Man of steel -- and silence
Carnegie felt himself to be 'trustee' of his wealth
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Reviewed by Elizabeth Corcoran
Sunday, October 22, 2006
Andrew Carnegie
By David Nasaw
THE PENGUIN PRESS; 878 Pages; $35
At a time when you can learn almost anything with a few hops around the Internet, our expectations of biographers have grown steeply. They must have exquisite (and of course accurate) details. And they must have sweep and scope, offering us more perspective than even the subject of the biography could ever have done.
In "Andrew Carnegie," historian David Nasaw provides more than 800 pages of marvelous detail about Carnegie's cinematic, rags-to-riches story. Carnegie was a Scottish immigrant who became America's largest steelmaker, an insatiable industrialist who became a leading philanthropist. Nasaw's research is extraordinary, drawing on everything from family letters to private business memos. Nasaw falls short, however, by packing these details into a disappointingly bland analytical framework.
Nasaw concedes right away that he isn't sure what to make of his subject. "I find him one of the most fascinating men I have encountered," Nasaw avers in his introduction. But it's a story with muted colors: Carnegie is neither as heroic nor as villainous as he has often been portrayed.
Instead, Nasaw plays it down the middle. We learn that Carnegie was born in 1835 to a poor linen-weaving family in Scotland. Industrial looms put Carnegie's father out of work. His mother, Margaret, or "Mag," shepherded the family to Allegheny City, Pa., where she had relatives. She would become her oldest son's heroine and constant companion, until her death in 1886.
By age 17, Carnegie had joined the Pennsylvania Railroad as chief assistant (and telegraph operator) for an up-and-coming manager named Tom Scott.
Railroads were hot. It was a giddy time to be in a growth business. There were few of today's checks and balances on aggressive business practices: government regulations, labor unions and litigation, and so on. Carnegie's boss, Scott, helped him make his first investment at age 20.
It was probably a sweetheart deal: Adams Express had just won an exclusive contract to use the Pennsylvania Railroad to ferry packages between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. Nasaw suggests the shares were a quid pro quo for the contract. Carnegie got his nugget because, as the telegraph operator, he would have known all the details of the deal.
Thrilled by investing, Carnegie looked for more opportunities. As he liked to tell the story, he spotted one when he met a man who had designed a novel sleeping berth for railways. Carnegie claimed he showed the design to Scott, who invested in the inventor's company, and that he, Carnegie, scraped together enough funds to invest, too. The happy story ends with the inventor's success -- and appropriate winnings going to the savvy investors, starting with Carnegie.
But that account is just smoke and myth, Nasaw contends. Carnegie got a toehold in the deal between the berthmaker and the railroad because his bosses were arranging for kickbacks and he was, once again, in the know. "Capitalizing on insider information to invest in companies that were about to be enriched by lucrative contracts was standard operating procedure for railroad executives," Nasaw writes.
Nasaw steadily chronicles how the charming, tiny Carnegie (he stood not quite 5 feet tall) rose through making smart investments, selling bonds, knowing when to get in and out of deals and negotiating fiercely. What will truly awe readers in our Blackberry and e-mail-centric world, however, are the number of holidays Carnegie managed to take while building up his fortune.
As he was leaving for a year of travel in October 1878, Carnegie described his leaving this way: " 'Bang! Click! The desk closes, the key turns and goodbye for a year to my wards,' " meaning companies, which then included Union Iron Mills, Lucy Furnaces, Keystone Bridge Works, Union Forge, Cokevale Works and the Edgar Thomson Steel Rail Works. "I'm off for a holiday, and the rise and fall of iron and steel 'affecteth me not.' " Despite this cavalier attitude, Carnegie became perhaps the world's richest man when he sold his company to J. Pierpont Morgan for $400 million in 1901.
Carnegie's philanthropic streak ran deep and true, Nasaw reports. Carnegie outlined his intention to give away most of his fortune when he married at age 52 in 1887, years before clashes with unions and his retirement. In 1889, he wrote his influential "Gospel of Wealth," a primer on why some people had so much money and how to give it away. Carnegie had no love of religion but instead was strongly influenced by the English philosopher Herbert Spencer. Core to Carnegie's beliefs was an idea that Bill and Melinda Gates continue to espouse: that the wealthy are "merely 'trustees' for their communities, with no individual right" to their fortunes.
Nasaw's decision to keep his narrative firmly glued to Carnegie's schedule leaves some holes, however. "What was remarkable about the library and organ [donation] programs was how little time or energy Carnegie invested in them," Nasaw writes. So the biography spends little time exploring the effect these kinds of works had and significantly more time on the conflicts Carnegie navigated with labor unions at his steel plants and on Carnegie's self-appointed campaign to halt American imperialism.
Carnegie lived with gusto through 1914, when he suddenly retreated into silence. "We cannot diagnose Carnegie's condition," Nasaw writes. He speculates that the world war depressed Carnegie, who died in 1919. Carnegie changed his world in profound ways. Nasaw's account tells us how -- and leaves the implications of those changes for another account.
Elizabeth Corcoran is a contributing editor for Forbes magazine.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/10/22/RVGIHLOC6K1.DTL
©2006 San Francisco Chronicle
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