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Chamberlain-Enterprising Americans-Business History of US(1991)
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This is John Chamberlain's monumental book Enterprising Americans - A Business History of the United States (1991) which is a lively and perceptive account of the growth of American business, from its mercantile beginnings in New England and along the Delaware and James River valleys to the great trade and industrial complexes which span the free world of today. Ever since the Revolution, and even before, the growth of American business has been an integral part of the growth of America. The Revolution was sparked by businessmen: in fact, perhaps no other revolution in history was fought on such basically economic grounds. Although the colonists were fighting to maintain their ancient chartered grants of self-government, they considered their rights to trade and economic expansion a fundamental part of the historic "rights of Englishmen." After the Revolution, business continued to play its vital role in the growth of industry and invention, in the spread of the vast transportation networks which would link one section of country with another, and in the transition from an agricultural to a primarily industrial economy. The story concentrates on the creative moments of men of decision. Virtual unknowns such a Sir William Pepperrell take their place with the more famous Eli Whitney, Carnegie, Ford, and J.P. Morgan. This is the story of the cotton gin and the locomotive, of steel and oil and electronics. It is also the story of the American dream, of the poor young man who, through wit, daring, and Yankee ingenuity, makes his way to the top and leaves his imprint on the generations to follow. Mr. Chamberlain writes in a brisk anecdotal style, yet with scholarly insight, about a subject which should interest not only the business but every student of American life and history. The scope and vitality of the book are indicated by some of the may topics which it covers: privateering in the coastal towns; the establishment of banking systems and the funding of a national economy; the development of a world-wide system of trade; industry, invention, and mass production; oil, steel, and the early trusts; the growth of money power; the creative as well as the destructive aspects of the men who have been called "robber barons"; the surprising expansion of business frontiers in the depressed Thirties - these and many others are the lively events which The Enterprising Americans recounts. 310 pages. A must read for everyone.

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