Vanderbilt University Essays

  • Lisa Campbell

    925 Words  | 2 Pages

    MOST IMPORTANT THING YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT LISA CAMPBELL: • Lisa Hooker Campbell is a member of the JDRF Middle Tennessee Chapter's Board of Directors. She is the daughter of Alice Ingram Hooker, who is the sister of the late E. Bronson Ingram (1931-1995), founder of Ingram Industries, and the niece of E. Bronson's widow Martha Ingram who is one of the country's wealthiest and most philanthropic women. Lisa's daughter Eileen was diagnosed with T1D about seven years ago. DONOR CONNECTION TO T1D:

  • Highway Don't Care, by Tim McGraw

    1510 Words  | 4 Pages

    straction.gov. N.d. Web. 9 Sept. 2013. Texting & Driving- It Can Wait. N.p. N.d. Web. 10 Sept. 2013. Tim McGraw- Highway Don't Care Lyrics. MetroLyrics. n.d. Web. 22 Oct.2013. Wetzel, Jennifer. Vanderbilt, Country Superstar Tim McGraw Share Important Message Regarding Dangers of Distracted Driving. Vanderbilt University, 9 May 2013. Web. 5 Nov.2013. Wolff, Kurt. Tim McGraw's 'Highway Don't Care' Video Drives Home Tragic Message. Radio.com. 7 May 2013. Web. 5 Nov. 2013.

  • James Dickey All American Poet

    1738 Words  | 4 Pages

    football career led him to a scholarship at the University of Clemson, in Clemson, South Carolina. But, before he went off to college he spent one year at the Darlington School in Rome, Georgia for one year in preparation for a college. He didn’t last longer than a year in Clemson though because he enlisted into the Army Air Corps. He served in WWII as a flight radar observer and navigator. After serving in the army he went to school at Vanderbilt University in Tennessee. He went there on the G. I. Bill

  • Eileen Hart

    1174 Words  | 3 Pages

    foundation’s trustees along with Nicholas Zeppos, Chancellor of Vanderbilt University. The foundation’s mission is “primarily to support Vanderbilt University and to provide financial support to other publicly supported charities”, and its charter specifies that it must dedicate 40% of its income and assets to Vanderbilt University. At the time of the foundation’s establishment, the Ingram family had already had a 50-year relationship with Vanderbilt. Bronson Ingram's father, Orrin Henry Ingram, served

  • The Wealth and Succes of William Vanderbilt

    583 Words  | 2 Pages

    William Vanderbilt was an American businessman whose wealth was derived from the thriving railroad industry of the late nineteenth century. He was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey in 1821 and died at age 64 on December 8, 1885. During this time, he led the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, the Canada Southern Railway, and the Michigan Central Railroad. He took over as president for these organizations for his father. His father, Cornelius Vanderbilt, brought the railroad business to his

  • Cornelius Vanderbilt Research Paper

    1061 Words  | 3 Pages

    History is Cornelius Vanderbilt. Vanderbilt went from an eleven year old school dropout to the wealthiest man in the United States. This self-made millionaire changed trade and transportation in the United States forever by building a railroad industry. Americans could travel across the country in less than half the time and buy products they could have never before. His railroad industry connected those in the north, south, east, and west in ways that were unprecedented. Vanderbilt was never recognized

  • Cornelius Vandebilt

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cornelius Vanderbilt was an enigma, an insanely complex person with conflicting personalities. He started his career opposing the idea of monopolies, a champion for individualism and free markets, but ended his career by building the very things he initially opposed, monopolies. He was a shrewd businessman, who only cared for himself, but during the civil war,he was a national patriot. He was willing to donate his ship, The Vanderbilt (approximately worth over 1 million dollars at that time, a significant

  • Greed

    795 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cornelius Vanderbilt and John D. Rockefeller were depicted as pure evil. Vanderbilt stole from the poor. Rockefeller was a snake. But the name-calling did not come from the consumers; it was the competing businesses that complained. The newspapers expanded on these comments, calling them "robber barons." These are inaccurate terms for these businessmen. They were not barons because they all started penniless and they were not robbers because they did not take it from anyone else. Vanderbilt got rich

  • Robber Barons in America

    1191 Words  | 3 Pages

    person who satisfies himself by depriving another. In America we had a lot of these kind of people. For this report I am going to tell you about the ones that I found most interesting to me. I would first like to tell you about Cornelius Vanderbilt. Cornelius Vanderbilt was born in Port Richmond on Staten Island, N. Y. in 1794. Cornelius at the age of 16 had already stepped into the busniess world and he didn’t even know it. At 16 he entered into the steamboat business when he established a freight

  • How Did Cornelius Vanderbilt's Life Influence Your Dream

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    How would your early life influence your dreams? Cornelius Vanderbilt was one who truly started with diminutive resources and worked his way towards the top of the ladder. Vanderbilt was not only an innovative force, but a prosperous business man of power. Pertaining to his personal education, Vanderbilt once said, “If I had learned education I would not have had time to learn anything else.” Cornelius Vanderbilt took the shipping and rail industry to the next level which provided valuable jobs

  • Cornelius Vanderbilt

    2191 Words  | 5 Pages

    Cornelius Vanderbilt has become one of the most famous names in American history because of the everlasting positive changes he introduced to the country. Cornelius Vanderbilt was an inspiration for future wealthy personas of the Gilded Age because he fought to limit competition in the developing railroad and steamboat industries; his tactics in these industries lead him to great wealth, which helped him wield enormous power and influence over the American economy and politics. Vanderbilt sought to

  • Big Business In The Gilded Age

    1022 Words  | 3 Pages

    natural resource, railroads were considered one of the key factors in almost every widespread industry. It allowed companies to quickly send products across the entire nation without using expensive and time-consuming caravans or wagons. Cornelius Vanderbilt was a prominent leader in the railroad industry at this time. He was already in his later years by the time the Gilded Age rolled around and didn't even get to see the uprising of some of the greatest leaders of the time. The railroad companies

  • The Story of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt

    592 Words  | 2 Pages

    hardships; the introductions of new technologies continued, ultimately leading to increased competition. Competition played an enormous part in the success and downfall of many people during the 19th century, such as Cornelius Vanderbilt, who thrived in competition. Vanderbilt was not born with the skills and abilities to succeed in a field where many fell, he learned from the people he worked under and the conflicts he encountered during his apprenticeships. Those quarrels taught him the skills necessary

  • Robber Barons: The Industrial Revolution In The United States

    857 Words  | 2 Pages

    Robber barons were not concerned about the poor working conditions their employees had to endure. Some robber barons such as Vanderbilt, Rockefeller, and Carnegie used monopolies to wipe out all rivalries they had with other companies. As said in the text, “they fought their way through chaotic competition by strictly controlling costs and increasing efficiency at every step” (Stiles)

  • Robber Barons: Gates, Carnagie, Rockafeller, Vanderbilt

    830 Words  | 2 Pages

    modern day baron have been accused of creating monopolies over several different areas. The four barons focused upon are Cornelius Vanderbilt, Andrew Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Bill Gates. They have all created monopolies over their respected industry. These monopolies eliminated all opposition and left consumers with only one choice. First off is Cornelius Vanderbilt, he built his business with the New York railways. He built the New York Central System by the 1850’s, he also produced the largest

  • Corruption and Prosperity in the Gilded Age

    1332 Words  | 3 Pages

    Deriving from the famed novel The Gilded Age written by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner, the Gilded Age was a time from the early 1860s to the early 1900s of political corruption and vast economic prosperity. After the Civil War, America became determined to reconstruct itself into a society not restricted as to what it could and could not have as individuals in terms of goods and services. America wanted to be viewed as something more than just farmers and craftsmen derived from different nations

  • Cornelius Vanderbilt An Entrepreneur

    685 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cornelius Vanderbilt is one of the five tycoons of America. He was able to use both wit and his entrepreneurial skills in order to create a very successful career and legacy. Starting off from the very beginning, young Vanderbilt was able to start his own business. At the age of sixteen, Vanderbilt decided to start his own ferry service with the loan he received by working through his Mother. With the one hundred he was able to obtain, by clearing and planting eight-acre field, Vanderbilt purchased

  • The Dishonest Success of Jay Gould

    600 Words  | 2 Pages

    several railways in the 1860s. Around 1867, Jay Gould began to manage the Erie Railroad along with his partners Daniel Drew and Jim Fisk. The trio struggled to keep control of the railroad because of a certain individual by the name of Cornelius Vanderbilt. In order to get the stocks to be legal, they participated in despicab...

  • What Are Cornelius Vanderbilt Contributions To America

    977 Words  | 2 Pages

    Cornelius Vanderbilt is amongst the richest men in America primarily because of his devotion to American railroad systems and steamship companies. Although he has made great contributions to present day transportation, possibly his most integral beneficence was "the invisible architecture" of the financial system. Vanderbilt was gifted from the very beginning, due to his shrewd nature and ability to adapt to growing demands of industrialization. Despite his lonely upbringing and lack of assistance

  • Robber Barons Or Captain Of Industry

    598 Words  | 2 Pages

    robber barons, which were Vanderbilt, Donald Trump, and Andrew Carnegie. There are also leaders called "captains of industry", who consisted of leaders like Rockefeller, J. Morgan, and also Bill Gates. Captains of industry worked hard and actually helped the economy instead of robber barons who insisted on achieving wealth by being ruthless businessman. Leaders of the last century where the building blocks of the Industrial Revolution. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, Vanderbilt, and JP Morgan where the