Saturday, July 21, 2012

The Beginning: Carnegie v. Frick pt 1


            The images of Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick are some of the most iconic representations of the Gilded Age, that period of industrial progress when everything seemed possible in America.  For the average immigrant the streets were not paved with gold but for these two men they may as well been.  As ruthless as they were wealthy, Andrew Carnegie in particular was the Bill Gates of his day; they represent what was possible in the time of limited regulation and, let’s not forget, no personal income tax.  It is well know that these two men began as friends and ended up as bitter enemies.  Perhaps it was destiny that two such strong willed men could no co exist peacefully in the same enterprise for ever.  It you take a look at their early interaction, with of course the benefit of hind site, it is almost impossible to miss the warning signs of what was to come.
            Andrew Carnegie, the elder of the two, immigrated to Allegheny City, what is today Pittsburgh’s North Side, at the age of 12 yrs with his parents and siblings from Scotland in 1848.  He had some schooling but formal education was impossible for the young boy whose priority now was to help provide for his family.  He got a job as a bobbin boy working 12 hours a day 6 days a week for $1.20 a week.  He moved on from there to become a clerk, then a delivery boy for a telegraph company in Pittsburgh.  By the time he was 18 years old he had become the assistant to the Assistant Superintendent of the Western Division of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Thomas Scott.  It was through this partnership that Carnegie would learn the value of investment which he built into one of the largest personal fortunes of any one individual in history.  He persuaded his employer Scott to loan him $500 so he could invest in Adams Express.  The company Scott had just told Carnegie was about to land a large contract with the railroad, the idea of insider trading was not something Carnegie or his friends were familiar with.  The $10 check Carnegie received shortly after his purchase of the company shares was the first time he ever made money with out personally working for it and it changed his life and the country.
            Henry Clay Frick grew up on a farm near Mount Pleasant Pennsylvania.  The son of a farmer, his early years, like much of his later life, were plagued by illness.  Because of his poor health his formal schooling was sporadic at best.  He was sent to collage by one of his maternal uncles but was soon back home having decided that collage was not for him.  In 1868 he moved to Pittsburgh and got a job as a clerk in a department store.  Impressed with his grandson, Abraham Overholt soon offered Frick a job as the book keeper for the family’s distillery business.  Unfortunately not long after taking the position Abraham died leaving Frick with out a job.  He again turned to family and got a position with his cousin Abraham Tinstman, who was in the coke making business.  Tinstman was looking for investors to provide and infusion of cash into his struggling business.  Frick, using the inheritance his mother received from his father’s estate as collateral, borrowed enough to buy at 20% stake in the new company.  This proved to be the first step in what would eventually make him the King of Coke.  By 1873 Frick and company were running 200 coke ovens, the largest operation in the region, and then came the economic collapse. 
            Both Carnegie and Frick were affected by the economic down turn and both met it with the same determination to succeed.  Frick used it as an opportunity to purchase the failing businesses of is rivals as each collapsed.  Carnegie had founded the Edgar Thomson Works, his first entry into the steel making business, just as the economic collapse began.  Carnegie had gotten out of the Railroad business and decided that the nation’s future lay in Steel.  His intense devotion to cost management helped his steel mill weather the storm and continue to show a profit even as other mills were shutting down.  Carnegie continued to expand and soon his own coke mills could not keep pace with his steel mills.  He needed Henry Clay Frick’s coke and he knew it.  Tom, Andrew’s brother, first approached Frick with the idea of selling the Carnegie Coke holdings near Latrobe, about 100 ovens in all, to Frick.  Frick was interested but it wasn’t a good time to be talking business, he was about to marry Adelaide Childs.  After the wedding however the couple began a 6 week honeymoon starting in New York City.  Carnegie, who was living in NYC at the time, invited the newlyweds to lunch and together Carnegie and Frick agreed upon a deal where Frick’s company would become the exclusive supplier of coke to Carnegie’s steel mills, setting the price at the beginning of the year per ton of coke.  After setting through the entire meeting Margaret Carnegie famously remarked to her son “ah, Andra, that’s a verra good thing for Mr. Freek, but what to we get out of it?”  What they got was a constant supply of coke at a set price, which would help insulate Carnegie from variations in the coke market, and in the long run the talents of one of the most gifted managers the world has ever seen.  The seeds were sown for a rocky relationship between the two very strong willed men. 
            Next week I will continue their story looking at the partnership years.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Weather In All Its Forms


            As a girl from Southern California weather is not something I used to spend much time thinking about.  I have frequently had people point out that this is because there is no weather in So. Cal.  Not so, is my usually response.  We have June Gloom, in you guessed it June, summer is hot but as I grew up less than 15 min from the beach not overly so.  The fire season is in October, I have been told this does not count but I can assure you it does, and the season of mud is in February when the rein causes the hillsides that burned in October to turn into mud and slide down into people’s living rooms.  In general however the area where I grew up usually keeps temps in a 40˚ range between a very cold 55˚ to a very warm 90˚ so coming to Pittsburgh one would expect quite a shock.
The lack of weather was my husbands biggest complaint about CA; followed closely by traffic which we wont discuss, lets just say the Pittsburghers idea of traffic is laughable.  Now I did come to Pittsburgh after spending 3 years in Kalamazoo Michigan which falls directly in the Snow Belt getting the lake effect off Lake Michigan so, I wasn’t as completely ignorant as some who saw my shinny red mustang with CA plates might have assumed.  However moving to western PA has definitely opened up the weather possibilities.  I had always thought that the three month division of seasons was just for convenience but here is a place where the seasons really do stick to being around for 3 months.  So by the time you are ready to move on to the next one it’s already here.  There are of course exceptions to every rule, the heaviest single day snow fall was in March 1993 when 23.6” were recorded, and I believe this was an actual blizzard.  Now in full swing and today and tomorrow are going to see 100˚ temps.  I feel kind of bad for my mom who is landing in Pittsburgh in a few hours leaving behind 60˚ temps but oh well it is going to cool off.
My uncle, when he was studying in Madison Wisconsin, once said in the summer he didn’t care how cold it got as long as it was cooler than this and in the winter he didn’t care how hot it got as long as it was warmer than this.  Pittsburgh can be like this too but extreme 100˚ heat and sub zero temps don’t usually last too long so just staying inside in a temperature controlled space is pretty easy to accomplish.  If there is something I find amazing is the precipitation.  The amount of water, in all its possible forms, is simply staggering.  I grow up in a desert remember.  The act that my lawn doesn’t have and doesn’t need sprinkles is not often believed by my family in CA.  I can remember my mom diligently going out at night to turn the sprinklers on and off in the dark, sometimes as much as three times a week.  My parent’s yard is quite large for their neighborhood so he had to water the lawn in sections.  But you have to shovel snow I can hear them say.  Yes this is true, however I think all last winter my husband had to shovel less than 10 times and I only shoveled once.  I try to help out but mostly he does it.  The fact is regardless of season we get some kind of H2O falling from the sky every week.  Some times there are light gentle soaking rains that water your plants nicely and other times we get violent thunder storms with rain so hard you can’t see across the street and thunder so loud it shakes the house.  I confess I still can not sleep through a loud thunder storm.  When lightning momentarily turns a dark night into day and thunder cracks so loud it sounds like a gun went off by you ear there is not sleeping, for me that is my husband usually only knows there was a storm because I told him about it he next day.  There is one real weather situation we have that truly frightens me and that is Ice.  Now I fully acknowledge that this is because at the end of last winter I hit a patch of lack ice going down a hill and around a curve, it’s Pittsburgh if you are not going up you are going down the flat strait road is rare, and slid into an oncoming car.  But these things happen and you can’t let that stop you.  Everyone was ok except of course my believed mustang that that is what matters, so I am told.  I do like my new car.
            We even get some truly weird weather like thunder and lightning while it’s snowing or poring rain in the sunshine.  These are the types of weather I describe to people in CA and I am pretty sure they don’t believe me but I promos I have personally experienced these events.  They do happen.  The nice thing about Pittsburgh is no matter the weather it won’t stay too long so you don’t get bored with it.  We don’t still have piles of snow in May or endless days of 100˚ temps.  If you like variety Pittsburgh is the place for you.