Cornelius Vanderbilt — "I hate debt."
I hate debt.
I hate debt.
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"The only way to win is to never back down."
"Money has never made man happy, nor will it, there is nothing in its nature to produce happiness."
"If I could not run a steamboat alongside another man and do it as well as he for twenty percent less, I would leave the business."
"I have made more money than any man in America."
"I have no use for a man who won't work."
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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