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DAVID AMES WELLS (1828—1898)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 514 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DAVID AMES WELLS (1828—1898)  ,
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American economist, was born in
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Springfield, Massachusetts, on the 17th of
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June 1828 . He graduated at Williams College in 1847, was on the editorial staff of the Springfield Republican in 1848, and at that time invented a machine for folding
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newspapers and
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book-sheets . He then removed to Cambridge, graduated at the Lawrence Scientific School in 1851, and published in 1850—1865 with George Bliss (1793—1873) an
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Annual of Scientific
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Discovery . In 1866 he patented a
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process for preparing textile fabrics . His essay on the
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national debt, Our Burden and Our Strength (1864), secured him the appointment in 1865 as chairman of the national revenue commission, which laid the basis of scientific taxation in the
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United States . In 1866—187o he was
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special
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commissioner of revenue and published important annual reports; during these years he became an advocate of
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free trade, and he argued that the natural resources of the United States must lead to
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industrial supremacy without the artificial assistance of a protective tariff which must produce an uneven development industrially . The creation of a Federal Bureau of
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Statistics in the Department of the
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Treasury was largely due to Wells's influence . In 1871 he was chairman of the New York State Commission on
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local taxation which urged the abolition of
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personal taxes, except of moneyed corporations, and the levy of a tax on the rental value of dwellings to be paid by the occupant; and in 1878 he reported on New York canal tolls . In 1877 he was president of the American Social Science Association . He died in Norwich,
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Connecticut, on the 5th of November 1898 . He edited many scientific text-books, and wrote The Creed of the Free Trader (1875), Robinson Crusoe's
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Money (1878), Our Merchant Marine (1832) , The Primer of Tariff Reform( 884) ,
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Practical
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Economics (: 885), Principles of Taxation(' 886) ,
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Recent Economic Changes (1889) .

End of Article: DAVID AMES WELLS (1828—1898)
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HERBERT GEORGE WELLS (1866— )

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