Pic of the Week: The 16th is 100

Everybody’s doing it, Doing what? Paying taxes, of course. Underwood & Underwood, 1920.

The Sixteenth that I am referring to is the 16th Amendment to the Constitution which is the amendment that created the Income Tax.  Ratification by the requisite number of states was completed on February 3, 1913 when Delaware became the 36th state to ratify.  Thereafter, another six joined including New Mexico and Wyoming which also ratified on February 3rd.  Several states rejected it or never considered it.  Of course,  after ratification it had to be implemented and explained.

A number of years ago – after receiving several questions that were related to the income tax I created a short guide with some sources for those who wanted to know more about the history.  The data gathered by the IRS from the forms is something that I find particularly useful for business research, and in 2011 I wrote a post about some of the data collected by the IRS.  Since that post they have added a bit more – particularly to their Archive – which makes me happy.

 

Andrew Carnegie – Man of Steel

Many in the library world think of Andrew Carnegie in terms of the many public libraries his fortune built, but otherwise, who was this man? Andrew Carnegie was born in Dunfermline, Scotland on November 25, 1825. His family immigrated to the United States when he was a child and eventually they settled in Pennsylvania.  Carnegie …

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Business Research Orientation class turns 5

Back in 2007, my coworker Jan Herd and I decided to develop a class specifically for business researchers.  Our very first class was in October 2007. While we included some general information about doing research at the Library and a detailed overview of the Library’s online catalog, we wanted to feature specific guidance on business …

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An Early History of Life Insurance

Today’s guest post is by 2012 Junior Fellow Alec Korte. A life worth living is a life worth insuring. The above quote was the bedrock on which Judge Willard Phillips, a Massachusetts lawyer, founded the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company in 1835. The anchor that held that bedrock firm was the leadership at the top, which …

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Five Questions (The Intern Edition): Alec Korte

1.  What is your background? Excluding five years in California, I have lived most of my life in Bowling Green, Ohio, home to its namesake university as well as the National Tractor Pulling Championship. I am currently enrolled at the University of Cincinnati, where I am studying Mechanical Engineering and, eventually, Business as part of …

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Give Me an H!

In an earlier post I featured an April 1902 Washington Times article on how to get a book from the Library of Congress.  While reading the article, a section about the catalog division – “one of the most remarkable departments in the conduct of the library” – also caught my eye. The function of a …

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