"Were vanderbilt carnegie rockefeller robber barrons or captians of industry" Essays and Research Papers

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    The industrial capitalists of the late 19th century should be regarded “Robber Barons” for many reasons. One example was with religious places. Money corrupts anyone. Many people think that if they had that much power or money‚ then they’d only do good with it‚ and help everyone‚ but in the end‚ it corrupts them all. It’s human nature to want power and money and humans do what it takes to do so. One thing was that there was one church in pull man‚ and one-either of the population going to religious

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    Innovator or Robber Baron? During the latter part of the nineteenth century‚ industries began to bloom across the United States. Local businesses and merchants gave way to larger corporations and industries. The head of these industries‚ such as the names of RockefellerCarnegie‚ and J.P. Morgan‚ were looked upon as robber barons by some‚ industrial innovators by others. A baron is "one having great wealth‚ power‚ and influence in a specified sphere of activity: an oil baron." Therefore the robber barons

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    They created so many job opportunities‚ built industries that benefited the whole country and gave away much of their hard earned money. Capitalists of the nineteenth century may have been considered robber barons but they were for the most part captains of industry. The American Industrial Revolution fundamentally changed politics‚ society‚ and the economy. Factory workers and consumerism had changed immensely in the Gilded Age; about 400‚000 patents were made between 1875 and 1900 which signifies

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    Andrew Carnegie‚ The Selfish Philanthropist Andrew Carnegie‚ born on November 25‚ 1835‚ was a Scottish philanthropist who was one of the richest men in America in the 1900 ’s. I completely agree with Carnegie ’s opinion of how the rich should donate their money toward the good of mankind before they die‚ but disagree with his actions toward his workers . He started working in a cotton mill making $1.20 a week only to upgrade to $2.20 working as a messenger boy. He eventually taught himself telegraphy

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    Andrew Carnegie

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    transportation‚ building‚ and communication were being discovered or invented. All around America businesses were popping up and men would be walking away filthy rich. But what defines a man to be a hero? Is it how much money he has‚ the way he grew up‚ what he did for others‚ or dying for his country? Andrew Carnegie was no Ulysses Grant but he was also not VanderbiltCarnegie gave back to his country with the riches he earned. We cannot look upon Carnegie as being the child with the silver spoon

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    robber barons or captains of industry I thought that people like Andrew Carnegie‚ John D. Rockefeller‚ and J.p Morgan were all robber barons. Because they would employ people and put them in these unsafe‚ and unsanitary conditions. Also they made education for immigrants coming in difficult because even though they built libraries and hospitals would the immigrants would be illiterate and not be able to pay for hospital bills. Lastly theses men were robber barons because they were using vertical

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    Andrew carnegie

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    The United States followed the example set by many European countries‚ and used industry to catapult the nation’s wealth. The lives of the general public were greatly impacted by this shift from agriculture to industry and this time became known as the Gilded Age. Railroads‚ steel mills‚ factories‚ and other forms of industry dominated the economy. One of very few men to accept this change in the U.S.‚ Andrew Carnegie overcame his humble underpinnings and became the owner of one of the largest steel

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    Carnegie Steel

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    Carnegie Drove Steel Home Andrew Carnegie grew up as a son of a weaver craftsman and a mother who went to work to help support the family when the stream weaving loom came to Scotland. Andrew later wrote‚ after seeing my dad begging for work I knew I would be the one to fix it. I determined that Andrew Carnegie was a captain of industry. He was a captain of industry because he‚ helped build the formidable American steel industry‚ supplied jobs to many people who were out of jobs because of the

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    Carnegie, Hero?

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    for heroism by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. The awards announced Friday include recognition for Michael T. McDonnell and Dylan Patrick Smith‚ who worked together to save people in Rockaway Beach in Queens during the October 2012 storm. As their neighborhood flooded with more than 5 feet of water‚ the 51-year-old McDonnell and 22-year-old Smith created a rescue line to help people‚ and Smith used his surfboard to paddle to those in distress. Other medal winners were from Arizona‚ California

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    John D. Rockefeller

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    15‚ 2001 The Rockefellers feared the temptations of wealth‚ yet a visitor once described their estate as the kind of place God would have built if only he’d had the money. They amassed a fortune that outraged a Democratic nation‚ then gave it all away reshaping America. They were the closest thing the country had to a royal family‚ but the Rockefellers shunned the public eye. For decades‚ the Rockefeller name was despised in America‚ associated with John D. Rockefeller Sr.’s feared monopoly

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