Craig W. Heinicke Curriculum Vitae Department of Economics Robins School of Business 28 Westhampton Way University of Richmond, VA 23173 cheinick@richmond.edu Phone: 804 287 6355 EDUCATION 1991 Ph.D., Economic History, Department of Economics, University of Toronto 1984 M.A., Economics, University of Toronto 1981 B.A. with Honors, SUNY College at Purchase ACADEMIC POSITIONS Teaching 2007- Visiting Professor, Department of Economics, Robins School of Business, University of Richmond 2002-07 Professor of Economics, Baldwin Wallace University 1996-2002 Associate Professor of Economics, Baldwin-Wallace University 1991-96 Assistant Professor of Economics, Baldwin-Wallace University 1989-91 Instructor of Economics, College of William and Mary 1982-88 Teaching Assistant, University of Toronto; Glendon College of York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Administrative 2000-07 Director, Baldwin-Wallace University Honors Program Sabbaticals 2004-05 Visiting Scholar, Center for Study of Public Choice, George Mason University 1998 Manchester and Halifax, Yorkshire, England, Archive research
SCHOLARSHIP Journal Articles Machinery Has Completely Taken Over, the Diffusion of the Mechanical Cotton Picker, 1949-64, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, (2008), 29, 1, 65-96. Labor Markets, Regional Diversity, and Cotton Harvest Mechanization in the Post-WWII U.S. with Wayne Grove. Social Science History (2005), 29, 2, 269-297. Better or Worse Opportunities? The Demise of Cotton Harvest Labor in the US 1949-1964, with Wayne Grove. Journal of Economic History (2003), 63, 3, 736-767. One Step Forward: Labor Force Participation of African-American Married Women in the South 1950-60, Journal of Interdisciplinary History (Summer, 2000), XXX: I, pp. 43-62. Southern Tenancy, Machines, and Production Scale on the Eve of the Cotton Picker's Arrival, Social Science History (Fall, 1999), Vol. 23, no. 3, pp. 435-458. African-American Migration and Mechanized Cotton Harvesting, 1950-60, Explorations in Economic History (1994), Vol. 31, 501-520. African-American Migration and Urban Labor Skills: 1950 and 1960, Agricultural History, (1994) Vol. 68, 185-198. Chapters and Encyclopedia Entries Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration, Greenwood Milestones in African-American History, edited by Steven A. Reich (2006, Greenwood Press) Cotton Belt, Impact of the Great Migration, Volume 1, 220-223 Demographic Patterns of the Great Black Migration (1940-1970), Volume 1, 239-243 Mechanical Cotton Harvester, Volume 2, 515-517 African-American Migration and Urban Labor Skills, 1950. conference paper Reprinted in David O. Whitten ed., Ely Whitney's Cotton Gin, 1793-1993, University of California Press.(1994), 185-198 Research with Undergraduate Student Participation 2013 Data cleaning and documentation editing, Women in cottage industry: Yorkshire, England in the 1840s with research assistant Rebecca Gluck, Robins School of Business, University of Richmond. 2002 Data analysis, Women in cottage industry: Yorkshire, in the 1840s. Student analysis of data collected at Yorkshire archives, Halifax, Yorkshire, UK. Student data cleaning for paper presented at the Economic History workshop, Harvard U. ( Racial and Regional Diversity see papers presented). Student research assistance by Michele Knapp.
2001 Data analysis and literature search for project on Women in household manufacture, Yorkshire, in the 1840s, and Cotton mechanization paper (see above under paper presentations). David Gartman and Erin Hahl, student research assistants. 1993 Statistical Analysis of Southern Labor in the US, focusing on African-American Married Women, with Susan Hunt. Published article resulted with student named as research assistant. 1992 Research Project on African-American Migration in the U.S with Mike Hammersmith, Baldwin-Wallace University, published article resulted with student named as research assistant. Academic Book Reviews Review of Keith J. Volanto, Texas, Cotton, and the New Deal, Journal of Economic History (2005), 65, 3, pp. 879-880. Review of TC Jacobson and GD Smith, Cotton's Renaissance: A Study in Market Innovation, Journal of Economic History, Cambridge University Press (2002). 62, 3: 901-902. Review of Donald Holley, The Second Great Emancipation: The Mechanical Cotton Picker, Black Migration, and How They Shaped the Modern South. for EH.NET, the website of the Cliometrics Society and associated societies, Miami University of Ohio, 2002. Economic History Services, Mar 26, 2002, Review of Lee Alston and Joseph Ferrie, Southern Paternalism and the American Welfare State, Economics, Politics, and Institutions in the South 1865-1965, University of Cambridge Press, for EH.NET, the website of the Cliometrics Society and associated societies, Miami University of Ohio, Dec. 2000. Review of John James and Mark Thomas, ed., Capitalism in Context: Essays on Economic Development and Cultural Change in Honor of R. M. Hartwell, Albion, a Journal of British Studies, (1996), Vol. 28, No. 1, pp. 163-65. Conference Papers Women Weavers in mid-19th Century Yorkshire: Specialization, Productivity and Wages. Social Science History Association, Chicago Ill, Nov, 2010. They naturally take care of keeping their own : Southern U.S. Labor Markets, Paternalism, and Selective Service during World War II. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Economics Association, Nov. 2007, New Orleans. Diffusion of the Cotton Picking Machine, 1949-1964 with Wayne Grove, Economic History Association Annual Meeting, San Jose, CA, September, 2004, abstracted in Journal of Economic History (June, 2005) 65, 2, 564. Diffusion of the Cotton Picking Machine, 1949-1964. With Wayne Grove, Allied Social Sciences Association, Cliometrics Sessions, January 2004, San Diego.
The Adoption of New Technology by Small Scale Producers: The Case of Cotton Pickers vs. Mechanical Strippers in Texas, 1949-1961. Paper presented at the Economic and Business Historical Society Annual Meeting, Memphis, April 2003. Technical Choice: Mechanical Cotton Pickers or Strippers in Texas, 1947-62. Paper presented with Wayne Grove at the Economic History Association Annual Conference, St. Louis, Mo., October 2002. Abstracted in Journal of Economic History (2003) 63,2, 568. The Economics of the Mechanical Cotton Picker and Southern Labor Markets, with Wayne Grove. Paper Presented at the Allied Social Sciences Association Annual Meeting, Atlanta GA, January 2002. Technological Unemployment in Agriculture: New Cost Estimates and Cotton Harvest Mechanization in the U.S. With Wayne Grove presented at the Northeast Universities Development Consortium Conference, Boston, MA September 28-30, 2001. Driven from the Field or Enticed to the City?: The Mechanical Cotton Harvester and the Great Migration from the Cotton Belt, 1949-1964. With Wayne Grove, Social Science History Association Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois; Midwest Economics Association Annual Meeting, Cleveland, OH, March 2001. The Federal Soil Bank, the Decline of Cotton, and the Demise of the Southern Plantation in the 1950s. Preliminary paper summary appearing in the Newsletter of the Cliometric Society, (Oct. 1996), Vol. 11, and presented at the Allied Social Science Association Annual meeting, New Orleans, LA, January, 1997. Southern Family Income in the Wake of the 'Great Migration, 1950-60. Presented at the annual meeting of the Social Science History Association, Nov. 1995, Chicago. Was the Great Migration an Elevating Force for African-Americans in the American Economy, 1950-60?. The Canadian Economics Association Annual Meeting, Calgary, Alta., Canada, (June 1994). Family Labor Market Activity and the Effects of the Great Migration: African-American nonmigrant Men and Women in the South 1950-1960. Presented at the annual meeting of the Economic History Association, Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct., 1994, abstracted in Journal of Economic History (June 1995) 55, 2, 398. African-American Migration and Urban Labor Skills: Evidence From 1950 and 1960. Presented at the Ely Whitney Cotton Gin Symposium, Meeting of the Agricultural History Society, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama May 1993. Black Migration from the Rural U.S. South and Mechanization in Agriculture, 1940-60. Presented at the 50th Annual Meeting of the Economic History Association, Montreal, PQ, Canada September, 1990. University Workshops and Seminars If Selective then How? Southern Labor Markets and Selective Service During World War II. Paper presented at the University of Akron Economics Department Seminar, March 2006.
Gross Favoritism in Selective Service? Southern Labor Markets and Paternalism During World War II. Paper presented at the Economics Department seminar, Cleveland State University. November, 2005. Southern Labor Markets and Paternalism During World War II: the Effect of the Selective Service System. Center for Study of Public Choice, George Mason University, March 2005. Drafting the New South: World War II, the Selective Service System, and the Integration of America. Invited Public Lecture, James Madison University, March 30, 2005. The Diffusion of the Mechanical Cotton Picker. All-Ohio Economic History Workshop, Ohio State University Economics Department, Columbus, OH, November, 2003. Racial and Regional Diversity and the Mechanization of the Cotton Harvest in the US 1949-64. Presented with Wayne Grove, Harvard University Economic History Workshop, November 2002. Driven from the Field or Enticed to the City?: The Mechanical Cotton Harvester and the Great Migration from the Cotton Belt, 1949-1964. Paper presented at the All-Ohio Economic History Seminar, Ohio State University, November 2000 Was the Great Migration an Elevating Force for African-Americans in the American Economy, 1950-60? Economic History Workshop, Department of Economics, Northwestern University. Feb., 1994. Newsletter Contributions Technology and Employment: What We Can Learn About Incentives and Institutions. The Economy, newsletter of the Buckhorn Chair in Economics, Baldwin-Wallace University, Fall 2002. Proceedings of the All-Ohio Economic History Seminar, Newsletter of the Cliometrics Society, Summer 2000, Vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 22-24. Economists and Economic Policy: Should we celebrate the Year 2000 Without Them? The Economy, newsletter of the Buckhorn Chair in Economics, Baldwin-Wallace University, Winter 2000. Railroad Mergers and the Uneasy Public: The Break-Up of the Consolidated Rail Corporation. The Economy, newsletter of the Buckhorn Chair in Economics, Baldwin-Wallace University, Winter 1999. Economic Policy in an Election Year: A Post World War II Perspective. The Economy, newsletter of the Baldwin-Wallace University Buckhorn Chair in Economics, 1992. Teaching Innovation Program Participation 2006-07 The Teaching Innovations Program (TIPS), sponsored by the American Economic Association committee on economic education; revision of teaching methods for use in economics classes, 2006-07 Academic year.
1995-96 Participant, Seminar on course revision to meet multicultural curricular goals and subsequent revision of teaching methods, academic year 1995-6. Teaching Seminars Attended 2014 Conference on Teaching & Research in Economic Education, Washington, D.C. Sponsored by the Committee on Economic Education, American Economic Association. 2011 Conference on Teaching & Research in Economic Education, Palo Alto, CA, Sponsored by the Committee on Economic Education, American Economic Association. 2010 Creative Ideas for Your Basic Economics Course. University of Florida, Tallahassee, FL, Feb 4-5, 2010. 2006 The Teaching Innovations Program (TIPS), workshop sponsored by the American Economic Association committee on economic education. June 2006, Chicago, IL. 2005 Midwest Conference on Student Learning in Economics: Innovation, Assessment, and Classroom Research, University of Akron, October, 2005. 2001 National Collegiate Honors Council Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL. 2000 The Teaching of Economics. The Introductory Economics Course: Does it need reforming? How can we teach economic Literacy? Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH. 1996 Opening Doors To Technology in Classrooms. OFIC Information Technology Summer Program. Walsh University, North Canton, OH. 1994 The Teaching of Economics: Thinking About Economic Thinking. Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH. 1994 East Central Colleges North American Nation Institute Summer Seminar, Caribbean Project, Mt. Union College, Alliance, Ohio. GRANTS 2005 Baldwin-Wallace University, Summer Research Grant 2003 Baldwin-Wallace University, Summer Research Grant 2001 Baldwin-Wallace University, Summer Research Grant 1998 Gigax Foundation Travel Grant for Travel to Yorkshire, England 1994 Baldwin-Wallace University, Summer Research Grant
1993 George Gund Foundation Grant, for research on African-American labor market dynamics, using Integrated Public Use Micro-Sample. Student Assistant Trained and Employed. 1992 George Gund Foundation Grant, for research on African-American migration. Student Assistant Trained and Employed. 1988 Associates of the University of Toronto Grant, for research conducted at the US Department of Agriculture, and National Archives, Washington, D.C. ACADEMIC SERVICE 2005-06 Vice-Chair, Baldwin-Wallace University Faculty 2005-07 Economics Department, Baldwin-Wallace University, Webpage Advisor 2001-07 Chair, Baldwin-Wallace University Honors Committee 2002-05 Member, Baldwin-Wallace University Faculty Development Committee. 2002-03 Participated in planning meetings for the Department of Education Grant Project on internationalization of the Curriculum, Latin America Unit 2001-07 Faculty Development committee, Baldwin-Wallace University 2000-01 Chair, Faculty Honors Committee, Baldwin-Wallace University 1999-2001 Chair, Faculty Enrollment Services Council, Baldwin-Wallace University 1999-2000 Member, Faculty Personnel committee, Baldwin-Wallace University 1999 Participant, Workshop for the Recruitment of Under-represented Faculty of Color, Baldwin-Wallace University 1997-98 Member, Student Affairs Advisory Board, Baldwin-Wallace University 1995 Participant, Seminar on course revision to meet Multicultural Curricular Goals, Baldwin-Wallace University 1994-97 Faculty Secretary, Baldwin-Wallace University Faculty 1993-2007 Member, Honors committee, Baldwin-Wallace University 1993-98 Co-Chair: Faculty Scholarship Support Group, Baldwin-Wallace University
MEDIA AND COMMUNITY APPEARANCES Research consultant for Louise Kiernan s, Chicago Tribune article Will to Read: Calvin Cottrell s Dogged Pursuit of Words and a Lost Education. March 17, 2002 Section 1, pp 1, 11-14. Cleveland News Channel Five, various dates 1999-2000. Current Theories for Full Employment, Cleveland City Club, April, 1994. UNIVERSITY PRESENTATIONS, AWARDS 2012 Panel Member, Teaching Innovation: Not an Individual or Episodic Endeavor, Pedagogy Luncheon Series, Robins School of Business, University of Richmond 2001 Baldwin-Wallace University Community Association, Faculty Community Relations Award 2001 Fall Faculty Conference Presentation, Summer Grant Research, Baldwin-Wallace University 1995 Fall Faculty Conference Presentation, by invitation of the Multicultural Task Force: Sharing What I have Done in the Classroom to Enhance Student Exposure to Multicultural Social Questions, Baldwin-Wallace University 1993 Fall Faculty Conference Presentation, Gund and Summer Grant Research, Baldwin- Wallace University 1992 Panel Participant, President Clinton s First 100 days, Baldwin-Wallace University 1991 Faculty Scholarship Support Group, presentation of dissertation research CONSULTING IN TEACHING-RELATED FIELDS 2001 Cuyahoga County Public Library System, circulation data analysis 1997 Penton Publishing, statistical analysis of machine tool data 1992-03 Kirby Inc., Forecasting of Sales and Shipments REFEREE AND REVIEWING Journals: Essays in Economic and Business History Explorations in Economic History
Journal of Economic Education Journal of Southern History Social Science History Books: Harper Collins Publishers John Wiley & Sons Publishers