Saturday, November 30, 2019
US Industrial Revolution Essays - Rockefeller Family, Standard Oil
  US Industrial Revolution  The Standard Oil Company founded by John D. Rockefeller and the U.S. Steel    Company founded by Andrew Carnegie. The Standard Oil Company and U.S. Steel    Company were made successful in different ways due to the actions of their  different owners. The companies differed in their labor relations, market  control, and structural organization. In the steel industry, Carnegie developed  a system known as vertical integration. This means that he cut out the middle  man. Carnegie bought his own iron and coal mines because using independent  companies cost too much and were inefficient. By doing this he was able to  undersell his competetors because they had to pay the competitors they went  through to get the raw materials. Unlike Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller  integrated his oil business from top to bottom, his distinctive innovation in  movement of American industry was horizontal. This meant he followed one product  through all its stages. For example, rockrfeller controlled the oil when it was  drilled, through the refining stage, and he maintained control over the refining  process turning it into gasoline. Although these two powerful men used two  different methods of management their businesses were still very successful (Conlin,    425-426). Tycoons like Andrew Carnegie, "the steel king," and John D.    Rockefeller, "the oil baron," exercised their genius in devising ways to  circument competition. Although, Carnegie inclined to be tough-fisted in  business, he was not a monopolist and disliked monopolistic trusts. John D.    Rockefeller came to dominate the oil industry. With one upward stride after  another he organized the Standard Oil Company, which was the nucleus of the  great trust that was formed. Rockefeller showed little mercy. He believed  primitive savagery prevailed in the jungle world of business, where only the  fittest survived. He persued the policy of "ruin or rule." Rockefeller's  oil monopoly did turn out a superior product at a relatively cheap price.    Rockefeller belived in ruthless business, Carnegie didn't, yet they both had  the most successful companies in their industries. (The American Pageant, pages    515-518) Rockefeller treated his customers in the same manner that Andrew    Carnegie treated his workers: cruel and harsh. The Standard Oil Company  desperately wanted every possible company to buy their products. Standard Oil  used ruthless tactics when Rockefeller threatenedto start his own chain of  grocery stores and put local merchants out of business if they did not buy oil  from Standard Oil Company. Carnegie dealt with his workers with the same cold  lack of diplomacy and consideration. Carnegie would encourage an unfriendly  competition between two of his workers and he goaded them into outdoing one  another. Some of his employees found working under Carnegie unbearable. These  rivalries became so important to the employees that somedidn't talk to each  other for years (McCloskkey, page 145). Although both Carnegie and Rockefeller  created extermely successsful companies, they both used unscrupulous methods in  some aspect of their corporation building to get to the top. The success of the    Standard Oil Company and U.S. Steel company was credited to the fact that their  owners ran them with great authority. In this very competetive time period, many  new businesses were being formed and it took talented businessmen to get ahead  and keep the companies running and make the fortunes that were made during this  period.    
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