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The Crusade for Honest Weight: The Origins of an Overlooked Progressive Movement1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2010

Timothy Messer-Kruse
Affiliation:
Bowling Green State University

Extract

For all its typically Progressive Era characteristics and national scope, the “honest weight movement” has long been hidden in plain sight. Seemingly ubiquitous and mundane, the common grocery scale was the intersecting borderland of industry, government, marketplace, and consumer. On the one hand, the regulation of weights and measures, being one of the first forms of governmental regulation of the marketplace dating back to the ancient world, seems so unobjectionable and commonplace that the Progressive Era movement for its more rigorous and efficient administration does not seem like it could have been a very controversial proposal. Who, after all, could object to clear and consistent standards of measurement and their universal application? Thus, the appearance of a movement to reform the ubiquitous and the mundane has not elicited the same historical attention that novel forms of government regulation have.

Type
Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2006

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References

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44 The Toledo Scale Papers scrapbooks contain a number of these ads from the Chicago Daily News, April 4, 1906Google Scholar; the Erie, PA, Daily Times, April 25, 1910Google Scholar; Boston Sunday Globe, March 20, 1910Google Scholar; and the Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph, Sept. 6, 1909Google Scholar; see also the brochure entided: “More Money—Bigger Business: Your Toledo Scales Will Bring You New Customers” in scrapbook #1, Toledo Scale Papers.

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