Carnegie Steel organization
also: Carnegie Steel, the Carnegie company
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
United Statescountry · 2Henry Clay Frickperson · 2J.P. Morganperson · 1Bolsheviksorganization · 1U.S. Steelorganization · 1Andrew Carnegieperson · 1Pittsburghplace · 1Pinkerton National Detective Agencyorganization · 1Charles M. Schwabperson · 1Homestead Strikeevent · 1James McParlinperson · 1Molly Maguiresorganization · 1Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workersorganization · 1Soviet Unioncountry · 1Homestead, Pennsylvaniaplace · 1Ford Motor Companyorganization · 1
Claims (6)
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
Henry Clay Frick financed_via
Carnegie Steel host_asserted
“Some of the workers are breaking ranks to get their jobs back. And, well, what happens is basically they end up getting a new labor deal with much cheaper labor costs. So it's all worth it for the Carnegie Steel Company. And they're able to…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 20:16
J.P. Morgan financed_via
Carnegie Steel host_asserted
“That's what he thinks it is to be a noble man. So his former partner, Henry Clay Frick, gets together with Charles Schwab and J.P. Morgan to purchase the entire Carnegie company. This would become U.S. Steel, the first modern U.S. corporati…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 22:59
Charles M. Schwab financed_via
Carnegie Steel host_asserted
“That's what he thinks it is to be a noble man. So his former partner, Henry Clay Frick, gets together with Charles Schwab and J.P. Morgan to purchase the entire Carnegie company. This would become U.S. Steel, the first modern U.S. corporati…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 22:59
Henry Clay Frick financed_via
Carnegie Steel host_asserted
“That's what he thinks it is to be a noble man. So his former partner, Henry Clay Frick, gets together with Charles Schwab and J.P. Morgan to purchase the entire Carnegie company. This would become U.S. Steel, the first modern U.S. corporati…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 22:59
Carnegie Steel succeeded
U.S. Steel host_asserted
“That's what he thinks it is to be a noble man. So his former partner, Henry Clay Frick, gets together with Charles Schwab and J.P. Morgan to purchase the entire Carnegie company. This would become U.S. Steel, the first modern U.S. corporati…”
▶ Shadow State 47_ Secret Societies 30; The Carnegie Legacy @ 22:59
Mentions (6)
▶ 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…
▶ 1:15:28
Carnegie Steel Company in Pittsburgh, their job basically was railroad. And they're the ones that built most of the rails for the railroad. They were mandating everyone work 12 hours a day. And there was a union, Amalgamated Association of …
▶ 15:10
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…
▶ 20:16
Some of the workers are breaking ranks to get their jobs back. And, well, what happens is basically they end up getting a new labor deal with much cheaper labor costs. So it's all worth it for the Carnegie Steel Company. And they're able to…
▶ 22:59
That's what he thinks it is to be a noble man. So his former partner, Henry Clay Frick, gets together with Charles Schwab and J.P. Morgan to purchase the entire Carnegie company. This would become U.S. Steel, the first modern U.S. corporati…
▶ 1:24:07
crazy-ass thing in our history. These are the same people that owned all of the press way back then. They all owned the same banks. And by the way, if you go and you look at the use of these companies like GE, Ford, Carnegie Steel, all of t…