This work chronicles the rise of Western Union Telegraph from its origins in the helter-skelter ferment of antebellum capitalism to its apogee as the first corporation to monopolize an industry on a national scale. The battles that raged over Western Union's monopoly on 19th century American telecommunications – in Congress, in courts, and in the press – illuminate the fierce tensions over the rising power of corporations after the Civil War and the reshaping of American political economy. The telegraph debate reveals that what we understand as the normative relationship between private capital and public interest is the product of a historical process that was neither inevitable nor uncontested. Western Union's monopoly was not the result of market logic or a managerial revolution, but the conscious creation of entrepreneurs protecting their investments. In the process, these entrepreneurs elevated economic liberalism above traditional republican principles of public interest and helped create a new corporate order.
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Western Union and the Creation of the American Corporate Order, 1845–1893
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Western Union and the Creation of the American Corporate Order, 1845–1893
"Joshua Wolff presents a thoroughly researched, deftly argued, and gracefully written history of America’s first industrial monopoly. He demonstrates that the rise of Western Union cemented the corporate order that characterized economic life in the late nineteenth century and afterward. This book is indispensable to historians of American capitalism." David Hochfelder, University at Albany, State University of New York
Published date: Jan 01, 2015
Language: English
No. of Pages: 318
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9781107480902
Dimensions:
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