'HE FARLY TEACHING OF ECONOMICS IN THE UNITED STATES 303
President Adams and was convicted under the Alien and Sedition
laws, as a result of which he became a popular hero.”
In 1813 he turned his attention anew to economic topics, (hav-
ing first written on the subject in 1799 in his Political Essays)
and became the editor of the Emporium of Arts and Sciences, the
object of which was to stimulate the American manufactures dur-
ing the war. He became a warm friend of Jefferson, who asked
his advice in 1814 as to the proposed curriculum of the nascent
University of Virginia. It was Cooper who recommended the
inclusion of the study of political economy—a suggestion accepted
by Jefferson.” When the time came to fill the professorships at
the University, Jefferson procured his appointment in 1819 as
professor of “chemistry, mineralogy and natural philosophy,”
with a temporary incumbency also of the chair of law. Cooper
had in the meantime been professor of chemistry at Dickinson
College and, since 1816, professor of chemistry and mineralogy
at Pennsylvania.
On account of the attacks made upon his alleged unorthodox
religious opinions, he was compelled to resign from the University
of Virginia, but was at once elected to a professorship of chem-
istry in the College of South Carolina at Columbia, S. C. In
the following year he became president. In 1823 he wrote Two
Tracts on the Proposed Alteration of the Tariff, which com-
manded widespread attention as a powerful argument against
the protective tariff. As a result of his interest in these topics,
when the trustees desired him in 1823 to teach metaphysics, he
remonstrated and suggested the substitution of political economy.
Although the Board agreed, he was unable to assume these
duties until 1825, when he was relieved of the subjects of
rhetoric and belles lettres.?
Cooper's Elements of Political Economy, of which a second
edition was published in 1830, although the title page bears the
date 1829 (compare the reference on page 349 to “The Report last
year, 1829”), was reprinted in London in 1831. It is a portly
volume of 366 pages which, in the words of the author, refrains
from entering upon the metaphysics of political economy and
Nei Win Des of Dr. Cooper,” The South Atlantic Quarterly,
* Dumas Malone, The Public Life of Thomas Cooper, 1783-1839. New
Haven, 1926.
* Malone, op. cit., p. 303.