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  1. James Laurence Laughlin (April 2, 1850 – November 28, 1933) was an American economist and professor at Cornell University, Harvard University, and the University of Chicago, [1] who helped to found the Federal Reserve System and was "one of the most ardent defenders of the gold standard ." [2]

  2. James Laurence Laughlin (April 2, 1850 – November 28, 1933) was an American economist and professor at Cornell University, Harvard University, and the University of Chicago, who helped to found the Federal Reserve System and was "one of the most ardent defenders of the gold standard ."

  3. 1. Jan. 2023 · Chapter. First Online: 01 January 2023. Abstract. James Laurence Laughlin, founding head of the Department of Political Economy at the University of Chicago, was engaged in many of the most important economic debates of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

  4. 1. Jan. 2017 · Laughlin, James Laurence (1850–1933) Published: 24 November 2016. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95121-5_802-1. Scholar, teacher, monetary reformer and university administrator, Laughlin was born in Deerfield, Ohio of middle-class parents of modest means. A scholarship plus outside work, largely tutoring, enabled him to ...

  5. JAMES LAURENCE LAUGHLIN 781 are of his own persuasion. But Laughlin frequently chose the best men when they were of very different persuasions from his own. He had little in common with the economic theory, the social outlook, or the manner of thinking of such men as Davenport, Hoxie, J. M. Clark, Walton Hamilton, or Veblen; but this did not

  6. J. Laurence Laughlin (1850-933), Professor of Political Economy, editor of the Journal of Political Economy. The J. Laurence Laughlin Papers consist of a small collection of writings, correspondence, lectures notes and miscellany. The primary focus of the collection centers on two economic controversies in which Laughlin was involved concerning ...

  7. JAMES LAURENCE LAUGHLIN (1850-1933) 3 It is difficult to think of economics under his teaching as the dis-mal science when we remember the names of some of his pupils. He had a hand in shaping careers as varied and striking as those of Stephen Leacock, Mackenzie King, Frank Vanderlip, and Theo-dore Roosevelt. Mr. Vanderlip has said that, with ...