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  1. Adolph Claus J. Spreckels (July 9, 1828 – December 26, 1908) (his last name has also been misspelled as Spreckles) was a major industrialist in Hawai'i during the kingdom, republican, and territorial periods of the islands' history.

  2. www.immigrantentrepreneurship.org › entries › claus-spreckels-robber-baron-andClaus Spreckels: Robber Baron and Sugar King

    Jun 7, 2011 · Claus Spreckels (born July 9, 1828 in Lamstedt, Kingdom of Hanover; died: December 26, 1908 in San Francisco, California) was perhaps the most successful German-American immigrant entrepreneur of the late-nineteenth century.

  3. 3 days ago · 06/08/2024. Sugar looms large in “The Sugar King of California.”. Dr. Bonura said that C&H was Claus Spreckels’ arch enemy. Our addiction to sweets can be partly attributed to Claus Spreckels, who is the subject of “The Sugar King of California: The Life of Claus Spreckels,” a new book by Dr. Sandra Bonura.

  4. Apr 5, 2021 · Claus Spreckels Builds a Business Empire in Northern California. Reinvesting the capital he had created with his retail and wholesale businesses, Spreckels’ industrial career began with something typically German: beer brewing.

  5. Oct 13, 2019 · Claus Spreckels (1828–1908) was perhaps the most successful German-American immigrant entrepreneur of the late-nineteenth century; he was one of the ten richest Americans of his time.

  6. Claus Spreckels (1828–1908) was perhaps the most successful German-American immigrant entrepreneur of the late nineteenth century. The career of the ―sugar king‖ of California, Hawaii, and the American West consisted of building and breaking monopolies in sugar, transport, gas, electricity, real estate, newspapers, banks, and breweries.

  7. Nov 28, 2022 · Spreckels Mansion, a completely over-the-top late Victorian home, was the luxurious residence of one of San Francisco’s wealthiest men at the time, Claus Spreckels. He made his fortune in the sugar industry, earning the house a nickname: The Sugar Palace.

  8. Claus Spreckels was born in Landstedt, in the then independent kingdom of Hanover, on July 9, 1828. He came to the United States in 1846, and engaged in the grocery business in South Carolina and New York. He came to San Francisco in 1856, where he was in the grocery trade and organized a brewery.

  9. May 29, 2013 · For several years, Claus Spreckels was the dominant economic and political force in Hawaii, more influential than King Kalakaua. While many contemporaries denounced the California sugar king as a usurper, the document gives evidence of the different economic logics of the post-autocratic Hawaiian kingdom and the German-American entrepreneur.

  10. Claus Spreckels rose to immense power and wealth as the “Sugar King” through the course of building a monopoly of Hawaiian sugar production through a complex of plantations and transportation systems that also established William Matson’s shipping empire.

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