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Flagler: Rockefeller Partner and
Florida Baronby Edward N.
Akin
Paperback: 305 pages 6.
5" x 9"
$19.95
"A
succinct and informed account of [Flagler's] leadership in transforming
Florida's economy." --American Historical Review
"An
important contribution to the understanding of Standard Oil's extended
partnership and how the personal desire of Flagler led to the early
development
of Florida's Atlantic Coast." --The Historian
Henry
M. Flagler (1830-1913), the ambitious Gilded Age tycoon who designed
and built
much of Florida's fashionable east coast, rode to success on the rails.
As
John D. Rockefeller's closest adviser in the 1870s, Flagler helped
assemble the
Standard Oil empire. In this thoroughly researched biography, Akin
shows that
Flagler understood early in his career that cheap freight rates
determined
industrial profits. Portraying Flagler as an aggressive entrepreneur,
Akin
documents his shrewd negotiations to obtain reduced rates, rebates, and
drawbacks from the railroads, thus assuring Standard Oil's national
domination
over oil transportation costs.
Flagler
drove himself as hard as he drove a bargain, obsessed with the desire
to create
a monument to himself that he called "my domain." His legacy was no
less than modern Florida. In 1885, at the age of fifty-five, he turned
his
attention away from Standard Oil and began construction of the Ponce de
León
luxury hotel in St. Augustine, the city where he had honeymooned with
his
second wife. Realizing he could never fill its rooms unless better
transportation with the North was available, he embarked on the second
railroad
venture of his lifetime, creation of the Florida East Coast Railway.
Flagler's
resort empire eventually included The Breakers in Palm Beach and the
Royal Palm
in Miami; his Atlantic coast railroad extended all the way to Key West,
an
engineering achievement that was called the "eighth wonder of the
world." By the beginning of the twentieth century, Flagler dominated
not
just the resort and railroad industries in Florida but steamship and
agricultural operations, too. Florida politicians gave his projects
preferential treatment, even changing the state's divorce law so he
could marry
for a third time.
Woven
into this biography are details about Flagler's family, personality,
three
marriages, alienation from his only son, and devotion to the
Presbyterian
church--copy that fueled society gossip columns from New York to Palm
Beach for
decades.
.....
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