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Corporate Liberalism and Electric Power System Planning in the 1920s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2011
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Examining the efforts to restructure the electric power industry during the early 1920s, this article challenges the view that proponents of corporate liberalism shared a belief in the legitimacy of corporate capitalism and that conflicts among them involved only technical and managerial issues. It argues, rather, that corporate liberals could disagree about the goals of economic planning as well as about tactics and strategy and that they often held conflicting perceptions of the nature of corporate capitalism in American society.
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References
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13 Minutes of the Super Power Advisory Board, 1st Meeting, 24 Sept. 1920, 4, File 59A–158, Water Resources Division—Super Power Survey, Record Group 57, National Archives [hereafter cited as Super Power Minutes].
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15 Super Power Minutes, 2d Meeting, 1 Dec. 1920, 5.
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17 Super Power Minutes, 2d Meeting, 8.
18 Super Power Minutes, 4th Meeting, 18 Feb. 1921, 3.
19 Super Power Minutes, 6th Meeting, 13 May 1921, 17.
20 Super Power Minutes, 7th Meeting, 20 May 1921, 4, 9.
21 Ibid., 12.
22 Ibid., 23.
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42 Morris Cooke, “Ontario Hydro-Electric,” New Republic, 21 June 1922, 103; Cooke to Murray, 1 June 1922, box 60, Cooke Papers. NELA, the trade organization of the utility industry, conducted a vigorous campaign in the 1920s to refute the contention of industry opponents that it was a monopoly.
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52 Cooke to Philip P. Wells, 24 Dec. 1924, box 39, Cooke Papers.
53 George Silzer to Pinchot, 19 Jan. 1925, box 39, Cooke Papers.
54 George Silzer to Pinchot, 30 Sept. 1925; Cooke to Philip P. Wells, 7 Oct. 1925, box 39, Cooke Papers.
55 Hedley Cooke quoted in Christie, Morris L. Cooke: Progressive Engineer, 79; Hughes, “Technology and Public Policy,” 1370.
56 Cooke's views on the cooling tower issue are discussed in Cooke to William Crozier, 2 Dec. 1924, box 265, Cooke Papers, where Cooke noted that “ … some of the largest stations abroad are now placed at the mines where there is no water, and where even in our own country and our own state stations larger than the average are now operating with only enough water to make up for evaporation.”
57 Memorandum, ’Giant Power Bills,” 14 Jan. 1926, container 2882, Gifford Pinchot Papers, Library of Congress.
58 For a more detailed discussion of Giant Power technology see Hughes, Networks Power, 312–13; and Hughes, “Technology and Public Policy,” 1370.
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60 Hoover to Murray, 22 Aug. 1923, box 422; Hoover to Guy Tripp, chairman, Westinghouse Electric Co., 27 Aug. 1923, box 590, Hoover Papers.
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65 “Super Power Studies: Northeast Section of the United States,” May 1924, and “Engineering Sub-Committee Report, Northeast Superpower Commission,” 26 July 1924, both in box 590, Hoover Papers.
66 Summary of Statement of Secretary Hoover to the Super Power Conference, New York, 13 Oct. 1923, box 162, Hoover Papers.
67 Henry Stimson to Hoover, 13 Jan. 1925, box 590, Hoover Papers. Stimson told Hoover “Pinchot's people … are not as wild or visionary on this subject [interconnection] as you seem to fear.”
68 Cooke to Pinchot, 19 Oct. 1923, box 36, Cooke Papers.
69 Cooke to Philip Wells, 16 Nov. 1923, container 1536, Pinchot Papers; New York Times, 8 Oct. 1923, 19.
70 Cooke to Pinchot, 19 Oct. 1923; Cooke to Philip Wells, 16 Nov. 1923.
71 Cooke to Pinchot, 25 Oct. 1923, box 36, Cooke Papers.
72 Pinchot to Hoover, 22 Nov. 1923, container 1536, Pinchot Papers.
73 Cooke to Pinchot, 25 Oct. 1923.
74 Memorandum, “Pinchot,” 20 July 1925, box 591, Hoover Papers. Pinehot's letter to Congress quoted in New York Times, 20 July 1925.
75 Hoover to Norman Hapgood, 12 Nov. 1927, box 591, Hoover Papers.
76 For a discussion of the differences between Cooke and Hoover see Layton, Revolt of the Engineers, chap. 8.
77 Gaddis, John Lewis, “The Corporatist Synthesis: A Skeptical View,” Diplomatic History 10 (Fall 1986): 359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar For a defense of the use of corporatism in diplomatic history see Hogan, Michael J., “Corporatism,” Journal of American History 77 (June 1990): 153–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Studies in diplomatic history that embrace corporatism include McCormick, Thomas J., “Drift or Mastery? A Corporatist Synthesis for American Diplomatic History,” Reviews in American History 10 (Dec. 1982): 321–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wilson, Joan Hoff, Ideology and Economics: U.S. Relations with the Soviet Union, 1918–1933 (Columbia, Mo., 1974)Google Scholar; Hogan, Michael J., Informal Entente: The Private Structure of Cooperation in Anglo-American Economic Diplomacy, 1918–1928 (Columbia, Mo., 1977)Google Scholar; and Leffler, Melvyn P., The Elusive Quest: America's Pursuit of European Stability and French Security, 1919–1933 (Chapel Hill, N.C., 1979).Google Scholar
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