У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно The Tragic Gilded Age Families Who Lost It All (Documentary) или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Certain Gilded Age families have gone from riches to rags in American history, due to tragic circumstances including insanity, crime mysteries, and even worse. ------------------------------------ Timestamps: 0:00 Introduction 1:00 The Singer Family 24:09 The Wendel Family 48:31 The Schwab Family 1:06:46 The Reynolds Family 1:27:29 The Duke Family ------------------------------------ Behind the iconic names of America's Gilded Age fortunes lay stories of spectacular rise and devastating fall that rivaled the most dramatic fiction. This documentary explores five legendary families whose vast wealth slipped through their fingers, leaving behind cautionary tales of how easily great fortunes can vanish across generations. The Singer family transformed the humble sewing machine into an industrial empire that generated billions in today's currency. Isaac Merritt Singer's revolutionary invention brought mechanization to households worldwide, but family squabbles, excessive spending, and poor investment choices ultimately unraveled the dynasty he created. His heirs, accustomed to palatial estates and European titles acquired through strategic marriages, watched helplessly as their inheritance dwindled to a shadow of its former glory. The Wendels present perhaps the most peculiar tale of wealth's dissolution. Despite amassing a real estate portfolio that would be worth billions today, the family's pathological fear of outsiders led seven siblings to live together in a decaying mansion, refusing marriages that might introduce strangers into their hermetic existence. Their obsession with preserving wealth ironically guaranteed its demise, as the last Wendel died without heirs, leaving their once-mighty fortune scattered among distant relatives and charitable institutions. Charles Schwab's steel empire made him America's first million-dollar-a-year executive, but his passion for high-stakes gambling, lavish spending, and ill-fated investments proved his downfall. His crowning achievement, Bethlehem Steel, once America's second-largest producer, crumbled along with his fortune. The man who built a 75-room riverside mansion in New York City died nearly penniless, forced to borrow against his life insurance policy just to maintain the appearance of wealth. The Reynolds family parlayed tobacco into an industrial colossus, with R.J. Reynolds' innovative marketing transforming cigarette smoking into a national habit. Yet subsequent generations watched their inheritance evaporate through a combination of family discord, substance abuse, and financial mismanagement. Their story illustrates how personal demons can consume even the most substantial fortunes, leaving behind only faded memories of former prominence. The Duke family, whose tobacco and energy ventures created one of America's largest fortunes, saw their wealth gradually eroded through excessive philanthropy, taxation, and dilution across numerous heirs. Though their name lives on through Duke University and the Duke Endowment, the family's personal fortune diminished with each successive generation until their place among America's wealthiest families was merely a historical footnote. These five families exemplify the fragility of great wealth across generations, revealing patterns that continue to plague modern dynasties. From lavish overspending and failed investments to family conflicts and inadequate succession planning, their stories demonstrate how easily fortunes built over decades can vanish in a single generation. Through rare archival footage, previously unseen family documents, and expert analysis, this documentary provides a fascinating glimpse into the psychology of wealth and its preservation. These cautionary tales remind us that behind every crumbling mansion and forgotten family name lies a universal truth: building wealth often proves easier than maintaining it across generations.