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United States Steel: A Corporation with a Soul

Chapter 3: FOREWORD
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About This Book

A detailed corporate history traces the formation and expansion of the nation's dominant steel concern, profiling its consolidation, key executives and managerial philosophy, and the industrial, technical, and logistical systems that sustained growth. It recounts major acquisitions, the development of mines, mills, and company towns, and efforts to address worker welfare and community life. Labor relations and the great strike receive extended treatment, alongside the corporation's role in wartime production, market development, investor issues, antitrust investigations and legal challenges, and organizational practices, with illustrations and appendices documenting operations and leadership.

FOREWORD

When, in 1914–1915, I wrote “The Authentic History of the United States Steel Corporation,” which has been enlarged and brought up to date in the present volume, the Government’s suit for the dissolution of the Corporation had not been decided. In fact, the lower court handed down its decision just about the time the book was going to press.

It was my good fortune to hear the testimony of the most important of the more than 400 witnesses and argument of counsel in the suit and to supplement the information so gained by conversations with steel men, inside and outside the Corporation, with whom my work brings me in constant contact. And all that I learned convinced me more and more that the big company was not illegal, either technically or morally, and that, in fact, its influence on industry was beneficent. It is naturally a matter of personal gratification that the suit has resulted in the complete vindication of the Corporation.

We live in a day of big corporations and the tendency seems to be to concentrate still more capital and manufacturing facilities. It is therefore important that we should know something of their activities, not only economic but social.

I believe that the United States Steel Corporation is one enterprise that endeavors always to live up fully to the responsibilities it must perforce assume to its employees and to the public, as well as to its stockholders. I believe that it has earned the title of “A Corporation With A Soul”. And, so believing, I have not hesitated to tell the story of United States Steel as I have learned it by years of personal observation and contact.

Arundel Cotter.