William F. Willoughby
American scholar (1867–1960)
William Franklin Willoughby (born 1867 in Alexandria, Virginia – died 1960) was an author of public administration texts including works on budgeting. He often worked with his twin brother, Westel W. Willoughby.
He graduated from Johns Hopkins University, 1885[1]
Family
Wife: Bessie Talbot (Appleby) Willoughby[1] Siblings: brother, Westel Woodbury Willoughby (1867–1945); sister, Alice Estelle Willoughby[1]
Biography
He was born on 20 July 1867 in Alexandria, Virginia to Westel Willoughby and his wife Jennie.
- Died: 6 May 1960 of a heart attack, Newport News, Virginia
- Graduated from Johns Hopkins University, 1885[1]
- Siblings: brother, Westel Woodbury Willoughby (1867–1945); sister, Alice Estelle Willoughby[1]
- Wife: Bessie Talbot (Appleby) Willoughby[1]
Leadership Positions
- Statistical expert for U.S. Department of Labor, 1885[1]
- Member of International Jury of Awards, Paris Exposition of 1900[1]
- Instructor of economics at Harvard, 1901[1]
- First Director of Brookings Institution
- Treasurer, secretary, and president of Executive Council of Puerto Rico of the Island of Puerto Rico, appointed Nov. 9 1901 by President Theodore Roosevelt, 1901–1909[1][2]
- Assistant director of U.S. Census, 1910[1]
- Member of U.S. Commission of Economy and Efficiency in Government[1]
- McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton, 1912[1]
- Deputy legal advisor to president of China,Yuan Shikai, 1914–1916[1][3]
- Director of the Institute for Government Research, 1916–1932[1]
- President of the American Political Science Association, 1931–1932
- Consultant to the Library of Congress, 1940–1944[1]
Publications
- Child Labor. By William F. Willoughby, A.B., and Miss Clare de Graffenried. Publications of the American Economic Association.[4]
- Workingmen's Insurance. Crowell and Company. 1898.[5][6]
- The System of Financial Administration of Great Britain. A. Report by William F. Willoughby, Westel W. Willoughby, and Samuel Mccdne Lindsay. With- an Introduction by A. Laurence Lowell. (New York.: Appleton and Co. for the Institute of Government Research. 1917.)[7]
- The Movement for Budgetary Reform in the States, D. Appleton and Co. NY. 1918
- The Government of Modern States, The Century Co., 1919
- Government Organization in War Time and After: A Survey of the Federal Civil Agencies Created for the Prosecution of the War, 1919
- The National Budget System, With Suggestions for Its Improvement, The Johns Hopkins Press, 1927
- Principles of judicial administration. Brooking Institution, 1929.[8]
- Financial Condition and Operations of the National Government 1921–1930, The Brookings Institution, 1931
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Manuscripts and Rare Books Department, Swem Library, The College of William and Mary in Virginia [1]
- ^ The New York Times, 10 Nov. 1901
- ^ Ramsey, Elizabeth Courtenay (1976). William F Willoughby, a Progressive in China, 1914-1916. College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences.
- ^ Bemis, Edward W. (1891-03-01). "Child Labor, by William F. Willoughby, Clare de Graffenried". Political Science Quarterly. 6 (1): 188–189. doi:10.2307/2139250. ISSN 0032-3195.
- ^ Cummings, Edward (1898). "Workingmen's Insurance . William Franklin Willoughby". Journal of Political Economy. 6 (4): 556–560. doi:10.1086/250539. ISSN 0022-3808.
- ^ McLean, Francis H. (1898). "Review of Workingmen's Insurance". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 12: 107–111. ISSN 0002-7162.
- ^ Higgs, Henry (1917). "Review of The System of Financial Administration of Great Britain.; The National Budget System and American Finance.; The Principles and Practice of the System of Control over Parliamentary Grants". The Economic Journal. 27 (108): 523–527. doi:10.2307/2222244. ISSN 0013-0133.
- ^ Moley, Raymond (1930). "Principles of judicial administration. by William F. Willoughby. Washington: The brookings institute, 1929. 390 pp". National Municipal Review. 19 (2): 100–101. doi:10.1002/ncr.4110190208. ISSN 0190-3799.
External links
- Works by William F. Willoughby at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about William F. Willoughby at Internet Archive
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Presidents of the American Political Science Association
- Frank Johnson Goodnow (1903–1905)
- Albert Shaw (1905–1906)
- Frederick N. Judson (1906–1907)
- James Bryce (1907–1908)
- A. Lawrence Lowell (1908–1909)
- Woodrow Wilson (1909–1910)
- Simeon E. Baldwin (1910–1911)
- Albert Bushnell Hart (1911–1912)
- Westel W. Willoughby (1912–1913)
- John Bassett Moore (1913–1914)
- Ernst Freund (1914–1915)
- Jesse Macy (1915–1916)
- Munroe Smith (1916–1918)
- Henry Jones Ford (1918–1919)
- Paul Samuel Reinsch (1919–1920)
- Leo Stanton Rowe (1920–1921)
- William Archibald Dunning (1921–1922)
- Harry Augustus Garfield (1922–1923)
- James Wilford Garner (1923–1924)
- Charles Edward Merriam (1924–1925)
- Charles A. Beard (1925–1926)
- William B. Munro (1926–1927)
- Jesse S. Reeves (1927–1928)
- John A. Fairlie (1928–1929)
- Benjamin F. Shambaugh (1929–1930)
- Edward Samuel Corwin (1930–1931)
- William F. Willoughby (1931–1932)
- Isidor Loeb (1932–1933)
- Walter J. Shepard (1933–1934)
- Francis W. Coker (1934–1935)
- Arthur N. Holcombe (1935–1936)
- Thomas Reed Powell (1936–1937)
- Clarence Addison Dykstra (1937–1938)
- Charles Grove Haines (1938–1939)
- Robert C. Brooks (1939–1940)
- Frederic A. Ogg (1940–1941)
- William Anderson (1941–1942)
- Robert E. Cushman (1942–1943)
- Leonard D. White (1943–1944)
- John Gaus (1944–1945)
- Walter F. Dodd (1945–1946)
- Arthur MacMahon (1946–1947)
- Henry R. Spencer (1947–1948)
- Quincy Wright (1948–1949)
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- V. O. Key Jr. (1957–1958)
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- Carl Brent Swisher (1959–1960)
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- Seymour Martin Lipset (1981–1982)
- William H. Riker (1982–1983)
- Philip Converse (1983–1984)
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- Aaron Wildavsky (1985–1986)
- Samuel P. Huntington (1986–1987)
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- Henry E. Brady (2009–2010)
- Carole Pateman (2010–2011)
- G. Bingham Powell (2011–2012)
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- Mark E. Warren (2023–present)
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