Sadly, the down economy has put a lot of workers over age 50 in the unenviable position of needing to find a new profession. Don’t believe that old cliché about middle-aged dogs and new tricks, though; lots of wildly successful people found big success in careers they began after their fiftieth birthdays. Here are just a few examples.
Whether or not you know it, you probably owe Hoyle a tip of the cap each time you reach for a deck of cards. The Englishman is considered to be the world’s first technical writer on the rules of card games, and he didn’t put pen to paper as a young card sharp. Hoyle was around 70 years old when he first began recording the rules of various card games in 1741; over the last 27 years of his life, his smash hit A Short Treatise on the Game of Whist went through over a dozen editions.

Harland Sanders was no slouch as a young man, but he didn’t become the string-tied chicken mogul we know and love until he was 65. “The Colonel” had a relatively successful restaurant and motel on U.S. 25 in Corbin, KY, but when Interstate 75 opened seven miles from Sanders’ restaurant, his business begin to dwindle. Rather than go broke, he began to work on perfecting his spice blend and quick-cooking technique for making fried chicken in 1952. He then began touring the country selling Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises, and by the time he sold the business for $2 million in 1964, there were over 900 of them.
Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie may be some of the world’s most beloved children’s books, but she was no spring chicken when she sat down to write them. Wilder didn’t publish her first novel until she was 65 years old, and she still managed to crank out 12 books in her series, although some were published posthumously.
You don’t have to start early to become the richest man in the world. Mori was an economics professor until he left academia at age 55 to become a real estate investor in 1959. Mori had recently inherited a couple of buildings from his father, and he jumped headfirst into Tokyo’s real estate scene. Mori started his second career by investing in the Minato ward where he spent his childhood, and within a matter of years he was presiding over Japan’s real estate boom.
When Mori died in 1993, he was Forbes’ two-time reigning world’s richest man with a net worth of around $13 billion. He was something of a Japanese precursor to Warren Buffett, though. Mori never seemed totally comfortable with the fame and fortune his second career won him. He dressed traditionally, abstained from alcohol, and lived a fairly modest life.

Anna Mary Robertson Moses is one of the biggest names in American folk art, and she didn’t even pick up a brush until she was well into her eighth decade. Grandma Moses was originally a big fan of embroidery, but once her arthritis grew too painful for her to hold a needle, she decided to give painting a try in the mid-1930s. She was 76 when she cranked out her first canvas, and she lived another 25 years as a painter—long enough to see the canvases she had sold for $3 fetch prices north of $10,000.
The founder of the Hare Krishna movement was 69 years old before he started the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. In his native India, Prabhupada had been a chemist and a Sanskrit scholar in Calcutta, but in 1965 he came to New York City with just fifty bucks, a pair of cymbals, and a desire to spread the teachings of Lord Krishna.
Prabhupada got off to a modest start by sitting on a sidewalk in the East Village and chanting, but by the time of his death in 1977 his legions of followers were rumored to be thousands strong.
You may not recognize Cover’s name, but you’ve surely heard of his invention, the Taser. Cover spent most of his career as a nuclear physicist who worked in aerospace and defense, including playing a significant role in supplying parts for NASA’s Apollo project. In 1970 the 50-year-old Cover started Taser, Inc. in an effort to find a weapon that could incapacitate assailants without killing them. He received a patent for his design in 1974, and by 1980 Cover had sold the Los Angeles Police Department on using his new gadget to help apprehend violent suspects. When Cover passed away last year at the age of 88, his device was in use in over 45 countries around the world.
The husband-and-wife team behind the popular dining surveys of the same name were corporate lawyers when they first started printing their restaurant guides. Eventually the guides became so popular that Tim left his job as corporate counsel for Gulf & Western to manage the business in 1986 when he was 51 years old. Nina eventually left the corporate law world to work on the dining surveys as well.

Sure, Reagan had been no slouch as an actor, but he wasn’t elected to his first public office until he was 55 years old. In 1966 Reagan won California’s gubernatorial race by over a million votes. Prior to his election, Reagan had done some politicking as the president of the Screen Actors Guild and as spokesman for General Electric, but nothing on his resume made him look like a sure-fire two-term president.
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Let us know who else belongs on this list in the comments!
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I was 48 when I began blogging for a living, after 24 years as a radio announcer. I’ve never been happier!
posted by Miss Cellania on 5-13-2010 at 10:53 am
I suggest that you add Ray Kroc. He was 52 when he when met the McDonald brothers. He went on to create the McDonalds that we know today.
posted by Sunny on 5-13-2010 at 1:14 pm
How About Rodney Dangerfield?
posted by Gabriel on 5-13-2010 at 1:31 pm
Uncle Dave Macon was in his 50s before he became a hit on the Grand Old Opry in the 1920s.
posted by Andy Alexis on 5-13-2010 at 1:35 pm
Jim Jannard (founder of Oakley) was in his 50′s when he decided to invent the Red One (a far superior digital movie camera that costs a fraction of the price compared to any other Hollywood-level camera)
posted by Joshua on 5-13-2010 at 2:10 pm
Rodney Dangerfield was not mentioned because he never gets any respect!
posted by kno1 on 5-13-2010 at 2:23 pm
I can’t think about the Zaget guide without thinking of that SNL skit with Adam Sandler and Chris Farley
posted by kat on 5-13-2010 at 3:10 pm
Miss Cellania, your avatar must be of someone else. If that really is you, there is no way you’re over 48!!
posted by NukeGuy on 5-13-2010 at 4:40 pm
How about the “Where’s the beef?” lady.
posted by Carol on 5-13-2010 at 5:35 pm
Woodrow Wilson was a college professor and administer until his mid-50′s. He did not run for his first elected office(Governor of New Jersey) until he was 56 in 1910 and was elected President of the United States two years later in 1912.
posted by John on 5-13-2010 at 5:38 pm
I’m over 50 and working hard to start my new career as a Powerball winner. No luck yet, but you never know. There’s hope twice a week.
posted by Prism on 5-13-2010 at 6:55 pm
Thanks, NukeGuy. That’s an old picture, taken when I was 46.
posted by Miss Cellania on 5-13-2010 at 7:58 pm
There are only 9 books in the Little House series, 8 published in her lifetime and 1 (The First Four Years) posthumously.
posted by BookPrincess on 5-13-2010 at 10:03 pm
Uh…you forgot Winston Churchill. He was forced out of politics in the early 1930′s and when the Queen asked him to form a government in 1940 he was 65 years old and receiving the British equivalent of Social Security. He was re-elected PM in 1951 at age 76.
posted by Arthur on 5-16-2010 at 1:38 pm
CNN just stole this article: http://www.cnn.com/2010/LIVING/worklife/05/16/mf.famous.career.after.50/index.html?hpt=C1
posted by David on 5-16-2010 at 5:55 pm
I actually disagree on Sanders. He did make a profit, but he actually turned down to share a lot of stocks in the company which soon became popular and his standards were lowered. I think in the end he loss. Maybe he had the money, but not surely his dream.
posted by Candy on 5-19-2010 at 11:01 pm
Clara Pellar was the “where’s the beef” lady. i believe she dies about 5 years ago.
posted by kurt on 5-20-2010 at 9:50 pm
THANKS PRISM! YOU SOUND LIKE MY TYPE OF GUY (PERSON?) I WAS FEELING USELESS AND FRIENDS SENT ME THIS LINK. GLAD TO SEE I AM NOT ALONE.
posted by JOY on 10-30-2010 at 6:21 am
Now 75 I’ve retired three times, I guess I’m destined to wear out and not rust out. Forward now with my small but growing virtual real estate business.
posted by John on 1-19-2011 at 7:53 pm
Cervantes was in his late 50′s when Don Quixote was first published. Prior to that, he’d been a soldier, a tax collector and spent several years in prison for bankruptcy (I’m personally very glad those laws have since changed).
posted by Vannabis on 1-27-2011 at 4:41 am
This is a really great article to read on the eve of my 40th b. day! Thanks!
posted by Susannadanna on 5-7-2011 at 2:00 am
Don’t forget that Mary Baker Eddy was at a late age when she founded the Christian Science.
posted by Baarbear on 5-7-2011 at 10:46 pm
This made my day. I’m 55 and working on changing careers. There is hope yet.
posted by Doryan on 5-9-2011 at 1:02 pm
Sharon of Sharon and the Dap Kings (vblues and funk band) was older than 50 when they made it big. :)
posted by Crystal on 9-4-2011 at 9:55 am
How about Joe Gibbs? Legendary FB coach to NASCAR mogul?
posted by Jillvill1 on 9-4-2011 at 10:12 am
How can you have a list like this without JULIA CHILD!
posted by Jess on 9-4-2011 at 12:42 pm
My idol, Julia Child. In addition to not even learning how to cook until she was well in her 30s, she did not become a published cookbook author until 1961 (age 49), and she was 51 when WGBH first aired The French Chef, the TV show that would ultimately make her a household name.
posted by Casey on 9-4-2011 at 3:12 pm