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Ethelbert Stewart

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Ethelbert Stewart
Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
In office
April 1921 – June 1932
PresidentWoodrow Wilson
Warren G. Harding
Calvin Coolidge
Herbert Hoover
Preceded byRoyal Meeker
Succeeded byCharles E. Baldwin
(Acting)
Personal details
Born1857
Cook County, Illinois
Died1936

Ethelbert Stewart (1857–1936) was the commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) from 1921 to 1932.

Stewart worked as a coffin-maker, then founded and edited labor newspapers. He was made the commissioner of labor for the state of Illinois in the 1880s.[1] He was made deputy commissioner of the BLS in 1913 along with other roles in the U.S. Department of Labor.[2] In that position he had a public role in how the organization should track women workers, child labor, and occupational injuries and illnesses. In the fall of 1913 he mediated a coal mining dispute involving the Rockefeller interests in Colorado and helped resolve the Indianapolis streetcar strike of 1913. It was hard to keep the Bureau staffed during World War I and Stewart advocated offering pensions to civil servants.[3] In 1920 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.[4]

When commissioner Royal Meeker left in 1920, Stewart was nominated by President Woodrow Wilson to take the top role, newly elected President Warren Harding re-nominated him, and Stewart was confirmed in 1921. The Bureau began issuing productivity statistics in this period, and increased coverage of wholesale prices, employment and unemployment, and industrial safety statistics.[3][2]

Publications and archives

References

  1. ^ a b Ethelbert Stewart Papers, 1884-1933 at Wilson Library at UNC-Chapel Hill
  2. ^ a b Commissioners: Ethelbert Stewart at bls.gov
  3. ^ a b Goldberg, Joseph P., and William T. Moye. 1985. First hundred years of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bureau of Labor Statistics Bulletin 2235. U.S. Government Printing Office. ISBN 0-935043-01-2. Chapters 4 and 5.
  4. ^ List of ASA Fellows, retrieved 2016-07-16.