Tycoons of The 1900S: Tabbi Austin
Tycoons of The 1900S: Tabbi Austin
Tycoons of The 1900S: Tabbi Austin
Tabbi Austin
WHAT IS A TYCOON?
In 1864, Carnegie devoted his full energies to the iron business. His firm received
lucrative contracts from the railroads to replace aging wooden bridges with iron ones.
On a trip to Europe, Carnegie met and was inspired by Henry Bessemer, developer of
breakthrough technology for making steel from pig iron. In 1873, Carnegie sold his
other interests and turned his full attention to steel; he began to acquire the components
of what would become the Carnegie Steel Company. Carnegie’s recipe for success
included hard work, attention to detail and an ability to hire and rely upon qualified
help; Charles Schwab was an early assistant and would later become president of U.S.
Steel and Bethlehem Steel. Carnegie also was a shrewd observer of human nature.
When he opened his first steel plant in 1875, he named the facility for the president of
the Pennsylvania Railroad, J. Edgar Thompson; shortly thereafter, Carnegie received an
enormous order from that organization for the production of steel rails .
A BIT OF A LOW POINT
T h e l o w p o i n t o f C a r n e g i e ’s c a re e r
o c c u r re d i n 1 8 9 2 d u r i n g t h e i n f a m o u s
Homestead Steel Strike. Carnegie was
t r a v e l i n g i n E u ro p e d u r i n g t h e d i s p u t e ,
b u t h i s i n t e re s t s w e re re p re s e n t e d b y
Henry Clay Frick, with whom Carnegie
h a d d i f f e re d o n l a b o r m a t t e r s i n t h e
past. Nevertheless, the total humiliation
s u f f e re d b y t h e s t r i k e r s a t H o m e s t e a d
s o u re d t h e o p i n i o n o f m a n y w o r k i n g
people of Carnegie for many years to
come.
MAJOR PHILANTHROPIC
VENTURES
From the start Rockefeller showed a genius for organization and method. The firm
prospered during the Civil War (1861–65), when Confederate (Southern) forces
clashed with those of the Union (North). With the Pennsylvania oil strike (1859) and
the building of a railroad to Cleveland, they branched out into oil refining (purifying)
with Samuel Andrews, who had technical knowledge of the field. Within two years
Rockefeller became senior partner; Clark was bought out, and the firm Rockefeller
and Andrews became Cleveland's largest refinery.
With financial help from S. V. Harkness and from a new partner, H. M. Flagler
(1830–1913), who also secured favorable railroad freight rebates, Rockefeller
survived the bitter competition in the oil industry. The Standard Oil Company, started
in Ohio in 1870 by Rockefeller, his brother William, Flagler, Harkness, and Andrews,
had a worth of one million dollars and paid a profit of 40 percent a year later. While
Standard Oil controlled one-tenth of American refining, the competition remained.
TRUSTS
Jay Gould
Gould gained control of the Union Pacific,
from which in 1883 he withdrew after
realizing a large profit. Buying up the stock
of the Missouri Pacific he built up, by means
of consolidations, reorganizations, and the
construction of branch lines, the "Gould
System" of railways in the Southwestern
states. In 1880 he was in virtual control of
10,000 miles of railway, about one-ninth of
the railway mileage of the United States at
that time. Besides, he obtained a controlling
interest in the Western Union Telegraph
Company, and after 1881 in the elevated
railways in New York City, and was
intimately connected with many of the
largest railway financial operations in the
US.
NOTABLE TYCOONS CONT.
B o s s Tw e e d