Contents


Collection Overview

Administrative Information

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Organization of the Collection

Search Terms

Series 1. Writings 1910-1948, n.d.

Series 2. Research Files 1909-1949

Alexander E. Cance Papers, 1911-1958

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Guy A. McLain Jr. and Kenneth Fones-Wolf.

Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

2003

Collection Overview

Creator: Cance, Alexander E.
Title: Alexander E. Cance Papers
Dates: 1911-1958
Abstract: Professor and Head of the Agricultural Economics Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst when it was known as Massachusetts Agricultural College who also worked briefly for Presidents Woodrow Wilson and Herbert Hoover, as well as the United States Department of Agriculture. Includes biographical materials, correspondence concerning Cance's role in the agricultural cooperative movement, addresses, articles (both in typescript and published), lectures, book reviews, typescript of a Carnegie study of factors in agricultural economics, a summary of a U.S. Senate report of which he was co-author, "Agricultural Cooperation and Rural Credit in Europe," and research material. No documentation of his role as a delegate to the Hoover Conference on Economic Crisis, 1920, or his position as Supervisor of Market Research with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1922.
Extent: 6 boxes2.75 linear ft.
Language: English.
Identification: FS 45

Administrative Information

Acquired prior to 1972.

Processed by Guy A. McLain Jr, Kenneth Fones-Wolf, 1983 and 1985.

Preferred Citation

Cite as: Alexander E. Cance Papers (RG 40/11 Cance). Special Collections and University Archives, W.E.B. Du Bois Library, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The collection is open for research.

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Biographical Note

Alexander E. Cance, Professor and Head of the Agricultural Economics Department at the University of Massachusetts, was born in 1874 in Wisconsin. In 1891 he graduated from the academy of Gale College, Galesville, Wisconsin, and taught physics, mathematics, and science through the next year (1892). From there he went to Macalester College of St. Paul, Minnesota, where he received his B.A. in 1896. For the next three years (1896-1899) he taught Mathematics, Greek, Latin, and English Literature at Avalon College, Missouri. In 1900 he taught Mathematics at Diploma Teachers College, Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Cance then spent three years teaching on the high school level, first at Ganesville, Wisconsin (1901), then as Principal of the Industrial and Farm School, Asheville, North Carolina (1902-1904). Cance then returned to Wisconsin, where he earned the M.A. in Psychology and Education (1906) and his Ph.D. in Economics (1908) from the University of Wisconsin.

In the fall of 1909 Cance came to the Massachusetts Agricultural College and initiated his work in Agricultural Cooperation. By 1910 he had organized the first course in "Cooperation in Agriculture" to be offered in the United States. In 1912 he was made the Head of the Department of Agricultural Economics, a post he retained until 1935.

Dr. Cance also served in a variety of roles outside the University. In 1913 he was appointed to President Woodrow Wilson's Committee of Seven to Study Cooperation and Credit in Europe. While serving on this committee he visited cooperative leaders in fourteen countries and assisted in the editing of the four volumes published by the U.S. Senate in 1914. In 1916 the Bureau of the Census selected Cance to make a field study and report on Agriculture in Mississippi, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Directly after the end of World War I, Cance served with the Army Education Corps as Head of the Department of Economics at the University of Beaune, France (1919). Here he taught courses in Agricultural Economics to American servicemen stationed in France. Upon his return to the United States in 1920 he was selected as a delegate to the Hoover Conference on the Economic Crisis, where he served as a member of the Committee for the Agricultural Report. In 1922 he was made Supervisor of Market Research for the United States Department of Agriculture in the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. This was to be Cance's last extended absence from the Massachusetts Agricultural College; he dedicated the rest of his career to expanding the college.

Dr. Cance retired in June 1942 from Massachusetts State College (formerly the Massachusetts Agricultural College). He was honored with a D.Sc. by his Alma Mater, Macalester College, in June 1948. The Institute of Cooperation honored him at its 1948 session in Amherst for his lifetime service to the cooperative movement.

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

The papers document Alexander Cance's distinguished career as professor and Head of the Agricultural Economics Department at the Massachusetts Agricultural College. They include biographical material, a small amount of correspondence (largely professional), addresses, typescripts of articles, an annotated typescript of his book Agricultural Marketing (1916), publications, book reviews, lectures, press notices, research material, lectures and articles by others on agricultural cooperation and economics, and newsclippings.

Well-documented and representing the bulk of the collection are Cance's writings. They include a substantial number of addresses (1925-1934; n.d.), articles both in typescript (1912-1926; n.d.) and published (1911-1925), lectures (n.d.), book reviews (1912-1932), and the Carnegie Study of Factors in Agricultural Economics (1914).

Other materials include: a Senate Report of the American Commission Investigating Cooperative Agriculture in Europe, entitled "Agricultural Cooperation and Rural Credit in Europe" (1914); a small amount of correspondence concerning Cance's role in the agricultural cooperative movement; and some miscellaneous research material.

Largely absent from this collection, with the exception of a few of his lectures, are materials related to his role as a teacher. In addition, these papers include no documentation of Cance's activities as a delegate to the Hoover Conference on Economic Crisis (1920), or his position as Supervisor of Market Research with the United States Department of Agriculture (1922).

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Search Terms

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Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into two series:

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Series 1. Writings 1910-1948, n.d.


Box

Folder

1 1
Biographical materials n.d.

2
Memoirs of an Irresponsible Executive n.d.

3
Correspondence 1945-1948

4-9
Addresses 1911-1934

10-11
Articles 1911-1928

12-13
Articles-Typescripts 1910-1919

Box

Folder

2 14
Articles-Typescripts 1920-1933

15
Book reviews 1912-1932

16-17
Book typescripts 1916, n.d.

18
Carnegie Study report 1914

19
Course Lectures n.d.

20
Course Outlines 1917-1931

21
Press notices n.d.

22-24
Writings-Typescripts n.d.

Series 2. Research Files 1909-1949


Box

Folder

3 1
Agricultural Economics-Research 1925

2-3
Agricultural Production 1909-1934

4
Agricultural Production Costs 1916

5
Agricultural Subsidies 1917

6
Agricultural Survey- Belchertown 1912

7
Agricultural-Massachusetts 1913-1925

8
American Inst. of Cooperation 1932

9
Banks and Agriculture 1916

10-11
Bibliographies 1914-1949

12
Capper-Volstead Act 1922

13
Connecticut Valley Tobacco Growers Assoc. 1917-1929

14
Consumers' Societies 1915

15
Cooperation-Massachusetts 1918-1928

16
Cooperative Associations-Massachusetts 1914-1934

17-18
Cooperative Legislation 1913-1934

Box

Folder

4 19-20
Cooperative Legislation-Massachusetts 1913-1937

21
Country Life 1927

22
County Farm Bureau 1914-1919

23
Credit Unions 1914-1918

24
Dairy Planning 1925-1929

25
Disarmament 1926-1933

26
Egg Selling Exchange 1914

27
Farm Accounting 1914-1919

28
Farm Labor 1912-1916

29
Farm Labor Cooperatives 1912-1914

30
Farmers' Commercial Assoc. n.d.

31-32
Farmers' Cooperative Exchanges 1914-1922

33-34
Food Marketing Research 1916-1928

35
Food Supply 1917

36
Fruit Growers' Cooperatives 1915-1917

37
Immigrants 1911-1916

38
Labor Problems 1918

Box

Folder

5 39
Land Banks 1915-1917

40
Land Depreciation 1913-1914

41
Land Tenure 1911-1922

42
Land Utilization 1916-1917

43
Livestock Planning 1920-1925

44
Manufacturing Investment 1918

45
Massachusetts Dairymen's Assoc. 1932

46
Massachusetts Fruit Growers' Assoc. 1920-1923

47
New England Agricultural Survey n.d.

48
New England Dairies 1926-1932

49
New England Institute of Cooperation 1928

50
New England Milk Producers' Assoc. 1916-1922

51
Polish Corporation Store 1911

52
Principles of Cooperation 1915-1923

53
Rural Credit 1915-1917

54-56
Rural Credit Conditions 1916

57
Rural Credit Legislation 1916

58-59
Rural Problems 1920

60
Rural Social Life 1917-1925

61
Sovereigns of Industry 1911

62
State Aid to Agriculture 1915-1920

Box

Folder

6 63
Statistics-Massachusetts 1910-1925

64
Student Papers n.d.

65
Surveys 1915-1920

66
Tobacco Marketing 1927

67
Vegetable Marketing Cooperatives 1916-1917

68
Vermont Cooperative Creameries 1920

69
World Agriculture Society 1919

70
YMCA War Work 1918