John Jacob Astor was the best-known and most important American businessman for more than a half-century. His career encompassed the country's formative economic years from the precarious days following the American Revolution to the emergence of an urban-centered manufacturing economy in the late 1840s. Change was the dominant motif of the period, and Astor either exemplified the varied economic, social, and political changes in his business career or he directly affected the course of events. In this biography of John Jacob Astor, John Denis Haeger uses Astor's life and his career as a merchant, fur trader, and land speculator as vehicles for examining several important themes and issues in American economic and urban development between ...
The main purpose of this study is to explain how and why William Henry Ferguson (1856-1937) became o...
My chapter in 'Fashion and Modernity' uses unpublished archival material to examine the business act...
"A single pagination runs through both volumes. Twenty-four chapters are needed to cover Mr. Astor's...
"The book was obviously not written to attract historians, but to entertain a larger public. The new...
Business history also attests to the legacy thatimmigrants left on American affairs. Althoughmany of...
"John Jacob Astor, the founder of the family, was truly a pioneer and a patriot… [He] was not only a...
The critical interest in Henry James and his relationship with the "Gilded Age," or the "golden age ...
James Ronda blends new documentation with older sources to provide an ample study of New York busine...
This study examines a frontier businessman and the evolution of his business enterprises in conjunct...
Auburn, New York, was one of many small communities settled in the northwestern frontier subsequent ...
Ever since the first colonists landed in \u27The New World\u27, Americans have forged ahead in their...
Robert Morris (1734-1806), an English-born merchant and later one of the American Founding Fathers, ...
When James Morrison, his wife Mary Ann and their most recent baby Lucy (they had 11 children) set of...
James Alexander (1691-1756) was a native of Scotland who, coming to America in 1715, became a promin...
Few men in the history of American business have been more controversial than Jay Gould. His accompl...
The main purpose of this study is to explain how and why William Henry Ferguson (1856-1937) became o...
My chapter in 'Fashion and Modernity' uses unpublished archival material to examine the business act...
"A single pagination runs through both volumes. Twenty-four chapters are needed to cover Mr. Astor's...
"The book was obviously not written to attract historians, but to entertain a larger public. The new...
Business history also attests to the legacy thatimmigrants left on American affairs. Althoughmany of...
"John Jacob Astor, the founder of the family, was truly a pioneer and a patriot… [He] was not only a...
The critical interest in Henry James and his relationship with the "Gilded Age," or the "golden age ...
James Ronda blends new documentation with older sources to provide an ample study of New York busine...
This study examines a frontier businessman and the evolution of his business enterprises in conjunct...
Auburn, New York, was one of many small communities settled in the northwestern frontier subsequent ...
Ever since the first colonists landed in \u27The New World\u27, Americans have forged ahead in their...
Robert Morris (1734-1806), an English-born merchant and later one of the American Founding Fathers, ...
When James Morrison, his wife Mary Ann and their most recent baby Lucy (they had 11 children) set of...
James Alexander (1691-1756) was a native of Scotland who, coming to America in 1715, became a promin...
Few men in the history of American business have been more controversial than Jay Gould. His accompl...
The main purpose of this study is to explain how and why William Henry Ferguson (1856-1937) became o...
My chapter in 'Fashion and Modernity' uses unpublished archival material to examine the business act...
"A single pagination runs through both volumes. Twenty-four chapters are needed to cover Mr. Astor's...