Rockefeller: The Richest American Who Ever Lived - YouTube

Channel: PragerU

[0]
He was called “the most hated man in America.” Yet the New York Times described him as
[6]
“the world’s greatest giver.” He was America’s first billionaire. And he gave half of it away.
[14]
He was the quintessential so-called “Robber Baron” of the Gilded Age.
[19]
But he was probably more responsible than any other single individual for the creation of
[25]
the American middle class and the development of America as a great industrial power.
[31]
He lived in a splendid mansion. But was so worried about spoiling his children that he dressed
[36]
them in hand me down clothes. Song lyrics were written about him. But he rarely went to social events.
[42]
His name was John D. Rockefeller. And his story is uniquely American.
[49]
Born in upstate New York in 1839, he did not have an easy childhood. His father was a part
[56]
time salesman and a full time philanderer. Rockefeller’s mother assured John that God
[62]
was the father who would never let him down. Rockefeller absorbed that message. It guided his life.
[70]
Deeply religious, he put into practice the spiritual law “Give and it shall be given unto you.”
[78]
From his teenage years to his dying day, Rockefeller always gave a portion of his income to charity.
[85]
Rockefeller’s special gift to the world was kerosene, cheap kerosene, cheap enough
[92]
that anyone could buy it. Before the formation of his signature company, Standard Oil,
[98]
people lit their homes with candles and heated them with coal or wood. The candles were dim
[104]
and the coal was dirty. Rockefeller’s affordable kerosene -- processed crude oil -- made the
[109]
world brighter, warmer, cleaner, and better -- for everyone. “We must ever remember,”
[116]
Rockefeller wrote to one of his partners in 1885, “we are refining oil for the poor man
[123]
and he must have it cheap and good.”
[128]
Rockefeller loved the business of business. He attended to every detail -- always with
[134]
the same goal, saving the customer money. That he made so much of it himself was a byproduct.
[143]
He was also scrupulously honest. His first partner, Maurice Clark said,
[149]
“If there was a cent due a customer, he wanted the customer to have it.”
[153]
Rockefeller displayed genius at getting creative ideas from his employees at Standard Oil.
[159]
He paid them well -- and rarely had labor problems. He generously rewarded his chemists
[165]
and engineers when they found new ways to get more kerosene out of a barrel of oil.
[171]
Other oil refiners dumped oil waste into nearby rivers. That repulsed Rockefeller who was
[178]
perhaps the greatest environmentalist of his age. Not only was he a great lover of nature,
[184]
he was the ultimate recycler. He believed there was a God-given use for every particle
[191]
in a barrel of oil and he was determined to find it.
[195]
After the kerosene had been removed, Rockefeller’s staff found uses for the remaining components:
[201]
the gasoline as fuel, some of the tars for paving, and other by-products to manufacture
[208]
paint, varnish, and even anesthetics.
[211]
It’s hard to imagine that the automobile industry would have even come into existence
[217]
without the availability of Rockefeller’s cheap oil. When Henry Ford was ready with
[221]
his Model-T, Rockefeller was ready to supply the gas.
[225]
By the early decades of the new century, millions of Americans had jobs in oil-related industries.
[232]
Those jobs helped to build the American middle class. As Rockefeller said, “We saw the
[238]
vast possibilities of the oil industry, stood at the center of it, and brought our knowledge
[245]
and imagination and business experience to bear in a dozen, in twenty, in thirty directions.”
[253]
Rockefeller was an oddity -- the first billionaire in U.S. history, but no one could out-give him.
[261]
From the time of his first job, earning 50 cents a day, the sixteen-year-old Rockefeller
[267]
gave to his local Baptist church, to missions in New York City, and to the poor --
[274]
black or white. He believed in the biblical admonition that not money, but “the love of money”
[282]
was “the root of all evil.” Rockefeller supported churches and missionaries
[287]
all over the world; lavishly endowed colleges like the University of Chicago and Spelman College,
[295]
a black women’s college, named after his wife, Laura; and gave millions to
[301]
medical research. Before he died in 1937 in his 98th year, he had given away about $550,000,000,
[312]
which was more than any other American had ever possessed.
[316]
So, if he did so much good during his life, why is he most commonly remembered today
[323]
as the paradigm of a greedy capitalist? The answer to that question, I’m afraid, has much more
[329]
to do with our educational system than with Rockefeller himself.
[335]
Maybe it’s time to take a fresh look at both.
[338]
I’m Burt Folsom, professor of History at Hillsdale College, for Prager University.