American Decades
Business Trusts and Regulation
Consolidation.
On 1 January 1901 Andrew Carnegie agreed to sell his steel company for $480 million to J. Pierpont Morgan, who then consolidated that company with his other steel holdings to form United States Steel Corporation, the first company in history capitalized at more than $1 billion. By comparison all U.S. manufacturing combined had only $9 billion in capitalization at that time, and all federal and state government expenditures totaled $1.66 billion in 1902. Through vertical integration of its holdings, U.S. Steel controlled every step in the steelmaking process from mining coal and ore to the making of nails and steel beams. Bringing about 80 percent of all American steel production under one company, U.S. Steel operated with expenses and revenues greater than all but a few of the world's governments. The deal was one of three hundred major consolidations that reshaped the American economy between 1897 and 1903. Those...
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1900's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- America, Europe, and Asia
- Big Stick and Dollar Diplomacy
- Business Trusts and Regulation
- City and State Reforms
- The Conservation Crusade
- Divisive Party Politics
- Industrialism and Government
- Jim Crow, Nativism, and Racism
- The McKinley Assassination
- National Politics: The 1900 Republican Convention
- National Politics: the 1900 Democratic Convention
- National Politics: the 1900 Elections
- National Politics: the 1902 Elections
- National Politics: the 1904 Republican Convention
- National Politics: the 1904 Democratic Convention
- National Politics: The 1904 Elections
- National Politics: The 1906 Elections
- National Politics: The 1908 Republican Convention
- National Politics: The 1908 Democratic Convention
- National Politics: The 1908 Elections
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1900–1909
