Franklin's Gulf Stream: Science in the Atlantic Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 01/04/2008 - 14:03
Description

Professor Joyce E. Chaplin covers Benjamin Franklin's creation of one of the first accurate charts of the Atlantic Gulf Stream in 1768 and the history of scientific research in the British colonies, both by Franklin and other scientists, that allowed the creation of such a chart.

Tremont Row: Artists' Daguerreotype Rooms Anonymous (not verified) Fri, 01/04/2008 - 14:03
Description

Curator and conservator Grant Romer talks about the formation and work of the Boston photography partners Albert Sands Southworth and Josiah Johnson Hawes and their studio on Tremont Row. Romer looks at the architecture of Tremont Row and how it impacted the work of the partners. His presentation includes slides.

Audio and video options are available.

Alanson B. Houghton: Ambassador of the New Era

Description

Scholar Jeffrey Matthews explores the life of Alanson B. Houghton, American industrialist, politician, and diplomat (to Germany, 1922-1925, and to Great Britain, 1925-1929). Houghton uses this exploration to examine U.S. foreign policy between World War I and World War II, citing Houghton's criticism of policy under Presidents Harding and Coolidge.

Audio and video options are available.

Benjamin Franklin

Description

From the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History website:

"In this lecture, Walter Isaacson, author of Benjamin Franklin: An American Life, traces Franklin's career from his early days as an apprentice in his brother's Boston print shop to his involvement, at the age of eighty-four, with the Pennsylvania Society for the Abolition of Slavery. Franklin was an autodidact, self-taught in every field he entered, but the virtue that he most embodied, Isaacson argues, was tolerance. The ultimate self-made man, Franklin's life remains essentially American."

Swetland Homestead [PA]

Description

The 1803 Swetland Homestead contains rooms furnished in period styles ranging from those of the early 1800s to the 1860s. The wide range of stylistic interpretation showcases the changes in domestic life and Wyoming, PA's industrialization, which occurred during this window of time.

The site offers period rooms. Tours are available to groups, including school groups, with advance notice.

Alfred P. Sloan Museum [MI]

Description

The Alfred P. Sloan Museum of Flint Michigan presents local history, historic automobiles, and scientific principles. Historic topics are covered in the Hometown Gallery and Piersen Automotive Gallery. Collections include more than 125,000 artifacts including textiles, prehistoric objects, and more than 80 historic vehicles made in Flint.

The museum offers hands-on activities; exhibits; films; a vehicle conservation and restoration shop; archival access; arts and crafts workshops; group tours; group picture-puzzle scavenger hunts; more than 11 hands-on educational programs, ranging from autowork to the fur trade; a planetarium; and a lunchroom. Reservations are required for school groups. Separate reservations are required for use of the lunchroom by large groups.

Texas Association of Museums [TX]

Description

"The Texas Association of Museums is dedicated to fostering educational, cultural, and recreational opportunities for all Texans. It accomplishes this, through service to its members, by providing a communications network, sponsoring educational programs, and encouraging adherence to professional standards and practices." The association offers a variety of professional services, including educational workshops and online tools such as fundraising software.

The site offers information and purchasing information for all services offered by the association, as well as a museum location finding service.

Tax Rates of the Mid-20th Century

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jpg image, Ipankonin, 2008, Great Seal of the United States, Wikimedia Commons
Question

Recent history shows tax rates exceedingly high some 50 years ago. How do historians (and educators) accommodate the recent past when putting contexts around today’s loud events?

Answer

There are only long answers to any questions about taxation in American history, no matter how short the questions. Here we have a short question, and only room for a short answer. So let’s make a start.

The “exceedingly high” part of this question most likely refers to the federal income tax’s “confiscatory” top rates coming out of World War II, which the Eisenhower Administration left in place into the 1960s. During the war, the top “marginal rate” was 94%, but 94% of what? Then as now, income tax rates moved up at distinct break points. In this made-up example, consider a 15% rate up to $25,000, 21% from $25,000 to $50,000, and 25% over $50,000. Those making $50,001 or more won’t pay a quarter of their total income, but rather 15% of the first $25,000, 21% of the next $25,000, and 25% of everything above $50K. That’s why the system is called progressive - the percentage rate progresses upward with income, but the higher percentage applies only to new (marginal) income above each break point. In 1944-45, “the most progressive tax years in U.S. history,” the 94% rate applied to any income above $200,000 ($2.4 million in 2009 dollars, given inflation).

In World War Two, tax law revisions increased the numbers of “those paying some income taxes” from 7% of the U.S. population (1940) to 64% by 1944.

Very few individuals encountered this top rate, however. The actual proportion of earnings citizens paid as income taxes in 1945 was far lower: for the poorest 20% of Americans, 1.7%; for the next 20%, 6.2%; for the middle quintile, 8.9%, for the upper-middle 20%, 10%; and for the wealthiest quintile, 20.7%. Tax rates have fallen since then: the current top level is 35% of income above $357,000, or $30,000 in 1945 dollars. Then the median family income was $2,379 per year. Brackets also have simplified (24 in the 1950s, just six today), yet the federal government takes in far more revenue than 60 years ago and citizens complain hugely about being over-taxed. What has happened?

Three things, basically. First in World War II, tax law revisions increased the numbers of “those paying some income taxes” from 7% of the U.S. population (1940) to 64% by 1944, vastly broadening the tax base and increasing the total intake. Even so by 1975, the same five quintiles, bottom to top, were paying respectively just 0.6%, 4.7%, 8.8%, 11.2%, and 17.8% of their adjusted gross incomes to the IRS. Note that for four of the five groups, this percentage was lower than in 1945, with several waves of tax cuts following in recent decades. Second, other federal taxes increased substantially. In 1952, social security tax rates stood at 1.5% of pay, employers and workers each putting in this sum. The self-employed paid 2.25% of net income. These figures increased by 1970 to 4.2% each for workers and enterprises (6.2% for self-employeds), and to 6.2% each (and 12.4% for self-employeds) by 2010. Thus the share of earned income taxed increased fourfold or more since the early 1950s. As well, Medicare and Medicaid taxes appeared in the late 1960s and rose from half a percent then to nearly 1.5% now. Thus many Americans currently pay more for these retirement and medical coverages than they do in regular income taxes. But the biggest blow may have been the evidently sharp increase in state and local taxes since the 1970s. Rising from a national average of $800 per capita (multiply by the number of your family members) in 1977, these taxes neared $4,300 per person by 2008, rising 44% faster than inflation. The principal mechanisms employed by non-federal governments were wage and income taxes, property taxes, and a vast range of fees, all of which went to support public safety (police, fire), health, basic and higher education, roads and other infrastructures, courts, prisons, and the regulation of everyday life (deeds, inspections, voter registrations, licensing, et al.)

Despite these surges, Americans remain among the least-taxed citizens of advanced industrial nations.

A few years ago, one critic of the recent Bush Administration asserted that: “By the time Clinton left office [January 2001], Federal income taxes as a percentage of income for the typical American family were lower than they had been at any time since 1966.” Perhaps so, but the typical total tax load, taking all outflows from households into account, had risen. Americans' taste for and justification of expanded government services had grown, as had their increasing resentment at the expense. From these tensions emerged “today's loud events,” in which polarized denunciations seem to be pushing aside pragmatic policy making. Two final notes: despite these surges, Americans remain among the least-taxed citizens of advanced industrial nations, with 28% of gross domestic product taken for taxes, vs. an average of 36% for the 38 member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, while, since 1942, the U.S. has spent far more than any other nation on military and national security needs. Second, none of the above discussion has touched the issue of business taxes, which are included in the U.S. vs. OECD assessment, but rarely examined historically, especially with attention to their state and local components.

For more information

Brownlee, W. Elliott. Federal Taxation in America: A Short History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004 (second edition).

Cooper, George. “The Taming of the Shrewd: Identifying and Controlling Income Tax Avoidance,” Columbia Law Review 85(1985): 658-729.

Lowery, David and Lee Seligman, “Understanding the Tax Revolt: Eight Explanations,” American Political Science Review 75(1981): 963-74.

Pechman, Joseph A. “The Future of the Income Tax,” The American Economic Review 80(March 1990): 1-20.

Steurle, C. Eugene. Contemporary US Tax Policy. Washington, DC: The Urban Institute, 2008 (second edition).

Bibliography

Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports: Consumer Income, Family and Individual Money Income in the United States: 1945. Series P-60, No. 2, March 1948, 1. Accessed 28 January 2011.

Conason, Joe. Big Lies. New York: St. Martins, 2003.

Rampell, Cathleen. “Tax Burdens Around the World,” New York Times. 24 November 2009.

Social Security Administration Trust Fund Data. Accessed 28 January 2011. As well, the ceiling for earnings for which citizens had to pay Social Security taxes lifted steadily, from $9,000 in 1972 to over $106,00 today (see Contributions and Benefits Bases 1937-2011. Accessed 28 January 2011).

Tax Foundation, Income Tax Rates and Brackets, 1913-2011. Accessed 28 January 2011.

State-Local Tax Burdens, 1977-2008 Accessed 28 January 2011.

Tax Policy Briefing Book: How do U.S. taxes compare internationally? Updated 18 March 2010. Percent of GDP for taxes is the internationally-recognized indicator for comparison; it does not mean the same thing as percent of individual income for taxes.

Witte, John F. The Politics and Development of the Federal Income Tax. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1975.

Gardner Museum of Architecture and Design [IL]

Description

The Gardner Museum is a stone Romanesque Revival style building erected in 1888. It was designed by the Chicago architectural firm of Patton and Fisher and built with limestone supplied by the Frederick W. Menke Stone Works of Quincy. It presents exhibits related the history of local architecture and design. The second floor's large room, formerly the library reading room, has a tongue and groove wood vaulted ceiling. It now houses the "Aspirations in Glass" exhibit of stained glass windows saved from demolished churches.

The museum offers exhibits, research library access, and tours. Unfortunately, the museum is now closed due to lack of funding.

Gunsmith

Description

George Suiter, gunsmith at Colonial Williamsburg, talks about the gun trade and gunsmithing in the colonial era.

To listen to this podcast, select "All 2006 podcasts," and scroll to the January 16th program.