HIST1302-Andrew Carnegie – Flashcards

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question
Why is Andrew Carnegie important?
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He was one of the "Captains of Industry" who led America into a new industrial era during the late nineteenth century. His speciality was steel; others pioneered in transportation, oil, and communication.
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Born?
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Dumferline, Scotland -- The "A" marks the spot on a modern Google map.
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Andrew's father William made a good living off hand-operated looms. What event led to his financial ruin?
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Power linen-looms came to that region of Scotland, undercutting his business.
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After the Carnegie family moved to Pittsburgh in 1848, what did these three enterprises have in common for young Andrew: a bobbin factory, the O'Reilly Telegraph Company, and the Pennsylvania Railroad?
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Working his way up in the world he was employed in all three businesses.
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What is the meaning of the phrase, "doing things railroad fashion"?
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"The railroad became almost universally the standard for efficiency and order." In Andrew Carnegie's case, "Just as he had assembled a mental map of the business establishments of Pittsburgh [as a telegraph boy], Carnegie now had a picture of the Pennsylvania Railroad system. He knew its equipment, workers, and customers; and he knew how changes in one area would affect conditions in another."
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After making a small fortune working in many different businesses, Andrew Carnegie, decided that the way to amass a great fortune and make a significant impact in American industry was to put all "his eggs in one basket." What "basket" did he choose?
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The steel industry
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What was Henry Bessemer's contribution to the steel industry?
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He invented a machine, the "Bessemer Converter," which could transform molten iron into stronger steel quickly and efficiently.
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This Carnegie plant manager was a genius at leadership and invention, but also a beloved boss who could knock off iron-work for a day so that his men could watch a baseball game. He died at his work. Who was he?
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William R. Jones
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What did Minnesota's Mesabi Range have to do with Andrew Carnegie's success?
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Its iron ore fed Carnegies steel works in Pennsylvania. And Carnegie himself owned some of the means of transportation from the Mesabi Range to Pittsburg.
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In the world of Andrew Carnegie, what did the Brooklyn Bridge and the Washington Monument have in common?
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Carnegie steel provided the framework for each.
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In 1901 Andrew Carnegie sold his steel company to J. P. Morgan. How much did Morgan pay Carnegie? What was the name of the new company created by Morgan?
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Morgan paid Carnegie $492 million: that's about $20 billion in today's money. The new company was named "U. S. Steel."
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What is the name of the book, written by Andrew Carnegie in 1886, that reflects his optimism about human progress?
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Triumphant Democracy
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What did John D. Rockefeller, J. P. Morgan, Thomas Edison, and Cornelius Vanderbilt have in common?
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They were "brilliant entrepreneurs" who led the industrial transformation of America during the late nineteenth century.
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What did the British philosopher Herbert Spencer contribute to the industrial revolution in America?
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He pioneered "social Darwinism," a philosophy that applied Charles Darwin's ideas on evolution to the human world. Men like Andrew Carnegie took comfort in Spencer's idea that "the survival of the fittest" (men like Carnegie and Rockefeller) uplifted human society as a whole. In other words, getting rich was a good thing!
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What did William Jones mean when he said "Andy was born with two sets of teeth and holes bored for a third"?
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Andrew Carnegie was a hard-driving, even ruthless, businessman.
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How did Carnegie win the upper hand in competition with the Duquesne Steel Works when that company introduced a new kind of railroad rail in competition with Carnegie's rails?
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Carnegie spread a rumor that the Duquesne rails lacked "homogeneity." The term meant nothing—Carnegie simply invented it. But this false charge dampened interest in the Duquesne rails.
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How did Hamlin Garland describe the working-class neighborhoods around Carnegie's mills?
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"Everywhere the yellow mud of the streets lay kneaded into sticky masses, through which groups of pale, lean men slouched in faded garments, grimy with soot and dirt of the mills."
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What tragic event happened at Andrew Carnegie's Homestead Works?
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In 1892 Carnegie authorized Henry Clay Frick to "break" the union at Homestead, known as "the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers." Frick brought in an army of "Pinkerton" detectives, and in the ensuing battle 14 men were killed and 163 injured. The plant reopened without the union, but the episode left a dark stain on Carnegie's reputation.
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Andrew Carnegie kept a file folder labeled "Gratitude and Sweet Words." What was in the folder?
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Basically, fan mail!
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After he sold his steel company, Andrew Carnegie turned his attention to charitable uses of his money, giving away all but 10 percent of the wealth he had accumulated. What were some examples of his charities?
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He gave money to his workers' pension fund, libraries, church organs, and many other causes. (The picture above is the Carnegie library he gave to Spokane, Washington.)
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Who said, "No idol [is] more debasing than the worship of money."
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Andrew Carnegie
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How does this article sum up Andrew Carnegie's career?
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"The industrial world he made... was neither moral nor immoral in its own right. Great cities, industrial plants, transportation facilities, entertainment industries, and other features of twentieth-century prosperity grew out of the industrial revolution, radically altering the material conditions of American life. Later generations would address the problems that industrialism created, seeking to improve the rewards of labor and to reduce industry's harm to the environment. But in doing so they would modify rather than remove the new world that men like Andrew Carnegie had built."
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