Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional Seattle life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer Seattle business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional Seattle business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced Seattle life coach:
A qualified Seattle life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your Seattle life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional Seattle business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a Seattle business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your Seattle business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
Seattle is located between the freshwater of Lake Washington and the saltwater of Puget Sound. There are rugged mountain ranges beyond those bodies of water, which are the Cascades in the east and the Olympics in the west. Seattle was established around water, on hills, in a mild marine climate that encourages prolific natural resources and abundant vegetation.
In 1851, the first white settlers arrived in the region and established a settlement that they named New York. Soon, they relocated to what is known today as the historical Pioneer Square district, where a harbor that offered protection and deep-water was available. Soon the settlement was renamed to Seattle, in honor of a friendly Duwamish Indian leader whose names was Sealth who had befriended the settlers.
In 1853, a man named Henry Yesler built a lumber mill, which was the primary means of economic support for the settlement. Although a considerable amount of the production from the lumber mill went to San Francisco, which was booming, the mill also provided lumber products to the fledgling communities around the Puget Sound area.
In 1856, there was a short lived Indian war, which briefly interrupted the development of Seattle. However, they year 1869 brought the incorporation of Seattle with a population of over 2,000 people.
In spite of coal being discovered close to Lake Washington and the subsequent growth associated with another extractive industry, the 1870’s were rather fairly quiet. The Northern Pacific Railroad Company decided that its transcontinental railroad terminus would be located in Tacoma, which was some 40 miles south of Seattle during the early 1870’s. However, shortly after it was completed in 1883, Seattle managed to force a connection. During the late 1880’s, the population of Seattle exploded. Although shipbuilding, shipping, fishing, and wholesale trade contributed to the economy of Seattle, the main industries were lumber and coal. During this time, the population was increasing at a rate of about 1,000 people every month. Also, there were 500 structures being built, mostly out of wood. In 1889, a disastrous fire destroyed all of the buildings on 116 acres in the middle of the business district. However, the fire didn’t stop the expansive growth of Seattle.
Actually, the fire offered opportunity for many different municipal improvements. These improvements included reconstructed wharves, regraded and widened streets, a municipal water works, and a professional fire department. Newly constructed structures in the burned district were required to be of steel or brick or steel.
In spite of an additional transcontinental Railroad arriving, known as the Great Northern, in 1893, the 1890 weren’t so prosperous. A business depression all across the country also struck Seattle. However, gold was discovered in Alaska and in the Yukon Territory in Canada, close to the Klondike River in 1897, and Seattle was once again a booming community.
Seattle was continuing to experience explosive growth in the early 1900’s. Two additional transcontinental railroads arrived in Seattle, which reinforced Seattle’s position as a shipping and trade hub, especially in the Northern Pacific as well as Asia.
The population of Seattle was becoming ever increasingly more diversified. African Americans worked as railroad waiters and porters. Scandinavians worked in lumbering and fishing. The Japanese operated hotels and truck gardens. There were a considerable communities of Jews, Filipinos, Chinese, and Italians. The International District was the home of several different Asian ethnic groups.
In 1909, Seattle was the host of the international fair. The population of the city was nearly 240,000 people. In 1914, the 42 story L. C. Smith building was completed. For over 40 years, it was a symbol of the booster spirit in Seattle and the tallest building in the American west.
The shipbuilding industry in Seattle, which turned out some 20% of wartime ship tonnage in America, was transformed by WW I. Seattle also received national attention from the war when, in order to keep their high wartime wages, the shipyard workers went on strike against the shipyards. This resulted in a four-day general strike in Seattle. The success of the strike sparked fears in the nation about radicals and socialists, although the strike didn’t seem to have a cogent objective. The general strike helped develop the reputation in Seattle as being a place of political radicalism.
During the 1920’s, there were depressed conditions in the lumber and shipbuilding trades. In the 1930’s, the Great Depression struck Seattle especially hard. However, the shipyards were thriving once again as the result of an economic rebound that was fueled by WW II. In 1916, the Boeing Company, was established and increased its workforce by over 1,200% and increased its sales to $600 million each year from $10 million each year, while the war was on. However, by the end of the war, there was an economic downturn in the region, which continued until the middle 1950’s.
During the late 1950’s, Boeing introduced the 707 commercial jet airliner successfully, which fueled another burst of municipal optimism. Seattle was the host of the futuristic Century 21 world’s fair in 1962. This fair left Seattle a permanent legacy in the Seattle Center and its complex of entertainment hall, performance, sports, in addition to the Monorail, the Space needle, and the Pacific Science Center.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
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Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional San Francisco life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer San Francisco business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional San Francisco business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced San Francisco life coach:
A qualified San Francisco life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your San Francisco life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional San Francisco business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a San Francisco business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your San Francisco business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
It was about 3000 B. C. that the first inhabitants arrived in the San Francisco region. By the 1500’s, when the first European pioneers were sailing next to the California coast, and as the result of dense fog, always managed to miss the Golden Gate, the region was inhabited by thalami Indian tribe, who spoke in the Ohlone language. Members of the 1769 Portola expedition were the first pioneers from the west to see the bay. In 1776, a man named Juan Bautiza de Anza marched north to establish a Spanish mission and presidio, from San Diego. The Mission San Francisco de Asis was the hub of material and spiritual life for over 1,000 neophytes that were accepted from the local Indian tribes by 1808.
The harbor in San Francisco was completely full of abandoned ships in 1849, whose crews had deserted to travel to the gold fields. For the harbor side expansion in the community, several of the vessels were used as raw materials.
Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821, which ensured the decline of the mission period. An American, named William Richardson, became the first permanent resident of Yerba Buena in 1835. Numerous more Americans arrived in Alta California and started clamoring for independence by the 1840’s. Following a briefly declared California Republic, they welcomed the arrival of a man named James Montgomery, who was a United States Navy captain who came ashore to raise the United States flag in the plaza area of Yerba Buena, currently known as Portsmouth Square, in 1846.
In the foothills of California at a location known as Sutter’s Fort, the first gold was discovered in 1848. In 1847, the name of Yerba Buena was changed to San Francisco and within months, the settlement became the depot and central port of the frenzied Gold Rush. During the next year, arriving 49ers, increased the population of the community to 25,000 people from 1,000 people.
The community was wild and lawless, and the Barbary Coast district full of gambling and prostitution. From 1849 through 1851, six major fires broke out. The silver boom of Nevada’s Comstock Lode in 1859 once again lined the pockets of the community and its docks. The construction of the Central Pacific Railroad, which was funded by four wealthy businessmen named Leland Stanford, Collis Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and Charles Crocker attracted numerous Chinese laborers. Sometime later many were forced to leave by exclusionary United States policies, the flourishing Chinatown in San Francisco rapidly became the largest Chinese community, outside of Asia.
As cable cars allowed the community’s grid to spread over the steepest hills, San Francisco expanded. City planners designated some 1,000 acres on the Pacific side of the peninsula for the Golden Gate Park in 1887.
The San Andreas Fault slipped over ten feet, which unleashed a huge earthquake in 1906 that was later estimated to be 7.8 on the Richter scale. The tremors triggered fires that raged for four days and broke water mains. Some 250,000 people were homeless, 25,000 buildings were destroyed, and 3,000 people were killed. The city was rapidly rebuilt and in 1915, with an improved city center and hosted the lavish Panama International Exposition.
There was growth both the outlying communities as well as in San Francisco during the 1930’s, with the construction of San Francisco Bay Bridges as well as the iconic Golden Gate Bridge.
In the Pacific theater during WW II, San Francisco was the primary point of embarkation, and the area became a hub for major arms production. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Japanese residents in the community were forced far inland into internment camps. African Americans soon filled their abandoned neighborhoods, who had arrived to work in the war industries from the South.
San Francisco also played a primary in the transition to the Cold War from WW II to the Cold War, and in, 1945, hosted conference at which the United Nations Charter was drafted and continuing to attract workers to develop technologies for the nuclear age.
San Francisco has continued its reputation as a hub for cultural bohemianism. In earlier years it had attracted writers that included Jack London and it also became a hub for the beat poets during the 1950’s as well as for the hippy counterculture of the Haight-Ashbury area that peaked with the Summer of Love in 1967.
San Francisco also gained a reputation for welcoming lesbians and gays and had long a hotbed of women’s rights, labor, and environmental activism. The center of the gay rights movement in San Francisco was in the Castro District. During the 1980’s, San Francisco worked very hard to respond to the challenges of the AIDs epidemic as well as chronic homelessness.
Another massive earthquake struck the community in 1989, which killed 67 people, collapsed freeways, and damaged buildings. In 1999, a boom that was the result of Internet technology started, which attracted entrepreneurs to the community, and raised resentment, respectable, and rents, in some of the tougher neighborhoods. The crowded population of the community, which had been steady for decades, started to increase again.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
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Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional San Diego life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer San Diego business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional San Diego business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced San Diego life coach:
A qualified San Diego life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your San Diego life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional San Diego business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a San Diego business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your San Diego business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
In 1867, a man named Alonzo Horton got off of a steamer from San Francisco, and went ashore on land that is currently known as San Diego. Mr. Horton was duly impressed with what he saw. He had been all over that world, but considered this place the most beautiful that he had ever seen. This sentiment is share by millions of others, residents, and visitors, with unceasing repetition, for over 100 Years.
Although Mr. Horton wasn’t the first, he was certainly most influential real estate speculator in San Diego in the history of a community whose story might be told in real estate speculation. Mr. Horton also wasn’t the first to be attracted by the natural harbor in San Diego and stunning beauty.
For 100s of years, as far back as 9000 B.C., this region belonged to the first Americans in the region of Southern California, currently known as San Dieguito. Much the same as modern people from California, these San Dieguito were looking for, and found the best places to live.
The Kumeyaay or Diegueno Indians arrived in the area about 1000 B. C., and mixed with the Indians that were already here. Until the 1500’s, when a man named Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, was exploring for Spain and sailed into the Harbor of San Diego, this uncharted paradise was theirs.
Juan Cabrillo, was the first European to arrive on Southern California soil, but didn’t intend to establish a settlement. While looking for a northwest passage to link the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, he discovered San Diego. After his arrival in 1542, which just happened to be on the eve of the feast day of Saint Michael the Archangel, he called his discovery San Miguel. However, San Miguel was ignored by outsiders for numerous years.
In 1602, another explorer, named Sebastian Vizcaino, was sailing north next to the California coast for Spain, and arrived in San Miguel. He changed to name to San Diego. However, faster fortunes as well as the enhancement of a growing empire elsewhere in the Orient and the Pacific attracted explorers away from San Diego. It would be another 167 years the colonization started.
During the middle 1700’s, the reluctance of Spain to colonize the remainder of California as well as Baja California discouraged fur traders from Russia, who had sailed across the Aleutians and were relocating down the coast of northwest America. As opposed to waging a full-scale military operation against the local Indians to establish control, Spain sent military support to the mission priests, who were attempting to make Christians of the Indians. Not incidentally, during the process, they raised the flag of Spain.
An advisor of the Spanish King known as Charles III named Jose de Galvez, organized a militia in order to establish a stronghold at Monterey in Alta, or upper California, and Spain started its push north from the Baja California peninsula. The Catalonian captain, named Don Gaspar de Portola, led the military forces, and the Franciscan priest, named Fray Junipero Serra, led the charge for the church, a string of missions, pueblos and presidios were established. San Diego, whose natural harbor was at the halfway point between Monterey and Loreto in Baja California, was the first base for the expedition.
The overland march to San Diego from Loreto certainly had its problems. Indian servants died or deserted, water was scarce, and they ran out of food. However, Portola and Serra arrived in San Diego during the summer of 1769. Portola and a group of men continued their march on to Monterey Bay, although Serra remained behind. The first mission in California, named San Diego de Alcala, was dedicated in 1769. Sometime later, Serra established a series of some 21 missions in California.
Well into the 1800’s, the Spanish mission system not only survived but also prospered, with a healthy commerce in the trading of leatherwork, grain, wine, and hides. However, in 1821 when Mexico declared its independence from Spain, forces were started that destroyed the old system. The Mexican government started parceling out the mission property to political favorites, after long pressure from the Spanish-Mexican pioneers of California.
The Mission San Diego de Alcala and its 58,000 acres were granted to Don Santiago Arguello in 1846 by Mexico Governor Pio Pico. By then, the settlement of San Diego was located at the foot of the presidio in a region currently known as known as Old Town, and had a population of approximately 350 people.
However, by then, the war between Mexico and the United States had reached the West Coast. San Diego was taken by forces of the United States with minimum resistance, with its strategic Southern California port. In 1847, when the war ended, San Diego, established as the first Spanish mission in California nearly 80 years, and under Mexican rule for the last 25 years, became a part of the United States.
However, the ceding of San Diego to the United States didn’t make for an immediate boom. The fact is that by the end of the Civil War, the population of San Diego had decreased by one half. Northern California was settled by the gold rush, while southern California was ultimately settled by a land rush.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
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Boston
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Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional Dallas life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer Dallas business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional Dallas business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced Dallas life coach:
A qualified Dallas life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your Dallas life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional Dallas business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a Dallas business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your Dallas business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
Dallas, Texas has certainly had humble beginnings for a community that currently has population of over one million people. During the 1840’s, the settlement known as Dallas was established in the Three Forks region of the Trinity River, made possible by the determination of one man.
In 1839, a man whose name was John Bryan traveled to Three Forks on a mission to establish a trading post for pioneers and Indians. The advantages of finding Three Forks, included the facts that it was soon to be on the established Preston Trail, and it was the best location to cross the river. Mr. Bryan returned to Arkansas after plotting the new settlement. Meanwhile, the US government negotiated a treaty to remove the existing population of Native Indians from all of North Texas.
In 1841, Mr. Bryan returned only to discover that the Indians were still there but his customers were gone. Mr. Bryan went to the close by Peters Colony and convinced some of those pioneers to move to his new settlement, in an effort to ensure the survival of the settlement. A man whose name was John Beeman was one of those pioneers and upon his arrival, Mr. Beeman planted the first crop of corn in 1842. The Dallas residents supported the annexation of Texas into the Union.
Soon, the Peters Colony pioneers spread the good news about what is currently known as Dallas. The population of this new Texas settlement increased quickly. The settlement became the permanent county seat of Dallas County in 1850.
The year 1860 brought the incorporation of Dallas as a town. The population of the settlement was about 2,000 people and the first mayor was a man named Samuel Pryor. Public debates about the issue of secession were held as Dallas prepared to enter the Civil War. The majority of the business district burned to the ground that same year. Arson was suspected and three slaves were hung, the rest of the slaves were beaten, and two abolitionists were run out of the community.
Later that same year the business district was reconstructed, although, there was a shortage of housing available since the community was experiencing explosive growth. Texas and Dallas County sent supplies and volunteers when the war got as far as Texas, which seceded from the Union in 1861.
Dallas experienced some additional growth that brought with it outlaws, former slaves, and unfair price structures for crops following the end of the Civil War. The first passenger train from the Houston and Texas Central Railroad came through Dallas in 1872. In 1877, The Farmer’s Alliance established The Farmer’s Markets, and built a warehouse to store cotton until it could be shipped to St. Louis. After only 20 months the Alliance collapsed as the result of the lack of support from the lending industry. Before their departure, such outlaws as Doc Holliday, Belle Starr, and Sam Bass made their mark on Dallas.
Much the same as other communities, Dallas was originally devastated by the Great Depression, and by 1931, over 18,000 people were unemployed. The discovery of oil is what saved the community although the community established a work for food program.
Beginning in 1931, the oil industry started to explore and exploit their finds, with the help of some bank loans. Small businesses started springing up all over the community in order to support the oil fields, while the roustabouts and roughnecks made their drilling machines hum like well-oiled machines. In Dallas, the oil fields were plentiful and productive. East Texas became synonymous with Big Oil.
In 1963, on November 22, the world and Dallas were stunned when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated during a presidential motorcade parade at the nearby place where John Neely Bryan had first located the settlement. A man named Lee Harvey Oswald was taken into custody for the assassination, while some days later, he was murdered by a nightclub owner in Dallas named Jack Ruby. In 1970, the Kennedy Memorial was completed in 1970, and the Sixth Floor Museum of the Texas Book Depository was completed and opened in 1989.
Between the 1950’s and the 1960’s, with the help of some growing companied, that included Texas Instruments, Dallas became the third largest technology center in the country. In 1957, the Home Furnishings Mart, opened, and the community became the home furnishing business of the Dallas Market Center, which gradually came to be known as the largest wholesale trade complex in the world.
Between 1970’s and the 1980’s, the Dallas skyline changed as the result of some prominent skyscrapers. During the 1980’s, when the oil industry moved its headquarters to Houston, Dallas was starting to understand the advantages of a struggling technology boom, by the expanding the telecommunications and computer industries, while continuing to be a center of business and banking. Dallas became known as the Silicon Valley of Texas during the 1990’s.
In Dallas, professional sports teams are famous and plentiful. As the result of their popularity and success during the 1970’s, the Dallas Cowboys football team was known as America’s Team. Obviously, the Dallas Cowgirl Cheerleaders, who have become famous all over the world, go right along with the Dallas Cowboys.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
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Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional Boston life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer Boston business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional Boston business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced Boston life coach:
A qualified Boston life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your Boston life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional Boston business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a Boston business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your Boston business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
A Reverend whose name was William Blackstone was the first English pioneer to arrive in what is currently known as the Boston area. In 1629, he arrived by himself to a peninsula by a stream, known as Shawmet by the local Algonquin Indians. In 1630, a man named John Winthorpe and his Puritan followers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, arrived in Salem to the north. Reverend Blackstone invited Mr. Winthrope to visit Shawmet after finding Salem to be something less than desirable for a settlement.
Mr. Winthorpe elected to make Shawmut a permanent settlement and, in 1600, changed the name from Shawmet to Boston, in honor of his hometown in Lincolnshire England. Mr. Winthrop and his associates fled left England in order to establish a pious Puritan state and to escape religious persecution. It is ironic that shortly thereafter. Mr. Blackstone left the colony as the result if the intolerant, intolerant society that the Puritans had created.
Up until 1664, only members of the church could establish citizenship in Massachusetts. Dissidents such as a man named Roger Williams and a woman named Anne Hutchinson were banished. In spite of the Salem Witch trials of 1692 and these facts, the colony developed representative institutions that would help form a future democratic country.
Boston became a center for a Puritan life during the next 200 years. From the beginning, Boston started emerging as an educational and intellectual center with the arrival of noted statesmen and theologians, and the establishment of Harvard University and the Boston Latin School. In 1639, a man named Stephen Daye constructed the first printing press in Cambridge in the colonies. Boston became the major commercial center in the colonies largely the result of its excellent harbors. Colonial Boston was the main port of North America, and a world leader in shipbuilding.
All throughout the 1700’s, the Boston area continued to grow, Farmers and fishermen prospered as these settlements grew to become communities around the city. The processing of wool, and the construction of mills next to the rivers for logging, meant that and overseas trade was thriving.
The American colonies remained British subjects, although they were separated by a great geographical distance. During the 1730’s, this started to change when, in an effort to replenish the treasury, the Crown increased taxes on the colonists. As the great philosophical distance started to grow between Britain and the colonies, Boston became a leading center of colonial resistance. This planted the seeds of revolution.
In 1770, the Boston massacre was the result of the Townshend Acts of 1767 and the Stamp Act of 1765. The Boston Tea party was the result of the Tea Act of 1773. The British responded to these defiant acts by bringing in additional troops in order to contain the dissidents and by closing the ports. The British sent troops to the communities of Concord and Lexington in 1775 to arrest John Hancock and Samuel Adams, as well as to seize the arms that were being stored by the colonists. Two men named William Dawes and Paul Revere rode through the night to warn the colonists of the approaching soldiers. On Lexington Green, the following morning, the shot heard round the world was fired, and the American Revolution started. George Washington was summoned to Boston to take command of the rebel army two months later following the Battle of Bunker Hill.
As the result of the building of railroad systems that linked towns and cities, new canals, and improved roads, Massachusetts prospered during the early 1800’s. Although by the 1840’s, there weren’t enough to fill the workforce, laborers were recruited locally. The solution came when the first non-English immigrants arrived from Ireland. A profitable time for Boston manufactures was the Civil War, with the production of blankets, shoes, weapons, and other materials that the troops required. Boston was also the primary voice of the abolitionist movement. The greatest industrial period for Boston, was the late 1800’s. Boston continued to be the primary manufacturer of products and goods as millions of immigrants from all over the world arrived in this country.
During the early 1910’s, the manufacturing in Boston declined. The once flourishing mills and factories had become obsolete and old. The tenements were decaying and aging. Many businesses closed and moved to the south. However, with the development of wholesaling, retailing, finance, banking. and the other service industries, prosperity continued in Boston.
During the great Depression, Boston suffered much the same as the rest of the county. However factories were retooled for the war effort with the outbreak of WW II, and people went back to work on the production lines. Boston was again a primary a manufacturer of major arms during wartime.
Farming and fishing were declining in Massachusetts during the 1950’s. However, the Boston region emerged as a leader in the high tech industries such as the fledgling computer business. Many of these new businesses were staffed, and indeed created by graduates of colleges in the Boston region, such as MIT. The service and financial industries continued to expand. These days, the Boston skyline is teeming with office towers and skyscrapers, which is a testament to vitality and achievements of Boston.
During the 2000’s, Boston continues to evolve. The 2004 Democratic National Convention, the museum of fine arts, and a new convention center accomplishments of Boston.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
Request A Consult With Carroll
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Chicago
Dallas
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Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional Chicago life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer Chicago business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional Chicago business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced Chicago life coach:
A qualified Chicago life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your Chicago life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional Chicago business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a Chicago business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your Chicago business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
In 1837 Chicago was only a small trading post located at the mouth of the mouth of the Chicago River. During the next 20 years the population of Chicago would quadruple and amaze the rest of the world by being able to continually reinvent itself and eventually become one of the largest cities in the country.
These days, Chicago continues to grow and constantly reinvent itself. Chicago has become a flourishing center of commerce and trade, a global city, where people of every nationality come to pursue the American dream.
The first permanent resident of Chicago was a trader and a free black man who was apparently from Haiti, who arrived in what is currently known in Chicago in the late 1770’s, named Jean Baptiste Point du Sable. The government of the United States constructed Fort Dearborn at what is currently known as the intersection of Wacker Drive and Michigan Avenue in 1795. There are even bronze markers in the pavement to establish this fact. In 1812, Native Indian burned fort to the ground, rebuilt and demolished again in 1857.
The year 1837 brought the incorporation of Chicago as a city. At that time Chicago was ideally located to benefit from the trading possibilities that were created by the westward expansion of the country. In 1848, a water link between the Mississippi River and the Great lakes by the completion of the Illinois and Michigan Canal. However, this canal was soon considered rendered obsolete because of the railroads. These days, 50% of the railroad freight in the US continues to pass through Chicago. In addition, the city has become the busiest aviation center in the country, as the result of Midway and O’Hare International airports.
The residents of the city had to do some rather amazing to keep up with Chicago as it grew. They raised a number of the streets between five and eight feet, during the 1850’s, to install a sewer system. In addition, that also had to raise the buildings. However, the sidewalks, streets, and buildings were all made from wood, and the majority them burned to the ground in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The Chicago Fire Department training academy is situated on the location of the O’Leary property where it has been reported where the fire started. The Chicago Water Tower and Pumping Station at the current intersection of Chicago and Michigan Avenues are among one of the few buildings that survived the fire.
It didn’t take long for Chicago to rebuild. Much of the debris was used to form the underpinnings of what is currently known as the Art Institute of Chicago, Millennium Park, and Grant Park by being dumped into Lake Michigan as landfill. In 1893, Chicago celebrated its recovery by hosting the World’s Columbian Exposition. One of the Exposition buildings was rejuvenated and became the Museum of Science and Industry. Even the Great Depression didn’t discourage Chicago. From 1933 through 1934, Chicago hosted the Century of Progress Exposition, on Northerly Island, which was equally successful.
During the 50 years after the Great Fire, immigrants flocked to Chicago to take jobs in the meat packing plants and factories. Many poor workers and their families found help in settlement houses operated by Jane Addams and her followers. Her Hull House Museum is currently located at 800 S. Halsted St.
Throughout the history of their city the residents of Chicago have demonstrated their ingenuity in matters both small and large. The ten story steel framed Home Insurance Building was constructed in 1834 to become the first skyscraper in the country located at the current intersection of Adams and LaSalle Streets. In 1931, the building was demolished.
In 1900, they reversed the flow of the Chicago River to make it flow towards the Mississippi River when waterborne illnesses threatened them, as the result of sewage that was flowing into Lake Michigan. The start of the Historic Route 66 begins at the current location of Adams Street at Grant Park in the front of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Chicago was also the birthplace of:
* The 1,450-foot Sears Tower, which was completed in 1974, and is the tallest building in North America and the third tallest building in the world.
* The first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction, which ushered in the Atomic Age, took place in 1942 at the University of Chicago. The location spot is marked by a Henry Moore sculpture located between 57th and 56th streets on Ellis Avenue.
* The refrigerated railroad car by Swift
* Mail-order retailing by Montgomery Ward and Sears
* The automobile radio by Motorola
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
Request A Consult With Carroll
Areas Served:
Boston
Chicago
Dallas
Los Angeles
New York
Philadelphia
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington DC
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
CEO & Founder
Organic Blueprints II, LLC.
6807 Patterson Ave #D
Richmond, VA 23226
(804) 288-0099 | office
(804) 869-5403 | mobile
carroll.schuller@organicblueprints.com
Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional Philadelphia life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer Philadelphia business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional Philadelphia business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced Philadelphia life coach:
A qualified Philadelphia life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your Philadelphia life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional Philadelphia business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a Philadelphia business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your Philadelphia business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
As laid out by the founder of Philadelphia, William Penn, the city was located between the Schuylkill and Delaware Rivers and Vine and South Streets. The fact is that the city proper was that portion that was located between Dock Creek and High, currently known as Market Street. This is where the early settlers constructed huts on the higher ground or dug caves in the banks of the Delaware River. In the meantime, the women were equally busy carrying their kettle that was slung between two pole and lighting their fire on the bare earth, in preparation for the meal of frugal and homely fare for the repast of diligent builders.
Native Indians, were usually present, either as vendors of their game and venison from the neighboring wilderness or as spectators of the improvements that were progressing. The earliest pioneers were the Dutch and the Swedes and as neighbors, brought their productions to the marketplace as a matter of course.
However, settlements were established outside of these boundaries, and in time they had separate governments and became separately incorporated as districts and towns with the entire group simply being known abroad as Philadelphia. Several of these were located immediately contiguous to the city proper, such as Moyamensing and Southwark to the south, and Northern Liberties, the Penn District, Spring Garden, and Kensigton in the north, and West Philadelphia in the west. These were all practically one community that was continuously built up.
In addition, there were several outlying settlements, villages, and townships close to the community. Some of these included Frankford, Passyunk, Holmesburg, Kingsessing, Port Richmond, Rising Sun, unincorporated Germantown, the Falls of Schuylkill, Blockley, Francisville, Mantua, Hamilton Village, the unincorporated Penn Township, Roxborough, unincorporated Germantown, Fox Chase, Nicetown, the unincorporated Northern Liberties, Harrowgate, Bridesburg, and Frankford. They were all consolidated as one municipal government in 1854, and the boundaries of which are coincident with those of the old county of Philadelphia.
Several of the Southwark dwellings were inhabited by seafaring men and sea captains. Recently a significant number of its inhabitants were the families of watermen and seagoing people. The shipyards, and lumberyards have relocated to other localities, and their old locations are now occupied by the depots and wharves of the Red Star and American lines of seagoing steamships, the shipping piers, elevators, and great grain warehouses of the Pennsylvania Railroad, the depots and wharves, of the molasses and West Indies trade, extensive sugar refineries, and commercial warehouses. This district was also characterized by the extensive iron works and machine shops of Savery, Merricks, Morris and Tasker, and others, in addition to the mechanical work promoted by the navy yard, which was located on Federal Street, before it was relocated to League Island.
The Northern Liberties also had its great lumber wharves and yards next to the river front. Most of these lumber yards have disappeared, and been replaced with shipping wharves, depots, railroad landings, commercial warehouses, and large markets for farm produce. However, some of the lumber yards are still there. This district was also characterized, especially next to Second Street, by its farmers’ market yards for the wholesale trade in farm products, such as eggs, vegetables, poultry, butter, and meats. Currently, the Spring Garden District is one of the most pleasant suburbs of Philadelphia. Port Richmond, occupies the Delaware River front to the northeast and north of Old Kensington, and was brought into prominence by the establishment of the tidewater terminus of the Reading Railroad Company, which transferred coal by sea. This started to improve the unproductive land in the area, such as the offices, workshops, engine houses, coal depots, and shipping piers. At the same time, there was by a significant increase of population the construction of buildings, rapid progress and great activity in all respects. Although the coal trade started it the district is currently the center of a manufacturing trade that has but few superiors in the US. The other villages and districts have incorporated within the city.
A committee appointed by town meeting drafted a bill to be laid before the Legislature, identifying the details of the measure, was adopted by the General Assembly in 1854. The bill provided that the city of Philadelphia should be enlarged by taking in all the territory contained within the county of Philadelphia. The incorporated districts were abolished. Belmont, West Philadelphia, Richmond, Penn, Moyamensing, Spring Garden, Kensington, the Northern Liberties, and Southwark stopped having corporate existence. The townships of Penn, Delaware, Byberry, the unincorporated Northern Liberties, Moreland, Lower Dublin, Oxford, Bristol, Germantown, Roxborough, Kingsessing, Blockley, Passyunk, Aramingo, and Frankford were abolished, and all the franchises and property of these governments was transferred to the city of Philadelphia. The result was the larger territory of the city was divided into 24 wards. The First Ward extended south of Warthon Street from the Delaware River to the Schuylkill River.
There was great rejoicing with the passage of this bill. The chief officers, Legislature, and Governor of the State were invited to participate in ceremonies that were arranged by a committee.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
Request A Consult With Carroll
Areas Served:
Boston
Chicago
Dallas
Los Angeles
New York
Philadelphia
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington DC
Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional New York life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer New York business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional New York business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced New York life coach:
A qualified New York life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your New York life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional New York business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a New York business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your New York business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
The Algonquin Indian tribe known as the Lenape were the first inhabitants of what is currently known as New York City. These people farmed, fished, and hunted the region between the Hudson and the Delaware Rivers. In the early 1500’s white European pioneers started exploring the area. Among the first was a man an Italian who sailed the Atlantic coast searching for a route to Asia named was Giovanni da Verrazano. However, up until 1624, nobody settled there. The new governor General of the settlement named Peter Minuit, purchased Manhattan Island, which was much larger, from the native Indians for 60 guilders in trade goods such as cloth, shell beads, tools, and farming equipment in 1626. When the settlement relocated to Manhattan, fewer than 300 people lived in New Amsterdam. However, the settlement grew rapidly. The population of this new settlement was about 18,000 people by 1760, which surpassed Boston and was the second-largest city in the American colonies. The city became the largest community in the Western hemisphere some 50 years later, and had a population of 202,589 people. These days the population of New York City is over eight million people who live in the five boroughs of the city.
New Amsterdam was seized from the Dutch by the British in 1664, who named the community New York City. For the next 100 years the population of New York City grew more diverse and larger. There were African slaves, indentured servants, and immigrants from Germany France, England, and the Netherlands.
Between 1785 and 1790, New York City served as the capital of the US. The community was a center of anti-British activity while the British were trying to seize the city practically as soon as the Revolutionary War started, since it was so strategically important. In spite of the best efforts of the Continental Army, led by George Washington, in 1776, New York City fell to the British. Up until 1783, it served as a British military base.
However, the community recovered rapidly from the ravages war. It was one of the more important ports in the country by 1810. The city played an especially important role in the cotton economy. Planters from the South sent their cotton crops to the docks on the East River, where it was transported to the cotton mills of English industrial cities, such as Manchester. Then, the manufacturers of textile goods would ship their finished goods back to New York.
The problem was that there wasn’t any convenient method to transport goods back and forth from the ever expanding agricultural hinterlands to the north and west until 1817, which the year that work commenced on the Erie and the Hudson River. In 1825, the Erie Canal opened. At last, New York City was the trading capital of the nation.
As the city grew, it made other improvements to the infrastructure. An orderly grid of avenues and streets was established for the undeveloped portions of Manhattan north of Houston Street by the Commissioner’s Plan in 1811. Construction was started on the Croton Aqueduct in 1837 that provided clean water for the growing population of the community. The New York City Police Department was established in 1845.
In the meantime, the face of the community was changed between the 1840’s and the 1850’s, by an ever increasing number of immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe, Ireland, and Germany. They arrived in distinct ethnic neighborhoods, built social clubs and churches, joined political organizations and trade unions, and started businesses.
New York City became the community we know these days by the late 1800’s. In 1895, residents of Brooklyn Staten Island, the Bronx, and Queens, which, at that time, were independent communities, voted to consolidate with Manhattan in order to create a Greater New York, consisting a five separate boroughs. In 1897, this resulted in New York City having population of over two million people and an area of 60 square miles. The consolidation plan took effect in 1898 and New York City had a population of approximately 3.35 million people and an area of some 360 square miles.
The early 1900’s was a period of great struggles for New York City as well as it was across the nation. Following World War II, the construction of suburbs and interstate highways encouraged affluent people to leave the city, which combined with economic changes to reduce the tax base, such as deindustrialization and other economic changes to lower the tax base and diminished public services. This, resulted in additional people leaving the community.
New York City endured one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in the history of this country when some terrorists crashed two hijacked airliners into the twin towers of the World Trade Center. About 3,000 people were killed and the twin towers were both destroyed. However, the city remained a major tourist attraction and financial with more than 40 million tourists visiting the city every year in spite of the disaster.
These days, the five boroughs are home to over eight million people. Over one-third of these people were born outside this country. As the result of the vibrant intellectual life and diversity of the city, it remains the cultural capital of America.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
Request A Consult With Carroll
Areas Served:
Boston
Chicago
Dallas
Los Angeles
New York
Philadelphia
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington DC
Are you unhappy, but unsure whether it’s related to your business or personal life? If you’re facing such a crossroads, perhaps it’s time to consider a professional Los Angeles life and business coach.
At Organic Blueprints, we offer Los Angeles business coaching and life coaching designed to provide you with a useful direction, organize your life, and find success. Many first-time life and business coaching clients wonder why they waited so long to seek out professional guidance for something so vital to personal fulfillment. Your life and business coach can help you identify clear goals and outline a path toward achieving them.
If you’re unhappy or feel like you’re are stuck in neutral, it may be time to work with a professional Los Angeles business coach who can help you find balance between your professional and personal life.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting an experienced Los Angeles life coach:
A qualified Los Angeles life coach can help you nurture relationships and set clear personal goals designed to help you capture life’s joy. By crafting your life goals and creating short and long term personal deliverables, your Los Angeles life coach will help you challenge yourself and overcome hurdles in stride.
Ask yourself these questions before contacting a professional Los Angeles business coach:
The success of your business hinges on planning, perspective, and organization, which is why a Los Angeles business coach can be so beneficial. Whether you want to develop employees, plan the upcoming year in detail, or start working’ on’ the business instead of ‘in’ the business, your Los Angeles business coach can help. Indeed, there is a balance you need to do both until the business is large enough to sustain a wholly strategic leader
Your personal life and business life should be balanced, and work symbiotically. Let a professional life and business coach from Organic Blueprints help you find happiness and success.
The human history of what is currently known as the city of Los Angeles starts around 6000 BC, when the Chumash and Gabrieleno occupied the area. In the late 1700’s, their hunter-gatherer existence ended when Spanish pioneers and missionaries arrived led by a Padre named Junipero Serra. The settlement was called El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles, and was the first civilian settlement to become a flourishing farming community, although, for decades, remained an isolated outpost.
In 1821, once Spain lost its hold on the territory to Mexico, many of the Mexican residents wanted land in California. The Mexican governors secularized the missions and divided their land up into free land grants by the middle 1830’s. Eventually, this became the cattle rancho or rancho system.
Between 1846 and 1848, the Mexican-American War raged, and American soldiers encountered some resistance from some Mexican commanders, such as General Andres Pico. However, Los Angeles and the rest of California came under the rule of the United States. The year 1850 brought the incorporation of Los Angeles as a city.
By 1930, the population of Los Angeles had increased to two million people as the result of a series of seminal events, that included the 1913 opening of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, the 1908 birth of the movie industry, the 1907 the launch of the Los Angeles port, the 1892 the discovery of oil, the birth of the citrus industry in the late 1800s, the arrival of the transcontinental railroad during the 1870’s, and the 1850’s, collapse of the Northern California Gold Rush.
With the exception of the film industry, there haven’t been many industries that have had as much of an impact on the economics in Los Angeles than the aviation industry. During WW I, the Lockheed brothers and Donald Douglas established aviation manufacturing facilities in Los Angles. With the help of billions of dollars’ worth of military contracts, some 20 years later, the aviation industry helped the economy of Los Angeles during the Great Depression. The economy of Los Angeles was driven by defense contracts, up until the end of the Cold War in 1990.
There was an influx of newcomers that arrived in Los Angeles after WW II, which transformed Los Angeles into the current megalopolis that is today. However, it had its attendant problems, such as suburban sprawl, air pollution, and racial strife. In 1965 and 1992, there were some major riots that created a significant amount of distrust between various ethnic groups and the Los Angeles police department. In the late 1990’s, a police corruption scandal certainly didn’t alleviate tensions, while the arrival of a new police chief in 2002 named William Bratton from New York, did. While on his watch, violent crime decreased considerable in spite of some isolated incidents of police brutality. Chief Bratton has earned the respect of most ethnic groups.
Continuing to plague Los Angeles are soaring real estate prices, traffic, pollution, and explosive population growth between 2000 and 2010. However, overall morale remains high as the result of a decreasing crime rate, low unemployment, and a strong economy. In May 2005, a man named Antonio Villaraigosa was elected as the mayor of Los Angeles. This is the first Latino elected in the city since 1872. Maybe someday soon, even racial tensions may become a thing of the past.
During the 1990’s the last of the automobile factories shut down. The steel mills and tire factories had shut down left earlier. The majority of the dairy and agricultural operations that were still thriving during the 1950’s, have relocated outlying counties while the furniture industry has moved to Mexico and other low-wage countries. Aerospace production has decreased considerably, or relocated to states that have better tax conditions. The movie producers oftentimes find less expensive locations to produce commercials, TV programs, and movies. However, the music, TV, and movie are still based in Los Angeles, which is home to numerous well-paid technicians, executives, and stars. Many studios still operate in Los Angeles, such 20th Century Fox in Century City and CBS Television City at the corner of Beverly Boulevard, Fairfax Avenue, and. Century Fox in Century City.
During the early 1900’s, the manufacture of clothing started on a large scale. During the 1920’s, the fashion industry emerged with an emphasis on leisure clothing and sportswear, and, in 1945, expanded to second place behind New York. In 1957, Toyota completed its first overseas office in Hollywood, and sold 257 cars in the United States. In 1982, it relocated its operations to Torrance as the result of easy access to LAX airport as well as port facilities. The company sold 2.2 million vehicles in the United States, and announced that it would relocate 3,000 of its employees to Plano, Texas, close to Dallas, to be nearer to its American factories. Many other Japanese companies followed Toyota to Los Angeles, because of its reputation as the national trendsetter as well as its location.
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
804.288.0099
Request A Consult With Carroll
Areas Served:
Boston
Chicago
Dallas
Los Angeles
New York
Philadelphia
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington DC
Carroll King Schuller, MBTI
CEO & Founder
Organic Blueprints II, LLC.
6807 Patterson Ave #D
Richmond, VA 23226
(804) 288-0099 | office
(804) 869-5403 | mobile
carroll.schuller@organicblueprints.com