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Physiological Science and Scientific Management in the Progressive Era: Frederic S. Lee and the Committee on Industrial Fatigue

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2011

Alan Derickson
Affiliation:
Alan Derickson is associate professor of labor studies and history at Pennsylvania State University, University Park

Abstract

This article explores the first attempt by American physiologists to assist employers with the stubborn problem of tired workers. It examines the work of Frederic Lee and the Committee on Industrial Fatigue, which was set up to increase productivity in the face of the long hours deemed necessary for war readiness. Despite the biomedical investigators' strenuous efforts and their incisive critique of Taylorism, however, corporate management found few practical uses for their findings and remedial proposals. Instead, industrial physiology helped to pave the way for rival consultants from psychology.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1994

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54 Waterbury American, 27 May 1920, 1 (quotation); 14 April 1920, 14; 15 April 1920, 1; 22 April 1920, 1, 3; 23 April 1920, 1; 27 April 1920, 1.

55 Scovill Manufacturing Company Bulletin, May 1920, 4; June 1920, 4; July 1920, 8; Waterbury American, 4 May 1920, 1, 14; 5 May 1920, 1; 20 May 1920, 1; 21 May 1920, 1, 12; 25 May 1920, 1; 10 June 1920, 1; 29 June 1920, 1; 14 July 1920, 1.

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61 Flinn, “Industrial Aspects of Human Fatigue,” 293; U.S. Surgeon General, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1920 (Washington, D.C., 1920), 37Google Scholar; PHS, The Physiology of Fatigue: Physico-Chemical Manifestations of Fatigue in the Blood, by Hastings, Albert B. (Washington, D.C., 1921)Google Scholar. Back in England, Florence published a comprehensive study that argued for a democratization of fatigue research and its application through labor-management collaboration. See Florence, P. Sargant, Economics of Fatigue and Unrest and the Efficiency of Labour in English and American Industry (New York, 1924), 61, 117–24Google Scholar. On applied physiological work in the United States in the late 1920s and the 1930s, see Horvath, Steven M. and Horvath, Elizabeth C., The Harvard Fatigue Laboratory: Its History and Contributions (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1973)Google Scholar; Dill, D. B. et al. , “Industrial Fatigue,” Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Toxicology 18 (Sept. 1936): 417–31Google Scholar.

62 Mayo, Elton, “Revery and Industrial Fatigue,” Journal of Personnel Research 3 (Dec. 1924): 273 (quotation), 273–81Google Scholar; Robinson, “Factors Affecting Human Efficiency,” 95, 98.

63 Henderson, L. J. and Mayo, Elton, “The Effects of Social Environment,” Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Toxicology 18 (Sept. 1936): 401–16, especially 402Google Scholar; Mayo, Elton, The Human Problems of an Industrial Civilization (New York, 1933)Google Scholar; Gillespie, Richard, Manufacturing Knowledge: A History of the Hawthorne Experiments (New York, 1991), 6575Google Scholar.

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