Chester W. Wright

Chester W. Wright

Chester W. Wright, 1911
Born 1879
Died 1966
Nationality American
Institution University of Chicago
Alma mater Harvard University
Doctoral
advisor
Frank Taussig
Doctoral
students
Harold Innis

Chester Whitney Wright (1879 – 1966) was an American economic historian, and Professor at the University of Chicago, known from his works on the economic history of the United States.[1][2]

Biography

Wright studied at the Harvard University, where he obtained his AB in 1901, his AM in 1902, and his PhD in 1906[3] with the thesis, entitled "Wool-growing and tariff: A Study in the Economic History of the United States" under Frank William Taussig.[4]

After graduation in 1906 Wright started his academic career at Cornell University. The next year in 1907 he moved to the University of Chicago to become Assistant Professor of Political Economy. He became Associate Professor and later Full Professor, and he kept teaching until his retirement in 1944. In 1908 Wright was awarded the David Ames Wells Prize for 1907–1908 for his thesis "Wool-Growing and the Tariff."[3]

Work

Economic History of the United States" Wright, 1941

In his "Economic History of the United States" Wright (1941) explained to offer a "functional approach to economic history." He explained:

The approach to the study of economic history that dominates the presentation of the subject in this volume is that of the economist whose immediate and primary function is to study the production and distribution of wealth with the objective of learning how the nation's economic progress can be promoted and its standard of living advanced. It can be called the functional approach to economic history. Although the narrative should provide such knowledge of the general background of economic history as is needed for most purposes in the interpretation of political history, and has frequently been turned aside to indicate the reactions thus involved, this has been a secondary rather than a primary consideration in the selection and organization of the material. Some material has been included because it served certain of the other objectives mentioned in the introductory chapter, though for the most part these objectives are served also by the material primarily of significance in relation to the major objective.[5]

Wright regarded as the fundamental problem" of his study, the question of "How the national income has been increased and distributed."[6]

Williamson (1941) commented, that "Within the limits of some 1120 pages Professor Wright has included an account of the major factors contributing to our economic development as well as a description of many of the minor influences. While the main emphasis is upon the evolution of economic institutions, attention is given to noneconomic factors which have affected economic life, and to the influence, in turn, of economic forces upon general historical development."[7]

Selected publications

Articles, a selection:

References

  1. "Wool-Growing and the Tariff" H. R. Mussey, "Wool-Growing and the Tariff. by Chester Whitney Wright," in: Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Jun., 1911), pp. 312-313.
  2. Frank Thistlethwaite. "Economic History of the United States. by Chester Whitney Wright," in: The Economic Journal, Vol. 60, No. 239 (Sep., 1950), pp. 608-611.
  3. 1 2 Warren J. Samuels (eds.) Materials from Chester Whitney Wright's Course, Economic History of the United States, Economics 220, University Of Chicago, 1933-1934, Book Series: Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology. 2005.
  4. Mitch, David. "Chicago and economic history." in The Elgar Companion to the Chicago School of Economics, (2010): 114.
  5. Wright (1941 p. xi-xii
  6. Leroy Allen (1942). Social Science. Vol. 17. p. 418.
  7. Harold F. Williamson. "Economic History of the United States. By Chester W. Wright. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1941. Pp. xxviii, 1120. $4.00," in: The Journal of Economic History, 1941, vol. 1, issue 02, pages 236-237
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