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Harold Vatter grew up in New Jersey and graduated from high school during the depression. His father was an accountant and funds were not available for college until a couple years later when a family member passed away. Vatter received his BA in Political Science at the University of Wisconsin, Madison in 1936.
Professor John Walker, who was a close associate of Harold Vatter and co-authored many publications with him, recounts that Vatter was an idealistic graduate and wanted to join the Abe Lincoln Brigade in the Spanish Civil War to fight fascism. The Abe Lincoln Brigade was an American arm of the International Brigade who were fighting for a republican government, against the fascist General Franco. The young brave soldiers in the brigade were not known for returning home alive and needles to say, Vatter's family was alarmed at his ambitions. They offered to send him to Columbia University if he stayed home. Education won out, and Vatter graduated with an MA in Economics two years later.
While attending the University of California, Berkeley, Vatter's Ph.D. was interrupted to go to war. He was one of two Ph.D. candidates from Berkeley to finish their exams before being shipped off. Walker explains that an army training sergeant was protective of valuable human capital and put Vatter to work typing documents. Vatter returned to Berkeley after the war to write his dissertation and complete his education in 1950.
Vatter taught at several Universities, including off. Walker explains that an army training sergeant was protective of valuable human capital and put Vatter to work typing documents. Vatter returned to Berkeley after the war to write his dissertation and complete his education in 1950.
Vatter taught at several Universities, including University of Chicago, before coming to Portland State University in 1965. He taught at PSU until retirement and passed away in 1998 at the age of 89. According to Professor Walker, Vatter was a pioneer of New Economic History. By integrating economic theory with history, Vatter achieved a level of thinking at par with the greats. A simple WorldCat search will reveal Vatter's numerous publications. Many of which can be found in the PSU library and other university libraries. Although Vatter was not famous, he was friendly and collegial with the Nobel Prize winners, Douglas North and Robert Fogel in their work in New Economic History.
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