HE EARLY TEACHING OF ECONOMICS IN THE UNITED STATES 291
ccordance with the best traditions of the old country, some
eaching on economic questions was included in the course.
owever that be, we know that in 1763 a more elaborate plan
f education was adopted and that the third-year class now
tudied the ethics of Hutcheson, and that the fourth-year class
tudied “Grotius or Pudendorf (sic) as well as a continuation of
he moral philosophy of Hutcheson et alienum.” Inasmuch as
t was this same Hutcheson, whose lectures on moral philosoph
ere attended by Adam Smith, it is not an unreasonable sup
osition that the course also included, as in the mother country
he subject of police later called political economy.
at happened during the next decade or two 1s uncertain.
n 1784, however, after Kings College had been reconstituted as
olumbia College, a committee of the graduates, of which Alex-
nder Hamilton was now a member, reported on the plan of edu-
ation. The committee recommended, among other things, in
ddition to three professorships in the Faculty of Law,—dealing
espectively with the law of nature and nations, the Roman civil
aw, and municipal law,—the creation of eight professorships in
he Faculty of Medicine, and sixteen professorships in the Faculty
f Arts. Two of these latter professorships were to deal respec-
ively with commerce and agriculture and were to be additional
o the professorship in moral philosophy. Among the chairs
hat were actually filled was that of geography.
here has fortunately been preserved a description of the
nstruction in geography by Professor Gross. He taught to the
ophomore class, three times a week, a course characterized as a
escription of the globe in respect of all general matters, includ-
ng “the origin of the present states and kingdoms, their extent,
ower, commerce, religion, and customs.” This was evidently
he earliest course of which we have any information dealing
ith economic topics, even though the character of the instruction
seems to have been descriptive rather than analytical. A few
years later Professor Gross was transferred to the chair of moral
hilosophy, a subject which he had taught from the ver
er
* The plan of education of 1763 is found in The History of Columbia
University, p. 451.
? As to these points see History of Columbia University, pp. 64, 69. So
ar as Professor Gross’ instruction in history is concerned, cf. Herbert B.
Adams, “The Study of History in American Colleges and Universities,”
Bureau of Education, Circular of Information, no. 2, 1887, p. 60.