Cornelius Vanderbilt — "Never tell what you are going to do till you have done it."
Never tell what you are going to do till you have done it.
Never tell what you are going to do till you have done it.
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"There is no friendship in trade."
"I'm not a man of words, but of deeds."
"The only way to get rich is to think big."
"If a fellow's got guts he can always win."
"I don't care a snap for the public."
American shipping and railroad magnate whose New York Central railroad and aggressive consolidation built the largest fortune in 19th-century America. Closely associated with John D. Rockefeller (later Gilded Age titan who learned the consolidation playbook). For an intellectual contrast, see Jay Gould, railroad speculator (1836-1892) — Vanderbilt built and ran railroads; Gould watered stock and manipulated markets. Their Erie Railroad rate-war and Gould's Black Friday (1869) gold-corner schemes were the public foil to Vanderbilt's quieter operational consolidation. The cleanest 'industrialist vs speculator' Gilded Age pairing.
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