Walker, Francis Amasa

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[[Image:Francis Amasa Walker.jpg|right|200px|thumb| Francis Amasa Walker]]
 
[[Image:Francis Amasa Walker.jpg|right|200px|thumb| Francis Amasa Walker]]
'''Francis Amasa Walker''' (July 2, 1840 – January 5, 1897) was a [[United States]] army general, [[economics|economist]] and [[education|educator]]. He was famous for his economic theories on [[wages]] and [[profit]] which discredited the previously accepted "wages-fund" theory that wages were based on preexisting [[capital]] assigned for the cost of [[labor]]. A pioneer in using [[statistics|statistical]] data to illustrate economic arguments, Walker strove to establish the "scientific" status of economics. A strong proponent of [[capitalism]], he developed a theory of the [[entrepreneur]] and entrepreneurial profit as their "wages" for successful work.  
+
'''Francis Amasa Walker''' (July 2, 1840 – January 5, 1897) was a [[United States]] army general, [[economics|economist]], and [[education|educator]]. He was famous for his economic theories on [[wages]] and [[profit]] which discredited the previously accepted "wages-fund" theory that wages were based on preexisting [[capital]] assigned for the cost of [[labor]]. A pioneer in using [[statistics|statistical]] data to illustrate economic arguments, Walker strove to establish the "scientific" status of economics. A strong proponent of [[capitalism]], he developed a theory of the [[entrepreneur]] and entrepreneurial profit as their "wages" for successful work.  
 
+
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However, later in his career Walker became rather narrow in his beliefs, particularly regarding the issue of [[immigration]]. He feared that new immigrants to the [[United States]] posed a social and economic threat to those already established families, and advocated government action to restrict further immigration. Although at the end of the nineteenth century many American citizens were protective of their hard-won way of life, the fears of men like Walker that new immigrants would reduce their quality of life or fail to assimilate into American life proved unfounded.
+
However, later in his career Walker became rather narrow in his beliefs, particularly regarding the issue of [[immigration]]. He feared that new immigrants to the [[United States]] posed a social and economic threat to those already established families, and advocated government action to restrict further immigration. Although at the end of the nineteenth century, many American citizens were protective of their hard-won way of life, the fears of men like Walker that new immigrants would reduce their quality of life, or fail to assimilate into American life, proved unfounded.
  
 
==Life==
 
==Life==
  
'''Francis Amasa Walker''' was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on July 2, 1840, into the family of distinguished economist and politician Amasa Walker. His father inevitably had great influence on his son’s life, particularly in his interest for [[law]] and [[economics]]. Walker graduated from Amherst College in 1860, where he studied law.  
+
'''Francis Amasa Walker''' was born in [[Boston, Massachusetts]], on July 2, 1840, into the family of distinguished economist and politician Amasa Walker. His father inevitably had great influence on his son’s life, particularly in his interest for [[law]] and [[economics]]. Walker graduated from [[Amherst College]] in 1860, where he studied [[law]].  
  
With the beginning of the [[American Civil War]] in 1861, Walker joined the Northern army. Walker was particularly skillful in analyzing the enemy troop strength and their position. He showed himself to be a great tactician, and soon rose from the rank of sergeant-major to that of brevet brigadier general of volunteers. The rank was awarded to him at the personal request of General [[Winfield Scott Hancock]]. He was wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville, and captured at Ream's Station, where he was sent to the famous Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia. His health seriously deteriorated and after the war he left army service.
+
With the beginning of the [[American Civil War]] in 1861, Walker joined the Northern army. Walker was particularly skillful in analyzing the enemy troop strength and their position. He showed himself to be a great tactician, and soon rose from the rank of sergeant-major to that of brevet brigadier general of volunteers. The rank was awarded to him at the personal request of General [[Winfield Scott Hancock]]. He was wounded at the [[Battle of Chancellorsville]], and captured at Ream's Station, where he was sent to the famous Libby Prison in [[Richmond, Virginia]]. His health seriously deteriorated and after the war he left army service.
  
Walker then worked as editor of the Springfield, Massachusetts ‘‘Republican’’, and chief of the government bureau of [[statistics]]. He supervised both the ninth (1870) and tenth (1880) census. He also served as U.S. commissioner of Indian Affairs from 1871 to 1872.  
+
Walker then worked as editor of the Springfield, Massachusetts ‘‘Republican,’’ and chief of the government bureau of [[statistics]]. He supervised both the ninth (1870) and tenth (1880) census. He also served as U.S. commissioner of Indian Affairs from 1871 to 1872.  
  
In the 1870s Walker turned entirely to academic work. From 1872 to 1880 he was professor of [[political economy]] at the Sheffield Scientific School at [[Yale]]. In 1878, he represented the United States at the Monetary Conference in [[Paris]], and from 1885-92 he served as the first president of the American Economic Association. He was also president of the American Statistical Association from 1883 to 1897.  
+
In the 1870s, Walker turned entirely to academic work. From 1872 to 1880 he was professor of [[political economy]] at the Sheffield Scientific School at [[Yale]]. In 1878, he represented the United States at the Monetary Conference in [[Paris]], and from 1885-1892 he served as the first president of the American Economic Association. He was also president of the American Statistical Association from 1883 to 1897.  
  
From 1881 to his death he was president of [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] (MIT). He contributed toward increasing the resources and numbers of the institution. During his tenancy at MIT, the number of students increased from 302, when he started as president, to 1198, when he died. He also worked on promotion of general school education and actively participated in debates on monetary and other government issues.  
+
From 1881 to his death, he was president of [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] (MIT). He contributed toward increasing the resources and numbers of the institution. During his tenancy at MIT, the number of students increased from 302, when he started as president, to 1198, when he died. He also worked on promotion of general school education and actively participated in debates on monetary and other government issues.  
  
 
Walker wrote numerous books and publications, among others: ''The Wages Question'' (1876), ''Money'' (1878), ''International Bimetallism'' (1896), and ''Political Economy'' (1884).  
 
Walker wrote numerous books and publications, among others: ''The Wages Question'' (1876), ''Money'' (1878), ''International Bimetallism'' (1896), and ''Political Economy'' (1884).  
  
Walker stayed at MIT until his death. He died in Boston on January 5, 1897. The Walker Memorial, a students' clubhouse and one of the MIT buildings on the Charles River, was dedicated in 1916 in his honor.  
+
Walker stayed at MIT until his death in [[Boston]] on January 5, 1897. The Walker Memorial, a students' clubhouse, and one of the MIT buildings on the Charles River, was dedicated in 1916 in his honor.  
  
 
==Work==
 
==Work==
  
Walker was a prolific writer, especially on topics in [[economics]], and is regarded as an original and powerful thinker. He tried to establish economics as a scientific discipline, and used [[statistics]] as a tool in economic study. His ideas can be classified as Neoclassical, with a strong influence of American [[Institutionalism]]. As such, Walker represents the definitive split from [[classical economics]].   
+
Walker was a prolific writer, especially on topics in [[economics]], and is regarded as an original and powerful thinker. He tried to establish economics as a scientific discipline, and used [[statistics]] as a tool in economic study. His ideas can be classified as [[Neoclassicism|Neoclassical]], with a strong influence of American [[Institutionalism]]. As such, Walker represents the definitive split from [[classical economics]].   
  
One of the Walker’s most important contributions to economic theory is his theory of [[wages]]. With his 1876 book ''The Wages Question'' he demolished the old Classical “wages-fund” theory. He also restructured the [[David Ricardo|Ricardian]] theory of [[rent]] and proposed a theory of distribution that became a foundation for later marginal productivity theory of distribution. He supplemented the trinity of [[land]], [[capital]], and [[labor]], or in terms of distribution, of [[rent]], [[interest]], and [[wages]], with a new entity—management and the earnings of management:
+
One of the Walker’s most important contributions to economic theory is his theory of [[wages]]. With his 1876 book ''The Wages Question,'' he demolished the old Classical “wages-fund” theory. He also restructured the [[David Ricardo|Ricardian]] theory of [[rent]] and proposed a theory of distribution that became a foundation for later marginal productivity theory of distribution. He supplemented the trinity of [[land]], [[capital]], and [[labor]], or in terms of distribution, of rent, [[interest]], and wages, with a new entity—management and the earnings of management:
<blockquote>Under free and full competition, the successful employers of labor would earn a remuneration which would be exactly measured, in the case of each man, by the amount of wealth which he could produce, with a given application of labor and capital, over and above what would be produced by employers of the lowest industrial, or no-profits, grade, making use of the same amounts of labor and capital, just as rent measures the surplus of the produce of the better lands over and above what would be produced by the same application of labor and capital to the least productive lands which contribute to the supply of the market, lands which themselves bear no rent. (''Quarterly Journal of Economics'', April, 1887) </blockquote>  
+
<blockquote>Under free and full competition, the successful employers of labor would earn a remuneration which would be exactly measured, in the case of each man, by the amount of wealth which he could produce, with a given application of labor and capital, over and above what would be produced by employers of the lowest industrial, or no-profits, grade, making use of the same amounts of labor and capital, just as rent measures the surplus of the produce of the better lands over and above what would be produced by the same application of labor and capital to the least productive lands which contribute to the supply of the market, lands which themselves bear no rent. (''Quarterly Journal of Economics'' April, 1887) </blockquote>  
  
 
Walker was a great proponent of [[capitalism|capitalist]] society:  
 
Walker was a great proponent of [[capitalism|capitalist]] society:  
<blockquote>At every step of its progress capital follows one law. It arises solely out of saving. It stands always for self-denial and abstinence" with interest “as the reward of abstinence." (''First Lessons in Political Economy'', 1889) </blockquote>
+
<blockquote>At every step of its progress capital follows one law. It arises solely out of saving. It stands always for self-denial and abstinence" with interest “as the reward of abstinence." (''First Lessons in Political Economy'' 1889) </blockquote>
  
He saw [[industrialization]] as beneficial for the society and advocated for [[entrepreneur]]ship. Walker argued that entrepreneur profit functions as their wages, and thus he disregarded [[Marxism|Marxist]] notions of class struggle based on the parasitic nature of entrepreneurship. As working people worked for wages, so do entrepreneurs. Profits, then, are an added increment of management, secured by foresight and business skill; and since they flow solely from the entrepreneur they belong to him alone and no portion may be justly claimed for rent, interest, or wages:
+
He saw [[industrialization]] as beneficial for the society and advocated for [[entrepreneur]]ship. Walker argued that entrepreneur profit functions as their wages, and thus he disregarded [[Marxism|Marxist]] notions of class struggle based on the parasitic nature of entrepreneurship. As working people worked for wages, so do entrepreneurs. Profits, then, are an added increment of management, secured by foresight and business skill; and since they flow solely from the entrepreneur, they belong to him alone and no portion may be justly claimed for rent, interest, or wages:
  
 
<blockquote>It appears that the gains of the employer are not taken from the earnings of the laboring class, but measure the difference in production between the commonplace or bad, and the able, and shrewd, and strong management of business. (''Political Economy'' 1888). </blockquote>  
 
<blockquote>It appears that the gains of the employer are not taken from the earnings of the laboring class, but measure the difference in production between the commonplace or bad, and the able, and shrewd, and strong management of business. (''Political Economy'' 1888). </blockquote>  
Line 42: Line 40:
 
Walker was also interested in monetary issues, advocating [[bimetallism]]. He did not, however, seek to justify any one nation in the attempt to maintain parity between [[gold]] and [[silver]].  
 
Walker was also interested in monetary issues, advocating [[bimetallism]]. He did not, however, seek to justify any one nation in the attempt to maintain parity between [[gold]] and [[silver]].  
  
In his later career, Walker became more conservative in his stands, an apologist of the [[Gilded Age]], and staunch critic of [[Henry George]], [[socialism|socialists]], and populists. He was especially harsh on the question of immigration. He believed that immigrants negatively influence the “native” population, as with the greater influx of immigrants the “quality of the general population deteriorates.” His views were typical for his time, when [[Darwinism|Darwin]]ian notions of racial inequality placed the Anglo-Saxon race above all others. Walker was particularly inspired by the work of American sociologist [[Edward A. Ross]], who prophesized the extinction of the white race if government did not react.
+
In his later career, Walker became more conservative in his stands, an apologist of the [[Gilded Age]], and staunch critic of [[Henry George]], [[socialism|socialists]], and populists. He was especially harsh on the question of immigration. He believed that immigrants negatively influence the “native” population, as with the greater influx of immigrants the “quality of the general population deteriorates.” His views were typical for his time, when [[Darwinism|Darwin]]ian notions of racial inequality placed the [[Anglo-Saxon]] race above all others. Walker was particularly inspired by the work of American sociologist [[Edward A. Ross]], who prophesized the extinction of the white race if government did not react.
  
 
Walker also observed that the “native” American [[family]] size was decreasing, and sought to explain it in [[sociology|sociological]] and economic terms. According to him, as the result of the increasing number of immigrants coming to work for lower wages, Americans become less willing to have large families, fearing for the future of their children. Walker thus proposed a restricted immigration policy, believing it would have a beneficial effect on the U.S. population. The issue of immigration became a matter of public debate in the early 1910s and 1920s heightening racial and class tensions, remaining an active problem throughout the twentieth century.
 
Walker also observed that the “native” American [[family]] size was decreasing, and sought to explain it in [[sociology|sociological]] and economic terms. According to him, as the result of the increasing number of immigrants coming to work for lower wages, Americans become less willing to have large families, fearing for the future of their children. Walker thus proposed a restricted immigration policy, believing it would have a beneficial effect on the U.S. population. The issue of immigration became a matter of public debate in the early 1910s and 1920s heightening racial and class tensions, remaining an active problem throughout the twentieth century.
Line 52: Line 50:
 
==Publications==   
 
==Publications==   
  
* Walker, Francis A. 1876. ''The Wages Question''. Macmillan & Co
+
*Walker, Francis A. [1874] 2006. ''The Indian Question.'' Ann Arbor: Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library. ISBN 1425523811
* Walker, Francis A. 1883. ''American agriculture (Census report)''. Government Printing Office
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1876. ''The Wages Question.'' Macmillan & Co.
* Walker, Francis A. 1883. ''Money in its Relation to Trade and Industry''. H. Holt and Co.
+
*Walker, Francis A. [1878] 2001. ''Money.'' Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402177437
* Walker, Francis A. 1888. ''Political Economy'' (3rd edition). Macmillan and Co.  
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1883. ''American agriculture (Census report).'' Government Printing Office.
* Walker, Francis A. 1889. ''First lessons in political economy''. H. Holt and Co.  
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1883. ''Money in its Relation to Trade and Industry.'' H. Holt and Co.
* Walker, Francis A. 1891. ''Hancock in the war of the rebellion''. Press of G.J. Little & Co
+
*Walker, Francis A. [1887] 1985. ''History of the Second Army Corps in the Army of the Potomac.'' Butternut Press. ISBN 0913419362
* Walker, Francis A. 1895. ''The Making of the Nation''. C. Scribner's Sons
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1888. ''Political Economy,'' 3rd edition. Macmillan and Co.
* Walker, Francis A. 1985 (original published in 1887). ''History of the Second Army Corps in the Army of the Potomac''. Butternut Press. ISBN 0913419362
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1889. ''First lessons in political economy.'' H. Holt and Co.
* Walker, Francis A. 1987 (original published in 1894). ''General Hancock''. Olde Soldier Books Inc. ISBN 0942211200
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1891. ''Hancock in the war of the rebellion.'' Press of G.J. Little & Co.
* Walker, Francis A. 2001 (original published in 1896). ''International Bimetallism''. University Press of the Pacific.  ISBN 0898753228
+
*Walker, Francis A. [1894] 1987. ''General Hancock.'' Olde Soldier Books Inc. ISBN 0942211200
* Walker, Francis A. 2001 (original published in 1878). ''Money''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402177437
+
*Walker, Francis A. 1895. ''The Making of the Nation.'' C. Scribner's Sons.
* Walker, Francis A. 2006 (original published in 1874). ''The Indian Question''. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library. ISBN 1425523811
+
*Walker, Francis A. [1896] 2001. ''International Bimetallism.'' Honolulu: University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 0898753228
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
  
* Falkner, Roland P. 1897. ''In memoriam: Francis Amasa Walker''. American Academy of Political and Social Science
+
*Falkner, Roland P. 1897. ''In memoriam: Francis Amasa Walker.'' American Academy of Political and Social Science.
* Hoar, George F. 1898. ''Francis Amasa Walker''. G.P.O.  
+
*Hoar, George F. 1898. ''Francis Amasa Walker.'' G. P. O.  
* Munroe, James P. 1923. ''A life of Francis Amasa Walker''. H. Holt and Company
+
*Munroe, James P. 1923. ''A life of Francis Amasa Walker.'' H. Holt and Company.
* Newton, Bernard. 1967. ''The economics of Francis Amasa Walker''. A. M. Kelley  
+
*Newton, Bernard. 1967. ''The economics of Francis Amasa Walker.'' A. M. Kelley.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved April 24, 2017.
 +
*[http://www.nndb.com/people/055/000103743/ ''Francis Amasa Walker''] – Biography.
  
* [http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/walker.htm ''Francis Amasa Walker''] – Biography, bibliography and resources on F. A. Walker
 
* [http://www.census.gov/pubinfo/www/video/Walker.html ''Walker and U.S. Census bureau''] – Movie link to Walker’s work in U.S. Census bureau
 
* [http://www.nndb.com/people/055/000103743/ ''Francis Amasa Walker''] – Biography
 
* [http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/parrington_francis_walker_on_hgeorge.html ''The economics of Francis Amasa Walker''] – On economical ideas of F. A. Walker by . Vernon Louis Parrington
 
  
 
{{Credit1|Francis_Amasa_Walker|74256976|}}
 
{{Credit1|Francis_Amasa_Walker|74256976|}}

Latest revision as of 22:24, 24 April 2017


Francis Amasa Walker

Francis Amasa Walker (July 2, 1840 – January 5, 1897) was a United States army general, economist, and educator. He was famous for his economic theories on wages and profit which discredited the previously accepted "wages-fund" theory that wages were based on preexisting capital assigned for the cost of labor. A pioneer in using statistical data to illustrate economic arguments, Walker strove to establish the "scientific" status of economics. A strong proponent of capitalism, he developed a theory of the entrepreneur and entrepreneurial profit as their "wages" for successful work.

However, later in his career Walker became rather narrow in his beliefs, particularly regarding the issue of immigration. He feared that new immigrants to the United States posed a social and economic threat to those already established families, and advocated government action to restrict further immigration. Although at the end of the nineteenth century, many American citizens were protective of their hard-won way of life, the fears of men like Walker that new immigrants would reduce their quality of life, or fail to assimilate into American life, proved unfounded.

Life

Francis Amasa Walker was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on July 2, 1840, into the family of distinguished economist and politician Amasa Walker. His father inevitably had great influence on his son’s life, particularly in his interest for law and economics. Walker graduated from Amherst College in 1860, where he studied law.

With the beginning of the American Civil War in 1861, Walker joined the Northern army. Walker was particularly skillful in analyzing the enemy troop strength and their position. He showed himself to be a great tactician, and soon rose from the rank of sergeant-major to that of brevet brigadier general of volunteers. The rank was awarded to him at the personal request of General Winfield Scott Hancock. He was wounded at the Battle of Chancellorsville, and captured at Ream's Station, where he was sent to the famous Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia. His health seriously deteriorated and after the war he left army service.

Walker then worked as editor of the Springfield, Massachusetts ‘‘Republican,’’ and chief of the government bureau of statistics. He supervised both the ninth (1870) and tenth (1880) census. He also served as U.S. commissioner of Indian Affairs from 1871 to 1872.

In the 1870s, Walker turned entirely to academic work. From 1872 to 1880 he was professor of political economy at the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale. In 1878, he represented the United States at the Monetary Conference in Paris, and from 1885-1892 he served as the first president of the American Economic Association. He was also president of the American Statistical Association from 1883 to 1897.

From 1881 to his death, he was president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He contributed toward increasing the resources and numbers of the institution. During his tenancy at MIT, the number of students increased from 302, when he started as president, to 1198, when he died. He also worked on promotion of general school education and actively participated in debates on monetary and other government issues.

Walker wrote numerous books and publications, among others: The Wages Question (1876), Money (1878), International Bimetallism (1896), and Political Economy (1884).

Walker stayed at MIT until his death in Boston on January 5, 1897. The Walker Memorial, a students' clubhouse, and one of the MIT buildings on the Charles River, was dedicated in 1916 in his honor.

Work

Walker was a prolific writer, especially on topics in economics, and is regarded as an original and powerful thinker. He tried to establish economics as a scientific discipline, and used statistics as a tool in economic study. His ideas can be classified as Neoclassical, with a strong influence of American Institutionalism. As such, Walker represents the definitive split from classical economics.

One of the Walker’s most important contributions to economic theory is his theory of wages. With his 1876 book The Wages Question, he demolished the old Classical “wages-fund” theory. He also restructured the Ricardian theory of rent and proposed a theory of distribution that became a foundation for later marginal productivity theory of distribution. He supplemented the trinity of land, capital, and labor, or in terms of distribution, of rent, interest, and wages, with a new entity—management and the earnings of management:

Under free and full competition, the successful employers of labor would earn a remuneration which would be exactly measured, in the case of each man, by the amount of wealth which he could produce, with a given application of labor and capital, over and above what would be produced by employers of the lowest industrial, or no-profits, grade, making use of the same amounts of labor and capital, just as rent measures the surplus of the produce of the better lands over and above what would be produced by the same application of labor and capital to the least productive lands which contribute to the supply of the market, lands which themselves bear no rent. (Quarterly Journal of Economics April, 1887)

Walker was a great proponent of capitalist society:

At every step of its progress capital follows one law. It arises solely out of saving. It stands always for self-denial and abstinence" with interest “as the reward of abstinence." (First Lessons in Political Economy 1889)

He saw industrialization as beneficial for the society and advocated for entrepreneurship. Walker argued that entrepreneur profit functions as their wages, and thus he disregarded Marxist notions of class struggle based on the parasitic nature of entrepreneurship. As working people worked for wages, so do entrepreneurs. Profits, then, are an added increment of management, secured by foresight and business skill; and since they flow solely from the entrepreneur, they belong to him alone and no portion may be justly claimed for rent, interest, or wages:

It appears that the gains of the employer are not taken from the earnings of the laboring class, but measure the difference in production between the commonplace or bad, and the able, and shrewd, and strong management of business. (Political Economy 1888).

Walker was also interested in monetary issues, advocating bimetallism. He did not, however, seek to justify any one nation in the attempt to maintain parity between gold and silver.

In his later career, Walker became more conservative in his stands, an apologist of the Gilded Age, and staunch critic of Henry George, socialists, and populists. He was especially harsh on the question of immigration. He believed that immigrants negatively influence the “native” population, as with the greater influx of immigrants the “quality of the general population deteriorates.” His views were typical for his time, when Darwinian notions of racial inequality placed the Anglo-Saxon race above all others. Walker was particularly inspired by the work of American sociologist Edward A. Ross, who prophesized the extinction of the white race if government did not react.

Walker also observed that the “native” American family size was decreasing, and sought to explain it in sociological and economic terms. According to him, as the result of the increasing number of immigrants coming to work for lower wages, Americans become less willing to have large families, fearing for the future of their children. Walker thus proposed a restricted immigration policy, believing it would have a beneficial effect on the U.S. population. The issue of immigration became a matter of public debate in the early 1910s and 1920s heightening racial and class tensions, remaining an active problem throughout the twentieth century.

Legacy

Francis A. Walker's work The Wages Question gave the final blow to the old "wages-fund" theory of wages, and as such laid the foundation for John Bates Clark's descriptions of the marginal products of labor and capital. Walker’s interest in the nature of management and his explicit categorization of the corporation’s profit into wages, rent, and profits, was foundational to Frank Hyneman Knight's work.

Publications

  • Walker, Francis A. [1874] 2006. The Indian Question. Ann Arbor: Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library. ISBN 1425523811
  • Walker, Francis A. 1876. The Wages Question. Macmillan & Co.
  • Walker, Francis A. [1878] 2001. Money. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1402177437
  • Walker, Francis A. 1883. American agriculture (Census report). Government Printing Office.
  • Walker, Francis A. 1883. Money in its Relation to Trade and Industry. H. Holt and Co.
  • Walker, Francis A. [1887] 1985. History of the Second Army Corps in the Army of the Potomac. Butternut Press. ISBN 0913419362
  • Walker, Francis A. 1888. Political Economy, 3rd edition. Macmillan and Co.
  • Walker, Francis A. 1889. First lessons in political economy. H. Holt and Co.
  • Walker, Francis A. 1891. Hancock in the war of the rebellion. Press of G.J. Little & Co.
  • Walker, Francis A. [1894] 1987. General Hancock. Olde Soldier Books Inc. ISBN 0942211200
  • Walker, Francis A. 1895. The Making of the Nation. C. Scribner's Sons.
  • Walker, Francis A. [1896] 2001. International Bimetallism. Honolulu: University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 0898753228

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Falkner, Roland P. 1897. In memoriam: Francis Amasa Walker. American Academy of Political and Social Science.
  • Hoar, George F. 1898. Francis Amasa Walker. G. P. O.
  • Munroe, James P. 1923. A life of Francis Amasa Walker. H. Holt and Company.
  • Newton, Bernard. 1967. The economics of Francis Amasa Walker. A. M. Kelley.

External links

All links retrieved April 24, 2017.


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