John Taylor: Economist of Southern Agrarianism

John Taylor, of Caroline, has for long attracted students of American political and intellectual history as the great adversary of Federalist policy and the prodigious defender of the economic order of the South. Taylor's prolix writings range widely over political philosophy, economic doctrine...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSouthern economic journal Vol. 11; no. 3; pp. 255 - 268
Main Author Grampp, William D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chapel Hill, N.C., etc Southern Economic Association and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 01.01.1945
Southern Economic Association and the University of North Carolina
Southern Economic Association
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Summary:John Taylor, of Caroline, has for long attracted students of American political and intellectual history as the great adversary of Federalist policy and the prodigious defender of the economic order of the South. Taylor's prolix writings range widely over political philosophy, economic doctrine and policy, and they have furnished abundant material for the study of Virginia's great agrarian. Yet for all such profusion of riches and the allure they have held for historians, the student of theoretical economics cannot be very happy over the treatment Taylor has been accorded in this field.
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ISSN:0038-4038
2325-8012
DOI:10.2307/1053268