Wilson (Margaret Barclay). A Carnegie Anthology. Privately printed. New York, 1915.


INDEX

Abbey, Edwin A., [298].
Abbott, Rev. Lyman, [285].
Abbott, William L., becomes partner of Mr. Carnegie, [201].
Accounting system, importance of, [135], [136], [204].
Acton, Lord, library bought by Mr. Carnegie, [325].
Adams, Edwin, tragedian, [49].
Adams Express Company, investment in, [79].
Addison, Leila, friend and critic of young Carnegie, [97].
Aitken, Aunt, [8], [22], [30], [50], [51], [77], [78].
Alderson, Barnard, Andrew Carnegie, quoted, [282] n.
Allegheny City, the Carnegies in, [30], [31], [34];
public library and hall, [259].
Allegheny Valley Railway, bonds marketed by Mr. Carnegie, [167]-71.
Allison, Senator W.B., [124], [125].
Altoona, beginnings of, [66].
American Four-in-Hand in Britain, An, Mr. Carnegie's first book, [6];
quoted, [27], [318] n.;
published, [212], [322].
Anderson, Col. James, and his library, [45]-47.
Arnold, Edwin, gives Mr. Carnegie the MS. of The Light of Asia, [207].
Arnold, Matthew, quoted, [206], [207], [302];
visits Mr. Carnegie, [216], [299], [301];
a charming man, [298];
seriously religious, [299];
as a lecturer, [299], [300];
and Henry Ward Beecher, [300];
on Shakespeare, [302];
and Josh Billings, [303]-05;
in Chicago, [305], [306];
memorial to, [308].
Baldwin, William H., [277].
Balfour, Prime Minister, [269]-71;
as a philosopher, [323], [324].
Balfour of Burleigh, Lord, and Trust for the Universities of Scotland, [269], [270], [272].
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Mr. Carnegie's relations with, [125]-29.
Baring Brother, dealings with, [168], [169].
Barryman, Robert, an ideal Tom Bowling, [28], [29].
Bates, David Homer, quoted, [45], [46], [100].
Beecher, Henry Ward, and Matthew Arnold, [300];
and Robert G. Ingersoll, [300], [301];
on Herbert Spencer, [336], [337].
Behring Sea question, [350], [353]-55.
Bessemer steel process, revolutionized steel manufacture, [184], [185], [229].
Billings, Dr. J.S., of the New York Public Libraries, [259];
director of the Carnegie Institution, [260].
[Billings, Josh], [295];
and Matthew Arnold, [303]-05;
anecdotes, [304], [305].
Bismarck, Prince, disturbs the financial world, [169].
Black, William, [298].
Blaine, James G., visits Mr. Carnegie, [216];
and Mr. Gladstone, [320], [321], [328];
a good story-teller, [341]-43, [357];
his Yorktown address, [341];
at Cluny Castle, [344];
misses the Presidency, [345];
as Secretary of State, [345], [352]-56;
at the Pan-American Congress, [346].
Bliss, Cornelius N., [363].
Borntraeger, William, [136];
put in charge of the Union Iron Mills, [198];
anecdotes of, [199]-201.
Botta, Professor and Madame, [150].
Braddock's Coöperative Society, [250].
Bridge-building, of iron, [115]-29;
at Steubenville, [116], [117];
at Keokuk, Iowa, [154];
at St. Louis, [155].
Bright, John, [11];
and George Peabody, [282].
British Iron and Steel Institute, [178], [180].
Brooks, David, manager of the Pittsburgh telegraph office, [36]-38, [57]-59.
Brown University, John Hay Library at, [275].
Bruce, King Robert, [18], [367].
Bryan, William J., and the treaty with Spain, [364].
Bull Run, battle of, [100].
Bülow, Prince von, [368], [370].
Burns, Robert, quoted, [3], [13], [33], [307], [313];
Dean Stanley on, [271];
rules of conduct, [271], [272].
Burroughs, John, and Ernest Thompson Seton, [293].
Butler, Gen. B.F., [99].
Cable, George W., [295].
Calvinism, revolt from, [22], [23], [74], [75].
Cambria Iron Company, [186].
Cameron, Simon, in Lincoln's Cabinet, [102], [103];
a man of sentiment, [104];
anecdote of, [104], [105].
Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry, [313];
and Trust for the Universities of Scotland, [269], [271];
Prime Minister, [312], [313].
Carnegie, Andrew, grandfather of A.C., [2], [3].
Carnegie, Andrew, birth, [2];
ancestry, [2]-6;
fortunate in his birthplace, [6]-8;
childhood in Dunfermline, [7]-18;
a violent young republican, [10]-12;
goes to school, [13]-15, [21];
early usefulness to his parents, [14];
learns history from his Uncle Lauder, [15], [16];
intensely Scottish, [16], [18];
trained in recitation, [20];
power to memorize, [21];
animal pets, [23];
early evidence of organizing power, [24], [43];
leaves Dunfermline, [25];
sails for America, [28];
on the Erie Canal, [29], [30];
in Allegheny City, [30];
becomes a bobbin boy, [34];
works in a bobbin factory, [35], [36];
telegraph messenger, [37]-44;
first real start in life, [38], [39];
first communication to the press, [45];
cultivates taste for literature, [46], [47];
love for Shakespeare stimulated, [48], [49];
Swedenborgian influence, [50];
taste for music aroused, [51];
first wage raise, [55];
learns to telegraph, [57], [58], [61];
becomes a telegraph operator, [59].
[Railroad experience:]
Clerk and operator for Thomas A. Scott, division superintendent of Pennsylvania Railroad, [63];
loses pay-rolls, [67];
an anti-slavery partisan, [68], [96];
employs women as telegraph operators, [69];
takes unauthorized responsibility, [71], [72];
in temporary charge of division, [73];
theological discussions, [74]-76;
first investment, [79];
transferred to Altoona, [84];
invests in building of sleeping-cars, [87];
made division superintendent on the Pennsylvania Railroad, [91];
returns to Pittsburgh, [92];
gets a house at Homewood, [94];
Civil War service, [99]-109;
gift to Kenyon College, [106];
first serious illness, [109];
first return to Scotland, [110]-13;
organizes rail-making and locomotive works, [115];
also a company to build iron bridges, [116]-18;
bridge-building, [119]-29;
begins making iron, [130]-34;
introduces cost accounting system, [135], [136], [204];
becomes interested in oil wells, [136]-39;
mistaken for a noted exhorter, [140];
leaves the railroad company, [140], [141].
Period of acquisition:
Travels extensively in Europe, [142], [143];
deepening appreciation of art and music, [143];
builds coke works, [144], [145];
attitude toward protective tariff, [146]-48;
opens an office in New York, [149];
joins the Nineteenth Century Club, [150];
opposed to speculation, [151]-54;
builds bridge at Keokuk, [154];
and another at St. Louis, [155]-57;
dealings with the Morgans, [155]-57, [169]-73;
gives public baths to Dunfermline, [157];
his ambitions at thirty-three, [157], [158];
rivalry with Pullman, [159];
proposes forming Pullman Palace Car Company, [160];
helps the Union Pacific Railway through a crisis, [162], [163];
becomes a director of that company, [164];
but is forced out, [165];
friction with Mr. Scott, [165], [174];
floats bonds of the Allegheny Valley Railway, [167]-71;
negotiations with Baring Brothers, [168], [169];
some business rules, [172]-75, [194], [224], [231];
concentrates on manufacturing, [176], [177];
president of the British Iron and Steel Institute, [178];
begins making pig iron, [178], [179];
proves the value of chemistry at a blast furnace, [181]-83;
making steel rails, [184]-89;
in the panic of 1873, [189]-93;
parts with Mr. Kloman, [194]-97;
some of his partners, [198]-203;
goes around the world, [204]-09;
his philosophy of life, [206], [207];
Dunfermline confers the freedom of the town, [210];
coaching in Great Britain, [211], [212];
dangerously ill, [212], [213];
death of his mother and brother, [212], [213];
courtship, [213], [214];
marriage, [215];
presented with the freedom of Edinburgh, [215];
birth of his daughter, [217];
buys Skibo Castle, [217];
manufactures spiegel and ferro-manganese, [220], [221];
buys mines, [221]-23;
acquires the Frick Coke Company, [222];
buys the Homestead steel mills, [225];
progress between 1888 and 1897, [226];
the Homestead strike, [228]-33;
succeeds Mark Hanna on executive committee of the National Civic Federation, [234];
incident of Burgomaster McLuckie, [235]-39;
some labor disputes, [240]-54;
dealing with a mill committee, [241], [242];
breaking a strike, [243]-46;
a sliding scale of wages, [244]-47;
beating a bully, [248];
settling differences by conference, [249], [250], [252];
workmen's savings, [251].
Period of distribution:
Carnegie Steel Company sells out to United States Steel Corporation, [255], [256];
Andrew Carnegie Relief Fund established for men in the mills, [256], [257], [281];
libraries built, [259];
Carnegie Institution founded, [259]-61;
hero funds established for several countries, [262]-67;
pension fund for aged professors, [268]-71;
trustee of Cornell University, [268];
Lord Rector of St. Andrews, [271]-73;
aid to American colleges, [274], [275], [277] n.;
connection with Hampton and Tuskegee Institutes, [276], [277];
gives organs to many churches, [278], [279];
private pension fund, [279], [280];
Railroad Pension Fund, [280];
early interested in peace movements, [282], [283];
on a League of Nations, [284] n.;
provides funds for Temple of Peace at The Hague, [284], [285];
president of the Peace Society of New York, [285], [286];
decorated by several governments, [286];
buys Pittencrieff Glen and gives it to Dunfermline, [286]-90;
friendship with Earl Grey, [290];
other trusts established, [290] n.;
dinners of the Carnegie Veteran Association, [291], [292];
the Literary Dinner, [292], [293];
relations with Mark Twain, [294]-97;
with Matthew Arnold, [298]-308;
with Josh Billings, [302]-05;
first meets Mr. Gladstone, [309], [330], [331];
estimate of Lord Rosebery, [309]-11;
his own name often misspelled, [310];
attachment to Harcourt and Campbell-Bannerman, [312];
and the Earl of Elgin, [313], [314];
his Freedom-getting career, [314], [316];
opinion on British municipal government, [314]-17;
visits Mr. Gladstone at Hawarden, [318], [319], [328], [329];
incident of the Queen's Jubilee, [320], [321];
relations with J.G. Blaine, [320], [321], [328], [341]-46;
friendship with John Morley, [322]-28;
estimate of Elihu Root, [324];
buys Lord Acton's library, [325];
on Irish Home Rule, [327];
attempts newspaper campaign of political progress, [330];
writes Triumphant Democracy, [330]-32;
a disciple of Herbert Spencer, [333]-40;
delegate to the Pan-American Congress, [346], [350];
entertains President Harrison, [347], [348];
founds Carnegie Institute at Pittsburgh, [348];
influence in the Chilian quarrel, [350]-52;
suggests Mr. Shiras for the Supreme Court, [353];
on the Behring Sea dispute, [354], [355];
opinion of Mr. Blaine, [355], [357];
relations with John Hay, [358]-61;
and with President McKinley, [359], [363];
on annexation of the Philippines, [362]-65;
criticism of W.J. Bryan, [364];
impressions of the German emperor, [366]-71;
hopeful of President Wilson, [371], [372].
[Carnegie, Louise Whitfield], wife of A.C., [215]-19;
charmed by Scotland, [215];
her enjoyment of the pipers, [216];
the Peace-Maker, [218];
honored with freedom of Dunfermline, [271];
first honorary member of Carnegie Veteran Association, [292].
[Carnegie, Margaret Morrison], mother of A.C., [6], [12];
reticent on religious subjects, [22], [50];
a wonderful woman, [31], [32], [38], [88]-90;
gives bust of Sir Walter Scott to Stirling, [157];
lays corner stone of Carnegie Library in Dunfermline, [211];
death of, [212], [213];
advice to Matthew Arnold, [299].
Carnegie, Margaret, daughter of A.C., born, [217].
Carnegie, Thomas Morrison, brother of A.C., [25];
a favorite of Col. Piper, [118], [119];
interested in iron-making, [130];
friendship with Henry Phipps, [132];
marries Lucy Coleman, [149];
death of, [212], [213].
Carnegie, William, father of A.C., [2];
a damask weaver, [8], [12], [13], [25], [30];
a radical republican, [11];
liberal in theology, [22], [23];
works in a cotton factory in Allegheny City, [34];
one of the founders of a library in Dunfermline, [48];
a sweet singer, [52];
shy and reserved, [62];
one of the most lovable of men, [63];
death of, [63], [77].
"Carnegie," the wood-and-bronze yacht, [260], [261].
Carnegie Brothers & Co., [129], [225], [226].
Carnegie Corporation of New York, [290] n.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, [286] n.
Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Learning, [268].
Carnegie Hero Fund, [262]-66.
Carnegie Institute at Pittsburgh, [259], [348].
Carnegie Institution, [259], [260].
Carnegie, Kloman & Co., [196], [197].
Carnegie, McCandless & Co., [201].
Carnegie, Phipps & Co., [226].
Carnegie Relief Fund, for Carnegie workmen, [266].
Carnegie Steel Company, [256].
Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland, trustees of, [269];
duties of, [270], [271].
Carnegie United Kingdom Trust, [290] n.
Carnegie Veteran Association, [291], [292].
"Cavendish" (Henry Jones), anecdote of, [315].
Central Transportation Company, [159], [161].
Chamberlain, Joseph, [326], [327], [356].
Chemistry, value of, in iron manufacture, [181],

[182], [223].
Chicago, "dizzy on cult," [305], [306].
Chili, quarrel with, [350]-53.
Chisholm, Mr., Cleveland iron manufacturer, [184].
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, [355], [356], [360].
Clemens, Samuel L., see [Twain, Mark].
Cleveland, Frances, Library at Wellesley College, [275].
Cleveland, President, [283];
and tariff revision, [147].
Cluny Castle, Scotland, [217];
Mr. Blaine at, [344].
Coal-washing, introduced into America by George Lauder, [144].
Cobbett, William, [4].
Coke, manufacture of, [144], [145], [221].
Coleman, Lucy, afterwards Mrs. Thomas Carnegie, [149].
Coleman, William, interested in oil wells, [136]-40;
and in coke, [144];
manufacturer of steel rails, [186];
anecdote of, [192];
sells out to Mr. Carnegie, [202].
Columbia University, [274] n.
Confucius, quoted, [50], [52], [340].
Constant, Baron d'Estournelles de, [286].
Conway, Moncure D., Autobiography quoted, [274].
Coöperative store, [250].
Corn Law agitation, the, [8].
Cornell University, salaries of professors, [268].
Cowley, William, [46].
Cremer, William Randall, receives Nobel Prize for promotion of peace, [283], [284] n.
Cresson Springs, Mr. Carnegie's summer home in the Alleghanies, [213], [307].
Cromwell, Oliver, [15].
Crystal Palace, London, [143].
Curry, Henry M., [181];
becomes a partner of Mr. Carnegie, [201].
Cyclops Mills, [133], [134].
Damask trade in Scotland, [2], [8], [12], [13].
Dawes, Anna L., How we are Governed, [327].
Dennis, Prof. F.S., [213], [214].
Dickinson College, Conway Hall at, [274].
Disestablishment of the English Church, [329].
Dodds process, the, for carbonizing the heads of iron rails, [186].
Dodge, William E., [260].
Donaldson, Principal, of St. Andrews University, [273].
Douglas, Euphemia (Mrs. Sloane), [29].
Drexel, Anthony, [175], [205].
Dunfermline, birthplace of Mr. Carnegie, [2], [6];
a radical town, [10];
libraries in, [48];
revisited, [110]-12, [157];
gives Mr. Carnegie the freedom of the town, [210];
Carnegie Library in, [211];
confers freedom of the town on Mrs. Carnegie, [271].
Dunfermline Abbey, [6], [7], [17], [18], [26], [27], [111].
Durrant, President, of the Union Pacific Railway, [159].
Eads, Capt. James B., [119], [120].
Edgar Thomson Steel Company, [188], [189], [201], [202].
Education, compulsory, [34].
Edwards, "Billy," [249], [250].
Edwards, Passmore, [330].
Elgin, Earl of, and Trust for the Universities of Scotland, [269]-72, [313], [314].
Elkins, Sen. Stephen B., and Mr. Blaine, [344], [345], [352], [359].
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, anecdote of, [335].
Endorsing notes, [173], [174].
Erie Canal, the, [29], [30].
Escanaba Iron Company, [194]-97, [220].
Evans, Captain ("Fighting Bob"), as government inspector, [199].
Evarts, William M., [336] n.
Fahnestock, Mr., Pittsburgh financier, [41].
Farmer, President, of Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad Co., [5].
Ferguson, Ella (Mrs. Henderson), [25].
Ferro-manganese, manufacture of, [220].
Fleming, Marjory, [20].
Flower, Governor Roswell P., and the tariff, [147], [148].
Forbes, Gen. John, Laird of Pittencrieff, [188].
Franciscus, Mr., freight agent at Pittsburgh, [72].
Franciscus, Mrs., [80].
Franklin, Benjamin, and St. Andrews University, [272];
quoted, [340].
Frick, Henry C., [222].
Frick Coke Company, [222], [226].
Fricke, Dr., chemist at the Lucy Furnace, [182].
Frissell, Hollis B., of Hampton Institute, [277].
Garrett, John W., President of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, [125]-29.
General Education Board, [274].
Germany, and the Philippines, [365];
Emperor William, [366]-71.
Gilder, Richard Watson, poem by, [262], [263];
manager of the Literary Dinner, [292], [293];
on Mr. Carnegie, [293] n., [340] n.
Gilman, Daniel C., first president of the Carnegie Institution, [260].
Gladstone, W.E., letter from, [233];
and Matthew Arnold, [298];
Mr. Carnegie and, [309], [327]-31;
his library, [318];
devout and sincere, [319];
anecdote of, [320];
and J.G. Blaine, [321];
and John Morley, [325].
Glass, John P., [54], [55].
God, each stage of civilization creates its own, [75].
Gorman, Senator Arthur P., and the tariff, [147], [148].
Gospel of Wealth, The, published, [255].
Gould, Jay, [152].
Grant, Gen. U.S., and Secretary Stanton, [106];
some characteristics of, [107];
unjustly suspected, [108].
Greeley, Horace, [68], [81].
Grey, Earl, trustee of Carnegie United Kingdom Trust, [290] and n.
Hague Conference, [283], [284].
Haldane, Lord Chancellor, error as to British manufactures, [331].
Hale, Eugene, visits Mr. Carnegie, [216].
Hale, Prof. George E., of the Mount Wilson Observatory, [261].
Halkett, Sir Arthur, killed at Braddock's defeat, [187], [188].
Hamilton College, Elihu Root Foundation at, [275].
Hampton Institute, [276].
Hanna, Senator Mark, [233], [234], [359];
Chair in Western Reserve University named for, [275].
Harcourt, Sir William Vernon, [312].
Harris, Joel Chandler, [295].
Harrison, President Benjamin, opens Carnegie Hall at Allegheny City, [259], [347];
his nomination, [344], [345];
dispute with Chili, [350]-53;
the Behring Sea question, [350], [353]-55.
Hartman Steel Works, [226].
Hawk, Mr., of the Windsor Hotel, New York, [150].
Hay, Secretary John, comment on Lincoln, [101], [102];
visits Mr. Carnegie, [216];
chairman of directors of Carnegie Institution, [260];
Library, at Brown University, [275];
as Secretary of State, [358];
the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, [359];
the Senate his bête noire, [360], [361].
Hay, John, of Allegheny City, [34]-37.
Head-ication versus Hand-ication, [4].
Henderson, Ebenezer, [5].
Henderson, Ella Ferguson, [25], [55].
Hero Fund, [262]-66.
Hewitt, Abram S., [260].
Higginson, Maj. F.L., [260].
Higginson, Col. Thomas Wentworth, [150].
Hill, David Jayne, on the German Hero Fund, [263], [264].
Hogan, Maria, [70].
Hogan, Uncle, [36], [77].
Holls, G.F.W., and the Hague Conference, [284].
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, and the Matthew Arnold memorial, [307], [308].
Homestead Steel Mills, consolidated with Carnegie Brothers & Co., [225], [226];
strike at, [228]-39;
address of workmen to Mr. Carnegie, [257].
Hughes, Courtney, [58].
Huntington, Collis P., [205].
Ignorance, the main root of industrial trouble, [240].
In the Time of Peace, by Richard Watson Gilder, [262], [263].
Ingersoll, Col. Robert G., [210], [300].
Integrity, importance of, in business, [172].
Ireland, Mr. Carnegie's freedom tour in, [314] n., [316].
Irish Home Rule, [327].
Irwin, Agnes, receives doctor's degree from St. Andrews University, [272], [273].
Isle of Wight, [215].
Jackson, Andrew, and Simon Cameron, [104], [105].
Jewett, Thomas L., President of the Panhandle Railroad, [117].
Jones, Henry ("Cavendish"), anecdote of, [315].
Jones, —— ("The Captain"), [202], [204], [241], [242], [369];
prefers large salary to partnership, [203].
Just by the Way, poem on Mr. Carnegie, [238].
Kaiser Wilhelm, and Mr. Carnegie, [366]-71.
Katte, Walter, [123].
Keble, Bishop, godfather of Matthew Arnold, [298].
Kelly, Mr., chairman of blast-furnaces committee, [241]-43.
Kennedy, Julian, [220].
Kenyon College, gift to, [106];
Stanton Chair of Economics, [275].
Keokuk, Iowa, [154].
Keystone Bridge Works, [116], [122]-28, [176].
Keystone Iron Works, [130].
Kilgraston, Scotland, [215], [216].
Kind action never lost, [85], [86].
King Edward VII, letter from, [264], [265], [326].
Kloman, Andrew, partner with Mr. Carnegie, [130], [178], [179];
a great mechanic, [131], [134];
in bankruptcy, [194]-96.
Knowledge, sure to prove useful, [60].
Knowles, James, on Tennyson, [337], [338].
Koethen, Mr., choir leader, [51].
Labor, some problems of, [240]-54.
Lang, Principal, [272].
Lauder, George, uncle of A.C., [12], [28], [113], [287];
teaches him history, [15]-17;
and recitation, [20].
Lauder, George, cousin of A.C., [8], [17];
develops coal-washing machinery, [144], [223].
Lauder Technical College, [9], [15].
Lehigh University, Mr. Carnegie gives Taylor Hall, [266].
Lewis, Enoch, [91].
Libraries, founded by Mr. Carnegie, [47], [48], [259].
Library, public, usefulness of, [47].
Lincoln, Abraham, some characteristics of, [101];
second nomination sought, [104], [105].
Linville, H.J., partner of Mr. Carnegie, [116], [120].
Literature, value of a taste for, [46].
Lloyd, Mr., banker at Altoona, [87].
Lombaert, Mr., general superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, [63], [66], [67], [73].
Lucy Furnace, the, erected, [178];
in charge of Henry Phipps, [181];
enlarged, [183];
gift from the workmen in, [257], [258].
Lynch, Rev. Frederick, [285].
Mabie, Hamilton Wright, quoted, [113].
McAneny, George, [277].
McCandless, David, [78], [186].
McCargo, David, [42], [49], [69].
McCullough, J.N., [173], [175].
MacIntosh, Mr., Scottish furniture manufacturer, [24].
McKinley, President William, [358];
and the Panama Canal, [359];
and the Spanish War, [361]-65.
McLuckie, Burgomaster, and Mr. Carnegie, [235]-37.
McMillan, Rev. Mr., Presbyterian minister, [74]-76.
Macdonald, Sir John, and the Behring Sea troubles, [354], [355].
Mackie, J.B., quoted, [3], [9].
Macy, V. Everit, [277].
Martin, Robert, Mr. Carnegie's only schoolmaster, [13]-15, [21].
Mason and Slidell, [102].
Mellon, Judge, of Pittsburgh, [1].
Memorizing, benefit of, [21], [39].
Mill, John Stuart, as rector of St. Andrews, [272].
Miller, Thomas N., [45], [46], [110];
on the doctrine of predestination, [75];
partner with Mr. Carnegie, [115], [130], [133];
death of, [130];
sells his interest, [133], [134].
Mills, D.O., [260].
Mitchell, Dr. S. Weir, [260].
Morgan, J. Pierpont, [171], [172], [256].
Morgan, Junius S., [155], [156], [170].
Morgan, J.S., & Co., negotiations with, [169]-72.
Morland, W.C., [42].
Morley, John, and Mr. Carnegie, [21], [22], [293];
address at Carnegie Institute, [188];
on Lord Rosebery, [311];
on the Earl of Elgin, [314];
on Mr. Carnegie, [322] n.;
pessimistic, [322], [323];
visits America, [324], [325];
and Elihu Root, [324];
and Theodore Roosevelt, [325];
and Lord Acton's library, [325];
and Joseph Chamberlain, [326], [327].
Morley, R.F., [100] n.
Morris, Leander, cousin of Mr. Carnegie, [51].
Morrison, Bailie, uncle of Mr. Carnegie, [4]-6, [9], [11], [210], [287], [312].
Morrison, Margaret, see [Carnegie, Margaret].
Morrison, Thomas, maternal grandfather of Mr. Carnegie, [4]-6, [287].
Morrison, Thomas, second cousin of Mr. Carnegie, [145].
Morton, Levi P., [165].
Mount Wilson Observatory, [261], [262].
Municipal government, British and American, [314]-16.
"Naig," Mr. Carnegie's nickname, [17].
National Civic Federation, [234].
National Trust Company, Pittsburgh, [224].
Naugle, J.A., [237].
New York, first impressions of, [28];
business headquarters of America, [149].
Nineteenth Century Club, New York, [150].
Ocean surveys, [261].
Ogden, Robert C., [277].
Oil wells, [136]-39.
Oliver, Hon. H.W., [42], [49].
Omaha Bridge, [164], [165].
Optimism, [3], [162];
optimist and pessimist, [323].
Organs, in churches, [278], [279].
Our Coaching Trip, quoted, [48], [110];
privately published, [212].
Palmer, Courtlandt, [150].
Panama Canal, [359], [360], [372].
Pan-American Congress, [345], [346].
Panic of 1873, the, [171], [172], [189]-93.
Park, James, pioneer steel-maker of Pittsburgh, [199], [200].
Parliament, membership and meetings, [315].
Partnership better than corporation, [221].
Patiemuir College, [2].
Pauncefote, Sir Julian, and Mr. Blaine, [355];
the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, [359], [360].
Peabody, George, his body brought home on the warship Monarch, [282].
Peabody, George Foster, [277].
Peace, Mr. Carnegie's work for, [282]-86;
Palace, at The Hague, [284], [285].
Peace Society of New York, [285], [286].
Peacock, Alexander R., partner of Mr. Carnegie, [203].
Pennsylvania Railroad Company, builds first iron bridge, [115]-17;
aids Union Pacific Railway, [163], [164];
aids Allegheny Valley Railway, [167]-71;
aids Pennsylvania Steel Works, [185].
See also [Carnegie, Andrew, Railroad experience].
Pennsylvania Steel Works, the, [185].
Pessimist and optimist, story of, [323].
Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, [167]-70.
Philippines, the, annexation of, [358], [362]-65.
Phillips, Col. William, [167], [168], [169].

Phipps, Henry, [31], [130];
advertises for work, [131], [132];
crony and partner of Thomas Carnegie, [132];
controversy over opening conservatories on Sunday, [132], [133];
European tour, [142];
in charge of the Lucy Furnace, [181], [182];
statement about Mr. Carnegie and his partners, [196], [197];
goes into the steel business, [201].
Phipps, John, [46];
killed, [76].
Pig iron, manufacture of, [178], [179];
importance of chemistry in, [181]-84.
Pilot Knob mine, [183].
Piper, Col. John L., partner of Mr. Carnegie, [116], [117];
had a craze for horses, [118], [121];
attachment to Thomas Carnegie, [118], [119];
relations with James B. Eads, [120].
Pitcairn, Robert, division superintendent, Pennsylvania Railroad, [42], [44], [49], [66], [189].
Pittencrieff Glen, bought and given to Dunfermline, [286]-89, [291].
Pittsburgh, in 1850, [39]-41;
some of its leading men, [41];
in 1860, [93];
later development, [348].
Pittsburgh, Bank of, [194].
Pittsburgh Locomotive Works, [115].
Pittsburgh Theater, [46], [48], [49].
Political corruption, [109].
Predestination, doctrine of, [75].
Principals' Week, [272].
Pritchett, Dr. Henry S., president of the Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Learning, [268].
Private pension fund, [279], [280].
Problems of To-day, quoted, [40], [217].
Protective tariffs, [146]-48.
Prousser, Mr., chemist, [222].
Public speaking, [210].
Pullman, George M., [157], [159];
forms Pullman Palace Car Company, [160], [161];
anecdote of, [162];
becomes a director of the Union Pacific, [164].
Quality, the most important factor in success, [115], [122], [123].
Queen's Jubilee, the (June, 1887), [320], [321].
Quintana, Manuel, President of Argentina, [346].
Railroad Pension Fund, [280].
Rawlins, Gen. John A., and General Grant, [107], [108].
Recitation, value of, in education, [20].
Reed, Speaker Thomas B., [362].
Reid, James D., and Mr. Carnegie, [59] and n.
Reid, General, of Keokuk, [154].
Republican Party, first national meeting, [68].
Riddle, Robert M., [81].
Ritchie, David, [139], [140].
Ritter, Governor, of Pennsylvania, anecdote of, [342].
Robinson, General, first white child born west of the Ohio River, [40].
Rockefeller, John D., [274].
Rogers, Henry H., [296].
Rolland School, [13].
Roosevelt, Theodore, [260];
and Elihu Root, [275];
John Morley on, [325];
rejects the Arbitration Treaty, [360], [361];
and the Philippines, [365].
Root, Elihu, [260], [286] n.;
fund named for, at Hamilton College, [275];
"ablest of all our Secretaries of State," [275];
on Mr. Carnegie, [276];
and John Morley, [324].
Rosebery, Lord, presents Mr. Carnegie with the freedom of Edinburgh, [215];
relations with, [309], [310];
handicapped by being born a peer, [310], [311].
Ross, Dr. John, [269], [271];
aids in buying Pittencrieff Glen, [288], [289];
receives freedom of Dunfermline, [313].
Round the World, [205], [206], [208].
Sabbath observance, [52], [53], [133].
St. Andrews University, Mr. Carnegie elected Lord Rector, [271], [273];
confers doctor's degree on Benjamin Franklin and on his great-granddaughter, [272], [273].
St. Louis Bridge, [155]-57.
Salisbury, Lord, and the Behring Sea troubles, [353]-55.
Sampson, ——, financial editor of the London Times, [156].
Schiffler, Mr., a partner of Mr. Carnegie in building iron bridges, [116], [117].
Schoenberger, Mr., president of the Exchange Bank, Pittsburgh, [192], [193].
Schurman, President Jacob G., [363].
Schwab, Charles M., [152], [254]-56.
Scott, John, [186].
Scott, Thomas A., [63], [70]-74, [77];
helps Carnegie to his first investment, [79];
made general superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, [84];
breaks a strike, [84], [85];
made vice-president of the Company, [90];
Assistant Secretary of War, [99], [102];
colonel, [103];
returns to the railroad, [109];
tries to get contract for sleeping-cars on the Union Pacific, [158], [159];
becomes president of that road, [164];
first serious difference with Carnegie, [165];
president of the Texas Pacific Railroad, and then of the Pennsylvania road, [172];
financially embarrassed, [173], [192];
break with Carnegie and premature death, [174].
Scott, Sir Walter, and Marjory Fleming, [20];
bust of, at Stirling, [157];
made a burgess of Dunfermline, [210].
Scott, Gen. Winfield, [102], [103].
Seneca Indians, early gatherers of oil, [138].
Sentiment, in the practical affairs of life, [253].
Seton, Ernest Thompson, and John Burroughs, [293].
Seward, William Henry, [102].
Shakespeare, quoted, [10], [214], [219], [255], [294], [297];
Mr. Carnegie's interest in, [48], [49].
Shaw, Henry W., see [Billings, Josh].
Shaw, Thomas (Lord Shaw), of Dunfermline, [269], [288], [289].
Sherman, Gen. W.T., [107].
Shiras, George, Jr., appointed to the Supreme Court, [353].
Siemens gas furnace, [136].
Singer, George, [225].
Skibo Castle, Scotland, [217], [272], [326].
Sleeping-car, invention of, [87];
on the Union Pacific Railway, [158]-61.
Sliding scale of wages, solution of the capital and labor problem, [246], [247], [252].
Sloane, Mr. and Mrs., [29].
Smith, J.B., friend of John Bright, [11], [12].
Smith, Perry, anecdote of, [124].
Snobs, English, [301].
Spanish War, the, [361]-65.
Speculation, [151], [153].
Spencer, Herbert, Mr. Carnegie's relations with, [333]-37;
a good laugher, [333], [334];
opposed to militarism, [335];
banquet to, at Delmonico's, [336];
very conscientious, [337], [338];
his philosophy, [339];
on the gift of Carnegie Institute, [348], [349].
Spens, Sir Patrick, ballad of, [7], [367].
Spiegel, manufacture of, [220].
Stanley, Dean A.P., on Burns's theology, [271].
Stanton, Edwin M., [41], [275].
Stanwood, Edward, James G. Blaine quoted, [345] n.
Steel, the age of, [181]-97;
King, [224], [225].
Steel Workers' Pension Fund, [281].
Steubenville, bridge at, over the Ohio River, [116], [117].
Stewart, D.A., freight agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, [94], [95];
joins Mr. Carnegie in manufacture of steel rails, [186].
Stewart, Rebecca, niece of Thomas A. Scott, [90].
Stokes, Major, chief counsel of the Pennsylvania Railroad, [81]-83, [86].
Storey, Samuel, M.P., [330].
Storey farm, oil wells on, [138], [139] n.
Straus, Isidor, [196].
Straus, Oscar S., and the National Civic Federation, [234], [235].
Strikes: on the Pennsylvania Railroad, [84], [85];
at Homestead, [228]-39;
at the steel-rail works, [240], [243].
Sturgis, Russell, [168].
Success, true road to, [176], [177].
Sun City Forge Company, [115] n.
Superior Rail Mill and Blast Furnaces, [115].
Surplus, the law of the, [227].
Swedenborgianism, [22], [50], [51].
Sweet By and By, The, [341], [342].
Taft, William H., and the Philippines, [363], [365].
Tariff, protective, [146]-48.
Taylor, Charles, president of the Hero Fund, [266], [267].
Taylor, Joseph, [58].
Taylor Hall at Lehigh University, [266].
Teaching, a meanly paid profession, [268].
Temple of Peace, at The Hague, [284], [285].
Tennant, Sir Charles, President of the Scotland Steel Company, [356], [357].
Texas, story about, [334].
Texas Pacific Railway, [172] n., [173].
Thaw, William, vice-president of the Fort Wayne Railroad, [190].
Thayer, William Roscoe, Life and Letters of John Hay, quoted, [216], [358], [359].
Thomas, Gen. George H., [107].
Thompson, Moses, [223].
Thomson, John Edgar, President of the Pennsylvania Railroad, [72];
an evidence of his fairness, [117];
offers Mr. Carnegie promotion, [140];
shows confidence in him, [163];
steel mills named for, [188], [189];
financially embarrassed, [192].
Tower, Charlemagne, Ambassador to Germany, [366], [368].
Trent affair, the, [102].
Trifles, importance of, [36], [124], [159], [248].
Triumphant Democracy, published, [309];
origin, [330]-32.
Troubles, most of them imaginary, [162].
Tuskegee Institute, [276].
[Twain], Mark, letter from, [294], [295];
man and hero, [296];
devotion to his wife, [297].
Union Iron Mills, [133], [134], [176];
very profitable, [198].
Union Pacific Railway, sleeping-cars on, [159]-61;
Mr. Carnegie's connection with, [162]-65.
"Unitawrian," prejudice against, [12].
Vanderlip, Frank A., [268].
Vandevort, Benjamin, [95].
Vandevort, John W., [95];
Mr. Carnegie's closest companion, [142];
accompanies him around the world, [204].
Van Dyke, Prof. John C., on the Homestead strike, [235]-37, [239].
Wagner, Mr., Carnegie's interest in, [49], [50].
Walker, Baillie, [3].
Wallace, William, [16], [17], [367].
War, breeds war, [16];
must be abolished, [274], [283], [284];
"ferocious and futile folly," [358].
Washington, Booker T., declines gift to himself, [276], [277].
Waterways, inland, improvement of, [342].
Webster Literary Society, [61].
Wellesley College, Cleveland Library at, [275].
Western Reserve University, Hanna Chair at, [275].
White, Andrew D., [23], [150];
and the Hague Conference, [284].
White, Henry, [358].
Whitfield, Louise, [213], [214].
See also, [Carnegie, Mrs. Andrew].
Whitwell Brothers, [179].
Wilkins, Judge William, [95], [96].
William IV, German Emperor, [366]-71.
Wilmot, Mr., of the Carnegie Relief Fund, [266].
Wilson, James R., [46].
Wilson, Woodrow, [371], [372].
Wilson, Walker & Co., [226].
Women as telegraph operators, [69], [70].
Woodruff, T.T., inventor of the sleeping-car, [87], [161].
Woodward, Dr. Robert S., president of the Carnegie Institution, [260].
Wordsworth, William, quoted, [86].
Workmen's savings, [251].
World peace, [369]-71.
Wright, John A., president of the Freedom Iron Works, [185].


FOOTNOTES

[1] The Eighteenth-Century Carnegies lived at the picturesque hamlet of Patiemuir, two miles south of Dunfermline. The growing importance of the linen industry in Dunfermline finally led the Carnegies to move to that town.