Strategic factors in nineteenth century American economic history : a volume to honor Robert W. Fogel

Bibliographic Information

Strategic factors in nineteenth century American economic history : a volume to honor Robert W. Fogel

edited by Claudia Goldin and Hugh Rockoff

(A National Bureau of Economic Research conference report)

University of Chicago Press, 1992

Other Title

Strategic factors in 19th century American economic history

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Note

Papers presented at a conference held Mar. 2-3, 1991 in Cambridge, Mass

Includes indexes

"The writings of Robert W. Fogel": p. 471-474

Bibliography: p. 475-476

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Offering new research on strategic factors in the development of the nineteenth century American economy--labor, capital, and political structure--the contributors to this volume employ a methodology innovated by Robert W. Fogel, one of the leading pioneers of the "new economic history." Fogel's work is distinguished by the application of economic theory and large-scale quantitative evidence to long-standing historical questions. These sixteen essays reveal, by example, the continuing vitality of Fogel's approach. The authors use an astonishing variety of data, including genealogies, the U.S. federal population census manuscripts, manumission and probate records, firm accounts, farmers' account books, and slave narratives, to address collectively market integration and its impact on the lives of Americans. The evolution of markets in agricultural and manufacturing labor is considered first; that concerning capital and credit follows. The demography of free and slave populations is the subject of the third section, and the final group of papers examines the extra-market institutions of governments and unions.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Claudia Goldin and Hugh Rockoff Two Appreciations, Stanley L. Engerman, Donald N. McCloskey I. Labor Markets in Manufacturing and Agriculture 1. The Market for Manufacturing Workers during Early Industrialization: The American Northeast, 1820 to 1860, Kenneth L. Sokoloff and Georgia C. Villaflor 2. Wages, Prices, and Labor Markets before the Civil War, Claudia Goldin and Robert A. Margo 3. Structural Change in the Farm Labor Force: Contract Labor in Massachusetts Agriculture, 1750-1865, Winifred B. Rothenberg 4. Farm Tenancy in the Antebellum North, Donghyu Yang II. Markets in Capital and Credit 5. Regional Interest Rates in Antebellum America, Howard Bodenhorn and Hugh Rockoff 6. Money versus Credit Rationing: Evidence for the National Banking Era, 1880-1914, Michael D. Bordo, Peter Rappoport, and Anna J. Schwartz 7. Precedence and Wealth: Evidence from Nineteenth-Century Utah, David W. Galenson and Clayne L. Pope 8. The Wealth of Women, 1774, Alice Hanson Jones III. The Demography of Free and Slave Populations 9. Adult Mortality in America before 1900: A View from Family Histories, Clayne L. Pope 10. Toward an Anthropometric History of African-Americans: The Case of the Free Blacks in Antebellum Maryland, John Komlos 11. The Slave Family: A View from the Slave Narratives, Stephen Crawford 12. The Fertility Transition in the United States: Tests of Alternative Hypotheses, Richard H. Steckel 13. Trading Quantity for Quality: Explaining the Decline in American Fertility in the Nineteenth Century, Jenny Bourne Wahl IV. Political Economy 14. The Profitability of Early Canadian Railroads: Evidence from the Grand Trunk and Great Western Railway Companies, Ann M. Carlos and Frank Lewis 15. The Rise and Fall of Urban Political Patronage Machines, Joseph D. Reid, Jr., and Michael M. Kurth 16. Dividing Labor: Urban Politics and Big-City Construction in Late-Nineteenth-Century America, Gerald Friedman

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