Adrian V. Cole
4 min readMar 23, 2019

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The Value of Corporate History

Businessmen pose on a Westinghouse generator

Everything has a history, simply because everything exists in time (except of course Monty Python which is timeless).

Starting with nations, which are the best-known kind of histories, we drill down to regions, states, cites and towns. Then further down on the family tree of history we find family histories, and then of course personal histories in the form of biography or memoir.

But let’s not leave out the history of corporations, as well as companies generally, no matter what their legal structure may be. And while we are at it, we should not forget NGOs, charities and organizations of all kinds.

Some people, after all, consider corporations people. Now this idea might well have solicited chuckles when Mitt Romney famously launched it, but if you parse that a little you quickly arrive at a less ridiculous formulation — that corporations are entities. They may not have consciousness or a will, but they certainly do possess a beginning, a middle and an end, or an origin, a present, and hopefully a future.

Thus positioned in time, a corporation (or company) must have a History.

I’ve argued elsewhere that History serves different purposes, so the question what is history for? has different answers. But one answer to this question applies across the board — for nations, for towns, for companies and individuals…

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Adrian V. Cole

Writer of fiction & non fiction. Author of “Thinking Past: Questions and Problems in World History to 1750.” Politics Reporter at the American Independent