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Author Skrabec, Quentin R., author

Title Benevolent barons : American worker-centered industrialists, 1850-1910 / Quentin R. Skrabec, Jr
Published Jefferson, North Carolina : McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, [2015]
©2015

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Cover -- Acknowledgments -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- One. The Puritan Experiment -- Two. Genesis of an Industrial Race -- Three. European Industrialization, Master Entrepreneurs, and Worker Utopias -- Four. Lowell and Rockdale -- Five. Crisis in American Labor: Class, Skilled, and Unskilled Laborers -- Six. Early Paternal and Employee-Driven Capitalists -- Seven. Robber Barons and the Questioning of Capitalism -- Eight. New Breed of Paternal Capitalists -- Nine. American Patriarchal or Philanthropic Capitalism -- Ten. The Failure of Pullman City -- Eleven. The Greatest Paternalist of Them All -- Twelve. Westinghouse's Paternalism -- Thirteen. Trusts and Corruption -- Fourteen. Wilmerding, America's New Lanark -- Fifteen. Capitalism with a Heart-Westinghouse's Vision -- Sixteen. A Government Policy for Philanthropy and Paternalism -- Seventeen. Corporate Paternalism -- Eighteen. Unions, Industrial Democracy and the New Deal -- Nineteen. Visions Come True -- Twenty. And the Wolf Finally Came-Deindustrialization and Globalization -- Chapter Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary American business has always had deep roots in community. For over a century, the country looked to philanthropic industrialists to finance hospitals, parks, libraries, civic programs, community welfare and disaster aid. Worker-centered capitalists saw the workplace as an extension of the community and poured millions into schools, job training and adult education. Often criticized as welfare capitalism, this system was unique in the world. Lesser known capitalists like Peter Cooper and George Westinghouse led the movement in the mid-1800s. Westinghouse, in particular, focused on good wages and benefits. Robber barons like George Pullman and Andrew Carnegie would later succeed in corrupting the higher benefits of worker-centered capitalism. This is the story of those accomplished Americans who sought to balance the accumulation of wealth with communal responsibility
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Industrialists -- United States -- Case studies
Capitalists and financiers -- United States -- Case studies
Capitalism -- United States -- History
Industrial relations -- United States -- History
Labor -- United States -- History
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Industries / General
Capitalism
Capitalists and financiers
Economic history
Industrial relations
Industrialists
Labor
Unternehmer
Investor
Kapitalismus
Arbeitsbeziehungen
SUBJECT United States -- Economic conditions. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140020
Subject United States
USA
Genre/Form dissertations.
Case studies
History
Academic theses.
Thèses et écrits académiques.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781476620299
1476620296