out of hiding so they could beat me up.
And that hurt,” Musk said. “For some reason they decided that I was it, and
they were going to go after me nonstop. That’s what made growing up difficult.
For a number of years there was no respite. You get chased around by gangs
at school who tried to beat the (expletive) out of me, and then I’d come home,
and it would just be awful there as well.”2 0
If there was a point of bright escape for Musk; it was technology. When he was
only 10, he became acquainted with programming via the Commodore VIC-20,
an inexpensive home computer. Before long, he had become proficient
enough to create Blastar — a video game in the style of Space-Invaders. He
sold the BASIC code for the game to a magazine called PC and Office
Technology for $500.2 1
In one telling incident at that time, Musk, along with his brother, planned to
open a video game arcade near their school. Ultimately, their parents nixed
the plan. But apparently the only thing stopping them was the need for a city
permit which had to be applied for by an adult.2 2
Moving to Canada
At 17, Musk moved to Canada to avoid serving in the South African military,
whose main duty in the late 1980s was enforcing apartheid. He would later
obtain Canadian citizenship through his mother.1 2
After emigrating to Canada, Musk enrolled in Queen's University in Kingston,
Ontario. It was there that he met Justine Wilson, an aspiring writer. They would
marry and have five sons together, twins and triplets, before divorcing in
2008.2 3
Musk's Education in the U.S.
After two years at Queen's University, Musk transferred to the University of
Pennsylvania. He took on two majors, but his time there wasn’t all work and no
play. With a fellow student, he bought a 10-bedroom fraternity house, which
they used as an ad hoc nightclub.2 4
Musk graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Physics, as well as a Bachelor
of Arts in Economics from the Wharton School.2 5 The two majors speak to the
direction Musk’s career would take later, but it was physics that made the
deepest impression on his thinking.
“(Physics is) a good framework for thinking,” he’d later say. “Boil things down
to their fundamental truths and reason up from there.”2 6
Musk was 24 years old when he moved to California to pursue a Ph.D. in
applied physics at Stanford University. With the Internet exploding and Silicon
Valley booming, Musk had entrepreneurial visions dancing in his head. He left
the Ph.D. program after just two days.2 7
In 1995, with $28,000 and his younger brother Kimbal at his side, Musk started
Zip2, a web software company that would help newspapers develop online city
guides.2 8 In 1999, Zip2 was acquired by Compaq’s AltaVista web search
engine for a whopping $340 million.2 9 Musk used his Zip2 buyout money to
create X.com, which he intended to shape into the future of banking. X was
merged with a company called Confinity and the resulting company came to
be known as PayPal.3 0 Musk was then ousted from the company before it
was bought by eBay for $1.5 billion.3 1
After PayPal slipped away, Musk helped generate funding for an electric car
startup called Tesla.1 2
Tesla and Beyond
In 2004, Musk joined engineers Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning to help
run Tesla Motors, where Musk was integral in designing the first electric car:
the Tesla Roadster. After Eberhard was ousted from the firm in 2007, following
a series of disagreements, Musk seized management control as CEO and
product architect. Under his watch, Tesla has become one of the world's most
popular and coveted car brands.3 2
With his interstellar travel company SpaceX, Musk landed several high-profile
contracts with NASA and the United States Air Force to design rockets and
conduct military missions. Musk has been vocal about his plans to send an
astronaut to Mars by the year 2025 in a collaborative effort with NASA.3 3
In addition to producing electric vehicles, Tesla maintains a robust presence in
the solar energy space, thanks to its acquisition of SolarCity.3 4 Founded in
2006, this clean energy services company currently produces two
rechargeable solar batteries, mainly used for stationary energy storage
purposes.3 5 The smaller Powerwall was developed for home backup power
and off-the-grid use, while the larger Powerpack is intended for commercial or
electric utility grid use.3 6 3 7
The Bottom Line
Musk's early interest in reading philosophy, science fiction, and fantasy novels
is reflected in his sense of idealism and concern with human progress. He
aims to work in the areas he has identified as crucial to our future, specifically
the Internet, the transition to renewable energy sources, and space
colonization. With his work with PayPal, Tesla Motors, SolarCity, and SpaceX,
he has defied critics and made advances in all three of these frontiers.