Carroll D. Wright
Carroll Davidson Wright (July 25, 1840 – February 20, 1909) was an American statistician.
Biography
Wright was born at Dunbarton, New Hampshire. He attended schools in Washington, New Hampshire, from elementary through the Tubbs Union Academy. He began to study law in 1860, but in 1862 enlisted as a private in the 14th New Hampshire Volunteer Regiment to fight the American Civil War. He became colonel in 1864, and served as assistant-adjutant general of a brigade in the Shenandoah Valley campaign under General Philip Sheridan.
After the war, he was admitted to the New Hampshire bar, and in 1867 became a member of the Massachusetts and United States' bars. From 1872 to 1873 he served in the Massachusetts Senate, where he secured the passage of a bill to provide for the establishment of trains for workers to Boston from the suburban districts. From 1873 to 1878 he was chief of the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor. In 1880, he was appointed supervisor of the U. S. Census in Massachusetts, being also special agent of the census on the factory system. In 1885 he was commissioned by the governor to investigate the public records of the towns, parishes, counties, and courts of the state.
He was the first U.S. Commissioner of Labor from 1885 to 1905, and in 1893 was placed in charge of the Eleventh Census. In 1894 he was chairman of the commission which investigated the Pullman Strike of Chicago, and in 1902 was a member of the Anthracite Coal Strike Commission. He was honorary professor of social economics in the Catholic University of America from 1895 to 1904; in 1900, he became professor of statistics and social economics in Columbian University (now George Washington University).
From 1900 to 1901, he was university lecturer on wage statistics at Harvard, and in 1903 he was a member of the Douglas Commission to investigate and recommend a program of vocational education for Massachusetts. In 1902, he was chosen president of Clark College (the undergraduate school at Clark University), Worcester, Massachusetts, where he was also professor of statistics and social economics from 1904 until his death. Dr Wright was President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1903, and in 1907 received the Cross of the Legion of Honor for his work in improving industrial conditions, a similar honor (Order of Saints Maurizio e Lazzaro) having been conferred upon him in 1906 by the Italian government. He was a member of the Institute of France and an honorary member of the Imperial Academy of Science of Russia.[1] In 1907, he was elected the second president of the National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education. He received honorary degrees from Tufts (1883), Wesleyan (1894), Dartmouth (1897), Clark Univ. (1902), Tufts (1902), and Amherst (1905). He died on February 20, 1909.
Publications
- Annual Reports of the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor (15 vols., Boston, 1873-1888)
- Census of Massachusetts (3 vols., 1876/7)
- The Factory System of the United States (1880)
- The Statistics of Boston (1882)
- Relation of Political Economy to the Labor Question (1882)
- History of Wages and Prices in Massachusetts, 1752-1883 (1885)
- Reports of U. S. Commissioner of Labor, including “Industrial Depressions” (Washington, 1886)
- Convict Labor (1886)
- Strikes and Lockouts (1887)
- The Industrial Evolution of the United States (1887)
- The Census of Massachusetts (4 vols., Boston, 1887/8)
- Outline of Practical Sociology (1899)
- Some Ethical Phases of the Labor Question (1902)
- Battles of Labor (1906)
- The Apprenticeship System in its Relation to Industrial Education (1908)
He wrote numerous pamphlets and monographs on social and economic topics. Among the titles of his pamphlets are:
- The Relation of Political Economy to the Labor Question (Boston, 1882)
- The Factory System as an Element in Civilization (1882)
- Scientific Basis of Tariff Legislation (1884)
- The Present Actual Condition of the Workingman (1887)
- The Study of Statistics in Colleges (1887)
- Problems of the Census (1887)
- Hand Labor in Prisons (1887)
- Historical Sketch of the Knights of Labor (1887)
- The Growth and Purposes of Bureaus of Statistics of Labor (1888)
Notes
References
- History of Washington, NH, 1768-1886
- Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Wright, Carroll Davidson". Encyclopedia Americana.
- Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1949). "Wright, Carroll Davidson". Encyclopedia Americana.
- Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1889). "Wright, Carroll Davidson". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
- American Statistical Association, New Series No. 86, June 1909, (Memorial by S.N.D. North)
- Fourth Annual Report of the Statistics of Labor, Commonwealth of Mass.(1909) (Memorial by H.G. Wadlin)
- Attribution
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Wright, Carroll Davidson". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
External links
- Works written by or about Carroll Davidson Wright at Wikisource
- Carroll Wright page including links to fully digitized copies of many of his books. From the Immigration to the United States, 1789-1930 collection, Harvard University Library Open Collections Program
- Guide to Wright, Carroll D. Selected writings, 1878-1901. 5399mf. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, Cornell University.
- Works by or about Carroll D. Wright at Internet Archive
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by Robert Percival Porter |
Superintendent of the United States Census 1893 – 1897 |
Succeeded by William Rush Merriam |