- George Hearst - Wikipedia
George Hearst (September 3, 1820 – February 28, 1891) was an American businessman, politician, and patriarch of the Hearst business dynasty After growing up on a small farm in Missouri, he founded many mining operations and is known for developing and expanding the Homestake Mine in the late 1870s in the Black Hills of South Dakota
- George Hearst - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
He was born in Missouri into a family of farmers He went west during the Gold Rush By the 1860s he owned many copper and silver mines His mining business grew bigger In 1880 he bought the San Francisco Examiner to promote his political opinions and himself He favored the two-party system
- Who Was The Real George Hearst? - True West Magazine
George Hearst was broke when he struck gold for the first time in California in 1857 When he died in 1891, the mining magnate’s estimated worth was between $200 and $400 million
- Hearst family - Wikipedia
The Hearst family is a wealthy American family based in California Their fortune was originally earned in the mining industry during the late 19th century under the entrepreneurial leadership of George Hearst
- George Randolph Hearst - Wikipedia
George Randolph Hearst Sr (April 23, 1904 – January 26, 1972) was an American heir and media executive He was the son of media magnate William Randolph Hearst, and the vice president of the Hearst Corporation
- George Hearst – Father of a Mining Publishing Empire
George Hearst was a self-made millionaire with a knack for mining that would lead to success across the American West Born near Sullivan, Missouri, on September 3, 1820, to William and Elizabeth Collins Hearst, George was the oldest of three children
- George Hurst - Wikipedia
George Randolph Hearst (1904–1972), eldest son of William Randolph Hearst George Randolph Hearst Jr (1927–2012), chairman of the board of the Hearst Corporation
- George Randolph Hearst Jr. - Wikipedia
George Randolph Hearst Jr (July 13, 1927 – June 25, 2012) [1] was an American businessman and member of the wealthy Hearst family He served as the chairman of the board of the Hearst Corporation from 1996 through to his death in 2012, succeeding his uncle Randolph Apperson Hearst
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