314 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK :
his character was such as to inspire respect and veneration and to
endear him to all who knew him.” * He died in 1868.
The reason that McVickar abandoned the teaching of Political
Economy at the time was no doubt the fact that in that year
there was created at Columbia a new chair of History and
Political Science, to which the distinguished scholar Francis
Lieber was called. Lieber continued to teach political economy
in addition to his famous lectures on history, political philosophy,
and comparative jurisprudence. When he died, in 1872, political
sconomy was assigned for a few years to Professor Nairne, the
accomplished Professor of Philosophy and English Literature. In
1876 Professor John W. Burgess was called to the new chair of
History, Political Science and International Law, and a year or
two later Richmond Mayo-Smith was called to Columbia and
to him was transferred the teaching of political economy, a
separate professorship for that purpose being created in 1881.
In the other American colleges political economy was intro-
duced at almost the same time. In 1825, the same year when
Dr. Cooper began his lectures, the subject is found in both Yale
and Rutgers.
At Yale it appears as a part of the regular curriculum for
seniors in 1825. Whether the subject was previously taught at
Yale is uncertain. We know that President Timothy Dwight had
charge of the course in Moral Philosophy before 1825, and we
are told that he dealt with the “more important disputable points
in Science, Politics, Morals, and Theology.” * As to how far
Economics was included under the head of Politics is not quite
clear.
The probability that Mr. Dwight touched on economic topics
is evident from the list of published questions that he discussed
with the Senior class in Yale College in 1813 and 1814. Among
the questions decided are the following:
Dispute II-—Ought Foreign Immigration to be encouraged?
Dispute IX—Ought the Poor to be supported by Law?
Dispute XX—Is a Savage State preferable to a Civilized?
t A History of Columbia University, 1754-1904. New York, 1904, p. 142.
Further details of his life may be found in William A. McVickar, The Life
of the Reverend John McVickar, New York, 1872.
2 Timothy Dwight’s Theology Explained and Defended, with a Memoir
mn the Life of the Author, 7th ed. New York, 1830, 1-47.