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CHANDLER, ALFRED DUPONT


Alfred DuPont Chandler (1918–) is a U.S. historian, specializing in the history of business. A Harvard graduate and professor emeritus, Chandler wrote and edited numerous books and articles about business history and famous businesspeople. Over the course of five decades he helped establish this field of study and earned a reputation as a business expert.

Alfred Chandler was born September 15, 1918, in Guyencourt, Delaware, to Alfred Dupont and Carol Remsay Chandler. He studied at Harvard University, where he earned his Bachelor of Arts in 1940. After graduation Chandler joined the Navy, where he served until 1945. He then returned to Harvard to study history and earned his Master of Arts in 1947, and his Ph.D. in 1952.

In 1950 Chandler began working as a research associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.). He also began his first editing project that year, working as an assistant editor for Elting M. Morison and John M. Blum on The Letters of Theodore Roosevelt. Once he earned his doctorate, he became a faculty member at M.I.T. and remained there until 1963. Chandler wrote his first book in 1956, Henry Varnum Poor: Business Editor, Analyst, and Reformer, which highlighted his interest in the field of business history.

Chandler's second book, Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the Industrial Enterprise, was a study in organizational behavior. The work was highly regarded, and Chandler won a Newcomen Award for it in 1962. Chandler began to establish a reputation as a respected business historian. In 1963 he left M.I.T. to join the faculty at Johns Hopkins University, where he became director of the Center for Study of Recent American History and department chairman in 1966. During this time, Chandler also wrote his next book, Giant Enterprises: Ford, General Motors, and the Automotive Industry, and edited a book called The Railroads. Chandler's expertise as a historian landed him a position as the chairman of the Historical Advisory Committee of the United States Atomic Energy Commission in 1969, a post he held until 1977.


The 1970s were a prolific period for Chandler. He started off the decade with his five-volume series on The Papers of Dwight David Eisenhower. In 1970 Chandler was the Thomas Henry Carroll Ford Foundation Visiting Fellow at Harvard University, and he was also a member of the National Advertising Council's Committee on Educational and Professional Development. Although he was also a visiting scholar at All Souls, Oxford University, and the European Institute in Washington, D.C., Chandler stayed at Harvard as the Isidor Strauss Professor of Business History in the Graduate School of Business. In 1971 he co-authored two books with Stephen Salsbury, Pierre S. du Pont and The Making of the Modern Corporation.

Chandler's most popular book, The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business appeared in 1977. The book's focus on managers and institutions was well received by the public. The New Republic called The Visible Hand "a triumph of creative synthesis." Robert L. Heilbroner of the New York Review of Books said the book was "a major contribution to economics, as well as to business history, because it provides powerful insights into the ways in which the imperatives of capitalism shaped at least one aspect of the business world—its tendency to grow into giant companies in some industries but not in others." The book was such a success it won Chandler both the Pulitzer and the Bancroft prizes in 1978.

Chandler continued to write about business and economic markets in the 1980s. In 1988 he published The Essential Alfred Chandler: Essays Toward a Historical Theory of Big Business, which contains a biographical introduction by editor Thomas McCraw. The next year Chandler retired from the Harvard Business School, but he continued his research and writing. In 1990 he published Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism, with the assistance of Takashi Hikino. In that book Chandler examined the history of 600 top firms in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany for three-quarters of the twentieth century. He evaluated the significance of what was considered an indispensable historical reference. In 1991 Financial World dubbed Chandler the "dean of American business history."

Since the publication of Scale and Scope, Chandler wrote many articles on the history of the firm, the logic of industrial success, and corporate structure. He also edited and co-edited several more books, including Big Business and the Wealth of Nations and The Dynamic Firm: The Role of Technology, Strategy, Organizations, and Regions. Even after a decade of retirement, Chandler continued to maintain a leading role in the field of business history through the end of the twentieth century.


FURTHER READING

Alford, B.W.E. "Chandlerism, the New Orthodoxy of US and European Corporate Development." Journal of European Economic History, 23, Winter 1994.

Amatori, Franco. "Reflections on Global Business and Modern Italian Enterprise by a Stubborn 'Chandlerian."' Business History Review, 71, Summer 1997.

Chandler, Alfred Dupont. The Essential Alfred Chandler: Essays Toward a Historical Theory of Big Business. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1988.

——. The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1977.

"A Chat with the Dean of American Business History." Financial World, 160, June 25, 1991.

Parker, William N. "The Scale and Scope of Alfred D. Chandler, Jr." The Journal of Economic History, 51, December, 1991.

NO OTHER AUTHOR IN OUR FIELD OF STUDIES HAS OFFERED US SO MUCH BOTH IN TERMS OF RESEARCH RESULTS AS WELL AS TOOLS FOR THE ANALYSIS AND DEFINITION OF THE GLOBAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE MODERN LARGE ENTERPRISE.

Franco Amatori, Business History Review, Summer 1997

Chandler, Alfred Dupont

Copyright © 1999 by The Gale Group


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