an astonishing 14 on the [Forbes 75 richest people in history] list are Americans born within nine years of each other… almost 20% of the names come from a single generation - born between 1831 and 1840 in a single country. The list includes industrialists and financiers who are still household names today: John Rockefeller, born in 1839 (the richest of the lot); Andrew Carnegie, 1835; Jay Gould, 1836; and JP Morgan, 1837.
…it was when all the rules by which the traditional economy functioned were broken and remade. What that list says is that it was absolutely critical, if you were going to take advantage of those opportunities, to be in your 20s when that transformation was happening. If you were born in the late 1840s, you missed it - you were too young to take advantage of that moment. If you were born in the 1820s, you were too old - your mindset was shaped by the old, pre-civil war ways.
17 notes
-
trappedarmch liked this
-
sheafoverref liked this
-
execratenix8 liked this
-
lowercharity liked this
-
coops reblogged this from chetgulland
-
obsessivecompulsive reblogged this from chetgulland and added:
fred-wilson + mikehudack + chetgulland)
-
walterblaurock reblogged this from thecool
-
yourpalmal liked this
-
chetgulland reblogged this from mikehudack
-
thecool reblogged this from fred-wilson
-
smikolay reblogged this from fred-wilson
-
huff reblogged this from fred-wilson
-
thegetdownguy liked this
-
mikehudack reblogged this from fred-wilson
-
pegobry reblogged this from fred-wilson
-
poortaste liked this
-
jitle reblogged this from fred-wilson
-
fred-wilson posted this