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Chicago Economics Programs Economist Market Economists

Chicago. Memos discussing guests to teach during summer quarter, 1927

 

 

Apparently the 1926 summer quarter course planning at the Chicago department of political economy in 1926 was so wild that the head of the department, Leon C. Marshall, decided to start the discussion for 1927 on the second day of Summer, 1926. Four of the seven colleagues responded with quite a few suggestions.

This post provides the first+middle names where needed in square brackets. Also links to webpages with further information about the suggested guests have been added.

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Copy of memo from
Leon Carroll Marshall

THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Department of Economics

Memorandum from L. C. Marshall. June 22, 1926

To: C. W. Wright, J. A. Field, H. A. Millis, J. Viner, L. W. Mints, P. H. Douglas, W. H. Spencer

We really must break through the morass we are in with respect to our summer quarter. Partly because of delayed action and partly because of an interminable debating society in such matters we finally get a patched up program which is not as attractive as it should be.

I shall proceed on the basis of the homely philosophy that the way to do something is to do something. I shall try to secure from every member of the group a statement of his best judgment concerning the appropriate course of action for the summer of 1927 and then move at once toward rounding out a program.

Won’t you be good enough to turn in to E57 within the next few days your suggestions and comments with respect to the following issues.

  1. Do you yourself expect to be in residence the summer quarter of 1927?
  2. If you do, what courses do you prefer to teach? Please list more than two courses placing all of the courses in your order of preference. In answering this question, please keep in mind the problem of guiding research. Should you offer a research course?
  3. What are your preferences with respect to hours? Please state them rather fully and give some alternatives so that a schedule may be pieced together.
  4. What courses or subject matter should we be certain to include in the summer of 1927?
  5. What men from outside do you recommend for these courses which we should be certain to include? Please rank them in the order of your preference.
  6. Quite aside from the subject matter which you have recommended above, what persons from the outside ought we try to make contact with if our funds permit? This gives an opportunity to aid in making up the personnel of the summer quarter in all fields.
  7. Please give any other comments or suggestions which occur to you.

Yours very sincerely,

LCM:G

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Response from
Jacob Viner

The University of Chicago
Department of Political Economy

July 1, 1926

Dear Mr. Marshall

I will want to offer 301 (Neo-class Ec.) & 353 (Int Ec. Pol) as usual next summer, though if we have a good outside theorist to give 301, I would like to give a course on Theory of Int Trade in addition to 353. I think we need someone especially in Banking, next in theory. Beyond these we should offer work in some of the following, if we can get first rankers: statistics, private finance, transportation, economic history of Europe & ec. Hist. of U.S.

I suggest the following from which selections could be made:

Banking

Theory Statistics Transportation

Ec. Hist.

[Eugene E.]
Agger

 

[Benjamin Haggott] Beckhart

 

[Allyn Abbott]
A.A. Young

 

[Chester Arthur]
C. A. Phillips

 

[Oliver Mitchell Wentworth]
Sprague

 

[James Harvey] Rogers

 

[Ernest Minor] E.M. Patterson

[Allyn Abbott]
Young

 

[Jacob Harry]
Hollander[Frank Hyneman] Knight

 

[Albert Benedict] Wolfe

 

[Herbert Joseph] Davenport

[Henry Roscoe] Trumbower

 

[Homer Bews] Vanderblue

[Melvin Moses] M.M. Knight

 

[Abbott Payson] A.P. Usher

As other possibilities I suggest [George Ernest] Barnett, [James Cummings] Bonbright, [Edward Dana] Durand, [Edwin Griswold] Nourse, [Sumner Huber] Slichter, John D. [Donald] Black, Holbrook Working, [Alvin Harvey] Hansen.

[signed]
J Viner

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Response from
Paul Howard Douglas

The University of Chicago
The School of Commerce and Administration

June 29, 1926

Professor L. C. Marshall
Faculty Exchange

Dear Mr. Marshall:

You have hit the nail on the head in your proposal to get under way for next summer, and I am very much pleased at your action. Answering your questions specifically may I say—

  1. That I do not expect to be in residence for the summer quarter of 1927.
  2. &3. Since I shall not be in residence no answers to these questions are, I take it, necessary.

 

  1. We should, I think, be certain to include adequate work in the following fields (a) Economic theory, (b) Monetary and banking theory, (c) Labor problems, (d) Statistics and quantitative economics, (e) Taxation and Public finance, (f) Economic history.
  2. As regards men from outside, I would recommend the following in each field: (a) Economic theory—[Herbert Joseph] H. J. Davenport, [John Rogers] J. R. Commons, [Frank Hyneman] F. H. Knight; (b) Monetary and banking theory—[Allyn Abbott] A. A. Young, [Oliver Mitchell Wentworth] O.M.W. Sprague, [James Waterhouse] James W. Angell; (c) Labor problems—Selig Perlman, Alvin [Harvey] H. Hansen; (d) Statistics and quantitative economics—[Frederick Cecil] F. C. Mills, [Robert Emmet] R. E. Chaddock, [William Leonard] W. L. Crum; (e) Taxation and public finance—[Harley Leist] H. L. Lutz, [William John] William J. Shultz; (f) Economic history—[Norbert Scott Brien] N. S. B. Gras.
  3. As people from outside to try for, might it not be possible to secure some one from England, such as [John Atkinson] John A. Hobson, Henry Clay, or [Dennis Holme] D. H. Robertson? Might it not also be possible to get Charles Rist from France or [Werner] Sombart from Germany?

Faithfully yours,
[signed]
Paul H. Douglas

P.S. The news that [Henry] Schultz and [Melchior] Palyi are to be with us next year is certainly welcome. Should we not let everyone know that they are coming, and should not a news note to this effect be sent on to the American Economic Review? [Handwritten note here: “Mr. Wright doing this”]

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Response from
Lloyd Wynn Mints

The University of Chicago
The School of Commerce and Administration

July 16, 1926

Memorandum to L. C. Marshall from L. W. Mints, concerning the work of the summer quarter, 1927.

  1. It is my present intention not to be in residence during the summer quarter, 1927, although I will be in the city, I suppose.
  2. It appears to me that we should attempt to get men from the outside who would represent some of the newer points of view rather than the orthodox fields. I should suppose that it would be desirable to have a man in statistics and, if he could be found, somebody to do something with quantitative economics. For the statistics I would suggest [William Leonard] Crum, [Frederick Cecil] Mills, [Frederick Robertson] Macaulay, [Willford Isbell] King, [Bruce D.] Mudgett, [Robert] Riegel. I am ignorant of the particular bents of some of the statistical men, but I should suppose that in quantitative economics [Holbrook] Working, [Alvin Harvey] Hansen, or [William Leonard] Crum might do something. Perhaps [Edmund Ezra] Day should be added to the men in Statistics.
    In economic history, as I remember it, we have had no outside help for a long time. I should like to see either [Noman Scott Brien] Gras or Max [Sylvius] Handman give some work here in the summer.
    Particular men who represent somewhat new points of view, and who might be had for the summer, I would suggest as follows: [Lionel Danforth] Edie, [Oswald Fred] Boucke, [Morris Albert] Copeland, [Sumner Huber] Slichter.
    In addition I should like very much to see either [Edwin Robert Anderson] Seligman or [John Rogers] Commons here for a summer.

[signed]
L.W.M.

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Response from
Harry Alvin Millis

Answers to questions re Summer Teaching, 1927

  1. Yes, I feel that I must teach next summer unless that plan you have been interested in goes through.
  2. 342 [The State in Relation to Labor] and 440 [Research].
  3. 342 at 8; 440 hour to be arranged.
  4. 5. 6.: Should get a better rounded program than we have had. Should have an outstanding man in economic theory and another in Finance. For the former I would mention [John] Maurice Clark, [John Rogers] Commons, and [Frank Hyneman] Knight—in order named. For the latter I would mention [Allyn Abbott] Young, [James Harvey] Rogers. If we can get the money I should like to see [George Ernest] Barnett brought on for statistics and a trade union course.

 

  1. Would it be possible to have a seminar which would bring together the outside men and some of the inside men and our mature graduate students—these hand-picked? It might be made very stimulating.

[Signed]
H. A. Millis

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Response from
Chester Whitney Wright

The University of Chicago
The Department of Political Economy

Memorandum to Marshall from Wright

Summer 1927
First term some aspects of economic history
1:30 or 2:30
May have to teach the whole summer but hope I can confine it to first term.
Can teach any phases of subjects in any fields suitable for term.

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Response from
James Alfred Field

[No written answer in the folder: however L. C. Marshall noted that Field would not be teaching in the summer term of 1927]

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Response from
William Homer Spencer

The University of Chicago
The School of Commerce and Administration
Office of the Dean

July 12, 1926

Mr. L. C. Marshall
The Department of Political Economy

My dear Mr. Marshall:

As Mr. [Garfield Vestal] Cox does not wish to teach during the Summer Quarter of 1927, I wish the Department of Political Economy would try to get Mr. [Edmund Ezra] Day of Wisconsin [sic, Michigan is correct] who could give both a course in statistics and a course in forecasting. Forecasting is not given this summer and unless we get someone from the outside to give it, I presume it will not be given next summer.

Why does not the Department of Political Economy for the coming summer get someone like Mr. [Leverett Samuel] Lyon to give an advanced course in economics of the market for graduate students? The Department of Political Economy could handle half of his time and I perhaps could handle the other half for market management

Now that it appears that the Department of Political Economy cannot get any promising young men in the Field of Finance, why do you not try for [Chester Arthur] Phillips of Iowa? He will give good courses and will draw a great many students from the middle west to the University.

So far as my own program is concerned, I have not made much progress. I tried to get [Roy Bernard] Kester of Columbia, but he turned me down. I am placing a similar proposition before [William Andrew] Paton of Michigan. In the Field of Marketing, I am trying for [Frederic Arthur] Russell of the University of Illinois to give a course in salesmanship primarily for teachers in secondary schools. Otherwise I have made no progress in getting outside men for next summer.

Yours sincerely,
[signed]
W. H. Spencer

WHS:DD

Source:  University of Chicago Archives. Department of Economics. Records. Box 22, Folder 7.

Categories
Chicago Economists

Chicago. Visiting Economics Professors, 1896-1943.

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On April 10, 1945, the chairman of the University of Chicago’s economics department, Professor Simeon E. Leland, submitted a 77 page (!) memorandum to President Robert M. Hutchins entitled “Postwar Plans of the Department of Economics–A Wide Variety of Observations and Suggestions All Intended To Be Helpful in Improving the State of the University”.

In his cover letter Leland wrote “…in the preparation of the memorandum, I learned much that was new about the past history of the Department. Some of this, incorporated in the memorandum, looks like filler stuck in, but I thought it ought to be included for historical reasons and to furnish some background for a few of the suggestions.” 

The memorandum deserves reproduction in its entirety sometime (and will probably be done by somebody else), but I intend to serve at least several blogpost-sized portions from Leland’s memo. So look forward for more tables/excerpts to come.

Today we have (1) a list compiled by Leland of visiting professors to the department of economics who had not been absorbed into the faculty as of 1945 (e.g. George Stigler was still at Minnesota at the time of the memo was written. Later posts include (2) data on economics faculty 1944/45 and the trend of enrolments and (3) talent-scouting lists for possible permanent, visiting and joint appointments.

__________________________

 

List of visiting professors
(excluding faculty members who frequently were visitors before joining the University)

[An asterisk (*) for deceased colleagues]

Visiting Professor

Year Institution

Present Location

G. W. S. Adams

1902

Henry C. Adams*

1902

Michigan
Clarence E. Ayers

1923

Amherst

Texas

Stephan Bauer

1899

Chamber of Commerce, Brünn, Austria
Spurgeon Bell

1920

Texas

National Resources Planning Board

E. L. Bogart

1910

Princeton

Illinois (Emeritus)

Arthur J. Boynton*

1914

Kansas
Harry G. Brown

1917

Missouri

Missouri

J. B. Canning

1924

Stanford

Stanford

T. N. Carver

1908

Harvard

Harvard (Emeritus)

Paul T. Cherington

1914

Harvard

McKinsey & Co., Management Consultants, 60 East 42nd St., N.Y.C.

F. E. Clark

1921

Northwestern

Northwestern

F. R. Clow*

1904

State Normal, Oshkosh, Wisconsin
J. B. Condliffe

1941

California

California

Frederick E. Croxton

1926

Ohio State

Columbia

E. E. Day

1910

Harvard

Cornell

F. S. Deibler

1917

Northwestern

Northwestern (Emeritus)

J. C. Duncan

1913

Illinois
J. F. Ebersole

1914

Minnesota

Harvard

Donald English

1916

Cornell

Cornell

Frank A. Fetter

1926

Princeton

Princeton (Emeritus)

Martin G. Glaeser

1930

Wisconsin

Wisconsin

John Paul Good

1899

Eastern Ill. State Normal, Charleston
Frank D. Graham

1930

Princeton

Princeton

Waldo E. Grimes

1939

Kansas State College

Kansas State College

Lawrence H. Grinstead

1926

Ohio State
Walton H. Hamilton

1917

Amherst

Yale

Matthew B. Hammond*

1921

Ohio State
Max S. Handman*

1928

Texas
Lewis H. Haney

1914

Texas

New York

Charles O. Hardy

1923
1925)
1929)
1933)

State Univ. of Iowa

Brookings Institution

Federal Reserve Bank, Kansas City, Missouri

Ernest L. Harris

1904

Grover G. Heubner

1926

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania

Jens P. Jensen*

1920)
1930)

Kansas
Alvin S. Johnson

1909

Texas

New School for Social Research

Eliot Jones

1925

Stanford

Stanford

Albert S. Keister

1926)
1927)

North Carolina Woman’s College

North Carolina Woman’s College

William S. Krebs

1921

Washington University

Washington University

Robert R. Kuczynski

1923

Statistical Office, Berlin

12 Lawn Rd., London, N.W. 3, England

Ben W. Lewis

1931)
1937)

Oberlin

Oberlin

H. L. Lutz

1915

Oberlin

Princeton

Leverett S. Lyon

1926)
1927

Brookings Institution

Chicago Association of Commerce

James D. Magee

1916

Cincinnati

New York

T. W. Mitchell

1911

Minnesota
Bernard Moses*

1898

California
Edwin G. Nourse

1931

Brookings Institution

Brookings Institution

T. W. Page*

1898

Randolph-Macon
Maffeo Pantaleoni*

1896

Naples
C. A. Phillips

1931

State Univ. of Iowa

State Univ. of Iowa

H. H. Preston

1924

Univ. of Washington

Univ. of Washington

Benjamin M. Rastall

1910

Wisconsin
H. L. Reed

1923

Washington University

Cornell

R. R. Renne

1940

Montana State

Montana State

Edward V. Robinson*

1908

Minnesota
Clyde O. Ruggles

1916)
1920)

Ohio State

Harvard

William J. Shultz

1926

College of the City of New York

College of the City of New York

Guy E. Snider

1915

College of the City of New York

College of the City of New York

A. E. Staley

1941

Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy

School of Advanced International Studies, Washington, D.C.

George J. Stigler

1943

Minnesota

Minnesota

Walter W. Stewart

1915

Missouri

Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J.

R. H. Tawney

1939

London

London

George O. Virtue*

1915

Nebraska
Norman J. Ware

1942

Wesleyan

Wesleyan

G. S. Wehrwein*

1940

Wisconsin
Louis Weld

1916

Yale

McCann-Erikson Co., New York

Albert C. Whitaker

1912)
1913)

Stanford

Stanford (Emeritus)

Nathaniel R. Whitney

1921

Cincinnati

Proctor and Gamble, Cincinnati

Murray S. Wildman*

1909

Missouri
John H. Williams

1921

Northwestern

Harvard

Milburn L. Wilson

1923

Montana

Chief, Nutrition Programs Branch, Office of Distribution, War Food Administration

Ambrose P. Winston

1913

Pekin
A. B. Wolfe

1915

Texas

Ohio State

Holbrook Working

1928

Stanford

Stanford

Bruce Wyman*

1903

Harvard
Allyn A. Young*

1912

Washington University
Ernest C. Young

1939

Purdue

Purdue

Source: University of Chicago Library, Department of Special Collections. Office of the President. Hutchins Administration Records. Box 73, Folder “Economics Dept., “Post-War Plans” Simeon E. Leland, 1945″.

Image Source: Detail of Simeon E. Leland photograph. University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf1-03717, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.

Categories
Economists

South Dakota. Economics Staff and Courses, 1883-1919

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While trying to nail down a few items in the c.v. of the University of Chicago Ph.D. (1915) and first Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers (under President Harry Truman), Edwin G. Nourse, I stumbled across this history of the early evolution of economics at the University of South Dakota. In addition to being a stepping stone in Nourse’s career, the University of South Dakota also had on its faculty William A. Scott who later went on to become a professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin.

_____________________

THE EVOLUTION OF ECONOMICS IN THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH DAKOTA

By Frank T. Stockton. Ph.D.
Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Economics.

The history of any university is largely made up of the history of its departments. As an institution grows the character of departmental organization and instruction changes. Departments having wide jurisdiction are divided and new chairs come into existence. Professors of Latin and of Greek displace quondam professors of the classics; professors of physics, of biology and of chemistry supplant omniscient professors of natural science; professors of economics, of sociology and of history drive to cover multi-minded professors of the social sciences. The economic principle of the separation of employments and the division of labor is well exemplified in this aspect of the progress of any growing institution of learning.

Soon after his arrival at South Dakota, the writer became interested in the history of his department since it seemed desirable to know something of its background and traditions. As his investigations progressed, it appeared that their results might be worth while presenting to the readers of the Quarterly in the hope that they would add a small chapter to the history of the University. Most of the material has been gleaned from catalogues and other publications, but much assistance has also been received from older members of the faculty who are familiar with the local situation. Only incidental mention of the courses in “business” or “commerce” will be made in this article.

In the “first annual announcement” of the University of Dakota, published for the year 1882-3, no work in economics was mentioned. At that time the University was only an academy. In the catalogue for 1883-4, however, we note the rather startling fact that political economy, as it was then generally called, was a required subject of study in the third year of the English and classical courses of the preparatory department and in the fourth year of the normal course. College work at this time was scheduled for only two years, yet in the outline of courses for the college classical department, political economy was listed as a Senior subject to be taken in conjunction with civil government. Apparently this work was planned for the time when four years of college study could be given. The texts announced for student use were the well-known books of Francis A. Walker and A. L. Perry, standard works of their time. The catalogue does not name the instructor in political economy, but it is quite likely that the subject was intended to be handled by President John W. Simonds. In the early days of practically every college it was almost invariably the rule for the president to teach economics as a side line to philosophy and ethics.

The 1884-5 catalogue is missing from the University files. The catalogue for 1885-6 did not mention any special courses in social science, but it did state that work in political and social science had to be taken by all Seniors. All courses in this field were doubtless conducted by President J. H. Herrick who was also professor of the mental, moral and social sciences. Surely, President Herrick had his hands full!

In the fall of 1887 some of the social sciences fell from their high presidential estate and lodged in the hands of a professor of history and English literature. The man who handled this combination department was William A. Scott, a classmate of Dean Akeley at the University of Rochester in 1886. In Scott’s first year a course in political economy, described as “Perry, and Lectures,” was given to all Seniors. In 1888 Scott left English to its fate and became professor of history and political science. He then proceeded to add to his work in political economy by offering two new courses dealing with economic problems and the science of finance. It is interesting to observe that a reading knowledge of French was considered essential to the successful prosecution of the latter. Special study for advanced students was also announced. Instead of one course in political economy being required of all Seniors, we find that under the new scheme of things elementary economics and economic problems were made a part of the requirements for the Ph.B. degree from 1888 to 1891. During practically the same period the elementary course was taken by all advanced normal students.

In 1890 Professor Scott obtained leave of absence to study at the Johns Hopkins University. He never returned to South Dakota. After taking his doctorate at the Hopkins in 1892 he migrated to the University of Wisconsin as assistant professor of economics under Richard T. Ely. Since 1900 he has occupied the position of director of the course in commerce and professor of political economy on the Wisconsin staff. He has written widely upon financial topics and he is best known today, perhaps, for his text, “Money and Banking,” which has gone through five editions. His other books are “The Repudiation of State Debts,” “Money,” “Banking,” and “Recent Theories on Interest.” It should be a source of pride to the University of South Dakota that a man of Professor Scott’s ability and reputation has had his name linked with the formative years of the institution.

Clark M. Young, a graduate of Hiram College, was elected acting professor in Scott’s place, but he did not accept the appointment. Fred W. Speirs, A.M., was then selected for the post. Under his regime the two advanced courses in political economy were dropped and in their place was substituted the first work in sociology, a course entitled “Social Science.” Professor Speirs left the University with practically all the rest of the faculty at the conclusion of President Grose’s meteoric administration. With the restoration of stable government, Professor Young became head of the Department of History and Political Science in the spring of 1892. He made no changes in the courses inherited from his predecessor until 1896 when the course in sociology was dropped. He devoted no time to sociology thereafter until 1899, and from 1892 until he surrendered control over political economy he gave only one elementary course in the latter field.

In 1899 Garrett A. Droppers (A.B., Harvard, 1887) who had been a graduate student at Berlin under Wagner and Schmoller, became president of the University and professor of political economy and finance. For the first time economics attained the rank of a separate department. Sociology emerged from retirement and was placed under Young’s jurisdiction as an adjunct to history and political science. Droppers, it appears, had considerable interest in the history of economic thought as he immediately organized a class in this field, admitting to it those who had one year of elementary economics. He also offered courses in public finance, in economic history, in money and in banking. Elementary economics, for a year or two, was made a required study for all Juniors. Apparently at Droppers’ direction, certain economics courses were also introduced into the curriculum of the College of Business, a branch of the University originally known as the Commercial department which had been established in 1887. These courses dealt with such subjects as transportation, insurance, commercial geography and commercial legislation. In 1905, when Carl W. Thompson, a graduate of Valparaiso, was made assistant professor of economics and director of the School of Commerce, the new name for the College of Business, the courses just mentioned were brought forward in the catalogue and announced as political economy courses rather than as business courses. Accounting was the only work now classified as economics which was then left in the School of Commerce.

President Droppers resigned in 1906. While he was at the University he gained the reputation of being an excellent instructor in his field. Many of his old students now pay tribute to him for the stimulating influence he had upon their mental processes. During his regime he succeeded in raising economics from the level of a side issue to the dignity of a major line. After leaving South Dakota he became professor of economics in 1908 at Williams College where he also achieved an enviable reputation as a teacher. During his stay at Williams he was selected to serve upon some of the public commissions of the state of Massachusetts. In 1914 he was appointed by President Wilson as minister to Greece and Montenegro, a position which he now holds. He has contributed several journal articles on specific questions in economics.

Upon the resignation of President Droppers, Mr. Thompson was appointed professor of economics. It will be noted that the term “political economy” was dropped from the title. “Economics” it has been since that day. Altogether some fourteen courses were announced under Thompson, including work in accounting which was transferred from the School of Commerce. Professor Thompson had a part in establishing the Socio-Economic club, an organization composed of advanced students in economics, sociology and history. Except for a few years it would appear that this club existed only on paper. It continued to be announced in the catalogues, however, until 1918. When the long and successful work of Dean Young came to its close with his death in 1908, the courses in sociology were transferred to Professor Thompson who then became the head of a new department, that of economics and sociology. Dean Young, it should be noted, never wrote any articles or books on economics, although he published matter of considerable importance in history, government and education.

Thompson resigned from the staff of the University in 1910. After serving for a time with the University of Minnesota, he accepted a position with the federal Department of Agriculture. At present he is one of the department’s specialists in rural organization. He was succeeded at South Dakota by Edwin G. Nourse, a graduate of Cornell, who came here from the Wharton School of Commerce and Finance of the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Nourse was primarily interested in agricultural economics and it was his ambition to promote courses in that field. He discovered, however, that there was a greater demand among the student body for work of a commercial character, so he was compelled to surrender his plans and continue, in general outline, what his predecessors had been offering in corporations, insurance, banking, money, labor problems, transportation, and the like. Certain courses, such as those dealing with public finance, the problems of distribution, the economics of agriculture and corporations were set off as being “primarily for Seniors and graduates.” Four courses in sociology were offered. The name of the School of Commerce was changed to that of the Department of Commerce and Finance. Professor Nourse resigned in 1912. After leaving Vermillion he took his doctor’s degree at Chicago, then served for three years as professor of economics at the University of Arkansas and then, in 1918, he became professor of agricultural economics at Iowa State College. He has written extensively upon agricultural economics, his chief publication doubtless being his “Readings in Agricultural Economics.” His other books are “Brokerage,” “Outlines of Agricultural Economics,” and “The Chicago Produce Market.” The last named publication has been awarded the Hart, Schaffner & Marx prize. He has also published valuable journal articles on agricultural economics and taxation. It is not too much to say that he is gaining recognition today as one of the leading authorities in his special line.

Following Nourse came Frederick W. Roman (A.B., Yale, 1902; Ph.D., Berlin, 1910) who remained two years. Very little change was made in the departmental announcements during his stay. In 1913 Dr. Roman was one of the prime movers in a reorganization of the Socio-Economic club under the title of the Social Science club. Upon his resignation in 1912, Professor Roman accepted a position with Syracuse University where he is now located.

Elmer K. Eyerly followed Roman as professor of economics and sociology in 1914. He was also made dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Dean Eyerly was an 1888 graduate of Franklin and Marshall who had spent several years in the state of South Dakota as a member of the Redfield, Yankton and South Dakota State faculties. Immediately prior to his coming to Vermillion he was associate professor of agricultural economics at the Massachusetts Agricultural College. The most important change made during his regime was the calling of Dr. Craig S. Thoms (A.B., Northwestern, 1888; Ph.D., Shurtleff, 1901) to be professor of applied sociology. Although Professor Thoms handled the elementary course in economics for three years and although Dean Eyerly continued to give courses in rural sociology and in social organization and control after the former’s appointment, Professor Thoms had the distinction of being the first instructor in the University’s history to be nominated as a sociologist. He is the author of two volumes: “The Workingman’s Christ,” and “The Bible Message for Modern Manhood.”

Another noteworthy thing done by Dean Eyerly was to discontinue the announcement of any courses under the Department of Commerce and Finance. All work in accounting and even the uncredited work in stenography and typewriting was brought forward in the catalogue for listing along with economics and sociology. However, a “suggested course in commerce and finance” was published and mention was also made under the head of University organization that there was a Department of Commerce and Finance. To all intents and purposes, however, that department was discontinued. In 1916 courses in economics and sociology were offered for the first time in the summer session. On account of his administrative duties Dean Eyerly was able to handle but a small amount of classroom work. Consequently, an instructor, Archie M. Peisch (A.B., Wisconsin, 1915) was engaged from 1915 to 1917 to handle courses in accounting, public finance, business barometers and commercial geography. Several correspondence courses were offered by the department at that time.

In the spring of 1917 Dean Eyerly resigned to devote his time to research. In this field he had already gained some notice through the publication of various articles on agricultural economics. Before long, however, he responded to the government need for trained men in his field and accepted a post as supervising farm help specialist with the U. S. Department of Agriculture. He was succeeded in the University by the writer. It is not the intention of the latter to expand upon his own times, but one or two facts should be stated to make our story complete. In the fall of 1917 economics was divorced from sociology and Professor Thoms was created the head of a separate department. Economics, likewise, was made to stand by itself. For the first semester of 1917-18, however, Professor Thoms continued to handle elementary economics. Since that time his work has been limited to sociology and Bible. It should also be mentioned that in the catalogue announcements for the year 1918-19 all reference to a Department of Commerce and Finance was omitted since, in fact, such a department had ceased to exist. Courses in accounting were listed in the catalogue as economics 21, economics 22, and so on, rather than accounting 1 and accounting 2, thus emphasizing the idea that accounting was to be handled from the economic rather than from the commercial or bookkeeping viewpoint. In February, 1918, Burton E. Tiffany (B. S., Greenville College, 1912) was appointed instructor in charge of accounting. Fifteen courses were announced by the department in the 1917-18 catalogue.

In conclusion, it is interesting to note that at least three of the men in charge of economics at the University have been primarily interested in agricultural questions. Yet not one of these men was able to create much demand for agricultural economics among his students, even though South Dakota is primarily an agricultural state. Again, it is rather remarkable to what extent the economists of the University have filled its administrative posts, either as presidents or as deans. Finally, attention should be called to the fact that practically all of the men named above have achieved distinction in the economic world as teachers, as writers, or as members of the public service. A heavy responsibility rests upon the existing departmental personnel in living up to the standards set by those who have, in times past, guided the department along its winding path.

 

Source: The Alumni Quarterly of the University of South Dakota. Vol. XIV, No. 4 (January, 1919), pp. 99 -105.