词条 | John M. Carmody |
释义 |
BiographyBorn in Towanda, Pennsylvania, Carmody attended Elmira College, the Lewis Institute in Chicago (later merged with Armour Institute of Technology to become Illinois Institute of Technology), and the Columbia University.[2] In 1900 he started his career in the steel industry, working as inspector for companies in Pennsylvania and Illinois, and abroad in Ontario in Canada, and in Havana in Cuba. From 1914 to 1922 he worked in the garment industry in Cleveland, Ohio for the H. Black Company, producer of produced WoolTex brand coats for women, and for the Printz-Biederman Company, another coat manufacturer. In 1921 he joined the Bituminous Coal Commission under US President Warren G. Harding, his first federal job. The work of the commission would eventually lead to the Guffey Coal Act of 1935. From 1922 to 1926 Carmody worked for the Davis's Davis Coal and Coke Company in Coketon, West Virginia.[2] In 1927 he joined the McGraw-Hill Publishing company to become editor for the magazine Coal Age, and from 1928 to 1929 for the Factory and Industrial Management magazine. Since 1933 held several government positions, starting as appointed chief engineer of the Civil Works Administration in 1933, member of the National Mediation Board in 1934/35, and in the National Labor Relations Board in 1935. In 1937 he was appointed by Franklin D. Roosevelt administrator of Rural Electrification Administration, and in 1939 head of the Federal Works Agency.[3] Furthermore, he was member in the United States Maritime Commission (1941–46),[4] the War Assets Administration until 1949, and the General Board of the United States Navy until 1951. In the 1950s he continued to worked as consultant and labor arbitrator.[2] WorkFederal Works AgencyAs administrator of the Federal Works Agency, Carmody appeared for the US Senate Committee July 13, 1939, where he promised that, new public works program will not interfere with private industry. Carmody also promised the "Senate Banking and Currency Committee that the new $350,000,000 public works program would not interfere with private industry. He pointed out that President Roosevelt's program made no specific provisions for federal loans to municipalities for acquisition of private utilities."[5] Selected publications
Articles, a selection:
References1. ^Bonnie Fox Schwartz (2014) The Civil Works Administration, 1933-1934: The Business of Emergency. p. 55 2. ^1 2 Carmody, John at fdrlibrary.marist.edu. Accessed 26.01.2015. 3. ^[https://books.google.nl/books?id=OEIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA21 LIFE], Sept. 2, 1946. p. 21 4. ^Lane, Frederic Chapin. Ships for victory: A history of shipbuilding under the US Maritime Commission in World War II. JHU Press, 2001. 5. ^[https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/hec2009013679/ Library of Congress]. Accessed 26.01.2015. External links
8 : 1881 births|1963 deaths|20th-century American businesspeople|American editors|Elmira College alumni|Illinois Institute of Technology alumni|Columbia University alumni|People from Towanda, Pennsylvania |
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