Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie

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Andrew Carnegie 1920
English
  • Parents and Childhood
  • Dunfermline and America
  • Pittsburgh and Work
  • Colonel Anderson and Books
  • The Telegraph Office
  • Railroad Service
  • Superintendent of the Pennsylvania
  • Civil War Period
  • Bridge-Building
  • The Iron Works
  • New York as Headquarters
  • Business Negotiations
  • The Age of Steel
  • Partners, Books, and Travel
  • Coaching Trip and Marriage
  • Mills and the Men
  • The Homestead Strike
  • Problems of Labor
  • The "Gospel of Wealth"
  • Educational and Pension Funds
  • The Peace Palace and Pittencrieff
  • Matthew Arnold and Others
  • British Political Leaders
  • Gladstone and Morley
  • Herbert Spencer and His Disciple
  • Blaine and Harrison
  • Washington Diplomacy
  • Hay and McKinley
  • Meeting the German Emperor
This autobiography of Andrew Carnegie is a very well written and interesting history of one of the most wealthy men in the United states. He was born in Scotland in 1835 and emigrated to America in 1848. Among his many accomplishments and philanthropic works, he was an author, having written, besides this autobiography, Triumphant Democracy (1886; rev. ed. 1893), The Gospel of Wealth, a collection of essays (1900), The Empire of Business (1902), and Problems of To-day (1908)]. Although this autobiography was written in 1919, it was published posthumously in 1920. (Summary by William Tomcho)

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