Carnegie quote does not fall in line with the way he ran his factory or used his money to help people. Before he became successful with steal, Carnegie sold defective rifles to his own army, showing that he would do anything to make a profit for himself. Death and injuries became a weekly occurrence in Carnegie’s factory but it didn’t bother him or his partner, Frick. The workers in the factories were being paid small amounts to work in terrible conditions but Carnegie had millions of dollars he could use to create a better working atmosphere.…
The Gospel of Wealth has become a way of life and the fundamental screen of society. The Gospel of Wealth has given a way for businessmen to help the less fortunate. Through ways such as building libraries and through “maximum prosperity” (Document I). Andrew Carnegie was also known as a “robber baron”. He founded the Carnegie Steel Company These things helped increase pay for workers and a way to be educated in order to grow and become successful.…
Andrew Carnegie, an immigrant to the USA, was a man who made a huge amount of money and felt rich had an obligation to help develop the nation that allowed him to get rich. He helped donated hundreds of libraries and other public works. He gave away 90 percent of his entire fortune which in today’s terms added up to about 4.75 billion dollars. That’s a lot right? Because he did this, many people lived life easier with the new editions in there towns.…
Andrew Carnegie before dying in, his contributions to society and to the world still live on today through his hard work and many sacrifices, but throughout Andrew`s life he loved to read so it made even more sense to establish more than 2,000 public libraries. Another contribution he gave in philanthropy was the establishment of he Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and funded the building of The Hague Palace of Peace, which houses the World Court, in the Netherlands. But not only did he revolutionize modern steel making and earn himself quite an achievement but gave away almost 90% of his fortune, but did it with the piece of mind that the next generation after him shall have something to live with and learn from. Andrew Carnegie…
Reading about Andrew Carnegie I got to learn more about the Gilded Age as well as the American Society during the time. Coming from a small house in Scotland to making 23 million dollars a year, Carnegie made the American dream a reality. Growing the steel industry to being bigger than any other company, Carnegie provided jobs and built foundations off his industry. Doing this Carnegie believed in Social Darwinism and felt that the working class was meant to stay poor. Underpaying his workers and favoring against Labor Unions didn't make him popular to the Lower Classes causing riots and strikes in the industry.…
Everyone wants to be successful. The “American dream” is to become filthy rich. In the 1800’s it was much more difficult to become a millionaire. However, a select few conquered this achievement. Andrew Carnegie was one of these select few.…
The wealth of these men and women would not have been able to be accomplished without the help of the average men and women being their workers and helping their businesses strive. Carnegie became a financer of libraries. Even though, he wasn’t able to obtain the best schooling, whenever he had the chance to expand his knowledge he did so. His family was big on books and keeping his brain fed by education. It’s been said that more than 2,800 libraries were opened with the help of Andrew.…
The Gilded Age was known as being a progressive age of expanding economic opportunities for businessman along with being an era of social conflict for farmers and other workers. This age can also be known as, "The best times and the worst times" As Andrew Carnegie stated, "The problem of our age is the proper administration of wealth, so that the ties of brotherhood may still bind together the rich and the poor in harmonious relationship" This goes along with the quote stated in the question, he strongly believed that those who were wealthy were entitled to determine how they would administrate the money they earned and that money should not be inherited, but rather thrown into the sea then to help those who were not willing to help themselves.…
According to Carnegie, wealth can be distributed in three ways, first passing it down to the following family generation. Carnegie’s opinion on leaving money to the family was not a wise choice not just because the family may not be deserving of the money or it being a sense…
Carnegie believed that rich people should use their money to help the poor. But he did not think that they should just give the money away because the poor would not use it in the best ways. Therefore, the rich man should be paternalistic.…
Andrew Carnegie was known for “destroying the unions”, which made the name robber baron for himself (Hewitt, Lawson). Although he was destroying the unions, he also gave back as well, which caused more of a dispute because people were concerned with why he destroyed something, then wanted to give back so much. People in this time period should have accepted and welcomed the wealth in hands of few because as we discussed previously he earned the money himself, and even though he was one of the wealthiest of this time period and had a notorious name for himself, he also excelled in philanthropy. Carnegie makes a valid point in his Gospel of Wealth where he states, “Those with great wealth must be socially responsible and use their assets to help others” (Gospel of Wealth). The people of this time period should have accepted the wealth in his hands because years later he gave his money back in huge bulks, to educational matters to share with the country, which states that they should have accepted the wealth in few hands because he ends up giving his wealth back in the long run (Hewitt, Lawson).…
Andrew Carnegie believed that it was the duty of the wealthy to help the poor. His idea of help came in the form of opportunities “to help those who will help themselves.” The wealthy would provide opportunities, not direct aid, to the poor; these opportunities could take the forms of “free libraries, parks, and means of recreation by which men are helped in body and mind; works of art, certain to give pleasure and improve the general condition of the people.” However, these opportunities did not really help the poor.…
Ch17. The Rise of Industrial America, 1865-1900 ~ By 1900, U.S. leading industrial power by a combination of factors : * Natural Resources (coal, iron ore, copper, lead..) * Labor Supplies (immigrants)…
Andrew Carnegie shouldn’t be considered a hero because his selfish, ambitious, and extreme competitive attitudes had made a negative impact on others. A hero is someone who helps people who is in need of help and someone who gives to the poor and doesn’t spend money on unnecessary things that aren’t important. A hero is also somebody who has good leadership. Carnegie had a steelmaking company, In Carnegie’s time in the northeast of about the 1900s. Carnegie’s selfish attitude shows that he had a negative impact on some people.…
The Income and Wealth Inequality of America As a capitalist nation, the United State of America is facing a serious problem, which is the inequality of wealth and income. In pace with the growth of the economy, the rich people are getting richer and the poor people are getting poorer. The gap between the rich and poor is widening unprecedentedly fast. Why is that happening?…