My Brush with John Kenneth Galbraith
John Fisher
[Reprinted from GroundSwell,
September-October 2006]
John Kenneth Galbraith died April 29, 2006 in Cambridge, Mass. at age
97. He was a liberal economist who served as J.F. Kennedy's ambassador
to India, taught 30 years at Harvard, was an advisor to four
presidents and was editor of Fortune magazine for four years. He
believed in government intervention as a countervailing economic force
to unbridled capitalism. He opposed the wars in Vietnam and Iraq. His
sense of humour often showed as in, "Economists are
economical,...,of ideas. Most make those of their graduate days last a
lifetime."
John Kenneth Galbraith was once asked which of his 40 or so books
would give someone the best economic education. He replied "The
Scotch" (1964). It was this book along with his eight year column
(The Plowman) in the St. Thomas Times-Journal that got him into so
much trouble with the local population.
As he wrote in one of the letters I received, "I'm afraid that I
never contemplated attending Dutton High School reunions. I became
somewhat unpopular in later times for a description I offered of the
principal, known as 'Old Tommy'." On October 15, 2006 on the
occasion of his birthday, I attended a '"Tribute to Galbraith"
at the John Kenneth Galbraith Reference Library in Dutton, Ontario.
Dutton is about four kilometres from the Galbraith home farm where
John Kenneth spent his youth before graduating from the Ontario
Agricultural College. A memorial Inuksuk is located at the farm.
Galbraith and another student drove across the U.S. in 1931 and
arrived for graduate studies at Berkeley, Ca. absolutely broke. Three
years later however he got a posting at Harvard for $2400. He became a
U.S. citizen in 1937.
It wasn't until the 1980's that the "Scotch" of the local
area started to warm up to Galbraith. He spoke at the University of
Western Ontario (London) in 1993 to help raise money for the Dutton
library. I had a brief conversation with him at that time. Alan
Galbraith, his oldest son, attended the recent "Tribute". I
spoke to him about my invitations to his father to the last two
Georgist conferences in Canada.
Galbraith's only reference to Henry George was in the letter of
October 30, 1998. He said, "I am not a full devotee of Henry
George but there is no one in the social world that I read with more
intense interest."
(Dutton is a village of 1200 about 12 miles to the east of Rodney,
Ontario. It is a part of west Elgin County and was in the high school
area (West Elgin Secondary School) where John Fisher taught for 25
years.)
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