Prof. Frank William Taussig, Ph.D.

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Prof. Frank William Taussig, Ph.D.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: St Louis, St Louis, MO, United States
Death: November 11, 1940 (80)
Mid-Cambridge, Middlesex, MA, United States (stroke)
Immediate Family:

Son of William Taussig; Karl /Joseph? Taussig; Adele Taussig and Eleanore Taussig
Husband of Laura Taussig and Edith T. Taussig
Father of William Guild Taussig; Mary Henderson; Catherine Crombie Opie and Helen B. Taussig
Brother of Jennie Brandeis; Walter Morriss Taussig; Anton Taussig and Prof. Frank William Taussig, Ph.D.

Occupation: Professor of Economics, Harvard
Managed by: Katherine H. Tachau
Last Updated:

About Prof. Frank William Taussig, Ph.D.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_W._Taussig

Frank William Taussig (December 28, 1859 - November 11, 1940) was a U.S. economist and educator. Taussig is credited with creating the foundations of modern trade theory.

He was born in St. Louis, the son of William and Adele (Wuerpel) Taussig. His parents encouraged his literary and musical interests, and he played the violin at an early age. He was educated in the St. Louis public schools and at Smith Academy in that city. He then went to Washington University there, but after a year transferred to Harvard from where he graduated in 1879.[1] He then traveled in Europe for a year, taking some time to study economics at the University of Berlin. He then did graduate work at Harvard in law and economics, and during this time was secretary to President Charles W. Eliot for some years. He got a law degree in 1886 and was appointed assistant professor at Harvard.[2] He became professor of economics in 1892, and remained at Harvard for the balance of his professional career, except for several years spent in federal service, and some time spent traveling in Europe recovering from a nervous disorder.[1] He was editor of the Quarterly Journal of Economics from 1889 to 1890 and from 1896 to 1935; president of the American Economic Association in 1904 and 1905; and chairperson of the United States Tariff Commission from 1917 to 1919. In March 1919, he was called to Paris to advise in the adjustment of commercial treaties, and in November, on invitation of President Wilson, he attended the second industrial conference in Washington for promoting peace between capital and labour. He was a strong supporter of the League of Nations. Taussig is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts. The successor to his chair at Harvard was Joseph Schumpeter. In 1888, he married Edith Thomas Guild. One of their four children was Helen Brooke Taussig (1898–1986), a noted pediatrician and cardiologist. F. W. Taussig's first wife died in 1910, and he married Laura Fisher.[1][2] [edit]Works

F. W. Taussig (second from the left) at the 1911 Harvard commencement The Tariff History of the United States (1888; sixth edition, revised, 1914), a standard work Protection to Young Industries as Applied to the United States (1883; second edition, 1886) History of the Present Tariff, 1860-83 (1885) The Silver Situation in the United States (1892; third edition, revised, 1896) Wages and Capital (1896) Principles of Economics (1911; second edition, 1915) Some Aspects of the Tariff Question (1915) Inventors and Money Makers (1915), Brown University lectures Free Trade, the Tariff, and Reciprocity (1919) [edit]



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_W._Taussig

"Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1920", database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QLKG-3SJH : 13 March 2018), Frank W Taussig and Laura Fisher, 1918.

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Prof. Frank William Taussig, Ph.D.'s Timeline

1859
December 28, 1859
St Louis, St Louis, MO, United States
1889
1889
1892
1892
1896
June 12, 1896
1898
May 24, 1898
1940
November 11, 1940
Age 80
Mid-Cambridge, Middlesex, MA, United States
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