Behind every larger-than-life figure is a dad who either fanned the flames of ambition or threw a few logs on the fire. For Donald Trump and Elon Musk, two titans who’ve reshaped politics and tech, their fathers—Fred Trump and Errol Musk—were the first to mold their relentless drive.
From New York’s real estate jungle to South Africa’s rugged terrain, these dads raised their sons with tough love, big expectations, and just enough chaos to forge global game-changers.
Fred Trump: The Real Estate Kingpin Who Built a President
Fred Trump, a self-made real estate mogul, turned Brooklyn and Queens into his personal Monopoly board, amassing a fortune in the millions by the 1940s.
Born to German immigrants, he started building houses at 16, once claiming he could “sell ice to Eskimos.” Fred raised Donald, his second son, in a 23-room Queens mansion, where discipline was as rigid as his crew cuts.
Young Donald was a handful—think a pint-sized tycoon throwing tantrums and baseballs with equal gusto. Sent to military school at 13 after too many pranks (like sneaking into Manhattan to buy switchblades), Donald learned to channel his energy into competition.
Fred’s mantra, “Be a killer, be a king,” became Donald’s gospel. He shadowed his dad on construction sites, absorbing deal-making and branding—Fred named everything “Trump,” from apartments to his yacht.
Their bond was intense but transactional; Fred bankrolled Donald’s early ventures but expected results, once bailing him out of a $1 million casino debt in 1990 with a sly, “Don’t mess this up.”
Fred’s tough love and showman’s flair—his office had a neon “TRUMP” sign—gave Donald the blueprint for his brash, deal-driven empire, culminating in two White House terms.
Errol Musk: The Rogue Engineer Who Sparked a Visionary
Errol Musk, a South African engineer and pilot, was as adventurous as he was controversial, once owning a stake in a Zambian emerald mine and flying his own plane.
Raised in Pretoria, Elon grew up in a wealthy but turbulent home, surrounded by books like The Lord of the Rings and a VIC-20 computer he mastered at 10. A nerdy kid with a knack for coding, Elon sold his first video game, Blastar, for $500 at 12—basically pocket change for a future billionaire.
Errol’s strict, military-style parenting was no picnic; after his 1979 divorce from Maye Musk, Elon chose to live with his dad, a decision he later called “not a good idea.” Errol’s tough stance—allegedly siding with Elon’s bullies and calling him “worthless”—pushed Elon to prove himself.
Despite their estrangement (spurred by Errol’s later scandalous relationship with his stepdaughter), Errol’s global adventures and engineering know-how inspired Elon’s boundary-pushing ventures like SpaceX and Tesla. Fun fact: Errol once sailed a yacht across the Atlantic, a daredevil streak Elon clearly inherited.
Shaping Titans: The Fatherly Formula
Fred and Errol, though worlds apart, shared a knack for instilling relentless ambition. Fred’s high-stakes real estate world taught Donald to dominate and brand everything, while Errol’s eclectic, hard-edged life pushed Elon to outsmart adversity.
Both sons were scrappy kids—Donald sneaking into theaters, Elon surviving schoolyard beatings—whose dads’ tough love forged resilience. Fred’s financial backing gave Donald a springboard; Errol’s chaotic influence drove Elon to escape and innovate.
Their relationships weren’t cuddly—Donald craved Fred’s approval, while Elon distanced himself from Errol—but the results are undeniable: a president who thrives on spectacle and a tech mogul aiming for Mars. This Father’s Day, let’s toast Fred and Errol, the dads who turned their boys into titans, one tough lesson at a time.