Surname
XXXXXXX’s XXXX
Professor
XXXXXX
XXXX
Andrew XXXXXXXX: The Father XX XXXXXX XXXXX America
For decades, XXXXXXXXX XXXXXX’t XXXX XXX love the XXXX-XXXXXX, XXX loving XXXXXX XXXXXX Annie. XXX image of the little XXXX XXXXXX so XXXXXXX from poverty XX XXXXXX provide XXXX XXX XXX XXXX in XXX XXXX’s, and her XXXXX XXXXXXXXX XX be XXX XXXXX XX what the XXXXXX might XXXX. XXX rags-XX-riches phenomenon is the XXXXX XX XXX XXXXXXXX XXXXX. XXX a few XXXXX people XXXX embodied XXXX phenomenon as XXXX as Andrew XXXXXXXX did in the XXXX XXXXX XXX XXXXX 1900s. His example and industry caused XXX to become the father XX the middle-XXXXX America (XXXXXX XXX).
Andrew XXXXXXXX XXX XX looked to XX an XXXXX XXXXXXX XX a XXXX XXXXXXXXX making XXX way up XX XXXXXX XXXXXX XX a XXXXXXXXXX world. XXXXXXXX XXX XXXX in a XXXX working-XXXXX XXXXXX in XXXXXXXX. According XX the XXX documentary “XXX Richest XXX in the XXXX: XXXXXX XXXXXXXX,” the industrial revolution was difficult XX Carnegie’s father XXXXXXX him XX lose XXX XXXXXXX business. The Carnegie family was XXXX opposed to XXX idea of a XXXXXXXXXX XXXXX, who XXXXXX their wealth XXXXXX by XXXXXXXXXXX (“XXXXXXX”). This type XX XXXXXXXXXX played a XXXXX factor in XXXXXX Carnegie’s XXXXXXX. In order to appease XXX XXXXXX’s desire XXX XXXXXXXX benefits, XXX XXXXXXX in an effort to XXXX XXX XXXXXX’s, XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXX and XXXXXXX XX property.
XXXXXXXX’s XXXXXXXXX was XXXXX XXX gaining XXXXXX. His XXXXXX XXXXXX XXX to “look XXXXX XXX XXXXXXXX, XXX XXX XXXXXX XXXX take XXXX of themselves;” he later turned this proverb XXXX “XXXXX XXX XXXXX, and the XXXXXXX XXXX XXXX XX themselves” (“Richest”). Such thrift was integral XX his XXXXXX success.
XXXX XXXXX
XXXXXX, Beth. "Professor Elaine Bassett English XXX 3 XXXXXX XXXX Andrew Carnegie: The Father XX Middle-Class XXXXXXX." (XXXX).