History of the Great American Fortunes, Volumen1C.H. Kerr, 1910 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 89
Página 8
... importance and acquiring even greate significance by the inclusion of data hitherto unrevealed . John Chamberlain has said of Mr. Myers ' book that it is " a classic , masterpiece of digging in archives . " The Modern Library edition ...
... importance and acquiring even greate significance by the inclusion of data hitherto unrevealed . John Chamberlain has said of Mr. Myers ' book that it is " a classic , masterpiece of digging in archives . " The Modern Library edition ...
Página 26
... important consideration is to determine why they exist , and how such an absurd contrast can be abolished . In taking up a series of types of great fortunes , as I have done in this work , my object has not been the current one of ...
... important consideration is to determine why they exist , and how such an absurd contrast can be abolished . In taking up a series of types of great fortunes , as I have done in this work , my object has not been the current one of ...
Página 35
... important men , they were mighty in the money marts but were made use of , and looked down upon , by the old Dutch aristocracy . Having amassed fortunes , these merchants yearned to be the founders of great estates ; to live as virtual ...
... important men , they were mighty in the money marts but were made use of , and looked down upon , by the old Dutch aristocracy . Having amassed fortunes , these merchants yearned to be the founders of great estates ; to live as virtual ...
Página 40
... important staples , the worker was likewise denied the soil except as a laborer or tenant , and in Massachusetts colony , where fortunes were being made from timber , furs and fisheries , the poor man had practically no chance against ...
... important staples , the worker was likewise denied the soil except as a laborer or tenant , and in Massachusetts colony , where fortunes were being made from timber , furs and fisheries , the poor man had practically no chance against ...
Página 44
... importance by a grant from Fletcher of a tract sixteen miles in length in Dutchess County , and also of another estate running twenty miles along the Hudson and eight miles inland . This estate he valued at £ 5,000.10 Likewise Peter ...
... importance by a grant from Fletcher of a tract sixteen miles in length in Dutchess County , and also of another estate running twenty miles along the Hudson and eight miles inland . This estate he valued at £ 5,000.10 Likewise Peter ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acres American American Fur Company amount Bank bankers became bonds bribed bribery brought capital capitalists cent Chapter charged claim coal Commission committee Congress corporations corruption defrauded directors Erie Railroad fact factory force fortune franchise fraud fraudulent funds Goelet Gould Government House hundred immense Indians industrial interests investigation J. P. Morgan John Jacob Astor labor land grant large number legislative Legislature magnates ment merchants methods millions of dollars Morgan multimillionaires Northern Pacific Railroad officials owners ownership Pacific Railroad paid passed plunder political possession profits propertied classes public lands Pullman Company Railroad Company Railway real estate rich Sage secured Session shares ships sold steamship stockholders street Supreme Court swindling timber tion trade transaction Trust Union Pacific Railroad United States Senate Vanderbilt Vanderbilt family vast wages wealth William workers York Central York Central Railroad York City
Pasajes populares
Página 201 - SECTION 1. The congress shall have power to limit, regulate, and prohibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age. "SECTION 2. The power of the several states is unimpaired by this article except that the operation of state laws shall be suspended to the extent necessary to give effect to legislation enacted by the congress.
Página 78 - I enjoin and require that no ecclesiastic, missionary, or minister of any sect whatsoever, shall ever hold or exercise any station or duty whatever in the said College; nor shall any such person ever be admitted for any purpose, or as a visitor, within the premises appropriated to the purposes of the said College.
Página 343 - They have power, more power — that is, more opportunity of making their personal will prevail — than perhaps any one in political life, except the President and the Speaker, who after all hold theirs only for four years and two years, while the railroad monarch may keep his for life.
Página 130 - That hereditary transmission of wealth, on the one hand, and poverty on the other, has brought down to the present generation all the evils of the feudal system — -and that this, in our opinion, is the prime source of all our calamities.
Página 171 - The ostensible purpose of the shaft is to provide light and air to the five rooms on each side of the house which get no direct light and air from the street or yard; but as the shafts are narrow and high, being...
Página 127 - Communication of the Rector, Church Wardens and Vestrymen of Trinity Church in the city of New York in reply to a resolution of the House, passed March 4, 1854"; Document No.
Página 343 - These railway kings are among the greatest men, perhaps I may say are the greatest men, in America. They have wealth, else they could not hold the position. They have fame, for every one has heard of their achievements; every newspaper chronicles their movements. They have power, more power — that is, more opportunity of making their personal will prevail — than...
Página 250 - We realize that, while we have political independence, our financial and industrial independence is yet to be attained, by restoring to our country the Constitutional control and exercise of the functions necessary to a people's government, which functions have been basely surrendered by our public servants to corporate monopolies. The influence of European money changers has been more potent in shaping legislation than the voice of the American people.
Página 633 - The New Haven system has more than 300 subsidiary corporations, in a web of entangling alliances with each other, many of which were seemingly planned, created, and manipulated by lawyers expressly retained for the purpose of concealment or deception.
Página 230 - Sparks, dramatically brought the issue to the front by revealing with overwhelming evidence that "the public domain was being made the prey of unscrupulous speculation and the worst forms of land monopoly through systematic frauds carried on and consummated under the public land laws.