Robber Barons: The Unseen Heroes of Industrial Revolution

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Not all heroes wear capes. The industrial revolution, during the eighteenth and nineteenth century, gave birth to numerous factories throughout the United States. With the technological innovations of efficient tools, heavy machinery, and other devices used to mass produce, this period in time required less human and animal power to complete troublesome tasks. Incidentally, the government did not lead this great time in history, the Laissez Policy did not allow them to. The leaders of this industrial revolution were people such as Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Philip Armour, Leland Stanford, and a few more. Due to some of these leaders, people coined the term “Robber Barons,” because they were able to create unfair competition and economically manipulate the price of their product when they formed trusts or monopolies. However, …show more content…

From the Hutchinton’s Biography Database, it states that “In 1885 he incorporated as Swift and Company and pioneered in the use of waste products to make glue, oleomargarine, soap, and fertilizer,” (Hutchinton’s Biography Database). Just like he hired Andrew Chase to develop a refrigerated railroad car, Swift would hire engineers and chemists to create byproducts of meat, from skins to bones, to use everything and ensure that nothing was wasted.
Not all of his money went into the meat business. Gustavus Franklin Swift had a good set of morals. Although he was not the wealthiest entrepreneur, he was not greedy either. According to the website Geni, his philanthropic contributions included, “Swift donated large sums of money to such institutions as the University of Chicago, the Methodist Episcopal Church, and the Young Men's Christian Association,” (Geni). Being a leader of the meat packing industry, Swift was left with a lot of money and he did not know what to spend it on. Therefore, out of good heart, Swift donates to these local

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