Business History

Ida Tarbell: The "Muckraker" Who Beat John D Rockefeller and Big Oil

46 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Ida Tarbell: The "Muckraker" Who Beat John D Rockefeller and Big Oil

Descripción

At a time when women couldn't vote or freely enter the workplace, Ida Tarbell took on the richest man in America and triumphed. Ida grew up in the Pennsylvania oil fields of the 1870s, and saw how John D Rockefeller and his company Standard Oil bought or bullied independent firms. Ida's neighbors and even her own father were in Rockefeller's sights.      In adulthood, Ida joined a new movement in journalism. She was a "muckraker" - looking to dig up dirt on the greedy and unscrupulous monopolies of the Gilded Age. She wrote a 19-part investigation of Standard Oil that became a nationwide hit and forced the US government to act and break Rockefeller's empire apart.  Write to us at businesshistory@pushkin.fm [businesshistory@pushkin.fm] See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Business History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

32 episodios

episode Ida Tarbell: The "Muckraker" Who Beat John D Rockefeller and Big Oil artwork

Ida Tarbell: The "Muckraker" Who Beat John D Rockefeller and Big Oil

At a time when women couldn't vote or freely enter the workplace, Ida Tarbell took on the richest man in America and triumphed. Ida grew up in the Pennsylvania oil fields of the 1870s, and saw how John D Rockefeller and his company Standard Oil bought or bullied independent firms. Ida's neighbors and even her own father were in Rockefeller's sights.      In adulthood, Ida joined a new movement in journalism. She was a "muckraker" - looking to dig up dirt on the greedy and unscrupulous monopolies of the Gilded Age. She wrote a 19-part investigation of Standard Oil that became a nationwide hit and forced the US government to act and break Rockefeller's empire apart.  Write to us at businesshistory@pushkin.fm [businesshistory@pushkin.fm] See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Ayer46 min
episode "Time is Money": How Ben Franklin's Sayings Created American Capitalism and Grind Culture artwork

"Time is Money": How Ben Franklin's Sayings Created American Capitalism and Grind Culture

Benjamin Franklin had a full life - he was a scientist, statesman, and a Founding Father. But we're looking at the huge impact he had as a writer of best-selling business books. Franklin first picked up the pen as a poor, downtrodden teenager to write satire, but as he became richer and more successful he instead shared his entrepreneurial insights with the public.    His sayings about time-wasting, thrift and the rewards of hard work were revolutionary. And both his admirers and critics claim his writings caused a profound global shift in how we think about work and wealth.  Write to us at businesshistory@pushkin.fm [businesshistory@pushkin.fm] See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

3 de jun de 202644 min
episode The Founding Father Who Got Rich in the Revolution artwork

The Founding Father Who Got Rich in the Revolution

Two-hundred-and-fifty years ago George Washington was fighting the Revolutionary War against the British, but Robert Morris doing something just as vital. He was raising money for the fighting and buying the gunpowder, tents, food and uniforms Washington's army needed.  Morris had been a merchant before the revolution, so didn't see why he shouldn't personally profit from his work supplying the colonists' struggle. He emerged from the war as a rich man and owned huge tracts of land. But the turbulent final years of the 18th Century saw Morris go first into substantial debt and then fall into utter ruin.      Write to us at businesshistory@pushkin.fm [businesshistory@pushkin.fm] See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

27 de may de 202647 min
episode The Dumbest Business Ever... Shipping Melting Ice to Calcutta. artwork

The Dumbest Business Ever... Shipping Melting Ice to Calcutta.

Frederic Tudor could get ice any time he wanted. He lived in chilly Boston and his family had a lake that froze over in the winter. Harvesting ice and storing it was a normal thing in New England in the 1800s, but Frederic decided he'd make a fortune if he could ship ice to the warmest places on earth. And everyone thought this was the dumbest business idea of all time! No one would back Frederic's plan - no one would even let him rent a ship to carry his ice. For decades he tried and failed to get his ice business running. He even ended up broke and in jail. But finally he prevailed and became a wealthy and celebrated figure - who changed the world.      Write to us at businesshistory@pushkin.fm [businesshistory@pushkin.fm] See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

20 de may de 202647 min