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Ida Tarbell - Wikipedia After the war, Tarbell served on President Warren G Harding's 1921 Unemployment Conference Tarbell, who never married, is often considered a feminist by her actions, although she was critical of the women's suffrage movement
Ida Tarbell | Biography, Accomplishments, Books, Muckraker, Standard . . . Ida Tarbell (born November 5, 1857, Erie county, Pennsylvania, U S —died January 6, 1944, Bridgeport, Connecticut) was an American journalist, lecturer, and chronicler of American industry best known for her classic The History of the Standard Oil Company (1904)
Ida Tarbell, Author of History of the Standard Oil Company was Born . . . Tarbell wrote many books, such as The Business of Being a Woman, The Tariffs in Our Times, New Ideals in Business, and An Account of Their Practice and Their Effects upon Men and Profits, but the History of the Standard Oil Company stands out
Brief Biography and Bibliography | Ida Tarbell | Allegheny College In her most famous work, The History of the Standard Oil Company (which oil historian Daniel Yergin called the “most important business book ever written”), Miss Tarbell revealed, after years of painstaking research, the illegal means used by John D Rockefeller to monopolize the early oil industry
Ida Tarbell, The Muckraker Who Broke Up Standard Oil A Progressive-era journalist, Ida Tarbell changed history when she set her sights on John D Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company Her exposé helped lead to break up his company, and established Tarbell as one of America’s great investigative journalists But for her, it was personal
Ida Tarbell: The Woman Who Took On Standard Oil Ida Tarbell became one of the most famous "muckraking" journalists in 19th century America, thanks largely to her investigation of the Standard Oil Company
Tarbell, Ida (1857–1944) - Encyclopedia. com Indeed, President Woodrow Wilson was so impressed with her work that he asked her to serve on the Tariff Commission he established in 1916 Tarbell declined the offer, pleading lack of administrative experience, the inherent weakness of any such body, and her desire to remain in journalism
Ida Tarbell - Women of the Hall As the most famous woman journalist of her time, Tarbell founded the American Magazine in 1906 She authored biographies of several important businessmen and wrote a series of articles about an extremely controversial issue of her day, the tariff imposed on goods imported from foreign countries
Ida Tarbell | American Experience | Official Site | PBS Having become one of the most influential women in the country, Ida Tarbell went on to pursue numerous writing and lecturing engagements However, she rejected the status of role model