Andrew Carnegie was born November 25, 1835 in Dunfermline, Scotland. He is the eldest son of William and Margaret Morrison Carnegie. His father was a local linen weaver and a leader of the Chartists, a local group who pursued enhanced working conditions in Great Britain. Meanwhile, Carnegie’s mother subsisted as a shoemaker and political and social activist. Carnegie also has one brother, Thomas M. Carnegie. However, Carnegie underwent poverty when his father was unexpectedly un-employed due to steam powered looms arising in Dunfermline (Carnegie Corporation of New York, 2015). Because of the dearth of work in Scotland, the Carnegie family established that moving to the United States would be the most advantageous to their family. Andrew’s …show more content…
“He did each job to the best of his ability and seized every opportunity to take on new responsibilities.” While working, he was often asked to relay messages to the town theatre, where he would stay and watch “plays by Shakespeare and other great playwrights.” In the course of still working in the telegraph office, he discovered a love for books and the knowledge that they detained. He was a covetous reader and took advantage of a local Allegheny citizen who opened his library to employed boys. Books administered most of Carnegie’s education as he progressed in his profession (WGBH Educational Foundation, …show more content…
He “was also one of the first to call for a ‘league of nations’ and he built a ‘palace of peace’ that would evolve into the World Court.” However, his aspirations for a sophisticated world of tranquility were demolished with the commencement of World War I in the year of 1914. Louise Carnegie, Andrew’s wife of twenty seven years at the moment, once stated that “with these hostilities her husband’s ‘heart was broken’ ” (WGBG Educational Foundation, 2015). Carnegie was also composing his autobiography throughout this time