<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Peter Kirk, Esq. tracked the world iron markets diligently. He had to. Kirk employed 1000 men and boys in his integrated iron and steel works in Workington, England. Britain's market share was losing ground to America's burgeoning steel industry. In 1886, he sailed from Workington flush with decades of success in Britain's Victorian era rail expansion. His luggage contained top hat, coat tails and gold coin. He tucked in his Derbyshire county family's century-old expertise in iron production that rode the wave of the Industrial Revolution, which he built on with his ingenuity and inventions. He filled another chest with quiet audacity and steadfast perseverance. However, he also carried the baggage of family rivalries and the propensity for those named Peter to leave the family business. In his pocket, Peter Kirk carried a dream. <p/>Once in America, he found the immigrant laws were stacked against his kind and so enlisted the aid of someone who quite possibly was a scoundrel. Even that was not enough to battle the boardroom politics of railroad competitions, demanding mining companies, frontier town rivalries, unexpected disasters, and America's greatest recession. Even so, he paid the woodcutters to carve out an outpost for his new steelworks from the dense and wild forests of Washington Territory. Alas, the dream failed, his money--lost, his expertise questioned, and his audacity tested. His perseverance and foresight, however, won Peter Kirk a new dream.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Some might describe Peter Kirk's story as one of riches to rags, but it is more like, top hat and tails to smart casual. This biography begins with a short introduction to the English iron mogul and how he arrived in Seattle, Washington Territory in 1886. It explains his family's 100-year history in the iron industry, riding the wave of success during the Industrial Revolution through Britain's successful Victorian era rail expansion. Transferring that legacy down the generations did not always go smoothly. Family curses, rivalries, and a propensity for those named Peter to leave the security of the family business catapulted Peter out of the Derbyshire (county) valley where his Kirk family had lived for 600 years. <p/>The story follows his early business successes in Workington (Cumbria county), often facilitated by Peter Kirk's inventions in creating efficiency in the iron-producing process and new products in a competitive market. Britain's status as the world's top iron producer was giving way to America's burgeoning growth. Kirk had to branch out in the New World to keep his ironworks solvent and his 1000 employees working. He traveled to the American continent on a fact-finding mission and discovered Washington Territory had resources and opportunity to build a new steel works. <p/>Confronted with hurdles like land laws prejudiced against immigrants, demanding mining companies, railroad and frontier town competition, insufficient cash flow, and the worst recession in American history, Kirk struggled to accomplish his greatest dream. However, he did not give up on Kirkland, the little town he carved out of the Pacific Northwest forests. <p/>Away from the engineer's desk and out of the boardroom, Kirk was an accomplished musician and devoted family man. Unusual for the Victorian era, his wife, Mary Ann, partnered with him in some of his business dealings. But troubles hit on the family front as well. Children died prematurely; scandal threatened his family's status; Mary Ann returned to England. <p/>This book is a journey of generations, across continents, through life's upheavals, celebrating successes, and adjusting to changing times and cultures.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Raised in Sitka, Alaska, Saundra Middleton was lured away to the Pacific Northwest when she heard its annual rainfall was only 37 inches a year. Once there, she discovered the rich history of her pioneering ancestors.<br>After a few years, she returned to Alaska, finished her undergraduate degree in English, and added two daughters to her genealogical pool. She dabbled in journalism publishing dozens of articles in Alaska Magazine and Alaska Business Monthly, and other publications.<br>As time allowed, Saundra delved into the bottomless pit of family research. She compiled several scrapbook-style books for family and friends. Combining her love of writing, history, and genealogy, Saundra was recognized for her short story Of Donkeys, Mules, & Plains Ponies in a 2015 writing contest sponsored by the Kent Family History Society in England. But one figure stood out in her research: Peter Kirk--a Victorian era steel tycoon, inventor, and town-builder. She had to write his story.
Cheapest price in the interval: 19.95 on November 8, 2021
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