“Meet You In Hell” is a book written by Les Strandiford, about the rivaling “bittersweet partnership” between the two founding fathers of the American iron and steel industry, by the names of Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick who were both successful business men that depended on one another to climb the cooperate ladder in the American steel industry, they appeared to be an interesting dynamic duo until a series of events that occurred resulted in a furious rivalry between the two.
Their partnership began when Andrew Carnegie hired Henry Clay Frick who was known as the king of coke (p.57), to run his company because he owned coke ovens which played a huge part in the manufacturing of iron and steel. Prior to hiring Frick, Mr. Carnegie “sold all of his coke ovens and brought coke through an open market” (p.52), In order to keep production cost down, which in return he would see a larger return on his investments. Their partnership was like a roller coaster full of twists and turns,
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which resulted in a series of events such as the flooding of Johnstown (p.146), which was the outcome of them refusing to repair the dam that Carnegie steel mill sat on, and took the lives of two thousand people.
Their partnership would continue to be on the path of success until Andrew Carnegie published the “Henry market debate” article in the August 1886 issue of form, in the article he is in fear of a workingman insurance, but however to a certain extent he sympathized with them being that he himself has experienced what the working class went through. On the other hand Carnegie was never willing to give into their demands and handed the issues to Frick to resolve the problems. Instead of fixing the problems Frick decided to resign, once Carnegie learned of his resignation he sent a telegram inviting Frick to come aboard. Henry Clay Frick returned the run the company meanwhile problems were arising at the Homestead Mill, the workers were threatening to strike if their demands for higher wages was not met. Carnegie responded that he will close the
mill down and there will be no wage increase. Which lead to an increase in unemployment. Things began to take a serious turn when Frick learned about a meeting Carnegie had with Rainey, which lead to Frick turning in another resignation for the second time as chairman of Carnegie company so that he could focus on his on empire. Being that he had enough of Carnegie “business methods, absurd newspaper interviews, personal remarks and unwanted interference in matters he knew nothing about”. (p.245), however he eventually he begged for his job back and was hired, just to find out that his position had been filled by a younger vibrant individual by the name of Schwab. When Frick returned to work for Carnegie, he and an employee by the name of Phipps would be accused of swindling Carnegie for his money which Frick denied. However the ongoing competitive battle between the two continued as Frick focused on his own successful business ventures. At the age of eighty three laying on his sick bed, Carnegie attempted to reach out to Frick one more time before he died with a letter through a messenger asking him to meet with him. Henry clay Frick replied they would “Meet in Hell”. I find Les Strandiford argument convincing because business partners should not betray one another. However on the bright side of things Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick partnership transformed America, by having librarians, railroads, schools, and art museums named after them. Plus the steel industry is currently up and running.
Industrialists Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick could not have come from more different backgrounds. Carnegie was born in the Scottish town of Dunfermline to a very poor family in 1835. When he was 12 years old, his father, a weaver, decided to move the family to the United States in search of better prospects, arriving at what was then the municipality of Allegheny, Pennsylvania, now part of Pittsburgh’s North Side. By that time, Pittsburgh was already known as a major center for the production of steel and other metals. In 1853, at the age of 18, Carnegie was hired as a telegraph operator for the Pennsylvania Railroad, and became a protégé of Thomas A. Scott, who would soon rise
Andrew Carnegie, the monopolist of the steel industry, was one of the worst of the Robber Barons. Like the others, he was full of contradictions and tried to bring peace to the world, but only caused conflicts and took away the jobs of many factory workers. Carnegie Steel, his company, was a main supplier of steel to the railroad industry. Working together, Carnegie and Vanderbilt had created an industrial machine so powerful, that nothing stood in its path. This is much similar to how Microsoft has monopolized the computer software
steel pipe tubing, Carnegie threatened to ruin him by invading his business if Morgan did not buy Carnegie out. E...
A Faustian legend is a story in which a character trades something of great personal value to the devil in order to receive personal gain. Since this type of literature originated in the Fourth Century it has spread throughout the world. Two relatively recent versions of this legend are “The Devil and Tom Walker” by Washington Irving and “The Devil and Daniel Webster” by Vincent Benét. These stories show many similarities as well as a few differences. While both Benét and Irving present similar themes in setting of the tales and motivation in the Faustian character, they do differ in the nature of that character and their visual presentation of the Devil.
Third and lastly, look at how both men treat their workers and customers in order to achieve the most possible profit for their company. Let us first look at Mr. Andrew Carnegie. Carnegie was a mogul in the steel industry. Carnegie developed a system known as the vertical integration. This method basically cuts out the ‘middle man’.
Carnegie was a brutal challenger and tried to eliminate his competitors. Another tactic Carnegie used to grow his business was to hold a vertical monopoly. The Carnegie Steel Company bought the iron ore deposits and even many of the steel finishing industries. With the magnificent industry...
Andrew Carnegie was a man who was born poor, but wanted to change many lives for those who were like him. Since he was able to walk, he started to work he was a bobbin boy in Pittsburg. Carnegie would work 12 hours a day to
The biography begins when the impoverished Carnegie family leaves their home in Scotland having been replaced by machines in the Industrial Revolution. People started sailing to America because their “old home no longer promised anything at all” (Livesay 14). They end up earning twice as much as they did in Scotland with their son Tom in school, the parents Margaret and Will shoe-binding, and Andrew working as a bobbin boy. Money earned without work was an opening to corruption in the eyes of a Republican nation and it was also assumed that hereditary wealth had caused the decline of Europe (Lena). Carnegie soon rises from poor bobbin boy to railroad superintendent, all the way to manager at the Pennsylvania Railroad. "I have made millions since, Carnegie later claimed, but none of these gave me so much happiness as my first week's earnings. I was now a helper of the family, a bread winner” (16). The background exposition on his family became crucial to understanding Carnegie’s drive to succeed. Livesay also fluently demonstrates the various professional relationships Carnegie develops throughout his life and how they affect his career. When his first investment pays a profit of $10, Carnegie discovers a whole new world of earning money from the capital. In 1865, he establishes his own business enterprises and...
To understand Carnegie before he became a wealthy man, he grew up poor working for $1.20 a week (Document LV). At the age of 50 years, he took a risk by investing in a package delivery company. His gamble paid off and he gained money to start his company, Carnegie’s Steel Company. Eventually, his company grew and caused
While Carnegie held the aptitude for greatness regardless of his surroundings, without free enterprise, he would not have even had to option to take a chance or to explore new ideas. In regulated economies, not only is the currency and producer-consumer relationship controlled by the government, many times the media is as well, as not to create a system in which citizens long for something else. In this case Carnegie would not have had the access to the learning resources that he did, and would never have learned how to use a telegraph machine. There would have been no room for lateral growth, and the world as we know it may not exist without Carnegie’s courage and yearning to better himself and the world.
Michael MacDonald’S All Souls is a heart wrenching insider account of growing up in Old Country housing projects located in the south of Boston, also known as Southie to the locals. The memoir takes the reader deep inside the world of Southie through the eyes of MacDonald. MacDonald was one of 11 children to grow up and deal with the many tribulations of Southie, Boston. Southie is characterized by high levels of crime, racism, and violence; all things that fall under the category of social problem. Social problems can be defined as “societal induced conditions that harms any segment of the population. Social problems are also related to acts and conditions that violate the norms and values found in society” (Long). The social problems that are present in Southie are the very reasons why the living conditions are so bad as well as why Southie is considered one of the poorest towns in Boston. Macdonald’s along with his family have to overcome the presence of crime, racism, and violence in order to survive in the town they consider the best place in the world.
He went to London in 1872, saw the new Bessemer method of producing steel, and returned to the United States to build a million-dollar steel plant. Foreign competition was kept out by a high tariff conveniently set by Congress, and by 1880 Carnegie was producing 10,000 tons of steel a month, making $1 1/2 million a year in profit. By 1900 he was making $40 million a year, and that year, at a dinner party, he agreed to sell his steel company to J. P. Morgan. He scribbled the price on a note: $492,000,000.”
Chapter three Pittsburg and Work of Andrew Carnegies autobiography starts off with a 13-year-old Carnegie thinking about going to work. He already determined that his family should be able to make 300 dollars a year, which would keep them from depending on others. Uncle Hogan had already seen the businessman in Carnegie at a very young age. He tells Carnegie that he was a likely boy and apt to learn; and believed that if a basket were fitted out for him with knickknacks to sell, he could peddle them around the wharves and make quite a considerable sum. This comment by Uncle Hogan leaves Carnegies mother outraged. She wanted her two sons Carnegie and his brother to always be honorable, respectful and always do what is right. Soon after the incident Carnegies father gave up handloom weaving for the cotton factory. This decision also granted Carnegie a position as a bobbin boy, where he made one dollar and twenty cents per week. Carnegie will go on to make millions after, but he
Carnegie saw how bad the wooden railroads were, so he proceeded to slowly replace them with iron ones. Carnegie's charm, perception, and hard work led to becoming one of the world's most famous men of the time, and led to the first corporation in the world with a market capitalization in excess of one billion when he sold his companies to John Morgan who called them United States Steel Corporation.
Setting: This book starts out in this kids house his name is crash. Then they go to the arcade. That is where they spend most of the story. Then close to the end they go to the riverside.