On December 22, 1830, Stephen Girard was seriously injured while crossing the street near Second and Market Streets in Philadelphia. He was knocked down by a horse and wagon, and one of its wheels ran over the left side of his face, lacerating his cheek and ear as well as damaging his good (left) eye. Despite his advanced age of 80 years old, he got up unassisted and returned to his nearby home, where a doctor dressed his wound. He threw himself back into his banking business, although he remained out of sight for two months. Nevertheless, Girard never fully recovered and he died on December 26, 1831. He was buried in the vault he built for his nephew in the Holy Trinity Catholic cemetery, then at Sixth and Spruce Streets. Twenty years later, his remains were re-interred in the Founder's Hall vestibule at
Girard College behind a statue by Nicholas Gevelot, a French sculptor living in Philadelphia. posit that, with adjustment for inflation, Girard was the fifth-wealthiest American of all time as of 1996, behind
John D. Rockefeller,
Andrew Carnegie,
Cornelius Vanderbilt, and
John Jacob Astor. He was worth around $7.5 million at the time of his death, was contested by his family in
France but was upheld by the
U.S. Supreme Court in a landmark case, ''Vidal et al. vs Girard's Executors'', 43 U.S. 127 (1844). He bequeathed nearly his entire fortune to charitable and municipal institutions of Philadelphia and New Orleans, including an estimated $6 million (approximately $ in ) for establishing a boarding school for "poor, male, white orphans" in Philadelphia, primarily those who were the children of coal miners, which opened as
Girard College in 1848. To his friend the judge Henry Bree, he bequeathed the
plantation he owned in Louisiana, including thirty
slaves. When Girard's former counting house on 22 North Water Street near the corner of Front and Market Streets was demolished in 1907, a set of underground cells were uncovered. At the time of discovery, it was alleged that the cells were used to incarcerate slaves. Although no longer in common use, people used to use the phrase "Stephen Girard work" or "Stephen Girard job" to refer to useless work. Girard did not believe in idleness, and in a time when people were loath to take handouts, he instead would pay for useless work. An example is paying workers to move bricks from one side of a yard to another (and then back again). ==Homages==