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Managers and Ministers: Instilling Christian Free Enterprise in the Postwar Workplace

Elizabeth Fones-Wolf and Ken Fones-Wolf

Business History Review, 2015, vol. 89, issue 1, 99-124

Abstract: This article examines the early industrial chaplain movement. In the midst of a postwar religious revival, companies, primarily in the South, hired Protestant ministers to care for their workers' spiritual needs. Many were motivated by both religious convictions and the desire to build a productive, loyal workforce. The opposition of unions and liberal Protestantism slowed the movement's growth, although over the last three decades thousands of employers have rediscovered the benefits of faith-based workplace programs. This article illuminates important postwar trends such as the persistence of paternalism and the importance of religion in managerial strategies.

Date: 2015
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