Alfred Marshall

@Economists, Family and Facts

Alfred Marshall was a great economist who authored ‘Principles of Economics’

Jul 26, 1842

BritishCambridge UniversityIntellectuals & AcademicsEconomistsLeo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: July 26, 1842
  • Died on: July 13, 1924
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Cambridge University, Intellectuals & Academics, Economists
  • Spouses: Mary Paley
  • Siblings: Agnes, Charles William Marshall, Mabel, Walter
  • Universities:
    • Cambridge University
    • Merchant Taylor's School
    • London
    • St. John's College
    • Cambridge University

Alfred Marshall born at

Bermondsey

Unsplash
Birth Place

He began a relationship with Mary Paley, one of his former students and one of the first women to be educated at the Cambridge, and married her in 1877. His wife collaborated with him to write some of his books.

Unsplash
Personal Life

He began to suffer from ill health during his later years though he remained dedicated to his profession till the very end. He died on 13 July 1924 at the age of 81.

Unsplash
Personal Life

The Marshall Library of Economics and The Marshall Society are named in his honor.

Unsplash
Personal Life

He was born on July 26, 1842, in Cambridge, England, to William Marshall, an employee in the Bank of England, and Rebecca Oliver. His was a middle-class and he had a comfortable childhood. His father was a very strict person.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

He went to the Merchant Taylors’ School before moving on to St. John’s College, Cambridge, rebelling against his father who expected Alfred to go to Oxford with a classics scholarship.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

He was a bright student having a deep interest in mathematics and science. However he experienced a mental crisis while at college and switched to philosophy.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

His interest in metaphysics led him to ethics which in turn motivated him to study economics. His initial interest in economics stemmed from the fact that economics was crucial for the improvement of the working class. His ethical stance guided him in his work on economics.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

In 1868, he was made a lecturer in the moral sciences at St. John’s College at Cambridge. A few years later, in 1875, he attended a study of trade protection in the United States and on his return strived to make political economy a serious subject at Cambridge.

Unsplash
Career

His efforts bore fruit and in 1885 he became the professor of political economy at Cambridge. Over the next several years he became one of the most prominent economists in the country and retired from Cambridge in 1908.

Unsplash
Career

Over the course of his tenure at Cambridge, he collaborated with several other eminent thinkers like Henry Sidgwick, Benjamin Jowett, John Neville Keynes and John Maynard Keynes, and founded the “Cambridge School”.

Unsplash
Career

He had started working on the ‘Principles of Economics’ in 1881 and spent the next ten years writing it. The book was finally published in 1890 and became the standard textbook for generations of economics students.

Unsplash
Career

The ‘Principles of Economics’ established his reputation as a brilliant economist. It appeared in eight editions and revolutionized the way economics was taught to students in English-speaking countries. Many concepts in the book were the result of Marshall’s original ideas.

Unsplash
Career

He is best known for writing the ‘Principles of Economics’ which went on to become the seminal textbook for generations of economics students. He was the first person to develop the standard demand and supply graph and introduce several new economic concepts. This book established him as one of the leading economists of his era.

Unsplash
Major Works