'Trust-busting' refers to government activities designed to break up
trusts or
monopolies.
Theodore Roosevelt is the
U.S. president most associated with dissolving trusts, but his chosen successor,
William Howard Taft, actually began the most of the anti-trust proceedings.
Trusts were large business entities that largely succeeded in controlling a
market, essentially becoming a
monopoly. The term became common in the late
19th century, when a system of trusts controlled much of the
economy of the United States. In
1898, President
William McKinley launched the "trust-busting" era when he appointed the
U.S. Industrial Commission on Trusts, which interrogated
Andrew Carnegie,
John D. Rockefeller,
Charles M. Schwab, and other industrial titans. The report of the Industrial Commission was seized upon by Theodore Roosevelt, who became known as a "Trust Buster," dissolving 44 trusts during his two terms as president. However, the "Trust Buster" name is probably more suited for Roosevelt's successor, William Howard Taft, who brought an end to 90 trusts in one term. Although Taft may have done more to control the trusts while in office, Roosevelt retains the nickname because he was the pioneer of trust-busting.
Senator
John Sherman from Ohio, introduced
legislation on July 2, 1890, to prevent trusts from forming. The
Clayton Antitrust Act was enacted in 1914 to remedy deficiencies in the Sherman Act.
See also
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United States antitrust law
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Andrew L. Harris, Governor of Ohio, appointed by McKinley to the Commission on Trusts
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Corporation
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United States v. E. C. Knight Co.
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History of the United States (1865-1918)
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U.S. Industrial Commission of 1898 (1898-1902)
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Thurman Arnold, headed Franklin Delano Roosevelt's trust-busting campaign in the Department of Justice
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Northern Securities Company
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