American Decades
Ross, Edward Alsworth 1866 - 1951
PROFESSOR AND SOCIAL ACTIVIST
Background.
The progressive movement found one of its greatest proponents in Edward Alsworth Ross, a gargantuan man with what contemporaries referred to as a "magnificent" head. He stood six feet six inches tall, and his size mimicked the way the professor loomed over the Progressive Era, always willing to contribute a juicy quote for newspapermen or another article outlining his positions. Professor Ross was a genuinely decent and thoughtful man. He was extremely loyal and generous with his graduate students and colleagues. For years he counseled and gave financial assistance to a worthy scholar who lost his post at a university because of his outspokenly radical views. Ross grew up in the Midwest as an orphan and was raised by many concerned groups. He attended Coe College, a small school where he emerged as a natural leader. He graduated in 1886 and was noted for his intellectual prowess and...
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1910's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Big Business: The Modern Corporation
- Creating the Federal Reserve System
- Economic Diplomacy in the 1910s
- The Five-Dollar Day
- Labor in the 1910s
- The New Freedom and the Trusts
- Organized Labor and the Wilson Administration
- Postwar Labor Distress
- The Retail Industry
- Seamstresses and Strikes: Women Organizers and the Garment Industry
- Taxation, Tariffs, and the National Economy
- The War Industries Board
- World War I and the Economy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1910–1919
