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Croly and had
According to Hanna biographer Herbert Croly, " he had gained little from the first nine years of his business life except experience.
Ward had strong influence on a rising generation of progressive political leaders, such as Herbert Croly.
Thus, although many American reform movements have their roots in the rhetoric of Croly's progressivism, to be effective they have had to accommodate the principles of liberal individualism that Croly wished to eradicate.
Croly, like Hamilton, had a faith in the powerful few and sincerely believed that those few would remain democratic.
Even those who believed Croly ’ s government could be democratic had concerns that Croly ’ s vision for the country was clouded by a Republican prejudice.
By Croly ’ s death in 1930, only 7, 500 copies of The Promise of American Life had been sold.
The book had soaring praise for Mark Hanna, a conservative who saw the role of government very differently from Croly.
Theodore Roosevelt was the star of many early pieces in TNR, but by December 1914, Roosevelt had a falling out with Croly, Lippmann, and Weyl.
By late 1916, Croly had come around to some of Wilson ’ s policies and used TNR to declare his support of Wilson in the 1916 election.
Croly described the retaliation for the deaths of two strikers ( the third had been mortally wounded ) " atrocious ", but noted that while the perpetrators were likely to escape punishment, those who harmed strikers — such as Hamrock after Ludlow, or Wheeler after Bisbee — likewise frequently escaped justice.
Croly noted that the local government was sympathetic to the union, as was public sentiment, and under such circumstances, the union had a responsibility to police its own members.

Croly and for
Charles Eliot was a fearless crusader not only for educational reform, but for many of the goals of the progressive movement -- whose most prominent figurehead was Theodore Roosevelt ( Class of 1880 ) and most eloquent spokesman was Herbert Croly ( Class of 1889 ).
Hanna, according to his biographer Croly, was in charge of the arrangements for the campaign visit of former President Grant and New York Senator Roscoe Conkling to the state.
Alvin Johnson hired Anderson to move to New York and write about politics for The New Republic in 1918, but he was fired for winning an argument with Editor-in-Chief Herbert David Croly.
The Saints decided not to renew manager Pete Mahon's contract for the 2012 season, appointing former player and manager Liam Buckley to the job, giving him a two year contract with former player and assistant manager at the club, Trevor Croly as his assistant.
David Croly worked as a reporter for the Evening Post and The New York Herald, as well as the editor of The New York World for 12 years.
Croly attended the City College of New York for one year and entered Harvard College in 1886.
After returning to America, Herbert Croly worked as an editor for an architectural magazine, The Architectural Record, from 1900 to 1906.
From 1905 to 1909, Herbert Croly worked on a new project: a political book he hoped would provide guidance for Americans during the transition from an agrarian to an industrialized society.
In The Promise of American Life, Herbert Croly set out his argument for a progressive-liberal government in twentieth-century America.
Despite his preference for Hamilton, Croly believed there were some good aspects about Jefferson ’ s philosophy on government.
He wrote, Jefferson was filled with a sincere, indiscriminate, and unlimited faith in the American people .” However, Croly viewed Jeffersonian democracy as tantamount to extreme individualism ,” suitable only for pre-Civil War America when the ideal Americans were pioneers pursuing individual wealth.
Croly argued that when America shifted from an agrarian economy to an industrial one, Jefferson ’ s vision was no longer realistic for America.
Croly firmly believed that labor unions were the most effective machinery which has yet been forged for the economic and social amelioration of the laboring class .” He wanted unions to have the right to negotiate contracts to ensure companies would only hire union workers.
Croly argued that compensation for work should be adjusted to the needs of a normal and wholesome life ”-- an idea along the lines of the Utopian author Edward Bellamy.
Croly called for the adoption of Hamiltonian means to achieve Jeffersonian ends.
To achieve this synthesis, however, Croly rejected Hamilton's arguments for institutional checks on a pure national democracy, and Jefferson's arguments for limited government.
However, Croly failed to see the connection between Jefferson's belief in democracy and his belief in limited government, and he failed to see the connection between Hamilton's belief in a strong national government and his call for institutional checks on democracy.
Croly ’ s book was also criticized for its lack of national focus.

Croly and workers
In Progressive Democracy, published in 1915, Croly picked up where The Promise of American Life left off, shifting his focus to economic democracy and the issue of power for workers in large corporations.

Croly and small
They painted Roosevelt as the candidate of big business, and Croly was charged with arguing that big business, when properly regulated, was better for national unity and prosperity because it was efficient without the greed he associated with small business competition.

Croly and
Herbert Croly was born in New York City in 1869 to journalists Jane Cunningham Croly — better known by her pseudonym Jenny June ”— and David Goodman Croly.
Croly famously admitted, I shall not disguise the fact that on the whole my own preferences are on the side of Hamilton rather than of Jefferson .”
He wrote that his goal was to explain the needs and requirements of a genuinely popular system of representative government .” For Croly, those needs and requirements included information on major political issues available to the public, energetic public debate and discussion, and the pursuit of a common voice in society.
Croly ’ s alternative to interpreting the Constitution as living ” was to eliminate it and start over, or at least substantially alter it.

Croly and large
Croly proposed a three-pronged program: the nationalization of large corporations, the strengthening of labor unions, and a strong central government.
Unlike other progressives, Croly did not want the government to wage war against large corporations.
Croly did not support economic equality or large disparities in wealth.

Croly and is
The text below is taken from the notes of a public talk History of the Brig o ' Balgownie given by Dr. Christopher P. Croly from the Archaeological Unit at Aberdeen City Council.
Little is known about Croly ’ s immediate actions after he left Harvard in 1899.
Whether or not Franklin Delano Roosevelt was directly influenced by Croly ’ s writings is debated, but many of Croly ’ s visions for how government should operate are tenets of the New Deal.

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