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S. N. D. North

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
S. N. D. North
Born1848
Died1924
NationalityAmerican
Scientific career
FieldsStatistician
InstitutionsUnited States Census Bureau

Simon Newton Dexter (S. N. D.) North (1848-1924)[1] was an American statistician. He served as President of the American Statistical Association in 1910. In 1914 he became one of the inaugural Fellows of the American Statistical Association.[2]

Earlier he had been Secretary of the National Association of Wool Manufacturers.[3]

North was chosen to head the 12th census in 1900. After Herman Hollerith's electromechanical tabulating machine was first used in the 11th census, it allowed North's administration to extend the census method to the field of agriculture and manufacture. Sharing the worries about the influx of immigrants with other upper-class Americans and colleagues of his day, like Francis Walker,[4] North praised Hollerith's tabulator machine as an enabler in "[coping] successfully with the problems growing out of the heterogeneous commingling of races" which "has been a powerful influence in the rapid disappearance of the Puritanical outlook upon life".[5]

References

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  1. ^ "US Census Directors 1893 - 1909".
  2. ^ List of ASA Fellows, retrieved 2016-07-16.
  3. ^ The Census Directorship. New York Times. Dec 28, 1897.
  4. ^ Hodgson, Dennis (1992). "Ideological Currents and the Interpretation of Demographic Trends: The Case of Francis Amasa Walker". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 28 (1): 28–44. doi:10.1002/1520-6696(199201)28:1<28::AID-JHBS2300280103>3.0.CO;2-L. PMID 11612656.
  5. ^ North, S. N. D. (1918) [1914-02-13]. Seventy Five Years of Progress in Statistics: The Outlook for the Future. Boston, MA: American Statistical Association. pp. 25f. Retrieved 2020-05-23. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
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