Leon P. Alford

Leon P. Alford

Leon Pratt Alford (Jan. 3, 1877 – Feb. 2, 1942) was an American mechanical engineer, organizational theorist, and administrator for the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.[1][2] known for his seminal work in the field of industrial management.[3]

Biography

Born in Simsbury, Connecticut, Alford graduated from the High School of Plainville, Connecticut, and in 1896 from the Worcester Polytechnic Institute.[4] After ten years in the industry in various functions,[5] he received his ME from Worcester Polytechnic Institute in 1905.[6]

In 1896 Alford started as shop foreman at the McKay Metallic Fastening Assn. in Boston, which merged to McKay-Bigelow Heeling Assn. in 1897. After another two years as shop foreman, he found employ as production superintendent at the United Shoe Machinery Company in 1899 in Boston. The United Shoe Machinery Company, formed in 1899 out of the merger of three shoe machinery companies, developed revolutionary new shoemaking equipment, which revolutionized the shoe industry.[7] The company employed 9,000 workers and in its best days supplied 85% of all shoemaking machines in the United States.[8] In 1902 Alford got promoted to mechanical engineer, and invented and patented some new constructions for the United Shoe Machinery Company.

In 1907 Alford started working in engineering journalism for the Engineering Magazine company. From 1907 to 1911 he was engineering editor at the American Machinist, and from 1911 to 1917 editor-in-chief. Sequentially he was editor for the Industrial Management from 1917 to 1920, from 1921 to 1923 editor for Manufacturing Industrial Management, and from 1923 to 1928 consulting editor for the Factory and Industrial Management and vice-president of the Ronald Press Company in New York.[5][9] Alford co-developed the theory called systematic management, and was an advocate of this management style within the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).

In 1929, Herbert Hoover appointed a president's commission to investigate the current state of the economy. Alford served on this panel and was the principal co-author of the committee's report, Recent Economic Changes (1929). From 1935 to 1937 he joined the Federal Communications Commission, where he was assistant engineer-in-charge of the manufacturing costs unit. In 1937 Alford jointed the faculty of New York University, where he became chairman of the department of administrative engineering.[5]

Alford was elected fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and was its former vice-president, and fellow of the Institute of Management and its former president. He was awarded the first Melville Medal in 1927[10] and in 1929 the Henry Laurence Gantt Medal from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

Work

Systematic management and scientific management

Alford was a practitioner of systematic management and an advocate of this management style within the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. This systems of management principles, partly based on the ideas of Charles Babbage, was developed together with Alexander Hamilton Church, would paved the way to modern industrial management.[3] Their views clashed with the scientific management approach advocated by Frederick Winslow Taylor.[11] In 1912, Alford published a critique of scientific management that undermined Taylor's claims of success.

Alford argued that labor efficiency improvements at the Philadelphia plant of the Link-Belt Company were due to the personality of company's president, James Mapes Dodge. Dodge had won much respect and trust from the workers because of arrangements and incentives he offered so that they would accept Taylor's changes.

Later in 1912, Alford sat on the ASME committee that considered whether or not to publish Taylor's book, The Principles of Scientific Management. Alford's criticisms of Taylor and his management techniques moderated the committee's position on the text. Because the committee's report was ambivalent about the merits of Scientific Management, the ASME declined to publish Taylor's book.

Industrial management

Alford published his own management text, Industrial Management. He advocated a reformist approach to labor and to unionism. In 1920, he co-founded the Management Division within the ASME. Alford advocated flexibility in "industrial relations" and "human engineering" and rejected fixed and rigid approaches to labor management such as scientific management. His approach to labor soon became the dominant accepted practice of corporate liberal management. Because of this approach, the Management Division soon became the largest division within the ASME.

Selected Publications

Books, a selection:

Articles, a selection:

Patents

References

  1. ^ Alford, Leon P. (April 4, 1912). "Scientific Management in Use". American Machinist. 36: 550.
  2. ^ Nelson, Daniel (1980). Frederick W. Taylor and the Rise of Scientific Management. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press., 181-182.
  3. 1 2 William Jaffe (1957). L.P. Alford and the Evolution of Modern Industrial Management. New York University Press.
  4. People of the Century in WPI Journal, Spring 1998.
  5. 1 2 3 "Prof. Alford of N.Y.U. dies, administrative engineer expert was 65." in: The Sun New York City, 2 January 1942.
  6. The Tech News Volume 25, Issue 6, November 8 1933
  7. Background & History at cummings.com. Accessed 11, 2014.
  8. United Shoe Machinery Corporation Records, 1898-1987. Accessed November 2014.
  9. Robert Cecil Cook. Who's who in American Education: A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Living Educators of the United States, Volume 9. Who's Who in American Education, 1940. p. 17
  10. ASME Honors Manual. Accessed 14 October 2013.
  11. Richard Vangermeersch (1996) "Church, Alexander Hamilton (1866-1936." In History of Accounting: An International Encyclopedia, edited by Michael Chatfield and Richard Vangermeersch. New York: Garland Publishing, 1996. p. 124.

Further reading

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