Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 694 pages of information about Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made.

Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 694 pages of information about Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made.

No man’s career holds out more encouragement to young men seeking to rise than that of Andrew V. Stout.  It shows that courage, patient industry, and business capacity will bring fortune to any honest worker.  His uniform success speaks volumes in favor of a young man’s striving to lead a Christian life in the midst of his business cares and struggles.  God’s blessing follows such an one at every step, and he will succeed in the end, whatever trials may beset his path at first.  It is a great mistake to suppose that a man’s success depends on his “sharpness.”  Shrewdness is a valuable quality, but it must be coupled with a plain, practical honesty, or it will amount to nothing in the end.  A man must be faithful to his God if he would have his work stand.

CHAPTER VI.

JONAS CHICKERING.

On Tremont Street, in the City of Boston, near the Roxbury line, there stands an immense building of brick, said to be larger than any edifice in the United States, save the Capitol at Washington.  It is built in the form of a hollow square, with a large court-yard in the center, and the building and court-yard together cover an area of five acres.  It is five stories in height on the outer side, and six on the inner, the court-yard being one story lower than the street.  The building is two hundred and sixty-two feet in length from east to west, and two hundred and forty-five from north to south, the shorter distance being the length on Tremont Street.  The width of the building all around the court-yard is fifty feet.  It contains nine hundred windows, with eleven thousand panes of glass, and when lighted up at night seems almost a solid mass of fire.  From five to six hundred men are employed here in various capacities, and an immense steam engine of one hundred and twenty horse-power furnishes the motive power for the machinery.  Altogether, it is one of the most prominent and interesting of all the sights of Boston, and the visitor is surprised to learn that it is due entirely to the energy and genius of one who, but thirty-four years previous to its erection, came to Boston a penniless stranger.  The building is the famous piano-forte manufactory of Chickering & Sons, and its founder was Jonas Chickering, the subject of this sketch.

JONAS CHICKERING was born at New Ipswich, New Hampshire, on the 5th of April, 1798.  His father was a blacksmith by trade, and employed his leisure time in cultivating a small farm of which he was the owner.  He was esteemed by his neighbors as an upright, reliable man, and prudent and careful in his temporal affairs.  The family being poor, young Jonas was required to do his share toward cultivating the farm, and received only such education as was afforded by the district schools in the vicinity.  He was noted at an early age for his passionate love of music.  When a mere child, he learned to play on the fife, and was such a proficient performer that he was called upon

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Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.