"Negative aspects of robber baron andrew carnegie" Essays and Research Papers

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    King of the Robber Barons

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    Robber Baron: 1: an American capitalist of the latter part of the 19th century who became wealthy through exploitation (as of natural resources‚ governmental influence‚ or low wage scales) Jay‚ born Jayson Gould to John Burr and Mary Gould as a small‚ feeble baby‚ was the robber baron’s robber baron. He was the king manipulator of Wall Street. Although he was not the only snake on Wall Street‚ he was the most calculating‚ manipulative‚ and strategizing of them all. December 6‚ 1892‚ surrounded

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    were John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie. There is no doubt that these people left their mark on business and on history. However‚ there is some dispute over how these individuals should be portrayed. Some people say that they were robber barons‚ while others insist that they were captains of industry. A captain of industry is someone who is perceived to have helped the nation through their business skills and their philanthropy. On the other hand‚ a robber baron was someone who was considered

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    helped America become. They have also been called "robber barons" because they built their great wealth by abusing the system‚ abusing their employees‚ and destroying their competitors to satisfy their own needs. These "kings" off industry displayed characteristics of both industrial statesmen and robber barons. It is therefore justified to characterize the industrial leaders of the nineteenth century as both industrial statesmen and robber barons. Because they used vicious tactics to destroy competition

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    Captain of Industry or Robber Baron: J.P. Morgan J.P. Morgan was a post-civil war “captain of industry‚” separating him from the other “Greats” such as Cornelius Vanderbilt‚ John D. Rockefeller‚ and Andrew Carnegie because of his motives and his upbringing. A “robber baron” is most simply defined as an individual who has financial ambitions that cause him to knowingly take advantage of others for his own personal gain. A “captain of industry” seeks solutions to common problems‚ and though the outcome

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    Professor Frawley U.S. History 1302 6 November 2013 Robber Baron or Captain of Industry In the 1880’s‚ American industry grew due to many factors including “the emergence of a talented and often ruthless group of entrepreneurs” (Brinkley 396). According to those in favor of these entrepreneurs‚ these men worked hard‚ innovated technology and strategized competitively to transform the American economy; these “Captains of Industry‚” such as Andrew Carnegie‚ Cornelius Vanderbilt‚ J Pierpoint Morgan and John

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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 Rockefeller‚ Carnegie‚ 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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    “Captain of Industry” or “Robber Barons”? American Industrial leaders of the late 19th and 20th centuries have earned the right to be called “Captains of Industry”‚ although along the way they may have acted as “Robber Barons.”It is a difficult to put any of these people into only one category‚ because without one there would not be the other. Acting as a “Robber Barron” was merely a stepping stone or a means of moving themselves in a leadership position in order to achieve their goal. These people

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    Industrial Leaders – Robber barons or Industrial Statesmen? The late 19th century industrial leaders have often been called "industrial statesmen" for the great economic power they brought to America. However‚ they have also been called "robber barons” since they built this great wealth by abusing the system‚ their employees‚ and destroying their competitors. These kings of industry displayed characteristics of both industrial statesmen and robber barons. But which would better describe

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    industrialization in the U.S. 1850-1910. Where the early industrialist Captains of Industry or Robber Barons. -Robber Barron: Used to describe a businessman that used ruthless business tactics to amass a huge personal wealth. -Captain of Industry: Used to describe to describe a businessman whose means of amassing their fortune contributes positively to the country in some way. Industrial Captain vs. Robber Barron In the late 1800’s and into the early 1900’s the United States was changing immensely

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    What are robber barons? what did robber barons do during the railroad era? • Robber Barons was the negative term for the titans of industry or‚ as Professor Donald Miller calls them‚ the capitalist conquistadors. These were the guys like Andrew Carnegie‚ Cornelius Vanderbilt‚ Gustavus Swift‚ Philip Armour‚ John D. Rockefeller and others who rose to the top and ran monopolies or near-monopolies in the Gilded Age (1870s-1900ish). They were seen as bad because they employed ruthless methods to run

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