American Decades
"A Protective vs. a Competitive Tariff"
Essay
By: Home Market Club
Date: 1909?
Source: Home Market Club. "A Protective vs. a Competitive Tariff." 1909? Reproduced in Pamphlets in American History, T1315. Microform. Microfilming Corp. of America.
About the Author: The Home Market Club, organized in Boston in the 1880s, was a leading advocate for protective tariffs. It published a monthly magazine The Protectionist, from 1899 to 1942. The club frequently hosted prominent figures for major addresses, including President William McKinley (served 1897–1901) and President Warren G. Harding (served 1921–1923), who in 1920 coined his famous phrase calling for a "return to normalcy." This referred to a return to high protective tariffs and a reduction in taxes following the administration of Woodrow Wilson (served 1913–1921).
Introduction
The debate over tariffs is as old as the Republic...
[The entire page is 2594 words long]
1900's Business and the Economy Primary Sources
- First Annual Report of the United States Steel Corporation for the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 1902
- Report to the President on the Anthracite Coal Strike of May–October, 1902
- The History of the Standard Oil Company
- Manifesto of the Industrial Workers of the World
- Conditions in Chicago Stock Yards: Message from the President of the United States
- Court Injunctions and Labor Unions
- The Western Federation of Miners on the Mesabi Range: An Address at a Social Entertainment of Hibbing Mine Workers
- Rate Wars in the Railroad Industry
- Explosion at Darr Mine
- Ford Price List of Parts for Models "N," "R," "S" and "S" Roadster
- "A Protective vs. a Competitive Tariff"
- Shop Management
- Thirteenth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1910, Volume VIII, Manufactures: 1909
- Bill Haywood's Book
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
