Paul Sorrells

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By the late 1880s Carnegie’s fortune ranked among the greatest. Like John D. Rockefeller, he had absorbed the lessons of the new industrial economy and ruthlessly eliminated competition, but where Rockefeller harbored the illusion that God had given him his money, Carnegie cultivated an even greater one: he thought his success was the product of evolution.
The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896 (Oxford History of the United States)
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