Thomas Mellon and His Times

Portada
University of Pittsburgh Pre, 1 sept 1995 - 560 páginas
In 1885, Thomas Mellon published his autobiography in a limited edition exclusively for his family, warning them that it contained "nothing which it concerns the public to know, and much which if writing for it I would have omitted." Mellon was an anomaly among the great American entrepreneurs of his time. Highly literate and an excellent narrative writer, he was deadly honest about his life, family, and financial success. The book his warning so effectively concealed for almost 110 years was a masterpiece of American autobiography, and it is now available for virtually the first time in this edition. At the time he looked back on his life, Mellon was a successful Pittsburgh entrepreneur and banker. In the next generation, two of his sons, Andrew William Mellon and Richard Beatty Mellon, joined Henry Ford and John D. Rockefeller as the four wealthiest men in the United States, and his descendants would play major roles in American business, art, and philanthropy. Nothing in Thomas Mellon's origins suggested this future. Born in Ulster with a Scotch-Irish heritage, he immigrated to the United States in 1818 at the age of five. He was raised by his parents on a small, hilly farm at Poverty Point, about twenty miles east of Pittsburgh. It seemed that his destiny would be the farm, but in childhood and adolescence he was transformed by two experiences. At the age of ten, he walked to Pittsburgh and saw for the first time the bustle and wealth of this growing city. He was especially awestruck by the mansion and steam mill of the Negley family, "impressed... with an idea of wealth and magnificence I had before no conception of." The thought occurred to this boy whether he "might not one dayattain in some degree such wealth, and an equality with such great people." Twenty years later, in 1843, Thomas proposed to Sarah Jane Negley after a courtship that, he observed, took "much valuable time, somewhat to the prejudice of my professional business." They were devoted to

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Índice

Childhood
11
Boyhood
19
Material Progress
33
Our Neighbors
38
First Visit to the City
47
School Days
54
The Decision
64
Academic Course
74
Before the Panic
246
After the Panic
265
Trip to Europe
288
Changes of a Lifetime
340
Conclusion
383
Afterword
389
FAMILY HISTORY
397
Name and Nationality
399

College Course
77
Study of Law
85
Bread Winning
94
Courtship and Marriage
100
Wedding Tour and Housekeeping
117
Professional Life
123
Judicial Life
161
Vexatious Litigation
184
Private Life
226
Ancestry
408
My Grandfather Mellons Family
420
My Fathers Family
436
The Negley and Winebiddle Families
446
Genealogical Chart
459
Notes
461
Bibliography
471
Index
473
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