Was he a hero like batman, a villain like the joker or a little bit of both? Andrew Carnegie was born in November in 1835 in Dunfermile Scotland into a very poor family. His mother gave birth to him in their attic and he attended a one room school house with 150 students before they moved to America. So, the question is was Andrew Carnegie a hero? My definition of a hero is someone who has courage integrity and concern for others. I think There are Two Sides to Every Hero.…
While Carnegie was working for the railroad he started to make investment. He left the railroad in1865 to go and focus on his other business interest. By the next decade, most of Carnegie’s time was dedicated to the steel industry. This start-to-finish strategy helped Carnegie become the dominant force in the industry and an exceedingly wealthy…
Andrew Carnegie moved from Scotland to America, when he was thirteen, with his parents. The Carnegies lived in Pittsburg, which Carnegie described as very unpleasant. Carnegie is on record saying the smoke in the air from the nearby industrial buildings was unbearable. This was the beginning of one of the conflicts Carnegie faced throughout his whole life. Carnegie is disgusted with how the industrialized society affects the world he lives in, but he builds a legacy from the same means that he has such hatred for.…
Andrew Carnegie’s views on wealth compared to the view of an average coal miner differ. Carnegie is the ultimate “rags to riches” story. As a young boy, Carnegie worked with Thomas A. Scott, his mentor, and through hard work, he became one of the richest men in history. However, money wasn’t everything to him. On the other hand, the average coal miners were in constant danger. They worked with the constant fear that they can be killed by “burning gas” or “crushed by cars.” However, the average coal miner’s pay varied from “$1.25 to $1.25.”…
Having courage, a caring personality and integrity are the qualities possessed by a “hero”. Andrew Carnegie was an industrialist who supported capitalism, and Social Darwinism, free enterprise and economic competition. He favored the idea that the most superior people in society naturally rise to the top. He was born in 1835 in the attic of a weaver’s cottage in Dunfermline, Scotland. Carnegie´s family faced poverty, which caused him to begin work at the age of 12 to contribute to his family's responsibilities. Working 12 hours a day, Carnegie earned 1 dollar and 20 cents. (“Wealth”, in the North American Review) As Carnegie aged, he realized his potential and began seizing business opportunities, creating deeper knowledge and power in the…
Carnegie had the skills to be a successful business man. Even from a young age, he worked as hard as he could to support his family. Pictures from the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh (Document A) shows where Carnegie was born in Scotland. He lived in a small cottage with his family and resided in the attic from 1835 to 1848. The following picture displays the grand and luxurious Skibo Castle that Carnegie purchased in 1897. In about less than half a century, Carnegie became rich after living in poverty. Heroes have an extraordinary capability that few others possess and for Carnegie, his capabilities lied in the world of business. However, just because of that, it doesn’t make one a hero. In addition to that, heroes do not take advantage of their skill to benefit only themselves. It is apparent in Carnegie’s article for the North American Review, “Wealth” in June of 1889 (Document B) that he sincerely believed that business being in the hands of few was a beneficial thing. It is not that he did not care about his workers at all and purposefully tried to take advantage of their labor, he really believed that good came out of the rise of the wealthy. He says, “(I)t is to this law (of competition) that we owe our wonderful material development, … while the law may be sometimes hard for the individual, it is best for the race, because it insure the survival of the fittest in every department”. Carnegie truly thought that those who work hard and…
During the time period after the Civil War and nearing the twentieth century, America’s economy was in prime position to be molded – all America needed was someone to come along to mold it. Businesspersons like Cornelius Vanderbilt and entrepreneurs like John D. Rockefeller were prime examples of exactly whom America needed to take charge of the economy at this time; however, there was one man who was not only a self-made steel tycoon and one of the wealthiest 19th century U.S. businessmen, but a humanitarian as well. This charitable captain of industry was none other than Mr. Andrew Carnegie – who transformed himself from a young Scottish immigrant to a corporate leader and philanthropist whose name still echoes prominently throughout American society today. Although plagued by devastating events in his past, Andrew Carnegie was a captain of industry because of his smart investments and, ultimately, a philanthropist because of his selfless acts. Before owning the world’s largest steel corporation, Andrew Carnegie was a mere messenger boy for a telegraph office. It was at the telegraph office where Thomas A. Scott took a liking to Carnegie. After many years of working closely under Scott and moving up the ranks, Carnegie became superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad and Scott’s right hand man. Scott later gave Carnegie the task of connecting the East to the West by way of a bridge that crossed the Mississippi. On a hunt for a material that could withstand the rapid waters, Carnegie came across steel – a radically new substance that was more flexible than iron so it could handle the harsh tidewaters of the Mississippi. By the time the bridge was complete, Carnegie knew he had stumbled upon something. This new material could entirely revolutionize the building process. Carnegie may not have known the importance of what he discovered, but steel was about to become the center of Andrew Carnegie’s whole world and…
Andrew Carnegie was a self made entrepreneur he had a monopoly on the steel industry. Carnegie was born the son of a poor weaver in Bunfermline, Scotland. In 1845 he immigrated to the United States with his parents. He was 12 years old when he came to America. Carnegie and his parents settled in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. His first job was with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. He eventually worked his way up to superintendent of Pittsburgh office and manager of its telegraph lines. At this time he invested in the sleeping car with the inventor Woodruff. The venture made Carnegie a wealthy man. He was still working for the railroad and got promoted to superintendent of the Pittsburgh division. After the Civil War Carnegie saw the potential in the steel industry. He could have stayed and worked with the railroad and been a rich man, but instead he and his brother, Thomas purchased an established rolling mill. From this purchase he would go on and become one of the wealthiest men of his time. Carnegie would implement a new steel refining process developed by Henry…
First, Andrew Carnegie was a hero because he was the primary reason why the United States became a world power in the steel industry. Carnegie wasn’t always the rich man we have believed to be. He was once a poor little boy living in an attic room above his father’s weaver’s shop. (Doc 1) His mother raised him to believe that once day they wouldn’t be living in the conditions they were in, mainly because his mother wanted to live the wealthy life. Once Carnegie immigrated to the U.S, he worked in a factory and later moved to working in the Pennsylvania Railroad Company living with a modest income. He later continued to grow and created the Carnegie Steel Company which brought the United States as one of the top steel manufacturers in the world. Part his success was because of his innovations with the steel refineries. He brought a way mass producing steel in a cheap why by introducing the Bessemer process. He also brought new form of management control by integrating all suppliers of raw materials into one company (Doc 5). This helped by lowering the costs of manufacturing and selling steel goods at a fair price (Doc 4). Carnegie always believed that growth was essential in any civilization. By living by this motto, he helped the steel industry in the U.S emerge into one of the most…
Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919) was one of the most famous American philanthropists and industrialists (Encarta). He was a Scottish immigrant who had worked his way up from "rags to riches" in the railroad and steel industry. And by 1901, he was one of the richest men in the World and one of the few men who actually achieved the American ideal of "rags to riches" (Brinkley, Alan, et al 518). He amassed a huge fortune in the steel industry and in 1901 simply quit the business life and lived the rest of his life as a philanthropist. Following the principles laid down in his book, The Gospel of Wealth, Carnegie donated over $300 million back to society, primarily through foundations and trusts. In this book, he believed that "People of wealth should consider all revenues in excess of their own needs as "trust…
Andrew to become successful by amassing wealth in the steel industry. He came from a poor family and had little formal education. When the Carnegies immigrated to America in 1848, Andrew was determined to bring prosperity to his family. He worked many small jobs, which included working for the Pennsylvania Railroad where he first recognized the importance of steel. With this recognition, he resigned and started the Keystone Bridge Company in 1865. He built a steel-rail mill, and bought out a small steel company. In 1888, he had a large plant, which provided many jobs in the United States. His steel company grew until it made him the wealthiest man in the world.…
Carnegie was a Scottish immigrant who built his empire from the ground up, as he was not always rich. Through a lot of smart calculated work, Carnegie managed to have a highly profitable company that monopolized the steel production industry which made him one of the richest Americans of his era. He was a firm believer that the wealthy best knew how to use their riches for the public welfare and he wrote the Gospel of Wealth explaining his thoughts. His basic idea was to not die a rich man for he wanted to spend his extra money to better our society and provide the poor with opportunities for advancement.…
Andrew Carnegie was a hero because he developed good business strategies that led him to become a successful businessman. His most successful business strategy was his method of vertical integration, which is when one person controls all the steps in the production process. Instead of just owning the steel mills, he also owned the iron ore fields, where the iron used to make the steel came from, along with the boats and railroads used to transport the iron to his steel mills (Doc 5). Carnegie’s process of vertical integration was a business technique that improved future businesses. Also another reason why Carnegie was such a successful businessman was because he was always well informed of his finances, and some would say he was a micromanager. “Carnegie’s watch on costs never let up in his first twenty-five years in the steel business.”(Doc 3). He also was informed of other businesses finances in order to ensure that he had lower prices and more customers than his competition. Over the years…
Andrew Carnegie grew to be a powerful business man. He was self-made which means he started out with nothing then became successful on his own. Andrew was born in Scotland in the year of 1835 and grew up poor. He later started working as a bobbin boy but had little earnings at the age of 12. In 1872, he adopted the Bessemer Process and built a steel mill in Pittsburgh. As a result of his wealth, Carnegie gave away $350,695,653 which helped others. The philanthropy of Andrew Carnegie made him a known hero.…
Cited: "The American Experience | Andrew Carnegie | Gilded Age" PBS, 1999. Web. 23 July 2009. .…