STS Circle at Harvard
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James Bergman
Harvard, History of Science

on
Working on Climatic Time: Climatology and Labor
Practices in Postwar Industrial Agriculture

Monday, November 4
12:15-2:00 pm
Maxwell Dworkin, 33 Oxford Street, Room 119

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Wednesday, October 30.

Abstract: In 1946, C.W. Thornthwaite left his position as principal 
climatologist at the Soil Conservation Service to consult for Seabrook Farms, 
one of the largest growers of truck crops and distributors of frozen foods in 
the United States. While there, he attempted to redress the problem of labor 
unrest and employment uncertainty brought on by the seasonal hiring and firing 
by reorganizing the farm’s harvest schedule. The new schedule staggered 
planting and harvesting on the basis of a “climatic calendar,” rather than a 
civil calendar, and was widely hailed as a successful nonmilitary application 
of the new field of operations research. For present-day scholars, it provides 
an opportunity to understand how ideas about climate were embedded not only in 
the physical characteristics of a region (rainfall, temperature, etc.), but 
also in practices of labor and industrial organization. It also illustrated the 
way in which climatology was presented as a way to understand and mitigate both 
environmental and social instability.

Biography:  James is a sixth-year PhD candidate in the History of Science at 
Harvard University. His dissertation traces the career of the climatologist 
C.W. Thornthwaite through government, academia, and business consulting (from 
1933 to 1963), with a view toward understanding the interaction between 
climatology and ideas about environmental control and stability. He was the 
recipient, in 2011, of the History of Science Society’s Nathan Reingold Prize 
for best original graduate student essay on the history of science and its 
cultural influences, for “Fighting Chance: The Science of Probability and the 
Forecast Controversy Between the Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory and the 
U.S. Signal Service, 1884–1890.” Prior to his PhD work, James received his A.B. 
in History and Science at Harvard. He later worked as a research associate in 
the areas of science and technology policy and international economics at the 
Council on Foreign Relations.



A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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