Baird, Henry Carey, 1825-1912
Henry Carey Baird éditeur américain
Baird, Henry Carey
Henry Carey Baird
VIAF ID: 70334559 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/70334559
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Baird, Henry Carey
- 100 1 _ ‡a Baird, Henry Carey ‡d 1825-1912
- 100 1 _ ‡a Baird, Henry Carey, ‡d 1825-1912
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Henry Carey Baird
- 100 0 _ ‡a Henry Carey Baird ‡c éditeur américain
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (10)
Works
Title | Sources |
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American and English banking contrasted, an issue for Mr. Carnegie; together with an attempt to explain the very simple cause of the New York city bank crisis of 1907 | |
Argument of Henry Carey Baird, chairman of a committee appointed by a public meeting in Philadelphia, before the committee on ways and means, March 9, 1876 : in opposition to the issue of $500,000,000 30-year gold-bonds for the refunding of an equal amount of 5-20 bonds. | |
Association, 1894: | |
Association : the dominating need of man and the keynote of social science. | |
Brief tracts on some economic questions (1882-'85) | |
The British credit system. Inflated bank credit as a substitute for "current money of the realm". The way "to pay debts without moneys" and to make "the rich richer and the poor poorer". | |
Carey and two of his recent critics : Eugen V. Böhm-Bawerk and Alfred Marshall | |
The Carey-Baird centenary, January 25, 1885. | |
Copyright, national and international. | |
Criticisms on the recent financial policies of the United States and France : including an attempt to explain the cause of the present prostrate condition of the Southern States | |
The duty on books. | |
General Washington and General Jackson, on Negro soldiers | |
Germany. The crime of incompetent governorship, as illustrated by the recent financial and monetary history of Germany. | |
The impending crisis. Protection must be maintained, or past bitter experiences of depression will be repeated. Two pictures: Prosperity under protection, and stagnation in the free-trade days. The duty of the government in regard to the industries of the people. | |
John Sherman : a critical examination of his claims to statesmanship | |
The lessons of German and French finance. A reply to the N.Y. Nation. | |
Letters on the crisis, the currency, and the credit system. | |
Memoir of Col. Alexander Biddle | |
Money | |
Money and bank credit in the United States, France, and Great Britain; and their effects on the people in their efforts to associate, to exchange services, commodities and ideas among their several selves. | |
Money and its substitutes. Commerce and its instruments of adjustment | |
Mr. Hewitt as a philosopher and a statesman. His theory of cheap raw materials as a basis for national wealth, power, and civilization, examined and disputed. | |
National discord and demoralization. | |
The necessary foundations of individual and national well-being, and of civilization : a lecture delivered before the Brooklyn Revenue Reform Club, February 28th, 1883, and before the Young Republicans of Philadelphia, March 31, 1883 | |
Of money, the instrument of association. A lecture delivered at the Wharton school of finance, University of Pennsylvania ... April 14, 1890. | |
The price of silver and its relations to the wheat competition of India | |
Protection of home labor and home productions necessary to the prosperity of the American farmer. | |
Real cause of business stagnation in the United States : a reply to an article in Saint John "Telegraph", July 24th, 1878 | |
Remonetization of silver; testimony before the U. S. Monetary commission... Oct. 3d, 1876... | |
The results of the resumption of specie payments in England, 1819-1823. A lesson and a warning to the people of the United States. | |
Sherman's silver theology. Its soundness disputed | |
Shusui seizōsho, 1873: | |
The silver dollar, the original standard of payment of the United States of America, and its enemies. | |
Some of the fallacies of British free trade revenue reform | |
The South. An attempt to indicate the nature and the cause of its diseases and the remedies for them. | |
The South: shall it ever become so far civilized as to be fit for a republican form of government, obedient to the Constitution and the laws | |
The theory of inflation. A critical examination of a ruinous popular fallacy. | |
Turkey and the United States : how they travel a common road to ruin : addressed by way of warning to Persident Hayes | |
Two letters to Arthur Latham Perry, professor of history and political economy in Williams College | |
The United States Treasury. The American car of juggernaut. To the editor of the press. | |
Victorian furniture, two pattern books | |
Victorian Gothic and Renaissance revival furniture | |
What is "Communism"? ... From the Irish World, June 1, 1878. |