J.M. Fells
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John Manger Fells (1858 – 7 December 1925) was a British incorporated
accountant An accountant is a practitioner of accounting or accountancy. Accountants who have demonstrated competency through their professional associations' certification exams are certified to use titles such as Chartered Accountant, Chartered Certifi ...
consultant, and author on
accounting Accounting, also known as accountancy, is the measurement, processing, and communication of financial and non financial information about economic entities such as businesses and corporations. Accounting, which has been called the "languag ...
. He was known as promoter of cost accounting and leading cost accountant in Britain early 20th century.Locke, Robert R. "Cost Accounting: An Institutional Yardstick For Measuring British Entrepreneurial Performance Circa 1914," in: ''The Accounting Historians Journal'' (1979): 1-22.
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Biography

Fells was a tailor's son, who came into prominence as secretary of Zetetical Society early 1880s, where he crossed paths with
Sidney Webb Sidney James Webb, 1st Baron Passfield, (13 July 1859 – 13 October 1947) was a British socialist, economist and reformer, who co-founded the London School of Economics. He was an early member of the Fabian Society in 1884, joining, like Geo ...
and Emile Garcke. He took classes in intermediate arithmetics, mathematics, composition, dictation, and English History at the Birkbeck Literary and Scientific Institution in 1872 and 1873. In 1887 Fells had become assistant secretary at the
Brush Electrical Light Corporation Brush Traction is a manufacturer and maintainer of railway locomotives in Loughborough, England. It is a subsidiary of Wabtec. History Hughes's Locomotive & Tramway Engine Works Henry Hughes had been operating at the Falcon Works since ...
, which was directed by Emile Garcke in those days. With Garcke he co-authored with the book "Factory Accounts: Their Principles and Practice." In the next decades this books was published in seven editions, and was still in use in Britain as educational text in the early 1930s. Fells joined the SAA accounting association in 1902, and was later elected fellow of the ICWA. He became known as authority in the field of cost accounting. Early in the 1900s Fells became chairman of the mining corporation Kent Collieries, by 1911 he was director of three mining corporations with operations in Burma and Australia. and later worked as consultant for the British industry and lectured accountants in India and Japan.J.M. Fells. "Cost Accounting," in: ''Incorporated Accountants' Students' Society of London.'' 1910. p. 160-161 In World War I Fells served as Private Secretary to the Surveyor-General of Supply in the War Office, and was appointed a CBE, Civilian War Honour, in 1920.


Work


Financial accounting and cost accounting

As authority in the field of cost accounting, Fells was engaged in promoting the profession and the legal status of the profession. In those days there was a big difference between financial accounting and cost accounting. Locke (1979) recalled:
inancial accounting wasa liberal profession made up of independent wealthy businessmen who did not work directly for industry but acted as consultants, working out of their own offices, much as lawyers do. The chartered or incorporated accountants, moreover, were not even exposed to cost accounting during their training, for as young “articled” clerks they were apprenticed to accounting offices instead of formally educated in colleges or universities. They could only learn what happened in the offices and, since the accountants seldom dealt with costing matters neither did the apprentices. The clerks who kept cost records in British industry were not chartered or incorporated accountants. They were poor, badly educated men who received what training they got on the job in a factory bookkeeping office. They hardly ever came into professional contact with public accountants who, in any case, despised them because of their lower class origins.
In 1910 J.M. Fells remarked that public accountants still "did not consider these industrial cost accountants to be engaged in accounting."


Selected publications

* J. M. Fells, G.B. Shaw, Sidney Webb et al. ''The Zetetical Society: Programme for the Session 1881-82.'' Zetetical Society, London. * Emile Garcke and J. M. Fells.
Factory accounts, their principles; a handbook for accountants and manufacturers with appendices on the nomenclature of machine details; the income tax acts; the rating of factories; fire and boiler insurance; the factory and workshop acts, etc.; including also a glossary of terms and a large number of specimen rulings
'' 1887; 2nd ed. 1889; 4th ed., rev. and enl, 1893. * J.M. Fells (1909). ''The Budget and the Taxation of Land.'' * John Manger Fells. ''Accountancy in Relation to Cost and Market Prices, Etc.'' London, 1923. Articles, a selection: * J.M. Fells. "Cost Accounting," in: ''Incorporated Accountants' Students' Society of London.'' 1910. p. 160-161 * Fells, J. M. "The Accountancy of Tomorrow," ''The Incorporated Accountants’ Journal,'' 22 (July, 1912), pp. 69–74. * Fells, John M. "Some principles governing the ascertainment of cost." ''Incorporated Accountants’ Journal'' (1919): 31-34. * Fells, J. M. "Industrial Economics'." ''The Incorporated Accountants' Journal,'' (1922): 123-6.


References


External links


Cost Accounting: An Institutional Yardstick For Measuring British Entrepreneurial Performance Circa 1914
by Robert R. Locke. {{DEFAULTSORT:Fells, John Manger 1858 births 1925 deaths British accountants British writers