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FREE ESSAY ON VANDERBILT, CORNELIUS

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The "Robber Barons"
This paper discusses the "Robber Barons": Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and Henry Ford. -- 1,650 words; MLA

Healthcare Governance Interview
A review of two interviews with directors of the Vanderbilt Medical Center. -- 1,250 words; APA

Healthcare Governance Interviews
A discussion of interviews with the Director of Record Services and the Director of Medicare/Medicaid Billing at the Vanderbilt Medical Center. -- 1,010 words; APA

The Gilded Age
Examines the gap between the rich and the poor in America during the Gilded Age. -- 916 words; APA

Christian Ethics in Business
Examines how Christian ideas on morality and ethics affect business in the United States. -- 1,403 words; MLA

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VANDERBILT, CORNELIUS

Cornelius Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt was born to a poor family and quit school at the age of 11 to work for his
Father who was a boater. When he turned 16 he persuaded his mother to give him a $100
dollar loan for a boat to start his business. He opened a transport and freight service
Between New York and Staten Island for eighteen cents a trip. He repaid the loan with an

$1,000 dollars. Vanderbilt later received a government contract to supply the forts
around 
New York. Large profits allowed him to build a schooner and two other vessels for trade.
Vanderbilt got his name from being the "commander" of the biggest vessel. By 1817 he 
possessed $9,000 dollars. Vanderbilt then sold his interests and turned his attention to

steamboats in 1818. He operated a ferry between New Brunswick, New Jersey, and New 
York City. He charged his customers a dollar while others charged four for the same
trip.
After a court decision Vanderbilt received most of the shipping business along the 
Hudson River. In 1829 Vanderbilt went out on his own and entered the competitive
service between New York and Peekskill. He cut rates so low the competition paid him
to move elsewhere. He then opened service to Long Island Sound, Providence, Boston,
and points in Connecticut. He offered the passengers not only comfort but often luxury.
By the 1840's Vanderbilt was running more than 100 steamboats and his company had 
more employees than any other company in the United States. By the time he was forty 
His wealth was more than $500,000.During the gold rush of 1849 the basic route was by 
Boat to Panama, by land across the isthmus, and by steamship to the Pacific Coast. He 
offered a route overland, across Nigeria that saved travelers 600 miles and cut the price

almost in half. By doing this he made over 1 million dollars a year. One of the few
things 
that Vanderbilt Bought was his mansion on Staten Island. At the age of 70, during the
Civil War Vanderbilt gained control of the New York railroad that connected New York 
and Chicago. He founded Vanderbilt University in Nashville Tennessee, and gave 
$50,000 to the Church of Strangers. Upon His death he was the richest man in The United 
States. He left his fortune of 95 million dollars to his son William Vanderbilt.
Vanderbilt is remembered for his remark," the public be damned," when asked by a 
reporter whether railroads should be run for the public benefit.

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