Andrew Carnegie person
also: Carnegie, Carnegie's, Mr. Andrew Carnegie, the Colonel
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Pennsylvania Railroadorganization · 5Thomas Scottperson · 4American Civil Warevent · 4J.P. Morganperson · 3Pinkerton National Detective Agencyorganization · 3Operation Gladiooperation · 2United Statescountry · 2Homestead Strikeevent · 2Homestead, Pennsylvaniaplace · 2Washington, D.C.place · 2Carnegie Endowment for International Peaceorganization · 1John Jacob Astorperson · 1John D. Rockefellerperson · 1Mark Zuckerbergperson · 1Rockefellerfamily · 1United Kingdomcountry · 1U.S. Steelorganization · 1World War IIevent · 1Chilecountry · 1War Departmentorganization · 1Alfred P. Sloanperson · 1Jacob Schiffperson · 1Pilgrims Societyorganization · 1Standard Oilorganization · 1
Claims (39)
Andrew Carnegie member_of
Freemasons documented
“No, I don't think so. Also got to mention that Andrew Carnegie is a Freemason, member of St. Andrew's Lodge, number 482 in Scotland. I think we're probably going to run into that when we do our several week session on the Freemasons. And I …”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 1:06:29
Andrew Carnegie funded
Institute of Pacific Relations host_asserted
“organization was funded by none other than Carnegie and Rockefeller, which I found in my research already. Small circle. Yeah. Holy crap. This is crazy. And not to mention they had a whole bunch of people in literature, journalism that obvi…”
▶ Operation Gladio meets Secret Societies with WarHamster Bady 2025-05-22 @ 35:42
George Lauder Sr. financed_via
Andrew Carnegie host_asserted
“The family falls on hard times. His dad borrows money from a guy by the name of George Lauder Sr. to move to the United States in 1848. Lauder's son, George Jr., would come to America and would go on and partner with Carnegie in later busin…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 1:48
George Lauder Sr. member_of
Andrew Carnegie host_asserted
“The family falls on hard times. His dad borrows money from a guy by the name of George Lauder Sr. to move to the United States in 1848. Lauder's son, George Jr., would come to America and would go on and partner with Carnegie in later busin…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 1:48
Andrew Carnegie member_of
Anchor Cotton Mills host_asserted
“His father's trying to sell his own weaving products. Not going very well. Dad's not much of a breadwinner. But Andrew's a really bright lad. The two of them both get jobs when he's 12 years old at a place called the Anchor Cotton Mills. Th…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 2:19
Andrew Carnegie member_of
Pennsylvania Railroad host_asserted
“So he's precocious. So in 1853, at the age of 18, he makes it to the big time, gets a job as a telegraph operator for the Pennsylvania Railroad. Anybody play Monopoly? Same Pennsylvania Railroad. There's a reason for that, that they used th…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 4:50
Andrew Carnegie appointed
Tom Carnegie host_asserted
“Whether it be the Rockefellers, to Carnegie, to all of the robber barons. That's why they called them robber barons. And that's how they made their money. All right, getting back into Andrew Carnegie. He's a telegraph operator for the Penns…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 7:46
Thomas Scott trained
Andrew Carnegie host_asserted
“At this point in time, he's making $1,500 a year at the age of 24. That's a lot of money back then. And it's because that guy John Hay really took a liking to him. He learns the railroad business. Okay, the owner of the railroad is a guy by…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 8:20
Andrew Carnegie financed_via
Adams Express Company host_asserted
“His insider relationships allowed him to invest in something called the Adams Express Company. That was interesting because that was a $500 investment that was secured by his mom, mortgaged to a $600 mortgage on a $700 house to get this inv…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 9:24
Andrew Carnegie financed_via
Pullman Company host_asserted
“rail car company. Those were the sleeping class cars for first class travel. It was a new thing in the 1870s and he is an early investor. During the Civil War, his former boss, Thomas Scott of the Pennsylvania Railroad was named the Assista…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 9:54
Andrew Carnegie carried_out_attack
Union Army host_asserted
“rail car company. Those were the sleeping class cars for first class travel. It was a new thing in the 1870s and he is an early investor. During the Civil War, his former boss, Thomas Scott of the Pennsylvania Railroad was named the Assista…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 9:54
Andrew Carnegie financed_via
Columbia Oil Company host_asserted
“Never fought, but he did help with the logistics. And the trains and logistics of the Union and the North was a big part of the reason why the North won that war. You've seen the Civil War films. You always see the Union blue on the railroa…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 10:48
Andrew Carnegie founded
Carnegie Steel host_asserted
“Clothes steelworks, furnaces throughout Pennsylvania. Then he combines all of his assets and those of his associates in 1892 to launch the Carnegie Steel Company, this one big conglomerate. Now here you got the steel and the railroad barons…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 15:10
Andrew Carnegie funded
U.S. Congress host_asserted
“And remember, this is the guy who talks about how charitable he is when he was 38 years old. He also had a huge leg up because of U.S. trade tariffs. He would constantly lobby Congress to continue the trade tariffs. These are what you call …”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 15:39
Andrew Carnegie ordered_assassination_of
Allegheny Labor Union host_asserted
“Carnegie at the time is in Scotland, visiting his homestead, basically donating his first library. I'll talk about his personal life. He's with his wife at the time and finally married, but we'll get to that. So he's in Scotland and Frick i…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 17:30
Andrew Carnegie supported
William Jennings Bryan host_asserted
“That's why he supported. He's been a Republican and supported his whole life. All these Northeast industrialists and robber barons, they are Republicans. They are the ones who financed Lincoln's campaign and benefited from the Union winning…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 27:26
Andrew Carnegie member_of
Republican Party host_asserted
“That's why he supported. He's been a Republican and supported his whole life. All these Northeast industrialists and robber barons, they are Republicans. They are the ones who financed Lincoln's campaign and benefited from the Union winning…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 27:26
Andrew Carnegie member_of
American Anti-Imperialist League host_asserted
“He would join something called the American Anti-Imperialist League, and none of the people who were in that were former presidents Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison and author Mark Twain. So they're really against American expansionis…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 27:54
Andrew Carnegie married
Louise Whitfield documented
“He had been dating in the New York social scene since about 1880, and he met a woman named Louise Whitfield, who he dated more than anyone else. He would finally marry her in 1886, where 51-year-old Andrew Carnegie would marry 29-year-old L…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 29:07
Andrew Carnegie founded
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
“Yet he establishes the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace two years before World War I breaks out. And we've had war ever since. So how successful has he become? Well, and you also have, according to Norman Dodd, documentation that …”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 48:55
Andrew Carnegie founded
Carnegie Institution for Science host_asserted
“Because they had a monopoly on the refining of petroleum. And one of the extracts goes into pharmaceuticals. And those were the Rockefellers. So when the Carnegies get involved in medical schools, you've got to think they've talked. So did …”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 38:44
Andrew Carnegie member_of
Pilgrims Society host_asserted
“Because they had a monopoly on the refining of petroleum. And one of the extracts goes into pharmaceuticals. And those were the Rockefellers. So when the Carnegies get involved in medical schools, you've got to think they've talked. So did …”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 38:44
Andrew Carnegie funded
Carnegie Institute of Technology host_asserted
“Founded over 300 libraries. There's a Carnegie Library in your state, almost guaranteed. In 1900, it gives $2 million for the Carnegie Institute of Technology, which would then go on to become Carnegie Mellon University. Interesting. We're …”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 39:48
Andrew Carnegie funded
Carnegie Trust for Universities of Scotland host_asserted
“Yeah. They've got exchanges in some strange places like some countries in Africa we have discussed. We're not doing the Melons today, but I thought I'd give them a mention. They are another interesting family. Okay. 1901, he gives $10 milli…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 41:24
Andrew Carnegie funded
National Conservatory of Music of America host_asserted
“Yeah. They've got exchanges in some strange places like some countries in Africa we have discussed. We're not doing the Melons today, but I thought I'd give them a mention. They are another interesting family. Okay. 1901, he gives $10 milli…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 41:24
Andrew Carnegie funded
Carnegie Hall host_asserted
“Yeah. They've got exchanges in some strange places like some countries in Africa we have discussed. We're not doing the Melons today, but I thought I'd give them a mention. They are another interesting family. Okay. 1901, he gives $10 milli…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 41:24
Andrew Carnegie funded
Carnegie United Kingdom Trust host_asserted
“Gives $10 million for the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust, which is a big grant-making foundation. And if anybody wants to do the dig on that, look at where that money's gone, I think you'll find it interesting. Now, you remember how the Home…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 42:03
Andrew Carnegie funded
Tuskegee Institute host_asserted
“From Renee, she says JFK Jr.'s wedding was on Cumberland Island. Nice factoid. I did not know that. What else does he do? This guy's got 20-plus years to give away a lot of money. He's a big benefactor to Booker T. Washington. He would help…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 43:10
Andrew Carnegie funded
National Negro Business League host_asserted
“From Renee, she says JFK Jr.'s wedding was on Cumberland Island. Nice factoid. I did not know that. What else does he do? This guy's got 20-plus years to give away a lot of money. He's a big benefactor to Booker T. Washington. He would help…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 43:10
Andrew Carnegie founded
Carnegie Hero Fund host_asserted
“From Renee, she says JFK Jr.'s wedding was on Cumberland Island. Nice factoid. I did not know that. What else does he do? This guy's got 20-plus years to give away a lot of money. He's a big benefactor to Booker T. Washington. He would help…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 43:10
Andrew Carnegie funded
Peace Palace host_asserted
“With a couple of Scandinavian ones thrown in there. This guy really, really is trying to build a reputation, isn't he? Yeah. His legacy. Whatever he thinks the public's going to make him look good, he'll give money to. Gives $1.5 million fo…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 43:49
Andrew Carnegie financed_via
Theodore Roosevelt host_asserted
“What did Teddy Roosevelt do? Quite a bit. Progressive president. It's interesting that Carnegie is the one who financed Roosevelt's famous trip to Africa. And that's the Spanish-American War, the acquisition of Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philip…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 49:26
Andrew Carnegie funded
Bellevue Hospital Medical College host_asserted
“The first one was the Denfrim Line Carnegie Library in Scotland. You have the $50,000 donation to the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. Important. One of the things the Rockefellers were famous and notorious for was they funded a lot of me…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 38:13
Andrew Carnegie funded
Denfrim Line Carnegie Library host_asserted
“The first one was the Denfrim Line Carnegie Library in Scotland. You have the $50,000 donation to the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. Important. One of the things the Rockefellers were famous and notorious for was they funded a lot of me…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 38:13
Andrew Carnegie funded
TIAA-CREF host_asserted
“He established a pension system for college professors, which would then become TIAA-CREF. Ooh, that's interesting. Well, here's where it gets really interesting. He told the schools, he told church-related schools that you have to sever yo…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 42:37
Andrew Carnegie founded
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
“With a couple of Scandinavian ones thrown in there. This guy really, really is trying to build a reputation, isn't he? Yeah. His legacy. Whatever he thinks the public's going to make him look good, he'll give money to. Gives $1.5 million fo…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 43:49
Andrew Carnegie founded
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
“none other than the Carnegie Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. So that's the big bait and switch they did in 1910 and 1913 while their bankers are creating the Federal Reserve and the past 16th and 17th Amendments and basically sto…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 25:08
Andrew Carnegie member_of
Pilgrims Society host_asserted
“And then, of course, it goes without saying, Bill and Melinda Gates, that was founded in 2000. We're very familiar with that. Carnegie Corporation, let's see, Carnegie Institute for Science. So Carnegie Corporation was part of, Andrew Carne…”
▶ Operation Gladio loose ends @ 18:05
Sullivan & Cromwell funded
Andrew Carnegie host_asserted
“You mean back in the Carnegie days? Yeah. You know the law firm that set that up? Sullivan and Cromwell. Absolutely. Same ones that set up the first modern day U.S. corporation, which was U.S. Steel. Yes. So it's all fake. The entire thing'…”
▶ Operation Gladio - Indonesia Part 2 @ 2:02:41
Mentions (35)
▶ 2:02:41
You mean back in the Carnegie days? Yeah. You know the law firm that set that up? Sullivan and Cromwell. Absolutely. Same ones that set up the first modern day U.S. corporation, which was U.S. Steel. Yes. So it's all fake. The entire thing'…
▶ 18:05
And then, of course, it goes without saying, Bill and Melinda Gates, that was founded in 2000. We're very familiar with that. Carnegie Corporation, let's see, Carnegie Institute for Science. So Carnegie Corporation was part of, Andrew Carne…
▶ 1:19:13
owned a bank, owned an insurance company, and owned a trust. The trust represented whatever business they were in, whether it was Standard Oil or steel for Carnegie or aluminum for the Kaisers, whatever it was. So that's how they monopolize…
▶ 17:22
and did really well at a young age. The guy only died in his early 60s, so he made a ton of money. But he basically got together a consortium. The first guy he was working with, his financier was Jacob Schiff. Jacob Schiff, of course, was a…
▶ 35:42
organization was funded by none other than Carnegie and Rockefeller, which I found in my research already. Small circle. Yeah. Holy crap. This is crazy. And not to mention they had a whole bunch of people in literature, journalism that obvi…
▶ 1:14:25
A guy by the name of James McParlin infiltrates the Irish coal miners and basically exposes them to such a degree that the organization just kind of disappears. So that was espionage. Then we had the Homestead Strike, which you and I talked…
▶ 1:14:58
The Pinkerton detectives were sent in to basically close, lock out the union. There's violence, a bunch of people killed, shots are fired. The Pinkerton agents end up coming across on a ferry and they're outnumbered. Long story short, 16 pe…
▶ 1:15:57
was, if not the strongest, one of the strongest unions in the United States. So they decide because they were being paid pennies a day, which is the exact same scenario we get down in Chile when they overthrew Salvador Allende for the coppe…
▶ 0:00
I'm preaching Gladio meets Secret Societies with Warhamster Brady. How are you today? I'm doing well. Looking forward to it as always. This is going to be a little different, but the same. Yeah, it's a good way of putting it. You know, we'r…
▶ 0:47
Bear with us because we're going to loop it back into Secret Society's Skull and Bones and Operation Gladio when we get to the end. But the story of Andrew Carnegie is worth telling on its own because it kind of connects some themes we've b…
▶ 1:16
the world in ways never intended. So we're going to touch on that a little bit today. That's one of the major themes we're going to be getting here. But let us start with Mr. Andrew Carnegie. He is born in 1835 in a place called Dunfermline…
▶ 1:48
The family falls on hard times. His dad borrows money from a guy by the name of George Lauder Sr. to move to the United States in 1848. Lauder's son, George Jr., would come to America and would go on and partner with Carnegie in later busin…
▶ 2:19
His father's trying to sell his own weaving products. Not going very well. Dad's not much of a breadwinner. But Andrew's a really bright lad. The two of them both get jobs when he's 12 years old at a place called the Anchor Cotton Mills. Th…
▶ 2:51
Andrew Carnegie works as what's called a bobbin boy, and he's working six days a week, 12 hours a day, and he's making $1.20 a week. His dad quits and ends up kind of riding off to the sunset. Wasn't much of a family man after that. Andrew …
▶ 3:20
In 1849, he becomes a telegraph messenger boy at $2.50 a week. Now, what's funny about when you talk about Andrew Carnegie, the history of him, is what you're going to see is Andrew Carnegie never had a son. And he cares an awful lot about …
▶ 3:52
Okay. All about philanthropy. And his actions may not match that. So I'll let you guys decide when we get to the end here, what kind of guy he really was. But a lot of the stories you hear about him are really papered over. Fair enough? Yes…
▶ 4:21
And he spent a lot of his resources working on that image. Yeah. Okay, so he's a really sharp kid. He learns how to decode telegraphs just from listening it by ear. He memorized it as he's running around Pittsburgh. He knew all the business…
▶ 4:50
So he's precocious. So in 1853, at the age of 18, he makes it to the big time, gets a job as a telegraph operator for the Pennsylvania Railroad. Anybody play Monopoly? Same Pennsylvania Railroad. There's a reason for that, that they used th…
▶ 5:21
Carnegie's, the place he worked, was Pennsylvania Railroad. So this all ties to Monopoly. And the telegraph back in the day was the way you spy on everything. Yeah. And, you know, that's also another thing. These families, these cartels tha…
▶ 7:46
Whether it be the Rockefellers, to Carnegie, to all of the robber barons. That's why they called them robber barons. And that's how they made their money. All right, getting back into Andrew Carnegie. He's a telegraph operator for the Penns…
▶ 8:20
At this point in time, he's making $1,500 a year at the age of 24. That's a lot of money back then. And it's because that guy John Hay really took a liking to him. He learns the railroad business. Okay, the owner of the railroad is a guy by…
▶ 8:51
You'd make an introduction and you could get in on deals early. A lot of those investments were pretty scandalous. They had inside information. They were doing insider trading using quid pro quo contracting scandals. Same stuff's going on t…
▶ 9:24
His insider relationships allowed him to invest in something called the Adams Express Company. That was interesting because that was a $500 investment that was secured by his mom, mortgaged to a $600 mortgage on a $700 house to get this inv…
▶ 9:54
rail car company. Those were the sleeping class cars for first class travel. It was a new thing in the 1870s and he is an early investor. During the Civil War, his former boss, Thomas Scott of the Pennsylvania Railroad was named the Assista…
▶ 10:24
and rode the first train carrying the troops into D.C. Kind of a big deal. And it's funny because Carnegie's only 5'3", but he carried a really big persona. So him riding at the front of this train in front of all these soldiers, it's a com…
▶ 10:48
Never fought, but he did help with the logistics. And the trains and logistics of the Union and the North was a big part of the reason why the North won that war. You've seen the Civil War films. You always see the Union blue on the railroa…
▶ 11:18
Then he, at the time, iron and steel demand is just rising like you wouldn't believe. Civil War is over. America is booming. There's demand for steel. They're building railroads everywhere. Carnegie gets involved with a huge iron and steel …
▶ 11:49
That's why he became the godfather of American steel. He used the connections of Thomas Scott and one of Scott's partners, J. Edgar Thompson. He would name a steel plant after Thompson. He used their connections to acquire contracts for thi…
▶ 12:21
What else does he do? He gave Scott shares in his company and Pennsylvania Railroad became his best customer. So it's interesting how that works. A little self-dealing by Scott. Is this sounding familiar? Yeah, a lot. So he's famous for, yo…
▶ 12:57
And the direct quote from his letter to himself was, I propose to take an income no greater than $50,000 per annum. Beyond this, I need never earn or make no effort to increase my fortune, but spend the surplus each year for benevolent purp…
▶ 13:28
No. In fact, he would not really get into philosophy for another 35, 40 years. And there's a reason for that. And you'll see the people that, you know, some of his heirs, when you see them interviewed, tell the story of Andrew Carnegie, the…
▶ 14:04
He says, I'm tired of trading paper. I want to build real things. That's when he really, really takes off in the steel industry. So it's like 1875 to 1900, he built his empire. All kinds of innovations from mass production, which is the Bes…
▶ 14:33
both horizontal and vertical integration he was doing. He owned every aspect of the production. By the 1880s, he's the largest manufacturer of pig iron, steel, and coke in the world. See a couple of benchmarks. 1889, U.S. steel output surpa…
▶ 1:55:29
Well, there were several on there that fit that, three of them that fit that criteria. Yeah, I don't remember. I just remember. Carnegie and Guggenheim. I thought Astor was one, too. Yes, Astor as well. Yeah, those were the three. Yeah, tha…
▶ 15:14
Both Hague conferences had come about largely because of acute need on the part of the declining European monarchies to restrict the contemporary arms race because it had already began to bankrupt them. Notably, Andrew Carnegie was part of …