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Part 1 (Wis Mss MK, Mss 411, Mss 806, Micro 924, Micro 200, File 1875 June 25 Oversize): Original Collection, 1812-196381.8 cubic feet (198 archives boxes, 3 cartons, 2 card file boxes, and 1 oversize folder) and 192 reels of microfilm (35 mm) The collection offers comprehensive documentation on Ely's long life and career including his research, writing, and teaching; personal life and family background; business interests; involvement in civic and patriotic organizations; and economic and social reform activities. The papers date 1812-1963 and are particularly strong for the years 1882-1939. The major portion of the papers is included in the microfilm edition and is described in detail, followed by a description of the six boxes of additions received in 1991. These 1991 additions and the folder of oversize certificates are listed at the end of this finding aid's contents list. An extensive description of this collection appears in Guide to the Manuscripts of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Supplement Number One, by Josephine L. Harper and Sharon C. Smith (Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1957). Also, a printed guide to the published microfilm edition of these papers is available; and an index to the correspondence is included in the microfilm. MICROFILMED PAPERS The major portion of this collection is available in both original paper form and on microfilm. These papers are organized in series and subseries as follows: - A. Correspondence, 1826-1957 (Reels 1-116 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 1-120)
- B. Diaries
- Manuscript, 1902-1929 (Reels 116-117 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 121-123)
- Typescript, 1905-1930 (Reels 117-120 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 123-125)
- C. Teaching and Research Files
- 1. Writings, 1876-1942
- Bibliography (Reel 120 and Wis Mss MK, Box 126)
- Articles and Addresses
- Alphabetical File (Reels 121-132 and Mss 411, Boxes 1-14)
- Scrapbooks (Reels 133-134)
- Book Drafts (Reels 134-146 and Mss 411, Boxes 14-26)
- 2. Reference Files, 1851-1879-1934
- Card File (Reel 146 and Mss 411, Boxes 26-27)
- Subject File (Reels 147-153 and Mss 411, Boxes 27-34)
- 3. University of Wisconsin Departmental Files, 1894, 1902-1922 (Reel 153 and Mss 411, Boxes 34-35)
- 4. Seminary Records, 1889-1930 (Reels 154-157 and Mss 411, Boxes 35-39)
- 5. Lecture Notes and Course Materials (Reels 157-178 and Mss 411, Boxes 39-56)
- 6. Student Research Papers, 1896-1930 (Reels 178-181 and Mss 411, Boxes 56-59)
- D. Organizational Records
- 1. American Association for Agricultural Legislation, 1918-1922 (Reels 181-182 and Mss 411, Box 60)
- 2. American Bureau of Industrial Research, 1902-1916 (Reel 182 and Mss 411, Box 60)
- 3. Book Publishing Company (Reel 182 and Mss 411, Box 60)
- 4. Christian Social Union, 1891-1910 (Reel 183 and Mss 411, Box 61)
- 5. League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch, 1918-1920 (Reels 183-184 and Mss 411, Boxes 61-62)
- 6. Northern Wisconsin Land Settlement, 1916-1920 (Reels 184-185 and Mss 411, Boxes 62-63)
- 7. Wisconsin Loyalty Legion - Madison Chapter, 1918 (Reel 185 and Mss 411, Box 63)
- E. Personal Papers and Scrapbooks, 1812-1941 (Reels 185-190, 191 and Mss 411, Boxes 63-67)
- F. Photographs, 1894-1941 (Reel 190)
Series A, Correspondence, 1826-1957, covers all facets of Ely's career. Virtually every late nineteenth and early twentieth-century leader in social and economic reform, and in education is among Ely's correspondents. Moreover, he had substantial correspondence with individuals prominent in business, religion, politics, publishing, and numerous other fields. Series A is also intimately connected with all the other components of the collection. Letters, for example, relating to the organizations and projects covered in series D, Organizational Records, and to research and publishing arrangements for works covered in series C, part 1, Writings, are found in series A. For the most part the focus of the material in the other series and subseries is self evident. However, special attention should be drawn to several areas. Series C, part 3, Departmental Files, contains a transcript and other records of Ely's famed 1894 trial for encouraging radicalism through his teaching. Part 4 of that same series, Seminary Records, includes minutes and other records of academic seminars Ely led in his various fields of interest. These show not only his role in the development of the seminar method of graduate education, but also document his own thinking on a number of significant topics. Series D, Organizational Records, consists of minutes, reports, financial data, publicity files, and other materials Ely preserved from several research organizations and projects, and reform and educational groups with which he was involved. In Series E, Personal Papers and Scrapbooks, is found the most extensive information on Ely's family background, formative years, and education. The scrapbooks in that series are also comprehensive in their coverage of Ely's activities and career. Series A. CORRESPONDENCE, 1826-1957 (Reels 1-116 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 1-120) (This description of the correspondence draws heavily on a register to the Ely collection prepared by Alice E. Smith in 1944.) The Richard T. Ely correspondence is so extensive and so varied in content that it defies description. Organized chronologically, the Ely letters measure fifty linear feet and total approximately 105,000 pages. It is a remarkably complete collection, consisting of professional, business, and personal letters. The vast majority of the letters fall within the years 1882-1939. Smaller numbers of letters document Ely's formative and student years and the last few years of his life. Until about 1898 the correspondence is primarily incoming with only occasional copies of outgoing letters. After 1898 carbons of Ely's outgoing correspondence seem to have been regularly preserved. A key to the effective use of the Ely correspondence is the index on reel 191 of the collection. It shows the names of addressees and signers (except Ely himself) of all letters and documents and lists the dates of all items addressed to or signed by them. No entries have been made under Ely's name since he is either signer or addressee of virtually every letter in the series. Entries are primarily for personal names; they were made for organizations only when items had no individual as addressee or signer. No distinction is made in the index between incoming and outgoing letters. Further explanation of the content and format of the index is included at the beginning of the index on reel 191. A select few individuals who were Ely's closest friends and advisors corresponded with him over long periods of time. It is to these people that Ely was likely to express himself most freely and completely. Among them were Mattie S.F. Bent, a friend since childhood; his sister, Francis Mason Ely; business man and diplomat Theodore Marburg; and former students and/or colleagues Charles J. Bullock, John B. Clark, Frank Fetter, John H. Finley, David Kinley, Edwin R.A. Seligman, Albert Shaw, and Henry C. Taylor. A few themes and types of correspondence also appear throughout the series. Most voluminous are letters related to academic affairs. Ely served as a mentor to many of his former students and his advice and counsel were sought by many other college and university administrators and faculty, and government economists (especially in the Bureau of the Census and the departments of Agriculture and Labor). These letters deal with placement, recommendations, publishing, lectures, research, professional organizations, academic freedom, Wisconsin and national politics, personal matters, and other topics. The emphasis is on economics in its broadest sense (including forestry, highways, agriculture, labor, etc.) but there is also material on allied fields, mainly sociology, political science, and the other social sciences. In scope this correspondence contains information on hundreds of colleges and universities in the United States, and for the Middle West there are few colleges and universities that are not represented by correspondence with their presidents or professors. The following list, which contains only a few of the most frequent and/or important academic correspondents, is intended to illustrate the breadth of this correspondence: - Adams, H.C.
- Adams, T.S.
- Baker, O.E.
- Bemis, Edward W.
- Bullock, Charles J.
- Butler, Nicholas Murray
- Carver, Thomas N.
- Clark, John B.
- Commons, John R.
- Comstock, George C.
- Dewey, Davis R.
- Englund, Eric
- Farnam, Henry W.
- Fetter, Frank A.
- Finley, John H.
- Fisher, Ernest M.
- Foreman, C.J.
- Gilman, Daniel Coit
- Gray, L.C.
- Haney, Lewis H.
- Harper, William R.
- Hibbard, Benjamin H.
- Kinley, David
- Mead, Elwood
- Meyer, Balthasar H.
- Morehouse, Edward W.
- Patten, Simon N.
- Pound, Roscoe
- Powell, Lyman P.
- Pritchett, Henry S.
- Reinsch, Paul S.
- Ross, Edward A.
- Scott, Walter Dill
- Seligman, Edwin R. A.
- Sellery, George C.
- Small, Albion W.
- Taussig, Frank W.
- Taylor, Henry C.
- Turner, Frederick J.
- Urdahl, Thomas K.
- Vincent, George E.
- Vincent, John H.
- Walker, Francis A.
- Warner, Amos G.
- Wehrwein, George S.
- Wicker, George Ray
- Wright, Carroll D.
- Young, Allyn A.
Given Ely's long tenure at the University of Wisconsin it is logical that administrators, faculty, politicians, regents, and others associated with that institution are heavily represented in the academic correspondence. There is correspondence with University of Wisconsin presidents John Bascom, Thomas C. Chamberlin, Charles Kendall Adams, Charles R. Van Hise, Edward A. Birge, and Glenn Frank. Moreover, Ely corresponded regularly with influential regents including Ben F. Faast, Zona Gale, G.D. Jones, and Breese J. Stevens, and with countless faculty and administrative staff members. These letters describe in detail the University's workings during a period of great expansion. Ely's German education influenced him greatly. Throughout the series a scattering of letters are found from German and other European economists and educators of renown. The sending of his children there in 1912-1913 kept alive these ties with German education and his earlier friendships. Following World War I and until about 1922, letters from that country deal mainly with the plight of friends caught by the inflation of the mark and with the purchase of books for the Ely library. A selection of Ely's correspondents among European economists and educators is as follows: - Ashby, Arthur W.
- Ashley, W.J.
- Conrad, Johannes
- Gide, Charles
- Hobson, John A.
- Plunkett, Horace
- Rew, R. Henry
- Sinzheimer, Ludwig
- Wallas, Graham
- Webb, Sidney
At Johns Hopkins and later at Wisconsin Ely took special interest in a number of Japanese students. Some later became influential educators and also translated several of his books into Japanese. As a result Ely had a great influence on the study of economics in that country. Some of Ely's Japanese correspondents were G.S. Ishikawa, K. Ishizawa, T. Iyenaga, Shosuke Sato, and Massada Shiozawa. Another common component of the series, closely related to the academic communications, is correspondence with publishers and editors. Ely himself was a prolific author. He also acted as editor of a number of major series of books and advised many people on their writing careers. Topics of this correspondence include publishing agreements, criticism, revision, royalties, selection of authors, and the development of topics for books and articles. For Ely's own works and those he edited after 1903 most of the correspondence was with George P. Brett and other representatives of the Macmillan Company. Other publishing companies represented include Arthur H. Clark & Company, Eaton & Mains, Edwards Brothers, Harper & Brothers, and Thomas Y. Crowell & Company. Among the editors and publishers from whom there are significant runs of correspondence are: - Abbott, Lyman
- Alden, H.M.
- Barton, Bruce
- Brett, George P.
- Brown, J. Franklin
- Clark, Arthur H.
- Colby, Frank Moore
- Crowell, Thomas Y.
- Devine, Edward T.
- Edwards, J.W.
- Gilder, R.W.
- Holt, Hamilton
- Latham, H.S.
- Mabie, H.W.
- Marsh, Edward C.
- Nelson, A.H.
- Page, Walter H.
- Rockwell, Thomas S.
- Shaw, Albert
- Shaw, William B.
- Spahr, Charles B.
Throughout the series there are family letters, especially of Ely's parents; siblings Francis Mason Ely and George S. Ely; children John T. A. Ely, Richard S. Ely, and Anna Ely Morehouse; and cousins including Laurence D. Ely, Mary Hamilton, Theodore Ely Hamilton, and Calvin N. Keeney. These letters contain family news, genealogical information, and show a continued interest in the Fredonia, New York area where Ely was born. Finally there is correspondence with people who, because of the number of letters or importance of the individuals, should be listed: - Adams, Mary M.
- Baker, Newton D.
- Carnegie, Andrew
- Douglas, A.W.
- Garland, Hamlin
- Hillquit, Morris
- Holmes, Oliver Wendell
- McCormick, Cyrus Hall, Jr.
- Pinchot, Gifford
- Rockefeller, John D.
- Root, Elihu
- Rosewater, Victor
- Schaffner, Margaret
- Shibley, George H.
- Roosevelt, Franklin D.
- Roosevelt, Theodore
- Taft, William Howard
- Thum, William
- Wilson, Woodrow
Still other topics, types of correspondence, and individual correspondents fall within distinct time periods in Ely's career. 1826-1901 (Reels 1-22 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 1-20) The series contains copies of two items, dated 1826 and 1833, concerning Judah Ely, grandfather of Richard T. Ely, and then skips to 1872. Between 1872 and 1882 there are a few letters of Ely's father, some letters of recommendation for Richard T. Ely, and a letter or two written to him. The lack of information on Ely's family background, formative, and college years is partially offset by biographical compilations found on reels 186 and 187 of the microfilm edition. Prepared by Francis Mason Ely, these include biographies of Ezra Sterling Ely, George Stetson Ely (brother of Richard T. Ely), Harriet Gardner Ely, and Richard T. Ely. The biographies are composed largely of excerpts of family letters woven into a narrative. The work on Richard T. Ely, for example, excerpts hundreds of letters dating 1854-1931. Generally the letters on which these compilations are based are not in the collection. Ely joined the Johns Hopkins University faculty in 1881. Although his correspondence during the first years there was not preserved as religiously as in later years, his interests in labor, socialism, and taxation are clearly discernible. Within a few years these fields broadened and included many liberal and experimental government and social reforms. Characteristically, Ely joined with other young liberals in 1885 to form the American Economic Association. His secretaryship, 1885-1892; his presidency, 1899-1901; and his interest in the organization are reflected in his correspondence with its officers during the greater part of his career. Ely was a member of the Baltimore and the Maryland tax commissions in 1885-1886 and 1886-1888, respectively, and there are letters at these times from numerous city and state officials relative to taxation. The New York Tax Reform Association also interested Ely as shown by correspondence, 1890-1900, with Bolton Hall. From 1901 to 1906 there is extensive correspondence with the Massachusetts Single Tax League through its secretary, C.B. Fellebraun. Between 1888 and 1893, Ely interested himself in municipal ownership, and there are many letters on this subject from municipal officials. For seven years following 1887 Ely lectured at Chautauqua, and his friendship with John H. Vincent, the founder, is evidenced by a scattering of correspondence. Of more importance is the correspondence with Vincent's son, George E. Vincent, mainly concerning Chautauqua and subsequent mutual publishing interests. At Chautauqua Ely also formed a warm friendship with William Rainey Harper and the two men corresponded about their lectures, their writings, and the University of Chicago. The 1892 correspondence shows Ely's activities in a similar venture, the Bay View Assembly at Bay View, Michigan. In addition, from 1897 to 1902 Ely was interested in the University Association Inc., of Chicago, an adult education enterprise of which Samuel Fallows and W.E. Ernst were officers. The combination of Chautauqua and the study of socialism and labor problems, together with Ely's innate religious convictions, apparently fused to form Ely's chief contribution to American thought. Many of his early publications were widely read in reform and religious circles. In this manner he attracted the attention of religious leaders and middle class society to the problem of the laboring classes, popularized the study of economics, and related economics to the social problems of the day. In 1891 Ely helped found and became secretary of the Christian Social Union (CSU). In the early 1890s he corresponded regularly with CSU president Frederick D. Huntington and others active in the organization including W.D.P. Bliss, James Macbridge Sterrett, and Everett P. Wheeler. At about the same time Ely was also interested in the activities of the Sociological Group, a body of scholars devoted to a union of certain Protestant churches and to formulating a progressive public opinion (see letters of Seth Low and William Chauncey Langdon). In this period and later he also maintained an extensive correspondence with other reform minded religious leaders. Among them were Lyman Abbott, William L. Bull, John Carter (secretary of the English CSU), Washington Gladden, Edward Everett Hale, George D. Herron, Robert A. Holland, J.O.S. Huntington, I.L. Nicholson, Walter Rauschenbush, and John A. Ryan. In the 1880s and 1890s Ely was especially involved with labor and working class reforms. His interest is evidenced by letters of labor leaders including Samuel Gompers, Robert D. Layton, and T.V. Powderly; socialists such as Robert Hunter, A.M. Simons, and John Spargo; and anarchists including Joseph Labadie and August Spies. The topics of socialism in England and the English Labor Party were also discussed with Sidney Webb and J. Ramsey MacDonald. A host of other reform figures including the following were among Ely's frequent correspondents: - Addams, Jane
- Bates, Helen Page
- Curtis, George W.
- Darrow, Clarence
- Fales, Imogene C.
- Howe, Frederic C.
- Kelley, Florence
- Lloyd, Henry Demarest
- Owen, Richard
- Sayles, Lita Barney
- Taylor, Graham
- Willard, Frances E.
In 1892 Ely accepted the appointment to the head of the Department of Economics, Politics, and History at the University of Wisconsin. An interesting series of letters of University of Wisconsin president Thomas C. Chamberlin, historian Frederick Jackson Turner, and Johns Hopkins president Daniel Coit Gilman document Ely's decision to move to Madison. Upon arrival he immediately set about to make his department not only an important teaching and research center, but also to make it of service to various organizations and groups outside Madison. Exemplifying this type of activity are 1892 and 1893 letters of Robert C. Spencer and Fred W. Speir of the People's Institute of Milwaukee, concerning lectures, charities, and general policies. Ely's interest in social reforms and his writings on socialism drew fire in 1894 from Oliver E. Wells, Wisconsin State Superintendent of Public Instruction, which resulted in Ely's trial and subsequent exoneration before the Board of Regents. The famous trial focused attention on Ely as a champion of academic freedom and was the topic of much of the correspondence in the summer of 1894. The letters of former Ely student David Kinley are particularly informative on the incident. Thereafter for 30 years much correspondence pertains to academic freedom, including especially the cases of Edward W. Bemis at the University of Chicago, 1895-1896, and Edward A. Ross at Stanford University in 1900. Moreover, from 1915 to 1923 Ely was interested in or was a member of the American Association of University Professors' Committee on Academic Freedom. 1902-1919 (Reels 22-69 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 21-68) During this period Ely was firmly established as one of the University of Wisconsin's most distinguished faculty members. In this role he had contact with numerous Wisconsin political figures concerning university and state government affairs, and other topics. These political contacts included: - Davies, Joseph E.
- La Follette, Robert M., Sr.
- Lenroot, Irvine L.
- McCarthy, Charles
- McGovern, Francis E.
- Philipp, Emanuel L.
- Rosenberry, Marvin B.
- Spooner, John C.
- Stevens, E. Ray
- Whitehead, John M.
Likewise he corresponded frequently with state and Madison area business and civic leaders: - Boyd, James M.
- Ela, Emerson
- Faast, Ben F.
- Frame, A.J.
- Hanks, Lucien M.
- Hanks, Stanley C.
- Hatton, William H.
- Jones, G.D.
- Jones, Richard Lloyd
- Kohler, Walter J.
- Levitan, Solomon
- Owen, John S.
- Proudfit, A.E.
- Rosebush, Judson
- Sensenbrenner, F.J.
- Stark, Carl L.
- Stark, Paul E.
- Vilas, William F.
This correspondence covers numerous topics including university administrative matters; fund raising for library materials and scholarships; research projects, especially concerning utilization of Wisconsin's cut-over regions; and, occasionally, personal business and real estate ventures. During the war years, preparedness and the League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch are also frequent topics. Also during the 1902-1919 period, the correspondence mirrors Ely's involvement in real estate and other investments. Beginning about the turn of the century, he was actively involved in promoting University Heights as a Madison residential section. Later he frequently acted as the agent for a number of former Madison residents in real estate and mortgage investments, and was interested in several Madison real estate companies and subdivisions, and in a State Street office building. Correspondence with Theodore Marburg, with several of Ely's University of Wisconsin colleagues, and with Madison banking and business leaders often concerns these real estate dealings. In 1909 is the onset of a long run of correspondence on another major real estate venture: a subdivision at Charlottesville, Virginia, called Madison Park. Ely's primary associates in the project were H.W. Hilleary and Samuel Marshall of Charlottesville. Other investors included Henry W. Farnam, V. Everit Macy, M.V. O'Shea, and Paul Reinsch. Noted landscape architect John Nolen was involved in planning the subdivision and is also a frequent correspondent. Between 1910 and 1915 correspondence with A.R. Hathaway pertains to the Northwestern Land and Improvement Company, a Tacoma, Washington concern speculating in irrigated orchard lands. Still another business venture covered in the period is an attempt to establish a publishing company in Madison to specialize in scientific and technical books. Correspondence between 1914 and 1916 with W.H. Lighty and Frank Sharp of the University of Wisconsin, and publishers Albert Shaw, George Barry Mallon, and Caspar W. Hodgson relates to this scheme. Academics, research, and publishing, however, are still the topics of most of Ely's correspondence. From 1902 to 1905, partly on behalf of the United States Department of Agriculture, Ely made investigations of irrigation and water rights in Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, and Nebraska, and his papers contain correspondence with Elwood Mead and others, and reports bearing on these subjects. Between 1902 and 1906 there is material on the Wisconsin University Settlement Association of Milwaukee and on Ely's efforts to allow university credit for laboratory work in that and other social service organizations. Association director H.H. Jacobs was a regular correspondent and a copy of the Settlement's articles of association are filed under May 1902. In the period 1902-1913, Ely became interested in the economic aspects of Mormonism and the correspondence touches upon this field. An interest was also shown in the Amana Society of Amana, Iowa, and in the cooperative colony at Rugby, Tennessee. The Union Colony of Colorado at Greeley is touched upon in the letters of the founder's son Ralph Meeker and others in 1903. Beginning about 1904, there is a great deal of correspondence concerning the American Bureau of Industrial Research, an organization headed by Ely and John R. Commons which collected and published source materials. The most important contribution made by the organization was the ten-volume Documentary History of American Industrial Society. Letters of associates and research workers such as John B. Andrews, Commons, Helen L. Sumner, and Ulrich B. Phillips; of the organization's treasurer, V. Everit Macy; and of financial contributors among whom were Macy, Stanley McCormick of Chicago, William H. Hatton of New London, Wisconsin, and Ellison D. Smythe of Pelzer, South Carolina, give a remarkably complete picture of this organization. A particularly interesting group of the Bureau papers is the correspondence of John B. Andrews and William E. Walling on gathering the source material which forms the basis for the State Historical Society of Wisconsin's famous labor and socialism collections. In 1906 there is a collection of letters to Henry C. Taylor in reply to Ely's queries on southern land tenancy. Some of these letters enclose copies of tenancy agreements. In the same year the American Association for Labor Legislation was organized and Ely, as president, corresponded with the officers, especially secretary Adna F. Weber. From 1909 to 1914 the correspondence with president William F. Blackman reflects an interest in Rollins College at Winter Park, Florida where Francis Mason Ely was employed as a librarian. In 1911, 1912, and again in 1913 Ely toured Europe and there is substantial correspondence concerning lectures and other arrangements for these trips. In the same period many letters concern the preparation of Property and Contract in Their Relation to the Distribution of Wealth. Included are letters relating to collecting examples of labor, theatrical, and baseball contracts; information on oyster culture which Ely used in his analysis of the concept of private property; and comment on the book from a number of colleagues and friends. Ely was a prime force behind the Wisconsin Commercial and Industrial Congress, which met in Madison in May 1916. Some of his early 1916 correspondence with Van Hise touches on the University's backing for this conference which was intended to demonstrate that the University was an asset to state businesses. World War I brought bitterness to the University of Wisconsin campus and conflict over support for the war effort between many members of the faculty and Senator Robert M. La Follette. Ely considered running for Congress on a pro-war platform against incumbent John M. Nelson. The July 1917 correspondence contains assessments of his chances from Francis E. McGovern and others. Ely's stand on the war is further reflected by his presidency of the Madison chapter of the Wisconsin Loyalty Legion, and his chairmanship of the executive committee of the League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch. His correspondence growing from these posts is both state and national in scope. William H. Short, League to Enforce Peace secretary, and W.W. Powell, Graham H. Stuart, and John M. Whitehead of the Wisconsin Branch are frequent contacts. A large portion of the League correspondence deals with a national convention convened in Madison, November 8-10, 1918, with William Howard Taft as main speaker. Subsequent letters illustrate the vain fight to secure United States membership in the League of Nations and Ely's efforts to reorganize the Wisconsin Branch into a permanent patriotic and anti-bolshevist organization called the Wisconsin Society of Civic and Industrial Education (see especially letters of D.O. Kinsman). In addition to Ely's own letters, the series contains correspondence of Juliet C. Thorp and Janet Van Hise, successive chairpersons of the Wisconsin Branch's Speakers' Bureau, and Women's Organizations. Signaling his growing interest in land economics, Ely, in December 1917, formed the American Association for Agricultural Legislation to study agriculture from an economic viewpoint. He served as secretary (other officers were Elwood Mead and Henry C. Taylor) until the organization folded about 1922. The series contains many letters concerning membership solicitation and other business of the organization. Also related to land economics was a 1918 study of vacant lands in northern Wisconsin conducted on behalf of the University and the state government. Anticipating widespread unemployment after the war and hoping that returning soldiers could settle the area, Ely concentrated on methods of attracting settlers, land companies, credit needs of settlers, etc. Important correspondents on this project were Donald W. Sawtelle, who assisted Ely in the study, land dealer Ben F. Faast, and E.G. Quamme, president of the Federal Land Bank in St. Paul. 1920-1931 (Reels 69-115 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 69-119) In 1920, at the age of 66, Ely organized the Institute for Research in Land Economics (IRLE), later renamed the Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities. This venture absorbed his energies and most of his correspondence for about the next twelve years. The Institute was established to perform basic research on a broad range of topics including urban and rural tenancy, land value, public and private ownership, conservation, public control over private land utilization, and public utilities. In addition to Ely's own letters, the series contains correspondence originating with IRLE staff, especially Arthur J. Mertzke and Dora E. Wallendorf. Information on all facets of Institute activity can be found in Ely's correspondence with the organization's trustees and a few other individuals who assisted in planning and fund raising. Among these individuals were Henry S. Graves, William S. Kies, Frank O. Lowden, Marvin B. Rosenberry, and Albert Shaw. Much of the IRLE correspondence concerns attempts to secure financial aid from private sources, utility organizations, railroads, real estate trade associations, and foundations. There are runs of correspondence with the following organizations with which the Institute either had mutual interests or from which it sought financial support: - American Construction Council (Dwight L. Hoopingarner)
- American Civic Association (Harlean James)
- American Gas Association
- Associated Mortgage Investors Inc. (Kingman Knott Robins)
- Carnegie Corporation (Frederick P. Keppel)
- Federated Societies on Planning and Parks
- Farm Mortgage Bankers Association (E.D. Chassell)
- Henry Strong Educational Foundation (Gordon Strong and S.C. Stallwood)
- Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial (Beardsley Ruml)
- National Association of Real Estate Boards (Nathan William MacChesney)
- National Electric Light Association (M.H. Aylesworth and Carl D. Jackson)
Other important correspondents include public utilities officials Paul S. Clapp and Martin J. and Samuel Insull; real estate industry leaders George Harding and Herbert U. Nelson; and railroad executive Daniel Willard. In addition there are many small groups of routine letters of people important in the business world. Much correspondence also pertains to the organization's research in its fields of interest such as city planning; housing, especially the City Housing Corporation of New York; highways and street railways; large land holdings in the United States; tax reforms, especially in Illinois; rural land problems; and public utilities. Research is covered extensively in the letters of the various economists who worked for the Institute including G.B.L. Arner, H. Morton Bodfish, Herbert B. Dorau, Martin G. Glaeser, Edward W. Morehouse, Mary Shine Peterson, Herbert D. Simpson, Henry C. Taylor, and George S. Wehrwein. For information on the City Housing Corporation and its planned community on Long Island see the letters of Alexander M. Bing. The Institute's work on rural and agricultural land issues is frequently connected with the Fairway Farms Corporation of Montana. Correspondence of Benjamin H. Hibbard, George Wehrwein, and M.L. Wilson is important in this corporation. In 1925 the IRLE shifted its headquarters and its affiliation to Northwestern University ostensibly to improve its sources of funding. From that point there is extensive correspondence with Northwestern University administrative officers including Frederick S. Deibler, William A. Dyche, Ralph E. Heilman, and Walter Dill Scott over IRLE administrative and financial matters. Other important topics of IRLE correspondence are public attacks on Ely and the Institute by Emil O. Jorgenson of the Manufacturers and Merchants Federal Tax League and the Education Protective Association, and night courses in real estate offered in conjunction with YMCAs. Unrelated to the IRLE is a large amount of correspondence, 1920-1930, concerning the finances and administration of the Washington, D.C. School for Secretaries and it subsidiaries, the Washington Employment Exchange and the M.S. Ginn and Company retailers of office supplies. Ely was the main financial backer and his son, John T.A. Ely, and Louis B. Montfort were the administrative officers of these businesses. In the best of times the School and related enterprises were only marginally successful and they represented a constant drain on Ely's finances. 1932-1944, 1957 (Reels 115-116 and Wis Mss MK, Box 120) Ely retired from the IRLE in 1931 and in 1932 moved to New York City and formed the Institute for Economic Research. A copy of this Institute's by-laws is enclosed with a letter dated June 20, 1935. The correspondence associated with the Institute for Economic Research shows its activities in land economics and real estate education, and in a few small research projects. By 1935 and 1936 there is also substantial correspondence related to research for a proposed “History of Economic Thought in the United States.” In 1937 William S. Kies and some other friends and admirers formed the Ely Economic Foundation to finance the completion of Ely's autobiography, the “History of Economic Thought,” and some other works. Kies and Robert H. Armstrong are the primary correspondents in the last years of Ely's life. Their letters reflect the progress on a few research and writing projects, and the management of Ely's modest financial resources, and generally give details of Ely's final years. Other correspondence during the final years touches on Ely's sale of his library to Louisiana State University and his efforts to sell his personal papers to various institutions. The correspondence dating from after Ely's death consists primarily of responses to Henry C. Taylor's request of former Ely students and associates for recollections and memories of their mentor. The lone 1957 letter concerns the rededication of a plaque commemorating the 1894 trial before the University of Wisconsin Regents. Series B. DIARIES, 1902-1930 (Reels 116-120 and Wis Mss MK, Boxes 121-125) The diaries are subdivided into manuscript and typescript copies. Both sets cover roughly the same years and events, and organization within each set is chronological. Within both the manuscript and typescript sets there is sometimes more than one diary covering the same time period. Most of the manuscript diaries are in Ely's handwriting, although some entries were apparently made by his wife, and still others by a secretary. In some volumes many days have no entries and these pages have intentionally been left off the film. Most entries are routine in character chronicling such things as appointments, speaking engagements, and deadlines for articles; or listing letters received and sent. Interspersed are more substantive remarks on both professional and personal topics. There are some important exceptions to the generally routine nature of the diaries. Volume 12, covering 1908, has details of Madison business ventures including Ely's role in organizing the First National Bank, the West End Realty Company, the West Lawn Heights Company, and the Joseph M. Boyd Company. Volumes 16 and 18 detail 1911 and 1913 trips to Europe, and volumes 19 and 20 relate impressions of Ely's travel to Vancouver, British Columbia, New Zealand, and Australia in 1914. The typewritten diaries appear to be based on the manuscript volumes, but in some cases are more detailed. They were not written on a day to day basis. Rather they seem to have been compiled later, perhaps when Ely was preparing his autobiography. Two years where the typescripts offer much more information than the manuscript diaries are 1905, when Ely traveled in the South, and 1921, for which there is no manuscript diary. Series C. TEACHING AND RESEARCH FILES The Teaching and Research Files are subdivided into Writings, Reference Files, University of Wisconsin Departmental Files, Seminary Records, Lecture Notes and Course Materials, and Student Research Papers. 1. Writings, 1876-1942 (Reels 120-126 and Wis Mss MK, Box 126, and Mss 411, Boxes 1-26) The Writings subseries includes a comprehensive card file bibliography, articles and addresses, and book drafts. The bibliography contains a section on books and articles written by Ely, and a separate section covering works he edited and works for which he wrote introductions. The Articles and Addresses consist of popular and scholarly articles and lectures as well as a few book reviews written by Ely. They are further subdivided into an alphabetical file arranged by title, and a set of topically organized scrapbooks. Included in the alphabetical file are drafts and manuscript copies of both published and unpublished works as well as some notes and published versions. The contents list below has a complete register of titles. Dates shown are frequently for the drafts and therefore may not be the actual date of publication. The journal in which the piece appeared, or the audience Ely was addressing are frequently noted on the documents. The scrapbooks contain copies of Ely's published articles. Arrangement of the articles within the volumes is topical. The contents list below shows the topics, and the table of contents in each individual volume lists the titles of articles contained under each topic. There is substantial duplication between the articles found in the scrapbooks and the alphabetical file. The volumes were microfilmed intact, however, because their method of organization provides an alternate means of access to Ely's writings. Book drafts and files, as their name implies, include Ely's drafts, outlines, notes, revisions, reviews, and other papers for many of his published works, and for several manuscripts which never appeared in print. Among the latter are four substantial manuscripts: “The Evolution of Economic Society,” an undated study of economic history; a textbook entitled “A Guide to the Study of Economic and Social Problems,” circa 1889; and “The New Economics and the New World,” circa 1930, and “The Story of Economics in the United States,” circa 1935-1940, both dealing with the history of economic thought. Also included are files on books written or proposed for several series of which Ely was the general editor, and one, The Changing Character of Municipal Ownership in the Electric Light and Power Industry, which was published by the Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities, but in which Ely apparently had no direct hand. The amount of documentation varies greatly among the works. Files on some books, such as Elementary Principles of Economics and The Social Law of Service, contain only a few notes, while others may contain multiple drafts and related research materials. Most thoroughly covered are Outlines of Land Economics and “The Story of Economics in the United States.” Files on the former, the first of Ely's three major works on land economics, contain variant versions of many chapters. For “The Story of Economics...” there are three distinct drafts and extensive research files. 2. Reference Files, 1851, 1879-1934 (Reels 146-153 and Mss 411, Boxes 26-34) Included is a card file of miscellaneous notes, and a topically organized research file containing notes, clippings, copies of articles, and other materials on subjects in which Ely had a research interest. The contents list below has a complete list of file headings for the topical file. Some of the notes and materials closely resemble Ely's published writings. The majority of the material appears under subjects for which Ely is most well known; thus there is a large volume of material on labor and socialism dating from the 1880's and 1890s, and substantial files on trusts and monopolies, and on topics related to agricultural and land economics. 3. University of Wisconsin Departmental Files, 1894, 1902-1922 (Reel 153 and Mss 411, Boxes 34-35) Ely served as the head of the Department of Economics, Politics, and History and its successors for nearly thirty years. These fragmentary records document only a fraction of his administrative responsibilities. Included are the transcript, exhibits, letters, and final report from the famous 1894 Board of Regents hearing on charges that Ely fomented socialism and labor unrest through his teachings; files on a proposed training school for public service; records of an educational survey of the University conducted in 1914-1915; and a departmental ledger. The survey, conducted by William H. Allen of the Bureau of Municipal Research of New York City, was intended to judge how well the University was meeting the needs of the state and how effectively it was managed. The resulting report was critical of some University programs initiated while Progressive Republicans controlled the state government. It spawned an intense controversy within the state and drew a good deal of national attention. Ely's files include questionnaires, plans, exhibits, criticism of the survey by Ely and others, and clippings of editorial comment from the New York Evening Post and New York Times. The ledger records receipts and expenditures of funds for various projects, 1916-1922. Arrangement is by account, and individual entries show the name of the individual or company paying or receiving funds and the purpose of most expenditures. Accounts include the American Bureau of Industrial Research, the Institute for Research in Land Economics, the University Appropriation for Research, and individual employees of the department. 4. Seminary Records, 1889-1930 (Reels 154-157 and Mss 411, Boxes 35-39) At Johns Hopkins University and later at the University of Wisconsin Ely pioneered in the use of the seminary or seminar method of graduate education. Consequently, records of Ely's seminaries and roundtables document not only his own thinking on a number of significant topics, but also form an important record of the development of graduate education. A few miscellaneous notes, 1889-1891, are the only records in this series which date from the Johns Hopkins period. Ely's seminaries and roundtables at the University of Wisconsin and Northwestern University are both well covered. Seminary meetings generally consisted of reviews of recent literature, research reports by seminary participants, and discussions. The content of individual files varies; however, the records generally consist of minutes of the meetings and, especially in later years, outlines of papers delivered by students. In some instances all seminary members worked on facets of the same general topic, and in others they were allowed to pursue any topic related to economics. After 1895 Ely frequently supervised two seminaries a year, and in these cases separate records were maintained for each. Records dating 1889-1906 are in volumes in chronological order. Post-1906 records are arranged chronologically by academic year. The following seminaries had designated topics: 1890/1891 | Ricardo's Writings
| 1893/1894 | Railroad Transportation
| 1895/1896 | English and German Socialism
| 1896/1897 | Scope and Method of Political Economy
| 1897/1898 | Scope and Method of Political Economy
| 1899/1900 | Physiocrats
| 1900/1901 | German Socialism
| 1908/1909 | 1. Ricardo; 2. Public Finance
| 1909/1910 | Economic Theory
| 1910/1911 | Economic Theory
| 1915/1916 | 1. General Economic Seminary; 2. Monopolies and Trusts
| 1916/1917 | 1. General Economic Seminary; 2. Land Problems; 3. Custom and Competition
| 1917/1918 | 1. Competition; 2. Land Problems
| 1918/1919 | Land Problems
| 1919/1920 | Tenancy
| 1920 (summer) | Large Land Holdings
| 1920/1921 | 1. Land Problems; 2. Monopolies and Trusts
| 1921/1922 | 1. Land Problems; 2. General Economics
| 1922/1923 | 1. Land Colonization and Rural Planning; 2. Monopolies and Trusts
| 1923/1924 | 1. Land Utilization; 2. Theory of Rent
| 1924/1925 | Land Problems
| 1926/1927 | Economic Theory
| 1927/1928 | Economic Theory
| 1928/1929 | 1. Economic Theory; 2. Cost and Income
| 1929/1930 | Competition
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5. Lecture Notes and Course Materials (Reels 159-178 and Mss 411, Boxes 39-56) These records consist of lecture notes and transcripts of lectures for classes taught by Ely. Most consist of series of lectures for semester or year length courses at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Wisconsin, and Northwestern University. Also included are Chautauqua lectures and lectures for courses Ely occasionally gave at other institutions. The files frequently contain other related material such as outlines, syllabi, class rosters, and lists of suggested term paper topics. Organization of the series is alphabetical by course title. Many of the lectures were continually updated and re-used. Dates are employed in the titles only when necessary to distinguish between two substantially differing drafts of the same lectures. Only a few of the course files predate Ely's arrival at the University of Wisconsin. Among those are a set of class rosters, 1882-1892, from Johns Hopkins, and files on courses entitled “Advanced Political Economy” and “Commerce - Its Historical Development.” Also from that early period are a number of Chautauqua lectures including “The Church and the World: The Church and the State,” “Economic and Social Problems,” and “Anton Ashley Cooper: Friend of the Laboring Class;” and a set of lectures on socialism delivered at Vassar College. University of Wisconsin class materials make up the bulk of this subseries. Central among these are extensive lectures entitled “The Distribution of Wealth.” These lectures were designed for a two-year course and according to the table of contents were divided into five “books.” The collection, however, contains only “books” one and two (“The Fundamentals in the Existing Social Order” and “The Separate Shares in Distribution”). The other “books” may never have been completed. Segments of these lengthy lectures were also used separately for a number of different courses including “Custom and Competition” and “Monopolies and Trusts.” Included in the collection is a partial copy of an early version of “Distribution of Wealth,” circa 1899; a verbatim transcript (circa 3700 pages) of the lectures as they were delivered beginning about 1906; a revision of the segments on “Custom and Competition” and “Monopolies and Trusts” dating approximately 1915-1921; an abbreviated version of the lectures (notes and outlines rather than a transcript) which varies somewhat in organization from the complete transcript; and some miscellaneous notes and materials. Other well documented courses include “Evolution of Industrial Society,” “History of Economic Thought,” and “History of Political Economy.” Ely's developing interest in land economics is also revealed in some of his Wisconsin courses. The files contain lectures entitled “Landed Property and the Rent of Land” dated 1911-1912 and “Urban Land Economics,” 1923. This emphasis continues after his move to Northwestern University. Files on courses from the Northwestern period include “Land Policies,” “Public Utility Operation,” and “Utilization of Land.” 6. Student Research Papers, 1896-1930 (Reels 178-181 and Mss 411, Boxes 56-59) These papers represent only a small fraction of the term papers and seminar papers prepared for Ely in his many years of teaching. They date from 1896-1930, although most fall between 1914 and 1926, and are organized by topics (listed in the contents list below). Included are papers prepared for both graduate and undergraduate courses as well as some outlines and abstracts of papers. Some of Ely's more well known students whose papers are preserved here are John B. Andrews, Asher Hobson, Harry Jerome, W. I. King, Selig Perlman, Horace Secrist, and Allyn A. Young. Series D. ORGANIZATIONAL RECORDS Filed in this series are records of the following organizations: The American Association for Agricultural Legislation, the American Bureau of Industrial Research, the Christian Social Union, the League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch, and the Wisconsin Loyalty Legion - Madison Chapter. In addition, the series contains records related to a book publishing company proposed for establishment in Madison, and a research project on northern Wisconsin land utilization. 1. American Association for Agricultural Legislation, 1918-1922 (Reels 181-182 and Mss 411, Box 60) The American Association for Agricultural Legislation (AAAL), an offshoot of the American Economic Association, was formed in December 1917. Its purpose was the study of agriculture from an economic viewpoint. Ely served as secretary from the founding of the organization until it disbanded about 1922 due to lack of interest and funds. Included in the AAAL files are a number of articles and clippings about the organization; financial reports and a journal of receipts and disbursements; membership lists; and records of a land economics conference in May 1919 sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Office of Farm Management. Organization of the files is by type of record and chronological thereunder. 2. American Bureau of Industrial Research, 1903-1916 (Reel 182 and Mss 411, Box 60) Founded by Ely in 1904, the Bureau was funded primarily by private gifts (V. Everit Macy and Robert Fulton Cutting of New York and Stanley McCormick of Chicago were among the principal contributors) and was established to prepare a thorough history of American industrial society. Ely brought John R. Commons to the University of Wisconsin to run the Bureau in 1904. As years passed Ely had progressively less and Commons proportionally more control of Bureau affairs. Among the prominent historians and economists who worked for the Bureau were Commons, John B. Andrews, Helen L. Sumner, Selig Perlman, and Ulrich B. Phillips. The material collected by the Bureau forms the basis for the State Historical Society of Wisconsin's outstanding labor history resources. Moreover, the Bureau was directly responsible for the publication of the ten-volume Documentary History of American Industrial Society and indirectly responsible for the first two volumes of Commons' History of Labor in the United States, and for numerous related monographs. American Bureau of Industrial Research records preserved in the Ely collection include a file of outlines and proposals concerning the Documentary History; financial ledgers (organized by account) and journals (organized chronologically); and two folders of reports and papers. The reports and papers consist of progress and financial reports; contracts with employees, publishers, and the University; and substantial documentation on a personal conflict between Ely and Commons which grew from a dispute over control of the Bureau. 3. Book Publishing Company (Reel 182 and Mss 411, Box 60) Between about 1914 and 1916 Ely and some associates investigated the possibility of establishing a publishing house in Madison specializing in scientific and technical books. This small subseries contains only a few lists of suggested series, books, and authors related to the proposal. 4. Christian Social Union, 1891-1910 (Reel 183 and Mss 411, Box 61) Richard T. Ely became secretary of the Christian Social Union in the United States (CSU) at the organization's initial meeting in April 1891. The Union was patterned after a similar organization in England and was intended to involve churches in social questions of the day. The CSU apparently flourished for a period of four to five years, became inactive, and was reconstituted in about 1907. As secretary, Ely was quite active in the early years of the organization. Although he was named to the executive committee of the reconstituted organization, he does not seem to have been a very active participant. Christian Social Union records include annual meeting and executive committee meeting minutes and some miscellaneous reports and papers. 5. League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch, 1918-1920 (Reels 183-185 and Mss 411, Boxes 61-62) Like the national body, the League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch was dedicated to building support for the war effort and for a post-war League of Nations. Richard T. Ely was one of the founders of the Wisconsin Branch in the summer of 1918 and served as the chairman of its executive committee. Other leaders of the Wisconsin Branch included State Senator John M. Whitehead of Janesville and Milwaukee attorney Edward W. Frost. Records here are organized alphabetically by type of record or topic. Included are activity reports, organizational material, speeches, membership lists, and financial records. Many of the records deal with a League-sponsored national convention held in Madison, November 8-10, 1918. Speakers at the convention included William Howard Taft, former socialist Algie M. Simons, and Harvard University President A. Lawrence Lowell. In addition to the Branch's general activities, the files cover its involvement in the Great Lakes Congress for a League of Nations held February 10-11, 1919, in Chicago, and accusations by Robert M. McElroy of the National Security League of widespread pro-Germanism on the University of Wisconsin campus. Also covered are Ely's postwar efforts to reorganize the Wisconsin Branch into a permanent patriotic and anti-bolshevist group under the name of the Wisconsin Society for Civic and Industrial Education. 6. Northern Wisconsin Land Settlement, 1916-1920 (Reels 184-185 and Mss 411, Boxes 62-63) During and immediately following World War I, Ely worked with state and university officials to study settlement of Wisconsin's cut-over regions. The work was given impetus by the hope that returning soldiers would settle the area. It was also closely related to the establishment of the American Association for Agricultural Legislation and to Ely's growing interest in land economics. Ely's papers contain an alphabetically arranged subject file from his Northern Wisconsin land settlement study. Among the records are outlines, drafts, and other materials from a bulletin published by Ely entitled Measures, Public and Private, Taken to Protect the Settlers in Northern Wisconsin and the Methods of Securing Their Protection; progress reports; information on a proposed state land settlement commission; a study of the credit needs of settlers; and information gathered in the course of the project such as annual reports of private land companies, survey data on individual settlers, and copies of soldier resettlement plans of several states. 7. Wisconsin Loyalty Legion - Madison Chapter, 1918 (Reel 185 and Mss 411, Box 63) This small subseries consists exclusively of membership lists for this super-patriotic World War I era organization. Series E. PERSONAL PAPERS AND SCRAPBOOKS, 1812-1941 (Reels 185-190, 191 and Mss 411, Boxes 63-67) This series is a heterogeneous collection of files including early deeds and family legal papers; biographical and genealogical information; two studies written by Ely while he was a student in Germany in the 1870s; correspondence; a file concerning the sale of Ely's library and personal papers; and scrapbooks. The file headings shown in the contents list below are generally descriptive of the contents of the series. Biographical and genealogical information appears in several forms. Most significant are biographies of Richard T. Ely, his parents, and his brother. Written by Francis Mason Ely, these biographies contain numerous excerpts from early family letters which are not part of the collection. The file on Ely's library and personal papers (“Personalia”) includes an extensive inventory of the Ely library purchased by Louisiana State University. The correspondence is ceremonial in character and deals with the celebration of Ely's 80th birthday (1934). The twenty-five volumes of scrapbooks, roughly topical in organization, contain newspaper and magazine clippings and some ephemeral matter such as invitations, programs, and announcements. Major categories pertain to Ely's biography and family, social and professional interests and activities, research interests, and commendation and criticism. The latter category includes a good deal of material on the 1894 investigation into Ely's teachings instigated by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Oliver E. Wells. Series F. PHOTOGRAPHS, 1894-1941 (Reel 190) Formal portraits and snapshots of Ely, his family, and his associates at various stages of his career make up the majority of this series. Also included are interior and exterior photos of the Ely home in Madison's University Heights. 1991 ADDITIONS The small quantity of additions received in 1991 consist primarily of family correspondence and miscellaneous professional papers, found in the household of Ely's second wife, Margaret Hahn Ely. The six boxes of these materials are not included in the microfilm publication. Included is Ely family correspondence covering the period from 1845 to 1963, chronologically arranged. It primarily consists of letters to Ely from his parents, Ezra Theodore Ely and Harriet Gardner Mason Ely, and his first wife, Anna Morris Anderson Ely. Also included are letters to Anna Ely from her mother, Susan Morris Anderson Crenshaw, letters to and from Richard Sterling Ely and daughter-in-law Caroline Minor Ely, as well as a few letters from other friends and family members such as half sister Octavia Crenshaw. There are only a few personal letters written by Richard T. Ely. A good portion of the family correspondence deals with day-to-day family life, especially the ongoing health problems of Anna Ely and the education, travel and early career of Richard Sterling Ely. The nature of the professional correspondence in these additions is not explained by its special provenance, and it contains letters from some of the same correspondents noted with the previously described Ely Papers. The professional correspondence is chronologically arranged and included in the index. Perhaps the most unique aspect of this section are letters received by Ely from students enrolled in his courses in the Chautauqua College during the late 1880s and early 1890s, and examination papers for his Political Economy course taught there. Only a few carbons of Ely's outgoing letters are included, although several interesting items of this type touch on his departure from Johns Hopkins and his support for the School for Secretaries in Washington, D.C. in behalf of his son John Ely. Also included is some correspondence pertaining to his second marriage and the impact of that event on the Institute for Research in Land Economics. At the end of the professional correspondence are additional undated materials pertaining to the Chautauqua, Ely's personal finances, and his land holdings in University Heights.
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Micro 924/Wis Mss MK
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Series: Correspondence
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Reel/Frame
191/238
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Index To Correspondence
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Reel
1
Box
1
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1826-1888 February 8
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Reel
2
Box
1
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1888 February 9-28
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|
Reel
2
Box
2
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1888 March-1889 November
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Reel
3
Box
2
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1889 December
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|
Reel
3
Box
3
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1890-1891 April
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|
Reel
4
Box
3
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1891 May-June
|
|
Reel
4
Box
4
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1891 July-1892 February
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Reel
5
Box
4
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1892 March-April 14
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Reel
5
Box
5
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1892 April 15-November
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Reel
6
Box
5
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1892 December
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|
Reel
6
Box
6
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1893 January-August
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Reel
7
Box
6
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1893 September-December
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Reel
7
Box
7
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1894 January-May
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Reel
8
Box
7
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1894 June-August
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Reel
8
Box
8
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1894 September-December
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Reel
9
Box
8
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1895 January-April 16
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Reel
9
Box
9
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1895 April 17-July
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Reel
10
Box
9
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1895 August-December
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Reel
10
Box
10
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1896 January-February
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Reel
11
Box
10
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1896 March-December
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Reel
11
Box
11
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1897 January-February
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Reel
12
Box
11
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1897 March-December
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Reel
12
Box
12
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1898 January 1-19
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Reel
13
Box
12
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1898 January 20-October
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Reel
14
Box
12
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1898 November-December
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Reel
14
Box
13
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1899 January-August
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Reel
15
Box
13
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1899 September-October 19
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Reel
15
Box
14
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1899 October 20-December; circa 1899
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Reel
15
Box
15
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1900 January 1-10
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Reel
16
Box
15
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1900 January 11-April
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Reel
17
Box
16
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1900 May-August
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Reel
18
Box
16
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1900 September 1-15
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Reel
18
Box
17
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1900 October-December
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Reel
19
Box
17
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circa 1900
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Reel
19
Box
18
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1901 January-March
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Reel
20
Box
18
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1901 April 1-21
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Reel
20
Box
19
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1901 April 22-August 14
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Reel
21
Box
19
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1901 August 15-September 20
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Reel
21
Box
20
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1901 September 21-December
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Reel
22
Box
20
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circa 1901
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Reel
22
Box
21
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1902 January-May
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Reel
23
Box
21
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1902 June
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Reel
23
Box
22
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1902 July-October
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Reel
24
Box
22
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1902 November 1-15
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Reel
24
Box
23
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1902 November 16-1903 January
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Reel
25
Box
23
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1903 February 1-17
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Reel
25
Box
24
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1903 February 18-May 20
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Reel
26
Box
24
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1903 May 21-31
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Reel
26
Box
25
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1903 June-August 15
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Reel
26
Box
26
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1903 August 16-September 14
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Reel
27
Box
26
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1903 September 15-December; circa 1903
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Reel
27
Box
27
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1904 January-February 5
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Reel
28
Box
27
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1904 February 6-April 15
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Reel
28
Box
28
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1904 April 16-May
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Reel
29
Box
28
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1904 June-September 15
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Reel
29
Box
29
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1904 September 16-November
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Reel
30
Box
29
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1904 December; circa 1904
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Reel
30
Box
30
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1905 January-March 9
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Reel
31
Box
30
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1905 March 10-April 14
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Reel
31
Box
31
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1905 April 15-June
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|
Reel
32
Box
31
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1905 July-September
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|
Reel
32
Box
32
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1905 October-December 12
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|
Reel
33
Box
32
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1905 December 13-1906 January
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|
Reel
33
Box
33
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1906 February-April 12
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Reel
34
Box
33
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1906 April 13-June 11
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Reel
34
Box
34
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1906 June 12-August
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Reel
35
Box
34
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1906 September-October
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Reel
35
Box
35
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1906 November-1907 January
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|
Reel
36
Box
35
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1907 February-April
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|
Reel
36
Box
36
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1907 May-September
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|
Reel
37
Box
36
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1907 October-December; circa 1907
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|
Reel
37
Box
37
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1908 January-May 15
|
|
Reel
38
Box
37
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1908 May 16-June
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Reel
38
Box
38
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1908 July-1909 February 15
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|
Reel
39
Box
38
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1909 February 16-March
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|
Reel
39
Box
39
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1909 April-August 19
|
|
Reel
40
Box
39
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1909 August 20-September
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|
Reel
40
Box
40
|
1909 October-1910 January 15
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|
Reel
41
Box
40
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1910 January 16-February 15
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Reel
41
Box
41
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1910 February 16-August
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Reel
42
Box
42
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1910 September-1911 January
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Reel
42
Box
43
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1911 February-1911 March
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Reel
43
Box
43
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1911 April-December; circa 1911
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Reel
43
Box
44
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1912 January-February
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Reel
44
Box
44
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1912 March-June 12
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44
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45
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1912 June 13-24
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45
Box
45
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1912 June 25-November 26
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Reel
46
Box
45
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1912 November 27-30
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Reel
46
Box
46
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1912 December-1913 February 15
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Reel
47
Box
46
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1913 February 17-March
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Reel
47
Box
47
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1913 April-August
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Reel
48
Box
47
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1913 September-October 14
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48
Box
48
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1913 October 15-1914 February 18
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Reel
49
Box
48
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1914 February 19-April 20
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Reel
49
Box
49
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1914 April 21-July
|
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Reel
50
Box
49
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1914 August-December 10
|
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Reel
50
Box
50
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1914 December 11-1915 January
|
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Reel
51
Box
50
|
1915 February-April 17
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Reel
51
Box
51
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1915 April 18-June 15
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Reel
52
Box
51
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1915 June 16-September
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Reel
52
Box
52
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1915 October-November 9
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Reel
53
Box
52
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1915 November 10-1916 January 25
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Reel
53
Box
53
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1916 January 26-27
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Reel
54
Box
53
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1916 January 28-May 3
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Reel
55
Box
53
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1916 May 4-16
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Reel
55
Box
54
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1916 May 17-September 5
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Reel
56
Box
54
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1916 September 6-30
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Reel
56
Box
55
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1916 October-1917 January 5
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Reel
57
Box
55
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1917 January 6-February 20
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Reel
57
Box
56
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1917 February 21-June 11
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Reel
58
Box
56
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1917 June 12-30
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Reel
58
Box
57
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1917 July-November
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Reel
59
Box
57
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1917 December; circa 1917
|
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Reel
59
Box
58
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1918 January-February
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Reel
60
Box
58
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1918 March 1-17
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Reel
60
Box
59
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1918 March 18-May 6
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Reel
61
Box
59
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1918 May 7-10
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61
Box
60
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1918 May 11-July 18
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Reel
62
Box
60
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1918 July 19-31
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Reel
62
Box
61
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1918 August-October 6
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Reel
63
Box
61
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1918 October 7-10
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Reel
63
Box
62
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1918 October 11-November 1
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Reel
64
Box
63
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1918 November 2-December 3
|
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Reel
64
Box
64
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1918 December 4-12
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Reel
65
Box
64
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1918 December 13-1919 January 23
|
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Reel
65
Box
65
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1919 January 24
|
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Reel
66
Box
65
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1919 January 25-March 23
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Reel
67
Box
65
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1919 March 24
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Reel
67
Box
66
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1919 March 25-June 12
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Reel
68
Box
67
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1919 June 13-September
|
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Reel
68
Box
68
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1919 October 1-10
|
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Reel
69
Box
68
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1919 October 11-December; circa 1919
|
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Reel
69
Box
69
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1920 January 1-10
|
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Reel
70
Box
69
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1920 January 11-April 23
|
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Reel
70
Box
70
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1920 April 14-23
|
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Reel
71
Box
70
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1920 April 24-July
|
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Reel
71
Box
71
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1920 August 1-9
|
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Reel
72
Box
71
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1920 August 10-October 29
|
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Reel
72
Box
72
|
1920 October 30-November 5
|
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Reel
73
Box
72
|
1920 November 6-1921 January 24
|
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Reel
73
Box
73
|
1921 January 25-February 15
|
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Reel
74
Box
73
|
1921 February 16-April
|
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Reel
74
Box
74
|
1921 May 1-20
|
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Reel
75
Box
74
|
1921 May 21-July
|
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Reel
75
Box
75
|
1921 August
|
|
Reel
76
Box
75
|
1921 September-November 10
|
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Reel
76
Box
76
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1921 November 11-December; circa 1921
|
|
Reel
77
Box
77
|
1922 January-March 14
|
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Reel
78
Box
77
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1922 March 15-28
|
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Reel
78
Box
78
|
1922 March 29-May 18
|
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Reel
79
Box
78
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1922 May 19-31
|
|
Reel
79
Box
79
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1922 May 19-August 2
|
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Reel
80
Box
79
|
1922 August 3-22
|
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Reel
80
Box
80
|
1922 August 23-October 20
|
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Reel
81
Box
80
|
1922 October 21-November 8
|
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Reel
81
Box
81
|
1922 November 9-December 25
|
|
Reel
82
Box
81
|
1922 December 26-1923 January 8
|
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Reel
82
Box
82
|
1923 January 9-February 15
|
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Reel
83
Box
82
|
1923 February 16-28
|
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Reel
83
Box
83
|
1923 March-May 15
|
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Reel
84
Box
83
|
1923 May 16-June 4
|
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Reel
84
Box
84
|
1923 June 5-August 14
|
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Reel
85
Box
84
|
1923 August 15-23
|
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Reel
85
Box
85
|
1923 August 24-December 12
|
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Reel
85
Box
86
|
1923 December 13-17
|
|
Reel
86
Box
86
|
1923 December 18-1924 March 20
|
|
Reel
87
Box
86
|
1924 March 21-22
|
|
Reel
87
Box
87
|
1924 March 23-May 29
|
|
Reel
88
Box
88
|
1924 May 30-August
|
|
Reel
88
Box
89
|
1924 September 1-2
|
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Reel
89
Box
89
|
1924 September 3-November 20
|
|
Reel
90
Box
89
|
1924 November 21-25
|
|
Reel
90
Box
90
|
1924 November 26-1925 February 15
|
|
Reel
91
Box
90
|
1925 February 16-20
|
|
Reel
91
Box
91
|
1925 February 21-May 6
|
|
Reel
92
Box
91
|
1925 May 7-14
|
|
Reel
92
Box
92
|
1925 May 15-July 8
|
|
Reel
93
Box
92
|
1925 July 9-14
|
|
Reel
93
Box
93
|
1925 July 15-September 16
|
|
Reel
94
Box
94
|
1925 September 17-November 28
|
|
Reel
94
Box
95
|
1925 November 29-December 2
|
|
Reel
95
Box
95
|
1925 December 3-1926 January
|
|
Reel
95
Box
96
|
1926 February 1-9
|
|
Reel
96
Box
96
|
1926 February 10-April 11
|
|
Reel
96
Box
97
|
1926 April 12
|
|
Reel
97
Box
97
|
1926 April 13-May 25
|
|
Reel
97
Box
98
|
1926 May 26-June 4
|
|
Reel
98
Box
98
|
1926 June 5-August 2
|
|
Reel
98
Box
99
|
1926 August 3-September 2
|
|
Reel
99
Box
99
|
1926 September 3-October 7
|
|
Reel
99
Box
100
|
1926 October 8-November 20
|
|
Reel
100
Box
100
|
1926 November 21-December 14
|
|
Reel
100
Box
101
|
1926 December 15-1927 January 27
|
|
Reel
101
Box
101
|
1927 January 28-February 13
|
|
Reel
101
Box
102
|
1927 February 14-April 28
|
|
Reel
102
Box
102
|
1927 April 29-May 6
|
|
Reel
102
Box
103
|
1927 May 7-July 24
|
|
Reel
102
Box
104
|
1927 July 25-31
|
|
Reel
103
Box
104
|
1927 August-October 25
|
|
Reel
103
Box
105
|
1927 October 26-November 17
|
|
Reel
104
Box
105
|
1927 November 18-1928 January 6
|
|
Reel
104
Box
106
|
1927 January 7-1928 February 6
|
|
Reel
105
Box
106
|
1928 February 7-March 11
|
|
Reel
105
Box
107
|
1928 March 12-April 16
|
|
Reel
106
Box
107
|
1928 April 17-30
|
|
Reel
106
Box
108
|
1928 May-July
|
|
Reel
107
Box
109
|
1928 August-November 5
|
|
Reel
107
Box
110
|
1928 November 6-30
|
|
Reel
108
Box
110
|
1928 December-1929 January 19
|
|
Reel
108
Box
111
|
1929 January 20-March 11
|
|
Reel
109
Box
111
|
1929 March 12-April 13
|
|
Reel
109
Box
112
|
1929 April 14-June 13
|
|
Reel
110
Box
112
|
1929 June 14-17
|
|
Reel
110
Box
113
|
1929 June 18-August
|
|
Reel
110
Box
114
|
1929 September-October 10
|
|
Reel
111
Box
114
|
1929 October 11-November
|
|
Reel
111
Box
115
|
1929 December-1930 January 8
|
|
Reel
111
Box
116
|
1930 January 9
|
|
Reel
112
Box
116
|
1930 January 10-April 25
|
|
Reel
113
Box
116
|
1930 April 26-30
|
|
Reel
113
Box
117
|
1930 May-September
|
|
Reel
113
Box
118
|
1930 October-November 15
|
|
Reel
114
Box
118
|
1930 November 16-1931 June 22
|
|
Reel
114
Box
119
|
1931 June 23-September
|
|
Reel
115
Box
119
|
1931 October-1933
|
|
Reel
115
Box
120
|
1934-1938
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/1
Box
120
|
1939-1944; 1957; undated
|
|
|
Series: Diaries
|
|
|
Subseries: Manuscript
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/454
Box
121
|
Volume 1, 1902 January 17-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/520
Box
121
|
Volume 2, 1903 March 6-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/546
Box
121
|
Volume 3, 1904 January 1-December 10, and miscellaneous entries for , 1889 and 1890
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/568
Box
121
|
Volume 4, 1904 March 15-December 27
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/621
Box
121
|
Volume 5, 1904? April 9-December 15
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/647
Box
121
|
Volume 6, 1905 January 9-December 28
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/682
Box
121
|
Volume 7, 1905 January 31-December 30
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/718
Box
121
|
Volume 8, 1906 February 1-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/787
Box
121
|
Volume 9, 1906 January 1-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/825
Box
121
|
Volume 10, 1907 January 4-December 30
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/894
Box
121
|
Volume 11, 1907 January 14-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/931
Box
121
|
Volume 12, 1908 January 1-December 28
|
|
Reel/Frame
116/1014
Box
121
|
Volume 13, 1909 January 4-December 21
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/1
Box
121
|
Volume 14, 1910 February 9-December 28
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/39
Box
121
|
Volume 15, 1911 January 18-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/100
Box
122
|
Volume 16, 1911 (Germany)
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/138
Box
122
|
Volume 17, 1912 January 10-December 28
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/214
Box
122
|
Volume 18, circa 1912 September (Europe)
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/246
Box
122
|
Volume 19, 1913 January 1-December 22
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/304
Box
122
|
Volume 20, 1914 January 8-December 28
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/371
Box
122
|
Volume 21, 1914 August (Vancouver and New Zealand)
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/393
Box
122
|
Volume 22, 1915 January 3-1916 January 2
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/501
Box
122
|
Volume 23, 1916 January 3-December 29
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/606
Box
122
|
Volume 24, 1918 January 1-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/717
Box
122
|
Volume 25, 1919 January 1-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/831
Box
122
|
Volume 26, 1920 January 1-September 1
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/890
Box
123
|
Volume 27, 1922 January 1-December 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/1001
Box
123
|
Volume 28, 1929 January 4-December 1
|
|
|
Subseries: Typewritten Extracts
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/1025
Box
123
|
, 1905 November 21-30 (“Southern trip”)
|
|
Reel/Frame
117/1033
Box
123
|
1907 January 4-February 27
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/1
Box
123
|
1908 January 1-February 29
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/103
Box
123
|
, 1908 January 1-April 1 (“personal”)
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/155
Box
123
|
1908 March 1-April 30
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/256
Box
123
|
1908 April 1-May 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/300
Box
123
|
1908 May 1-June 30
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/362
Box
123
|
, 1908 June 4-18 (“personal”)
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/367
Box
123
|
1908 July 1-August 19
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/414
Box
123
|
1908 October 1-December 26
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/514
Box
123
|
1909 January 4-March 31
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/598
Box
123
|
1909 January 4-June 24
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/643
Box
123
|
1909 April 1-December 15
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/919
Box
124
|
1912 March 9-June 25
|
|
Reel/Frame
118/1023
Box
124
|
1913 May 5-June 13
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/1
Box
124
|
1913 June 14-July 22
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/54
Box
124
|
, 1913 August 13-21 (Germany)
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/84
Box
124
|
1914 January 1-December 23
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/173
Box
124
|
1915 January 12-March 25
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/236
Box
124
|
1916 January 17-October 3
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/398
Box
124
|
1917 March 23-1918 January 8
|
|
Reel/Frame
119/532
Box
124
|
1921 April 7-1924 October 23
|
|
Reel/Frame
120/1
Box
125
|
1924 October 23-1930 May 2
|
|
|
Series: Teaching and Research Files
|
|
|
Subseries: Writings, 1876-1942
|
|
|
Bibliography
|
|
Reel/Frame
120/216
Box
126
|
Works Written by Ely
|
|
Reel/Frame
120/341
Box
127
|
Works Edited and Works for which Ely Wrote Introductions
|
|
Micro 924/Mss 411
|
Articles and Addresses
|
|
|
Alphabetical File
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/1
Box/Folder
1/1
|
“Activities of the IRLE,” 1930 May 16
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/28
Box/Folder
1/1
|
“Adam Smith,” 1897, circa 1932
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/37
Box/Folder
1/1
|
“Address to the Graduating Class, Washington School for Secretaries,” 1930 June 27
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/45
Box/Folder
1/1
|
Addresses, Miscellaneous
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/78
Box/Folder
1/1
|
“Adjusting the Tax Burden to the Tax Paying Ability of the Tax Bearer,” 1931 November
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/112
Box/Folder
1/2
|
“Administration,” 1886 December
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/195
Box/Folder
1/2
|
“Administration of the City of Berlin,” 1882 March
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/198
Box/Folder
1/2
|
“Advantages of Public Ownership and Management of Natural Monopolies,” 1901 March
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/221
Box/Folder
1/2
|
“Advisability of State Supervision of Real Estate Mortgage Bonds and the Development of Uniformity in Appraisal Procedure in Construction Projects,” 1926 November 30
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/237
Box/Folder
1/2
|
After Dinner Speeches, 1900, 1901
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/248
Box/Folder
1/2
|
“Age and Efficiency,” circa 1928
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/263
Box/Folder
1/2
|
“Agricultural Relief and Urban Land,” 1933 March 28
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/269
Box/Folder
1/3
|
“Amana: A Study of Survival in Christian Communism,” 1902 October
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/348
Box/Folder
1/3
|
“America, the Land of Joy,” 1926 January
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/356
Box/Folder
1/3
|
“American Academy of Real Estate,” 1933 February 21
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/360
Box/Folder
1/3
|
“American Colleges and German Universities,” 1880 July
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/368
Box/Folder
1/3
|
American Construction Council (speech to)
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/392
Box/Folder
1/3
|
“American Economic Association, 1885-1909: An Historical Sketch,” 1909 December
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/539
Box/Folder
1/4
|
“The American Economic Association,” circa 1886
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/542
Box/Folder
1/4
|
“An American Land Policy,” 1912
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/564
Box/Folder
1/4
|
“American Labor Organizations,” 1887 January
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/592
Box/Folder
1/4
|
“Anarchy,” 1893
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/634
Box/Folder
1/4
|
“Aspects of the Larger Conflict”
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/655
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“Benjamin Franklin, Founder and Pilot”
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/660
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“Beschreibung von Guetern in der Naehe von Frankfurt A/M Besichtigt,“ 1913 July
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/673
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“Besichtigung von Verschiedenen Anstalten in Muenchen,” 1913 August
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/678
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“Beware Another Land Boom,” 1924 November
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/745
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“Bibliography of Political Economy,” 1907 January 17
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/753
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“The Billion Dollar Steel Trust: An Analysis,” 1901 August
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/773
Box/Folder
1/5
|
“Blue Eagle, Spread Your Wings,” 1933 October
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/792
Box/Folder
2/1
|
Bohn, Frank, comments for radio talks, 1933 September
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/795
Box/Folder
2/1
|
“Bolshevism,” 1920
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/925
Box/Folder
2/1
|
Book Reviews by Ely
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/1022
Box/Folder
2/1
|
Books to be reviewed in the Town Crier
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/1027
Box/Folder
2/1
|
“Bread and Circuses,” 1934 October 18
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/1033
Box/Folder
2/1
|
“Budget Controversy in Congress,” 1932 July
|
|
Reel/Frame
121/1047
Box/Folder
2/1
|
“Budget - Family and Individual,” 1932 July
|
|
Reel/Frame
122/1
Box/Folder
2/1
|
“The Building and Loan Association,” 1923 December
|
|
Reel/Frame
122/5
Box/Folder
2/1
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“The Building Industry and its Needs: a Program” (an address prepared for Harry A. Wheeler), 1930 May
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Reel/Frame
122/18
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2/1
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“Business, the University and the State,” 1916 February 18
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122/23
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2/2
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“Can Capital Prosper with Labor Idle,” 1933 April
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122/31
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2/2
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“Certain Psychological Aspects of Industrial Evolution,” 1904
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122/99
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2/3
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“The Changing Mind in the Changing World,” 1931 May 5
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122/125
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“Chicago, the Public Utility Capital of the U.S.,” 1928 April
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122/133
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2/3
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“The Child's Paradise: the Story of Radburn,” 1930 February 27
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122/139
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2/3
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“Christian Self Sacrifice vs. Asceticism”
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122/294
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“Christian Social Service,” 1922 March 21
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122/298
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2/3
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“Christianity as a Social Force,” 1893
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122/323
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2/3
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“Christianity's Foundation: A Common Sense View of the Old Testament,” circa 1895
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122/326
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2/3
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“The Church and the Labor Movement”
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122/369
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2/4
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“City and Country: They Must Pull Together and Not Apart if They Are to Prosper,” 1925 February 21
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122/397
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2/4
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The City Housing Corporation (articles describing)
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122/453
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2/4
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“The City Housing Corporation and Sunnyside,” 1926 April
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122/463
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2/4
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“The City of the Future”
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122/505
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2/4
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“Closed Circles of Economic Relationships as Sources of Surplus Gains,” 1931
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122/571
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2/4
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“Collection of Old Deeds and Records,” circa 1931
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122/610
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2/5
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“A College Course in Political Economy,” 1903 February
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122/627
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2/5
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“Competition in the New Era,” 1923 February
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122/674
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2/5
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“Competition, Its Nature, Its Permanency, and Its Beneficence,” 1900 December 27
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122/715
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2/5
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“Conservation and Economic Theory,” 1915 December
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122/770
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2/5
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“Conservation in War Time,” 1917 November 20
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122/777
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3/1
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“Cooperation in America,” 1886
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122/857
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3/1
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“Corporations,” circa 1887
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122/920
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3/1
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“Cost and Income in Land Utilization”
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122/1002
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3/1
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Country Gentlemen Articles
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122/1023
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3/1
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“Currency”
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123/1
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3/2
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“Data Necessary for Forecasting Land Values with Special Emphasis on Farm Lands,” 1923 December 28
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123/67
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3/2
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“Debt Readjustment Vs. Liquidation of the Corn Belt,” 1926 April
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123/79
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3/2
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“A Decade of Economic Theory,” 1899 December 14
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123/137
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3/2
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“A Decade of Social Progress,” 1891 March
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123/146
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3/2
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“The Decline of Authority and the Problem of Leadership,” 1918 May 13
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123/157
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3/2
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“Depreciation and How to Finance It”
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123/160
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3/2
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“The Depression and the One Hundred and Fifty Year Plan,” 1931 December 10
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123/184
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3/2
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“The Development of Economics in Its Relation to the Problems of Government,” 1915 December 2
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123/241
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3/3
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“Discussion of the Budget,” 1931 December 14
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123/254
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3/3
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“The Dole and the Job”
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123/257
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3/3
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Duluth Lectures, 1897
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123/270
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3/3
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“Economic and Social Aspects of Mormonism”
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123/340
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3/3
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“Economic & Social Science in Business Education”
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123/350
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3/3
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“An Economic Approach to the Reclamation of Blighted Areas”
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123/383
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3/3
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“Economic Aspects of Kentucky,” 1908 October 6
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123/420
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3/3
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“The Economic Foundations of Peace in the World”
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123/424
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3/3
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“Economic Ideas of the Middle Ages”
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123/439
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3/3
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“Economic Internationalism,” 1890 February
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123/443
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3/3
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“Economic Relationships of Construction,” 1927 December 1
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123/467
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3/3
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“Economic Revolution,” 1893 January
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123/475
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3/4
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“Economic Theory and Labor Legislation,” 1907 December 30
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123/591
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3/4
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“Economics -- A Science,” 1934 April
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123/594
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3/4
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“Economics and Social Science in Adult Education,” 1934
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123/604
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3/4
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“Economics and the Study of Law”
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123/709
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3/4
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“Economics in its Relation to Education and Legislation for the Improvement of Individual and National Welfare,” 1931
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123/724
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3/4
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“The Economics of Irrigation”
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123/770
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3/5
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“Economics of Real Estate,” 1923 July
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123/781
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3/5
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“Economics of Real Estate Securities”
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123/785
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3/5
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“Education and Research in Relation to the Future of Building and Loan Associations,” 1924 July
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123/805
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3/5
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“Education and Research in Their Relations to Public Utilities,” 1923 June 7
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123/819
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3/5
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“The Educational Policy of the Church,” 1894 July 28
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123/901
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4/1
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“The Educational Value of Political Economy”
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123/1004
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4/1
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“Equality and Equality of Opportunity,” 1906 December 10
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124/1
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4/1
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“Equality of Opportunity”
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124/10
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4/1
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“Essay on Adam Smith,” 1897
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124/79
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4/1
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“Everyman's Economics”
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124/83
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4/1
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“The Evils of Our Present Methods of Taxation,” 1901
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124/103
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4/2
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“The Evolution of Equality in American History,” 1934 October 19
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124/108
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4/2
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“The Evolution of Industrial Society,” 1897-1902
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124/236
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4/2
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“Excessive Constitutionalism”
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124/278
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4/2
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Extracts from Press Notices of the New School of Economics, “History and Public Law of the University of Wisconsin,” 1892 March
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124/288
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4/3
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“Farm Homes and Our National Welfare,” 1922 February 3
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124/296
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4/3
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“Farm Ownership and Tenancy with Special Consideration of the Lessons from British Tenure,” 1926 January 20
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124/335
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4/3
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“Farm Relief and Flood Control,” 1927 July 28
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124/346
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4/3
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“The Financial Conditions of Electric Railways from the Standpoint of the Political Economist,” 1924 March 4
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124/413
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4/4
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“Forces Affecting Municipally Owned Electric Plants in Wisconsin” (preface by Ely), 1930
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124/416
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4/4
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“Foreign Debts,” 1932 November 18
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124/423
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4/4
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“Forestry Act of 1927 of the Province of Ontario”
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124/428
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4/4
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“The Forward Look,” 1939 January
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124/432
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4/4
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“The French Protestant Association for the Practical Study of Social Questions,” 1892 June
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Reel/Frame
124/439
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4/4
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“Foundation and Early Influence of the American Economic Association,” 1935 April 2
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124/449
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4/4
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“Foundation for the Study of Construction Economics and the IRLE”
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124/464
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4/4
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“Foundations of Agricultural Prosperity,” 1920 September 16
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Reel/Frame
124/503
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4/5
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“The Founding and Early History of the American Economic Association,” 1935 December 27
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124/550
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4/5
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“Fraternalism vs. Paternalism,” 1898 March?
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124/605
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4/5
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“Frederick Denison Maurice,” 1888 July 11
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124/671
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4/5
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“Fundamental Beliefs in My Social Philosophy,” 1894 October
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124/685
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4/6
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“The Future Organization of Higher Education in the U.S.,” 1895 July 11
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124/698
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4/6
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“A Garden of Eden”
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124/706
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4/6
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“General Conceptions of Property in Economic Theory and Its Relation to Law”
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Reel/Frame
124/722
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4/6
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“German Cooperative Credit Unions,” 1881
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Reel/Frame
124/734
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4/6
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“Germany and the World War”
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124/752
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4/6
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“Give Him a Chance,” 1937 September
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124/764
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4/6
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“Gold vs. -- Wampum?”
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124/770
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5/1
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“Good Government and Good Business,” 1917, 1918
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124/833
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5/1
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“Government as an Employer,” 1935 September
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Reel/Frame
124/840
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5/1
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“Government in Business and the General Welfare,” 1931
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Reel/Frame
124/862
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5/1
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Grace Church Address, 1925 September 21
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Reel/Frame
124/867
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5/1
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“The Great Change: Work and Wealth in a New Age”
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124/900
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5/1
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“The Great European War Foretold, and the German Domination of Russia Graphically Described”
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124/905
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5/1
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“A Great Opportunity”
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124/912
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5/2
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“Greeley, Colorado: A Type of American Prosperity,” 1902, 1903
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Reel/Frame
124/983
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5/3
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“Hard Times,” 1894 December 13
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124/1015
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5/3
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“Hard Times -- Cure and Prevention,” 1931 May 11
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Reel/Frame
124/1039
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5/3
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“Hard Times in the U.S.,” 1932
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124/1053
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5/3
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“Hard Times, The Way In and the Way Out,” 1931 January 18
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Reel/Frame
125/1
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5/3
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“Herr Most in Baltimore,” 1883 March 2
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Reel/Frame
125/36
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5/3
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“Higher Education,” 1893 May 7
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Reel/Frame
125/40
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5/3
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“Higher Education and the Churches,” 1895 June 7
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Reel/Frame
125/45
Box/Folder
5/3
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“Higher Education of Women,” 1892 May 28
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Reel/Frame
125/47
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5/3
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“How do Economic Limitations of Poorer Agricultural Sections Affect Social Conditions,” 1926 November 22
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Reel/Frame
125/68
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5/3
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“How Should Political Economy Be Taught to the Rising Generation?” , 1889 November 2
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Reel/Frame
125/70
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5/3
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“How to Avert Strikes,” 1901 August 3
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Reel/Frame
125/83
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5/4
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“Idle Hands,” 1934 January
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125/108
Box/Folder
5/4
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“Immortality,” 1927 April 12
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Reel/Frame
125/114
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5/4
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“The Improvement of Municipal Government,” 1890 October 9
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Reel/Frame
125/116
Box/Folder
5/4
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“In the Short Run,” 1933 February
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125/126
Box/Folder
5/4
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“Increasing Public Expenditures,” 1933 January
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Reel/Frame
125/129
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5/4
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“Individual Fortunes”
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Reel/Frame
125/220
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5/4
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“Industrial Betterment,” 1902 September
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125/225
Box/Folder
5/4
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“Industrial Democracy in American History,” 1905, 1906
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Reel/Frame
125/248
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5/5
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“Industrial Liberty,” 1901 December 27
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Reel/Frame
125/335
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5/5
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“Industrial Problems,” 1904 September
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Reel/Frame
125/439
Box/Folder
5/5
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“Industrial Questions of the Day”
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125/449
Box/Folder
5/5
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“Industrial Situation: Utopian Aspirations”
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Reel/Frame
125/451
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5/5
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“Inheritance of Property,” 1934 October 29
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Reel/Frame
125/458
Box/Folder
5/6
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Institute for Research in Land Economics (addresses on)
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Reel/Frame
125/511
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5/6
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“Institute for Research in Land Economics,” 1924 July
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Reel/Frame
125/515
Box/Folder
5/6
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“Institute for Research in Land Economics,” 1927 June
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Reel/Frame
125/533
Box/Folder
5/6
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“Institutional Economics,” 1931 December 29
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Reel/Frame
125/539
Box/Folder
5/6
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“Is Prosperity Returning?” , 1932 October
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Reel/Frame
125/602
Box/Folder
5/6
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“The Islands of Safety in the New Age”
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Reel/Frame
125/611
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5/7
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“A Job for Everyone”
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Reel/Frame
125/638
Box/Folder
5/7
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“Johns Hopkins University,” 1882 August 24
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125/641
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5/7
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“Karl Marx and Technocracy,” 1933 February
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Reel/Frame
125/644
Box/Folder
5/7
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“Labor as Treated in the Report of the Industrial Commission,” 1902 November
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Reel/Frame
125/701
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5/7
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“The Labor Movement & International Peace,” 1896 April
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Reel/Frame
125/706
Box/Folder
6/1
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Lambda Alpha (address to)
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Reel/Frame
125/726
Box/Folder
6/1
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Land Economics (various addresses), 1926-1933
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Reel/Frame
125/838
Box/Folder
6/2
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“Land Economics and Business Executives,” 1921 December
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Reel/Frame
125/867
Box/Folder
6/2
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“Land Economics and Geography,” 1922 December 27
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Reel/Frame
125/884
Box/Folder
6/2
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“Land Economics and the Real Estate Dealer,” 1925 July 31
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Reel/Frame
125/896
Box/Folder
6/2
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“Land Economics as a Science and Real Estate Business as a Profession,” 1927, 1929
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Reel/Frame
125/941
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6/3
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“Land Economics Association” (letter to), 1931-1932
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Reel/Frame
125/952
Box/Folder
6/3
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“Land Economics in Its Relation to Building and Loan Associations,” 1924 December 8
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Reel/Frame
125/970
Box/Folder
6/3
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“Land Income,” 1928
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Reel/Frame
125/985
Box/Folder
6/3
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“Land, Labor and Taxation,” 1887-1888
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Reel/Frame
125/997
Box/Folder
6/3
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“Land Planning and Education,” 1929 December 30
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Reel/Frame
125/1009
Box/Folder
6/3
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“A Land Policy for Wisconsin”
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Reel/Frame
125/1027
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6/3
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“Land Problems and the Cost of Living,” 1920
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Reel/Frame
125/1030
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6/3
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“Land Settlement in the United States,” 1925 January 7
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Reel/Frame
125/1054
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6/3
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“Land Settlement Problems and Home Ownership,” 1919, 1920
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Reel/Frame
126/1
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6/4
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“Land Speculation,” 1920 July
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Reel/Frame
126/10
Box/Folder
6/4
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“Land Tenure,” 1939
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Reel/Frame
126/133
Box/Folder
6/4
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“Land Tenure: Economic and Agrarian Aspects,” 1928
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Reel/Frame
126/158
Box/Folder
6/5
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“Land Utilization,” 1926 October
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Reel/Frame
126/258
Box/Folder
6/5
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“Land Utilization: A National Policy Outlined,” 1922 May
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Reel/Frame
126/274
Box/Folder
6/5
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“Land Valuation and Our Agricultural Future,” 1924 November
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Reel/Frame
126/304
Box/Folder
6/5
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“Land Value Trends,” 1926 October
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Reel/Frame
126/321
Box/Folder
6/6
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“Landed Property as an Economic Concept and a Field of Research,” 1916 December 28
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Reel/Frame
126/360
Box/Folder
6/6
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“Landlord and Tenant Problems,” 1925 December
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Reel/Frame
126/376
Box/Folder
6/6
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“Large and Small Farms,” 1925 September
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Reel/Frame
126/403
Box/Folder
6/6
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“The Larger Aspects of Civil Service Reform,” 1894 April 26
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Reel/Frame
126/423
Box/Folder
6/6
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“The Law of Increased Public Expenditures Causes and Remedies,” 1932 December 15
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Reel/Frame
126/429
Box/Folder
6/6
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“Leadership in America,” 1917 September
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Reel/Frame
126/446
Box/Folder
6/6
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“Lessons to be Drawn from the Year's Labor Troubles,” 1901 December 28
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Reel/Frame
126/463
Box/Folder
7/1
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“Liberty, A Social Product,” 1897 January
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Reel/Frame
126/475
Box/Folder
7/1
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“The Life and Work of a Nobel Teacher: A Sketch of the Late Professor H.B. Adams,” 1901 September
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Reel/Frame
126/481
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7/1
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“Lower East Side: The New Frontier,” 1931 June
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Reel/Frame
126/521
Box/Folder
7/1
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“Luck and Chance,” 1934 January 8
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Reel/Frame
126/538
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7/1
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“Luck and Chance in Success and Failure,” 1921 May
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Reel/Frame
126/545
Box/Folder
7/2
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“Magnify Your Job: A Talk to Young People”
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Reel/Frame
126/548
Box/Folder
7/2
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“Making Men Good By Law,” 1933 December
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Reel/Frame
126/556
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7/2
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“Man and the Land,” 1919 March 8
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Reel/Frame
126/568
Box/Folder
7/3
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Miscellaneous Writings
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Reel/Frame
126/619
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7/3
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“Mr. Gregg's Contribution to Commercial Education”
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Reel/Frame
126/630
Box/Folder
7/3
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“Model Towns,” 1890 November 27
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Reel/Frame
126/632
Box/Folder
7/4
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“Modern Land Problems,” 1924 December 16
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Reel/Frame
126/651
Box/Folder
7/4
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“Modern Land Problems and the Farmers' Troubles,” 1926 May 7
|
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Reel/Frame
126/669
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7/4
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“Monopolies,” 1897 October 30
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Reel/Frame
126/684
Box/Folder
7/4
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“Movements and Trends in Land Values on Manhattan Island and In Greater New York”
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Reel/Frame
126/729
Box/Folder
7/4
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“Municipal Ownership,” 1903 December 1
|
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Reel/Frame
126/841
Box/Folder
7/4
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“Municipal Ownership of Natural Monopolies,” 1901 March
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Reel/Frame
126/853
Box/Folder
7/4
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“My Grandfather in Hard Times”
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Reel/Frame
126/858
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7/4
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“'Myself' by John R. Commons: A Contribution to the Understanding of America,” 1935
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Reel/Frame
126/924
Box/Folder
7/5
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“The National Agricultural Conference,” 1922
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Reel/Frame
127/1
Box/Folder
7/5
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“National Budget,” 1932 January
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Reel/Frame
127/25
Box/Folder
7/5
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“National Land Policy,” 1922 February
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Reel/Frame
127/27
Box/Folder
7/5
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“National Policy For Land Utilization,” 1922, 1923
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Reel/Frame
127/130
Box/Folder
7/5
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“NRA and the Farm Problem,” 1933 August 28
|
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Reel/Frame
127/133
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7/6
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“Natural Monopolies and Local Taxation,” 1889 January 8
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Reel/Frame
127/144
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7/6
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“Natural Monopolies and the Workingman,” 1894 March
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Reel/Frame
127/239
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7/6
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“Nature and Significance of Monopolies and Trusts” , 1900 April
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Reel/Frame
127/311
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7/6
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“The Nature of Socialism”
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127/326
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7/6
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“The Needs of the City,” 1889 December 4
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Reel/Frame
127/336
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7/6
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“Neglected Aspects of Municipal Reform,” 1897 December 18
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Reel/Frame
127/353
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7/6
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“The New Economic World and the New Economics,” 1929 November
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127/363
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7/6
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“The New Economics,” 1932 November 28
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Reel/Frame
127/367
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7/6
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“New Housing Methods,” 1929 September 19
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Reel/Frame
127/391
Box/Folder
7/6
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New International Encyclopedia (articles for), 1903
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Reel/Frame
127/393
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7/6
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“New Public Domain of Tax Delinquent Lands”
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Reel/Frame
127/395
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8/1
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New York Times article, 1932
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Reel/Frame
127/589
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8/1
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“The Newest New Economics”
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Reel/Frame
127/593
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8/1
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“The Next Thing in Social Reform,” 1891 April 23
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Reel/Frame
127/597
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8/2
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“Objections to Socialism,” 1901 January
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Reel/Frame
127/637
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8/2
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“Organization and Purposes of the Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities,” 1924 April
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Reel/Frame
127/659
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8/2
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“Our Day”
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Reel/Frame
127/678
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8/2
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“Our Foreign Debts,” 1932 December
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127/681
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8/2
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“Our Point of View”
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Reel/Frame
127/723
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8/2
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“Oyster Culture,” circa 1889
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127/746
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8/3
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“Parsimony in Public Finance”
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127/843
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8/3
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“The Passing of Laissez-Faire,” 1912 February
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127/868
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8/3
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“Past and Present of Political Economy,” 1939 December 1
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Reel/Frame
127/919
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8/3
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“Pauperism in the United States,” 1891 April
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Reel/Frame
127/935
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8/3
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“The Peace Time Army”
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127/942
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8/4
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“Pelzer: A Modern Instance of Enlightened Absolutism,” 1902 June
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Reel/Frame
127/971
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8/4
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The People's Money (articles for)
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Reel/Frame
127/982
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8/4
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“The Personal Elements of Business”
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127/990
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8/4
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“Philanthropy,” 1887 March 9
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Reel/Frame
127/1013
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8/4
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“The Place of Economic Research in a Housing Foundation,” 1930 February 18
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Reel/Frame
127/1026
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8/4
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“Place of Economics in Secondary Education,” 1900 September
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Reel/Frame
127/1047
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8/4
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“Place of Research in Graduate Training,” 1927 June 16
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Reel/Frame
128/1
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8/4
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“A Planned Economic Life,” 1933 April
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128/31
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8/5
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“A Plea for an American Aristocracy”
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128/163
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8/5
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“Points to Be Considered in the Investigation of Landed Property,” 1917
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128/332
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8/6
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“Policy and Population,” 1925 March
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Reel/Frame
128/347
Box/Folder
8/6
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“Political Economy in America,” 1887 February
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Reel/Frame
128/355
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8/6
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“Political Economy in the High School,” 1895 March
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Reel/Frame
128/358
Box/Folder
8/6
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“Political Economy in the Schools of the South,” 1904, 1905
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Reel/Frame
128/393
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8/6
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“Population and Food Supply,” 1922 December 28
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Reel/Frame
128/401
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8/6
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“The Population Bugaboo,” 1925 May 16
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Reel/Frame
128/403
Box/Folder
9/1
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“Possibilities of Social Reform,” 1902 December 13
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Reel/Frame
128/421
Box/Folder
9/1
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“The Possibility of Adjusting Supply to Demand,” 1932
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Reel/Frame
128/460
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9/1
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“Practical Approach to the World,” 1927-1930
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Reel/Frame
128/616
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9/1
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“Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition,” 1942 December
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Reel/Frame
128/639
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9/1
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“Price and Prosperity,” 1922 November 20
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Reel/Frame
128/668
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9/2
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“The Price of Industrial Progress,” 1905 November
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Reel/Frame
128/701
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9/2
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“The Price of Progress,” 1922 June
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Reel/Frame
128/728
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9/2
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“Prince Peter Alexeyevich Kropotkin, The Idealist of Anarchism,” 1934 May 28
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Reel/Frame
128/733
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9/2
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“The Principle of Proportionality in Production”
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Reel/Frame
128/739
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9/2
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“Prisoners and Captives,” 1892 August 16
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Reel/Frame
128/936
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9/3
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“Private and Public Colonization or Organized Settlement of the Land,” 1923 February 20
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Reel/Frame
128/960
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9/3
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“The Private Colonization of Land,” 1922 March
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Reel/Frame
128/979
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9/3
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“Private Colonization of the Land,” 1918 June
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Reel/Frame
129/1
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9/3
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“The Problem of Modern Democracy,” 1931 May 14
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Reel/Frame
129/22
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9/3
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“Professor Adolph Wagner”
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Reel/Frame
129/29
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9/3
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“Professor Richard T. Ely Makes a Personal Statement In Reply to the Accusation Affecting His Conduct As a University Professor,” 1894 August 15
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Reel/Frame
129/32
Box/Folder
9/3
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“A Program for Labor Reform,” 1890 April
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Reel/Frame
129/50
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9/3
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“Progress in Planned Utilization of Land,” circa 1936
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Reel/Frame
129/79
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9/4
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“The Progress of Socialism,” 1891 February 5
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Reel/Frame
129/99
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9/4
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“The Progress of Socialism Since 1893,” 1899
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129/113
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9/4
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“Progressivism, True or False -- An Outline,” 1915 February
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129/134
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9/4
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“The Proper Aims of Schools of Economics and Politics,” 1892 May 19
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Reel/Frame
129/136
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9/4
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“Proportionality in Production,” 1935 June 10
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Reel/Frame
129/141
Box/Folder
9/4
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“Proposed Law to Limit Real Estate Taxation in New York to 1 3/4%”
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Reel/Frame
129/146
Box/Folder
9/4
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“Proposed Survey of Assessed and True Value of Property in New York,” 1932 August 10
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Reel/Frame
129/159
Box/Folder
9/4
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“The Proposed Tax Exemption of Mortgage Interest As a Solution of the Housing Problem,” 1921
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Reel/Frame
129/171
Box/Folder
9/4
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“Public Control of Corporations,” 1901 February
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Reel/Frame
129/177
Box/Folder
9/5
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“Public Education, An Essential Element of American Democracy,” 1904 July
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Reel/Frame
129/185
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9/5
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“Public Ownership Compared with Public Control,” 1903
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Reel/Frame
129/223
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9/5
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“Public Ownership of Public Utilities,” 1917 March 24
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Reel/Frame
129/235
Box/Folder
9/5
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“Public Works in Municipalities,” 1889 April 19
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Reel/Frame
129/257
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9/5
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“Pullman: A Social Study,” 1885 February
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Reel/Frame
129/293
Box/Folder
10/1
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“Radburn,” 1934 April
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129/307
Box/Folder
10/1
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“Railway Economics and Land Economics: Their Relations,” 1923 January
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Reel/Frame
129/309
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10/1
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“The Real Estate Business as a Profession,” 1918-1921
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Reel/Frame
129/495
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10/1
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“Real Estate Education,” 1924 December 1
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Reel/Frame
129/502
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10/1
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“Real Estate Education in the Future,” 1925 June 24
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Reel/Frame
129/516
Box/Folder
10/1
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“Real Estate in the Business Cycle,” 1932 March
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Reel/Frame
129/522
Box/Folder
10/2
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“Real Estate in the Depression, the Way in and the Way Out,” 1932 June 22
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Reel/Frame
129/534
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10/2
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Real Estate Luncheon Talk, 1932 September 13
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Reel/Frame
129/546
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10/2
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“Real Estate Mortgages and the Way Out,” 1934 January 16
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Reel/Frame
129/583
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10/2
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“Reasons for the Encouragement of the Investigation of Landed Property by Land Owners”
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Reel/Frame
129/603
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10/2
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“Recollections of the Life and Work of Simon N. Patten,” 1923 December 29
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Reel/Frame
129/629
Box/Folder
10/2
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“Recommendations as to the Wisconsin Real Estate Tax Law Changes,” 1934 May 2
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Reel/Frame
129/688
Box/Folder
10/2
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“Reconstruction Finance Corporation”
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Reel/Frame
129/693
Box/Folder
10/3
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“Recovery Program for a State,” 1934 August
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Reel/Frame
129/696
Box/Folder
10/3
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“Recreational Land and the Farmer,” 1925 April 15
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Reel/Frame
129/713
Box/Folder
10/3
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“Reforms in Taxation,” 1901 January
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Reel/Frame
129/734
Box/Folder
10/3
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“The Relation Between Race Progress and Social Progress”
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Reel/Frame
129/763
Box/Folder
10/3
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“The Relation of the Church to Education in the Diocese of Milwaukee,” 1897
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Reel/Frame
129/779
Box/Folder
10/4
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“The Relation of the Engineer to Land Economics,” 1925 October
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Reel/Frame
129/785
Box/Folder
10/4
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“The Relation of the Teacher to the Labor Movement”
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Reel/Frame
129/868
Box/Folder
10/4
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“Religion as a Social Force,” 1897 July
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Reel/Frame
129/875
Box/Folder
10/4
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“The Religious Press and the Labor Movement,” 1902 September 3
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Reel/Frame
129/878
Box/Folder
10/4
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“Remarks by RTE on the Occasion of the Celebration of His 80th Birthday,” 1934 April 15
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Reel/Frame
129/894
Box/Folder
10/4
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“Remarks on the Scope of Land Economics,” 1927 December 27
|
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Reel/Frame
129/900
Box/Folder
10/4
|
“Remarks on the Work of Doctor H.B. Adams,” 1901 February 22
|
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Reel/Frame
129/909
Box/Folder
10/4
|
“Report of the Committee on Text Books to the U.S. League of Local Building and Loan Associations,” 1924 July 24
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Reel/Frame
129/923
Box/Folder
10/4
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“Report on Irrigation,” 1904 September 19
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Reel/Frame
129/977
Box/Folder
10/4
|
“Research and the Housing Situation,” 1926 April
|
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Reel/Frame
129/992
Box/Folder
10/4
|
“Response of RTE at Unveiling of Ely Portrait, University of Wisconsin,” 1924 May 9
|
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Reel/Frame
129/1003
Box/Folder
10/4
|
“Retrospect -- Economics and Culture,” 1935
|
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Reel/Frame
129/1025
Box/Folder
10/5
|
“The Rise of the Science of Statistics in Germany”
|
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Reel/Frame
130/1
Box/Folder
10/5
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“Robber Taxes,” 1924 July 12
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Reel/Frame
130/46
Box/Folder
10/5
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“Russian Land Reform,” 1916 March
|
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Reel/Frame
130/53
Box/Folder
10/5
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Rutgers Town (testimony at hearing on application for loan), 1934 May 22
|
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Reel/Frame
130/64
Box/Folder
10/6
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School of Land Economics
|
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Reel/Frame
130/69
Box/Folder
10/6
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“The Science of Wealth,” 1901 June
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Reel/Frame
130/78
Box/Folder
10/6
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“Scientific Research in Public Finance and Taxation...,” 1930 May 16
|
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Reel/Frame
130/95
Box/Folder
10/6
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Secretarial Manual (introduction by Ely)
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Reel/Frame
130/138
Box/Folder
10/6
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“Self Interest”
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Reel/Frame
130/146
Box/Folder
10/6
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“Senior's Theory of Monopoly,” 1899 December 27
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Reel/Frame
130/191
Box/Folder
10/6
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“Should the University of Wisconsin Aim to Attract Students From Every Part of the U.S. and Even From Foreign Countries?” , 1903 February
|
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Reel/Frame
130/198
Box/Folder
10/6
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“The Single Tax,” 1890 December 25
|
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Reel/Frame
130/212
Box/Folder
11/1
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“The Single Tax Versus the Lure of Prosperity in the Settlement of Northern Wisconsin”
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Reel/Frame
130/242
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Sir Charles D'Avenant, His Life and Economic Works”
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Reel/Frame
130/311
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11/1
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“A Sketch of the Life and Service of H.B. Adams,” 1902 February 5
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Reel/Frame
130/369
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Smaller and Better Taxes,” 1929 November
|
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Reel/Frame
130/372
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Aspects of Christianity,” 1888
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Reel/Frame
130/385
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Aspects of Insurance,” 1899 February
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Reel/Frame
130/422
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Law of Service,” 1895 June 25
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Reel/Frame
130/455
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Message of Christianity,” 1898 July 10
|
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Reel/Frame
130/475
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Observations in Germany,” 1892
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Reel/Frame
130/487
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Progress,” 1897
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Reel/Frame
130/505
Box/Folder
11/1
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“Social Progress,” 1901 May
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Reel/Frame
130/526
Box/Folder
11/2
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“Social Progress,” 1903
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Reel/Frame
130/613
Box/Folder
11/2
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“Social Progress,” 1905
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Reel/Frame
130/704
Box/Folder
11/2
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“Social Reconstruction”
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Reel/Frame
130/717
Box/Folder
11/2
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“Social Reforms Versus War,” 1896 June
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Reel/Frame
130/730
Box/Folder
11/3
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“The Social Significance of the Lord's Supper”
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Reel/Frame
130/803
Box/Folder
11/3
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“Social Studies in Europe,” 1889 December
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Reel/Frame
130/809
Box/Folder
11/3
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“The Social Theory of Property,” 1922 May 24
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Reel/Frame
130/845
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11/3
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“Socialism,” 1886 February
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Reel/Frame
130/864
Box/Folder
11/3
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“Socialism at Its Best,” 1934 February 16
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Reel/Frame
130/868
Box/Folder
11/4
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“Socialism, Religious, Ethical and Materialistic,” 1902 November 20
|
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Reel/Frame
130/902
Box/Folder
11/4
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“Socialism -- What Is It?” , 1934 April
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Reel/Frame
130/906
Box/Folder
11/4
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“Soil Deterioration and Public Land Policy,” 1926 February
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Reel/Frame
130/917
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11/4
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“Some Aspects of the World's Crises”
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Reel/Frame
130/919
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11/4
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“Some Ethical Aspects of Ownership,” 1902 February
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Reel/Frame
130/949
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11/4
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“Some Recent Theories on the States of Economic Development,” 1906 December 27
|
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Reel/Frame
130/957
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11/4
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“Something for Nothing,” 1934 October 18
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Reel/Frame
130/963
Box/Folder
11/4
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“Sound Economic Foundations Essential in All Plans for Improved Housing”
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Reel/Frame
130/972
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11/5
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Southern Trip (notes from various addresses), 1905 November
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Reel/Frame
130/1001
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11/5
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“Special Report of the Committee on Business and Housing for the President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership”
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Reel/Frame
130/1050
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11/5
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“Spending to Learn Saving,” 1934 May
|
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Reel/Frame
131/1
Box/Folder
11/5
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“State Income Taxes as a Partial Substitute for General Property Taxes As Applied to Farms,” 1929 September 28
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Reel/Frame
131/15
Box/Folder
11/6
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“A State Land Policy for Wisconsin”
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Reel/Frame
131/66
Box/Folder
11/6
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“State Universities in the South,” 1904, 1906
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Reel/Frame
131/75
Box/Folder
11/6
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“The State University,” 1892 October 26
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Reel/Frame
131/79
Box/Folder
11/6
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“The State University and the Churches,” 1893
|
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Reel/Frame
131/85
Box/Folder
11/6
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“Statement In Regard to Woodrow Wilson Manuscript on 'American Economists,'” 1928 January 9
|
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Reel/Frame
131/96
Box/Folder
11/6
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“The Strength and Weakness of Socialism,” 1897 November
|
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Reel/Frame
131/115
Box/Folder
11/6
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“The Strength and Weakness of Socialism,” 1934 May
|
|
Reel/Frame
131/135
Box/Folder
12/1
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“The Struggle of an Economist During a Long Life,” 1939 November 30
|
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Reel/Frame
131/150
Box/Folder
12/1
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“A Study of a 'Decreed' Town,” 1903 February
|
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Reel/Frame
131/178
Box/Folder
12/1
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“The Study of Social Science and the Christian Minister,” 1892, 1893
|
|
Reel/Frame
131/197
Box/Folder
12/1
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“Suggestions for a Land Economics Exhibit,” circa 1931
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Reel/Frame
131/211
Box/Folder
12/1
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“Suggestions for Speakers on the U.S. and the World War,” 1917
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Reel/Frame
131/236
Box/Folder
12/1
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“Suggestions on Social Topics,” 1891-1892
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Reel/Frame
131/298
Box/Folder
12/2
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“Suggestions to Teachers of General Economics,” 1910 June 6
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Reel/Frame
131/322
Box/Folder
12/2
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“Swollen Fortunes,” 1906 December 17
|
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Reel/Frame
131/305
Box/Folder
12/2
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“Summary of the Revenue Act of 1932”
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Reel/Frame
131/402a
Box/Folder
12/2
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“Symptoms & Causes”
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Reel/Frame
131/403
Box/Folder
12/3
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“The Task of Reorganization”
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Reel/Frame
131/420
Box/Folder
12/3
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“Tax Exemption and Housing”
|
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Reel/Frame
131/428
Box/Folder
12/3
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“Tax Program of the National Association of Real Estate Boards,” 1933 October 30
|
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Reel/Frame
131/443
Box/Folder
12/4
|
“Taxation” (address before Landlords Mutual Protective Association of Baltimore), 1888 December 4
|
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Reel/Frame
131/522
Box/Folder
12/4
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“Taxation,” 1890 February
|
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Reel/Frame
131/655
Box/Folder
12/5
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“Taxation,” undated
|
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Reel/Frame
131/686
Box/Folder
12/5
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“Taxation,” (for Nelson's Encyclopedia), undated
|
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Reel/Frame
131/771
Box/Folder
12/5
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“Taxation of Farm Lands,” 1924 January 24
|
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Reel/Frame
131/827
Box/Folder
12/5
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“Taxation of Farm Lands,” 1924 May 15
|
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Reel/Frame
131/865
Box/Folder
12/6
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“Taxation of Land,” 1922, 1924
|
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Reel/Frame
132/1
Box/Folder
13/1
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“Taxation of Real Estate”
|
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Reel/Frame
132/13
Box/Folder
13/1
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“Taxing Land Values and Taxing Building Values,” 1930 March
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/17
Box/Folder
13/1
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“Technocracy,” 1933
|
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Reel/Frame
132/63
Box/Folder
13/2
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“Technology”
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Reel/Frame
132/81
Box/Folder
13/2
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“The Telegraph Monopoly,” 1889 July
|
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Reel/Frame
132/94
Box/Folder
13/2
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“Tenancy in an Ideal System of Land Ownership,” 1919 March
|
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Reel/Frame
132/135
Box/Folder
13/2
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“Thinking and Achievement”
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Reel/Frame
132/147
Box/Folder
13/3
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“The Three G's -- A Program for Prosperity,” 1924 August 30
|
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Reel/Frame
132/166
Box/Folder
13/3
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“Tours of Observation,” 1924 September
|
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Reel/Frame
132/204
Box/Folder
13/4
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“Town and Village Improvement,” 1926 September 10
|
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Reel/Frame
132/233
Box/Folder
13/4
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Town Crier Articles (list of), 1932-1934
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/249
Box/Folder
13/4
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“The Trusteeship of Literature: A Word of Warning Against a Proposed New Index”
|
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Reel/Frame
132/261
Box/Folder
13/4
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“Trusts”
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/274
Box/Folder
13/4
|
“The Twentieth Century City,” 1901
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/367
Box/Folder
13/4
|
“Two Kinds of Cooperation,” 1897
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/377
Box/Folder
13/4
|
“Two Kinds of Optimism,” 1897 June
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/388
Box/Folder
13/5
|
“Ulm on the Danube,” 1913 December 6
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/434
Box/Folder
13/5
|
“Under All the Land,” 1933 September
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/468
Box/Folder
13/5
|
“Unemployment”
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/537
Box/Folder
13/5
|
“The Universities and the Churches,” 1893 July 5
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/621
Box/Folder
13/6
|
“The University As a Commercial Asset of Wisconsin,” 1915 February 12
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/667
Box/Folder
13/6
|
“University of Wisconsin Presidents and Others”
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/675
Box/Folder
13/6
|
“Until We Meet Again,” circa 1939
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/698
Box/Folder
13/6
|
“Utility and Cost as Determinants of Value”
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/709
Box/Folder
13/6
|
“Utilization of Land in War Time and the Growth of an Irish Farm”
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/735
Box/Folder
13/7
|
“Valuation of Land,” 1922 December 29
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/770
Box/Folder
13/7
|
“Votes for Women,” 1912 May 25
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/845
Box/Folder
14/1
|
Washington School for Secretaries (remarks on presenting diplomas to 1932 graduates)
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/849
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“What Henry Ford and His Automobile Have Done to Economic Thinking,” 1935
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/877
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“What Is Our Social Ideal,” 1898
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/886
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“Why Are Nations Striving to Become Self-Sufficing,” 1934 February
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/897a
Box/Folder
14/1
|
Work and the Workman / by John K. Ingram (introduction by Ely), 1928
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/898
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“Work for All,” 1935 May 16
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/905
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“World Trade and World Peace,” 1933 April
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/908
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“World Trade and World Peace - Putting the Cart Before the Horse,” 1933 March 6
|
|
Reel/Frame
132/915
Box/Folder
14/1
|
“Worthless Land: What Can We Do for the Men on It,” 1924 October 25
|
|
|
Scrapbooked Writings, 1876-1942
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/1
|
Volume I
- Adams, Henry C.
- Adams, Herbert B.
- Agriculture
- American Economic Association
- Anarchy
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/83
|
Volume II
- Arbitration
- Bolshevism
- Building and Loan Associations
- Charities
- Church
- Church and Education
- Church and Labor
- Churches and State Universities
- Cities and Towns
- Cities and Towns - Planning
- Civil Service
- Competition
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/187
|
Volume III
- Competition (continued)
- Conservation
- Construction
- Co-operation
- Corporations
- Economic Conditions
- Economics
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/284
|
Volume VI: The volume numbering is Ely's. Volumes IV and V were not with the collection when it was received at the Historical Society. - Economics (continued)
- Economics - History
- Economics - Study and Teaching
- Education
- Education of Women
- Electric Railroads
- Ethics
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/364
|
Volume VII
- European War, 1914-1918
- Excess Condemnation
- Farm Relief
- Farm Tenancy
- Fisk, George M.
- Forests and Forestry
- Fortunes
- French Protestant Association
- Germany - Foreign Relations - Russia
- Government Ownership
- Heredity and Crime
- Housing
- Immigration
- Industrial Education
- Industry
- Industry - History
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/470
|
Volume VIII
- Industry - History (continued)
- Industry - Organization
- Inheritance and Succession
- Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities
- Labor and Laboring Classes
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/582
|
Volume IX
- Labor and Laboring Classes (continued)
- Labor Laws and Legislation
- Land
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/708
|
Volume X
- Land (continued)
- Land - Taxation
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/840
|
Volume XI
- Land - Taxation (continued)
- Land Settlement
- Land Tenure
- Landlord and Tenant
- Liberty
- Luxury
- Marketing
- Monopolies
|
|
Reel/Frame
133/972
|
Volume XII
- Mormons and Mormonism
- Municipal Government
- Municipal Ownership
- Peace
- Political Science
- Population
- Progress
- Public Utilities
- Railroads
- Real Estate
- Real Estate - Study and Teaching
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/1
|
Volume XIII
- Real Estate - Study and Teaching (continued)
- Religion
- Research
- Single Tax
- Smith, Adam
- Social Conditions
- Social Laws and Legislation
- Social Problems
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/96
|
Volume XIV
- Social Problems (continued)
- Social Sciences
- Socialism
- Strikes
- Studies in the Evolution of Industrial Society
- Success
- Taxation
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/181
|
Volume XV
- Taxation (continued)
- Telegraph
- Trade Unions
- Trusts
- U.S. - Economic Conditions
- Universities and Colleges
- Wells Affair
- Wisconsin University
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/269
|
Volume XVI, Miscellaneous, 1876-1888
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/475
|
Volume XVII, Miscellaneous, 1886-1888
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/585
|
Volume XVIII, Miscellaneous, 1887
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/679
|
Volume XIX, Miscellaneous, 1889-1891
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/836
|
Volume XX, Miscellaneous, 1892-1897
|
|
|
Book Drafts and Files
|
|
Box/Folder
14/2
|
“Advertising” (G.B. Hotchkiss)
|
|
|
Changing Character and Extent of Municipal Ownership in the Electric Light and Power Industry
|
|
Reel/Frame
134/954
Box/Folder
14/3
|
Draft #1
|
|
Reel/Frame
135/1
Box/Folder
14/4-5
|
Draft #2
|
|
Reel/Frame
135/576
Box/Folder
15/1
|
Draft #3
|
|
Reel/Frame
135/779
Box/Folder
15/2
|
Charts and Tables
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/1
Box/Folder
15/3
|
Citizens Library of Economics, Politics, and Sociology
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/65
Box/Folder
15/4
|
“Classical Economists”
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/81
Box/Folder
15/5
|
The Coming City, 1891-1892
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/213
Box/Folder
15/6
|
Elementary Principles of Economics (Ely and Wicker), 1904-1919
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/247
Box/Folder
15/7
|
“Elements of Economics” (Ely and William Scott)
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/252
Box/Folder
15/8
|
Elements of Land Economics (Ely and Morehouse)
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/273
Box/Folder
15/9-10
|
“Evolution of Economic Society”
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/602
Box/Folder
15/11
|
Foundations of National Prosperity, 1917-1918
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/613
Box/Folder
15/12
|
The Great Change - Work and Wealth in the New Age
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/623
Box/Folder
16/1-2
|
“A Guide to the Study of Economic and Social Problems”
|
|
Reel/Frame
136/832
Box/Folder
16/3
|
Hard Times - the Way In and the Way Out
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/1
Box/Folder
16/4
|
History of Economic Thought (Lewis H. Haney)
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/17
Box/Folder
16/5
|
Introduction to Political Economy, 1896
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/33
Box/Folder
16/6
|
“The Jew and the Land” (William Kirsch)
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/51
Box/Folder
16/6
|
“Labor Movement in America,” 1905-1906
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/99
Box/Folder
16/7
|
Land Economics (Ely and Wehrwein)
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/108
Box/Folder
16/8
|
Land Economics Series, 1913-1940
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/225
Box/Folder
17/1
|
“Landed Property and the Rent of Land”
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/228
Box/Folder
17/2
|
List of Books Edited, Engaged and Proposed for Various Series
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/329
Box/Folder
17/3
|
Monopolies and Trusts
|
|
Reel/Frame
137/516
Box/Folder
17/4-6
|
“The New Economics and the New World”
|
|
Reel/Frame
138/1
Box/Folder
17/7
|
Outlines of Economics, 1893-1910
|
|
Reel/Frame
138/160-140/440
Box/Folder
17/8-20/1
|
Outlines of Land Economics
|
|
Reel/Frame
140/441
Box/Folder
20/2
|
Problems of Today
|
|
Reel/Frame
140/468-141/221
Box/Folder
20/3-4
|
Property and Contract in Their Relations to the Distribution of Wealth
|
|
Reel/Frame
141/222
Box/Folder
20/5
|
Social Aspects of Christianity
|
|
Reel/Frame
141/236
Box/Folder
20/6
|
Social Law of Service
|
|
Reel/Frame
141/250
Box/Folder
20/7
|
Socialism: An Examination of Its Nature, Its Strength and Its Weakness, With Suggestions for Social Reform
|
|
|
“The Story of Economics in the United States”
|
|
Reel/Frame
141/262
Box/Folder
20/8
|
Draft #2 : The numbering of the manuscripts is Ely's. There is no manuscript #1 with the collection. It is possible that lectures entitled “The History of American Economic Thought” (see Reel 168 and Box 48 below) served as the initial manuscript.
|
|
Reel/Frame
141/396
Box/Folder
21/1-2
|
Draft #3
|
|
Reel/Frame
141/???-142/572
Box/Folder
21/3-4
|
Draft #4
|
|
Reel/Frame
142/573
Box/Folder
22/1-2
|
Notes and Early Drafts
|
|
|
Research Files
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/1
Box/Folder
22/3
|
American Economics Association
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/20
Box/Folder
22/4-5
|
American Economic Thought
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/312
Box/Folder
22/6
|
Appendix
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/316
Box/Folder
22/7
|
Atkinson, Edward
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/323
Box/Folder
22/8
|
Bibliography
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/535
Box/Folder
23/1
|
Book Reviews
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/560
Box/Folder
23/2
|
Bowen, Francis
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/604
Box/Folder
23/3
|
Carey, Mathew
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/632
Box/Folder
23/4
|
Clark, J.B.
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/644
Box/Folder
23/5
|
Comments and Criticism
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/659
Box/Folder
23/6
|
Commons, John R.
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/???
Box/Folder
23/7-9
|
Correspondence, 1930-1940
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/710
Box/Folder
23/10
|
Dedication
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/723
Box/Folder
23/11
|
Early Teachings in the U.S.
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/799
Box/Folder
23/12
|
Ely, Richard T.
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/911
Box/Folder
23/13
|
Encyclopedia articles on American economists
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/928
Box/Folder
23/14
|
Epilogue
|
|
Reel/Frame
143/1046
Box/Folder
23/15
|
Greeley, Horace
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/1
Box/Folder
23/16-17
|
History of American Economic Thought Papers
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/358
Box/Folder
24/1
|
Institutional Economics
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/???
Box/Folder
24/2-4
|
Jaffe, Grace
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/380
Box/Folder
24/5
|
Jefferson, Thomas
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/405
Box/Folder
24/6
|
Lectures
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/569
Box/Folder
24/7-9
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/1021
Box/Folder
25/1
|
Paine, Thomas
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/1024
Box/Folder
25/2
|
Patten, Simon
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/1030
Box/Folder
25/3
|
Political Economy Since Mill
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/1038
Box/Folder
25/4
|
Portraits
|
|
Reel/Frame
144/1053
Box/Folder
25/5
|
Preface
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/1
Box/Folder
25/6
|
Prologue
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/219
Box/Folder
25/7
|
Sketches of Economists (prepared for newspaper)
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/278
Box/Folder
25/8
|
Table of Contents
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/352
Box/Folder
25/9
|
Tucker, George
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/382
Box/Folder
25/10
|
Veblen, Thorstein
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/538
Box/Folder
25/11
|
Walker, Francis
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/568
Box/Folder
25/12
|
“The Story of Socialism” (Ely and Frank Bohm)
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/571
Box/Folder
25/13
|
Studies in the Evolution of Industrial Society
|
|
Reel/Frame
145/1023
Box/Folder
25/14
|
Taxation in American States and Cities
|
|
|
Unidentified
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/1
Box/Folder
26/1
|
regarding Labor Organizations in New York in the 1880s
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/114
Box/Folder
26/1
|
regarding Land Utilization
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/147
Box/Folder
26/1
|
regarding Real Estate
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/165
Box/Folder
26/1
|
regarding Taxation
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/198
Box/Folder
26/2
|
regarding Municipal Ownership of Public Utilities
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/577
Box/Folder
26/3
|
“Utilization of Land” (O.E. Baker)
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/626
Box/Folder
26/4
|
World War and Leadership in a Democracy
|
|
|
Subseries: Reference Files
|
|
Reel/Frame
146/746
Box/Folder
26/5 and 27/1
|
Card File
|
|
|
Subject File
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/1
Box/Folder
27/2
|
Apprenticeship, 1917-1918
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/79
Box/Folder
27/3
|
Banking, 1929-1930
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/291
Box/Folder
27/4
|
Boycotting and Blacklisting, 1913
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/338
Box/Folder
27/5
|
Charities, 1894-1895
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/395
Box/Folder
27/6
|
Christian Socialism in England
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/399
Box/Folder
27/7
|
The Church, 1895-1896
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/666
Box/Folder
27/8
|
Citizenship, 1919
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/765
Box/Folder
28/1
|
Combinations and Blind Pools, 1902
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/773
Box/Folder
28/2
|
Commerce
|
|
|
Competition, 1905-1916
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/896
Box/Folder
28/3
|
General
|
|
Reel/Frame
147/1040
Box/Folder
28/3
|
Competition and Price
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/1
Box/Folder
28/3
|
Unfair Competition
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/47
Box/Folder
28/3
|
Competition - Definitions
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/56
Box/Folder
28/4
|
Contracts, 1886-1905
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/81
Box/Folder
28/5
|
Courts, 1911-1912
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/147
Box/Folder
28/6
|
Custom, 1906
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/201
Box/Folder
28/7
|
Distribution of Wealth, 1897-1912
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/246
Box/Folder
28/8
|
Economic Notes, 1890
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/378
Box/Folder
28/9
|
Education
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/383
Box/Folder
28/10
|
Eminent Domain, 1903-1911
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/403
Box/Folder
28/11
|
Ethics, 1892
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/421
Box/Folder
28/12
|
Evolution of Individual Societies, 1906-1912
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/459
Box/Folder
28/13
|
Farm Prosperity, 1921-1926
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/530
Box/Folder
28/14
|
Farmers' Organizations, 1890-1891
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/544
Box/Folder
28/15
|
Forgotten Millions
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/568
Box/Folder
28/16
|
Fourierism, 1851
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/588
Box/Folder
29/1
|
George, Henry, 1915
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/630
Box/Folder
29/2
|
Germany, 1880, 1882, 1913
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/719
Box/Folder
29/3
|
Greeley, Colorado, 1895-1902
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/835
Box/Folder
29/4
|
Housing, 1918
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/915
Box/Folder
29/5
|
Industrial Peace, 1902
|
|
|
Irrigation, circa 1902-1904
|
|
Reel/Frame
148/917
Box/Folder
29/6
|
Notebooks and Miscellaneous Notes
|
|
|
Final Report
|
|
Reel/Frame
149/1
Box/Folder
29/6
|
Manuscript
|
|
Reel/Frame
149/237
Box/Folder
29/6
|
Printed (“The Economics of Irrigation”)
|
|
Reel/Frame
149/265
Box/Folder
29/7-8
|
Labor Movement, 1885-1917
|
|
Reel/Frame
149/818
Box/Folder
29/9
|
Labor Movement: list of labor and socialist periodicals in the U.S., 1885
|
|
Reel/Frame
149/895
Box/Folder
30/1
|
Labor Movement: list of labor organizations in the U.S., 1885
|
|
Reel/Frame
149/1010
Box/Folder
30/2
|
Laissez Faire, 1879-1885
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/1
Box/Folder
30/3
|
Land Investigations
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/12
Box/Folder
30/4
|
Land Policies
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/49
Box/Folder
30/5
|
Land Problems, 1918-1920
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/204
Box/Folder
30/6
|
Land Values, 1922
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/392
Box/Folder
30/7
|
Mill, John Stuart
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/404
Box/Folder
30/8
|
Miscellaneous Notes and Topics, 1893-1909
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/531
Box/Folder
31/1-3
|
Monopolies and Trusts, 1891-1916
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/963
Box/Folder
31/4
|
Mormonism, 1902
|
|
Reel/Frame
150/1045
Box/Folder
31/5
|
Patents
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/1
Box/Folder
31/6
|
Philanthropy, 1890, 1895
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/31
Box/Folder
31/7
|
Police Power, 1913-1915
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/124
Box/Folder
31/8
|
Political Economy, 1884
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/186
Box/Folder
31/9
|
Property, 1912-1916
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/252
Box/Folder
32/1
|
Public Finance, 1894-1908
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/424
Box/Folder
32/2
|
Pullman, 1884-1885
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/464
Box/Folder
32/3
|
Railways, 1896
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/485
Box/Folder
32/4
|
Real Estate, 1918-1922
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/693
Box/Folder
32/5
|
Regulation, 1916
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/708
Box/Folder
32/6
|
Rent Liens, 1931-1932
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/710
Box/Folder
32/7
|
Roadsides
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/715
Box/Folder
32/8
|
Shore Rights, 1907-1909
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/737
Box/Folder
32/9
|
Single Tax, 1903-1905
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/745
Box/Folder
32/10
|
Social Legislation
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/748
Box/Folder
32/11
|
Social Reform
|
|
Reel/Frame
151/817
Box/Folder
32/12
|
Socialism, 1885-1913
|
|
Reel/Frame
152/1
Box/Folder
33/1-2
|
Socialism, 1885-1913 (continued)
|
|
Reel/Frame
152/394
Box/Folder
33/3
|
Socialism - Political Parties, 1903
|
|
Reel/Frame
152/480
Box/Folder
33/4
|
Socialism - Weaknesses, 1890-1894
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152/587
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33/5
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Sphere of the State, 1888-1934
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152/631
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33/6
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State Loans to Schools, 1917-1918
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152/643
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33/7
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Sunday Closings, 1892-1896
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152/664
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33/8
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Surplus, 1922-1928
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152/742
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33/9
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Taxation, 1886-1912
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152/853
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33/10
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Taxation in Ohio
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152/868
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34/1
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Topics for Students
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152/978
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34/2
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Trust Conferences, 1893, 1899
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153/1
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34/3
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Urban Land, 1922
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153/82
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34/4
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Value
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153/118
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Water Power, 1907-1913
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Subseries: University of Wisconsin Departmental Files
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Ely Trial
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153/159
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34/8
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Regents' Hearing Transcript, 1894 August
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153/274
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Exhibits, Final Report, Correspondence, et cetera, 1894 August-September, undated
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Micro 200
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Proceedings before committee appointed to investigate and report charges against Dr. Ely : No known paper copies.
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Micro 924/Mss 411
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Correspondence
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34/6
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Administrative, 1909-1912, 1922-1925
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153/376
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34/7
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Ledger, 1916-1922
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153/418
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Report for the President, 1902 October
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153/441
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35/1
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Training School for Public Service, 1912
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153/710
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35/2-3
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University of Wisconsin Survey, 1914-1915
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154/1
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35/4
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1889/1890, 1890/1891
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154/11
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154/90
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35/6
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1893 December 6-1896 May 27
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1896 October 6-1898 April 26
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154/331
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1898 May 3-1900 May 8
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154/477
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1900 October 2-1902 January 7
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154/534
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1902 January 28-1903 January 27
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154/604
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1903 February 24-1904 May 24
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154/784
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1904 October 4-1906 January 30
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1910/1911
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1914 October 6-1917 May 9
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1915/1916
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155/262
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1916/1917
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1917/1918
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1918/1919
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155/411
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1919/1920
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155/513
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1920 (Summer Session)
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155/543
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37/10-11
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1920/1921
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155/863
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37/12
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1921/1922
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1922/1923
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156/755
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156/899
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156/949
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1928/1929
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157/205
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1929/1930
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157/286
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39/2
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Miscellaneous and undated
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Subseries: Lecture Notes and Course Materials
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Reel/Frame
157/334
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39/3
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Advanced Political Economy
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157/879
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39/4
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American Public Finance
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157/1022
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39/5
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Anton Ashley Cooper - Friend of the Laboring Classes
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158/1
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39/6
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Balanced Production
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158/20
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39/7
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Chautauqua Lectures - Miscellaneous Notes
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158/172
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40/1
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The Church and the World. The Church and the State
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158/388
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Civil Service
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158/718
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Class Rosters, 1882-1892
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158/935
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40/4
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Commerce - Its Historical Development in Modern Times
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159/1
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40/5-7
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Custom and Competition
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Distribution of Wealth
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Reel/Frame
159/253-164/539
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Transcripts, circa 1899, circa 1906-1914 : The microfilm order matches the paper order indicated as follows; however the reel ending points are undetermined at this time.
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Box/Folder
41/1-2
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circa 1899, Book I, Parts VII-IX
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circa 1906-1914
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41/3
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Table of Contents
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Book I, Part I
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41/4-6
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Pages 1-1081
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42/1
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Pages 1082-1474
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42/2-5
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Book I, Parts II-V
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Book I, Part VI
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42/6
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Pages 1960-2110
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43/1
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Pages 2111-2223
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43/2-5
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Book I, Parts VII-IX
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43/6-7
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Book II, Part I
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44/1
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Topics, Essay Subjects, et cetera
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44/2
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Miscellaneous Notes
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164/540-166/198
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Transcripts, circa 1915-1921 : The microfilm order matches the paper order indicated as follows; however the reel ending points are undetermined at this time.
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Box/Folder
44/3-12
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Book I, Parts V-VI
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Book VII
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44/13
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Table of Contents
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44/14
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Chapter 1
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45/1-13
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Chapters 2-11, 14-16
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45/14
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Miscellaneous Notes
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Reel/Frame
166/199-167/381
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Outlines : The microfilm order matches the paper order indicated as follows; however the reel ending points are undetermined at this time.
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Box/Folder
45/15
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Table of Contents
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46/1-6
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Books I-II
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47/1
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Books III-V
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Reel/Frame
167/382
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47/2
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Economic and Social Problems
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167/416
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47/3
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Economic Institutions
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Reel/Frame
167/438
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47/4
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Ethics and Economics
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Evolution of Industrial Society
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Reel/Frame
167/629
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47/5-6
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Draft, 1909
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Reel/Frame
168/1
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47/7
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Partial Draft, undated
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Reel/Frame
168/181
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47/8
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Miscellaneous Notes
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168/465
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48/1
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History of American Economic Thought
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History of Economic Thought
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168/677
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48/1
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1905
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168/896
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48/2
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1908-1909
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169/1
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48/3
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, 1908-1909 (continued)
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169/246
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48/4-5
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1920-1922
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169/671
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49/1
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undated
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169/785
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49/2
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Miscellaneous Notes
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History of Political Economy
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170/1
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49/3-4, 50/1-2
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Draft #1
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171/1
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Draft #2
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171/437
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50/4
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Miscellaneous Notes
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171/955
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51/1
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Housing
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172/1
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Individual Fortunes
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172/5
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Labor Movement
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172/26
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51/4
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Land Classification for Utilization
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172/57
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Land Economics
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172/127
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51/6-7
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Land Policies
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Landed Property and the Rent of Land
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172/503
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51/8-9
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1911-1912
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172/987
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51/10
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1915
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173/1
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52/1
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Miscellaneous Notes
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173/584
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52/2-3
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Money and Banking
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174/1
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52/4
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Monopolies and Trusts
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174/13
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52/5
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The Nature and Significance of Monopolies and Trusts
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174/48
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52/6
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Outlines of Economics
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Reel/Frame
174/111
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52/7
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Private Property
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Reel/Frame
174/321
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53/1
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Property and Contract
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174/351
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53/2
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Property, Contract, and Socialism
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174/444
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53/3
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Property in Economic Theory
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174/614
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53/4
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Public Finance
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175/1
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54/1
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Public Finance (continued)
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175/875
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54/2
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Public Utility Operation
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176/1
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54/3
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Public Utility Operation (continued)
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176/189
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54/4
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Rent of Land
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176/343
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54/5
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Robert Owen
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176/458
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54/6
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Single Tax
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176/493
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54/7
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Social Ethics
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Socialism
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176/856
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55/1
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1888
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177/1
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55/2
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1907
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177/363
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55/3
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Miscellaneous Notes
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Urban Land Economics
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Reel/Frame
177/561
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55/4
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1923
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177/633
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55/5
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1926
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Reel/Frame
177/742
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55/6
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Utilization of Land
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Reel/Frame
177/798-178/503
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56/1-4
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The World War and Leadership in a Democracy
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Reel/Frame
178/504
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56/5
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Miscellaneous and Unidentified
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Subseries: Student Research Papers
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Reel/Frame
178/689
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56/6
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Agriculture
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178/961
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57/1
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Colonization
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179/1
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57/2-5
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Competition
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179/822
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57/6
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Competitive Principle of Distribution
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179/848-180/339
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Custom
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180/340
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58/4
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Custom and Competition
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180/455
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58/5
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Customary Price
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180/546
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58/6
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Distribution of Wealth
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180/772
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58/7
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Economic Progress
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180/820
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58/8
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Institutions
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180/841
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58/9
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Interest
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180/850
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58/10
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Labor and Monopoly
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180/855
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58/11
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Land
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180/982
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Landed Property
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180/998
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59/2
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Monopoly
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180/1078
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59/3
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Property
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181/1
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59/4
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Public Lands
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181/69
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Public Utilities
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181/295
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59/6
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Real Estate
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181/473
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59/6
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Rent
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181/501
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59/7
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Ricardo, David
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181/547
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59/8
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Taxation
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181/631
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59/9
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Trusts
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181/???
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59/10
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Urbanization
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181/686
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59/11
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Usury Laws
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181/704
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59/12
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Washington, George
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Series: Organizational Records
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American Association for Agricultural Legislation
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Reel/Frame
181/721
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60/1
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Articles
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181/818
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60/2
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Financial, 1918-1922
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181/879
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60/3
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Land Economics Conference, 1919
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182/1
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60/4
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Lists of Members and Prospective Members
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182/131
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60/5
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Miscellaneous Papers
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American Bureau of Industrial Research
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182/295
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60/6
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Documentary History, Outlines
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182/403
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60/7
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Ledgers and Journals, 1904-1909
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182/548
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60/8-9
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Reports and Papers, 1903-1910, 1915-1916
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182/1053
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60/10
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Book Publishing Company
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Christian Social Union
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183/1
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61/1
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Annual Meeting and Executive Committee Minutes, 1891-1892, 1907-1910
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183/120
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61/2
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Reports and Papers, 1891-1892
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League to Enforce Peace - Wisconsin Branch
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183/164
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61/3
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Britain Day
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183/170
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61/4
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Form Letters
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183/227
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61/5
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Great Lakes Congress
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Reel/Frame
183/309
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61/6
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Journal of Receipts and Disbursements, 1918-1919
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Reel/Frame
183/338
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61/7
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McElroy Case
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Madison Convention
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183/361
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61/8
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General
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183/458
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61/9
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Invitations
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183/589
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61/10
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Publicity
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Reel/Frame
183/677
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61/11
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Speeches
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Reel/Frame
183/789
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61/12
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Membership Lists
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Reel/Frame
183/818
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62/1-2
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Miscellaneous Papers, 1918-1920
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Reel/Frame
184/1
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62/3
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Printed Matter
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Reel/Frame
184/170
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62/4
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Speakers' Applications
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184/197
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62/5
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Subscriptions List
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Reel/Frame
184/231
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62/6
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“Win the War for a Permanent Peace Convention,” Philadelphia, 1918 May 16-18
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Northern Wisconsin Land Settlement
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Reel/Frame
184/298
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62/7-8
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Bulletin #1
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Reel/Frame
184/827
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63/1
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Clippings, 1919-1920
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184/851
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63/2
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Credit Needs of Settlers
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184/943
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63/3
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Eau Claire Conference, 1918 September 24
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Reel/Frame
184/975
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63/4
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Field Trip Reports, 1918
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Reel/Frame
185/1
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63/5
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Form Letters, 1918
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Reel/Frame
185/45
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63/6
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Questionnaires for Real Estate Dealers
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Reel/Frame
185/115
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63/7
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Report by R. T. Ely, 1918 June 29
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Reel/Frame
185/121
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63/8
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Reports and Miscellaneous Papers, 1917-1920
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Reel/Frame
185/477
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63/9
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Settlement Plans, 1916-1919
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Reel/Frame
185/585
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63/10
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State Land Settlement Commission
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Reel/Frame
185/652
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63/11
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Wisconsin Loyalty Legion - Madison Chapter Membership Lists
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Series: Personal Papers and Scrapbooks
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Reel/Frame
185/785
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63/12
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Deeds, Mortgages, and Documents, 1812-1881
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80th Birthday Celebration Letters (alphabetical order)
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Reel/Frame
185/1032
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64/1-2
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Affleck-Cross
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Reel/Frame
186/1
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64/1-2
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Davis-Young
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186/202
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64/3-4
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Letters from Friends of R.T. Ely on His 80th Birthday
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Reel/Frame
186/486
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64/5
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“Estimates of Contributions to Welfare Economics by Richard T. Ely” (thesis by B.M. Hancock)
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Reel/Frame
186/604
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64/6-7, 65/1
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“Life and Letters of Richard T. Ely” / by F.M. Ely
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Reel/Frame
186/1036
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65/2
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“In Memoriam: Ezra Sterling Ely” / by F.M. Ely
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Reel/Frame
187/1
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65/3
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Miscellaneous Biographical and Genealogical Material
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Reel/Frame
187/116
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65/4
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Personalia and Library, 1937-1941
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Reel/Frame
187/126
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65/5
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“Report by Anne Dewees on Interview with Richard T. Ely,” 1940 April 22
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Reel/Frame
187/136
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65/6
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Round Table Group, An Appreciation by, 1920-1921
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Reel/Frame
187/161
Box/Folder
65/7
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“Story of the Life of George Stetson Ely” / by F.M. Ely
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Reel/Frame
187/780-188/395
Box/Folder
65/8
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“Story of the Life of Harriet Gardner Ely” / by F.M. Ely
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Reel/Frame
188/396
Box/Folder
65/9
|
“The Sphere and Province of Government,” circa 1878
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Reel/Frame
188/511
Box/Folder
65/10
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“Ubersicht des Verschiedenen National-Okonomischen Theorien,” 1878
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Scrapbooks
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Reel/Frame
188/524
Box/Folder
66/1
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Volume I
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|
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Biographical, 1873-1929
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Family, 1912-1928
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Honors, 1914-1931
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Miscellaneous, 1925
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Reel/Frame
188/634
Box/Folder
66/2
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Volume II, Interests and Activities Including Social Activities, 1885-1907
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Reel/Frame
188/730
Box/Folder
66/3
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Volume III
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Interests and Activities Including Social Activities, 1907-1931
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Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public
Utilities, 1922-1930
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Reel/Frame
188/843
Box/Folder
66/4
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Volume IV, Mention and Review of Books, Articles and Editorial Work, 1883, 1901
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|
Reel/Frame
189/1
Box/Folder
66/5
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Volume V, Mention and Review of Books, Articles, and Editorial Work, 1902-1931
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Reel/Frame
189/146
Box/Folder
66/6
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Volume VI, Addresses, University Activities, Summer Schools, 1881-1902
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Reel/Frame
189/246
Box/Folder
66/7
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Volume VII, Addresses, University Activities, Summer Schools, 1902-1918
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Reel/Frame
189/329
Box/Folder
66/8
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Volume VIII, Addresses, University Activities, Summer Schools, 1918-1930
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Reel/Frame
189/410
Box/Folder
66/9
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Volume IX, Commendation and Criticism (including Wells investigation), 1885-1912
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Reel/Frame
189/532
Box/Folder
66/10
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Volume X, Commendation and Criticism, 1914-1931
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Reel/Frame
189/642
Box/Folder
66/11
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Volume XI, Ely's Activities, 1880-1886
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Reel/Frame
189/821
Box/Folder
66/12
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Volume XII, Ely's Activities, 1884-1890
|
|
Reel/Frame
190/1
Box/Folder
67/1
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Volume XIII, Ely's Activities, 1890-1897
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|
Reel/Frame
190/155
Box/Folder
67/2
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Volume XIV, Ely's Activities, 1894 : Entire volume concerns Wells investigation.
|
|
Reel/Frame
190/322
Box/Folder
67/3
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Volume XV, Ely's Activities, 1894-1903
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|
Reel/Frame
190/494
Box/Folder
67/4
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Volume XVI, Ely's Activities, 1903-1909
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|
Reel/Frame
190/532
Box/Folder
67/5
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Volume XVII, Ely's Activities, 1908-1909
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Reel/Frame
190/555
Box/Folder
67/6
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Volume XVIII, Miscellaneous, 1888, 1894, 1903, 1915-1929
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Reel/Frame
190/623
Box/Folder
67/7
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Volume XIX, Research Interests (primarily taxation), 1887-1888
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Reel/Frame
190/689
Box/Folder
67/8
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Volume XX, Research Interests (primarily tariff), 1880-1888
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|
Reel/Frame
190/838
Box/Folder
67/9
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Volume XXI, Research Interests (primarily taxation, annexation, and licensing), 1888
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Reel/Frame
190/935
Box/Folder
67/10
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Volume XXII, Research Interests (primarily taxation), 1879-1888)
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|
Reel/Frame
190/1069
Box/Folder
67/11
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Volume XXIII, Reviews and Comment on French and German Socialism in Modern Times and Past and Present of Political Economy, 1883-1885
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|
Reel/Frame
190/1112
Box/Folder
67/12
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Volume XXIV, Clippings Concerning Ely's Resignation at Johns Hopkins and Acceptance of a Position at Wisconsin, 1892
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Reel/Frame
191/1
Box/Folder
67/13
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Volume XXV, American Economic Association, 1885-1906 : Scrapbook Volume XXV was discovered and added to the edition after the original filming had been completed.
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|
Reel/Frame
190/1158
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Series: Photographs : Originals of these photographs are part of PH 801, PH 815, PH 816, PH 939, described as Parts 2, 3, 4, 5 respectively.
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|
Mss 806
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Series: 1991 Additions, 1845-1963
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|
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Subseries: Professional Papers
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|
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Correspondence
|
|
Box
1
Folder
1-12
|
1879-1937
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|
Box
2
Folder
1
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undated
|
|
Box
2
Folder
2
|
Chautauqua miscellany
|
|
Box
2
Folder
3
|
Financial miscellany
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|
Box
2
Folder
4
|
Notes and fragments
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|
Box
2
Folder
5
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Property miscellany
|
|
|
Subseries: Family Papers
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|
|
Correspondence
|
|
Box
2
Folder
6-16
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1845-1889
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|
Box
3
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1890-1901
|
|
Box
4
|
1902-1910
|
|
Box
5
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1911-1963; undated
|
|
Box
6
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Genealogical miscellany
|
|
File 1875 June 25 Oversize
|
Series: Oversize Certificates
|
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PH 801
|
Part 2 (PH 801): Additions, 1917 7 photographs (1 folder) : Photographs of a pea vine thrashing crew in action and of the construction of a frame warehouse for Calvin Keeny, a relative of Ely, in Fairfield, Washington, 1917.
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PH 815
|
Part 3 (PH 815): Additions, circa 1910-1915 11 photographs (1 folder) : Photographs of tombstones in localities in New York state of members of the Ely and Hunn families, ancestors, and relatives, circa 1910-1915.
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PH 816
|
Part 4 (PH 816): Additions, 1924-1925 17 photographs (1 folder) : Photographs created by Brown Brothers Studio of New York of Sunnyside Gardens, a housing development of the City Housing Corporation, Long Island, New York, 1924-1925, including images of construction, apartment interiors, and a food garden.
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PH 939
|
Part 5 (PH 939): Additions, 1910 7 photographs (1 folder) : Record photographs of details of unsanitary tenement living quarters in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1910, apparently photographed by the Baltimore Health Dept. Images show an alley with African-American inhabitants, backyard water sources, flooded cellars, rubbish and litter, white children peeking out a door, and clotheslines.
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M2003-120
|
Part 6 (M2003-120): Additions, 1888-1890 0.6 cubic feet (2 archives boxes) : Additions, 1888-1890, consisting of two publications, Problems of Today and Taxation in American States and Cities, bound with scrapbook pages containing news clippings, reviews, and notes handwritten by Ely. Problems of Today brought together for publication a series of newspaper articles of the same title originally published in the Baltimore Sun in which Ely discussed the management of utilities and the definition of natural monopolies. In Taxation in American States and Cities, Ely tackled the problem of tax assessment, an issue he had studied while serving an appointment on the Baltimore and Maryland tax commissions.
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|
Box
1
Folder
1-4
|
Taxation in American States and Cities
|
|
Box
1
Folder
5-6
|
Problems of Today
|
|
Box
2
Folder
1-2
|
Problems of Today (continued)
|
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PH 5058
|
Part 7 (PH 5058): Additions, circa 1870s to 1930s 0.2 cubic feet of photographs (1 archives box) : Personal photographs, undated
|
|
Box
1
Folder
1
|
Cartes-de-visite, 19th century
|
|
Box
1
Folder
2
|
Relatives, 1873-1930s
|
|
Box
1
Folder
3
|
Ely residence / photographs by M. Diemer, 1925
|
|
Box
1
Folder
4
|
General, 1914-1935
|
|
Box
1
Folder
5
|
Professional life, 1895-1924
|
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