Taylor Society
The Taylor Society was created in 1912 at the New York Athletic Club by followers of Frederick W. Taylor, including Frank Gilbreth, Morris Llewellyn Cooke, Robert Kent, Conrad Lauer (for Charles Day), and Wilfred Lewis.[1]
In 1925 the Society declared that it 'welcomes to membership all who have become convinced that "the business men of tomorrow must have the engineer-mind".'[2]
The Taylor Society merged with the Society of Industrial Engineers in 1936, forming the Society for Advancement of Management.[1][3]
Key figures and membership
At the entry of the United States into World War One in 1917, the Society's membership numbered around 100.[2]
Prominent interwar members included Lyndall Urwick, William Leffingwell, Harlow S. Person, Lillian Gilbreth, Mary van Kleeck, Henry Gantt, Sanford E. Thompson, Richard Feiss, Hans Renold, Henri Le Châtelier and Oliver Sheldon.
From 1919, the Society's permanent secretary was Harlow S. Person.[4]
By 1925 the expanded Taylor Society had 800 members.[2]
Presidents of the Society
The Society's president from 1919-1921 was Henry S. Dennison, owner of Dennison Manufacturing Co. Paper Box Factory.[5] In 1927 its President was Morris Llewellyn Cooke[6] and in 1932 Sanford E. Thompson.[7]
Activities
The Taylor Society received early support from the British Fabian Society.[8]
The Society was largely responsible for the research and publication of the first biography of F.W. Taylor by Frank Copley, published in 1923.[9]
The Taylor Society were involved in the Committee on American Participation to the Prague International Management Congress in 1924.[2] Frank Gilbreth died prior to the conference and his wife, Dr. Lillian Gilbreth, also a Taylor Society member, appeared in his place. This substitution was later made famous by the movie Cheaper by the Dozen (1950).
It had close connections with the Geneva-based International Management Institute (IMI) and International Labour Organization (ILO).[10] From 1928 until its closure in 1933, the IMI was headed by Taylor Society member Lyndall Urwick.[11][12]
Bulletin of the Taylor Society
The Society's regular periodical was the Bulletin of the Taylor Society,[2] full editions of which can be found in the F.W. Taylor archive at the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey. Its successor publication was the Bulletin of the Society of the Advancement of Management.
A 1914-1934 index of articles from the Bulletin, and many Bulletin articles, is in Donald Del Mar and Rodger D. Collons, Classics in Scientific Management: a Book of Readings (University of Alabama Press, c.1976).
Engagement with the Bedaux System
Initially, the Taylor Society appears to have been unperturbed by the Bedaux System and its Bedaux Unit: in 1927 a discussion of the Bedaux Point System appeared in the Society's Bulletin without additional comment.[13]
However, its approach to Bedaux became more antagonistic. In 1929, the Society supported Southern textile workers in their strike against the Bedaux System, which textile workers believed was 'even worse than the old "Taylor Stop-Watch System"'.[14]
Soon after the dissolution of the Taylor Society, its long-standing secretary Harlow S. Person responded to the Charles Bedaux & Duke of Windsor fiasco by stating that the Taylor System, which required much management restructuring, and the Bedaux System, which could be applied 'as is', were 'poles apart'.[15]
Publications
- Taylor Society, Frederick Winslow Taylor: a memorial volume; being addresses delivered at the funeral of Frederick Winslow Taylor (1915) online at Archive.org
- Harlow S. Person, 'What is the Taylor Society?' Bulletin of the Taylor Society (December 1922)
- Frank Barkley Copley, Frederick W. Taylor, Father of Scientific Management (Harper and Brothers, 1923) 2 vols. online at Archive.org
- Taylor Society, Critical Essays on Scientific Management (New York, 1925)
- Taylor Society, Union-Management Cooperation in the Railway Industry (New York, 1926)
- Harlow S. Person, Scientific Management in American Industry (Harper & Brothers, 1929) online at Archive.org
References
- 1 2 http://samnational.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/SAMHistory1912-1987b.pdf
- 1 2 3 4 5 Percy S. Brown, 'The Works and Aims of the Taylor Society' Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (May, 1925) online at JSTOR
- ↑ Link to Society for Advancement of Management
- ↑ Daniel Nelson, 'The Transformation of University Business Education' in A Mental Revolution: Scientific Management Since Taylor (1992) "Link" (PDF).
- ↑ Kyle Bruce, 'Henry S. Dennison, Elton Mayo, and Human Relations historiography' Management & Organizational History Vol. 1, No. 2 (2006), pp.177-199.
- ↑ The Taylor Society Looks Ahead (1927)
- ↑ Lyndall Urwick, The Golden Book of Management: A Historical Record of the Life and Work of Seventy Pioneers (1956)
- ↑ 'A Word from the Fabian Socialists' Bulletin of the Taylor Society (June, 1919)
- ↑ Copley, Frank Barkley, Frederick W. Taylor, Father of Scientific Management (Harper and Brothers, 1923) 2 vols. online at Archive.org
- ↑ Nyland, Chris, Bruce, Kyle and Burns, Prue, 'Taylorism, the International Labour Organization, and the Genesis and Diffusion of Codetermination' Organization Studies (2014)
- ↑ Charles D. Wrege, Ronald G. Greenwood, and Sakae Hata, 'The International Management Institute and Political Opposition to its Efforts in Europe, 1925-1934' Business and Economic History (1987) PDF link
- ↑ E.FL. Brech, Andrew Thomson and John F. Wilson, Lyndall Urwick, Management Pioneer: A Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010).
- ↑ 'News of the Sections' Bulletin of the Taylor Society (1927).
- ↑ Milton Nadworny, Scientific Management and the Unions: 1900- 1932. A Historical Analysis (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1955)
- ↑ Michael R. Weatherburn, 'Scientific Management at Work: the Bedaux System, Management Consulting, and Worker Efficiency in British Industry, 1914-48' (Imperial College PhD thesis, 2014). "Download PDF from Imperial College, London".
Further reading
- Percy S. Brown, 'The Works and Aims of the Taylor Society' Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (May, 1925) online at JSTOR
- Donald Del Mar and Rodger D. Collons, Classics in Scientific Management: a Book of Readings (University of Alabama Press, c.1976)
- Samuel Haber, Efficiency and Uplift: Scientific Management in the Progressive Era, 1890-1920 (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1964)
- Milton Nadworny, Scientific Management and the Unions: 1900- 1932. A Historical Analysis (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1955)
- Carlos E. Pabon, Regulating Capitalism: the Taylor Society and Political Economy in the Inter-War Period (PhD thesis, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, 1992) PDF online
- Lyndall Urwick, The Golden Book of Management: A Historical Record of the Life and Work of Seventy Pioneers (1956)