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…
Gustavus Franklin Swift was one of the greatest captains of industry ever to positively impact and contribute in the history of the United States of America. Gustavus Franklin Swift was always determined to become a meat dealer. Swift decided this when he began his career at the age of 14, he went to work at his older brother’s butcher shop. Historian Scott Robinson’s biography of Swift mentions that, “By 1859 he had made enough money to open his own butcher shop in Eastham, Massachusetts. By working 16 hours a day and exhibiting great skill in judging the market value of the cattle he bought, Swift was able to make his business a huge success,” (Robinson). This is the first milestone that Swift achieves, the first business enterprise to his name. Also, it appears that he had no struggle in managing his shop, he was talented, he had the eye of a prosperous haggler and made large profits this way. Historian Robinson also mentions that, “In 1869 Swift opened a meat market in Clinton, Massachusetts. Unlike most markets of the day, he displayed many different cuts of meat, and gave the most prominent spots to those cuts which customers were less likely to request,” (Robinson). Due to his successful start, Swift decides to expand his business and trade in a variety of meats. Just like his talent to make a profit from haggling meat, he also knew what meats were in demand and what were not. Swift was able to yet again, create another successful business. Swift ends up partnering up with James Hathaway, a meat wholesaler. As a result of this, Hathaway handled all of the slaughtering and wholesaling aspects to the business, while Swift bought the meat and supervised the shipments. However, this is only the beginning, Swift realizes that dealing in meat requires a different set of skills. Another problem was presented to Swift when he started dealing in meat. Swift sees that the shipping and distribution of live cattle proves to be inefficient and takes a great sum of money to manage. Historians Ian Friedman and Charles Carey Jr, state that in American Inventors, Entrepreneurs & Business Visionaries, Swift’s answer to this was, “killing and dressing the animals in large packing houses in Chicago, then shipping the dressed meat via refrigerated railcars to keep it from spoiling, would be much cheaper than handling and transporting live animals. He hired Andrew J. Chase, a well-known refrigeration engineer, who designed an insulated railcar that chilled air by constantly circulating it over ice.” (Friedman and Carey Jr). This allows Swift to pay less since the upkeep of keeping the cattle alive and healthy during travel is quite expensive. Since Andrew Chase invents a refrigerated railroad car, this allows Swift to package meat for imports and exports. Swift This method proves to be more efficient and extremely profitable. Swift always had incredible ways of solving problems, he invents and revolutionizes a new way of shipping meat. Swift’s brilliant way of shipping meat is also used today, whether it transported locally or internationally. Eventually, Swift was able to conquer all business aspects to the meat packing industry. In the website of Geni A MyHeritage Company, a biography of Gustavus Franklin Swift states that, “ His was one of the first companies in modern business history to boast complete "vertical integration" and had departments for purchasing, production, shipping, sales, and marketing,” (Geni). After this, there was nothing in Swift’s way, profits boomed from left to right. This was the highest point that he was able to achieve before the government stepped in. Swift always looked for ways to make the biggest profit out of his meat industry.
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
organizations. Gustavus Franklin Swift will be remembered to be one of the greatest captains of industry. Not only did he work very hard to become extremely successful and wealthy in business, he left a positive impact to the world around him. Swift revolutionized the meat industry by creating the refrigerated rail car transport, a method that is used today by big companies to keep their goods from spoiling. Also, the group of Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) continues to strive today because of Swift. Just like Gustavus Swift said, “Don’t let the best you have done so far be the standard for the rest of your life.” This motivational quote kept Swift to always push himself even when he could not anymore. Never rest and always strive to do better, for it will bring success in one’s life.
The late 19th century and early 20th century was the age of big businesses. It bore a class of entrepreneurs known as robber barons. These entrepreneurs carry a perception in the eyes of most historical commentators that they committed veiled larceny acts to enrich themselves to the detriment of the customers, often seeking the aid of politicians to support their crony capitalist endeavors. Such portrayal by the historians lives us with the picture of greedy and exploitative capitalists. However, there are cases where this ‘robber baron’ string of entrepreneurs did indeed exploit their customers financial gain. Jay Cooke, famously known as the ‘financier of the Civil War’, was an example of this string of entrepreneurs and their reaches within the United States government.
"The Myth of The Robber Barons" by Burton W. Folsom, JR. tells a unique story about entrepreneurs in early America. The book portrays big businessmen as being behind America's greatness.
John D. Rockefeller as a Robber Baron A "robber baron" was someone who employed any means necessary to enrich themselves at the expense of their competitors. Did John D. Rockefeller fall into that category or was he one of the "captains of industry", whose shrewd and innovative leadership brought order out of industrial chaos and generated great fortunes that enriched the public welfare through the workings of various philanthropic agencies that these leaders established? In the early 1860s Rockefeller was the founder of the Standard Oil Company, who came to epitomize both the success and excess of corporate capitalism. His company was based in northwestern Pennsylvania. A major question historians have disagreed on has been whether or not John D. Rockefeller was a so-called "robber baron".
Robber Barons and the Gilded Age Did the Robber Barons and the Gilded Age of the 1890’s and early 20th Century have a negative impact on 21st Century Corporate America today? Carnegie, Rockefeller, Morgan, and Vanderbilt all had something in common, they were all “Robber Barons,” whose actions would eventually lead to the corruption, greed, and economic problems of Corporate America today. During the late 19th century, these men did all they could to monopolize the railroad, petroleum, banking, and steel industries, profiting massively and gaining a lot personally, but not doing a whole lot for the common wealth. Many of the schemes and techniques that are used today to rob people of what is rightfully theirs, such as pensions, stocks, and even their jobs, were invented and used often by these four men.
During the 1800’s, business leaders who built their affluence by stealing and bribing public officials to propose laws in their favor were known as “robber barons”. J.P. Morgan, a banker, financed the restructuring of railroads, insurance companies, and banks. In addition, Andrew Carnegie, the steel king, disliked monopolistic trusts. Nonetheless, ruthlessly destroying the businesses and lives of many people merely for personal profit; Carnegie attained a level of dominance and wealth never before seen in American history, but was only able to obtain this through acts that were dishonest and oftentimes, illicit. Document D resentfully emphasizes the alleged capacity of the corrupt industrialists. In the picture illustrated, panic-stricken people pay acknowledgment to the lordly tycoons. Correlating to this political cartoon, in 1900, Carnegie was willing to sell his holdings of his company. During the time Morgan was manufacturing
By the turn of the nineteenth century, American industry experienced a dramatic upturn in popularity. However, though this industrialization was crucial for America's economic development, it also inevitably led to social turmoil. Corruption was rampant among government figures, and they bribed people with money, jobs, or favors to win their votes. Referred to as the Gilded Age, this era was indeed gilded, masking a plethora of social issues behind a thin veil of economic success. The most notable problems stemmed from the justification of what was called laissez-faire economics, in which the poor were believed to be poor exclusively based on their own shortcomings. The abundance of disposable factory workers faced awful hours and were treated
During the Gilded Age, several Americans emerged as leaders in many fields such as, railroads, oil drilling, manufacturing and banking. The characterization of these leaders as “robber barons” is, unfortunately, nearly always correct in every instance of business management at this time. Most, if not all, of these leaders had little regard for the public or laborers at all and advocated for the concentration of wealth within tight-knit groups of wealthy business owners.
The issue that Swift is addressing is the fact that there are too many poor children in Dublin and that they are becoming such a huge burden for all the poor mothers or parents of the country. Swift then creates his own solution to the problem. He proposes that all poor children who are around one year of age, be cooked and eaten by the people of Dublin, preferably the poor. With this solution, he argues that it will eventually put an end to the overpopulation of the poor young children and it will satisfy the hunger for all the other people. Crazy right?
Based on the Gilded Age, literally meaning a layer of gold is displayed on the outside and once you look deeper past through the top layer of gold, you can identify that the robber barons are the culprit of the corruption in the government who monopolized the corporate America. Although, there is a great transition from the agricultural economy towards the rapid growth of the urban and industrial society, the robber barons created a lot of problems for much of the working class poor in America. The robber barons use the power they obtain through their wealth for their own advantage and try to repress any form of the spread of democracy and the regulation in the marketplace, its work safety, the labor laws, and the certain amount of work hours which followed thereafter witnessing of the homestead strikes that touched on the major issues of the American nation. Both Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller dominated giant corporations, but they dictated much of the employees and greatly tried to divide out the employees from desperately trying to organize the reforms that would essentially stop the robber barons from taking advantage of them. The robber barons insisted that if you cannot work the day you are supposed to other than the Fourth of July, some other person will be a willing participant to come and take your job.
Industrial development of the late 18th century (around 1865-1900) is often characterized by it’s affluent, aggressive and monopolistic industrial leaders of the likes of men such as Andrew Carnegie, William H. Vanderbilt, and John D. Rockefeller. Due to their ruthless strategies, utilization of trusts, and exploitation of cheap labor in order to garner nearly unbreakable monopolies and massive sums of wealth, these men are often labelled as “robber barons”. At the same time, they are also often referred to as “industrial statements” for their organization, and catalyst of, industrial development; not to forget their generous contributions to the betterment of American society. Therefore, whether or not their aforementioned advances in industry were undertaken for their own personal benefits, one cannot ignore their positive effects on America. Thus, one can conclude that not only were the captains of industry both “robber barons” and “industrial statements”, but that that these two labels, in fact, go hand-in-hand.
This was mostly done by his descriptions of preparing the children like they are a chicken, and his list of advantages to eating children. While describing how to prepare a child Swift said, “a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food.” The manner in which he described a human child the same way one would a cow, chicken, or fish. The obvious lack of ethics and morals in this passage cement that this essay is satirical and should not be understood as a legitimate solution to the starvation issue. He later listed the advantages of a system that breeds children for food, these advantages are all very unethical simply based off the fact that they are benefits of eating infants. Swift mentioned ideas including the murder of Catholic babies, eating humans as a fun custom, and giving the poor something of value (their own children). His use of ethos shows the audience that the essay is satirical and emphasizes the extreme ridiculousness of his ideas.
As you can see, the business world we know today would not have been possible without some of the many advances that took place in the Gilded Age, and although newer laws and standards in the business prevent big business tycoons from becoming as powerful as they once were in the Gilded Age, we still see signs today of what business leaders such as Cornelius Vanderbilt, Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and J. P. Morgan all contributed to the business world.
The captain of industries were businessmen who also benefitted society through their accumulation of wealth, using methods such as increased productivity, the expansion of markets, offering up new jobs to the working class, and other acts of generosity. All of the notable industrialists dubbed “robber barons” were also named “captain of industries” as well. Therefore, there have been many debates as to whether the term “robber barons” really did justice to the industrialists, when taking into account of their effects on America’s economy, and not just the negative aspects. While the robber barons did harm specific groups of people in order to meet their selfish goals, as well as execute ruthless tactics to surpass their competitors, they have also created an economic boom in which they created larger manufacturing companies, created many employment opportunities for the working class. Even though robber barons went to extreme measures and harmed others in their pursuit of wealth, they have also, and built a stable and prosperous
I don’t agree with those who consider Swift a misanthrope. In my view, Swift does not hate or distrust human. Actually we can say that he has lost his faith in humankind. Perhaps he was tired of those who expressed hate towards the downtrodden and less fortunate, but his writing were an attempt to point out the others. If he hated mankind, he probably would not have pursued writing literature with the messages that his literature had.
Swift made a hasty generalization by basing his knowledge that everyone would love human flesh on an incident on the island of Formosa (Swift 365). Swift learned through a native of Formosa that when a child was put to death, his body was sold as a “Prime dainty” (Swift 365-6). He said how even the prime minister of the state had bought a girl put to death because of treason (Swift 365-6). So he deducts that since they like it then the whole world will.