Business History Review
Harvard, Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration
Bimestrale; dal 1949 trimestrale
ISSN: 0007-6805
Conservata in: Università degli Studi di Firenze, Biblioteca di Scienze Sociali
Punto di servizio: Economia, Riv. Str. 338
Consistenza: a. 10, 1936, 1-
Lacune: v. 75, 2001, 3;
[ 2030-2021 ] [ 2020-2011 ] [ 2010-2001 ] [ 2000-1991 ] [ 1990-1981 ] [ 1980-1971 ] [ 1970-1961 ] [ 1960-1951 ] [ 1950-1941 ] [ 1940-1936 ]
Charles W. Chatfield, The W. L. Douglas Shoe Company: Background
of a Recent Merger, p. 159
A. R. Reynolds, Sources of Credit for a Frontier Lumber Company:
The Daniel Shaw Lumber Company as a Type Study, p. 184
Robert E. Moore, Business Philosophy, p. 196
Robert W. Lovett, Publisher and Advertiser Extraordinary:
The E. C. Allen Collection, p. 201
William J. Parish, Charles Ilfeld and Mercantile Capitalism
in the Arid Southwest, p. 216
Secretary’s Column, p. 218
PROBLEMS AND CHALLENGES IN BUSINESS HISTORY RESEARCH
Thomas C. Cochran, Entrepreneurial History, p. 113
Henrietta M. Larson, History of Business Administration and
Operation, p. 120
PROBLEMS AND CHALLENGES IN TEACHING BUSINESS HISTORY
Herman Krooss, In a School of Commerce, p. 136
Charles J. Kennedy, To College and University Freshmen, p. 140
John G. B. Hutchins, In Professional Education for Business, p. 146
Meeting of the Council of the Business Historical Society, p. 157
Announcement of Two Book Dividends, p. 158
Robert W. Lovett, The Cole Brothers Pump and Lightning
Rod Company, p. 53
J. D. Chambers, The Memoir of a Nottingham Lace Merchant:
William Cripps, 1798 – 1884, p. 65
Index to Bulletin Available to Members of the Society, p. 109
Charles C. Abbott, A New Book on Anglo-American Trade and
Finance: A Review, p. 110
S. B. Gras, Past, Present, and Future of the Business Historical
Society, p. 1
William M. Ferris, Land Title Difficulties in Mexico: A Memorandum
Written in 1926, p. 13
Joe B. Frantz, The Annual Report as a Public Relations tool
in Three Industries, p. 23
Mary E. Murphy, Research in Public Accountancy, p. 43
General Meeting of the Members of the Business Historical
Society, Inc., p. 51
Vincent P. Carosso, The Waltham Watch Company: A Case History, p. 165
General Meeting of the Business Historical Society, p. 188
Information about the Business History Foundation, Inc., p. 189
History of the House of Baring Presented to Members, p. 190
Robert W. Lovett, The Thompson Products Collection, p. 191
Thomas R. Navin, World’s Leading Cymbal Maker: Avedis Zildjian
Company, p. 196
Secretary’s Column, p. 207
John F. Hippen, A Wall Street Man and a Western Railroad:
A Chapter in Railroad Administration, p. 117
N. S. B. Gras, A Great Indian Industrialist: Jamsetji Nusserwanji
Tata, 1839 – 1904, p. 149
Robert W. Lovett, Rundell, Bridge and Rundell- An Early Company
History, p. 152
Book to Be Presented to Members, p. 163
Announcement of the Business Historical Society Fellowship
Award, p. 163
Ralph W. Hidy, Problems in Collaborative Writing of Business
History, p. 67
Vincent P. Carosso, Anaheim, California: A Nineteenth Century
Experiment in Commercial Viniculture, p. 78
Ruth Teiser, Catherine Harroun, Wells, Fargo & Company:
The First Half Year, p. 87
Hilma Holton, Survey of the Teaching of Business History, p. 96
Charles A. Bliss, A History of Pepperell: A Review, p. 104
N. S. B. Gras, The Cravath Firm and Its Predecessors: A Review, p. 107
Fritz Redlich, Banking in Mediaeval Bruges: A Review, p. 109
Robert W. Lovett, Plans for Reconstruction of America’s First
Iron Works, p. 113
Meeting of the Council of the Business Historical Society, p. 116
BEHAVIOR OF BUSINESS MEN IN A CHANGING WORLD
RISE OF BUSINESS STATESMANSHTP, by N. S. B. GRAS
Survey of the Business Road We Have Traveled, p. 1
Economic and Non-Economic Men, p. 5
External Difficulties (as well as Advantages) Business Men
Have Encountered, p. 12
World Struggle between Four Systems: Social Democracy, Communism
(Autocratic Socialism), Fascism, and Democratic Socialism, p. 23
Stock Arguments of Socialists against Private Business Capitalism,
p. 30
Potent Current Drives in Favor of Socialism and against Private
Business, p. 36
Leadership, Past and Present: the Business Man Rises and Falls, p. 45
Chance for Leadership – in Socializing Business, p. 50
Consequences of the New Business Statesmanship – Not All Good, p. 57
Joe B. Frantz, Gail Borden as a Businessman, p. 123
The Society Announces Another Fellowship, p. 133
Henrietta M. Larson, A New Book on Banking Four Hundred Years
Ago, p. 134
Fritz Redlich, Jacques Laffitte and the Beginnings of Investment
Banking in France, p. 137
A New Book for Members of the Business Historical Society, p. 161
Announcing a Change in the Frequency of Publication of the
Bulletin, p. 161
Secretary’s Column, p. 162
Meeting of the Council of the Business Historical Society, p. 67
Members of the Society Will Receive a Critical Guide to Business
History, p. 68
Request for a Volume of Harvard Studies in Business History, p. 69
Ruth Teiser, Catherine Harroun, Origin of Wells, Fargo &
Company, 1841-1852, p. 70
Kenneth K. Kolker, The Changing Status of the Foreman, p. 84
Theodore F. Marburg, Manufacturer’s Drummer, 1852, with Comments
on Western and Southern Markets, p. 106
Carolyn Curtis, A Note on the Burlington Records in the Newberry
Library, p. 115
A History of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, p. 118
Announcement of Fellowship Awards, p. 39
Theodore F. Marburg, Manufacturer’s Drummer, 1832, p. 40
C. J. Kennedy, Introducing College Freshmen to Business History, p. 57
History of the Humble Oil & Refining Company, p. 64
PROBLEMS IN WRITING THE HISTORY OF LARGE BUSINESS UNITS
Ralph W. Hidy, Importance of the History of the Large Business
Unit, p. 4
Henrietta M. Larson, Availability of Records for Research
in the History of Large Business Concerns, p. 12
Richard C. Overton, Problems of Writing the History of Large
Business Units with Special Reference to Railroads, p. 22
T’ai-Ch’u Liao, The An Lo Szu Market of Chengtu: A Field
Study, p. 155
History of a West Coast Firm Being Written at Stanford University,
p. 172
Henrietta M. Larson, Business History: Retrospect and Prospect, p. 173
Secretary’s Column, p. 200
The Society Announces a New Fellowship, p. 123
Fritz Redlich, William Jones and His Unsuccessful Steamboat
Venture of 1819, p. 125
Lee M. Friedman, The First Chamber of Commerce in the United
States, p. 137
Thomas R. Navin Jr., The Wellman-Woodman Patent Controversy
in the Cotton Textile Machinery Industry, p. 144I
WHAT IS CAPITALISM IN THE LIGHT OF HISTORY?, by N. S. B. Gras
Linguistic Booby Traps, p. 79
What Do We Mean by Capitalism?, p. 82
The Earliest Stages of Pre-Business Capitalism, p. 85
Private Business Capitalism, p. 86
Individualism in Private Business Capitalism, p. 90
Sedentary Merchants as Model Business Men in a Régime
of Mercantile Capitalism, p. 95
Industrial Capitalists: Good Engineers but Poor Administrators, p. 100
Financial Capitalists Rely Upon Policy-Formulation and Over-All
Control, p. 107
National Capitalists: top Control Is Completely Divorced From
Business, p. 111
Public Business Capitalists: The Socialist Leaders of Soviet
Russia, p. 114
The Seven Births of “Capitalism”, p. 116
Some Further Conclusions, p. 117
Henrietta M. Larson, The Business History Foundation, Inc., p. 51
Thomas R. Navin Jr., Advertising in the Grand Manner, p. 55
William H. Woodwell, The Woodwell Shipyard, 1759 – 1852, p. 58
A Seventeenth Century Shoemaker’s Account Book, p. 75
Meeting of the Council of the Business Historical Society, p. 75
Mary E. Murphy, Arthur Lowes Dickinson: Pioneer in American
Professional Accountancy, p. 27
Lee M. Friedman, The Drummer in Early American Merchandise
Distribution, p. 39
Irving P. Schiller, A Program for the Management of Business
Records, p. 44
Leon S. Gay, A New Approach to Local Business History, p. 3
George S. Gibb, Three Early Railroad Equipment Contracts, p. 10
Lewis S. Atherton, Predecessors of the Commercial Drummer
in the Old South, p. 17
Members Receive a New Book on the Radio Industry, p. 163
N. B. S. Gras, War and Business: Four Century-Long Struggles, p. 165
Fritz Redlich, “Translating” Economic Policy into
Business Policy: An Illustration from the Resumption of Specie
Payments in 1879, p. 190
Secretary’s Column, p. 196
Ralph W. Hidy, Cushioning a Crisis in the London Money
Market, p. 131
N. B. S. Gras, What Type of Business History Are You Writing?, p. 146
Secretary’s Column, p. 159
George S. Gibb, The Pre-Industrial Revolution in America:
A Field for Local Research, p. 103
Raymond De Roover, The Three Golden Balls of the Pawnbrokers, p. 117
N. S. B. Gras, Questions and Answers, p. 124
Elva C. Tooker, A Merchant Turns to Money-Lending in Philadelphia, p. 71
N. S. B. Gras, The Philosophy of the Business Man, p. 86
Elizabeth M. Bacon, Marketing Sewing Machines in the Post
– Civil War Years, p. 93
Thomas C. Cochran, Plans for Internship in Business Archival
Work, p. 95
N. S. B. Gras, Letters of a Canadian Business Man: A Book
Review, p. 97
SHIFT FROM GOVERNMENT REGULATION TO GOVERNMENT CONTROL OF
BUSINESS
Editor’s Introduction, p. 35
N. S. B. Gras, Historical Background, p. 36
Lincoln Gordon, Government Controls in War and Peace, p. 42
Charles Cortez Abbott, Governmental Activity in the Financial
Field, p. 51
C. O. Ruggles, Public Utilities, p. 57
Paul M. Giddens, History Looks at Oil, p. 3
General Meeting of the Business Historical Society, p. 16
The Status of Business History at the Stanford Graduate School
of Business, p. 17
The Hundredth Anniversary of the Graniteville Company, p. 21
A New York Farmer’s Capital Investment in the 1840’s, p. 22
The Teaching of Business History, p. 24
N. S. B. Gras, Questions and Answers in Business History, p. 25
Henrietta M. Larson, “Plutarch’s Lives” of Trade:
The First Series of American Business Biographies, p. 28
Josepha M. Perry, Samuel Snow, Tanner and Cordwainer, p. 183
N. S. B. Gras, An Old-Time Novel About Business, p. 194
George S. Gibb, The Society Presents a History of the Waltham
Watch Company, p. 195
Selections from De Tocquevilles Democracy in America: “A
Frenchman Assays the Spirit behind American Business Expansion
in the 1830’s”, p. 202
Hiram J. Halle – A Memorial, p. 211
Secretary’s Column, p. 212
T. D. Clark, Records of Little Businesses as Sources of
Social and Economic History, p. 151
N. S. B. Gras, Sir Andrew Freeport, a Merchant of London, p. 159
Why Write Company Histories?, p. 162
Frederic C. Lane, Venture Accounting in Medieval Business
Management, p. 164
Deposit of Illinois Central Railroad Company Records in the
Newberry Library, Chicago, p. 173
Meeting of the Council of the Business Historical Society, p. 176
N.S. B. Gras, J. Franklin Ebersole, 1884 – 1945, p. 177
Secretary’s Column, p. 178
SHIFTS IN PUBLIC RELATIONS, by N. S. B. Gras
1. What are public relations?, p. 97
2. Rise of an interest in public relations, p. 100
3. Business is business: a fundamental dictum, p. 102
4. Let business alone, relatively speaking, p. 104
5. The first period in the history of public relations: the
public must help business, p. 106
6. The second period in the history of public relations: let
the public keep its hands off business and let business men freely
Compete, p. 111
7. The third period in the history of public relations: economic
freedom is dangerous; regulation and control are the only enduring
systems, p. 118
8. The public be p1eased (but fooled), p. 120
9. The public be fully served and fully informed (and perhaps
partly educated), p. 122
10. Public relations counsellors, p. 127
11. Public relations departments, p. 129
12. Effect of business changes, especially depressions, on
public relations, p. 134
13. Other business factors in the creation of bad public relations, p. 136
14. Success, failure, and difficulties in public relations, p. 139
BOOM-TOWN BANKER-CENTRAL CITY COLORADO, 1880, by Herbert O. Brayer (Archivist of The State Historical Society of Colorado and Director of The Western Range Cattle Industry Study)
Lewis E. Atherton, Itinerant Merchandising in the Ante-Bellum
South, p. 35
Josepha M. Perry, A New Book on Business History, p. 59
A Book Concerning a Country Store, p. 62
Florence Edler De Roover, Concerning the Ancestry of the Dollar
Sign, p. 63
Florence Edler De Roover, A Prize of War: A Painting of
Fifteenth Century Merchants, p. 3
Selections from the Autobiography of Thomas Mellon – II,
p. 12
The Adam Smith Collection at the Harvard School of Business
Administration, p. 26
Historical Societies’ Interest in Business History, p. 28
A New Book in American Social History, p. 29
Secretary’s Column, p. 30
Selections from the Autobiography of Thomas Mellon – I, p. 145
The Corporation and the Historian: Report of a Meeting of
the American Economic History Association, Held at Princeton,
New Jersey, September, 1944, p. 155
Henrietta M. Larson, Business Men as Collectors, p. 162
George Avery Rich – A Memorial, p. 171
Percy Selden Straus – A Memorial, p. 172
Secretary’s Column, p. 174
Kenneth Wiggins Porter, The Business Man in American Folklore, p. 113
The Closing of the Industrial Museum of the American Steel
and Wire Company, p. 131
Henrietta M. Larson, An Early Industrial Capitalist’s Labor
Policy and Management, p. 132
Joseph P. Day-A Memorial, p. 142
ARE YOU WRITING A BUSINESS HISTORY?, by N. S. B. Gras
What Is Business History?, p. 73
The Purpose of Business History, p. 76
Who Should Write a Business History?, p. 78
Sources of Information, p. 82
Digging Out the Facts, p. 85
What topics to Emphasize, p. 87
Special Problems of a Large Holding Company, p. 92
Conflict in Composition, p. 95
Balance of Research and Composition, p. 96
What to Leave Out and Why, p. 98
How Much of the Industry and of General Business to Include, p. 101
Editorial Review of the Manuscript, p. 103
What Are the Larger Generalizations, p. 104
How Much of the Scholar’s Research Materials to Publish, p. 106
General Implications of the Task, p. 107
Criticisms of the Finished Product, p. 109
Josepha M. Perry, Sketch of the Life and Work of Milton
Prince Higgins, 1842 – 1912, p. 33
R. C. Overton, Scholars Get Access to Burlington Records, p. 54
A New Business History Series, p. 56
Evelyn H. Knowlton, Early Manufacturing in Oregon, p. 57
Thomas C. Cochran, New York City Business Records: A Plan
for Their Preservation, p. 59
R. Gordon Wasson, Another View of the Historian’s Treatment
of Business, p. 62
Charles Copeland-A Memorial, p. 69
Secretary’s Column, p. 70
Members to Receive a History of Two Bank Groups in the Northwest, p. 17
AN EARLY SEDENTARY MERCHANT IN THE MIDDLE WEST
Records Available for a Study of the Career of Henry Shaw, p. 1
A History of Reed & Barton, p. 97
THE BUSINESS ACTIVITIES OF ERIC BOLLMANN
An International Business Promoter, 1797-1821
Part I: The Foreign Merchant, p. 81
Francesco Sassetti and the Downfall of the Medici Banking House, p. 65
Personal Letters of a New Orleans Mercantile Clerk-1844-1845, by Lewis E. Atherton (University of Missouri), p. 49
MAJOR HOWER IN OVERSEAS SERVICE
His History of Macy’s Soon to Be Distributed to Members of
the Society, p. 33
An Experiment in the Retention and Preservation of Corporate Records, by Carl H. McKenzie (Secretary-Treasurer Pennsylvania Telephone Corporation)
The Social Implications of Business Administration: Past and Present, p. 1
The Life of the Genoese Woolworkers as Revealed in Thirteenth-Century Notarial Records, p. 101
Sidelights on the Investment Policies of Stanford, Huntington, Hopkins, and Crocker, p. 85
Some Unexplored Fields in American Railroad History, p. 69
The New Bridge Oyster Company, 1863 – 1868, p. 53
Capitalism-Concepts and History, by N. S. B. Gras, p. 21
Marketing Life Insurance: Its History in America,by J. Owen Stalson, D.C.S.,reviewed by Willis Hatfield Hazard, Ph.D. (New England Mutual Life Insurance Company), p. 1
Business and the Telephone, 1878,as illustrated by Early Directories, p. 81
James J. Hill’s Philosophy of Railroad Management, by William J. Cunningham, p. 65
A New Study of Rockefeller, a review by N. S. B. Gras, p. 49
John C. Kiley, Changes in Realty Values in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, p. 33
PROBLEMS AND OPPORTUNITIES IN THE FIELD OF BUSINESS HISTORY.
A paper read by Professor Ralph M. Hower at the annual meeting
of the Economic history Association, New York, December 28, 1940,
p. 17.
Aspects of Labor Administration in the Early Nineteenth
Century, p. 1