Take the Money and Run

By Steve Fraser

This article appeared in the April 2, 2007 edition of The Nation.

March 15, 2007

At the height of the Gilded Age, in 1883, William Graham Sumner, the foremost exponent in America of Herbert Spencer's philosophy of social Darwinism, asked a very good question: The Yale professor wanted to know What Social Classes Owe to Each Other. Virtually nothing, beyond a modicum of everyday courtesy, was his blunt conclusion. "A free man in a free democracy," Sumner proclaimed, "has no duty whatever toward other men." On the contrary, every man's duty was to take care of himself; all else amounted to a kind of insidious sentimentality. (His exact words were "the next pernicious thing to vice is charity.") Andrew Carnegie and Andrew Mellon were true believers in social Darwinism. Carnegie was a devoted acolyte and great friend of Spencer's. Mellon's father, Thomas, was a social Darwinist avant la lettre, and his scrupulously dutiful son remained loyal to the creed till the day he died--and that would be in 1937, long past the time when many, even of his own class, had abandoned ship.

They were hard, implacable men, relentless in their pursuit of profit, human engines of capital accumulation. Carnegie and Mellon, although born twenty years apart (in 1835 and 1855, respectively), were founding members of Matthew Josephson's "robber baron" generation of American capitalists (a ripe metaphor actually invented by Kansas Populists). They come down to us as "captains of industry." In fact, Carnegie was above all a salesman and Mellon a banker. While they presided over great industrial empires--iron, steel, coal and coke in Carnegie's case; steel and coal but also aluminum, oil and aeronautics in Mellon's--they left matters of actual production to managers, engineers, scientists and technicians who knew a great deal more about such things. Still, the penumbra of muscular ruthlessness that attaches itself naturally to our image of the industrial tycoon is an apt characterization of both men, although in a purely physical sense an improbable one. Both were tiny people, Carnegie rather cherubic and elfish, Mellon more dour and gnome-like.

Big questions about wealth, power and democracy echo in the background of these two new artfully constructed but constrained biographies, sounding like the residual hum given off by the Big Bang. Sometimes, as in Cannadine's brilliant portrait of the clannish solidarity of Pittsburgh's Scotch-Irish industrial gentry, or in Nasaw's nuanced treatment of Carnegie's approach-and-avoidance relationship with the Republican Party's high command, this background radiation becomes more visible. Both authors, however, stay close to the particulars of their subjects' private and public lives. They do this because that is what biographers are supposed to do, but also perhaps because we live in a time that seems reluctant to engage a frame of reference once more or less taken for granted: one that probed the relationship between personality and social class, and that questioned how American political democracy evolved alongside enormous concentrations of power and wealth.

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About Steve Fraser

Steve Fraser is working on a book about the two gilded ages. A TomDispatch regular and co-director of the American Empire Project series at Metropolitan Books, he is the author of, among other works, the recently published Wall Street: America's Dream Palace. more...
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