24 Facts About Jeremiah Jenks

1.

Jeremiah Whipple Jenks was an American economist, educator, and Professor at Cornell University, who held various posts in the US government throughout his career.

2.

Jeremiah Jenks served as a member of the Dillingham Immigration Commission from 1907 to 1914 in which he led research projects on the state of immigration to the United States.

3.

Jeremiah Jenks authored several influential books, including The Immigration Problem: A Study of Immigration Conditions and Need, and The Dictionary of Races.

4.

Jeremiah Jenks was among the first social science academics within government and one of the first to propose that the federal government has the power to restrict immigration.

5.

Jeremiah Jenks then went on to study law while teaching at Mount Morris College in Illinois, and was admitted to the Michigan bar in 1881.

6.

Jeremiah Jenks later studied in Germany, earning his doctorate from the University of Halle under Johannes Conrad in 1885.

7.

Jeremiah Jenks held professorships at both Cornell University as a member of the President White School of History and Political Science and New York University.

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8.

Jeremiah Jenks began his career in service for the federal government as a tax commissioner in New York City, and soon moved onto hold various posts within the federal government.

9.

Jeremiah Jenks soon became an advisor to Mexico, Nicaragua, and Germany as well, quickly advancing through the ranks of the federal government.

10.

Jeremiah Jenks was appointed a member of the US Commission on International Exchange, and was appointed to the United States Immigration Commission in 1907.

11.

Jeremiah Jenks was recognized with the Silver Buffalo Award in 1926.

12.

Jeremiah Jenks was interested in the political aspects of economic problems and he served frequently on various government commissions and made many reports on currency, labor, and immigration issues.

13.

Jeremiah Jenks was part of the new school of economic theory during the Progressive Era, which stemmed through his dissertation adviser at the University of Halle, Joseph Conrad, who was an outspoken critic of British Classical Economics.

14.

Jeremiah Jenks made many other trips around the world as a member of the Commission on International Exchange, where he researched colonial policy and the gold standard in countries all over the world.

15.

Progressive economists and Jeremiah Jenks founded the American Economic Association, where he served as president from 1906 - 1907.

16.

Jeremiah Jenks served as an economic adviser at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.

17.

Jeremiah Jenks saw American colonial intervention as a way to offset inefficiencies produced by the native populations, and a way to bring them to the moral standards of America.

18.

Jeremiah Jenks was instrumental in the writing and the passage of the Dillingham Immigration Bill of 1911, which was ultimately vetoed by President William Howard Taft.

19.

In 1916, Jeremiah Jenks was included on a committee led by Sidney Gulick, which sought to end the disproportionate discrimination in the immigration of citizens of Asian countries, and proposed a new model for immigration restrictions.

20.

Jeremiah Jenks was instrumental to the work, as he did much of the hiring for the commission and led many of the research projects that the commission undertook.

21.

Jeremiah Jenks applied his experiences abroad in different colonies across the world, as he increasingly thought it was the duty of the federal government to place restrictions on immigration into the United States.

22.

Jeremiah Jenks then led many studies on the urban congestion, living conditions, and occupations of immigrants from different races.

23.

Jeremiah Jenks was concerned with the effect of immigrants on American morality and hired many women to investigate this effect, particularly in the field of white slavery, or human trafficking.

24.

Jeremiah Jenks and Lauck argued that immigration adversely economic outcomes for native-born Americans.