Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Apr 2, 2014 · Famous Business Leaders. Entrepreneurs. Cornelius Vanderbilt was a famous industrialist who worked in railroads and shipping. He had accumulated the largest fortune in the U.S. at the time of...

  2. May 11, 2018 · Cornelius Vanderbilt. Born May 27, 1794 (Port Richmond, New York) Died January 4, 1877 ( New York, New York) Shipping executive. Railroad executive. Financier. When Cornelius Vanderbilt died in 1877, he left an estate valued at $100 million. Vanderbilt's astonishing fortune ranked him as the richest American in his lifetime, and his wealth had ...

  3. Apr 11, 2011 · Apr 11, 2011, 9:46 AM. Cornelius Vanderbilt tried since the outbreak of war to donate the steamship Vanderbilt, his largest and fastest vessel, to the Union effort. Panic over the vulnerability of the Union fleet in 1862 induced the government to accept his gift. Cornelius Vanderbilt was a hard man.

  4. Cornelius Vanderbilt (May 27, 1794 - January 4, 1877) was an American industrialist, born on Staten Island, New York. He entered the transportation business at the age of 16 when he established a freight-and-passenger ferry service between Staten Island and Manhattan.

  5. www.thoughtco.com › cornelius-vanderbilt-the-commodore-1773616Cornelius Vanderbilt - ThoughtCo

    Apr 30, 2018 · Cornelius Vanderbilt was born May 27, 1794, on Staten Island, in New York. He was descended from Dutch settlers of the island (the family name had originally been Van der Bilt). His parents owned a small farm, and his father also worked as a boatman. At the time, the farmers on Staten Island needed to transport their produce to the markets in ...

  6. Cornelius Vanderbilt, known as "the Commodore, " was in his 79th year when he decided to make the gift that founded Vanderbilt University in the spring of 1873. The $1 million that he gave to endow and build the university was Vanderbilt's only major philanthropy.

  7. A biography of Cornelius Vanderbilt, the quintessential “robber baron,” a man widely revered as well as hated. By Michael Kazin. Page 1 of 10. 1. 2.

  1. People also search for