• Source: Charles Ryle Fay
  • Charles Ryle Fay (13 January 1884 – 19 November 1961) was a noted British economic historian. He was a strong advocate of co-operation, workers' rights and women's rights. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' Boys' School, Crosby and King's College, Cambridge, where he was a student alongside John Maynard Keynes. The two remained friends until Keynes' death.
    Fay's papers are held at the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland.


    Works


    Co-operation at home and abroad: a description and analysis, 1908
    Copartnership in industry, 1913
    Life and labour in the nineteenth century; being the substance of lectures delivered at Cambridge University in the year 1919 to students of economics, among whom were officers of the Royal Navy and students from the Army of the United States, 1920
    Great Britain from Adam Smith to the present day; an economic and social survey, 1928
    Imperial economy and its place in the formation of economic doctrine, 1600-1932, 1934
    English economic history, mainly since 1700, Cambridge: Heffer, 1940
    The corn laws and social England, 1951
    Huskisson and his age, 1951
    Palace of industry, 1851; a study of the Great Exhibition and its fruits, 1951
    Round about industrial Britain, 1830-1860, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1952
    Adam Smith and the Scotland of his day, 1956
    Life and labour in Newfoundland, 1956
    The world of Adam Smith. Cambridge: W. Heffer & Sons, Ltd. 1960 – via Internet Archive.


    References




    External links


    Works by or about Charles Ryle Fay at the Internet Archive

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