George E. Bates was an American academic. He was a Professor of Investment Management at the Harvard Business School and the editor of the Harvard Business Review.
Bates joined his father's lumber yard business, W. S. Bates & Son, in 1923 and remained a partner until 1940. The yard was in Nevada, Missouri. He started his career at the Harvard Business School as an Assistant Dean in 1925. Over the course of his forty-year career as a faculty member, he became the Williston Professor of Investment Management at the Harvard Business School. He authored two books and many academic articles. He was also the editor of the Harvard Business Review and the Harvard Business School Alumni Bulletin. He became professor emeritus in 1965. Bates also worked at Yale Law School as Sterling Research Associate and then Lecturer in Law. During World War II Bates was the Director of Instruction for the U.S. Navy Supply Corps Midshipmen-Officers School. He was also a member of the New England Committee for the Quartermaster Corps for testing cold weather and mountaineering equipment. In Investment Management: A Casebook, Bates presents many business cases of investment management. Reviewing it for The Journal of Finance, University of Washington professor Fred J. Mueller suggested the cases were outdated. Meanwhile, French industrial economist Jacques Houssiaux said in Revue économique that the cases could not be applied to the French context, though he hoped the book would inspire French investment managers. Bates was an advisor to the Institute of Business Administration at Istanbul University in Turkey, and to the government of Tunisia. He participated in the Expedition for the Archaeological Exploration of Sardis with faculty from Harvard and Cornell University. Bates was an honorary curator of the Byzantine coins and seals section of the Fogg Museum. He was the author of a book about Byzantine coins. He was a fellow of the American Numismatic Society. In retirement Bates published A Bates-Breed Ancestry to document a lifetime of work digging into the genealogy of his and wife's ancestors, including all maternal lines, going back at least 11 generations, to the 16th century in many cases.
Personal life, death and legacy
Bates was married in Lynn, Massachusetts on April 11, 1931 to Dorothea Breed of Lynn and they had two sons, George Preston and Nathaniel Breed. They resided first in Lexington and then in Concord, Massachusetts. Dorothea died in 1943. In 1949, Bates married Louise MacMillan in Boston. They lived in Gloucester, Massachusetts for a while and then on Beacon Street in Boston's Back Bay. On his retirement in 1965, they moved to Camden, Maine. Bates served on several board and committees in Concord including the Planning Board and the Library Committee. He also served as vice president of Emerson Hospital and was a member of the Governor's Committee on Public Transportation. Bates was a member of the Society of Colonial Wars, the Somerset Club, the Country Club of Brookline and the Vine Book Hunt Club. An avid sailor, he was a member first of Eastern PointYacht Club in Gloucester, later of Camden Yacht Club, as well as of the Yacht Racing Union of Massachusetts Bay. His sailboat Sunshine was named after Sunshine Biscuit, Inc., successor name of the Loose-Wiles Biscuit Company founded by his great uncle Jacob L. Loose and his brother Joseph. Bates was also an honorary trustee of the New England Historic Genealogical Society. Bates died on September 25, 1992 in Camden. Bates is the namesake of an endowed chair at the Harvard Business School held by William E. Fruhan Jr.
Works
Archives and records
at Baker Library Special Collections, Harvard Business School