Pre-Radcliffe economics course offerings and the Radcliffe courses for 1893-94 and for 1894-1900 have been posted earlier.
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1900-1901
ECONOMICS.
Primarily for Undergraduates:—
1. Dr. SPRAGUE and Dr. ANDREW. — Outlines of Economics. — Production, Distribution, Exchange. — Lectures on Social Questions, Banking and Monetary Legislation. 3 hours a week.
19 Undergraduates, 5 Special students. Total 24.
For Undergraduates and Graduates:—
3. Professor CARVER. — Principles of Sociology. —Theories of social progress. 2 hours a week.
2 Graduates, 5 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 9.
10. Professor ASHLEY. — The Mediaeval Economic History of Europe. 2 hours a week.
2 Graduates, 4 Undergraduates, 3 Special students. Total 9.
92. Mr. WILLOUGHBY. — The Labor Question in Europe and the United States. — The Social and Economic Condition of Workingmen. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 2d half-year.
1 Graduate, 8 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 11.
81. Dr. ANDREW. — Money. A general survey of currency legislation, experience, and theory in recent times. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 1st half-year.
1 Graduate, 4 Undergraduates, 1 Special student. Total 6.
Source: Radcliffe College. Report of the President, 1900-01, p.44.
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1901-1902
ECONOMICS.
Primarily for Undergraduates:—
1. Dr. ANDREW. — Outlines of Economics. — Production, Distribution, Exchange. — Industrial Organization, Labor Questions, Banking and Monetary Legislation. 3 hours a week.
28 Undergraduates, 4 Special students. Total 32.
For Undergraduates and Graduates:—
3. Asst. Professor CARVER. — Principles of Sociology. —Theories of social progress. 2 hours a week.
6 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 8.
92. Mr. DURAND. — The Labor Question in Europe and the United States. — The Social and Economic Condition of Workingmen. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 2d half-year.
1 Graduate, 6 Undergraduates. Total 7.
6. Dr. SPRAGUE. — The Economic History of the United States. 2 hours a week.
2 Graduates, 4 Undergraduates. Total 6.
Primarily for Graduates:—
20. Asst. Professor CARVER. — Seminary in Economics. Thesis-subject: Motives in Politics.
1 Special student. Total 1.
Source: Radcliffe College. Report of the President, 1901-02, pp. 37-38.
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1902-1903
ECONOMICS.
Primarily for Undergraduates:—
1. Drs. ANDREW and MIXTER. — Outlines of Economics. — Production, Distribution, Exchange, Industrial Organization, Foreign Trade, Banking, Socialism, and Labor Questions. 3 hours a week.
18 Undergraduates, 3 Special students. Total 21.
For Undergraduates and Graduates:—
32. Professor CARVER. — Principles of Sociology. —Theories of social progress. Half-course. 2 hours a week. 2d half-year.
10 Undergraduates, 1 Special student. Total 11.
14. Professor CARVER. — Methods of Social Reform. — 2 hours a week.
4 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 6.
112. Dr. GAY. — The Modern Economic History of Europe and America. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 2d half-year.
1 Graduate, 1 Undergraduate. Total 2.
51. Mr. MEYER. — Railways and Other Public Works under Corporate and Private Management. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 1st half-year.
1 Graduate, 4 Undergraduates. Total 5.
8a1. Dr. ANDREW. — Money. A general survey of currency legislation, experience, and theory in recent times. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 1st half-year.
1 Graduate, 7 Undergraduates, 3 Special students. Total 11.
8b2. Dr. SPRAGUE. — Banking and the history of the leading Banking Systems. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 2d half-year.
3 Undergraduates. Total 3.
Source: Radcliffe College. Report of the President, 1902-03, p. 43.
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1903-1904
ECONOMICS.
Primarily for Undergraduates:—
1. Asst. Professor ANDREW. — Outlines of Economics. — Production, Distribution, Exchange, Industrial Organization, Foreign Trade, Banking, Socialism, and Labor Questions. 3 hours a week.
36 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 38.
For Undergraduates and Graduates:—
2. Professor CARVER. — Economic Theory. 3 hours a week.
1 Graduate, 1 Undergraduate, 2 Special students. Total 4.
11. Asst. Professor GAY. — The Modern Economic History of Europe and America. 2 hours a week (and occasionally a third hour).
2 Undergraduates. Total 2.
6. Dr. SPRAGUE. — The Economic History of the United States. 2 hours a week.
7 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 9.
9a2. Professor RIPLEY. — Problems of Labor and Industrial Organization. Half-course. 3 hours a week, 2d half-year.
2 Graduates, 5 Undergraduates. Total 7.
Primarily for Graduates:—
131. Professor CARVER. — Methods of Economic Investigation. Half-course. 2 hours a week, 1st half-year. [Graduate course in Harvard University, to which Radcliffe students were admitted by vote of the Harvard Faculty]
1 Graduate, 2 Undergraduates. Total 3.
20. Professors CARVER and RIPLEY. — Seminary in Economics. Thesis-subjects: “Labor Organizations among Women” and “The Defective Child in its own home.”
1 Graduate, 1 Special student. Total 2.
Source: Radcliffe College. Report of the President, 1903-04, pp. 50-51.
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1904-1905
ECONOMICS.
Primarily for Undergraduates:—
1. Asst. Professors ANDREW and SPRAGUE. — Outlines of Economics. — Production, Distribution, Exchange, Industrial Organization, Foreign Trade, Banking, Socialism, and Labor Questions. 3 hours a week.
14 Undergraduates, 4 Special students. Total 18.
For Undergraduates and Graduates:—
3. Professor CARVER. — Principles of Sociology. — Theories of social progress. 2 hours a week, with a third hour at the pleasure of the instructor.
1 Graduate, 3 Undergraduates, 2 Special students. Total 6.
6. Asst. Professor SPRAGUE. — The Economic History of the United States. 3 hours a week.
2 Graduates, 1 Undergraduate, 1 Special student. Total 4.
COURSE OF RESEARCH
20a. Asst. Professor GAY. — The Expansion of English Trade in the Mediterranean, and the Levant Company. 1 hour a week. [Graduate course in Harvard University, to which Radcliffe students were admitted by vote of the Harvard Faculty]
1 Graduate. Total 1.
Source: Radcliffe College. Report of the President, 1904-05, p. 56.
Image Source: Gymnasium and Fay House, Radcliffe College ca. 1904. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540. REPRODUCTION NUMBER: LC-D4-10778 R (b&w glass neg.) Copy from Wikimedia Commons.