12 Most POWERFUL FAMILIES of the GILDED AGE

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  • Опубліковано 3 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 553

  • @franklesser5655
    @franklesser5655 2 роки тому +202

    Carnegie was an amazing philanthropist. just about every library in the U.S. was funded by him, not counting the schools and universities he funded.

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +31

      Truly amazing. His generosity outshined everyone else on this list. Thanks for watching!

    • @billyboy969
      @billyboy969 2 роки тому +17

      Perhaps he was the OLNY true philanthropist

    • @nelliethursday1812
      @nelliethursday1812 Рік тому +20

      Carnegie believed in eugenics and contributed much money to its research. He had very unkind words about both physically and mentally disabled people. And as for races other than his white self ............

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Рік тому +5

      He forgot to fill them with books though.

    • @kayhathaway6956
      @kayhathaway6956 Рік тому +11

      Nellie, white people are good, too. Carnegie with “his white self” sure blessed this nation, and ALL people, with endless giving. So, there’s no need to point out his skin color, unless…….you’re racist. If you are, it’s no big deal to me.

  • @smokenjoe1194
    @smokenjoe1194 Рік тому +8

    3:07 I worked at the Rockefeller mansion on the Hudson River for few years as a construction consultant. I've crawled thru the attics, tunnels and spent many hours in the barn with the car collection. I love the bat cave most of all

  • @9ballalex
    @9ballalex Рік тому +89

    A relevant fact about the Astor family, perhaps not important for the sake of this video but still interesting, is that John Jacob Astor IV, son and heir of William Astor, perished in the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, being the wealthiest person aboard the ship.

    • @teenac718
      @teenac718 Рік тому +13

      He gave up his seat .

    • @oriraykai3610
      @oriraykai3610 Рік тому +1

      ​@@teenac718 - How the HELL would you know that!?

    • @melianna999
      @melianna999 Рік тому +8

      @@oriraykai3610 So many documentaries
      about Titanic

    • @paulflemming732
      @paulflemming732 Рік тому

      That was the reason for sinking the Titanic. Because Astor, the biggest banker in the U. S. at the time, and his big Jewish banker friends ,who were also killed by the sinking of the Titanic, would have opposed the setting up of the Federal Reserve Bank in the form that it was set up a year or so later in 1913, being allowed to print dollars without having gold or silver to back them.

    • @melianna999
      @melianna999 Рік тому

      @@paulflemming732 Their friends today
      "sinking" the world economy to
      "sink" the poor and middle class.

  • @DonnaRhodesletstakeupmakeup
    @DonnaRhodesletstakeupmakeup 2 роки тому +27

    Loved your video.. I've always been fascinated by the Vanderbilts and Biltmore house which is truly spectacular

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +4

      Thank you for watching!

    • @jimcowan8770
      @jimcowan8770 Рік тому

      I’ve been there,. It’s truly beautiful!

  • @PeterCombs
    @PeterCombs Рік тому +19

    and today the Hearst family is STILL worth around 20 Billion in today's, money...more than any of the others mentioned, and bringing up second place is the Dupont family...at around 15 Billion.

  • @jonnarobinson7541
    @jonnarobinson7541 Рік тому +20

    I am fascinated by the Gilded Age and I have heard of all of these families. The only one I question is the Hearsts. I think of William Randolph Hearst as being more around the turn of the century and later, not from the 1870's - 1900. However, I think your video was wonderful!!

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  Рік тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching!

  • @Bjk248
    @Bjk248 Рік тому +43

    I love this! Very interesting. Fortunately I have been to the Biltmore estate in Asheville, North Carolina many times and love it so much I guess we all wish that we had been a part of these wealthy families.😂

    • @amab1853
      @amab1853 Рік тому +2

      My sister visited last year. I want go visit. I also want to visit the Rhode island gilded age mansions

    • @theresaann7388
      @theresaann7388 Рік тому

      I guess that would have been better than being a Is made there.

    • @mr.rightnow.7300
      @mr.rightnow.7300 Рік тому +3

      Yes, Biltmore is just incredible. What's more incredible is that they considered that their summer home.

    • @sadlemayfriedman5564
      @sadlemayfriedman5564 5 місяців тому

      To Bjk I'm not sure that's a good outlook. The Vanderbilt's we're notorious for scandals and squandering their wealth and Gloria Vanderbilt herself had a terrible upbringing her mother who has a terrible person and your father was an alcoholic 14 months after Gloria was born.
      There are plenty of information regarding these families and their children were shameful socially and morally ignorant. And most of them couldn't stand their parents and or their siblings.

  • @haroldrupert4957
    @haroldrupert4957 2 роки тому +8

    Thanks for sharing this most interesting documentary.❤

  • @rickwilliamson1417
    @rickwilliamson1417 2 роки тому +11

    Great stories thank you

  • @jackielaurin8692
    @jackielaurin8692 11 місяців тому +7

    wonderful insight to the magical force of dedication to earn wealth and keep it within a society of same minded thinkers of the day..fun to read & listen to, thank you for your insight..I think Canegie was a real leader in philantropy. It was to better the common man wanting to learn..

  • @DowntownChris
    @DowntownChris 2 роки тому +39

    Good work. I watch all of the Guilded Age content and you all have something interesting and unique about them that makes your channels so interesting. One of the biggest takeaways (aside from your amusing slam on the Vanderbilt heirs (crappy news stations/singing and dancing for their supper) was how good looking the Roosevelts were. What a handsome family. The others were so unattractive, their fur coats and jewels notwithstanding.

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +8

      True, the Roosevelts were quite an attractive bunch (despite the inbreeding). Thanks so much for tuning in!

    • @oriraykai3610
      @oriraykai3610 Рік тому +1

      Eleanor was cute at age 16. After that, well....😢

    • @huchlvr
      @huchlvr Рік тому +1

      Actually most of them were atractive for their time. Consuelo Vanderbuilt was considered one of the most beautiful women in the world, Edith Vanderbuilt was also considered one of the most beautiful woman (Biltmore's grand dame). And not all of the Vanderbuilt money went to waste. While George W Vanderbuilt II did spend most of his on Biltmore, his grandson and grt grandson still own it today, while hiis other grt grandson have a lucrative real estate portfolio due to their inheritance. GWV II & his wife also devoted quite alot of resources to the town of Asheville in terms of housing, churches, schools, and working class programs to learn trades.

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      @@huchlvr It's much easier for a wealthy person to be attractive,.

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      @@huchlvr And don't forget that the Vanderbilts have given us a man I consider an American treasure - Anderson Cooper.

  • @VADACHE
    @VADACHE 2 роки тому +54

    Carnegie is my fav we need more humans like him

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 2 роки тому +6

      Actually, he could be a miserable boss, but he left everything bad that needed doing to Henry Frick who therefore got all the bad publicity rather than Carnegie. He hated the idea that anyone should want better pay and working conditions in HIS company.

    • @nelliethursday1812
      @nelliethursday1812 Рік тому +7

      @@LJB103 He supported eugenics and contributed much money to its research. He had very unkind words for both physically and mentally disabled people. As for people other than his white self well.........

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Рік тому +2

      @@LJB103 The most notorious instance of that dirty work must be noted to go along with what you said. That was the Homestead Steel Strike massacre. Carnegie gave the approval, or Frick would never have been able to order the Pinkerton massacre of the strikers. Though another lesser known order by Frick alone, caused thousands of deaths. He wouldn't allow work to be done to the Johnstown Dam in Johnstown Pennsylvania., as it would have disrupted travel to his country club. The Dam broke, and flooded Johnstown in a huge torrent of water that killed THOUSANDS. Frick was never charged for this, much less arrested.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому

      @@algini12 True, but was it just Frick or all the rich members?

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Рік тому

      @@LJB103 Frick owned the place. And I think he owned the Dam too, but I can't remember for certain.

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Рік тому +3

    Cheers and Vivat for these Pioneers and Builders of a Powerful Nation !

  • @peterlbaldwin511
    @peterlbaldwin511 2 роки тому +24

    I am intrigued toknow of the position within "The Guilded Age" if any of "The Guggenheim" family.. Guggenheim along with John Jacob Astor were on board "Titanic", neither surviving that fatal collision...

  • @cedricsmith8188
    @cedricsmith8188 Рік тому +8

    They all sound pretty fascinating.

  • @cynthiaalver
    @cynthiaalver Рік тому +56

    I read a fascinating book about Mrs Astor. The one thing that stuck with me the most was, if a person accepted an invitation to Mrs Astor's home, be it for tea, dinner a ball or whatever, there was NO excuse for cancelling and that included death. Not just a family member but YOU YOURSELF. If a death happened the poor unfortunate corpse's family better find an ACCEPTABLE replacement because if you upset Mrs Astor's dinner count, your entire family would immediately fall to the bottom of the social ladder and that meant expulsion from all other society families until you moved back into Mrs Astor's good graces. Yikes!

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  Рік тому +7

      So ruthless of her, though we’re not surprised! Thanks for sharing!

    • @mr.rightnow.7300
      @mr.rightnow.7300 Рік тому +8

      Yeah, high society can be a bitch. So many rules....and "punishments".

    • @CitySlickerBallKicker
      @CitySlickerBallKicker Рік тому +5

      People who live like that are burning in Hell

    • @mr.rightnow.7300
      @mr.rightnow.7300 Рік тому +7

      @@CitySlickerBallKicker Good lord. That's a bit much isn't it? Pick up a book one day on the life of high society and the elite. It's all they know. These are not people that are running to the supermarket. It's a completely different set of rules. Fascinating actually. Check out Amy Vanderbilt,s book on etiquette.

    • @CitySlickerBallKicker
      @CitySlickerBallKicker Рік тому +3

      @@mr.rightnow.7300 Why read a book when you wrote a book as a comment.

  • @peterbroderson6080
    @peterbroderson6080 Рік тому +16

    The majority of these families, through trusts and tax shelters, are still powerful and have influence over our economy and government!

    • @zimtak6418
      @zimtak6418 Рік тому

      Sad but true.

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      Anderson Cooper, a Vanderbilt. I'd say he has enriched our country in ways other than monetary. Also I once knew someone who was a Rockefeller descendant. She was such a sweet person and not at all a snob, but she was rich.

  • @garycombs5721
    @garycombs5721 Рік тому +32

    Alva and Alice Vanderbilt gave to us the single greatest lesson to be learned from the gilded age-rich men must be very careful not to marry wrongly.

  • @tomdonovan4842
    @tomdonovan4842 2 роки тому +7

    Well done thank you

  • @madisondean1074
    @madisondean1074 Рік тому +13

    Out of all these families in this video I only recognized 5 of them. Particularly the Astors and the Roosevelts.

  • @soniajones869
    @soniajones869 Рік тому +12

    How about the Gettys?

  • @charlesvanderhoog7056
    @charlesvanderhoog7056 2 роки тому +26

    For wealth comparisons with today's US dollars, one could multiply the numbers by about 1000. The VanderBilt fortune of US$108 million would equal roughly US$100 billion today.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 2 роки тому +7

      Actually John D Rockefeller's fortune would be equal to about $400 billion today, and Carnegie's fortune would be somewhere in the mid-$300 billion area.

    • @charlesvanderhoog7056
      @charlesvanderhoog7056 2 роки тому

      @@LJB103 Yes, you may be right. The point is of course, that such numbers may exceed the acceptance levels of people.

    • @oriraykai3610
      @oriraykai3610 Рік тому

      Oh really? Is that why you only multiply by 31 to know the value of money 40 years earlier in today's money? Vanderbilt's fortune would be 3 billion. That just means that WE live in the TRUE guilded age.

  • @Nigelsmom2136
    @Nigelsmom2136 Рік тому +3

    Love their definition of summer cottages.

  • @qhuizatlantis8484
    @qhuizatlantis8484 Рік тому +10

    Next the 13 bloodlines that would be epic

    • @seameology
      @seameology Рік тому

      Which includes some of these.

  • @alexandram8075
    @alexandram8075 Рік тому +3

    Great breakdown thank you!

  • @khher1979
    @khher1979 Рік тому +11

    Hold up, Timothy Oliphant is a Vanderbilt?!??! I knew about Cooper Anderson but not Oliphant

  • @jrcwwl
    @jrcwwl 2 роки тому +26

    Ahahaha, "crappy news networks" 2:02. For that line alone---I'm subscribing/liking this channel!

    • @jrcwwl
      @jrcwwl Рік тому

      @@suzyfarnham3165 Or what you really mean, once it gets political by making fun of YOUR political party you are "out." It's common knowledge anyone with any semblance of intelligence knows CNN is nothing but a bad joke, a farce, a travesty and only listened to by abject morons. My subscription balanced out your unsub. along with many others who no doubt subscribed for that correct observation regarding the crappy news network. I think he was being nice by even calling it a "news network."

    • @jimcowan8770
      @jimcowan8770 Рік тому +1

      I Agree

    • @seameology
      @seameology Рік тому +2

      That was gold!

  • @userone6672
    @userone6672 Рік тому +4

    I did not know about the Melons. Thank you.

  • @teacherof20
    @teacherof20 Рік тому +3

    LOL their descendants had to resort to working for crappy news networks 🤣🤣

  • @glasgovipsolara
    @glasgovipsolara Рік тому +5

    This is a new fascination of mine. The gilded age.
    Which family impressed me the most? The Carnegie family. Such philanthropy is astonishing to us in this era. Or do I just not know about present day equivalents? 95% of his wealth was given to good causes? Where does that happen today?

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      If you're really fascinated I suggest the novels of Edith Wharton. She brings the Gilded Age to life.

    • @glasgovipsolara
      @glasgovipsolara Рік тому

      @@joansutton - thank you. I will have a look.

  • @gwillis01
    @gwillis01 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for this video

  • @nievesdereyes65
    @nievesdereyes65 2 роки тому +5

    I loved it!!!!❤

  • @billyboy969
    @billyboy969 2 роки тому +203

    You left out Rothschilds

    • @johnscanlan9335
      @johnscanlan9335 2 роки тому +63

      They weren't Americans

    • @billyboy969
      @billyboy969 2 роки тому +33

      @@johnscanlan9335 they are very well established in america

    • @johnscanlan9335
      @johnscanlan9335 2 роки тому +51

      @@billyboy969 they certainly had extensive business interests here in the United States but they didn't live here or have any significant social presence.

    • @billyboy969
      @billyboy969 2 роки тому +5

      @@johnscanlan9335 I never had a reason to look that much as to where they lived or partied , but just heard about a house in west palm beach Florida.they have had major power impacts all over the world - much like the others you named.

    • @johnscanlan9335
      @johnscanlan9335 2 роки тому +15

      @@billyboy969 you seem to have answered your own question. If they had or have a house in West Palm Beach, they by definition weren't taking their social presence in the United States very seriously. No self-respecting Robber Baron would be caught dead in WEST Palm!

  • @2615ParkAvenueAssociates
    @2615ParkAvenueAssociates 2 роки тому +14

    Was Senator William A. Clark considered for your Gilded Age families. He and John D. Rockefeller were tied as the wealthiest men in America. His daughter Huguette Clark caused a sensation in her eccentric years in the 2000's and was the source for the book, "Empty Mansions."

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +8

      Thank you for watching! We chose to go with only the biggest names for this list. However, we were sure to include Senator Clark in our upcoming video. We might also highlight Huguette in a future video. So stay tuned…

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Рік тому +3

      I read that book. Sad

    • @lauraguida8482
      @lauraguida8482 Рік тому +4

      @@schmancy2978 A video on Huguette Clark would be great. I don't think a lot of people know her bizarre story.

    • @jimcowan8770
      @jimcowan8770 Рік тому

      @@schmancy2978 Okay,. So,. I’m gonna have to subscribe now,. Loved your story! Very interesting!

  • @BixbysDad
    @BixbysDad Рік тому +2

    I'd love to see a video about the Lodge's and the Cabots of New England.

  • @nicodangond5822
    @nicodangond5822 Рік тому +2

    5:06 that’s John J Astor VI, not IV
    Tiny error but overall amazing video, thank you!

  • @pameladulany1457
    @pameladulany1457 Рік тому +2

    I live in Nashville TN area. Home of Vanderbilt University and the Commadores. I have been to Biltmore twice and hope to go again. Incredible! So they are my favorite.

  • @waltvancourt5052
    @waltvancourt5052 Рік тому +5

    The men who built America and made the world better.

    • @sadlemayfriedman5564
      @sadlemayfriedman5564 5 місяців тому

      I'm not sure you know what you're talking about. Apparently the history of these families has escaped you. They didn't build it the people most if not all renew immigrants. These families exploited them and in many cases CAUSE their demise. Teddy Roosevelt while President broke up the Monopoly of the Roben Barron's.

  • @nelliethursday1812
    @nelliethursday1812 Рік тому +14

    Carnegie believed in eugenics and contributed much money to its research

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  Рік тому +6

      Sadly.

    • @tracylalonde4972
      @tracylalonde4972 Рік тому +3

      Oh, I actually didn’t know that.
      I guess I shouldn’t be surprised but thanks for the little education. 😊

    • @donnasmyth45
      @donnasmyth45 Рік тому +1

      Knew he couldn't have been all that. Thanks for the info.

  • @JLW667
    @JLW667 2 роки тому +4

    3:24
    6:03
    6:06
    7:31
    8:54 JP Morgan
    11:20

  • @joansutton
    @joansutton Рік тому

    What an interesting and informative video! UA-cam is just great.

  • @marygem
    @marygem 2 роки тому +51

    Robber barons ... all successful during times of no taxes, or very little, before 1920.

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +10

      Yes, we couldn’t agree more.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому +9

      Even with taxes.....They're back and as bad, if not worse, than before! Musk, Bezos, Gates, et al.

    • @kenyonbissett3512
      @kenyonbissett3512 Рік тому

      No one else paid taxes either. As long as you were somewhere between amoral and immoral you to could rob, pillage and rape the country. Carnegie’s steel plant had 100,000 deaths/maimed workers. The injured worker received no compensation for their injuries due to unsafe working conditions. If worker tried to strike they were beaten and even murdered.

    • @billyboy969
      @billyboy969 Рік тому

      Some time early on they paid a really high tax rate, might have been the only taxeed group.

    • @seameology
      @seameology Рік тому +2

      Hence, the Federal Reserve act of 1913. You have these families to blame for that.

  • @stopthelies4249
    @stopthelies4249 Рік тому +4

    The day when slaveowners stop owning slaves and took the money and invested in railroads after steam ships and of course oil banking etc. now he can continue because I know he’s going to leave that part out Vanderbilt look it up. 0:36

  • @LJB103
    @LJB103 2 роки тому +14

    Your photos of the 4 Astors at the end of the segment mislabels John Jacob VI as IV (his father who died on the Titanic). Some how Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney was thought of as "the poor Whitney" when compared to his cousin Jock Whitney (whose daughters were actually the children of his 2nd wife and her 1st husband, FDR's son James Roosevelt II). Another family that belongs on this list are the Marshall Fields.

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +3

      Good catch. Thanks!

    • @Tboy439
      @Tboy439 Рік тому +1

      @@schmancy2978 ...Actually Vanderbilt was one of the lucky ones who somehow knew to cancel his trip on the Titanic, { Olympic } just as White Star and Titanic owner JP Morgan did, wink wink. Vanderbilt would die 4 years later on the Lusitania when it sunk. Karma's a bitch isn't it. BTW....If your talking about the most powerful men in America, there is no way you can leave out Jacob Schiff and the Warburgs. The Schiff family lived side by side in a duplex in Frankfort with the Rothschilds when they were beginning their banking dynasties. Jacob Schiff came to America in 1880 as the main Rothschild agent with two primary goals. 1. To eventually get the Federal Reserve Act passed and 2. to help weaken Russia so it could later be destroyed. It was Schiff who arranged a 200 million dollar loan to Japan in 1905 so they could go to war with Russia, and Schiff hosted Leon Trotsky in New York before giving him 20 million in gold and sending him off to Russia for the Revolution. It was actually Schiff who was calling the shots in Russia, since it was he who ordered the murder of Tsar Nicholaus II and his entire family. Lenin and Trotsky had no say in the matter. Ironically, Schiff died in 1923, the same year Stalin came to power, just as they had to get rid of Robespierre so Napoleon would have no rival in power and they disabled Lenin so Schiff would have no rival for power.
      Furthermore....The Roosevelt's were indeed of Dutch decent and became rich off the opium war on China and piracy. You've heard of the Dutch West Indies Corp right? Also, 3 of the wealthiest Americans, Astor, Stauss and Gugenhiem, who opposed the Federal Reserve Act along with some other politicians died on the Titanic after being given complimentary tickets by JP Morgan, while Morgan and a couple dozen of his friends cancelled last minute, wink wink.
      You of coarse have given a list of openly wealthy people who people figure would be the most powerful, but as usual, the actual most powerful, most people have never heard of. Example...JP Morgan was the face of the banking industry, but actually nothing more than a red herring. For 43 years, Jacob Schiff was the most powerful man in America, and hardly anyone has heard of him. Sorry to ramble on so much.

  • @mervyngreene6687
    @mervyngreene6687 Рік тому +5

    You didn't include my favorite Robber Baron--Leland Stanford.

  • @chrisbrown-ty6lp
    @chrisbrown-ty6lp Рік тому +5

    I would like to know more about lesser known gilded age families or individuals, lots of information on the obvious ones, just a suggestion

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  Рік тому +1

      Noted. We’ll add it to our list for future videos. Thanks.

  • @stananderson4524
    @stananderson4524 11 місяців тому

    My third great Grandmother was a Whitney. I am learning more and more about this fascinating family.

  • @chaudharyvishalsangwan1402
    @chaudharyvishalsangwan1402 2 роки тому +7

    Still they are powerful families at this time

    • @amab1853
      @amab1853 Рік тому +2

      Exactly. These families legacy is still very much alive

  • @jorgegomez524
    @jorgegomez524 Рік тому +3

    The fortune of the hears was really made by his father, and his huge copper mine

  • @alisahale6017
    @alisahale6017 Рік тому +3

    Background music is irritating, but the info is interesting.

  • @noras.9774
    @noras.9774 Рік тому +4

    Carnegie, who knew when he must stop and lives his life. And after him remans a lot of culture places!

  • @teenac718
    @teenac718 Рік тому +4

    Guggenheim & Astor were Morgan's rivals. Both died. Who financed White Star lines??

  • @dr.aniasara7038
    @dr.aniasara7038 Рік тому +1

    These are videos, among others that speak to our history, that need to be shown in class rooms as part of History and Political education.

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      This video would be very interesting to high school classes. It's a great part of American history.

  • @msmushrum
    @msmushrum Рік тому +2

    An interesting introduction and the integrity of the content would have been stronger if reference was made or the fact mentioned that some families' establishments played a role in facilitating the continuation of the practice of enslaving people. Banking and insurance comes to mind.

    • @noelogara1
      @noelogara1 Рік тому

      Maybe Carnegie tried to buy a ticket to heaven.

  • @HORSEYANIME2024
    @HORSEYANIME2024 Рік тому

    Pls do a part 2

  • @JanKeenan
    @JanKeenan Рік тому

    Regardless of whether it’s new or old money, I’m glad these brilliant people were able to help improve the world and hence our lives

  • @annehersey9895
    @annehersey9895 Рік тому +2

    While in college, Wm Randolph Hearst III took a menial job with my hometown newspaper, The Santa Maria Times, owned by Hearst corp. He happened to live in the same apartment complex as I did and we were the same age. I didn't know him well but we were both at a few parties. He drove a really cute Mercedes Roadster sports car and NO ONE in my town owned a Mercedes that I knew of-about 25,000 people in Santa Maria then.I do remember one party Will brought his school chum, Eddie with him. That would be Edsel Ford II!!! Both of them were nice enough guys and when ever they introduced themselves to someone new, it was just as Will and Eddie. No pretensions there just in the cars they drove. That was my brush with old big money and made me realize we are all just the same!

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому +2

      I actually associated with him in a therapy group, but didn't know his last name then. I said to him once that I thought his father was some sort of salesman. I was right, but he laughed. Will seemed quite a nice guy, just as you say.

  • @texasjewelz5470
    @texasjewelz5470 2 роки тому +9

    Oh Lord
    Follow the rabbit train on these families
    You’ll find the reasons for our current society

  • @BFFBuddyFionaandFriends
    @BFFBuddyFionaandFriends Рік тому +2

    I like the videos because they’re fast-paced.
    My only criticism is about Andrew Carnegie because the majority of his so-called philanthropic efforts occurred after the Johnstown flood, and were clearly an effort to soothe a guilty conscience.

  • @leenich2011
    @leenich2011 Рік тому +2

    I'd like to know the about the families who got rich from American slavery and where are those families now.

  • @Shelly-mz9yf
    @Shelly-mz9yf Рік тому +2

    What i find more interesting is they thought they were above reproach.

  • @Arjujumand
    @Arjujumand Рік тому +1

    Seeing Sonja Morgan reminds me of her iconic “DO NOT TOUCH THE MORGAN LETTERS!”

  • @daphnenapier1102
    @daphnenapier1102 Рік тому +3

    Amazing how the all made it big in the USA

  • @mrgreen1888
    @mrgreen1888 Рік тому +6

    What about the Kennedy family .

  • @blangeTx
    @blangeTx Рік тому +4

    My Grandfather and great uncle worked as house staff for the Whitney's in the 30's. I went to Marymount School in Manhattan that had been the residence of one of I believe Payne Whitney. On a website when I googled the mansion, it looked familiar because at the time I was going to Marymount I did not realize it was the Whitney mansion.

  • @bludgeonedtodeath90
    @bludgeonedtodeath90 Рік тому +4

    Even if you are very rich, if you fail to manage wealth and make wrong decisions, you will perish or lose your dominance. Like the Vanderbilt and Roosevelt families. Carnegies may also be included. They don't have the same effect as before. Do the descendants of these families still live as if they were rich? We don't know much about them. Also, I had never heard of the Gould, Duke, Whitney, and Hearst families before. The Mellon family is by far the most profitable of these families. Today they are richer than they have ever been.

    • @seameology
      @seameology Рік тому

      Gould's are still in New York. I've met them.

    • @bludgeonedtodeath90
      @bludgeonedtodeath90 Рік тому

      @@seameology Cool! Are they still very rich? Also, what about Morgan and the Roosevelt family? What happened to them? they are not in sight.

    • @miuvans
      @miuvans Рік тому

      I only knew from the Dukes 😂 from my trips to NC , I’m a latin anerica foreign of course

  • @marlaosborn5392
    @marlaosborn5392 Рік тому +1

    What about the Harrimans (rail tycoons and HUGE NY state property owners

  • @suzannebosjolie7532
    @suzannebosjolie7532 Рік тому +5

    You could not give me any one of those houses even if I were a zillionaire. It was one of those “keep up with the Jone’s” kind of people that I find revolting. Besides, they were not homes, but hotels!

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      The Joneses were actully the family of Edith Wharton. Her maiden name was Edith Newbold Jones.

  • @kevinsysyn4487
    @kevinsysyn4487 Рік тому +1

    The great hidden bonanza that made these families and Wall Street so wealthy was the government giving the railroad Right-of-ways to anyone who wanted to build a railroad. If you consider the magnitude of this from settlement, development of the country, the amount of real estate involved, property values and every level of extortionary control it is too staggering to account.

  • @brandonmec32
    @brandonmec32 Рік тому +3

    Hearst is also one of the main reasons cannabis was made illegal

  • @bobl4419
    @bobl4419 Рік тому +2

    I'm surprised GETTY was not included.

  • @Chrisoula17
    @Chrisoula17 Рік тому +1

    13:29, that’s Mary Lou Whitney the owner of Birdstone who won the Belmont.

  • @mikegetsmad323
    @mikegetsmad323 Рік тому +4

    How could you exclude Henry Frick?

  • @emeselatkoczy9011
    @emeselatkoczy9011 Рік тому +3

    It's pronounced CarnEgie. Learned that while living in Pittsburgh.

  • @edpottinger849
    @edpottinger849 Рік тому +3

    Cornelius Vanderbilt built the Grand Trunk Railway in eastern Canada about 10 years before he died.The railway went bankrupt.
    The Grand Trunk Pacific was formed to accommodate passengers from Vancouver to Prince Rupert.This railway became a subsidiary company of the CNR.The Candian National Railway was the parent company and all assets belonged to them.All said lands adjacent to their railway.
    The Grand Trunk Railway is no longer in existence,and has absolutely no assets.
    My father is getting screwed with by some family members,nephews.They logged his land in Quick, BC,Canada
    What did they do next but try to cover it up my making a completely false caviete.
    They did this by one of their daughters working in the Land Title Office of British Columbia.
    When you check into the history from CN themselves,they can explain why ownership by the Grand Trunk Railway is impossible.Grade 11 History taught me a lot about Canadian History,including the construction of our National railroad network.
    I'm going to sue them for this and trespassing on my dad Ed Pottinger Sr.s land.And trying to steel it from him.Real nice cousins I have,such respect for their uncle

    • @jackielaurin8692
      @jackielaurin8692 11 місяців тому

      Very interesting indeed. Good luck

    • @edpottinger849
      @edpottinger849 11 місяців тому

      @jackielaurin8692 My father has passed and my brother is making it very difficult to proceed.Family can turn on you when a parent passes

  • @davezedman
    @davezedman 10 місяців тому +1

    Also, Astoria Oregon is named after John Jacob Astor. Thomas Jefferson and him collaborated ( with Astor's money) to send expeditions to Oregon to help settle and colonize the western states, immediately after Lewis and Clark went west. They simultaneously sent a land expedition as well as a sea expedition. The sea expedition landed in where is now, Astoria Oregon. There is a book called "Astoria" by Peter Clark, that is highly recommended, to learn about all this.

  • @Scouseviking1990
    @Scouseviking1990 Рік тому +2

    Don’t forget about the cargills too

  • @dgcm1574
    @dgcm1574 Рік тому +3

    How about the Anheuser-Busch? the owner of Budweiser

  • @donmigueldecuenca
    @donmigueldecuenca Рік тому +1

    I'd add the family of Henry Huttleston Rogers, every bit as rich as these others, and his amazing granddaughter Millicent Rogers.

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  Рік тому

      Thanks we’ll consider them for future videos.

  • @luisvaldes1568
    @luisvaldes1568 Рік тому +6

    Crappy new news networks, I love it!

  • @Jean-gx2qe
    @Jean-gx2qe Рік тому +1

    "Massive endowments"!! 😅🤣 did mo one else catch that???! 🤣

  • @barbarabangert6594
    @barbarabangert6594 Рік тому +2

    I would like to see a video about dash for titles in the gilded age

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  Рік тому +2

      Thanks! We will add it to our list for future videos!

  • @brettanderson3160
    @brettanderson3160 Рік тому +2

    The Goelets, though less well known, should have been on this list.

  • @stevehartman1730
    @stevehartman1730 Рік тому +3

    Wm Randolph Hearst was the one who had Hemp criminalized as most paper was made from hemp but Hearst held millions of acres of timber n North West n by criminalizing hemp then paper could be made from trees.

  • @MIKIEEYEZ1975
    @MIKIEEYEZ1975 Рік тому

    KENNEDY’s, Rockefeller money is the gift that keeps on giving!!

  • @jay2twoapparel559
    @jay2twoapparel559 Рік тому +2

    12 family run the word .

  • @maryellenhern3252
    @maryellenhern3252 Рік тому

    You have enough names to make a second dozen. My favorites are the Clark fortune, as in the attorney for Isaac Singer (and he was a bad boy!) who left us the museums in Cooperstown, Williamstown and the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation.

  • @jamessveinsson6006
    @jamessveinsson6006 2 роки тому +5

    How can you not Include the Ford family as part of the gilded age

    • @schmancy2978
      @schmancy2978  2 роки тому +4

      They’re 20th century.

    • @jamessveinsson6006
      @jamessveinsson6006 2 роки тому +2

      @@schmancy2978 I guess you’re right

    • @jamessveinsson6006
      @jamessveinsson6006 Рік тому +1

      When did the gilded age really and did it go into the 20th century at all if not then I miss spoke

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Рік тому +5

    The Kennedy, the Woolworth-Hutton, the Donahu , the Westinghouse shloud be in the selection as well.

  • @elainecannavo9072
    @elainecannavo9072 Рік тому +3

    The saying goes you have to spend money to make money.

  • @gwillis01
    @gwillis01 Рік тому +2

    My favorite is the Roosevelts

  • @garyhagen5015
    @garyhagen5015 Рік тому +3

    Add the Fricks

  • @irismckay6472
    @irismckay6472 Рік тому +1

    Love Gloria Vanderbilt and Anderson Cooper. These families do continue to make a positive impact today, especially through nonprofits and foundations. Would love a less cynical narration of these people. Nobody likes show-offs, but 'singing and acting' isn't a bad way to make a living.

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      I just watched a biography of Gloria here on UA-cam. I was so impressed with her creativity and immense courage. Her life was not easy, despite her wealth. And what a gift Anderson Cooper is to our nation.

  • @CheekandBluster
    @CheekandBluster Рік тому +1

    I cannot not point out that the way the narrator pronounces "Schmancy" is, itself, schmancy.

  • @karenbishop5885
    @karenbishop5885 Рік тому +1

    Always funny, these old formal photos always show them unsmiling.

  • @cartomancycarmen
    @cartomancycarmen Рік тому

    The Morgans fascinated me since I didn’t know that’s where that housewife came from 😮😅

  • @patriciarobinson6081
    @patriciarobinson6081 Рік тому +1

    That's how the Celebrities were suppose to dress for the Met Gala 2022 but they missed the mark?

  • @SusanBenjamin-t4j
    @SusanBenjamin-t4j Рік тому +1

    Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears sho funded African American schools in the south, was a distinguished Jewish philanthropist. Worth mentioning is the Brown family of Rhode Island

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton Рік тому

      He did wonderful things for Chicago.

  • @quantumleaper8396
    @quantumleaper8396 Рік тому +2

    I forgot Rockefeller

  • @WaM1756
    @WaM1756 Рік тому +1

    What about the Fricks - Henry Clay and his children?