Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T16:34:38.199Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

How did the Invisible Hand Handle Industrial Waste? By-product Development before the Modern Environmental Era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2015

Abstract

A growing number of historians have turned their attention to the past behavior of industrialists toward their waste. Many have argued that the price system and competition typically fostered a short-term outlook that rewarded pollution rather than encouraging “loop-closing,” a modern term that refers to the linkages between different industries in which the residual of one becomes the input of another. Others have identified precedents in this respect that are credited to Progressive Era reformers. Building on evidence that has, by and large, escaped the attention of the present generation of historical writers, this essay challenges both views by arguing that market institutions, which included both profit motive and property rights, actually resulted in the usage of industrial by-products. Although past industrial activities did create significant pollution problems, perhaps our ancestors should be given more credit than they generally are for the creativity and resourcefulness they displayed in profitably solving numerous environmental problems.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2007. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography of Works Cited

Books

Akin, William E. Technocracy and the American Dream: The Technocrat Movement, 1900–1941. Berkeley, Calif., 1977.Google Scholar
Ayres, Robert U., and Ayres, Leslie W., eds. A Handbook of Industrial Ecology. Cheltenham, U.K., 2002.Google Scholar
Boyle, Godfrey, Everett, Bob, and Ramage, Janet. Energy Systems and Sustainability: Power for a Sustainable Future. Oxford, U.K., 2003.Google Scholar
Brubaker, Elizabeth. Property Rights in the Defence ofNature. Toronto, 1995.Google Scholar
Bruttini, Arturo. Uses of Waste Materials. The Collection of Waste Materials and Their Uses for Human and Animal Food, in Fertilisers, and in Certain Industries 1914–1922. London, 1923, (Available at http://www.dli.gov.in/ULIB/web/handle8.pl?call=149).Google Scholar
Chase, Stuart. The TragedyofWaste. New York, 1925.Google Scholar
Clapp, Brian William. An Environmental History of Britain since the Industrial Revolution. Harlow, U.K., 1994.Google Scholar
Clemen, Rudolf A. By-Products in the Packing Industry. Chicago, 1927, (Available at http://historical.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/cul.neh/docviewer?did=clemen).Google Scholar
Descriptive Catalogue of the Collection Illustrating the Utilization of Waste Products. London, 1875.Google Scholar
Freycinet, Charles de. Traite d’assainissement industriel, comprenant la description des principaux procedes employes dans les centres manufacturiers de l’Europe occidentale pour proteger la sante publique et l’agriculture contre les effets des travaux industriels. Paris, 1870.Google Scholar
Freycinet, Charles de. Souvenirs 1848–1878. Paris, 1912.Google Scholar
Gluud, W., ed. International Handbook of the By-Product Coking Industry. London, 1932, (English edition by E. M. Myers, based on American revision by D. L. Jacobson.).Google Scholar
Hays, Samuel P. Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency: The Progressive Conservation Movement, 1890–1920. Cambridge, Mass., 1959.Google Scholar
Hobson, John. A. TheEvolution ofModern Capitalism: AStudyofMachine Production. New York, 1894.Google Scholar
Institute of Meat Packing. Readings on By-Products of the Meat-Packing Industry. Chicago, 1941.Google Scholar
Jordan, John M. Machine-Age Ideology: Social Engineeringand American Liberalism, 1911–1939. Chapel Hill, N.C., 1994.Google Scholar
Kershaw, John B.C. The Recovery and Use of Industrial and Other Waste. London, 1928.Google Scholar
Koller, Theodor. The Utilisation of Waste Products: A Treatise on the Rational Utilisation, Recovery, and Treatment of Waste Products of All Kinds. (Translated from the 2nd revised edition). London, 1902.Google Scholar
Koller, Theodor. The Utilisation of Waste Products: A Treatise on the Rational Utilisation, Recovery, and Treatment ofWaste Products ofAll Kinds (3rd revised edition, translated from the 2nd revised German edition). New York, 1918., (Available at http://www.archive.org/texts/texts-details-db.php?collection=millionbooks&collectionid=TheUtiliztionOfWasteProducts).Google Scholar
Lipsett, Charles H. The Fabulous Wall Street Scrap Giants. New York, 1969.Google Scholar
Lipsett, Charles H. A Hundred Years of Recycling History: From Yankee Tincart Peddlers to Wall Street Scrap Giants. New York, 1974.Google Scholar
Lipsett, Charles H. Industrial Wastes and Salvage: Conservation and Utilization. New York, 1951.Google Scholar
Lomborg, Bjorn. The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State ofthe World. Cambridge, Mass., 2001.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl. Capital, Volume III: The Process of Capitalist Production as a Whole. Chicago, 1894, (Available at http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1894-c3/).Google Scholar
Meiners, Roger E., and Morriss, Andrew P. The Common Law and the Environment: Rethinking the Statutory Basis for Modern Environmental Law. Lanham, Md., 2000.Google Scholar
Meldola, Raphael. Coal and What we Get from It. London, 1905.Google Scholar
Melosi, Martin V. Effluent America: Cities, Industry, Energy, and the Environment. Pittsburgh, 2001.Google Scholar
Morel, Jul. Les richesses de la nature: Le regne animal. Gand, Belgium, 1876.Google Scholar
Perry, George Powell. Wealth from Waste, Or Gathering up the Fragments. New York, 1908.Google Scholar
Playfair, Lyon. On the Chemical Principles Involved in the Manufactures of the Exhibition as Indicating the Necessity of Industrial Instruction. London, 1852.Google Scholar
Pursell, Carroll. The Machine in America: A Social History of Technology. Baltimore, Md., 1995.Google Scholar
Razous, Paul. Les dechets industriels. Recuperation-Utilisation. Paris, 1905.Google Scholar
Razous, Paul. Les dechets et sous-produits industriels. Recuperation-Utilisation. Paris, 1921.Google Scholar
Rogers, Allen, ed. Industrial Chemistry. A Manual for the Student and Manufacturer. Volume One-Inorganic, 5th ed., New York, 1931.Google Scholar
Rogers, Allen, ed. Industrial Chemistry. A Manual for the Student and Manufacturer. Volume Two-Organic, 5th ed., New York, 1931.Google Scholar
Scott, James. Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition have Failed. New Haven, Conn., 1998.Google Scholar
Simmonds, Peter Lund. Animal Products: TheirPreparation, Commercial Uses, and Value. New York, 1875.Google Scholar
Simmonds, Peter Lund. Waste Products and Undeveloped Substances; or, Hints for Enterprise in Neglected Fields. London, 1862.Google Scholar
Simmonds, Peter Lund. Waste Products and Undeveloped Substances: A Synopsis of Progress Made in Their Economic Utilisation During the Last Quarter of a Centuryat Home and Abroad, 3rd ed. London, 1876.Google Scholar
Slosson, Edwin E. Creative Chemistry: Descriptive of Recent Achievements in the Chemical Industries. New York, 1941.Google Scholar
Spooner, Henry J. Wealth from Waste: Elimination of Waste a World Problem. London, 1918.Google Scholar
Suessenguth, Otto. Die industrie derabfallstoffe. Leipzig, 1879.Google Scholar
Talbot, Frederick A. Millions from Waste. Philadelphia, 1920.Google Scholar
Tarr, Joel A. The Search for the Ultimate Sink: Urban Pollution in Historical Perspective. Akron, Ohio., 1996.Google Scholar
Travis, Anthony S. The Rainbow Makers: The Origins ofthe Synthetic Dyestuffs Industryin Western Europe. Bethlehem, Pa., 1993.Google Scholar
Wagner, Frederick H. Coal Gas Residuals, 2nd ed., New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Winter, James. Secure from Rash Assault: Sustaining the Victorian Environment. Berkeley, Calif., 1999.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, Erich. World Resources and Industries: A Functional Appraisal of the Availability of Agricultural and Industrial Resources. New York, 1933.Google Scholar

Articles and Essays

Beaton, Kendall. “Dr. Gesner’s Kerosene: The Start of American Oil Refining.Business History Review 29 (March 1955): 2853.Google Scholar
Carlson, Albert S., and Gow, Charles B. “Scrap Iron and Steel Industry.Economic Geography 12 (April 1936): 175–84.Google Scholar
Christine, GarwoodGreen Crusaders or Captives ofIndustry? The British Alkali Inspectorate and the Ethics of Environmental Decision Making, 1864–95.Annals of Science 61 (Jan. 2004): 99117.Google Scholar
Cumbler, John T. “Conflict, Accommodation and Compromise: Connecticut’s Attempt to Control Industrial Waste in the Progressive Era.Environmental History 5 (July 2000): 314–35.Google Scholar
Desrochers, Pierre. “Industrial Ecology and the Rediscovery of Inter-Firm Recycling Linkages: Some Historical Perspective and Policy Implications.Industrial and Corporate Change 11 (Nov. 2002): 1031–57.Google Scholar
Dingle, Anthony E. “‘The Monster Nuisance of All’: Landowners, Alkali Manufacturers, and Air Pollution, 1828–64.Economic History Review 35 (Nov. 1982): 529–48.Google Scholar
Donnelly, James. “Consultants, Managers, Testing Slaves: Changing Roles for Chemists in the British Alkali Industry, 1850–1920.Technology and Culture 35 (Jan. 1994): 100–28.Google Scholar
Fischer-Kowalski, Marina. “Society’s Metabolism. The Intellectual History of Materials Flow Analysis, Part I, 1860–1970.Journal of Industrial Ecology 2(1) (Winter 1998): 6178.Google Scholar
Fischer-Kowalski, Marina and Walter, Hiittler. “Society’s Metabolism. The Intellectual History of Materials Flow Analysis, Part II, 1970–1998.Journal of Industrial Ecology 2(4) (Fall 1998): 6178.Google Scholar
Gille, Zsuzsa. “Legacy of Waste or Wasted Legacy? The End of Industrial Ecology in Post-Socialist Hungary.Environmental Politics 9 (Spring 2000): 203–31.Google Scholar
Gorman, Hugh S. “Efficiency, Environmental Quality, and Oil Field Brines: The Success and Failure of Pollution Control by Self-Regulation.Business History Review 73 (Winter 1999): 601–40.Google Scholar
LeCain, Timothy. “The Limits of ‘Eco-Efficiency’: Arsenic Pollution and the Cottrell Electrical Precipitator in the U.S. Copper Smelting Industry.Environmental History 5 (July 2000): 336–51.Google Scholar
Lowy, Alexander. “Industrial Organic Chemicals and Dye Intermediates.” In Industrial Chemistry, Volume II: Organic, ed. Rogers, Allen. New York, 1931, pp. 642724.Google Scholar
The Manufacturer and BuilderUtilization of Waste Products.13 (April 1881): 86.Google Scholar
Mathias, Peter. “Agriculture and the Brewing and Distilling Industries in the Eighteenth Century.Economic HistoryReview NS 5(2) (1952): 249–57.Google Scholar
McCarthy, Tom. “Henry Ford, Industrial Ecologist or Industrial Conservationist? Waste Reduction and Recycling at the Rouge.Michigan Historical Review 27 (Fall 2001): 5389.Google Scholar
McDonald, Stephen L. “Erich W. Zimmerman, The Dynamics of Resourceship.” In Economic Mavericks: The Texas Institutionalists, ed. Philipps, Ronnie J. Greenwich, Conn., 1995, pp. 151–83.Google Scholar
Paddock, Harold E. “Production Waste. Its Nature and Its Accounting.The Accounting Review 33 (Jan. 1958): 5055.Google Scholar
Playfair, Lyon. “Waste Products Made Useful.North American Review 155 (Nov. 1892): 560–68.Google Scholar
Pounds, Norman J. “World Production and Use of Steel Scrap.Economic Geography 35 (July 1959): 247–58.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine. “Industrial Ecology and the Greening of Business History.Business and Economic History 26 (Fall 1997): 123–37.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine. “Industrial Ecology and the Transformation of Corporate Environmental Management: A Business Historian’s Perspective.” In Inventing for the Environment, eds. Molella, Arthur and Bedi, Joyce. Cambridge, Mass., 2003, pp. 319–38.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine. “‘Knowing’ Industrial Pollution: Nuisance Law and the Power of Tradition in a Time of Rapid Economic Change, 1840–1864.Environmental History 8 (Oct. 2003): 565–97.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine and Sellers, Christopher C.The Nature of the Firm: Towards an Ecocultural History of Business.Business HistoryReview 73 (Winter 1999): 577600.Google Scholar
Shelford, Victor E. “Fortunes in Wastes and Fortunes in Fish.The Scientific Monthly 9 (Aug. 1919): 97124.Google Scholar
Smith, John K. “Turning Silk Purses into Sow’s Ears: Environmental History and the Chemical Industry.Enterprise and Society 1 (Dec. 2000): 785812.Google Scholar
Stewart, Mart A. “Environmental History: Profile of a Developing Field.The History Teacher 31 (May 1998): 351–68.Google Scholar
Stine, Jeffrey K., and Tarr, Joel A.At the Intersection of Histories: Technology and the Environment.Technology and Culture 39 (Oct. 1998): 601–40.Google Scholar
Tarr, Joel A. “Industrial Waste Disposal in the United States as a Historical Problem.Ambix 49 (March 2002): 420.Google Scholar
Westbrook, Robert B. “Tribune of the Technostructure: The Popular Economics of Stuart Chase.American Quarterly 32 (Autumn 1980): 387408.Google Scholar
Worrel, Ernst. “Editorial.Resources, Conservation and Recycling 12.Google Scholar
Young, James T. “Business and Science.Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 28 (1906): 2837.Google Scholar
Zimring, Carl Abraham. “Dirty Work: How Hygiene and Xenophobia Marginalized the American Waste Trades, 1870–1930.Environmental History 9(1) (2004): 80101.Google Scholar

Unpublished Sources

Maher, John William. “Retrieving the Obsolete: Formation of the American Scrap Steel Industry, 1870–1933.” Ph.D. diss., University of Maryland, 1999.Google Scholar
Jensen, Michael. “‘…Waste is Regarded as Almost Criminal.’ The Policy and Practice of Waste Elimination in the Ford Motor Company, 1919–1946.” Joint Senior Essay for History and Studies in the Environment, Yale University, April 2000.Google Scholar
Zimring, Carl Abraham. “Recycling for a Profit: The Evolution of the American Scrap Industry.” Ph.D. diss., Carnegie-Mellon University, 2002.Google Scholar

Archival Sources

Young, James Thomas. Office of Alumni Records, Biographical Records, 1950–2002, Collection UPF 1.9 AR, University of Pennsylvania Archives, Philadelphia.Google Scholar