Outlines a new method of discovering original documents related to management history. Uses seemingly insignificant statements in books, articles or original documents to locate documents not listed on any computer database or public archive records, but which are undiscovered in attics or basements. The method involves the use of sources not commonly used by management scholars: obituaries, wills, cemetery records, deeds, land‐ownership maps, city directories and court records. Provides two examples to illustrate the discovery of actual documents: (1) the discovery of ten years of correspondence between F.W. Taylor and S. Thompson on the time required to do work, and (2) new evidence on F.W. Taylor’s interest in high‐heat treatment of tool steel leading to high‐speed steel and in shovels and shovelling. Finally presents new evidence on Taylor’s secret agreement with Bethlehem Steel to give favourable testimony in a patent case in exchange for a free licence for the high‐speed steel process Taylor had sold to Bethlehem for more than $50,000 in 1901.
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1 March 1997
Literature Review|
March 01 1997
A new method of discovering primary management history: two examples where “little things mean a lot” Available to Purchase
Charles D. Wrege;
Charles D. Wrege
Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA
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Ronald G. Greenwood;
Ronald G. Greenwood
GMI Engineering & Management Institute, Flint, Michigan, USA
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Regina Greenwood
Regina Greenwood
GMI Engineering & Management Institute, Flint, Michigan, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-776X
Print ISSN: 1355-252X
© MCB UP Limited
1997
Journal of Management History (Archive) (1997) 3 (1): 59–92.
Citation
Wrege CD, Greenwood RG, Greenwood R (1997), "A new method of discovering primary management history: two examples where “little things mean a lot”". Journal of Management History (Archive), Vol. 3 No. 1 pp. 59–92, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/13552529710168870
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