Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Although the most important railroader of his time, he would be almost wholly forgotten today were it not for four simple words he so uncharacteristically and incautiously uttered on October 8, 1882: “The public be damned.”

  2. The public be damned!” replied Vanderbilt. “We run. natural, perhaps, that the phrase should have been tacked upon him and perpetuated in the long list of our “popular beliefs which are wrong.”. That historic phrase was uttered in an interview with newspaper men in October, 1882.

  3. "The Public Be Damned!" A Thematic and Multiple Intelligences Approach to Teaching the Gilded Age TI he Gilded Age often fails to generate much enthusiasm among students as well as teachers. Several years ago a teacher of American history confessed that she covered the late nineteenth century in a twenty-minute lecture because "not much

  4. publish and be damned. /ˌpʌblɪʃ ən bi ˈdæmd/. /ˌpʌblɪʃ ən bi ˈdæmd/. a phrase meaning 'you can publish if you like, I don't care'. It is thought to have been used by the Duke of Wellington when he received threats that private details about him were going to be published.

  5. May 27, 2013 · In a column titled “The Public Be Damned,” accompanied by a photo of a smiling, bald-headed economist, Friedman argued that the attitude expressed in that title, far from being businessmen’s attitude toward the public, is actually the attitude of the U.S. Post Office.

  6. Dec 1, 2006 · “Mr. Vanderbilt, are you working for the public or for your stockholders?” “The public be damned! I am working for my stockholders! If the public want the train, why don’t they support it?”On October 17, 1882, Tribune writer Rufus Hatch wrote a piece savaging Vanderbilt. Hatch claims that

  7. Nov 6, 2022 · The public be damned! Attributed remark to a reporter during a visit to Chicago, promptly denied by Vanderbilt. Descriptions of the context and circumstances vary widely, although most accounts agree that he was asked whether he ran an unprofitable train for the public's benefit.