Industrial Leaders In The Gilded Age

581 Words2 Pages

The Gilded Age of the Industrial Revolution was an era of creation and expansion. Strong businessmen took this period of opportunity to capitalize on the nation’s desire to grow; Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and J.P. Morgan were three such men. The three of them were fabulously wealthy and successful, but their reputation with the masses varied. In the Gilded Age, the title “Captain of Industry” was given to one who used their own wealth and influence to positively impact their society. Their opposites, “robber barons”, were industrialists who amassed their wealth through unethical methods. Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Morgan are three men that prove that industrial leaders could not be perfectly classified under only one of these titles. Andrew Carnegie was many things; a steel tycoon, a philanthropist, and to some was considered a robber baron. He earned his massive fortune by creating the Carnegie Steel Corporation, a business that by 1889 was the largest of it’s kind in the world. In 1901 he sold this company for around $200 million and retired. He strongly believed that his wealth should be donated, and he spent his later years …show more content…

By founding his Standard Oil Company, he became the richest American of all time and one of the country’s first business tycoons. He was self made and not born wealthy, he used his financial success to donate over $500 million to philanthropic causes. Among his achievements, he funded the Rockefeller Sanitation Commission, the University of Chicago, and the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. His charity and generosity might give him the label of Captain of Industry. However, his control over the oil industry was tight and monopolistic. He was often accused of unfair business and was censured by reformers and journalists. His philanthropic achievements in contrast to his industrial practices keep us from classifying Rockefeller as a baron or

Open Document