1. Benjamin Anderson was born in Columbia, Missouri on May 1,1886, to Benjamin McLean Anderson, a businessman and politician, and Mary Frances Anderson.

1. Benjamin Anderson was born in Columbia, Missouri on May 1,1886, to Benjamin McLean Anderson, a businessman and politician, and Mary Frances Anderson.
Benjamin Anderson soon became a degree-seeking student again, this time pursuing his AM from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Benjamin Anderson completed his master's degree in 1910 and finished his Ph.
Benjamin Anderson left Harvard to join New York City's National Bank of Commerce in 1918.
Benjamin Anderson remained with NBC for only two years before Chase National Bank hired him as an economist and as the new editor of the bank's Chase Economic Bulletin.
Benjamin Anderson was a leading opponent of the New Deal and an enthusiastic supporter of a free market gold standard.
In 1939, Benjamin Anderson again entered the academic community, this time as a professor of economics at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Benjamin Anderson held this position until his death at Santa Monica Hospital on January 19,1949.
Henry Hazlitt, who is often cited as having popularized Austrian economics in the English-speaking world, credits Benjamin Anderson with acquainting him with the work of Ludwig von Mises and other Austrians.
Benjamin Anderson was an acute critic of nearly all other writers on money, and especially of Irving Fisher and his mechanical quantity theory of money.
Mac Benjamin Anderson read German, and discussed many German writers on money.
Benjamin Anderson's Theorie des Geldes und der Umlaufsmittel is an exceptionally excellent book.
Outside of Austrian circles, though, Benjamin Anderson's writings encountered a cooler reception from the then-dominant Progressives, who disagreed with his calls for reducing government intervention in the market.
Benjamin Anderson was a skilled chess player and penned the preface to Jose Raul Capablanca's A Primer of Chess.