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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Later National Literature, Part III
>
Economists
> The Early Nineteenth Century
Albert Gallatin
Mathew Carey
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVIII. Later National Literature, Part III.
XXIV.
Economists
.
§ 7. The Early Nineteenth Century.
The first quarter of the nineteenth century saw but little change in the general character of economic discussion. The United States continued to be overwhelmingly an agricultural country and it was only toward the end of this period that New England was beginning to be affected by the industrial transition which was responsible for the growth of economic science in Great Britain. Adam Smiths
Wealth of Nations,
of which the first American edition had appeared in 1789, was now reprinted in 1811 and 1818; Ricardos
Principles
appeared in an American edition in 1819, and J. B. Says
Treatise on Political Economy
was translated in 1821. None of these, however, seems to have aroused much attention or interest. The first American work with an independent title was
An Essay on the Principles of Political Economy
(1805), which was a rather insignificant treatise on banking and public revenue. Somewhat similar were L. Baldwins
Thoughts on the Study of Political Economy as Connected with the Population, Industry, and Paper Currency of the United States
(Cambridge, 1809) and A. V. Johnsons
Inquiry into the Nature of Value and Capital
(New York, 1813). More significant was Daniel Raymonds
The Elements of Political Economy
(1820), which disclosed an acquaintance with the English writers and which laid the foundations for the defence of the protective system, afterwards elaborated by List. The influence of Malthus is perceptible in A. H. Everetts
New Ideas on Population
(1823), in which the invincibly optimistic attitude of youthful America is revealed.
14
The chief lines of discussion were therefore largely a continuation of the preceding period. The interest temporarily manifested in industry is attested by George Logans
A Letter to the Citizens of Pennsylvania on the Necessity of Promoting Agriculture, Manufactures and the Useful Arts
(1800) and the
Essay on the Manufacturing Interests of the United States
(Philadelphia, 1804). Agricultural problems were treated by Thomas Moore in
The Great Error of American Agriculture Exposed
(Baltimore, 1801); James Humphreys
Gleanings on Husbandry
(Philadelphia, 1803); John Robertss
The Pennsylvania Farmer
(Philadelphia, 1804); and, above all, by John Taylors
Arator
(Georgetown, 1814) and J. S. Skinners
The American Farmer
(Baltimore, 1820). Colonel Taylor, of Virginia, is also to be noted for his earlier
Enquiry into the Principles and Tendencies of Certain Public Measures
(Philadelphia, 1794) and his later
Tyranny Unmasked
(1822). A growing interest was now taken in statistical presentation. Worthy of notice are S. Blodgett, Jr.s
Thoughts on the Increasing Wealth and Natural Economy of the United States
(1801) and
Economica
(1806); Timothy Dwights
Statistical Account of Connecticut
(1811); R. Dickinsons
A Geographical and Statistical Review of Massachusetts
(1813); and Moses Greenleafs
Statistical View of Maine
(1816). Widely read were Adam Seyberts
Statistical Annals
(1818), D. B. Wardens
Statistical, Political, and Historical Account of the United States
(3 vols., 1819), John Bristeds
Resources of the United States
(1818), and William Darbys
Universal Gazetteer
(1827) and
View of the United States, Historical, Geographical, and Statistical
(1828). We may also mention that the discussion on the recharter of the bank was responsible for Dr. Erick Bollmans
Paragraphs on Banks
(Philadelphia, 1810) and the
Letters of Common Sense Respecting the State Bank and Paper Currency
(Raleigh, 1811).
15
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Albert Gallatin
Mathew Carey
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