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A Patriot’s History of the United States

A Patriot’s History of the United States


FROM COLUMBUS’S GREAT DISCOVERY TO THE WAR ON TERROR
Larry Schweikart and Michael Allen
SENTINEL
SENTINEL
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2
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g 2196, South
Africa
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in 2004 by Sentinel, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Copyright © Larry Schweikart and Michael Allen, 2004
All rights reserved
CIP DATA AVAILABLE.
ISBN: 1-4295-2229-1
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publ
ication may be
reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in
any form or by any
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e prior written
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To Dee and Adam
—Larry Schweikart
For my mom
—Michael Allen
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Larry Schweikart would like to thank Jesse McIntyre and Aaron Sorrentino for the
ir contribution to
charts and graphs; and Julia Cupples, Brian Rogan, Andrew Gough, and Danielle El
am for
research. Cynthia King performed heroic typing work on crash schedules. The Univ
ersity of
Dayton, particularly Dean Paul Morman, supported this work through a number of g
rants.
Michael Allen would like to thank Bill Richardson, Director of Interdisciplinary
Arts and Sciences
at the University of Washington, Tacoma, for his friendship and collegial suppor
t for over a decade.
We would both like to thank Mark Smith, David Beito, Brad Birzer, Robert Loewenb
erg, Jeff
Hanichen, David Horowitz, Jonathan Bean, Constantine Gutzman, Burton Folsom Jr.,
Julius Amin,
and Michael Etchison for comments on the manuscript. Ed Knappman and the staff a
t New
England Publishing Associates believed in this book from the beginning and have
our undying
gratitude. Our special thanks to Bernadette Malone, whose efforts made this poss
ible; to Megan
Casey for her sharp eye; and to David Freddoso for his ruthless, but much needed
, pen.
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER ONE:
The City on the Hill, 1492–1707
CHAPTER TWO:
Colonial Adolescence, 1707–63
CHAPTER THREE:
Colonies No More, 1763–83
CHAPTER FOUR:
A Nation of Law, 1776–89
CHAPTER FIVE:
Small Republic, Big Shoulders, 1789–1815
CHAPTER SIX:
The First Era of Big Central Government, 1815–36
CHAPTER SEVEN:
Red Foxes and Bear Flags, 1836–48
CHAPTER EIGHT:
The House Dividing, 1848–60
CHAPTER NINE:
The Crisis of the Union, 1860–65
CHAPTER TEN:
Ideals and Realities of Reconstruction, 1865–76
CHAPTER ELEVEN:
Lighting Out for the Territories, 1861–90
CHAPTER TWELVE:
Sinews of Democracy, 1876–96
CHAPTER THIRTEEN:
“Building Best, Building Greatly,” 1896–1912
CHAPTER FOURTEEN:
War, Wilson, and Internationalism, 1912–20
CHAPTER FIFTEEN:
The Roaring Twenties and the Great Crash, 1920–32
CHAPTER SIXTEEN:
Enlarging the Public Sector, 1932–40 The New Deal: Immediate Goals, Unintended Res
ults
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN:
Democracy’s Finest Hour, 1941–45
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN:
America’s “Happy Days,” 1946–59
CHAPTER NINETEEN:
The Age of Upheaval, 1960–74
CHAPTER TWENTY:
Retreat and Resurrection, 1974–88
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE:
The Moral Crossroads, 1989–2000
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO:
America, World Leader, 2000 and Beyond
CONCLUSION
NOTES
SELECTED READING
INDEX
INTRODUCTION
Is America’s past a tale of racism, sexism, and bigotry? Is it the story of the co
nquest and rape of a
continent? Is U.S. history the story of white slave owners who perverted the ele
ctoral process for
their own interests? Did America start with Columbus’s killing all the Indians, le
ap to Jim Crow
laws and Rockefeller crushing the workers, then finally save itself with Frankli
n Roosevelt’s New
Deal? The answers, of course, are no, no, no, and NO.
One might never know this, however, by looking at almost any mainstream U.S. his
tory textbook.
Having taught American history in one form or another for close to sixty years b
etween us, we are
aware that, unfortunately, many students are berated with tales of the Founders
as self-interested
politicians and slaveholders, of the icons of American industry as robber-baron
oppressors, and of
every American foreign policy initiative as imperialistic and insensitive. At le
ast Howard Zinn’s A
People’s History of the United States honestly represents its Marxist biases in th
e title!
What is most amazing and refreshing is that the past usually speaks for itself.
The evidence is there
for telling the great story of the American past honestly—with flaws, absolutely;
with
shortcomings, most definitely. But we think that an honest evaluation of the his
tory of the United
States must begin and end with the recognition that, compared to any other natio
n, America’s past
is a bright and shining light. America was, and is, the city on the hill, the fo
untain of hope, the
beacon of liberty. We utterly reject “My country right or wrong”—what scholar wouldn’t?
But in
the last thirty years, academics have taken an equally destructive approach: “My c
ountry, always
wrong!” We reject that too.
Instead, we remain convinced that if the story of America’s past is told fairly, t
he result cannot be
anything but a deepened patriotism, a sense of awe at the obstacles overcome, th
e passion invested,
the blood and tears spilled, and the nation that was built. An honest review of
America’s past would
note, among other observations, that the same Founders who owned slaves institut
ed numerous
ways—political and intellectual—to ensure that slavery could not survive; that the c
oncern over not
just property rights, but all rights, so infused American life that laws often f
ollowed the practices of
the common folk, rather than dictated to them; that even when the United States
used her military
power for dubious reasons, the ultimate result was to liberate people and bring
a higher standard of
living than before; that time and again America’s leaders have willingly shared po
wer with those
who had none, whether they were citizens of territories, former slaves, or disen
franchised women.
And we could go on.
The reason so many academics miss the real history of America is that they assum
e that ideas don’t
matter and that there is no such thing as virtue. They could not be more wrong.
When John D.
Rockefeller said, “The common man must have kerosene and he must have it cheap,” Roc
kefeller
was already a wealthy man with no more to gain. When Grover Cleveland vetoed an
insignificant
seed corn bill, he knew it would hurt him politically, and that he would only wi
n condemnation
from the press and the people—but the Constitution did not permit it, and he refus
ed.
Consider the scene more than two hundred years ago when President John Adams—just
voted out
of office by the hated Republicans of Thomas Jefferson—mounted a carriage and left
Washington
even before the inauguration. There was no armed struggle. Not a musket ball was
fired, nor a
political opponent hanged. No Federalists marched with guns or knives in the str
eets. There was no
guillotine. And just four years before that, in 1796, Adams had taken part in an
equally momentous
event when he won a razor-thin close election over Jefferson and, because of Sen
ate rules, had to
count his own contested ballots. When he came to the contested Georgia ballot, t
he great
Massachusetts revolutionary, the “Duke of Braintree,” stopped counting. He sat down
for a moment
to allow Jefferson or his associates to make a challenge, and when he did not, A
dams finished the
tally, becoming president. Jefferson told confidants that he thought the ballots
were indeed in
dispute, but he would not wreck the country over a few pieces of paper. As Adams
took the oath of
office, he thought he heard Washington say, “I am fairly out and you are fairly in
! See which of us
will be the happiest!”1 So much for protecting his own interests! Washington stepp
ed down freely
and enthusiastically, not at bayonet point. He walked away from power, as nearly
each and every
American president has done since.
These giants knew that their actions of character mattered far more to the natio
n they were creating
than mere temporary political positions. The ideas they fought for together in 1
776 and debated in
1787 were paramount. And that is what American history is truly about—ideas. Ideas
such as “All
men are created equal”; the United States is the “last, best hope” of earth; and Ameri
ca “is great,
because it is good.”
Honor counted to founding patriots like Adams, Jefferson, Washington, and then l
ater, Lincoln and
Teddy Roosevelt. Character counted. Property was also important; no denying that
, because with
property came liberty. But virtue came first. Even J. P. Morgan, the epitome of
the so-called robber
baron, insisted that “the first thing is character…before money or anything else. Mo
ney cannot buy
it.”
It is not surprising, then, that so many left-wing historians miss the boat (and
miss it, and miss it,
and miss it to the point where they need a ferry schedule). They fail to underst
and what every
colonial settler and every western pioneer understood: character was tied to lib
erty, and liberty to
property. All three were needed for success, but character was the prerequisite
because it put the
law behind property agreements, and it set responsibility right next to liberty.
And the surest way to
ensure the presence of good character was to keep God at the center of one’s life,
community, and
ultimately, nation. “Separation of church and state” meant freedom to worship, not f
reedom from
worship. It went back to that link between liberty and responsibility, and no on
e could be taken
seriously who was not responsible to God. “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there
is liberty.” They
believed those words.
As colonies became independent and as the nation grew, these ideas permeated the
fabric of the
founding documents. Despite pits of corruption that have pockmarked federal and
state politics—
some of them quite deep—and despite abuses of civil rights that were shocking, to
say the least, the
concept was deeply imbedded that only a virtuous nation could achieve the lofty
goals set by the
Founders. Over the long haul, the Republic required virtuous leaders to prosper.
Yet virtue and character alone were not enough. It took competence, skill, and t
alent to build a
nation. That’s where property came in: with secure property rights, people from al
l over the globe
flocked to America’s shores. With secure property rights, anyone could become succ
essful, from an
immigrant Jew like Lionel Cohen and his famous Lionel toy trains to an Austrian
bodybuilderturned-
millionaire actor and governor like Arnold Schwarzenegger. Carnegie arrived penn
iless;
Ford’s company went broke; and Lee Iacocca had to eat crow on national TV for his
company’s
mistakes. Secure property rights not only made it possible for them all to succe
ed but, more
important, established a climate of competition that rewarded skill, talent, and
risk taking.
Political skill was essential too. From 1850 to 1860 the United States was nearl
y rent in half by
inept leaders, whereas an integrity vacuum nearly destroyed American foreign pol
icy and shattered
the economy in the decades of the 1960s and early 1970s. Moral, even pious, men
have taken the
nation to the brink of collapse because they lacked skill, and some of the most
skilled politicians in
the world—Henry Clay, Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton—left legacies of frustration and c
orruption
because their abilities were never wedded to character.
Throughout much of the twentieth century, there was a subtle and, at times, obvi
ous campaign to
separate virtue from talent, to divide character from success. The latest in thi
s line of attack is the
emphasis on diversity—that somehow merely having different skin shades or national
origins
makes America special. But it was not the color of the skin of people who came h
ere that made
them special, it was the content of their character. America remains a beacon of
liberty, not merely
because its institutions have generally remained strong, its citizens free, and
its attitudes tolerant,
but because it, among most of the developed world, still cries out as a nation, “C
haracter counts.”
Personal liberties in America are genuine because of the character of honest jud
ges and attorneys
who, for the most part, still make up the judiciary, and because of the personal
integrity of large
numbers of local, state, and national lawmakers.
No society is free from corruption. The difference is that in America, corruptio
n is viewed as the
exception, not the rule. And when light is shown on it, corruption is viciously
attacked. Freedom
still attracts people to the fountain of hope that is America, but freedom alone
is not enough.
Without responsibility and virtue, freedom becomes a soggy anarchy, an incomplet
e licentiousness.
This is what has made Americans different: their fusion of freedom and integrity
endows
Americans with their sense of right, often when no other nation in the world sha
res their perception.
Yet that is as telling about other nations as it is our own; perhaps it is that
as Americans, we alone
remain committed to both the individual and the greater good, to personal freedo
ms and to public
virtue, to human achievement and respect for the Almighty. Slavery was abolished
because of the
dual commitment to liberty and virtue—neither capable of standing without the othe
r. Some
crusades in the name of integrity have proven disastrous, including Prohibition.
The most recent
serious threats to both liberty and public virtue (abuse of the latter damages b
oth) have come in the
form of the modern environmental and consumer safety movements. Attempts to sue
gun makers,
paint manufacturers, tobacco companies, and even Microsoft “for the public good” hav
e made
distressingly steady advances, encroaching on Americans’ freedoms to eat fast food
s, smoke, or
modify their automobiles, not to mention start businesses or invest in existing
firms without fear of
retribution.
The Founders—each and every one of them—would have been horrified at such intrusions
on
liberty, regardless of the virtue of the cause, not because they were elite whit
e men, but because
such actions in the name of the public good were simply wrong. It all goes back
to character: the
best way to ensure virtuous institutions (whether government, business, schools,
or churches) was
to populate them with people of virtue. Europe forgot this in the nineteenth cen
tury, or by World
War I at the latest. Despite rigorous and punitive face-saving traditions in the
Middle East or Asia,
these twin principles of liberty and virtue have never been adopted. Only in Ame
rica, where one
was permitted to do almost anything, but expected to do the best thing, did thes
e principles
germinate.
To a great extent, that is why, on March 4, 1801, John Adams would have thought
of nothing other
than to turn the White House over to his hated foe, without fanfare, self-pity,
or complaint, and
return to his everyday life away from politics. That is why, on the few occasion
s where very thin
electoral margins produced no clear winner in the presidential race (such as 182
4, 1876, 1888,
1960, and 2000), the losers (after some legal maneuvering, recounting of votes,
and occasional
whining) nevertheless stepped aside and congratulated the winner of a different
party. Adams may
have set a precedent, but in truth he would do nothing else. After all, he was a
man of character.
A Patriot’s History of the United States
CHAPTER ONE
The City on the Hill, 1492–1707
The Age of European Discovery
God, glory, and gold—not necessarily in that order—took post-Renaissance Europeans t
o parts of
the globe they had never before seen. The opportunity to gain materially while b
ringing the Gospel
to non-Christians offered powerful incentives to explorers from Portugal, Spain,
England, and
France to embark on dangerous voyages of discovery in the 1400s. Certainly they
were not the first
to sail to the Western Hemisphere: Norse sailors reached the coasts of Iceland i
n 874 and
Greenland a century later, and legends recorded Leif Erickson’s establishment of a
colony in
Vinland, somewhere on the northern Canadian coast.1 Whatever the fate of Vinland
, its historical
impact was minimal, and significant voyages of discovery did not occur for more
than five hundred
years, when trade with the Orient beckoned.
Marco Polo and other travelers to Cathay (China) had brought exaggerated tales o
f wealth in the
East and returned with unusual spices, dyes, rugs, silks, and other goods. But t
his was a difficult,
long journey. Land routes crossed dangerous territories, including imposing moun
tains and vast
deserts of modern-day Afghanistan, northern India, Iran, and Iraq, and required
expensive and wellprotected
caravans to reach Europe from Asia. Merchants encountered bandits who threatened
transportation lanes, kings and potentates who demanded tribute, and bloodthirst
y killers who
pillaged for pleasure. Trade routes from Bombay and Goa reached Europe via Persi
a or Arabia,
crossing the Ottoman Empire with its internal taxes. Cargo had to be unloaded at
seaports, then
reloaded at Alexandria or Antioch for water transport across the Mediterranean,
or continued on
land before crossing the Dardanelles Strait into modern-day Bulgaria to the Danu
be River.
European demand for such goods seemed endless, enticing merchants and their inve
stors to engage
in a relentless search for lower costs brought by safer and cheaper routes. Grad
ually, Europeans
concluded that more direct water routes to the Far East must exist.
The search for Cathay’s treasure coincided with three factors that made long ocean
voyages
possible. First, sailing and shipbuilding technology had advanced rapidly after
the ninth century,
thanks in part to the Arabs’ development of the astrolabe, a device with a pivoted
limb that
established the sun’s altitude above the horizon. By the late tenth century, astro
labe technology had
made its way to Spain.2 Farther north, Vikings pioneered new methods of hull con
struction, among
them the use of overlapping planks for internal support that enabled vessels to
withstand violent
ocean storms. Sailors of the Hanseatic League states on the Baltic coast experim
ented with larger
ship designs that incorporated sternpost rudders for better control. Yet improve
d ships alone were
not enough: explorers needed the accurate maps generated by Italian seamen and s
parked by the
new inquisitive impulse of the Renaissance. Thus a wide range of technologies co
alesced to
encourage long-range voyages of discovery.
Political changes, a second factor giving birth to the age of discovery, resulte
d from the efforts of
several ambitious European monarchs to consolidate their possessions into larger
, cohesive
dynastic states. This unification of lands, which increased the taxable base wit
hin the kingdoms,
greatly increased the funding available to expeditions and provided better milit
ary protection (in the
form of warships) at no cost to investors. By the time a combined Venetian-Spani
sh fleet defeated a
much larger Ottoman force at Lepanto in 1571, the vessels of Christian nations c
ould essentially
sail with impunity anywhere in the Mediterranean. Then, in control of the Medite
rranean,
Europeans could consider voyages of much longer duration (and cost) than they ev
er had in the
past. A new generation of explorers found that monarchs could support even more
expensive
undertakings that integrated the monarch’s interests with the merchants’.3
Third, the Protestant Reformation of 1517 fostered a fierce and bloody competiti
on for power and
territory between Catholic and Protestant nations that reinforced national conce
rns. England
competed for land with Spain, not merely for economic and political reasons, but
because the
English feared the possibility that Spain might catholicize numbers of non-Chris
tians in new lands,
whereas Catholics trembled at the thought of subjecting natives to Protestant he
resies. Therefore,
even when economic or political gains for discovery and colonization may have be
en marginal,
monarchs had strong religious incentives to open their royal treasuries to suppo
rt such missions.
Time Line
1492–1504:
Columbus’s four voyages
1519–21:
Cortés conquers Mexico
1585–87:
Roanoke Island (Carolinas) colony fails
1607:
Jamestown, Virginia, founded
1619:
First Africans arrive in Virginia
1619:
Virginia House of Burgesses formed
1620:
Pilgrims found Plymouth, Massachusetts
1630:
Puritan migration to Massachusetts
1634:
Calverts found Maryland
1635–36:
Pequot Indian War (Massachusetts)
1638:
Anne Hutchinson convicted of heresy
1639:
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
1642–48:
English Civil War
1650:
First Navigation Act (mercantilism)
1664:
English conquer New Netherlands (New York)
1675–76:
King Philip’s (Metacomet’s) War (Massachusetts)
1676:
Bacon’s Rebellion (Virginia)
1682:
Pennsylvania settled
1688–89:
English Glorious Revolution and Bill of Rights
1691:
Massachusetts becomes royal colony
1692:
Salem witch hunts
Portugal and Spain: The Explorers
Ironically, one of the smallest of the new monarchical states, Portugal, became
the first to subsidize
extensive exploration in the fifteenth century. The most famous of the Portugues
e explorers, Prince
Henry, dubbed the Navigator, was the brother of King Edward of Portugal. Henry (
1394–1460) had
earned a reputation as a tenacious fighter in North Africa against the Moors, an
d he hoped to roll
back the Muslim invaders and reclaim from them trade routes and territory.
A true Renaissance man, Henry immersed himself in mapmaking and exploration from
a coastal
center he established at Sagres, on the southern point of Portugal. There he tra
ined navigators and
mapmakers, dispatched ships to probe the African coast, and evaluated the report
s of sailors who
returned from the Azores.4 Portuguese captains made contact with Arabs and Afric
ans in coastal
areas and established trading centers, from which they brought ivory and gold to
Portugal, then
transported slaves to a variety of Mediterranean estates. This early slave trade
was conducted
through Arab middlemen or African traders who carried out slaving expeditions in
the interior and
exchanged captive men, women, and children for fish, wine, or salt on the coast.
Henry saw these relatively small trading outposts as only the first step in deve
loping reliable water
routes to the East. Daring sailors trained at Henry’s school soon pushed farther s
outhward, finally
rounding the Cape of Storms in 1486, when Bartholomeu Dias was blown off course
by fantastic
winds. King John II eventually changed the name of the cape to the Cape of Good
Hope, reflecting
the promise of a new route to India offered by Dias’s discovery. That promise beca
me reality in
1498, after Vasco de Gama sailed to Calicut, India. An abrupt decline in Portugu
ese fortunes led to
her eclipse by the larger Spain, reducing the resources available for investment
in exploration and
limiting Portuguese voyages to the Indian Ocean to an occasional “boatload of conv
icts.”5
Moreover, the prize for which Portuguese explorers had risked so much now seemed
small in
comparison to that discovered by their rivals the Spanish under the bold seamans
hip of Christopher
Columbus, a man the king of Portugal had once refused to fund.
Columbus departed from Spain in August 1492, laying in a course due west and ult
imately in a
direct line to Japan, although he never mentioned Cathay prior to 1493.6 A nativ
e of Genoa,
Columbus embodied the best of the new generation of navigators: resilient, coura
geous, and
confident. To be sure, Columbus wanted glory, and a motivation born of desperati
on fueled his
vision. At the same time, Columbus was “earnestly desirous of taking Christianity
to heathen
lands.”7 He did not, as is popularly believed, originate the idea that the earth i
s round. As early as
1480, for example, he read works proclaiming the sphericity of the planet. But k
nowing
intellectually that the earth is round and demonstrating it physically are two d
ifferent things.
Columbus’s fleet consisted of only three vessels, the Niña, the Pinta, and the Santa
María, and a
crew of ninety men. Leaving port in August 1492, the expedition eventually passe
d the point where
the sailors expected to find Japan, generating no small degree of anxiety, where
upon Columbus
used every managerial skill he possessed to maintain discipline and encourage ho
pe. The voyage
had stretched to ten weeks when the crew bordered on mutiny, and only the captai
n’s reassurance
and exhortations persuaded the sailors to continue a few more days. Finally, on
October 11, 1492,
they started to see signs of land: pieces of wood loaded with barnacles, green b
ulrushes, and other
vegetation.8 A lookout spotted land, and on October 12, 1492, the courageous ban
d waded ashore
on Watling Island in the Bahamas, where his men begged his pardon for doubting h
im.9
Columbus continued to Cuba, which he called Hispaniola. At the time he thought h
e had reached
the Far East, and referred to the dark-skinned people he found in Hispaniola as
Indians. He found
these Indians “very well formed, with handsome bodies and good faces,” and hoped to
convert
them “to our Holy Faith by love rather than by force” by giving them red caps and gl
ass beads “and
many other things of small value.”10 Dispatching emissaries into the interior to c
ontact the Great
Khan, Columbus’s scouts returned with no reports of the spices, jewels, silks, or
other evidence of
Cathay; nor did the khan send his regards. Nevertheless, Columbus returned to Sp
ain confident he
had found an ocean passage to the Orient.11
Reality gradually forced Columbus to a new conclusion: he had not reached India
or China, and
after a second voyage in 1493—still convinced he was in the Pacific Ocean—Columbus a
dmitted
he had stumbled on a new land mass, perhaps even a new continent of astounding n
atural resources
and wealth. In February 1493, he wrote his Spanish patrons that Hispaniola and o
ther islands like it
were “fertile to a limitless degree,” possessing mountains covered by “trees of a thou
sand kinds and
tall, so that they seem to touch the sky.”12 He confidently promised gold, cotton,
spices—as much
as Their Highnesses should command—in return for only minimal continued support. M
eanwhile,
he continued to probe the Mundus Novus south and west. After returning to Spain
yet again,
Columbus made two more voyages to the New World in 1498 and 1502.
Whether Columbus had found parts of the Far East or an entirely new land was irr
elevant to most
Europeans at the time. Political distractions abounded in Europe. Spain had bare
ly evicted the
Muslims after the long Reconquista, and England’s Wars of the Roses had scarcely e
nded. News of
Columbus’s discoveries excited only a few merchants, explorers, and dreamers. Stil
l, the prospect
of finding a waterway to Asia infatuated sailors; and in 1501 a Florentine passe
nger on a
Portuguese voyage, Amerigo Vespucci, wrote letters to his friends in which he de
scribed the New
World. His self-promoting dispatches circulated sooner than Columbus’s own written
accounts, and
as a result the term “America” soon was attached by geographers to the continents in
the Western
Hemisphere that should by right have been named Columbia. But if Columbus did no
t receive the
honor of having the New World named for him, and if he acquired only temporary w
ealth and fame
in Spain (receiving from the Crown the title Admiral of the Ocean Sea), his plac
e in history was
never in doubt. Historian Samuel Eliot Morison, a worthy seaman in his own right
who reenacted
the Columbian voyages in 1939 and 1940, described Columbus as “the sign and symbol
[of the]
new age of hope, glory and accomplishment.”13
Once Columbus blazed the trail, other Spanish explorers had less trouble obtaini
ng financial
backing for expeditions. Vasco Núñez de Balboa (1513) crossed the Isthmus of Panama
to the
Pacific Ocean (as he named it). Ferdinand Magellan (1519–22) circumnavigated the g
lobe, lending
his name to the Strait of Magellan. Other expeditions explored the interior of t
he newly discovered
lands. Juan Ponce de León, traversing an area along Florida’s coast, attempted unsuc
cessfully to
plant a colony there. Pánfilo de Narváez’s subsequent expedition to conquer Tampa Bay
proved
even more disastrous. Narváez himself drowned, and natives killed members of his e
xpedition until
only four of them reached a Spanish settlement in Mexico.
Spaniards traversed modern-day Mexico, probing interior areas under Hernando Cor
tés, who in
1518 led a force of 1,000 soldiers to Tenochtitlán, the site of present-day Mexico
City. Cortés
encountered powerful Indians called Aztecs, led by their emperor Montezuma. The
Aztecs had
established a brutal regime that oppressed other natives of the region, capturin
g large numbers of
them for ritual sacrifices in which Aztec priests cut out the beating hearts of
living victims. Such
barbarity enabled the Spanish to easily enlist other tribes, especially the Tlax
calans, in their efforts
to defeat the Aztecs.
Tenochtitlán sat on an island in the middle of a lake, connected to the outlying a
reas by three huge
causeways. It was a monstrously large city (for the time) of at least 200,000, r
igidly divided into
nobles and commoner groups.14 Aztec culture created impressive pyramid-shaped te
mple
structures, but Aztec science lacked the simple wheel and the wide range of pull
eys and gears that it
enabled. But it was sacrifice, not science, that defined Aztec society, whose py
ramids, after all,
were execution sites. A four-day sacrifice in 1487 by the Aztec king Ahuitzotl i
nvolved the
butchery of 80,400 prisoners by shifts of priests working four at a time at conv
ex killing tables who
kicked lifeless, heartless bodies down the side of the pyramid temple. This work
ed out to a “killing
rate of fourteen victims a minute over the ninety-six-hour bloodbath.”15 In additi
on to the
abominable sacrifice system, crime and street carnage were commonplace. More int
riguing to the
Spanish than the buildings, or even the sacrifices, however, were the legends of
gold, silver, and
other riches Tenochtitlán contained, protected by the powerful Aztec army.
Cortés first attempted a direct assault on the city and fell back with heavy losse
s, narrowly escaping
extermination. Desperate Spanish fought their way out on Noche Triste (the Sad N
ight), when
hundreds of them fell on the causeway. Cortés’s men piled human bodies—Aztec and Europ
ean
alike—in heaps to block Aztec pursuers, then staggered back to Vera Cruz. In 1521
Cortés returned
with a new Spanish army, supported by more than 75,000 Indian allies.16 This tim
e, he found a
weakened enemy who had been ravaged by smallpox, or as the Aztecs called it, “the
great leprosy.”
Starvation killed those Aztecs whom the disease did not: “They died in heaps, like
bedbugs,” wrote
one historian.17 Even so, neither disease nor starvation accounted for the Spani
ards’ stunning
victory over the vastly larger Aztec forces, which can be credited to the Spanis
h use of Europeanstyle
disciplined shock combat and the employment of modern firepower. Severing the ca
useways,
stationing huge units to guard each, Cortés assaulted the city walls from thirteen
brigantines the
Spaniards had hauled overland, sealing off the city. These brigantines proved “far
more ingeniously
engineered for fighting on the Aztecs’ native waters than any boat constructed in
Mexico during the
entire history of its civilization.”18 When it came to the final battle, it was no
t the brigantines, but
Cortés’s use of cannons, muskets, harquebuses, crossbows, and pikes in deadly discip
line, firing in
order, and standing en masse against a murderous mass of Aztecs who fought as in
dividuals rather
than a cohesive force that proved decisive.
Spanish technology, including the wheel-related ratchet gears on muskets, consti
tuted only one
element of European military superiority. They fought as other European land arm
ies fought, in
formation, with their officers open to new ideas based on practicality, not theo
logy. Where no
Aztec would dare approach the godlike Montezuma with a military strategy, Cortés d
ebated tactics
with his lieutenants routinely, and the European way of war endowed each Castili
an soldier with a
sense of individual rights, civic duty, and personal freedom nonexistent in the
Aztec kingdom.
Moreover, the Europeans sought to kill their enemy and force his permanent surre
nder, not forge an
arrangement for a steady supply of sacrifice victims. Thus Cortés captured the Azt
ec capital in
1521 at a cost of more than 100,000 Aztec dead, many from disease resulting from
Cortés’s cutting
the city’s water supply.19 But not all diseases came from the Old World to the New
, and syphilis
appears to have been retransmitted back from Brazil to Portugal.20
If Europeans resembled other cultures in their attitude toward conquest, they di
ffered substantially
in their practice and effectiveness. The Spanish, especially, proved adept at de
feating native
peoples for three reasons. First, they were mobile. Horses and ships endowed the
Spanish with vast
advantages in mobility over the natives. Second, the burgeoning economic power o
f Europe
enabled quantum leaps over Middle Eastern, Asian, and Mesoamerican cultures. Thi
s economic
wealth made possible the shipping and equipping of large, trained, well-armed fo
rces. Nonmilitary
technological advances such as the iron-tipped plow, the windmill, and the water
wheel all had
spread through Europe and allowed monarchs to employ fewer resources in the farm
ing sector and
more in science, engineering, writing, and the military. A natural outgrowth of
this economic
wealth was improved military technology, including guns, which made any single S
panish soldier
the equal of several poorly armed natives, offsetting the latter’s numerical advan
tage. But these two
factors were magnified by a third element—the glue that held it all together—which w
as a western
way of combat that emphasized group cohesion of free citizens. Like the ancient
Greeks and
Romans, Cortés’s Castilians fought from a long tradition of tactical adaptation base
d on individual
freedom, civic rights, and a “preference for shock battle of heavy infantry” that “gre
w out of
consensual government, equality among the middling classes,” and other distinctly
Western traits
that gave numerically inferior European armies a decisive edge.21 That made it p
ossible for tiny
expeditions such as Ponce de León’s, with only 200 men and 50 horses, or Narváez’s, with
a force
of 600, including cooks, colonists, and women, to overcome native Mexican armies
outnumbering
them two, three, and even ten times at any particular time.
More to the point, no native culture could have conceived of maintaining expedit
ions of thousands
of men in the field for months at a time. Virtually all of the natives lived off
the land and took
slaves back to their home, as opposed to colonizing new territory with their own
settlers. Indeed,
only the European industrial engine could have provided the material wherewithal
to maintain such
armies, and only the European political constructs of liberty, property rights,
and nationalism kept
men in combat for abstract political causes. European combat style produced yet
another advantage
in that firearms showed no favoritism on the battlefield. Spanish gunfire destro
yed the hierarchy of
the enemy, including the aristocratic dominant political class. Aztec chiefs and
Moor sultans alike
were completely vulnerable to massed firepower, yet without the legal framework
of republicanism
and civic virtue like Europe’s to replace its leadership cadre, a native army coul
d be decapitated at
the head with one volley, whereas the Spanish forces could see lieutenants fall
and seamlessly
replace them with sergeants.
Did Columbus Kill Most of the Indians?
The five-hundred-year anniversary of Columbus’s discovery was marked by unusual an
d strident
controversy. Rising up to challenge the intrepid voyager’s courage and vision—as wel
l as the
establishment of European civilization in the New World—was a crescendo of damnati
on, which
posited that the Genoese navigator was a mass murderer akin to Adolf Hitler. Eve
n the
establishment of European outposts was, according to the revisionist critique, a
regrettable
development. Although this division of interpretations no doubt confused and dam
pened many a
Columbian festival in 1992, it also elicited a most intriguing historical debate
: did the esteemed
Admiral of the Ocean Sea kill almost all the Indians? A number of recent scholar
ly studies have
dispelled or at least substantially modified many of the numbers generated by th
e anti-Columbus
groups, although other new research has actually increased them. Why the sharp i
nconsistencies?
One recent scholar, examining the major assessments of numbers, points to at lea
st nine different
measurement methods, including the time-worn favorite, guesstimates.
1. Pre-Columbian native population numbers are much smaller than critics have ma
intained. For
example, one author claims “Approximately 56 million people died as a result of Eu
ropean
exploration in the New World.” For that to have occurred, however, one must start
with early
estimates for the population of the Western Hemisphere at nearly 100 million. Re
cent research
suggests that that number is vastly inflated, and that the most reliable figure
is nearer 53 million,
and even that estimate falls with each new publication. Since 1976 alone, expert
s have lowered
their estimates by 4 million. Some scholars have even seen those figures as wild
ly inflated, and
several studies put the native population of North America alone within a range
of 8.5 million (the
highest) to a low estimate of 1.8 million. If the latter number is true, it mean
s that the “holocaust”
or “depopulation” that occurred was one fiftieth of the original estimates, or 800,0
00 Indians who
died from disease and firearms. Although that number is a universe away from the
estimates of 50
to 60 million deaths that some researchers have trumpeted, it still represented
a destruction of half
the native population. Even then, the guesstimates involve such things as accoun
ting for the effects
of epidemics—which other researchers, using the same data, dispute ever occurred—or
expanding
the sample area to all of North and Central America. However, estimating the num
ber of people
alive in a region five hundred years ago has proven difficult, and recently seve
ral researchers have
called into question most early estimates. For example, one method many scholars
have used to
arrive at population numbers—extrapolating from early explorers’ estimates of popula
tions they
could count—has been challenged by archaeological studies of the Amazon basin, whe
re dense
settlements were once thought to exist. Work in the area by Betty Meggers conclu
des that the early
explorers’ estimates were exaggerated and that no evidence of large populations in
that region
exists. N. D. Cook’s demographic research on the Inca in Peru showed that the popu
lation could
have been as high as 15 million or as low as 4 million, suggesting that the meas
urement
mechanisms have a “plus or minus reliability factor” of 400 percent! Such “minor” exagge
rations
as the tendencies of some explorers to overestimate their opponents’ numbers, whic
h, when
factored throughout numerous villages, then into entire populations, had led to
overestimates of
millions.
2. Native populations had epidemics long before Europeans arrived. A recent stud
y of more than
12,500 skeletons from sixty-five sites found that native health was on a “downward
trajectory long
before Columbus arrived.” Some suggest that Indians may have had a nonvenereal for
m of syphilis,
and almost all agree that a variety of infections were widespread. Tuberculosis
existed in Central
and North America long before the Spanish appeared, as did herpes, polio, tick-b
orne fevers,
giardiasis, and amebic dysentery. One admittedly controversial study by Henry Do
byns in Current
Anthropology in 1966 later fleshed out over the years into his book, argued that
extensive
epidemics swept North America before Europeans arrived. As one authority summed
up the
research, “Though the Old World was to contribute to its diseases, the New World c
ertainly was
not the Garden of Eden some have depicted.” As one might expect, others challenged
Dobyns and
the “early epidemic” school, but the point remains that experts are divided. Many no
w discount the
notion that huge epidemics swept through Central and North America; smallpox, in
particular, did
not seem to spread as a pandemic.
3. There is little evidence available for estimating the numbers of people lost
in warfare prior to the
Europeans because in general natives did not keep written records. Later, when w
hites could
document oral histories during the Indian wars on the western frontier, they fou
nd that different
tribes exaggerated their accounts of battles in totally different ways, dependin
g on tribal custom.
Some, who preferred to emphasize bravery over brains, inflated casualty numbers.
Others, viewing
large body counts as a sign of weakness, deemphasized their losses. What is cert
ain is that vast
numbers of natives were killed by other natives, and that only technological bac
kwardness—the
absence of guns, for example—prevented the numbers of natives killed by other nati
ves from
growing even higher.
4. Large areas of Mexico and the Southwest were depopulated more than a hundred
years before
the arrival of Columbus. According to a recent source, “The majority of Southweste
rnists…believe
that many areas of the Greater Southwest were abandoned or largely depopulated o
ver a century
before Columbus’s fateful discovery, as a result of climatic shifts, warfare, reso
urce
mismanagement, and other causes.” Indeed, a new generation of scholars puts more c
redence in
early Spanish explorers’ observations of widespread ruins and decaying “great houses”
that they
contended had been abandoned for years.
5. European scholars have long appreciated the dynamic of small-state diplomacy,
such as was
involved in the Italian or German small states in the nineteenth century. What h
as been missing
from the discussions about native populations has been a recognition that in man
y ways the tribes
resembled the small states in Europe: they concerned themselves more with tradit
ional enemies
(other tribes) than with new ones (whites).
Sources: The best single review of all the literature on Indian population numbe
rs is John D.
Daniels’s “The Indian Population of North America in 1492,” William and Mary Quarterly
, April
1999, pp. 298–320. Among those who cite higher numbers are David Meltzer, “How Colum
bus
Sickened the New World,” The New Scientist, October 10, 1992, 38–41; Francis L. Blac
k, “Why
Did They Die?” Science, December 11, 1992, 139–140; and Alfred W. Crosby Jr., Ecolog
ical
Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900–1900 (New York: Cambridge Uni
versity
Press, 1986). Lower estimates come from the Smithsonian’s Douglas Ubelaker, “North A
merican
Indian Population Size, A.D. 1500–1985,” American Journal of Physical Anthropology,
77(1988),
289–294; and William H. MacLeish, The Day Before America (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
, 1994).
Henry F. Dobyns, American Historical Demography (Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana U
niversity
Press, 1976), calculated a number somewhat in the middle, or about 40 million, t
hen subsequently
revisited the argument, with William R. Swagerty, in Their Number Become Thinned
: Native
American Population Dynamics in Eastern North America, Native American Historic
Demography
Series (Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press, 1983). But, as Nobe
list David Cook’s
study of Incaic Peru reveals, weaknesses in the data remain; see Demographic Col
lapse: Indian
Peru, 1520–1660 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981). Betty Meggers’s “Prehis
toric
Population Density in the Amazon Basin” (in John W. Verano and Douglas H. Ubelaker
, Disease
and Demography in the Americas [Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press,
1992], 197–
206), offers a lower-bound 3 million estimate for Amazonia (far lower than the h
igher-bound 10
million estimates). An excellent historiography of the debate appears in Daniel
T. Reff, Disease,
Depopulation, and Culture Change in Northwestern New Spain, 1518–1764 (Salt Lake C
ity, Utah:
University of Utah Press, 1991). He argues for a reconsideration of disease as t
he primary source of
depopulation (instead of European cruelty or slavery), but does not support infl
ated numbers. A
recent synthesis of several studies can be found in Michael R. Haines and Richar
d H. Steckel, A
Population History of North America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000
). Also see
Richard H. Steckel and Jerome C. Rose, eds., The Backbone of History: Health and
Nutrition in the
Western Hemisphere (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002). The quotation
referring to
this study is from John Wilford, “Don’t Blame Columbus for All the Indians’ Ills,” New Y
ork
Times, October 29, 2002.
Technology and disease certainly played prominent roles in the conquest of Spani
sh America. But
the oppressive nature of the Aztecs played no small role in their overthrow, and
in both Peru and
Mexico, “The structure of the Indian societies facilitated the Spanish conquest at
ridiculously low
cost.”22 In addition, Montezuma’s ruling hierarchical, strongly centralized structur
e, in which
subjects devoted themselves and their labor to the needs of the state, made it e
asy for the Spanish to
adapt the system to their own control. Once the Spanish had eliminated Aztec lea
dership, they
replaced it with themselves at the top. The “common people” exchanged one group of d
espots for
another, of a different skin color.
By the time the Aztecs fell, the news that silver existed in large quantities in
Mexico had reached
Spain, attracting still other conquistadores. Hernando de Soto explored Florida
(1539–1541),
succeeding where Juan Ponce de León had failed, and ultimately crossed the Mississ
ippi River,
dying there in 1542. Meanwhile, marching northward from Mexico, Francisco Vásquez
de
Coronado pursued other Indian legends of riches in the Seven Cities of Cibola. S
upposedly, gold
and silver existed in abundance there, but Coronado’s 270-man expedition found non
e of the fabled
cities, and in 1541 he returned to Spain, having mapped much of the American Sou
thwest. By the
1570s enough was known about Mexico and the Southwest to attract settlers, and s
ome two
hundred Spanish settlements existed, containing in all more than 160,000 Europea
ns.
Traveling with every expedition were priests and friars, and the first permanent
building erected by
Spaniards was often a church. Conquistadores genuinely believed that converting
the heathen
ranked near—or even above—the acquisition of riches. Even as the Dominican friar and
Bishop of
Chiapas, Bartolomé de Las Casas, sharply criticized his countrymen in his writings
for making
“bloody, unjust, and cruel wars” against the Indians—the so-called Black Legend—a second
army
of mercy, Spanish missionaries, labored selflessly under harsh conditions to bri
ng the Gospel to the
Indians. In some cases, as with the Pueblo Indians, large numbers of Indians con
verted to
Christianity, albeit a mixture of traditional Catholic teachings and their own r
eligious practices,
which, of course, the Roman Church deplored. Attempts to suppress such distortio
ns led to
uprisings such as the 1680 Pueblo revolt that killed twenty-one priests and hund
reds of Spanish
colonists, although even the rebellious Pueblos eventually rejoined the Spanish
as allies.23
Explorers had to receive from the king a license that entitled the grantee to la
rge estates and a
percentage of returns from the expedition. From the estates, explorers carved ou
t ranches that
provided an agricultural base and encouraged other settlers to immigrate. Then,
after the colonists
had founded a mission, the Spanish government established formal forts (presidio
s). The most
prominent of the presidios dotted the California coast, with the largest at San
Diego. Royal
governors and local bureaucrats maintained the empire in Mexico and the Southwes
t with
considerable autonomy from Spain. Distance alone made it difficult for the Crown
to control
activities in the New World.
A new culture accompanied the Spanish occupation. With intermarriage between Eur
opeans and
Indians, a large mestizo population (today, referred to as Mexican or Hispanic p
eople) resulted. It
generally adopted Spanish culture and values.
The Pirates of the Caribbean
Despite frantic activity and considerable promise, Spanish colonies grew slowly.
Southwestern and
Mexican Spanish settlements had a population of about 160,000 by the 1570s, when
the territory
under the control of the king included Caribbean islands, Mexico, the southweste
rn part of today’s
United States, large portions of the South American land mass, and an Indian pop
ulation of more
than 5 million. Yet when compared to the later rapid growth of the English colon
ies, the stagnation
of Spain’s outposts requires examination. Why did the Spanish colonies grow so slo
wly? One
explanation involves the extensive influence in the Caribbean and on the high se
as of pirates who
spread terror among potential settlers and passengers. A less visible and much m
ore costly effect on
colonization resulted from the expense of outfitting ships to defend themselves,
or constructing a
navy of sufficient strength to patrol the sea-lanes. Pirates not only attacked s
hips en route, but they
also brazenly invaded coastal areas, capturing entire cities. The famous English
pirate Henry
Morgan took Portobelo, the leading Spanish port on the American Atlantic coast i
n 1668, and
Panama City fell to his marauders in 1670–71.24 Sir Francis Drake, the Master Thie
f of the
unknown world, as the Spaniards called him, “became the terror of their ports and
crews” and he
and other “sea dogs” often acted as unofficial agents of the English Crown.25
Other discouraging reports dampened Spanish excitement for settling in the New W
orld. In 1591,
twenty-nine of seventy-five ships in a single convoy went down trying to return
to Spain from
Cuba; in 1600 a sixty-ship fleet from Cádiz to Mexico encountered two separate sto
rms that sank
seventeen ships and took down more than a thousand people; and in 1656 two galle
ons collided in
the Bahamas, killing all but fifty-six of the seven hundred passengers. Such glo
omy news combined
with reports of piracy to cause more than a few potential Spanish settlers to re
consider their plans
to relocate in Mexico.26
Another factor that retarded Spain’s success in the New World was its rigid adhere
nce to
mercantilism, an economic theory that had started to dominate Europe. Mercantili
sm held that
wealth was fixed (because it consisted of gold and silver), and that for one nat
ion to get richer,
another must get poorer.
Spain thoroughly embraced the aspects of mercantilism that emphasized acquiring
gold and silver.
Spanish mines in the New World eventually turned out untold amounts of riches. F
rancisco Pizarro
transported 13,000 pounds of gold and 26,000 pounds of silver in just his first
shipment home.
Total bullion shipped from Mexico and Peru between 1500 and 1650 exceeded 180 to
ns. Yet Spain
did not view the New World as land to be developed, and rather than using the we
alth as a base
from which to create a thriving commercial sector, Spain allowed its gold to sit
in royal vaults,
unemployed in the formation of new capital.27
Spanish attitudes weighed heavily upon the settlers of New Spain, who quickly we
re outpaced by
the more commercially oriented English outposts.28 Put another way, Spain remain
ed wedded to
the simplest form of mercantilism, whereas the English and Dutch advanced in the
direction of a
freer and more lucrative system in which business was less subordinated to the n
eeds of the state.
Since the state lacked the information possessed by the collective buyers and se
llers in the
marketplace, governments inevitably were at a disadvantage in measuring supply a
nd demand.
England thus began to shoot ahead of Spain and Portugal, whose entrepreneurs fou
nd themselves
increasingly enmeshed in the snares of bureaucratic mercantilism.
France in the New World
France, the last of the major colonizing powers, abandoned mercantilism more qui
ckly than the
Spanish, but not as rapidly as the English. Although not eager to colonize North
America, France
feared leaving the New World to its European rivals. Following early expeditions
along the coast of
Newfoundland, the first serious voyages by a French captain into North America w
ere conducted
under Jacques Cartier in 1534. Searching for the fabled Northwest Passage, a nor
therly water route
to the Pacific, he sailed up the St. Lawrence, reaching the present site of Mont
real. It was another
seventy years, however, before the French established a permanent settlement the
re.29
Samuel de Champlain, a pious cartographer considered one of the greatest inland
explorers of all
time, searched for a series of lakes that would link the Atlantic and Pacific, a
nd in 1608 established
a fort on a rocky point called Quebec (from the Algonquin word “kebec,” or “where the
river
narrows”). Roughly twenty years later, France chartered the Company of New France,
a trading
firm designed to populate French holdings in North America. Compared to English
colonial efforts,
however, New France was a disappointment, in no small part because one of the mo
st enthusiastic
French groups settled in the southeastern part of the United States, not Canada,
placing them in
direct contact with the powerful Spanish. The French government, starting a tren
d that continued to
the time of the Puritans, answered requests by religious dissidents to plant a c
olony in the
southernmost reaches of North America. Many dissenters born of the Protestant Re
formation
sought religious freedom from Catholic governments. These included French Protes
tants known as
Huguenots. Violent anti-Protestant prejudices in France served as a powerful ind
ucement for the
Huguenots to emigrate.
Huguenots managed to land a handful of volunteers in Port Royal Sound (present-d
ay South
Carolina) in 1562, but the colony failed. Two years later, another expedition su
ccessfully settled at
Fort Caroline in Florida, which came under attack from the Spanish, who slaughte
red the
unprepared inhabitants, ending French challenges to Spanish power in the souther
n parts of North
America. From that point on, France concentrated its efforts on the northern rea
ches of North
America—Canada—where Catholicism, not Protestantism, played a significant role in Fr
ench
Canadian expansion alongside the economics of the fur trade.
French colonization trailed that of the English for several reasons. Quebec was
much colder than
most of the English colonial sites, making it a much less attractive destination
for emigrants. Also,
the conditions of French peasants in the 1600s were better than that of their En
glish counterparts,
so they were less interested in leaving their mother country. Finally, the Frenc
h government,
concerned with maintaining a large base of domestic military recruits, did not e
ncourage migration
to New France. As a result, by 1700, English colonists in North America outnumbe
red French
settlers six to one. Despite controlling the St. Lawrence and Mississippi rivers
, New France,
deprived by its inland character of many of the advantages available to the coas
tal English
settlements, saw only a “meagre trickle” to the region.30 As few as twenty-seven tho
usand French
came to Canada in 150 years, and two-thirds of those departed without leaving de
scendants
there.31
Even so, New France had substantial economic appeal. Explorers had not found gol
d or silver, but
northern expeditions discovered riches of another sort: furs. Vast Canadian fore
sts offered an
abundance of highly valued deer, elk, rabbit, and beaver skins and pelts, harves
ted by an
indigenous population eager to trade. Trapping required deep penetration into fo
rests controlled by
Indians, and the French found that they could obtain furs far more easily throug
h barter than they
could by deploying their own army of trappers with soldiers to protect them. Thu
s, French traders
ventured deep into the interior of Canada to exchange knives, blankets, cups, an
d, when necessary,
guns with the Indians for pelts. At the end of a trading journey, the coureurs d
e bois (runners of the
woods) returned to Montreal, where they sold the furs to merchants who shipped t
hem back to
Europe. That strategy demanded that France limit the number of its colonists and
discourage
settlement, particularly in Indian territories. France attempted to deal with na
tives as friends and
trading partners, but quickly realized that the Indians harbored as much enmity
for each other as
they did for the Europeans. If not careful, France could find itself on the wron
g end of an alliance,
so where possible, the French government restrained colonial intrusions into Ind
ian land, with the
exception of missionaries, such as Jacques Marquette (1673) and René de La Salle (
1681).32
The English Presence
Despite the voyages of John Cabot, English explorers trailed in the wake of the
Portuguese,
Spanish, and French. England, at the beginning of the sixteenth century “was backw
ard in
commerce, industry, and wealth, and therefore did not rank as one of the great E
uropean
nations.”33 When Queen Elizabeth took the throne in 1558, the situation changed: t
he nation
developed a large navy with competent—often skilled—sailors. Moreover, profits from
piracy and
privateering provided strong incentives to bold seamen, especially “sea dogs” like J
ohn Hawkins
and Francis Drake, to join in plundering the Spanish sea-lanes.
By that time, the English reading public had become fascinated with the writings
of Humphrey
Gilbert, especially A Discourse to Prove a Passage by the North-West to Cathaia
and the East
Indies (1576), which closed with a challenge to Englishmen to discover that wate
r route.
In 1578, Elizabeth granted him rights to plant an English colony in America, but
he died in an
attempt to colonize Newfoundland. Walter Raleigh, Gilbert’s half brother, inherite
d the grant and
sent vessels to explore the coast of North America before determining where to l
ocate a settlement.
That expedition reached North Carolina in the summer of 1584. After spending two
months
traversing the land, commenting on its vegetation and natural beauty, the explor
ers returned to
England with glowing reports. Raleigh supported a second expedition in 1585, at
which time one
hundred settlers landed at Roanoke on the Carolina coast. When the transports ha
d sailed for
England, leaving the colony alone, it nearly starved, and only the fortunate arr
ival of Drake, fresh
from new raiding, provided it with supplies. Raleigh, undeterred by the near dis
aster, planned
another settlement for Roanoke, by which time Richard Hakluyt’s Discourse on Weste
rn Planting
(1584) further ginned up enthusiasm for settling in the region.34
Settlers received stock in Raleigh’s company, which attracted 133 men and 17 women
who set sail
on three ships. They reached Roanoke Island in 1587, and a child born on that is
land, Virginia
Dare, technically became the first European born in America. As with the previou
s English
expedition, the ships, under the command of the governor, John White, returned t
o England for
more supplies, only to arrive under the impending threat of a Spanish invasion o
f England—a failed
invasion that would result in the spectacular defeat of the Spanish Armada in 15
88, leaving
England as the predominant sea power in the world. Delays prohibited the supply
ships from
returning to Roanoke until 1591, when John White found the Roanoke houses standi
ng, but no
settlers. A mysterious clue—the word croatoan carved on a tree—remains the only evid
ence of
their fate. Croatoan Indians lived somewhat nearby, but they were considered fri
endly, and neither
White nor generations of historians have solved the puzzle of the Lost Colony of
Roanoke.
Whatever the fate of the Roanoke settlers, the result for England was that by 16
00 there still were
no permanent English colonies in America.
Foundations for English Success in the New World: A Hypothesis
England had laid the foundation for successful North American settlements well b
efore the first
permanent colony was planted at Jamestown in 1607. Although it seemed insignific
ant in
comparison to the large empire already established by the Spanish, Virginia and
subsequent English
colonies in Massachusetts would eclipse the settlement of the Iberian nations an
d France. Why?
It is conceivable that English colonies prospered simply by luck, but the domina
nce of Europe in
general and England in particular—a tiny island with few natural resources—suggests
that specific
factors can be identified as the reasons for the rise of an English-Atlantic civ
ilization: the
appearance of new business practices, a culture of technological inquisitiveness
, and a climate
receptive to political and economic risk taking.
One of the most obvious areas in which England surpassed other nations was in it
s business
practices. English merchants had eclipsed their Spanish and French rivals in pre
paring for
successful colonization through adoption of the joint-stock company as a form of
business. One of
the earliest of these joint-stock companies, the Company of the Staple, was foun
ded in 1356 to
secure control over the English wool trade from Italian competitors. By the 1500
s, the Moscovy
Company (1555), the Levant Company (1592), and the East India Company(1600) fuse
d the
exploration of distant regions with the pursuit of profit. Joint-stock companies
had two important
advantages over other businesses. One advantage was that the company did not dis
solve with the
death of the primary owner (and thus was permanent). Second, it featured limited
liability, in which
a stockholder could lose only what he invested, in contrast to previous business
forms that held
owners liable for all of a company’s debts. Those two features made investing in a
n exciting
venture in the New World attractive, especially when coupled with the exaggerate
d claims of the
returning explorers. Equally important, however, the joint-stock feature allowed
a rising group of
middle-class merchants to support overseas ventures on an ever-expanding basis.
In an even more significant development, a climate receptive to risk taking and
innovation, which
had flourished throughout the West, reached its most advanced state in England.
It is crucial to
realize that key inventions or technologies appeared in non-Western countries fi
rst; yet they were
seldom, if ever, employed in such a way as to change society dramatically until
the Western
societies applied them. The stirrup, for example, was known as early as a.d. 400–5
00 in the Middle
East, but it took until 730, when Charles Martel’s mounted knights adopted cavalry
charges that
combat changed on a permanent basis.35 Indeed, something other than invention wa
s at work. As
sociologist Jack Goldstone put it, “The West did not overtake the East merely by b
ecoming more
efficient at making bridles and stirrups, but by developing steam engines…[and] by
taking
unknown risks on novelty.”36 Stability of the state, the rule of law, and a willin
gness to accept new
or foreign ideas, rather than ruthlessly suppress them, proved vital to entrepre
neurship, invention,
technical creativity, and innovation. In societies dominated by the state, scien
tists risked their lives
if they arrived at unacceptable answers.
Still another factor, little appreciated at the time, worked in favor of English
ascendancy: labor
scarcity ensured a greater respect for new immigrants, whatever their origins, t
han had existed in
Europe. With the demand for labor came property rights, and with such property r
ights came
political rights unheard of in Europe.
Indeed, the English respect for property rights soon eclipsed other factors acco
unting for England’s
New World dominance. Born out of the fierce struggles by English landowners to p
rotect their
estates from seizure by the state, by the 1600s, property rights had become so f
irmly established as
a basis for English economic activities that its rules permeated even the lowest
classes in society.
English colonists found land so abundant that anyone could own it. When combined
with freedom
from royal retribution in science and technological fields, the right to retain
the fruit of one’s
labor—even intellectual property—gave England a substantial advantage in the coloniz
ation
process over rivals that had more than a century’s head start.37 These advantages
would be further
enhanced by a growing religious toleration brought about by religious dissenters
from the Church
of England called Puritans.38
The Colonial South
In 1606, James I granted a charter to the Virginia Company for land in the New W
orld, authorizing
two subsidiary companies: the London Company, based in Bristol, and the Plymouth
Company,
founded by Plymouth stockholders. A group of “certain Knights, Gentlemen, Merchant
s, and other
Adventurers” made up the London Company, which was a joint-stock company in the sa
me vein as
the Company of the Staple and the Levant Company. The grant to the London Compan
y, reaching
from modern-day North Carolina to New York, received the name Virginia in honor
of Queen
Elizabeth (the “Virgin Queen”), whereas the Plymouth Company’s grant encompassed New
England. More than 600 individuals and fifty commercial firms invested in the Vi
rginia Company,
illustrating the fund-raising advantages available to a corporation. The London
Company organized
its expedition first, sending three ships out in 1607 with 144 boys and men to e
stablish a trading
colony designed to extract wealth for shipment back to England.
Seeking to “propagate the Christian religion” in the Chesapeake and to produce a pro
fit for the
investors, the London Company owned the land and appointed the governor. Colonis
ts were
considered “employees.” However, as with Raleigh’s employees, the colonists enjoyed, a
s the king
proclaimed, “all Liberties, Franchises, and Immunities…as if they had been abiding a
nd born,
within this our Realm of England.”39 Most colonists lacked any concept of what awa
ited them: the
company adopted a military model based on the Irish campaigns, and the migrants
included few
farmers or men skilled in construction trades. After a four-month voyage, in Apr
il 1607, twentysix-
year-old Captain John Smith piloted ships fifty miles up the James River, well r
emoved from
eyesight of passing Spanish vessels. It was a site remarkable for its defensive
position, but it sat on
a malarial swamp surrounded by thick forests that would prove difficult to clear
. Tiny triangleshaped
James Forte, as Jamestown was called, featured firing parapets at each corner an
d contained
fewer than two dozen buildings. Whereas defending the fort might have appeared p
ossible,
stocking the fort with provisions proved more difficult: not many of the colonis
ts wanted to work,
and none found gold. Some discovered pitch, tar, lumber, and iron for export, bu
t many of the
emigrants were gentleman adventurers who disdained physical labor as had their S
panish
counterparts to the Southwest. Smith implored the London Company to send “30 carpe
nters,
husbandmen, gardeners, fishermen, blacksmiths, masons and diggers up of trees…[ins
tead of] a
thousand of such as we have.”40 Local Indians, such as the Monacan and Chickahomin
y, traded
with the colonists, but the English could neither hire Indian laborers nor did I
ndian males express
any interest in agriculture themselves. Reaping what they had (not) sown, the se
ttlers of James
Forte starved, with fewer than one third of the 120 colonists surviving a year.
So few remained that
the living, Smith noted, were scarcely able to bury the dead.
Disease also decimated the colony. Jamestown settlers were leveled by New World
diseases for
which they had no resistance. Malaria, in particular, proved a dreaded killer, a
nd malnutrition
lowered the immunity of the colonists. The brackish water at that point of the J
ames River also
fostered mosquitoes and parasites. Virginia was hardly a “disease-free paradise” bef
ore the arrival
of the Jamestown English.41 New microbes transported by the Europeans generated
a much higher
level of infection than previously experienced by the Indians; then, in a viciou
s circle, warring
Indian tribes spread the diseases among one another when they attacked enemy tri
bes and carried
off infected prisoners.
Thanks to the efforts of Smith, who as council president simply assumed control
in 1608, the
colony was saved. Smith imposed military discipline and order and issued the fam
ous biblical edict,
“He who will not work will not eat.” He stabilized the colony, and in the second win
ter, less than
15 percent of the population died, compared to the more than 60 percent who died
just a year
earlier. Smith also organized raids on Indian villages. These brought immediate
returns of food and
animals, but fostered long-term retribution from the natives, who harassed the c
olonists when they
ventured outside their walls. But Smith was not anti-Indian per se, and even pro
posed a plan of
placing white males in Indian villages to intermarry—hardly the suggestion of a ra
cist. Subsequent
settlers developed schools to educate Indians, including William and Mary. Smith
ran the colony
like an army unit until 1609, when confident of its survival, the colonists tire
d of his tyrannical
methods and deposed him.
At that point he returned to England, whereupon the London Company (by then call
ing itself the
Virginia Company) obtained a new charter from the king, and it sought to raise c
apital in England
by selling stock and by offering additional stock to anyone willing to migrate t
o Virginia. The
company provided free passage to Jamestown for indentures, or servants willing t
o work for the
Virginia Company for seven years. A new fleet of nine ships containing six hundr
ed men and some
women left England in 1609. One of the ships sank in a hurricane, and another ra
n aground in
Bermuda, where it remained until May 1610.
The other vessels arrived at Jamestown only to experience the “starving time” in the
winter of
1609–10. English colonists, barricaded within James Forte, ate dogs, cats, rats, t
oadstools, and
horse hides—ultimately eating from the corpses of the dead. When the remnants of t
he fleet that
had been stuck in Bermuda finally reached Virginia in the late spring of 1610, a
ll the colonists
boarded for a return to England. At the mouth of the James River, however, the s
hips encountered
an English vessel bringing supplies. The settlers returned to James Forte, and s
hortly thereafter a
new influx of settlers revived the colony.42
Like Smith, subsequent governors, including the first official governor, Lord De
La Warr,
attempted to operate the colony on a socialist model: settlers worked in forced-
labor gangs; shirkers
were flogged and some even hanged. Still, negative incentives only went so far b
ecause ultimately
the communal storehouse would sustain anyone in danger of starving, regardless o
f individual work
effort. Administrators realized that personal incentives would succeed where for
ce would not, and
they permitted private ownership of land. The application of private enterprise,
combined with the
introduction of tobacco farming, helped Jamestown survive and prosper—an experienc
e later
replicated in Georgia.
During the early critical years, Indians were too divided to coordinate their at
tacks against the
English. The powerful Chief Powhatan, who led a confederation of more than twent
y tribes,
enlisted the support of the Jamestown settlers—who he assumed were there for the e
xpress purpose
of stealing Indian land—to defeat other enemy Indian tribes. Both sides played bal
ance-of-power
politics. Thomas Dale, the deputy governor, proved resourceful in keeping the In
dians off balance,
at one point kidnapping Powhatan’s daughter, Pocahontas (Matoaka), and holding her
captive at
Jamestown. There she met and eventually married planter John Rolfe, in 1614. The
ir marriage
made permanent the uneasy truce that existed between Powhatan and Jamestown. Rol
fe and
Pocahontas returned to England, where the Indian princess, as a convert to Chris
tianity, proved a
popular dinner guest. She epitomized the view that Indians could be evangelized
and
“Europeanized.”43
Tobacco, Slaves, and Representative Government
Rolfe already had made another significant contribution to the success of the co
lony by curing
tobacco in 1612. Characterized by King James I as a “vile and stinking…custom,” smokin
g tobacco
had been promoted in England by Raleigh and had experienced widespread popularit
y. Columbus
had reported Cuban natives rolling tobacco leaves, lighting them on fire, and st
icking them in a
nostril. By Rolfe’s time the English had refined the custom by using a pipe or by
smoking the
tobacco directly with the mouth. England already imported more than £200,000 worth
of tobacco
per year from Spanish colonies, which had a monopoly on nicotine until Rolfe’s dis
covery.
Tobacco was not the only substance to emerge from Virginia that would later be c
onsidered a
vice—George Thorpe perfected a mash of Indian corn that provided a foundation for
hard liquor—
but tobacco had the greatest potential for profitable production.
Substantial change in the production of tobacco only occurred, however, after th
e Virginia
Company allowed individual settlers to own land. In 1617, any freeman who migrat
ed to Virginia
could obtain a grant of one hundred acres of land. Grants were increased for mos
t colonists through
the headright policy, under which every head of a household could receive fifty
acres for himself
and an additional fifty acres for every adult family member or servant who came
to America with
him. The combination of available land and the growing popularity of tobacco in
England resulted
in a string of plantations stretching to Failing Creek, well up the James River
and as far west as
Dale’s Gift on Cape Charles. Virtually all of the plantations had riverfronts, all
owing ships’
captains to dock directly at the plantation, and their influence extended as far
as the lands of the
Piedmont Indians, who traded with the planters.44
Tobacco cultivation encouraged expansion. The crop demanded large areas of farml
and, and the
methods of cultivation depleted the soil quickly. Growers steadily moved to inte
rior areas of
Virginia, opening still more settlements and requiring additional forts. But the
recurring problem in
Virginia was obtaining labor, which headright could not provide—quite the contrary
, it encouraged
new free farms. Instead, the colony placed new emphasis on indentures, including
“20 and odd
Negroes” brought to Virginia by a Dutch ship in 1619.
The status of the first blacks in the New World remains somewhat mysterious, and
any thesis about
the change in black status generates sharp controversy. Historian Edmund Morgan,
in American
Slavery, American Freedom, contended that the first blacks had the same legal st
atus as white
indentured servants.45 Other recent research confirms that the lines blurred bet
ween indentures of
all colors and slaves, and that establishing clear definitions of exactly who wa
s likely to become a
slave proved difficult.46 At least some white colonists apparently did not disti
nguish blacks from
other servants in their minds, and some early black indentured servants were rel
eased at the end of
their indentures. Rather than viewing Africa as a source of unlimited labor, Eng
lish colonists
preferred European indentured servants well into the 1670s, even when they came
from the ranks of
criminals from English jails. But by the 1660s, the southern colonists had slowl
y altered their
attitudes toward Africans. Increasingly, the southerners viewed them as permanen
t servants, and in
1664 some southern colonies declared slavery hereditary, as it had been in ancie
nt Athens and still
was throughout the Muslim world.47
Perhaps the greatest irony surrounding the introduction of black servants was th
e timing—if the
1619 date is accurate. That year, the first elected legislative assembly convene
d at Jamestown.
Members consisted of the governor and his council and representatives (or burges
ses) from each of
the eleven plantations. The assembly gradually split into an upper house, the go
vernor and council,
and the lower house, made up of the burgesses. This meant that the early forms o
f slavery and
democracy in America were “twin-born at Jamestown, and in their infancy…were rocked
in the
Cradle of the Republic.”48
Each of the colonists already had the rights of Englishmen, but the scarcity of
labor forced the
Virginia Company to grant new equal political rights within the colony to new mi
grants in the form
of the privileges that land conferred. In that way, land and liberty became inte
rtwined in the minds
and attitudes of the Virginia founders. Virginia’s founders may have believed in “na
tural law”
concepts, but it was the cold reality of the endless labor shortages that put te
eth in the colony’s
political rights. Still, the early colonial government was relatively inefficien
t and inept in carrying
out its primary mission of turning a profit. London Company stockholders failed
to resupply the
colony adequately, and had instead placed their hope in sending ever-growing num
bers of settlers
to Jamestown. Adding to the colony’s miseries, the new arrivals soon encroached on
Indian lands,
eliciting hostile reaction. Powhatan’s death in 1618 resulted in leadership of the
Chesapeake tribes
falling to his brother, Opechancanough, who conceived a shrewd plan to destroy t
he English.
Feigning friendship, the Indians encouraged a false sense of security among the
careless colonists.
Then, in 1622, Opechancanough’s followers launched simultaneous attacks on the set
tlements
surrounding Jamestown, killing more than three hundred settlers. The English ret
aliated by
destroying Indian cornfields, a response that kept the Indians in check until 16
44. Though blind,
Opechancanough remained the chief and, still wanting vengeance, ordered a new wa
ve of attacks
that killed another three hundred English in two days. Again the settlers retali
ated. They captured
Opechancanough, shot him, and forced the Indians from the region between the Yor
k and James
rivers.49
By that time, the Virginia Company had attracted considerable attention in Engla
nd, none of it
good. The king appointed a committee to look into the company’s affairs and its pe
rceived
mismanagement, reflecting the fact that English investors—by then experiencing the
fruits of
commercial success at home—expected even more substantial returns from their succe
ssful
operations abroad than they had received. Opechancanough’s raids seemed to reinfor
ce the
assessment that the London directors could not make prudent decisions about the
colony’s safety,
and in 1624 the Court of King’s Bench annulled the Virginia Company’s charter and th
e king
assumed control of the colony as a royal province.
Virginians became embroiled in English politics, particularly the struggle betwe
en the Cavaliers
(supporters of the king) and the Puritans. In 1649 the Puritans executed Charles
I, whose forces had
surrendered three years earlier. When Charles was executed, Governor William Ber
keley and the
Assembly supported Charles II as the rightful ruler of England (earning for Virg
inia the nickname
Old Dominion). Parliament, however, was in control in England, and dispatched wa
rships to bring
the rebellious pro-Charles Virginians in line. After flirting with resistance, B
erkeley and his
Cavalier supporters ultimately yielded to the Puritan English Parliamentarians.
Then Parliament
began to ignore the colony, allowing Virginia to assume a great deal of self-gov
ernment.
The new king, Charles II, the son of the executed Charles I, rewarded Berkeley a
nd the Virginia
Cavaliers for their loyalty. Berkeley was reappointed governor in 1660, but when
he returned to his
position, he was out of touch with the people and the assembly, which had grown
more irascible,
and was more intolerant than ever of religious minorities, including Quakers. At
the same time, the
colony’s population had risen to forty thousand, producing tensions with the gover
nor that erupted
in 1676 with the influx of settlers into territories reserved for the Indians. A
ll that was needed for
the underrepresented backcountry counties to rise against Berkeley and the tidew
ater gentry was a
leader.
Bacon’s Rebellion
Nathaniel Bacon Jr., an eloquent and educated resident in Charles City County, h
ad only lived in
Virginia fourteen months before he was named to the governor’s council. A hero amo
ng
commoners, Bacon nonetheless was an aristocrat who simmered over his lack of acc
ess to the
governor’s inner circle. His large farm in the west stood on the front line of fro
ntier defense, and
naturally Bacon favored an aggressive strategy against the Indians. But he was n
ot alone. Many
western Virginians, noting signs of unrest among the tribes, petitioned Berkeley
for military
protection. Bacon went further, offering to organize and lead his own expedition
against the
Indians. In June 1676 he demanded a commission “against the heathen,” saying, “God dam
me my
blood, I came for a commission, and a commission I will have before I goe!”50 Gove
rnor Berkeley,
convinced that the colonists had exaggerated the threat, refused to send troops
and rejected Bacon’s
suggestion to form an independent unit.
Meanwhile, small raids by both Indians and whites started to escalate into large
r attacks. In 1676,
Bacon, despite his lack of official approval, led a march to track hostiles. Ins
tead, he encountered
and killed friendly Indians, which threatened to drag the entire region into war
. From a sense of
betrayal, he then turned his 500 men on the government at Jamestown. Berkeley ma
neuvered to
stave off a coup by Bacon when he appointed him general, in charge of the Indian
campaign.
Satisfied, Bacon departed, whereupon Berkeley rescinded his support and attempte
d to raise an
army loyal to himself. Bacon returned, and finding the ragtag militia, scattered
Berkeley’s hastily
organized force, whereupon Bacon burned most of the buildings at Jamestown.
No sooner had Bacon conquered Jamestown than he contracted a virus and died. Lea
derless,
Bacon’s troops lacked the ability to resist Berkeley and his forces, who, bolstere
d by the arrival of
1,100 British troops, regained control of the colony. Berkeley promptly hanged 2
3 of the rebels and
confiscated the property of others—actions that violated English property law and
resulted in the
governor’s being summoned back to England to explain his behavior. Reprimanded by
King
Charles, Berkeley died before he could return to the colony.51
The Maryland Experiment
Although Virginia was a Protestant (Anglican) colony—and it must be stated again t
hat the London
Company did not have a religious agenda per se—a second Chesapeake colony was plan
ted in 1634
when George Calvert received a grant from James I. Calvert, who enjoyed strong p
ersonal support
from the king despite his conversion to Catholicism in 1625, already had mounted
an unsuccessful
mission to plant a colony in Newfoundland. After returning from the aborted Newf
oundland
venture, Calvert worked to obtain a charter for the northern part of Chesapeake
Bay. Shortly after
he died, the Crown issued a charter in 1632, to Cecilius Calvert, George’s son, na
ming George
Calvert Lord Baltimore. The grant, named in honor of Charles I’s sister, Queen Mar
y, gave
Baltimore a vast expanse of land stretching from the Potomac River to the Atlant
ic Ocean.
Calvert’s grant gave him full proprietary control over the land, freeing him from
many of the
constraints that had limited the Virginia Company. As proprietor, Calvert acted
rex in abstentia (as
the king in his absence), and as long as the proprietor acted in accordance with
the laws of England,
he spoke with the authority of the Crown. Calvert never visited his colony, thou
gh, governing the
province through his brother, Leonard, who held the office of governor until 164
7. Like Virginia,
Maryland had an assembly (created in 1635) elected by all freeholders.
In March 1634 approximately three hundred passengers arrived at one of the easte
rn tributaries of
the Potomac and established the village of St. Mary’s. Located on a high cliff, St
. Mary’s had a
good natural harbor, fresh water, and abundant vegetation. Father Andrew White,
a priest who
accompanied the settlers, observed of the region that “we cannot set down a foot w
ithout but tread
on strawberries, raspberries, fallen mulberry vines, acorns, walnuts, [and] sass
afras.”52 The
Maryland colony was planned better than Jamestown. It possessed a large proporti
on of laborers—
and fewer adventurers, country gentlemen, and gold seekers—and the settlers plante
d corn as soon
as they had cleared the fields.
Calvert, while not unaware of the monetary returns of a well-run colony, had ano
ther motive for
creating a settlement in the New World. Catholics had faced severe persecution i
n England, and so
Lord Baltimore expected that a large number of Catholics would welcome an opport
unity to
immigrate to Maryland, when he enacted the Toleration Act of 1649, which permitt
ed any Christian
faith to be practiced in the colony.53 The Act provided that “no person…professing t
o believe in
Jesus Christ, shall from henceforth be in any ways troubled, molested, or discou
ntenanced.”54 Yet
the English Catholics simply did not respond the way Calvert hoped. Thus, he had
to welcome
Protestant immigrants at the outset. Once the news of religious toleration sprea
d, other religious
immigrants came from Virginia, including a group of persecuted Puritans who esta
blished
Annapolis. The Puritans proved a thorn in Baltimore’s side, however, especially af
ter the English
Civil War put the Puritans in control there and they suspended the Toleration Ac
t. After a brief
period in which the Calvert family was deprived of all rights to govern, Lord Ba
ltimore was
supported, ironically, by the Puritan Lord Protector of England, Oliver Cromwell
, and he was
reinstated as governor in 1657. Religious conflict had not disappeared, however;
an early wave of
Jesuits worked to convert all of the colonies, antagonizing the Protestant major
ity. Thus, in many
ways, the attempt to permit religious toleration resulted in conflict and, frequ
ently, bloodshed.
Nor did the immigration of Protestants into Maryland allay the nagging labor sho
rtage. In 1640,
Maryland established its own headright system, and still the demands for labor e
xceeded the
supply. As in Virginia, Maryland planters solved the shortage through the use of
indentured
servants and, at the end of the 1600s, African slaves. Maryland enacted a law “con
cerning Negroes
and Other Slaves” in 1664, which not only perpetuated the slave status of those al
ready in bondage,
but expanded slave status to “whosoever freeborn woman shall intermarry with any s
lave.”55
Maryland, therefore, with its large estates and black slaves, looked very much l
ike Virginia.
The Carolinas: Charles Town vs. Cracker Culture
Carolina, England’s final seventeenth-century mainland slave society was establish
ed in 1663,
when Charles II chartered the colony to eight wealthy proprietors. Their land gr
ant encompassed
the territories known today as North and South Carolina. Although Charles’s aim wa
s to create a
strategic buffer zone between Spanish Florida and Virginia, Carolina’s proprietors
instead sought
agricultural riches. Charles Town, now Charleston, South Carolina, founded in 16
70, was
populated largely by English Barbados planters and their slaves. Soon they turne
d portions of the
sweltering Carolina seacoast into productive rice plantations; then, over the ne
xt century, indigo, a
vegetable dye, became the planters’ second most important cash crop thanks to the
subsidies
available in the mercantilist system.
From its outset, Carolina society was triracial: blacks eventually constituted a
majority of
Carolinians, followed by a mix of Indians and Europeans. White Carolinians allie
d with Cherokee
Indians to soundly defeat the rival Yamasees and Creeks and pushed them westward
. Planters
failed in their attempts to enslave defeated Indians, turning instead to black s
laves to cultivate the
hot, humid rice fields. A 1712 South Carolina statute made slavery essentially p
ermanent: “All
negroes, mulattoes, mustizoes, or Indians, which at any time heretofore have bee
n sold…and their
children, are hereby made and declared slaves.”56 Slave life in the Carolinas diff
ered from Virginia
because the rice plantation system initially depended almost exclusively on an a
ll-male workforce.
Life in the rice and indigo fields was incredibly harsh, resembling the conditio
ns in Barbados. The
crops demanded full-time attention at harvest, requiring exhausting physical lab
or in the Carolina
sun.
Yet colonial slave revolts (like the 1739 Stono revolt, which sent shock waves t
hrough the planter
community) were exceptions because language barriers among the slaves, close and
brutal
supervision, a climate of repression, and a culture of subservience all combined
to keep rebellions
infrequent. The perceived threat of slave rebellions, nevertheless, hung over th
e southern coastal
areas of Carolina, where slaves often outnumbered whites nine to one. Many plant
ers literally
removed themselves from the site of possible revolts by fleeing to the port citi
es in the summer.
Charles Town soon became an island where planter families spent the “hot season” fre
e from the
plantations, swamps, and malaria of the lowlands. By mid-eighteenth century, Cha
rles Town, with
a population of eight thousand and major commercial connections, a lively social
calendar of balls
and cotillions, and even a paid symphony orchestra, was the leading city of the
South.
Northern Carolinians differed socially, politically, economically, and culturall
y from their
neighbors to the south. In 1729 disputes forced a split into two separate coloni
es. The northern part
of the colonies was geographically and economically more isolated, and it develo
ped more slowly
than South Carolina. In the northeastern lowlands and Piedmont, North Carolina’s e
conomy turned
immediately to tobacco, while a new ethnic and cultural wave trekked south from
Pennsylvania
into North Carolina via Virginia’s Great Valley. German and Celtic (Scots-Irish) f
armers added
flavor to the Anglo and African stew of Carolina society. Germans who arrived we
re pious Quaker
and Moravian farmers in search of opportunities to farm and market wood, leather
, and iron
handicrafts, whereas Celts (or Crackers, as they came to be known) were the wild
and woolly
frontiersmen who had fast worn out their welcome in the “civilized” areas of Pennsyl
vania and
Virginia. Crackers answered their detractors by moving on, deeper and deeper int
o the forests of
the Appalachian foothills and, eventually, the trans-Appalachian West. Such a ja
mbalaya of
humankind immediately made for political strife as eastern and western North Car
olinians squared
off time and again in disputes that often boiled down to planter-versus-small-fa
rmer rivalries.
Life of the Common Colonials
By the mid-1700s, it was clear across the American colonies that the settlers ha
d become
increasingly less English. Travelers described Americans as coarse-looking count
ry folk. Most
colonials wore their hair long. Women and girls kept their hair covered with hat
s, hoods, and
kerchiefs while men and boys tied their hair into queues until wigs came into vo
gue in the port
cities. Colonials made their own clothes from linen (flax) and wool; every home
had a spinning
wheel and a loom, and women sewed and knitted constantly, since cotton cloth wou
ld not be
readily available until the nineteenth century. Plentiful dyes like indigo, birc
h bark, and pokeberries
made colorful shirts, pants, dresses, socks, and caps.
Americans grew their own food and ate a great deal of corn—roasted, boiled, and co
oked into
cornmeal bread and pancakes. Hearty vegetables like squash and beans joined appl
es, jam, and
syrup on the dinner table. Men and boys hunted and fished; rabbit, squirrel, bea
r, and deer
(venison) were common entrees. Pig raising became important, but beef cows (and
milk) were
scarce until the eighteenth century and beyond. Given the poor quality of water,
many colonials
drank cider, beer, and corn whiskey—even the children! As cities sprang up, the la
ck of convenient
watering holes led owners to “water” their cattle with the runoff of breweries, yiel
ding a disgusting
variant of milk known as swill milk, which propagated childhood illnesses.
Even without swill milk, infant mortality was high, and any sickness usually mea
nt suffering and,
often, death. Colonials relied on folk medicine and Indian cures, including herb
s, teas, honey, bark,
and roots, supplemented with store-bought medicines. Doctors were few and far be
tween. The
American colonies had no medical school until the eve of the American Revolution
, and
veterinarians usually doubled as the town doctor, or vice versa. Into the vacuum
of this absence of
professional doctors stepped folk healers and midwives, “bone crackers” and bleeders
. Going to a
physician was usually the absolute last resort, since without anesthesia, any se
rious procedures
would involve excruciating pain and extensive recovery. Women, especially, suffe
red during
childbirth, and infants often had such high mortality rates that babies were not
named until age two.
Instead, mothers and fathers referred to the child as “the little visitor” or even “it
.” Despite the
reality of this difficult life, it is worth noting that by 1774 American colonis
ts already had attained a
standard of living that far surpassed that found in most of the civilized parts
of the modern world.
Far more than today, though, politics—and not the family—absorbed the attention of c
olonial men.
Virtually anyone who either paid taxes or owned a minimum of property could vote
for
representation in both the upper and lower houses of the legislature, although i
n some colonies
(Pennsylvania and New York) there was a higher property qualification required f
or the upper
house than for the lower house. When it came to holding office, most districts r
equired a candidate
to have at least one hundred pounds in wealth or one hundred acres, but several
colonies had no
requirements for holding office. Put another way, American colonials took politi
cs seriously and
believed that virtually everyone could participate. Two colonies stand out as ex
amples of the trends
in North American politics by the late 1700s—Virginia and Maryland.
The growth and maturation of the societies in Virginia and Maryland established
five important
trends that would be repeated throughout much of America’s colonial era. First, th
e sheer distance
between the ruler and the governed—between the king and the colonies—made possible a
n
extraordinary amount of independence among the Americans. In the case of Bacon’s R
ebellion, for
example, the Virginia rebels acted on the principle that it is “easier to ask forg
iveness than to seek
permission,” and were confident that the Crown would approve of their actions. Tur
moil in
England made communication even more difficult, and the instability in the Engli
sh government—
the temporary victory of Cromwell’s Puritans, followed by the restoration of the S
tuarts—merely
made the colonial governments more self-reliant than ever.
Second, while the colonists gained a measure of independence through distance, t
hey also gained
political confidence and status through the acquisition of land. For immigrants
who came from a
nation where the scarcity of land marked those who owned it as gentlemen and pla
ced them among
the political elites, the abundance of soil in Virginia and Maryland made them t
he equals of the
owners of manorial estates in England. It steadily but subtly became every citiz
en’s job to ensure
the protection of property rights for all citizens, undercutting from the outset
the widespread and
entrenched class system that characterized Europe. Although not universal—Virginia
had a
powerful “cousinocracy”—nothing of the rigid French or English aristocracies constrain
ed most
Americans. To be sure, Virginia possessed a more pronounced social strata than M
aryland (and
certainly Massachusetts). Yet compared to Europe, there was more equality and le
ss class
distinction in America, even in the South.
Third, the precedent of rebellion against a government that did not carry out th
e most basic
mandates—protecting life, property, and a certain degree of religious freedom (at
least from the
Church of England)—was established and supported by large numbers, if not the vast
majority, of
colonists. That view was tempered by the assumption that, again, such rebellion
would not be
necessary against an informed government. This explains, in part, Thomas Jeffers
on’s inclusion in
the Declaration of Independence the references to the fact that the colonists ha
d petitioned not only
the king, but Parliament as well, to no avail.
Fourth, a measure of religious toleration developed, although it was neither as
broad as is often
claimed nor did it originate in the charity of church leaders. Although Virginia
Anglicans and
Maryland Catholics built the skeleton of state-supported churches, labor problem
s forced each
colony to abandon sectarian purity at an early stage to attract immigrants. Unde
rlying
presuppositions about religious freedom were narrowly focused on Christians and,
in most
colonies, usually Protestants. Had the colonists ever anticipated that Jews, Mus
lims, Buddhists,
Hindus, or members of other non-Christian groups would constitute even a small m
inority in their
region, even the most fiercely independent Protestants would have agreed to the
establishment of a
state church, as Massachusetts did from 1630 to 1830.
America’s vast size contributed to a tendency toward “Live and let live” when it came
to
religion.57 Dissidents always could move to uninhabited areas: certainly none of
the denominations
were open to evangelizing from their counterparts. Rather, the colonists embrace
d toleration, even
if narrowly defined, because it affected a relatively cohesive group of Christia
n sects. Where
differences that were potentially deeply divisive did exist, the separation caus
ed by distance
prevented one group from posing a threat to others.
Finally, the experiences in Virginia and Maryland foreshadowed events elsewhere
when it came to
interaction with the Indians. The survival of a poorly armed, ineptly organized
colony in
Jamestown surrounded by hostile natives requires more of an explanation than “whit
e greed”
provides. Just as Europeans practiced balance-of-power politics, so too the Indi
ans found that the
presence of several potential enemies on many sides required that they treat the
whites as friends
when necessary to balance the power of other Indians. To the Doeg Indians, for e
xample, the
English were no more of a threat than the Susquehannock. Likewise, English settl
ers had as much
to fear from the French as they did the natives. Characterizing the struggle as
one of whites versus
Indians does not reflect the balance-of-power politics that every group in the N
ew World struggled
to maintain among its enemies.58
New England’s Pilgrims and Puritans
Whereas gold provided the motivation for the colonization of Virginia, the settl
ers who traveled to
Plymouth came for much different reasons.59 The Puritans had witnessed a divisio
n in their ranks
based on their approach to the Anglican Church. One group believed that not only
should they
remain in England, but that they also had a moral duty to purify the church from
the inside. Others,
however, had given up on Anglicanism. Labeled Separatists, they favored removing
themselves
from England entirely, and they defied the orders of the king by leaving for Eur
opean Protestant
nations. Their disobedience to royal decrees and British law often earned the Se
paratists
persecution and even death.
In 1608 a group of 125 Separatists from Scrooby, in Nottinghamshire, slipped out
of England for
Holland. Among the most respected leaders of these “Pilgrims,” as they later came to
be known,
was a sixteen-year-old boy named William Bradford. In Holland they faced no reli
gious
persecution, but as foreigners they found little work, and worse, Puritan childr
en were exposed to
the “great licentiousness” of Dutch youth. When few other English Separatists joined
them, the
prospects for establishing a strong Puritan community in Holland seemed remote.
After receiving
assurances from the king that they could exercise their religious views freely,
they opened
negotiations with one of the proprietors of the Virginia Company, Sir Edwin Sand
ys, about
obtaining a grant in Virginia. Sandys cared little for Puritanism, but he needed
colonists in the New
World. Certainly the Pilgrims already had displayed courage and resourcefulness.
He therefore
allowed them a tract near the mouth of the Hudson River, which was located on th
e northernmost
boundary of the Virginia grant. To raise capital, the Pilgrims employed the join
t-stock company
structure, which brought several non-Separatists into the original band of settl
ers. Sailing on the
Mayflower, 35 of the original Pilgrims and 65 other colonists left the English h
arbor of Plymouth
in September 1620, bound for the Hudson River. Blown off course, the Pilgrims re
ached the New
World in November, some five hundred miles north of their intended location. The
y dropped
anchor at Cape Cod Bay, at an area called Plymouth by John Smith.
Arriving at the wrong place, the colonists remained aboard their vessel while th
ey considered their
situation. They were not in Virginia, and had no charter to Plymouth. Any settle
ment could be
perceived in England as defiance of the Crown. Bradford and the forty other adul
t men thus devised
a document, before they even went ashore, to emphasize their allegiance to King
James, to
renounce any intention to create an independent republic, and to establish a civ
il government. It
stated clearly that their purpose in sailing to Virginia was not for the purpose
s of rebellion but “for
the glory of God, and advancement of the Christian faith, and honor of our king
and country….”60
And while the Mayflower Compact provided for laws and the administration of the
colony, it
constituted more than a mere civil code. It pledged each of them “solemnly and mut
ually in the
presence of God and one another” to “covenant and combine ourselves under a civil Bo
dy Politick”
under “just and equal laws…[for the] furtherance of” the glory of God. To the Pilgrims
, a just and
equal society had to be grounded in religious faith. Developing along a parallel
path to the concepts
of government emerging in Virginia, the Mayflower Compact underscored the idea t
hat
government came from the governed—under God—and that the law treated all equally. Bu
t it also
extended into civil affairs the concept of a church contact (or covenant), reinf
orcing the close
connection between the role of the church and the state. Finally, it started to
lay a foundation for
future action against both the king of England and, eighty years after that, sla
very by establishing
basic principles in the contract. This constituted a critical development in an
Anglo-European
culture that increasingly emphasized written rights.
As one of the first acts of their new democracy, the colonists selected Bradford
as governor. Then,
having taken care of administrative matters, in late December 1620, the Pilgrims
climbed out of
their boats at Plymouth and settled at cleared land that may have been an Indian
village years
earlier. They had arrived too late in the year to plant, and like their countrym
en farther south, the
Pilgrims suffered during their first winter, with half the colony perishing. The
y survived with
assistance from the local Indians, especially one named Squanto—“a spetiall instrume
nt sent from
God,” as Bradford called him.61 For all this they gave thanks to God, establishing
what would
become a national tradition.
The Pilgrims, despite their fame in the traditional Thanksgiving celebration and
their Mayflower
Compact, never achieved the material success of the Virginia colonists or their
Massachusetts
successors at Massachusetts Bay. Indeed, the Plymouth colony’s population stagnate
d. Since the
Separatists’ religious views continued to meet a poor reception in England, no new
infusions of
people or ideas came from the Old World. Having settled in a relatively poor reg
ion, and lacking
the excellent natural harbor of Boston, the Pilgrims never developed the fishing
or trading business
of their counterparts. But the Pilgrims rightly hold a place of high esteem in A
merica history,
largely because unlike the Virginia settlers, the Separatists braved the dangers
and uncertainties of
the voyage and settlement in the New World solely in the name of their Christian
faith.
Other Puritans, though certainly not all of them Separatists, saw opportunities
to establish their own
settlements. They had particular incentives to do so after the ascension to the
throne of England of
Charles I in 1625. He was determined to restore Catholicism and eradicate religi
ous dissidents. By
that time, the Puritans had emerged as a powerful merchant group in English soci
ety, with their
economic power translating into seats in Parliament. Charles reacted by dissolvi
ng Parliament in
1629. Meanwhile, a group of Dorchester businessmen had provided the perfect vehi
cle for the
Puritans to undertake an experiment in the New World.
In 1623 the Dorchester group established a small fishing post at Cape Ann, near
present-day
Gloucester, Massachusetts. After the colony proved a dismal economic failure, th
e few settlers who
had lived at Cape Ann moved inland to Salem, and a new patent, granted in 1628,
provided
incentives for a new group of emigrants, including John Endicott, to settle in S
alem. Ultimately, the
New England Company, as it was called, obtained a royal charter in 1629. Stockho
lders in the
company elected a General Court, which chose the governor and his eighteen assis
tants. Those
prominent in founding the company saw the Salem and Cape Ann areas as opportunit
ies for
establishing Christian missions.
The 1629 charter did not require the company’s headquarters to be in London, as th
e Virginia
Company’s had. Several Puritans, including John Winthrop, expressed their willingn
ess to move to
the trading colony if they could also move the colony’s administration to Massachu
setts.
Stockholders unwilling to move to the New World resigned, and the Puritans gaine
d control of the
company, whereupon they chose John Winthrop as the governor.62 Called the Moses
of the great
Puritan exodus, Winthrop was Cambridge educated and, because he was an attorney,
relatively
wealthy. He was also deeply committed to the Puritan variant of Christianity. Wi
nthrop suffered
from the Puritan dilemma, in that he knew that all things came from God, and the
refore had to be
good. Therefore all things were made for man to enjoy, except that man could not
enjoy things too
much lest he risk putting material things above God. In short, Puritans had to b
e “in the world but
not of it.”
Puritans, far from wearing drab clothes and avoiding pleasure, enjoyed all thing
s. Winthrop himself
loved pipe smoking and shooting. Moreover, Puritan ministers “were the leaders in
every field of
intellectual advance in New England.”63 Their moral codes in many ways were not fa
r from
modern standards.64
A substantial number of settlers joined Winthrop, with eleven ships leaving for
Massachusetts that
year. When the Puritans finally arrived, Winthrop delivered a sermon before the
colonists
disembarked. It resounded with many of the sentiments of the Plymouth Pilgrims: “W
ee must
Consider that wee shall be as a City upon a Hill, the eyes of all people are upo
n us.” Winthrop
wanted the Puritans to see themselves as examples and, somewhat typical of his d
ay, made dire
predictions of their fate if they failed to live up to God’s standard.
The Massachusetts Bay colony benefited from changes in the religious situation i
n England, where
a new policy of forcing Puritans to comply with Anglican ceremonies was in effec
t. Many Puritans
decided to leave England rather than tolerate such persecution, and they emigrat
ed to
Massachusetts in what was called the Great Migration, pulled by reports of “a stor
e of
blessings.”65 This constant arrival of new groups of relatively prosperous colonis
ts kept the colony
well funded and its labor force full (unlike the southern colonies). By 1640, th
e population of
Massachusetts Bay and its inland settlements numbered more than ten thousand.
Puritan migrants brought with them an antipathy and distrust of the Stuart monar
chy (and
governmental power in general) that would have great impact in both the long and
short term.
Government in the colony, as elsewhere in most of English America, assumed a dem
ocratic bent.
Originally, the General Court, created as Massachusetts Bay’s first governing body
, was limited to
freemen, but after 1629, when only the Puritan stockholders remained, that meant
Puritan male
church members. Clergymen were not allowed to hold public office, but through th
e voting of the
church members, the clergy gained exceptional influence. A Puritan hierarchy ran
the
administrative posts, and although non-Puritan immigrant freemen obtained proper
ty and other
rights, only the church members received voting privileges. In 1632, however, th
e increasing
pressure of additional settlers forced changes in the minority-run General Court
. The right to elect
the governor and deputy governor was expanded to all freemen, turning the govern
or and his
assistants into a colonial parliament.66
Political tensions in Massachusetts reflected the close interrelationship Purita
ns felt between civil
and religious life. Rigorous tests existed for admission to a Puritan church con
gregation:
individuals had to show evidence of a changed life, relate in an interview proce
ss their conversion
experience, and display knowledge of scripture. On the surface, this appeared to
place
extraordinary power in the hands of the authorities, giving them (if one was a b
eliever) the final
word on who was, and was not, saved. But in reality, church bodies proved extrem
ely lenient in
accepting members. After all, who could deny another’s face-to-face meeting with t
he Almighty?
Local records showed a wide range of opinions on the answer.67 One solution, the
“Halfway
Covenant,” allowed third-generation Puritan children to be baptized if their paren
ts were
baptized.68
Before long, of course, many insincere or more worldly colonists had gained memb
ership, and with
the expansion of church membership, the right to participate in the polity soon
spread, and by 1640
almost all families could count one adult male church member (and therefore a vo
ter) in their
number. The very fact that so many people came, however tangentially, under the
rubric of local—
but not centralized—church authority reinforced civic behavior with a Christian mo
ral code,
although increasingly the laity tended to be more spiritually conservative than
the clergy.69
Local autonomy of churches was maintained through the congregational system of o
rganization.
Each church constituted the ultimate authority in scriptural doctrine. That occa
sionally led to
unorthodox or even heretical positions developing, but usually the doctrinal agr
eement between
Puritans on big issues was so widespread that few serious problems arose. When t
roublemakers did
appear, as when Roger Williams arrived in Massachusetts in 1631, or when Anne Hu
tchinson
challenged the hierarchy in 1636, Winthrop and the General Court usually dispatc
hed them in short
order.70 Moreover, the very toleration often (though certainly not universally)
exhibited by the
Puritans served to reinforce and confirm “the colonists in their belief that New E
ngland was a place
apart, a bastion of consistency.”71
There were limits to toleration, of course. In 1692, when several young Salem gi
rls displayed
physical “fits” and complained of being hexed by witches, Salem village was thrown i
nto an
uproar. A special court convened to try the witches. Although the girls initiall
y accused only one as
a witch (Tituba, a black slave woman), the accusations and charges multiplied, w
ith 150 Salemites
eventually standing accused. Finally, religious and secular leaders expressed ob
jections, and the
trials ceased as quickly as they had begun. Historians have subsequently ascribe
d the hysteria of the
Salem witch trials to sexism, religious rigidity, and even the fungus of a local
plant, but few have
admitted that to the Puritans of Massachusetts, the devil and witchcraft were qu
ite real, and
physical manifestations of evil spirits were viewed as commonplace occurrences.
The Pequot War and the American Militia System
The Puritan’s religious views did not exempt them from conflict with the Indians,
particularly the
Pequot Indians of coastal New England. Puritan/Pequot interactions followed a cy
clical pattern that
would typify the next 250 years of Indian-white relations, in the process giving
birth to the
American militia system, a form of warfare quite unlike that found in Europe.
Initial contacts led to cross-acculturation and exchange, but struggles over lan
d ensued, ending in
extermination, extirpation, or assimilation of the Indians. Sparked by the murde
r of a trader, the
Pequot War commenced in July of 1636. In the assault on the Pequot fort on the M
ystic River in
1637, troops from Connecticut and Massachusetts, along with Mohican and Narragan
sett Indian
allies, attacked and destroyed a stronghold surrounded by a wooden palisade, kil
ling some four
hundred Pequots in what was, to that time, one of the most stunning victories of
English settlers
over Indians ever witnessed.
One important result of the Pequot War was the Indians’ realization that, in the f
uture, they would
have to unify to fight the Englishmen. This would ultimately culminate in the 16
75–76 war led by
Metacomet—known in New England history as King Philip’s War—which resulted in a stagge
ring
defeat for northeastern coastal tribes. A far-reaching result of these conflicts
was the creation of the
New England militia system.
The Puritan—indeed, English—distrust of the mighty Stuart kings manifested itself in
a fear of
standing armies. Under the colonial militia system, much of the population armed
itself and
prepared to fight on short notice. All men aged sixteen to sixty served without
pay in village militia
companies; they brought their own weapons and supplies and met irregularly to tr
ain and drill. One
advantage of the militia companies was that some of their members were crack sho
ts: as an
eighteenth-century American later wrote a British friend,
In this country…the great quantities of game, the many lands, and the great privil
eges of killing
make the Americans the best marksmen in the world, and thousands support their f
amilies by the
same, particularly the riflemen on the frontiers…. In marching through the woods o
ne thousand of
these riflemen would cut to pieces ten thousand of your best troops.72
But the American militia system also had many disadvantages. Insubordination was
the inevitable
result of trying to turn individualistic Americans into obedient soldiers. Milit
iamen did not want to
fight anywhere but home. Some deserted in the middle of a campaign because of sp
ring plowing or
because their time was up. But the most serious shortcoming of the militia syste
m was that it gave
Americans a misguided impression that they did not need a large, well-trained st
anding army.
The American soldier was an amateur, an irregular combatant who despised the pro
fessional
military. Even 140 years after the Pequot War, the Continental Congress still wa
s suspicious that a
professional military, “however necessary it may be, is always dangerous to the li
berties of the
people…. Standing armies in time of peace are inconsistent with the principles of
republican
government.”73
Where muskets and powder could handle—or, at least, suppress—most of the difficultie
s with
Indians, there were other, more complex issues raised by a rogue minister and an
independentminded
woman. Taken together, the threats posed by Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson m
ay
have presented as serious a menace to Massachusetts as the Pequots and other tri
bes put together.
Roger Williams and the Limits of Religious Toleration
The first serious challenge to the unity of state and religion in Massachusetts
came from a Puritan
dissident named Roger Williams. A man Bradford described as “godly and zealous,” Wil
liams had
moved to Salem, where he served as minister after 1635. Gradually he became more
vocal in his
opinion that church and state needed to be completely separated. Forced religion
, he argued,
“Stinks in God’s nostrils.” Williams had other unusual views, but his most dangerous n
otion was
his interpretation of determining who was saved and thus worthy of taking commun
ion with others
who were sanctified. Williams demanded ever-increasing evidence of a person’s salv
ation before
taking communion with him—eventually to the point where he distrusted the salvatio
n of his own
wife. At that point, Williams completed the circle: no one, he argued, could det
ermine who was
saved and who was damned.
Because church membership was so finely intertwined with political rights, this
created thorny
problems. Williams argued that since no one could determine salvation, all had t
o be treated (for
civil purposes) as if they were children of God, ignoring New Testament teaching
on subjecting
repeat offenders who were nevertheless thought to be believers to disfellowship,
so as not to
destroy the church body with the individual’s unrepentant sin. Such a position str
uck at the
authority of Winthrop, the General Court, and the entire basis of citizenship in
Massachusetts, and
the magistrates in Boston could not tolerate Williams’s open rebellion for long. O
ther
congregations started to exert economic pressure on Salem, alienating Williams f
rom his own
church. After weakening Williams sufficiently, the General Court gave him six we
eks to depart the
colony. Winthrop urged him to “steer my course to Narragansett Bay and the Indians
.”74
Unable to stay, and encouraged to leave, in 1636 Williams founded Providence, Rh
ode Island,
which the orthodox Puritans derisively called “Rogues Island” or “the sewer of New Eng
land.”75
After eight years, he obtained a charter from England establishing Rhode Island
as a colony.
Church and state were separated there and all religions—at least all Christian rel
igions—tolerated.
Williams’s influence on religious toleration was nevertheless minimal, and his hal
o, “ill fitting.”
Only a year after Williams relocated, another prominent dissident moved to Rhode
Island. Anne
Hutchinson, a mother of fifteen, arrived in Boston in 1631 with her husband, Wil
liam (“a man of
mild temper and weak parts, wholly guided by his wife,” deplored Winthrop). A foll
ower of John
Cotton, a local minister, Hutchinson gained influence as a Bible teacher, and sh
e held prayer groups
in her home. She embraced a potentially heretical religious position known as an
tinomianism,
which held that there was no relationship between works and faith, and thus the
saved had no
obligation to follow church laws—only the moral judgment of the individual counted
. Naturally,
the colonial authorities saw in Hutchinson a threat to their authority, but in t
he broader picture she
potentially opened the door to all sorts of civil mischief. In 1636, therefore,
the General Court tried
her for defaming the clergy—though not, as it might have, for a charge of heresy,
which carried a
penalty of death at the stake. A bright and clever woman, Hutchinson sparred wit
h Winthrop and
others until she all but confessed to hearing voices. The court evicted her from
Massachusetts, and
in 1637 she and some seventy-five supporters moved to Rhode Island. In 1643, Ind
ians killed
Hutchinson and most of her family.
The types of heresies introduced by both Williams and Hutchinson constituted par
ticularly
destructive doctrinal variants, including a thoroughgoing selfishness and reject
ion of doctrinal
control by church hierarchies. Nevertheless, the experience of Hutchinson reaffi
rmed Rhode
Island’s reputation as a colony of religious toleration. Confirming the reality of
that toleration, a
royal charter in 1663 stated, “No person…shall be in any wise molested, punished, di
squieted, or
called in question, for any differences in opinion in matters of religion [but t
hat all] may from time
to time, and at all times hereafter, freely and fully have and enjoy his and the
ir judgments and
consciences, in matters of religious concernments.” Rhode Island therefore led the
way in
establishing toleration as a principle, creating a type of “religious competition.”7
6 Quakers and
Baptists were accepted. This was no small matter. In Massachusetts, religious de
viants were
expelled; and if they persisted upon returning, they faced flogging, having thei
r tongues bored with
hot irons, or even execution, as happened to four Quakers who were repeat violat
ors. Yet the
Puritans “made good everything Winthrop demanded.”77 They could have dominated the e
arly
state completely, but nevertheless gradually and voluntarily permitted the struc
tures of government
to be changed to the extent that they no longer controlled it.
Rhode Island, meanwhile, remained an island of religious refugees in a Puritan s
ea, as new Puritan
settlers moved into the Connecticut River Valley in the 1630s, attracted by the
region’s rich soil.
Thomas Hooker, a Cambridge minister, headed a group of families who moved to an
area some
hundred miles southwest of Boston on the Connecticut River, establishing the tow
n of Hartford in
1635; in 1636 a colony called New Haven was established on the coast across from
Long Island as
a new beacon of religious purity. In the Fundamental Articles of New Haven (1639
), the New
Haven community forged a closer state-church relationship than existed in Massac
husetts,
including tax support for ministers. In 1662 the English government issued a roy
al charter to the
colony of Connecticut that incorporated New Haven, Hartford, Windsor, New London
, and
Middletown.
The Council for New England, meanwhile, had granted charters to still other land
s north of
Massachusetts: Sir Ferdinando Gorges and John Mason received territory that comp
rised Maine
and New Hampshire in 1629, although settlements had appeared throughout the regi
on during the
decade. Gorges acquired the Maine section, enlarged by a grant in 1639, and afte
r battling claims
from Massachusetts, Maine was declared a proprietary colony from 1677 to 1691, w
hen it was
joined to Massachusetts until admitted to the Union in 1820 as a state. Mason ha
d taken the
southern section (New Hampshire), which in 1679 became a royal province, with th
e governor and
council appointed by the king and an assembly elected by the freemen.
Unique Middle Colonies: New York, New Jersey, and Quaker Pennsylvania
Sitting between Virginia, Maryland, and the Carolinas to the south and New Engla
nd to the north
was an assortment of colonies later known as the middle colonies. Over time, the
grants that
extended from Rhode Island to Maryland assumed a character that certainly was no
t Puritan, but
did not share the slave-based economic systems of the South.
Part of the explanation for the differences in the region came from the early Du
tch influence in the
area of New Amsterdam. Following the explorations of Henry Hudson in 1609, the W
est India
Company—already prominent in the West Indies—moved up the Hudson Valley and establis
hed
Fort Orange in 1624 on the site of present-day Albany. Traveling to the mouth of
the Hudson, the
Dutch settled at a site called New Amsterdam, where the director of the company,
Peter Minuit,
consummated his legendary trade with the Indians, giving them blankets and other
goods worth less
than a hundred dollars in return for Manhattan.
The Dutch faced a problem much like that confronting the French: populating the
land. To that end,
the company’s charter authorized the grant of large acreages to anyone who would b
ring fifty
settlers with him. Few large estates appeared, however. Governor Minuit lost his
post in 1631, then
returned to the Delaware River region with a group of Swedish settlers to found
New Sweden.
Despite the relatively powerful navy, the Dutch colonies lacked the steady flow
of immigrants
necessary to ensure effective defense against the other Europeans who soon reach
ed their borders.
The English offered the first, and last, threat to New Amsterdam.
Located between the northern and southern English colonies, the Dutch territory
provided a haven
to pirates and smugglers. King Charles II sought to eliminate the problem by gra
nting to his
brother, the Duke of York (later James II), all of the land between Maryland and
Connecticut. A
fleet dispatched in 1664 took New Amsterdam easily when the Dutch governor, Pete
r Stuyvesant,
failed to mobilize the population of only fifteen hundred. The surrender generou
sly permitted the
Dutch to remain in the colony, but they were no match for the more numerous Engl
ish, who
renamed the city New York. James empowered a governor and council to administer
the colony,
and New York prospered. Despite a population mix that included Swedes, Dutch, In
dians, English,
Germans, French, and African slaves, New York enjoyed relative peace.
The Duke of York dispensed with some of his holdings between the Hudson and Dela
ware Rivers,
called New Jersey, giving the land to Sir George Carteret and John (Lord) Berkel
ey. New Jersey
offered an attractive residence for oppressed, unorthodox Puritans because the c
olony established
religious freedom, and land rights were made available as well. In 1674 the prop
rietors sold New
Jersey to representatives of an even more unorthodox Christian group, the Societ
y of Friends,
called Quakers. Known for their social habits of refusing to tip their hats to l
anded gentlemen and
for their nonviolence, the Quakers’ theology evolved from the teachings of George
Fox. Their
name came from the shaking and contortions they displayed while in the throes of
religious
inspiration. Highly democratic in their church government, Quakers literally spo
ke in church as the
Spirit moved them.
William Penn, a wealthy landlord and son of an admiral, had joined the faith, pu
tting him at odds
with his father and jeopardizing his inheritance. But upon his father’s death, Pen
n inherited family
lands in both England and Ireland, as well as a debt from King Charles II, which
the monarch paid
in a grant of territory located between New York and Maryland. Penn became propr
ietor and
intended for the colony to make money. He advertised for settlers to migrate to
Pennsylvania using
multilingual newspaper ads that rival some of the slickest modern Madison Avenue
productions.
Penn also wanted to create a “holy experiment” in Pennsylvania, and during a visit t
o America in
1682 designed a spacious city for his colony called Philadelphia (brotherly love
). Based on
experience with the London fire of 1666, and the subsequent plan to rebuild the
city, Penn laid out
Philadelphia in squares with generous dimensions. An excellent organizer, Penn n
egotiated with the
Indians, whom he treated with respect. His strategy of inviting all settlers bro
ught talent and skills
to the colony, and his treatment of the Indians averted any major conflict with
them.
Penn retained complete power through his proprietorship, but in 1701, pressure,
especially from the
southern parts of the colony, persuaded him to agree to the Charter of Liberties
. The charter
provided for a representative assembly that limited the authority of the proprie
tor; permitted the
lower areas to establish their own colony (which they did in 1703, when Delaware
was formed);
and ensured religious freedom.
Penn never profited from his proprietorship, and he served time in a debtors’ pris
on in England
before his death in 1718. Still, his vision and managerial skill in creating Pen
nsylvania earned him
high praise from a prominent historian of American business, J.R.T. Hughes, who
observed that
Penn rejected expedient considerations in favor of principle at every turn. His
ideals, more than his
business sense, reflected his “straightforward belief in man’s goodness, and in his
abilities to know
and understand the good, the true and beautiful.” Over the years, Pennsylvania’s Qua
kers would
lead the charge in freeing slaves, establishing antislavery societies even in th
e South.
The Glorious Revolution in England and America, 1688–89
The epic story of the seventeenth-century founding and development of colonial A
merica ended on
a crucial note, with American reaction to England’s Glorious Revolution. The story
of abuses of
power by Stuart kings was well known to Americans. Massachusetts Puritans, after
all, had fled the
regime of Charles I, leaving brethren in England to wage the English Civil War.
The return of a
chastened Charles II from French exile in 1660 did not settle the conflict betwe
en Parliament and
the king.
When James II ascended to the throne in 1685, he decided to single-handedly reor
ganize colonial
administration. First, he violated constitutionalism and sanctity of contract by
recalling the charters
of all of the New England and Middle colonies—Massachusetts Bay, Pennsylvania, New
York, and
New Jersey—and the compact colonies Plymouth, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. In 16
86 he
created the so-called Dominion of New England, a centralized political state tha
t his appointee,
Governor Edmund Andros, was to rule from Boston, its capital city. James’s plan fo
r a Dominion
of New England was a disaster from the start. Upon arrival, Andros dismissed the
colonial
legislatures, forbade town meetings, and announced he was taking personal comman
d of the village
militias. In reality, he did no such thing, never leaving the city limits of Bos
ton.
In the meantime, the countryside erupted in a series of revolts called the colon
ial rebellions. In
Maryland’s famed Protestant Revolt, discontented Protestants protested what they v
iewed as a
Catholic oligarchy, and in New York, anti-Catholic sentiments figured in a revol
t against the
dominion of New England led by Jacob Leisler. Leisler’s Rebellion installed its na
mesake in the
governorship for one year, in 1689. Soon, however, English officials arrived to
restore their rule
and hanged Leisler and his son-in-law, drawing-and-quartering them as the law of
treason required.
But Andros’s government was on its last leg. Upon hearing of the English Whigs’ vict
ory over
James II, colonials arrested him and put him on a ship bound for the mother coun
try.
James II’s plans for restoring an all-powerful monarchy dissolved between 1685 and
1688. A
fervent opposition had arisen among those calling themselves Whigs, a derogatory
term meaning
“outlaw” that James’s foes embraced with pride. There began a second English civil war
of the
seventeenth century—between Whigs and Tories—but this time there was little bloodshe
d. James
was exiled while Parliament made arrangements with his Protestant daughter, Mary
, and her
husband, William, of the Dutch house of Orange, to take the crown. William and M
ary ascended
the throne of England in 1689, but only after agreeing to a contract, the Declar
ation of Rights. In
this historic document, William and Mary confirmed that the monarch was not supr
eme but shared
authority with the English legislature and the courts. Moreover, they acknowledg
ed the House of
Commons as the source of all revenue bills (the power of the purse) and agreed t
o acknowledge the
rights to free speech and petition. Included were provisions requiring due proce
ss of law and
forbidding excessive bail and cruel and unusual punishment. Finally, the Declara
tion of Rights
upheld the right of English Protestants to keep and bear arms, and forbade “standi
ng armies in time
of peace” unless by permission of Parliament.
The resemblance of this Declaration and Bill of Rights to the eighteenth-century
American
Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, Constitution, and Bill o
f Rights is striking,
and one could argue that the Americans were more radicalized by the Glorious Rev
olution than the
English. In England, the Glorious Revolution was seen as an ending; in America,
the hatred and
distrust sown by the Stuart kings was reaped by subsequent monarchs, no matter h
ow
“constitutional” their regimes. Radical Whig ideas contained in the Glorious Revolut
ion—the
pronounced hatred of centralized political, religious, economic, and military au
thority—germinated
in America long after they had subsided in England.
By 1700, then, three major themes characterized the history of the early English
colonies. First,
religion played a crucial role in not only the search for liberty, but also in t
he institutions designed
to ensure its continuation. From the Mayflower Compact to the Charter of Liberti
es, colonists saw a
close connection between religious freedom and personal liberty. This fostered a
multiplicity of
denominations, which, at a time when people literally killed over small differen
ces in the
interpretation of scripture, “made it necessary to seek a basis for political unit
y” outside the realm
of religion.78
A second factor, economic freedom—particularly that associated with land ownership—a
nd the
high value placed on labor throughout the American colonies formed the basis of
a widespread
agreement about the need to preserve private property rights. The early colonist
s came to the
conclusion that the Indians’ view of land never could be harmonized with their own
, and they
understood that one view or the other had to prevail.79 They saw no inherent con
tradiction in
taking land from people who did not accept European-style contracts while they c
ontinued to
highly value their own property rights.
Finally, the English colonies developed political institutions similar to those
in England, but with
an increased awareness of the need for individuals to have protection from their
governments. As
that understanding of political rights percolated up through the colonial govern
ments, the colonies
themselves started to generate their own aura of independent policy-making proce
sses. Distance
from England ensured that, barring significant British efforts to keep the colon
ies under the royal
thumb, the colonies would construct their own self-reliant governments. And it w
as exactly that
evolution that led them to independence.
CHAPTER TWO
Colonial Adolescence, 1707–63
The Inability to Remain European
England’s American colonies represented only a small part of the British Empire by
the late 1700s,
but their vast potential for land and agricultural wealth seemed limitless. Thre
ats still remained,
especially from the French in Canada and Indians on the frontier, but few coloni
sts saw England
herself as posing any threat at the beginning of the century. Repeatedly, Englis
h colonists stated
their allegiance to the Crown and their affirmation of their own rights as Engli
sh subjects. Even
when conflicts arose between colonists and their colonial governors, Americans a
ppealed to the
king to enforce those rights against their colonial administrators—not depose them
.
Between 1707 (when England, Scotland, and Wales formed the United Kingdom) and 1
763,
however, changes occurred within the empire itself that forced an overhaul of im
perial regulations.
The new policies convinced the thirteen American colonies that England did not s
ee them as
citizens, but as subjects—in the worst sense of the word. By attempting to foster
dependence
among British colonists throughout the world on each other and, ultimately, on t
he mother country,
England only managed to pit America against other parts of the empire. At the sa
me time, despite
their disparate backgrounds and histories, the American colonies started to shar
e a common set of
understandings about liberty and their position in the empire. On every side, th
en, the colonies that
eventually made up the United States began to develop internal unity and an inde
pendent attitude.
Time Line
1707:
England, Wales, and Scotland unite into the United Kingdom(Great Britain)
1702–13:
Queen Anne’s War
1714–27:
George I’s reign
1727–60:
George II’s reign
1733:
Georgia founded
1734–41:
First Great Awakening
1735:
John Peter Zenger Trial
1744–48:
King George’s War
1754:
Albany Congress;
1754–63:
French and Indian War
1760:
George III accedes to throne
1763:
Proclamation of 1763
Shaping “Americanness”
In Democracy in America, the brilliant French observer Alexis de Tocqueville pre
dicted that a
highly refined culture was unlikely to evolve in America, largely because of its
“lowly” colonial
origins. The “intermingling of classes and constant rising and sinking” of individua
ls in an
egalitarian society, Tocqueville wrote, had a detrimental effect on the arts: pa
inting, literature,
music, theater, and education. In place of high or refined mores, Tocqueville co
ncluded, Americans
had built a democratic culture that was highly accessible but ultimately lacking
in the brilliance that
characterized European art forms.1
Certainly, some colonial Americans tried to emulate Europe, particularly when it
came to creating
institutions of higher learning. Harvard College, founded in 1636, was followed
by William and
Mary (1693), Yale (1701), Princeton (1746), the College of Philadelphia (Univers
ity of
Pennsylvania) (1740), and—between 1764 and 1769—King’s College (Columbia), Brown,
Queen’s College (Rutgers), and Dartmouth. Yet from the beginning, these schools di
ffered sharply
from their European progenitors in that they were founded by a variety of Protes
tant sects, not a
state church, and though tied to religious denominations, they were nevertheless
relatively secular.
Harvard, for example, was founded to train clergy, and yet by the end of the col
onial era only a
quarter of its graduates became ministers; the rest pursued careers in business,
law, medicine,
politics, and teaching. A few schools, such as the College of New Jersey (later
Princeton), led by
the Reverend John Witherspoon, bucked the trend: Witherspoon transformed Princet
on into a
campus much more oriented toward religious and moral philosophy, all the while c
harging it with a
powerful revolutionary fervor.2
Witherspoon’s Princeton was swimming against the tide, however. Not only were most
curricula
becoming more secular, but they were also more down to earth and “applied.” Colonial
colleges
slighted the dead languages Latin and Greek by introducing French and German; mo
dern historical
studies complemented and sometimes replaced ancient history. The proliferation o
f colleges (nine
in America) meant access for more middle-class youths (such as John Adams, a Mas
sachusetts
farm boy who studied at Harvard). To complete this democratization process, appo
inted boards of
trustees, not the faculty or the church, governed American universities.
Early American science also reflected the struggles faced by those who sought a
more pragmatic
knowledge. For example, John Winthrop Jr., the son of the Massachusetts founder,
struggled in
vain to conduct pure research and bring his scientific career to the attention o
f the European
intellectual community. As the first American member of the Royal Society of Lon
don, Winthrop
wrote countless letters abroad and even sent specimens of rattlesnakes and other
indigenous
American flora and fauna, which received barely a passing glance from European s
cientists. More
successful was Benjamin Franklin, the American scientist who applied his researc
h in meteorology
and electricity to invent the lightning rod, as well as bifocals and the Frankli
n Stove. Americans
wanted the kind of science that would heat their homes and improve their eyesigh
t, not explain the
origins of life in the universe.
Colonial art, architecture, drama, and music also reflected American practicalit
y and democracy
spawned in a frontier environment. Artists found their only market for paintings
in portraiture and,
later, patriot art. Talented painters like John Singleton Copley and Benjamin We
st made their living
painting the likenesses of colonial merchants, planters, and their families; eve
ntually both sailed for
Europe to pursue purer artistic endeavors. American architecture never soared to
magnificence,
though a few public buildings, colleges, churches, and private homes reflected a
n aesthetic
influenced by classical motifs and Georgian styles. Drama, too, struggled. Purit
an Massachusetts
prohibited theater shows (the “Devil’s Workshop”), whereas thespians in Philadelphia,
Williamsburg, and Charleston performed amateurish productions of Shakespeare and
contemporary
English dramas. Not until Royall Tyler tapped the patriot theme (and the comic p
otential of the
Yankee archetype) in his 1789 production of The Contrast would American playwrig
hts finally
discover their niche, somewhere between high and low art.
In eighteenth century Charleston, Boston, and Philadelphia, the upper classes co
uld occasionally
hear Bach and Mozart performed by professional orchestras. Most musical endeavor
, however, was
applied to religion, where church hymns were sung a cappella and, occasionally,
to the
accompaniment of a church organ. Americans customized and syncopated hymns, grea
tly
aggravating pious English churchmen. Reflecting the most predominant musical inf
luence in
colonial America, the folk idiom of Anglo, Celtic, and African emigrants, Americ
an music already
had coalesced into a base upon which new genres of church and secular music—gospel
, field
songs, and white folk ballads—would ultimately emerge.
Colonial literature likewise focused on religion or otherwise addressed the need
s of common folk.
This pattern was set with Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation, which related the exc
iting story of the
Pilgrims with an eye to the all-powerful role of God in shaping their destiny. A
nne Bradstreet, an
accomplished seventeenth-century colonial poet who continued to be popular after
her death, also
conveyed religious themes and emphasized divine inspiration of human events. Alt
hough literacy
was widespread, Americans read mainly the Bible, political tracts, and how-to bo
oks on farming,
mechanics, and moral improvement—not Greek philosophers or the campaigns of Caesar
.
Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography is a classic example of the American penchant fo
r pragmatic
literature that continues to this day. Franklin wrote his Autobiography during t
he pre-Revolutionary
era, though it was not published until the nineteenth century. Several generatio
ns of American
schoolchildren grew up on these tales of his youthful adventures and early caree
r, culminating with
his gaining fame as a Pennsylvania printer, writer, scientist, diplomat, and pat
riot politician.
Franklin’s “13 Virtues”—Honesty, Thrift, Devotion, Faithfulness, Trust, Courtesy, Cleanl
iness,
Temperance, Work, Humility, and so on—constituted a list of personal traits aspire
d to by virtually
every Puritan, Quaker, or Catholic in the colonies.3
Franklin’s saga thereby became the first major work in a literary genre that would
define
Americanism—the rags-to-riches story and the self-improvement guide rolled into on
e. Franklin’s
other great contribution to American folk literature, Poor Richard’s Almanac, prov
ided an
affordable complement to the Autobiography. Poor Richard was a simply written ma
gazine
featuring weather forecasts, crop advice, predictions and premonitions, witticis
ms, and folksy
advice on how to succeed and live virtuously.4
Common Life in the Early Eighteenth Century
Life in colonial America was as coarse as the physical environment in which it f
lourished, so much
so that English visitors expressed shock at the extent to which emigrants had be
en transformed in
the new world. Many Americans lived in one-room farmhouses, heated only by a Fra
nklin stove,
with clothes hung on wall pegs and few furnishings. “Father’s chair” was often the onl
y genuine
chair in a home, with children relegated to rough benches or to rugs thrown on t
he wooden floors.
This rugged lifestyle was routinely misunderstood by visitors as “Indianization,” ye
t in most cases,
the process was subtle. Trappers had already adopted moccasins, buckskins, and f
urs, and adapted
Indian methods of hauling hides or goods over rough terrain with the travois, a
triangular-shaped
and easily constructed sled pulled by a single horse. Indians, likewise, adopted
white tools,
firearms, alcohol, and even accepted English religion, making the acculturation
process entirely
reciprocal. Non-Indians incorporated Indian words (especially proper names) into
American
English and adopted aspects of Indian material culture. They smoked tobacco, gre
w and ate squash
and beans, dried venison into jerky, boiled lobsters and served them up with wil
d rice or potatoes
on the side. British-Americans cleared heavily forested land by girdling trees,
then slashing and
burning the dead timber—practices picked up from the Indians, despite the myth of
the ecologically
friendly natives.5 Whites copied Indians in traveling via snowshoes, bullboat, a
nd dugout canoe.
And colonial Americans learned quickly—through harsh experience—how to fight like th
e
Indians.6
Even while Indianizing their language, British colonists also adopted French, Sp
anish, German,
Dutch, and African words from areas where those languages were spoken, creating
still new
regional accents that evolved in New England and the southern tidewater. Environ
ment also
influenced accents, producing the flat, unmelodic, understated, and functional m
idland American
drawl that Europeans found incomprehensible. Americans prided themselves on inno
vative
spellings, stripping the excess baggage off English words, exchanging “color” for “col
our,” “labor”
for “labour,” or otherwise respelled words in harder American syllables, as in “theate
r” for
“theatre.” This new brand of English was so different that around the time of the Am
erican
Revolution, a young New Englander named Noah Webster began work on a dictionary
of
American English, which he completed in 1830.
Only a small number of colonial Americans went on to college (often in Great Bri
tain), but
increasing numbers studied at public and private elementary schools, raising the
most literate
population on earth. Americans’ literacy was widespread, but it was not deep or pr
ofound. Most
folks read a little and not much more. In response, a new form of publishing aro
se to meet the
demands of this vast, but minimally literate, populace: the newspaper. Early new
spapers came in
the form of broadsides, usually distributed and posted in the lobby of an inn or
saloon where one of
the more literate colonials would proceed to read a story aloud for the dining o
r drinking clientele.
Others would chime in with editorial comments during the reading, making for a t
ruly democratic
and interactive forum.7 Colonial newspapers contained a certain amount of local
information about
fires, public drunkenness, arrests, and political events, more closely resemblin
g today’s National
Enquirer than the New York Times.
Americans’ fascination with light or practical reading meant that hardback books,
treatises, and the
classics—the mainstay of European booksellers—were replaced by cheaply bound tracts,
pamphlets, almanacs, and magazines. Those Americans interested in political affa
irs displayed a
hearty appetite for plainly written radical Whig political tracts that emphasize
d the legislative
authority over that of an executive, and that touted the participation of free l
andholders in
government. And, of course, the Bible was found in nearly every cottage.
Democratization extended to the professions of law and medicine—subsequently, some
would
argue, deprofessionalizing them. Unlike British lawyers, who were formally train
ed in English
courts and then compartmentalized into numerous specialties, American barristers
learned on the
job and engaged in general legal practices. The average American attorney served
a brief, informal
apprenticeship; bought three or four good law books (enough to fill two saddleba
gs, it was said);
and then, literally, hung out his shingle. If he lacked legal skills and acumen,
the free market would
soon seal his demise.8
Unless schooled in Europe, colonial physicians and midwives learned on the job,
with limited
supervision. Once on their own they knew no specialization; surgery, pharmacy, m
idwifery,
dentistry, spinal adjustment, folk medicine, and quackery were all characteristi
c of democratized
professional medical practitioners flourishing in a free market.9 In each case,
the professions
reflected the American insistence that their tools—law, medicine, literature—emphasi
ze
application over theory.
Religion’s First Great Awakening
A free market of ideas benefited American colonists in religion too. Affairs of
the spirit in the
English colonies, where religion was varied, unregulated, and enthusiastic, diff
ered from those of
the mother country, with its formality and stiffness. Sects multiplied, split ap
art into new divisions,
and multiplied some more, due in part to the Protestant/Puritan emphasis on indi
vidual Bible
reading and in part because of the congregational nature of the churches. Althou
gh Virginia, South
Carolina, Connecticut, and Massachusetts retained official churches in varying d
egrees, the
decentralization of religious denominations made them impossible to control. Ame
rican Baptist
ministers, for example, required no formal training in theology, much less a for
mal degree in
divinity, to preach the Gospel. Instead, they were “called” to the pulpit, as were m
any new
Methodists, radical Presbyterians, and other enthusiastic men of God. Both the p
resbytery system,
which constituted a top-down hierarchical structure, and the Baptists’ congregatio
nal organization
of churches (a bottom-up arrangement) met different needs of saint and sinner al
ike, all the while
rejecting Anglican hierarchical control.10 American preachers displayed a thorou
gh antiintellectual
bent in which sermons replaced written lectures with a down-home, oratorical rel
igious
style. Itinerant preachers roamed New England, western Pennsylvania, and the Pie
dmont and
Appalachian frontiers, spreading the Word.11
A major source of what Americans today call old-time religion originated in the
First Great
Awakening work of clergymen Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield. At first gla
nce, Edwards
seems an unlikely candidate for delivering fire and brimstone sermons. Born in C
onnecticut in
1703, the third-generation Puritan was a brilliant, deep-thinking philosopher an
d theologian. After
his 1720 graduation from Yale, he coupled a rational defense of biblical doctrin
e with a profoundly
mystical teaching style that his Presbyterian parishioners found compelling. Edw
ards and others
inspired unprecedented religious fervor in Massachusetts in 1735.
When English Methodist George Whitefield—as much a showman as preacher—arrived on
American shores in 1741, American ministers had already seeded the ground for th
e religious
revival known as the First Great Awakening. Essentially, this movement was chara
cterized by
tremendous religious growth and enthusiasm, the first such upsurge since the ori
ginal Puritan
migration a hundred years earlier. As the waves of the awakening spanned America’s
eastern shore,
church attendance soared and ministers like Edwards and Whitefield hosted open a
ir camp
meetings to exhort true believers to accept the Lord and avoid the flames of hel
l. Throughout the
Connecticut River Valley thousands flocked to the glow of this New Light Christi
anity, as it was
called, camping out in the open air and enjoying the fellowship of their fellow
devotees.
George Whitefield’s dramatic preaching both frightened and inspired his audiences.
Literally acting
out biblical stories on stage, playing each of the major parts himself, Whitefie
ld voiced the word of
God to sinners. His impersonation of Satan and descriptions of the horrors of he
ll terrified
audiences and evidently gave them much to think about. Edwards called this tacti
c “salutary
terror.” His most famous sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” (1741), remain
s a fireand-
brimstone classic in which he warned sinners that “God holds you over the pit of h
ell, much as
one holds a spider, or some loathsome insect.”12 The climax of any Whitefield/Edwa
rds sermon
was salvation. Parishioners came forward in tears and humility, confessing their
sins and swearing
to begin life anew as saved Christians. Thus, out of the old Calvinist tradition
of saving grace, came
a more modern, public, and theatrical American outpouring of religious emotion t
hat remains
common today, which elicited no small degree of condemnation from traditionalist
s.13
By the late 1740s, the Great Awakening began to fade. Even Jonathan Edwards fell
into disfavor
and withdrew as a recluse to a small congregation of pioneers and Indians in wes
tern
Massachusetts. Yet the First Great Awakening left an indelible legacy by further
diffusing and
decentralizing church authority. It fathered new Protestant sects—Baptist, Methodi
st, and New
Light Presbyterian movements—and enhanced the role of the independent itinerant pr
eachers. Like
American doctors and lawyers, the clergy grew less intellectual and more pragmat
ic. Saving souls
was more important to them than preaching doctrine, and a college education in t
heology became
optional if not irrelevant or even, later, an impediment to sound doctrine. All
of this fit perfectly
into the large antiauthoritarian pattern in colonial America, giving the First G
reat Awakening a
political as a well as social impact.
Finally, the First Great Awakening foreshadowed another religious movement—a movem
ent that
would, during the first half of the nineteenth century, echo and supersede the f
irst crusade’s
fervency. The Second Great Awakening that followed gave birth to abolitionism as
the true
believers of the Second Great Awakening added slavery to their list of man’s sins
and, in fact,
moved it to the top of the list.
Slavery’s American Origins and Evolution
As Edmund Morgan has shown, African American slavery evolved slowly in the seven
teenthcentury
American South.14 White Virginians and Carolinians did not come to America with
the
intention of owning slaves, yet that was precisely what they did: between 1619 a
nd 1707 slavery
slowly became entrenched. Opportunities in the economically diverse Northeast pr
oved much more
attractive to immigrants than the staple-crop agriculture of Virginia and the Ca
rolinas, making for
permanent labor shortages in the South. Increasingly, it became more difficult t
o persuade white
indentured servants or Indian workers to harvest the labor-intensive tobacco and
rice crops. This
was hard physical labor best performed in gang systems under the supervision of
an overseer. No
free whites would do it, and Southerners discovered that the few Indians they pu
t to work soon
vanished into the forest. Southern tobacco planters soon looked elsewhere for a
more servile work
force.
Yet why did tobacco and rice planters specifically turn to African slaves? In re
trospect, one must
conclude that Africans were more vulnerable to enslavement than white indentured
servants and
Indians. The African Gold Coast was open to exploitation by European sea powers
and already had
a flourishing slave trade with the Muslims. This trade was far more extensive th
an previously
thought, and involved far more Europeans than earlier scholars had acknowledged.
15 Thanks to
this existing trade in human flesh, there were already ample precedents of black
slavery in the
British West Indies. More important, those African slaves shipped to North Ameri
ca truly became
captives. They did not (initially) speak English, Spanish, French, or Indian lan
guage and could not
communicate effectively outside their plantations. Even before they were shipped
across the
Atlantic, traders mixed slaves by tribe and language with others with whom they
shared nothing in
common except skin color, isolating them further. The first generation of slave
captives thus
became extremely demoralized, and rebellion became infrequent, despite the paran
oia over slave
revolts that constantly gripped plantation whites.
How could these English colonists, so steeped in the Enlightenment principles of
liberty and
constitutionalism, enslave other human beings? The answer is harsh and simple: B
ritish colonists
convinced themselves that Africans were not really human beings—that they were pro
perty—and
thus legitimate subjects for enslavement within the framework of English liberty
. Into English folk
belief was interwoven fear of the color black, associating blackness with witchc
raft and evil, while
so-called scientists in Europe argued that blacks were an inferior species of hu
mans. English
ministers abused the Bible, misinterpreting stories of Cain and Abel and Noah’s so
n Ham, to argue
for separate creation and an alleged God-imposed inferiority on blacks as the “cur
se of Ham.”16
When combined with perceived economic necessity, English racism and rationalizat
ion for
enslavement of African people became entrenched.17
Slavery’s institutionalization began in Virginia in 1619 when a small group of bla
ck slaves arrived.
The term “slave” did not appear in Virginia law for fifty years, and there is eviden
ce that even the
earliest Africans brought over against their will were viewed as indentures. Fre
e blacks, such as
“Antonio the negro,” were identified in public records as early as 1621, and of the
three hundred
Africans recorded as living in the South through 1640, many gained freedom throu
gh expiration of
indenture contracts. Some free blacks soon became landholders, planters, and eve
n slaveholders
themselves. But at some point in the mid-seventeenth century, the process whereb
y all blacks were
presumed to be slaves took root, and this transformation is still not well under
stood. Attempts by
scholars such as Peter Kolchin to isolate race begs the question of why whites p
ermitted any blacks
to be free, whereas Edmund Morgan’s explanation of slavery stemming from efforts b
y poor whites
to create another class under them is also unpersuasive.18 However it occurred,
by 1676,
widespread legalized slavery appeared in Maryland, Virginia, and the Carolinas,
and within thirty
years, slavery was an established economic institution throughout the southern a
nd, to a much
smaller degree, northern American colonies.19
English, Dutch, and New England merchant seamen traded in human flesh. West Afri
can intertribal
warfare produced abundant prisoners of war to fuel this trade. Prisoners found t
hemselves branded
and boarded onto vessels of the Royal African Company and other slavers. On the
ships, slaves
were shackled together and packed tight in the hold—eating, sleeping, vomiting, an
d defecating
while chained in place. The arduous voyage of three weeks to three months was ch
aracterized by a
16 percent mortality rate and, occasionally, involved suicides and mutinies. Fin
ally, at trip’s end,
the slavers delivered their prisoners on the shores of America.
Every American colony’s legislators enacted laws called black codes to govern what
some would
later call America’s Peculiar Institution. These codes defined African Americans a
s chattels
personal—moveable personal property—not as human beings, and as such slaves could no
t testify
against whites in court, nor could they be killed for a capital crime (they were
too valuable). Black
codes forbade slave literacy, gun or dog ownership, travel (excepting special tr
avel permits),
gatherings numbering more than six slaves, and sex between black males and white
women
(miscegenation). However, as the development of a large mulatto population attes
ts, white men
were obviously free to have sex with—or, more often, rape—black women. All of the ab
ove laws
were open to broad interpretation and variation, especially in northern colonies
. This fact did not
alter the overall authoritarian structure of the peculiar institution.20
The vast majority of slaves in the New World worked in either Virginia tobacco f
ields or South
Carolina rice plantations. Rice plantations constituted the worst possible fate,
for Carolina lowlands
proved to be a hot, humid, and horrible work environment, replete with swarms of
insects and
innumerable species of worms. Huge all-male Carolina work forces died at extraor
dinary rates.
Conditions were so bad that a few Carolina slaves revolted against their masters
in the Cato
Conspiracy (1739), which saw seventy-five slaves kill thirty whites before fleei
ng to Spanish
Florida; white militiamen soon killed forty-four of the revolutionaries. A year
later, whites hanged
another fifty blacks for supposedly planning insurrection in the infamous Charle
ston Plot.
Slave revolts and runaways proved exceptions to the rule. Most black slaves endu
red their fate in
stoic and heroic fashion by creating a lifestyle that sustained them and their w
ill to endure slavery.
In the slave quarters, blacks returned from the fields each day to their familie
s, church and religion,
and a unique folk culture, with music, dance, medicine, folktales, and other tra
ditional lore. Blacks
combined African customs with Anglo-and Celtic-American traits to create a uniqu
e African
American folk culture. Although this culture did not thoroughly emerge until the
nineteenth
century, it started to take shape in the decades before the American Revolution.
African American
traditions, music, and a profound belief in Christianity helped the slaves endur
e and sustained their
hopes for “a better day a comin’.”
Although the institution of slavery thoroughly insinuated itself into southern l
ife and culture in the
1600s, it took the invention of the cotton gin in the 1790s to fully entrench th
e peculiar institution.
Tobacco and rice, important as they were, paled in comparison to the impact of c
otton agriculture
on the phenomenal growth of slavery, but the tortured political and religious ra
tionales for slavery
had matured well before then, making its entrenchment a certainty in the South.2
1
A few statistics clarify these generalizations. By the mid-1700s, Americans impo
rted
approximately seven thousand slaves from Africa and the Caribbean annually. Some
40 percent of
Virginians and 66 percent of all South Carolinians in 1835 were black. Of these,
probably 95
percent were slaves. By 1763, between 15 and 20 percent of all Americans were Af
rican
Americans, free and slave—a larger per capita black population than in modern-day
America. Yet
90 percent of all these African Americans resided south of the Pennsylvania line
. Northern slavery,
always small because of the absence of a staple crop, was shriveling, its death
accelerated by
northern reformers who passed manumission acts beginning late in the 1700s, and
by the formation
in 1775 of the world’s first abolitionist group, the Quaker Anti-Slavery Society—by
Pennsylvania
Quakers. Other Northerners routinely freed their slaves or allowed them to buy t
heir own freedom,
so that by 1830 there were only three thousand slaves left in all of the North,
compared to more
than two million in the South.22 When individual initiative did not suffice, Nor
therners employed
the law. The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 would forbid slavery above the Ohio Riv
er, and the
Constitution would allow abolition of the slave trade by 1807.23
Some Northerners envisioned, and prayed for, an end to American slavery, as did
a small number
of Southerners. George Washington would free all of his slaves following his dea
th; Jefferson and
Madison would not. They privately decried slavery as a “necessary evil”—something thei
r fathers
and they had come to depend upon, but not something they were proud of or aimed
to perpetuate.24
Jefferson’s commitment to ending slavery may be more suspect than Washington’s or, c
ertainly,
Franklin’s. But virtually all of these men believed that slavery would some day en
d, and often they
delayed confronting it in hopes that it would just go away. Until the invention
of the cotton gin,
their hope was not necessarily a futile one. After the advent of the Cotton King
dom, however,
increasingly fewer Southerners criticized slavery, and the pervading philosophy
about it slowly
shifted from its presence as a necessary evil to a belief that slavery was a pos
itive good.
Georgia: The Last Colony
Unlike the Puritans, who wanted to create a “city on a hill,” or the Virginia Compan
y, which sought
profit, the founders of Georgia acted out of concern for Spanish power in the so
uthern area of
America. Although Queen Anne’s War ended in 1713, Spain still represented a signif
icant threat to
the Carolinas. General James Oglethorpe, a military hero, also had a philanthrop
ic bent. He had
headed an investigation of prisons and expressed special concern for debtors, wh
o by English law
could be incarcerated for their obligations. If he could open a settlement south
of the Carolinas, he
could offer a new start to poor English and settle a region that could stand as
a buffer to Spanish
power.
In 1732, Oglethorpe received a grant from King George II for land between the Sa
vannah and
Altamaha rivers. Oglethorpe and his trustees deliberately limited the size of th
e landholdings to
encourage density and, thus, better defense. Debtors and prisoners were released
on the condition
that they emigrate to Georgia; they helped found the first fortified town on the
Savannah River in
1733. The trustees, though, had planned well by encouraging artisans, tradesmen,
farmers, and
other skilled workers from England and Scotland to emigrate. In addition, they w
elcomed all
religious refugees—to the point of allowing a small group of Jews to locate in Geo
rgia—except
Catholics, fearing they might ally with the Spanish.
Within a decade, Britain’s fears of Spanish aggression proved well founded. The Eu
ropean War of
the Austrian Succession (1740–48) spawned conflict in the Western Hemisphere when
Spain and
France allied with Indian tribes to attack the British. During the 1739–42 War of
Jenkins’s Ear,
General Oglethorpe led Georgians and South Carolinians into Spanish Florida to t
hwart a Spanish
invasion. They enjoyed mixed success but failed to wrest Saint Augustine from Sp
ain. Despite
limited military success, Oglethorpe soon found that his colonists wanted to lim
it his power.
Former convicts actively opposed his ban of rum (sobriety, they believed, would
not expedite their
rehabilitation!). Planters chafed at his prohibition of slavery. In 1750, Georgi
ans repealed the ban
on slavery, importing nearly ten thousand Africans by 1770. One year before its
original charter
expired, Oglethorpe’s group surrendered control and Georgia became a Royal colony.
With the stabilization of Georgia as the thirteenth American colony, the final A
merican adjustment
to empire was complete. Britain’s colonies spanned the entire Atlantic seaboard, a
nd the system
appeared relatively sound. At the same time, on paper, the mercantile apparatus
of the 1600s
seemed to function satisfactorily. The king and Parliament handed down laws to t
he secretary of
state who, with the Board of Trade, issued orders for commerce and governance of
the New World.
Britain deployed a small network of royal governors, officials, and trade and cu
stoms officers who
were directed to carry out these laws.
Ultimately, it would be up to these officials to prevent the American Revolution—a
challenge well
beyond them. The most common thread that connected the British colonies was thei
r governmental
structure: eleven colonies had an appointed council and elected assembly (with t
he franchise, or
voting rights, bestowed on adult white male property owners); ten colonies had a
governor selected
by the king, in the case of a royal colony, or by the directors of the joint-sto
ck company. The
legislators’ right to vote on taxes, the governor’s salary, and all other revenue me
asures—the
coveted power of the purse—constituted a central part of the rights of Englishmen
the colonists
enjoyed. Thus, citizens took even relatively minor local levies as serious busin
ess. As they grew
more prosperous, wealth permeated through the greater part of the body politic,
making inevitable
the ascendancy of the legislative bodies over the executives. Despite resistance
from the governors,
virtually all the American colonies in 1770 had seen the elected legislative bod
ies supersede the
governors’ offices, wresting almost all important decision-making power from the k
ing’s
proxies.25
American Whigs clung to (and radicalized) a distrust of power that Puritans had
displayed in the
English Civil War and Glorious Revolution. Colonists distrusted appointed govern
ors and held
them at bay with the economic power of the lower house of the legislature and it
s
budgetary/appropriation powers. If a governor proved uncooperative, the legislat
ure might hold
back his salary to foster compromise. Separated from the mother country by three
thousand miles
and beholden to the legislatures for their pay, most governors learned how to de
al with the
provincials on their own terms. But colonial governments were not balanced gover
nments in any
sense. Elected representatives commanded disproportionate power, as the colonist
s and English
Whigs desired. At the same time, a separation of powers was clearly visible, if
imperfectly
weighted in favor of the legislature.
Benign Neglect
Continued clashes between colonial legislators and governors picked by the Crown
only heralded a
larger dissatisfaction among Americans with their position in the empire. Three
factors fueled their
growing discomfort with English rule. First, there was the tenuous nature of imp
erial holdings
themselves: overseas possessions required constant protection and defense agains
t foreign threats,
especially those posed by the French. Not only did Britain have to maintain a la
rge, well-equipped
navy capable of extending English power to all areas of the globe, but colonial
settlements also
needed troops to defend against natives and encroachments from other nations’ colo
nies. A nation
as small as England could not hope to protect its possessions with English soldi
ers alone: it needed
conscripts or volunteers from the colonies themselves. Even so, the cost of supp
orting such farflung
operations, even in peacetime, was substantial. In wartime, the expense of maint
aining armies
overseas soared still further. Attempts to spread that expense to the colonists
themselves without
extending to them representation in England soon bred animosity in the North Ame
rican colonies.
A second factor, already evident in Bacon’s Rebellion, involved a growing differen
ce between
Americans and Englishmen caused by the separation of the English colonists from
the motherland
in both distance and time. In the case of America, absence did not make the hear
t grow fonder.
Instead, the colonists started to see themselves differently—not as Americans, to
be sure, but as
Virginians, Georgians, and so on.26
The final source of unrest originated in the flawed nature of mercantilism itsel
f. Mercantilist
doctrine demanded that the individual subordinate his economic activity to the i
nterests of the state.
Such an attitude may have been practicable in Rome or in Charlemagne’s empire; but
the ideas of
the Enlightenment soon gave Americans the intellectual basis for insisting that
individuals could
pursue wealth for themselves, and give the state only its fair share. It did not
help the English that
mercantilism was based on a conceptual framework that saw wealth as fixed and li
mited, meaning
that for the government to get more wealth, individuals had to receive less of t
he fruit of their own
labor.27
After the Glorious Revolution, the English government failed to develop a cohesi
ve or coherent
policy for administering the colonies, even though by 1754 there were eight colo
nies under the
authority of royal governors. The British utilized a series of laws collectively
called the Navigation
Acts (originated in 1651 as a restriction against trading with the Dutch), which
placed regulations
on goods manufactured or grown within the empire. Various acts provided subsidie
s for sugar,
molasses, cotton, or other agricultural items, but only if they were grown in an
approved colony.
The British West Indies, for example, were to produce sugar, and any other colon
y attempting to
grow sugar cane faced penalties or taxes. Britain hoped to foster interdependenc
e among the
colonies with such policies, forcing New England to get its sugar from the Briti
sh West Indies,
cotton from India, and so on. Above all, the Navigation Acts were intended to ma
ke all the colonies
dependent on England for manufactured goods and English currency, and thus they
prohibited or
inhibited production of iron ore or the printing of money.28 As the governor of
New York revealed
in a letter to the Board of Trade, all governors were commanded to “discourage all
Manufactures,
and to give accurate accounts [of manufacturing] with a view to their suppressio
n.”29
Having the state pick winners and losers in the fields of enterprise proved disa
strous, and not
merely because it antagonized the Americans. The Board of Trade, desperate to bo
ost shipbuilding,
paid subsidies for products such as pitch, tar, rosin, hemp, and other seafaring
-related products to
reduce Britain’s reliance on Europe. As production in the colonies rose, prices fo
r shipbuilding
basics fell, encouraging fishing and shipping industries that none of the other
colonies had. Not
only did a government-controlled economy fail to keep the colonials pacified, bu
t it also
unwittingly gave them the very means they eventually needed to wage an effective
war against the
mother country.
Americans especially came to despise regulations that threatened the further dev
elopment of
America’s thriving merchant trade in the port cities: Boston, New York, Philadelph
ia, Baltimore,
and Charleston. Those urban centers had sprouted a sturdy population of aspiring
merchants, selfemployed
artisans, and laborers, perhaps one in ten of whom were criminals, leading Willi
am Byrd
II to instruct an English friend in 1751, “Keep all your felons at home.”30 In the c
ountry and on the
frontier, farmers and planters exported surplus produce. Traders at the top favo
red the regulations
because they allowed them to freeze out aspiring competitors, but producers and
consumers
disliked the laws, and they were swiftly becoming the majority.
But even by clinging to the outmoded mercantilist structure, entrepreneurs in pl
aces like
Philadelphia found that nothing could stem the advance of more energetic people
with better
products or ideas. In Philadelphia, “Opportunity, enterprise, and adversity reinfo
rced each other. A
young business man could borrow money and move into trade, challenging the comme
rcial position
of older, more established merchants. His opportunity was…their adversity.”31 The ri
ch got richer,
but so too did the poor and a large middle class. All Americans except slaves we
re energized by the
emergent global economy. In this new economy, raw materials from the American fr
ontier—furs,
fish, naval stores, tobacco, lumber, livestock, grain—moved to American port citie
s and then east
and south across the Atlantic in sailing ships.32 In return, manufactured goods
and slaves flowed to
America over the same routes. Americans prospered from this booming economy, wit
nessing
unprecedented growth to the extent that on the eve of the Revolution, colonists
had per capita
annual incomes of $720 in 1991 dollars, putting these people of two hundred year
s ago “on a par
with the privately held wealth of citizens in modern-day Mexico or Turkey.”33
The conflict lay in the fact that, in direct violation of British mercantile pol
icy, Americans traded
with both French and Spanish colonies. Large quantities of wine and salt came fr
om Spain’s
Madeira Islands, and molasses, gold coin, and slaves came from the French Caribb
ean colonies of
Guadeloupe and Martinique. Great Britain was engaged in war against France and S
pain
throughout the eighteenth century, making this illicit trade, quite literally, t
reasonous. Yet that trade
grew, despite its illegality and renewed British efforts to put teeth in the Nav
igation Acts.
Enforcement of British trade policies should have fallen to the Board of Trade,
but in practice, two
administrative bodies—the king’s Privy Council and the admiralty courts—carried out ac
tual
administration of the laws. Admiralty courts almost exclusively dealt with the m
ost common
violation, smuggling by sea. But like any crime statistics, the records of the c
ourts reflect only
those caught and prosecuted, and they fail to measure the effort put into enforc
ement itself.
Smuggling made heroes out of otherwise obnoxious pirates, turning bloodthirsty c
utthroats into
brave entrepreneurs. Moreover, the American colonies, in terms of their size, po
pulation, and
economic contribution to the empire, represented a relatively minor part of it,
meaning that prior to
1750 most acts were designed with the larger and more important possessions in m
ind. A critical,
yet little-noticed, difference existed between America and the other colonies, h
owever. Whereas in
India, for example, British-born officials and troops constituted a tiny minorit
y that dominated a
huge native population, in America British-born subjects or their descendants ac
counted for the
vast majority of the nonslave, non-Indian population.
Another factor working against a successful economic royal policy was the poor q
uality of royal
officials and royal governors. Assignment in America was viewed as a less desira
ble post than, say,
the British West Indies, Madras (India), or even Nova Scotia. These colonies wer
e more “British,”
with amenities and a lifestyle stemming from a stronger military presence and lo
cations on major
trade routes.
Colonial governorships offered havens for corrupt officials and royal cronies, s
uch as New York
governor Lord Cornbury, a cousin of Queen Anne, who was a dishonest transvestite
who warranted
“the universal contempt of the people.”34 Sir Danvers Osborn, the most mentally frag
ile of the
colonial governors, hanged himself after one week in America.35
When governors and other officials of the empire, such as tax collectors and nav
al officers,
administered the laws, they did so with considerable laxity, waiving or reducing
duties in cases of
friendship or outright bribery (which was widespread because of the low pay of t
he administrators).
For the most part, the administrators approached the Navigation Acts with a poli
cy of salutary or
benign neglect, postponing any serious harms contained in the taxes until the la
ws were enforced in
the future. This process of benign neglect may well have continued indefinitely
had a critical event
not forced a change in the enforcement of the laws: the last of the colonial war
s, the French and
Indian War.
Franco-British Warfare, 1689–1748
Tensions between England, France, and Spain led to several European conflicts wi
th American
theaters. In America, King William’s War (1689–97), Queen Anne’s War (1701–13), the War
of
Jenkins’s Ear (1739–42), King George’s War (1744–48), and the French and Indian War (175
6–63)
served as provincial mirrors of European rivalry. The first two conflicts saw fi
erce fighting in both
the southern and northern colonies, from the Caribbean to Canada. In the South,
Spain allied with
France to fight British sailors and soldiers over the contested lands lying betw
een the Carolinas and
Florida (Georgia was not yet a colony). The northern theater of King William’s and
Queen Anne’s
wars saw naval and land forces clash throughout the Atlantic maritime region—the m
odern-day
Canadian provinces of Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia, and the American s
tates of New
York and Maine. The St. Lawrence River Valley outpost of Quebec and the Atlantic
coastal towns
of Louisbourg, Falmouth, and Port Royal became coveted prizes in both of these c
olonial wars.
Queen Anne’s War resulted in the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, with France ceding Nova S
cotia and
Newfoundland to England. This, and the War of Jenkins’s Ear, almost seamlessly mer
ged with
King George’s War (known in Europe as the War of the Austrian Succession, 1740–48).3
6 In the
American theater, Britain, again pitted against the French, focused on the north
, especially the
important French naval base at Louisbourg. Located on Cape Breton Island, just n
orth of Nova
Scotia, Louisbourg guarded the entrance to the all-important St. Lawrence River.
In a daring and
uncharacteristic move, American colonials grabbed the military initiative themse
lves.
Massachusetts governor William Shirley raised money and troops to launch a 1745
attack led by
Maine colonel William Pepperrell. On June 17, 1745, Pepperrell and his 4,000 tro
ops successfully
captured Louisbourg, the “Gibraltar of the New World.”
Despite the glorious Louisbourg victory, King George’s War dragged on inconclusive
ly for two
and a half more years. Savage guerrilla warfare stretched from Spanish Florida/G
eorgia to
Vermont, western Massachusetts, and the frontiers of New York and Maine. The 174
8 Treaty of
Aix-la-Chappelle was more of a truce than a true conclusion to the war, and it g
reatly disappointed
the American colonists by returning Louisbourg and other French territories (tho
ugh not Nova
Scotia) to France.
Inadvertently, King George’s War created what would soon become a unique American
subculture—the Louisiana Cajuns. Before the end of the war, Governor William Shirl
ey pointed to
the dangers posed by French nationals residing in British (formerly French) Nova
Scotia. Shirley
feared that these Acadians, who still bore the name of their old province in Fra
nce, would remain
loyal to France and would thus constitute an “enemy within” the British colonies. Ev
en after King
George’s War came to a close, fear of the Acadians remained strong. In 1755, at th
e start of the
French and Indian War, Nova Scotia’s governor, Colonel Charles Lawrence, expelled
six thousand
Acadians to the lower thirteen American colonies. This Acadian diaspora saw some
of the exiles
return to France and the French Caribbean, whereas others trickled back to Nova
Scotia. However,
sixteen hundred Acadians trekked to Louisiana between 1765 and 1785. Although th
e Gulf Coast
climate and geography proved a drastic change, they sought the familiarity and p
rotection of
Franco-American culture. Today these French Cajuns (a slurred version of “Acadian”)
still reside
in or near the marshes and Louisiana bayous where they fled more than 250 years
ago, retaining a
speech pattern as impenetrable as it was in the 1700s.
Returned to its 1713 boundaries after King George’s War, Britain’s fifteen-hundred-m
ile-long
American territory was thin, often extending no farther than a hundred miles inl
and. Huge chunks
of unsettled open territory divided the colonial towns, and genuine differences
in regional culture
split the American colonies further. Still, for all their internal disagreements
, the British colonies
had distinct advantages over the French in any American conflict. France’s unwilli
ngness to
encourage colonial settlement weakened its military designs in the New World. En
gland could
transport troops from home, and her colonies could also draw upon local militias
, which meant that
despite the fact that the population of New France had doubled since 1660, the p
opulation of the
British colonies, 1.5 million, greatly exceeded that of the 60,000 French in Nor
th America.
Moreover, the British, taking advantage of a navy much superior to France’s, could
command
seacoasts, trading ports, and major rivers.
The latter advantage proved particularly acute when considering that the French
hitched their fate
to the success of fur trading operations. Important port cities like New Orleans
(founded 1718),
Biloxi, and Mobile in the South and Detroit, Montreal, and Quebec in the North r
ivaled Boston,
Philadelphia, and other Atlantic urban areas, but they were vulnerable to surgic
al attacks by the
British navy, even to the extent that the inland waterways (especially the St. L
awrence River)
became primary targets. France’s trading strategy of sparse settlement and an emph
asis on fur
trading left her only one significant asset: her good relations with the Indians
.
Advantages provided by alliances with Indians, however, could not overcome the v
ulnerabilities
created by making fur trading the cornerstone of the French economic and colonia
l policy. The
wars with England exposed these weaknesses, wherein the small French population
and nonexistent
industrial base proved incapable of raising, equipping, and supporting large mil
itias in North
America. Even with their Indian allies, the French found themselves outnumbered
and, more
important, outproduced in every geopolitical conflict with England. Worse, the F
rench had tied
themselves to allies who did not embrace the Western way of war, rendering them
even less
effective than other traditional European armies.
Meanwhile, the Indians, who realized that the English settlers were arriving lik
e locusts, were
pushed toward the French, although each tribe had to weave its own tapestry of d
iplomatic alliances
carefully and shrewdly. Indeed, northeastern Indians, unlike those in most other
regions, shared a
common threat: the Iroquois Confederacy, made up of the Mohawks, Senecas, Cayuga
s,
Onondagas, Oneidas, and Tuscaroras. Fresh from a total victory over the Hurons,
the Iroquois
established themselves as a force in the region. For a time, they managed to mai
ntain neutrality
between the British and the French, all the while realizing that they must event
ually choose a side.
Initially, the Iroquois favored the British by allowing English traders into the
ir territories, a practice
that convinced the French that British colonists soon would follow in greater nu
mbers. French
troops therefore moved into the Ohio Valley in the late 1740s, building forts as
a buffer against
further English expansion, determined to demonstrate control over the trans-Appa
lachian frontier
lands by occupation—something the British had never done systematically. From 1749
to 1754,
France continued this construction program, establishing outposts at strategic p
oints that guarded
the approaches to Canada, producing a situation where British settlers and specu
lators were almost
certain to bump up against them.
The French and Indian War
France’s eviction from North America began in 1753, when Virginia governor Robert
Dinwiddie
dispatched an expedition against Fort Duquesne in western Pennsylvania. At the h
ead of the militia
was a young patrician landowner and surveyor, George Washington.37 Meeting early
success,
Washington reached the Ohio Valley, where he defeated a tiny force of Canadians,
then constructed
Fort Necessity near the French outpost. In 1754 a French counterattack captured
Fort Necessity and
forced a bloodless surrender by Washington—hardly an auspicious start for the Amer
ican
Revolution’s “indispensable man.” Still, the encounter showed something of Washington’s
mettle:
he wrote that he “heard the bullets whistle and…there is something charming in the s
ound.”38 Of
more immediate concern to Washington and his fellow Virginians, however, was the
fact that the
episode signaled the American origins of the French and Indian War, called the S
even Years’ War
in Europe.
Leaders of the thirteen colonies, virtually all of whom faced a threat from eith
er the French or the
Indians, decided in 1754 that they had to unify to meet the enemy. The English g
overnment agreed,
and it instructed them to negotiate a treaty with the Iroquois. Representatives
from all the New
England colonies, as well as Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New York met in Albany
in 1754 and
quickly concluded an agreement with the five northern tribes. Some delegates use
d the gathering
for more than concluding a nonaggression pact with the natives, however. Benjami
n Franklin, a
representative from Pennsylvania, proposed a plan of union that would create a f
ederal council
composed of delegates from all the colonies. Under Franklin’s Albany Plan, the cou
ncil would have
the power to treat with the Indians, levy taxes, and raise armies. Delegates app
roved the plan, but
the colonial assemblies rejected the concept, fearing that it would infringe on
the independence of
the individual colonies.
Meanwhile, Washington’s capitulation at Fort Necessity proved only the first Briti
sh disaster of the
war. A year later, General Edward Braddock led a second expedition of 2,500 men
against Fort
Duquesne. After failing to capture the fort, Braddock retreated in column format
ion through the
thick forests, where French and Indian forces ambushed his troops and slaughtere
d them. Braddock
was killed in the battle, and the apparent British incompetence in forest warfar
e encouraged the
Indians to step up their activities on behalf of the French. Only the Iroquois r
efused to ally with
France. However, the threat from other tribes on the frontier grew so substantia
l that many English
settlers removed themselves eastward of the Allegheny Mountains.
The northern theater of the French and Indian War proved the most critical. Ther
e, in 1756, France
appointed the Marquis de Montcalm as the commander of the Canadian forces. A cap
able military
leader, Montcalm assessed the situation as less than favorable for France, but h
e nevertheless
launched effective preemptive strikes to stabilize the approaches to Canada. Wit
hin one year, he
had captured the British forts Oswego and William Henry.39
Montcalm also built Fort Ticonderoga, a new post on Lake Champlain. At the begin
ning of 1757,
the entry points to French territory remained secure. Britain’s new secretary of s
tate, William Pitt,
responded to French successes by forging a policy of total war that would simult
aneously quell
Britain’s enemies in India, Africa, the West Indies, America, and on the high seas
. Pitt’s bold plan
carried a high price tag: in America he mustered a 50,000-man army, counting col
onial militia, and
appointed two young generals—Jeffrey Amherst and James Wolfe—to attack the French fo
rts.
Those forces captured Louisbourg and Fort Frontenac (and thereby Lake Ontario) b
y 1758, and
avenged Braddock by retaking Fort Duquesne. The following year Pitt believed he
was ready for a
master stroke. He ordered General James Wolfe to deliver France the “knockout punc
h” at Quebec
City on the St. Lawrence River. The sickly General Wolfe, though only thirty-two
years old,
possessed a fierce martial spirit. He used the availability of a British naval s
uperiority of two
hundred ships to land a 10,000-man force at the foot of the steep cliffs of Queb
ec City.
After seven weeks of unsuccessful maneuvering, Wolfe located unguarded paths lea
ding up to the
bluffs and on the evening of September 12, 1759, marched 4,500 men up to the Pla
ins of Abraham.
There, Wolfe controlled the supply routes to Quebec, and his presence constitute
d a threat to the
entire French colony. Had Montcalm waited inside the city’s walls, he might have b
een relieved,
but he lacked confidence in the French navy (with good reason), and embarked on
a hurried, illconceived
attack outside the fort. In the ensuing fifteen-minute battle, Montcalm was woun
ded (he
died a day later) and Wolfe killed.40 By the end of September thirteenth, howeve
r, the British held
the field, and four days later they marched into Quebec. A year later Montreal i
tself fell.41
Peace might have been imminent had Spain not entered into the war in 1762. This
was too late for
Spain to affect the war’s outcome, but allowed sufficient time for her to fully em
barrass herself.
Soon Britain relieved Spain of Gibralter, Cuba (later traded back to Spain for w
estern Florida), and
the Philippines (also later restored to Spain). The war ended in 1763 with the T
reaty of Paris, in
which France gave England her colonies in India—then considered the most important
booty of
war. As a reward for loyalty and alliance, France had earlier awarded Spain the
Louisiana Territory,
which Spain held until giving it back to Napoleon and France in 1802.
The long-term significance of the treaty involved the transfer of Canada and all
French possessions
east of the Mississippi (and north of Florida and Louisiana) to England. Great B
ritain now
possessed nearly the entirety of eastern North America—an empire unimaginable a fe
w decades
earlier.
Enter King George III
In 1760 a young, inexperienced, and not particularly bright George III ascended
to the throne as
king of Great Britain and presided over the glorious conclusion to the French an
d Indian War. The
first of the Hanoverian monarchs to speak English (instead of low German) as his
primary
language, the good-looking George III fathered fifteen children and developed a
reputation as a
solid family man. His domesticity earned him the nickname among the people of th
e Farmer, and
what he lacked in intellect he made up for with hard work.
Britain’s empire had changed significantly, though, since the time of George’s ances
tor King
William, who had fought the first of the five colonial wars seventy years earlie
r. During the
eighteenth century, George’s American colonial subjects had grown more distinct fr
om their
English brethren than even those independent Americans of the time of Queen Anne’s
War.
Whether in economics, material culture, dress, language, educational institution
s, professions,
religions, law, and governmental institutions, the colonials had become further
radicalized and
Americanized in the New World.42
George III neither admired nor approved of this independent spirit. But the conc
lusion of the
French and Indian War brought him problems as well as opportunities, and he need
ed America’s
full cooperation to meet the new financial demands on his government. William Pi
tt’s brilliant
policies had achieved victory, but at a high price: Britain left the war saddled
with a huge debt—
£137 million, with £5 million in annual interest payments. At home, a new group of B
ritish
politicians quite naturally opposed higher taxes following on the heels of their
severe wartime
privation.43
This was bad timing indeed, for now Britain possessed vast and costly territorie
s stretching from
southern Asia to Canada. The latter territory alone demanded a substantial milit
ary force to police
the native Indian frontier and watch over sullen Frenchmen who now found themsel
ves unwilling
Britons. Pontiac’s Rebellion, a violent and widespread 1763 Ottawa Indian uprising
, served as a
grim reminder that the situation on the Canadian-American frontier urgently dema
nded a British
standing army. But who would pay the bill?
Only the most myopic observer would argue that Americans had not benefited great
ly from British
sacrifice in the colonial wars and now, thought the royal ministers, the America
ns ought to pay
their share of the costs of Britain’s (and their own) glory. According to American
ized governmental
beliefs, however, if the colonists were to bear new taxes and responsibilities,
they had to have a say
in their creation. The radical new view of law and politics could produce no oth
er solution, and
Americans’ belief in the power of the purse led quite naturally to their oppositio
n to taxation
without representation. These were challenges to George III’s authority that the k
ing could not
allow.
CHAPTER THREE
Colonies No More, 1763–83
Farmers and Firebrands
The changes brought by the French and Indian War were momentous, certainly in th
e sheer size
and unique character of the territory involved. (Historian Francis Parkman maint
ained that the fall
of Quebec began the history of the United States.) British acquisition of the ne
w territories carried a
substantial cost for almost every party involved. England amassed huge debts, co
ncluding, in the
process, that the colonists had not paid their fair share. France likewise emerg
ed from the war with
horrific liabilities: half the French annual budget went to pay interest on the
wartime debt, not to
mention the loss of vast territories. Some Indian tribes lost lands, or were des
troyed. Only the
American colonists really came out of the seven years of combat as winners, yet
few saw the
situation in that light.
Those Indians who allied with the French lost substantially; only the Iroquois,
who supported the
British in form but not substance, emerged from the war as well as they had ente
red it.1
Immediately after the war, pressures increased on the tribes in the Appalachian
region as settlers
and traders appeared in ever-increasing numbers. An alliance of tribes under the
Ottawa chief
Pontiac mounted a stiff resistance, enticing the Iroquois to abandon the British
and join the new
confederacy.2 Fearing a full-blown uprising, England established a policy prohib
iting new settlers
and trading charters beyond a line drawn through the Appalachians, known as the
Proclamation
Line of 1763. There was more behind the creation of the line than concern about
the settlers’ safety,
however. Traders who held charters before the war contended they possessed monop
oly powers
over trade in their region by virtue of those charters. They sought protection f
rom new competitors,
who challenged the existing legal status of the charters themselves.3
Such concerns did not interest the Indians, who saw no immediate benefit from th
e establishment of
the line. Whites continued to pour across the boundary in defiance of the edict,
and in May 1763,
Pontiac directed a large-scale infiltration and attack of numerous forts across
the northern frontier,
capturing all but Detroit and Fort Pitt. English forces regrouped under General
Jeffrey Amherst,
defeating Pontiac and breaking the back of the Indian confederacy. Subsequent tr
eaties pushed the
Indians farther west, demonstrating both the Indians’ growing realization that the
y could not resist
the English on the one hand or believe their promises on the other.
Paradoxically, though, the beneficence of the English saved the Indians from tot
al extermination,
which in earlier eras (as with the Mongol or Assyrian empires) or under other ci
rcumstances (as in
the aftermath of King Philip’s War) would have been complete. As early as 1763, a
pattern took
shape in which the British (and later, the Americans) sought a middle ground of
Indian relations in
which the tribes could be preserved as independent entities, yet sufficiently se
gregated outside
white culture or society. Such an approach was neither practical nor desirable i
n a modernizing
society, and ultimately the strategy produced a pathetic condition of servitude
that ensnared the
Indians on reservations, rather than forced an early commitment to assimilation.
Time Line
1763:
Proclamation of 1763
1765:
Stamp Act and Protest
1770:
Boston Massacre
1773:
Tea Act and Boston Tea Party
1774:
Intolerable Acts; First Continental Congress
1775:
Battles of Lexington and Concord; Washington appointed commander in chief
1776:
Paine’s Common Sense; Declaration of Independence
1777:
Articles of Confederation; Battle of Saratoga
1778:
French Alliance
1781:
Articles of Confederation ratified; Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown
1783:
Treaty of Paris
Land, Regulation, and Revolution
By establishing the Proclamation line, the British not only disturbed aspiring t
raders and
disappointed the besieged Indians, but also alienated many of the new settlers i
n the west. After all,
many had come to the New World on the promise of available land, and suddenly th
ey found it
occupied by what they considered a primitive and barbarous people.4 Some settler
s simply broke
the law, moving beyond the line. Others, including George Washington, an establi
shed
frontiersman and military officer who thought westward expansion a foregone conc
lusion, groused
privately. Still others increasingly used the political process to try to influe
nce government, with
some mild success. The Paxton Boys movement of 1763 in Pennsylvania and the 1771
Regulator
movement in North Carolina both reflected the pressures on residents in the west
ern areas to defend
themselves despite high taxes they paid to the colonial government, much of whic
h were supposed
to support defense. Westerners came to view taxes not as inherently unfair, but
as oppressive
burdens when incorrectly used.
Westward expansion only promised to aggravate matters: in 1774, Lord Dunmore of
Virginia
defeated Indians in the Kanawha River Valley, opening the trails of Kentucky to
settlement. The
white-Indian encounter, traditionally described as Europeans “stealing” land from Na
tive
Americans, was in reality a much more complex exchange. Most—but certainly not all—I
ndian
tribes rejected the European view of property rights, wherein land could become
privatized. Rather,
most Indians viewed people as incapable of owning the land, creating a strong in
centive for tribal
leaders to trade something they could not possess for goods that they could obta
in. Chiefs often
were as guilty as greedy whites in thinking they had pulled a fast one on their
negotiating partners,
and more than a few Indians were stunned to find the land actually being closed
off in the aftermath
of a treaty. Both sides operated out of misunderstandings and misperceptions.5 U
nder such
different world views, conflict was inevitable, and could have proved far bloodi
er than it ultimately
was if not for the temperance provided by Christianity and English concepts of h
umanity, even for
“barbarian” enemies.
Tribes such as the Cherokee, realizing they could not stem the tide of English c
olonists, sold their
lands between the Kentucky and Cumberland rivers to the Transylvania Company, wh
ich sent an
expedition under Daniel Boone to explore the region. Boone, a natural woodsman o
f exceptional
courage and self-reliance, proved ideal for the job. Clearing roads (despite occ
asional Indian
attacks), Boone’s party pressed on, establishing a fort called Boonesborough in 17
75. Threats from
the natives did not abate, however, reinforcing westerners’ claims that taxes sent
to English
colonial governments for defense simply were wasted.6
Had westerners constituted the only group unhappy with British government, it is
unlikely any
revolutionary movement would have appeared, much less survived. Another more imp
ortant group
was needed to make a revolution—merchants, elites, and intellectuals in the major
cities or the
gentlemen farmers from Virginia and the Carolinas. Those segments of society had
the means,
money, and education to give discontent a structure and to translate emotions in
to a cohesive set of
grievances. They dominated the colonial assemblies, and included James Otis, Sam
uel Adams, and
Patrick Henry—men of extraordinary oratorical skills who made up the shock troops
of the
revolutionary movement.7
Changes in the enforcement and direction of the Navigation Acts pushed the easte
rn merchants and
large landowners into an alliance with the westerners. Prior to 1763, American m
erchant interests
had accepted regulation by the mercantilist system as a reasonable way to gain m
arket advantage
for American products within the British Empire. American tobacco, for example,
had a monopoly
within the English markets, and Britain paid bounties (subsidies) to American sh
ipbuilders, a policy
that resulted in one third of all British vessels engaged in Atlantic trade in 1
775 being constructed
in North American (mostly New England) shipyards. Although in theory Americans w
ere
prohibited from manufacturing finished goods, a number of American ironworks, bl
ast furnaces,
and other iron suppliers competed in the world market, providing one seventh of
the world’s iron
supplies, and flirted with the production of finished items.8
Added to those advantages, American colonists who engaged in trade did so with t
he absolute
confidence that the Royal Navy secured the seas.9 England’s eight hundred ships an
d 70,000
sailors provided as much safety from piracy as could be expected, and the powerf
ul overall trading
position of Britain created or expanded markets that under other conditions woul
d be denied the
American colonies. As was often the case, however, the privileges that were with
held and not those
granted aroused the most passion. Colonists already had weakened imperial author
ity in their
challenge to the Writs of Assistance during the French and Indian War. Designed
to empower
customs officials with additional search-and-seizure authority to counteract smu
ggling under the
Molasses Act of 1733, the writs allowed an agent of the Crown to enter a house o
r board a ship to
search for taxable, or smuggled, goods. Violations of the sanctity of English ho
mes were disliked
but tolerated until 1760, when the opportunity presented itself to contest the i
ssue of any new writs.
Led by James Otis, the counsel for the Boston merchants’ association, the writs we
re assailed as
“against the Constitution” and void. Even after the writs themselves became dormant,
colonial
orators used them as a basis in English law to lay the groundwork for independen
ce.
Only two years after Otis disputed the writs in Massachusetts, Virginia lawyer P
atrick Henry won a
stunning victory against the established Anglican Church and, in essence, manage
d to annul an act
of the Privy Council related to tobacco taxes in Virginia. Henry and Otis, there
fore, emerged as
firebrands who successfully undercut the authority of the Crown in America.10 Ot
her voices were
equally important: Benjamin Franklin, the sage of Philadelphia, had already argu
ed that he saw “in
the system of customs now being exacted in American by Act of Parliament, the se
eds sown of a
total disunion of the two countries.”11
Mercantilism Reborn
The British government contributed to heightened tensions through arrogance and
ineptness.
George III, who had ascended to the throne in 1760 at the age of twenty-two, was
the first of the
German-born monarchs who could be considered truly English, although he remained
elector of
Hanover. Prone to periodic bouts of insanity that grew worse over time (ending h
is life as a
prisoner inside the palace), George, at the time of the Revolution, was later vi
ewed by Winston
Churchill as “one of the most conscientious sovereigns who ever sat up on the Engl
ish throne.”12
But he possessed a Teutonic view of authority and exercised his power dogmatical
ly at the very
time that the American situation demanded flexibility. “It is with the utmost asto
nishment,” he
wrote, “that I find any of my subjects capable of encouraging the rebellious dispo
sition…in some
of my colonies in America.”13 Historians have thus described him as “too opinionated
, ignorant,
and narrow-minded for the requirements of statesmanship,” and as stubborn and “funda
mentally illsuited”
for the role he played.14
Worse, the prime minister to the king, George Grenville (who replaced William Pi
tt), was
determined to bring the colonies in tow by enforcing the Navigation Acts so long
ignored.
Grenville’s land policies produced disaster. He reversed most of the laws and prog
rams of his
predecessor, Pitt, who had started to view land and its productivity as a centra
l component of
wealth.
To that end, Pitt had ignored many of the provisions of the Navigation Acts in h
opes of uniting the
colonies with England in spirit. He gave the authority to recruit troops to the
colonial assemblies
and promised to reimburse American merchants and farmers for wartime supplies ta
ken by the
military, winning himself popular acclaim in the colonies. Grenville, on the oth
er hand, never met a
tax he didn’t like, and in rigid input-output analysis concluded (probably with so
me accuracy) that
the colonists were undertaxed and lightly burdened with the costs of their own d
efense. One of his
first test cases, the Sugar Act of 1764, revived the strictures of the Molasses
Act against which the
Boston merchants had chafed, although it lowered actual rates. This characterize
d Grenville’s
strategy—to offer a carrot of lower rates while brandishing the stick of tighter e
nforcement.15 The
plan revealed another flaw of the British colonial process, namely allowing inco
mpetents to staff
the various administrative posts so that the colonials had decades of nonenforce
ment as their
measuring rod. (Franklin compared these posts to the modern equivalent of minimu
m wage
jobs.)16
Despite lower rates, opposition arose over the new enforcement mechanisms, inclu
ding the referral
of all smuggling cases to admiralty courts that had judges instead of juries, wh
ich normally handled
such cases. Any colonial smuggler knew that the outcome of such a trial was less
often in his favor,
and complaints arose that the likelihood of real prosecution and conviction was
higher under the
new law. A second law, the Currency Act of 1764, prohibited the colonies from is
suing paper
money. When combined with the taxes of the Sugar Act, colonists anticipated that
the Currency
Act would drain the already scarce metallic money (specie, or gold and silver co
ins) from America,
rendering merchants helpless to counteract inflation that always followed higher
taxes.17
By 1764, then, colonists drew a direct correlation between paying taxes and gove
rning, and
between government intervention in the economy and inflation. A few early taxes
had existed on
land, but land ownership conferred voting status. Other than that, only a handfu
l of other direct
taxes were levied, especially in light of the small size and limited power of go
vernment. “The more
revenue governments had, the more mischief they could create,” was the prevailing
colonial view.
In sharp contrast to land taxes, Grenville’s new duties were in no way associated
with rights, and
all subjects—landowners or otherwise—now had to pay.18
There is truth to the British claim that the colonists had received the benefits
of government on the
cheap for decades, a development that provides a cautionary tale for contemporar
y Americans. This
concealment of the actual costs of government fostered the natural inclination t
o think that the
services were free. Unfortunately, any attempt to withdraw or reduce the benefit
is then fought
tooth and nail because it is viewed as a right. In the case of the American colo
nists, they correctly
identified their rights to protection from attack and to a fair system of courts
and laws, but they had
avoided paying for the benefits for so long that by the 1770s they viewed any im
position of taxes as
oppression.
Dissatisfaction with the Navigation Acts themselves only reflected the deeper ch
anges in economic
thought being developed at exactly that time by Scottish professor Adam Smith, w
ho had
formulated his Theory of Moral Sentiments in 1754. Arguing that men naturally ha
d a self-interest
based on information that only they could know—likes, dislikes, personal foibles—Smi
th had laid
the groundwork for his more famous book, Wealth of Nations, which would appear c
oncurrent with
the Declaration of Independence. Smith reformulated economics around individual
rights rather
than the state’s needs. His concepts fit with Thomas Jefferson’s like a hand in a gl
ove; indeed, it
would be Alexander Hamilton and some of the Federalists who later would clash re
peatedly with
Smith’s individual-oriented economic principles. While Wealth of Nations in no way
influenced
the writings of Adams or others in 1776, the ideas of personal economic liberty
had already seeped
into the American psyche, almost as if Adams and Jefferson had read Smith extens
ively.19
Thus, at the very time that the British started to enforce a creaky, antiquated
system that had started
its drift into obsolescence, Americans—particularly seaboard merchants—started to fl
ex their
entrepreneurial muscles in Smith’s new free-market concepts. Equally important, Am
ericans had
started to link economic rights and political rights in the most profound ways.
At accelerating rates
the colonists used the terms “slavery” and “enslavement” in relation to British governme
nt
policies.20 If the king could assault citizen’s liberties when it came to trade, h
ow long before he
issued edicts on political speech, and even religion?
The Stamp Act of 1765
Parliament, meanwhile, continued to shift the fiscal burdens from overtaxed land
owners in England
to the American colonists with the awareness that the former voted and the latte
r did not.
Attempting to extract a fraction of the cost of troops sent to defend the coloni
es, Grenville—who,
as historian Paul Johnson notes, “had a gift for doing the wrong thing”—pushed through
a stamp
tax, which was innocuous in its direct effects but momentous in its symbolism.21
The act placed a
tax on virtually every paper transaction. Marriage certificates, ships’ papers, le
gal documents,
newspapers, even playing cards and dice were to be stamped and therefore taxed.
Worse, the act
raised the terrifying threat that if paper documents were subject to government
taxation and control,
how long before Puritan, Baptist, Quaker, and Methodist religious tracts or even
Bibles came under
the oversight of the state? To assume as much was not unrealistic, and certainly
Sam Adams argued
that this was the logical end-point: “The Stamp-Act itself was contrived with a de
sign only to inure
the people to the habit of contemplating themselves as slaves of men; and the tr
ansition from thence
to a subjection to Satan, is mighty easy.”22 Although most colonists were alarmed
at the precedent
set by the Stamp Act, the fact that newspapers were taxed ensured that the publi
shing organs of the
colonies universally would be aligned against England on the issue.23
Hostility to the new act ran far deeper than its narrow impact on newspapers, ho
wever. An often
overlooked component of the policies involved the potential for ever-expanding h
ordes of
administrators and duty collectors in the colonies. Had the pecuniary burdens be
en completely
inconsequential, the colonists still would have protested the insidious, invasiv
e presence of an army
of royal bureaucrats and customs officials. Several organizations were formed fo
r the specific
purpose of harassing stamp agents, many under the name Sons of Liberty. They eng
aged in
violence and intimidation of English officials, destroying the stamps and burnin
g the Boston house
of the lieutenant governor, Thomas Hutchinson. Sympathetic colonial juries then
refused to convict
members of the Sons of Liberty, demonstrating that the colonists saw the economi
c effects as nil,
but the political ramifications as substantial.24
Parliament failed to appreciate the firestorm the new policies were causing. Edm
und Burke
observed of the House of Commons, “Far from any thing inflammatory, I never heard
a more
languid debate in this House.”25 In the colonies, however, reaction was immediate
and dramatic.
Virginia again led the way in resistance, focused in the House of Burgesses with
Patrick Henry as
the chief spokesman for instant response. He offered five resolutions against th
e Stamp Act that
constituted a radical position. Many strongly disagreed with his views, and a Wi
lliamsburg law
student named Thomas Jefferson, who witnessed the debates, termed them “most blood
y.”26
Nevertheless, the delegates did not disagree with Henry’s assessment of the legali
ty of the act, only
his methods in responding to them, which many thought could have been more conci
liatory. Henry
achieved immortality with the provocative tone of his resolutions, reportedly st
ating: “If this be
treason, make the most of it.”
Leaders from Massachusetts, led by James Otis, agreed. They suggested that an in
tercolonial
congress be held at City Hall, in New York, a meeting known as the Stamp Act Con
gress (1765).
Delegates drafted a bill of rights and issued a statement of grievances, reitera
ting the principle of no
taxation without representation. Confronted with unified, outraged opposition, P
arliament backed
down. A new government under the Marquis of Rockingham repealed the Stamp Act in
1766, in no
small degree because of internal dissatisfaction with the program in England, wh
ere manufacturers
had started to lose sales. But other groups in England, particularly landholders
who again faced
increased tax burdens themselves, denounced the repeal as appeasement. In retrea
t, Parliament
issued a Declaratory Act, maintaining that it had the authority to pass new taxe
s any time it so
chose, but both sides knew Britain had blinked.
A “Massacre” in Boston
After Rockingham was dismissed under pressure from English landlords, the king r
ecalled ailing
William Pitt from his peerage to form a new government. Pitt’s coalition governmen
t included
disparate and uncooperative groups and, after 1767, actual power over England’s me
rcantilist
policies devolved upon Charles Townshend, the chancellor of the Exchequer. Under
new duties
enacted by Parliament, the words changed but the song remained the same: small t
axes on glass,
lead, tea or other products but significant shifts of authority to Parliament. T
his was Parliament’s
shopworn tactic: exchange small initial duties for gigantic new powers that coul
d be used later
oppressively.
Townshend persuaded Parliament to suspend the New York Assembly for its refusal
to provide
necessary supplies under the Mutiny Act (also called the Quartering Act) of 1765
. He hoped to
isolate New York (even though Massachusetts’ Assembly similarly had refused to vot
e funds for
supplies), realizing that the presence of the army headquarters in New York City
made it imperative
that the English government maintain control of the situation there. Once again,
the colonists did
not object to the principle of supporting troops or even quartering them, but in
stead challenged the
authority of Parliament to mandate such support. A series of written arguments b
y Charles C.
Pinckney and Edward Rutledge (both of South Carolina), Daniel Dulany of Maryland
, and John
Dickinson of Pennsylvania provided a comprehensive critique of the new acts base
d on English law
and traditions. Dickinson’s “Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania” reached wide audie
nces and
influenced groups outside the seaboard elites. British officials were stunned to
find that, rather than
abandoning New York, other colonies expressed their support for their sister col
ony.
No more important ally of New York could exist than Massachusetts, where Sam Ada
ms and a
group of vocal followers organized resistance in the Massachusetts Assembly. Let
ters went out
from the assembly to other colonies urging them to resist the new taxes and to b
oycott British
goods until the measures were lifted. The missive might have died, except for fu
rther meddling by
the British secretary of state, who warned that Parliament would dissolve any co
lonial assemblies
that endorsed the position of the Massachusetts Assembly. All of the colonies pr
omptly supported
the Massachusetts letter, even Pennsylvania, which had refused to support the ea
rlier
correspondence.
Whereas New York had borne the brunt of England’s initial policies, Boston rapidly
became the
center of revolutionary ferment and British repercussions. Britain transferred f
our regiments of
troops from Halifax to Boston, stationing them directly within the city in a def
iant symbol of
occupation. Bostonians reacted angrily to the presence of “redcoats” and “lobsterbacks
,” whereas
the soldiers treated citizens rudely and competed with them for off-hour work. T
ensions heightened
until on March 5, 1770, a street fight erupted between a mob of seventy or so wo
rkers at a shipyard
and a handful of British sentries. Snowballs gave way to gunfire from the surrou
nded and terrified
soldiers, leaving five colonists dead and six wounded. American polemicists, esp
ecially Sam
Adams, lost no time in labeling this the Boston Massacre. Local juries thought o
therwise, finding
the soldiers guilty of relatively minor offenses, not murder, thanks in part to
the skillful legal
defense of John Adams.
If Britain had had her way, the issue would have died a quiet death. Unfortunate
ly for Parliament,
the other Adams—John’s distant cousin Sam—played a crucial role in fanning the fires o
f
independence. He had found his calling as a writer after failing in private busi
ness and holding a
string of lackluster jobs in government. Adams enlisted other gifted writers, wh
o published under
pen names, to produce a series of broadsides like those produced by Dickinson an
d the premassacre
pamphleteers. But Adams was the critical voice disturbing the lull that Britain
sought, publishing
more than forty articles in a two-year period after the massacre. He established
the Lockean basis
for the rights demanded by Americans, and did so in a clear and concise style th
at appealed to lesseducated
citizens. In November 1772 at a town meeting in Boston, Adams successfully press
ed for
the creation of a “committee of correspondence” to link writers in different colonie
s. These actions
demonstrated the growing power of the presses churning out a torrent of tracts a
nd editorials
critical of England’s rule. The British were helpless to stop these publishers. Ce
rtainly court actions
were no longer effective.27
Following the example of Massachusetts, Virginia’s House of Burgesses, led by Jeff
erson, Henry,
and Richard Henry Lee, forged resolutions that provided for the appointment of p
ermanent
committees of correspondence in every colony (referred to by one governor as “blac
khearted
fellows whom one would not wish to meet in the dark”). Committees constituted an “un
elected but
nevertheless representative body” of those with grievances against the British Emp
ire.28 Josiah
Quincy and Tom Paine joined this Revolutionary vanguard, steadfastly and fearles
sly demanding
that England grant the colonists the “rights of Englishmen.” Adams always remained o
n the cutting
edge, however, and was among the first advocating outright separation from the m
other country.
Tied to each other by the committees of correspondence, colonies further cemente
d their unity,
attitudes, and common interests or, put another way, became increasingly America
n.
By 1775 a wide spectrum of clubs, organizations, and merchants’ groups supported t
he committees
of correspondence. Among them the Sons of Liberty, the Sons of Neptune, the Phil
adelphia
Patriotic Society, and others provided the organizational framework necessary fo
r revolution; the
forty-two American newspapers—and a flood of pamphlets and letters—gave voice to the
Revolution. Churches echoed the messages of liberty, reinforcing the goal of “ting
[eng] the minds
of the people and impregnat[ing] them with the sentiments of liberty.”29 News such
as the
colonists’ burning in 1772 of the Gaspee, a British schooner that ran aground in R
hode Island
during an ill-fated mission to enforce revenue laws, circulated quickly througho
ut the colonies even
before the correspondence committees were fully in place, lending further eviden
ce to the growing
public perception that the imperial system was oppressive. Thus, the colonial di
ssatisfaction
incorporated the yeoman farmer and the land speculator, the intellectual and the
merchant, the
parson and the politician—all well organized and impressively led.
Boston emerged as the focal hub of discontent, and the brewing rebellion had abl
e leaders in the
Adamses and a dedicated coppersmith named Paul Revere. Lacking the education of
John Adams
or the rhetorical skill of Sam, Revere brought his own considerable talents to t
he table of resistance.
A man plugged in to the Boston social networks as were few other men, Revere was
known by
virtually all. One study found that besides the Sons of Liberty, there were six
other main
revolutionary groups in Boston. Of the 255 leading males in Boston society, only
two were in as
many as five of these groups—Joseph Warren and Paul Revere.30 Revere percolated th
e
Revolutionary brew, keeping all parties informed and laying down a vital structu
re of associations
that he would literally call upon at a moment’s notice in 1775. Only through his d
edicated planning
was an effective resistance later possible.
Boston’s Tea Party
Under such circumstances, all that was needed to ignite the Revolutionary explos
ion was a spark,
which the British conveniently provided with the passage of the Tea Act in 1773.
Tea played a
crucial role in the life of typical America colonists. The water in North Americ
a remained
undrinkable in many locations—far more polluted with disease and bacteria than mod
ern drinking
water—thus tea, which was boiled, made up the staple nonalcoholic drink. The East
India
Company had managed to run itself into near bankruptcy despite a monopoly status
within the
empire. Its tea sent to America had to go through England first, where it was li
ghtly taxed. But
smugglers dealing directly with Dutch suppliers shipped directly to the colonies
and provided the
same tea at much lower prices. The Tea Act withdrew all duties on tea reexported
to America,
although it left in place an earlier light tax from the Townshend Act.
Britain naturally anticipated that colonists would rejoice at the lower aboveboa
rd prices, despite the
imposition of a small tax. In fact, not only did average colonists benefit from
drinking the cheap
smuggled tea, but a number of merchant politicians, including John Hancock of Ma
ssachusetts, also
regularly smuggled tea and stood to be wiped out by enforcement of the new act.
Even those
merchants who legitimately dealt in tea faced financial ruin under the monopoly
privileges of the
East India Company. Large public meetings produced a strategy toward the tea, wh
ich involved not
only boycotting the product but also preventing the tea from even being unloaded
in America.
Three ships carrying substantial amounts of tea reached Boston Harbor in Decembe
r 1773,
whereupon a crowd of more than seven thousand (led by Sam Adams) greeted them. M
embers of
the crowd—the Sons of Liberty dressed as Mohawk Indians—boarded the vessels and thre
w 342
chests of tea overboard while the local authorities condoned the action. The Bri
tish admiral in
charge of the Boston Harbor squadron watched the entire affair from his flagship
deck.
In Delaware, nine days later, a similar event occurred when another seven hundre
d chests of tea
sank to the bottom of the sea, although without a Sam Adams to propagandize the
event, no one
remembers the Delaware Tea Party. New Yorkers forced cargo to remain on its ship
s in their port.
When some tea was finally unloaded in Charleston, it couldn’t be sold for three ye
ars. Throughout,
only a few eminent colonists, including Ben Franklin and John Adams, condemned t
he boardings,
and for the most part Americans supported the “Mohawks.” But even John Adams agreed
that if a
people rise up, they should do something “to be remembered, something notable and
striking.”31
“Notable and striking,” the “tea party” was. Britain, of course, could not permit such o
utright
criminality. The king singled out Boston as the chief culprit in the uprising, p
assing in 1774 the
Intolerable or Coercive Acts that had several major components. First, Britain c
losed Boston
Harbor until someone paid for the tea destroyed there. Second, the charter of Ma
ssachusetts was
annulled, and the governor’s council was to be appointed by the king, signaling to
the citizens a
revocation of their rights as Englishmen. Third, a new Quartering Act was passed
, requiring
homeowners and innkeepers to board soldiers at only a fraction of the real cost
of boarding them.
Fourth, British soldiers and officials accused of committing crimes were to be r
eturned to England
for trial. Fifth, the Quebec Act transferred lands between the Ohio and Mississi
ppi rivers to the
province of Quebec and guaranteed religious freedom to Catholics. New Englanders
not only
viewed the Quebec Act as theft of lands intended for American colonial settlemen
t, they also feared
the presence of more Catholics on the frontier. John Adams, for one, was terrifi
ed of the potential
for a recatholicization of America. Antipapism was endemic in New England, where
political
propagandists fulminated against this new encroachment of the Roman “Antichrist.”
Southerners had their own reasons for supporting independence. Tidewater planter
s found
themselves under an increasing debt burden, made worse by British taxes and unfa
ir competition
from monopolies.32 Lord Dunmore’s antislavery initiatives frightened the Virginia
planters as
much as the Catholic priests terrified New Englanders. At a time when slavery co
ntinued to exert
mounting tensions on Whig-American notions of liberty and property, the fact tha
t the Southerners
could unite with their brethren farther north had to concern England.
Equally as fascinating as the alliance between the slave colonies and the nonsla
veholding colonies
was the willingness of men of the cloth to join hardened frontiersmen in taking
up arms against
England. John Witherspoon, a New Jersey cleric who supported the resistance, war
ned that “there
is not a single instance in history in which civil liberty was lost, and religio
us liberty preserved
entire.”33 Virginia parson Peter Muhlenberg delivered a sermon, then grabbed his r
ifle.34
Massachusetts attorney and New Jersey minister; Virginia farmer and Pennsylvania
sage; South
Carolina slaveholder and New York politician all found themselves increasingly a
ligned against the
English monarch. Whatever differences they had, their similarities surpassed the
m. Significantly,
the colonists’ complaints encompassed all oppression: “Colonists didn’t confine their
thoughts
about [oppression] simply to British power; they generalized the lesson in terms
of human nature
and politics at large.”35 Something even bigger than resistance to the king of Eng
land knitted
together the American colonists in a fabric of freedom. On the eve of the Revolu
tion, they were far
more united—for a wide variety of motivations—than the British authorities ever susp
ected. Each
region had its own reason for associating with the others to force a peaceful co
nclusion to the crisis
when the Intolerable Acts upped the ante for all the players.
If British authorities truly hoped to isolate Boston, they realized quickly how
badly they had
misjudged the situation. The king, having originally urged that the tea duty be
repealed, reluctantly
concluded that the “colonists must either triumph or submit,” confirming Woodrow Wil
son’s
estimate that George III “had too small a mind to rule an empire.”36 Intending to fo
rce compliance,
Britain dispatched General Thomas Gage and four regiments of redcoats to Massach
usetts. Gage
was a tragic figure. He proved unrelenting in his enforcement methods, generatin
g still more
colonial opposition, yet he operated within a code of “decency, moderation, libert
y, and the rule of
law.”37 This sense of fairness and commitment to the law posed a disturbing dilemm
a for his
objective of crushing the rebellion.
The first united resistance by the colonies occurred in September 1774, when del
egates to a
Continental Congress convened in Philadelphia in response to calls from both Mas
sachusetts and
Virginia. Delegates from every colony except Georgia arrived, displaying the wid
espread sympathy
in the colonies for the position of Boston. Present were both Adamses from Massa
chusetts and
Patrick Henry, Richard Henry Lee, and the “indispensable man,” George Washington, re
presenting
Virginia. Congress received a series of resolves from Suffolk County, Massachuse
tts, carried to the
meeting by Paul Revere. These Suffolk Resolves declared loyalty to the king, but
scorned the
“hand which would ransack our pockets” and the “dagger to our bosoms.” When Congress
endorsed the Suffolk Resolves, Lord Dartmouth, British secretary of state, warne
d, “The
[American] people are generally ripe for the execution of any plan the Congress
advises, should it
be war itself.” King George put it much more succinctly, stating, “The die is cast.”
No act of the Congress was more symbolic of how far the colonies had come toward
independence
than the Galloway Plan of union. Offered by Joseph Galloway of Pennsylvania, the
plan proposed
the establishment of a federal union for the colonies in America, headed by a pr
esident general
(appointed by the king) and advised by a grand council, whose representatives wo
uld be chosen by
the colonial assemblies. Presented roughly three weeks after the Suffolk Resolve
s, the Galloway
Plan was rejected only after a long debate, with the final vote taken only in th
e absence of many of
the advocates. Still, it showed that the colonies already had started to conside
r their own
semiautonomous government.
Revolutionary Ideas
In October 1774, the First Continental Congress adopted a Declaration of Rights
and Grievances,
twelve resolutions stating the rights of the colonists in the empire. Among the
resolutions was a
statement of the rights of Americans to “life, liberty, and property…secured by the
principles of the
British Constitution, the unchanging laws of nature, and [the] colonial charters
.” Where had the
colonists gotten such concepts?
Three major Enlightenment thinkers deeply affected the concepts of liberty and g
overnment held
by the majority of the American Revolutionary leaders. Certainly, all writers ha
d not read the same
European authors, and certainly all were affected by different ideas to differen
t degrees, often
depending on the relationship any given writer placed on the role of God in huma
n affairs.
Nevertheless, the overall molding of America’s Revolution in the ideological sense
can be traced to
the theories of Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and the Baron Charles de Montesquieu.
Hobbes, an English writer of the mid-1600s, was a supporter of the monarchy. In
The Leviathan
(1661), Hobbes described an ancient, even prehistoric, “state of nature” in which ma
n was “at
warre with every other man,” and life was “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short
.”38 To escape
such circumstances, man created the “civil state,” or government, in which people ga
ve up all other
rights to receive protection from the monarch. As long as government delivered i
ts subjects from
the “fear of violent death,” it could place on them any other burden or infringe on
any other
“rights.” From Hobbes, therefore, the Revolutionary writers took the concept of “right
to life” that
infused virtually all the subsequent writings.
Another Englishman, John Locke, writing under much different circumstances, agre
ed with Hobbes
that a state of nature once existed, but differed totally as to its character. L
ocke’s state of nature was
beautiful and virtually sinless, but somehow man had fallen out of that state, a
nd to protect his
rights entered into a social compact, or a civil government. It is significant t
hat both Hobbes and
Locke departed substantially from the classical Greek and Roman thinkers, includ
ing Aristotle,
who held that government was a natural condition of humans. Both Hobbes and Lock
e saw
government as artificial—created by man, rather than natural to man. Locke, writin
g in his “Second
Treatise on Government,” described the most desirable government as one that prote
cted human
“life, liberty, and estate”; therefore, government should be limited: it should only
be strong enough
to protect these three inalienable rights. From Locke, then, the Revolutionary w
riters took the
phrase “right to liberty,” as well as to property.39 Hobbes and Locke, therefore, ha
d laid the
groundwork for the Declaration of Rights and Grievances and, later, the Declarat
ion of
Independence, which contained such principles as limitations on the rights of th
e government and
rule by consent of the governed.
All that remained was to determine how best to guarantee those rights, an issue
considered by a
French aristocrat, Charles de Montesquieu. In The Spirit of the Laws, drawing la
rgely on his
admiration for the British constitutional system, Montesquieu suggested dividing
the authority of
the government among various branches with different functions, providing a blue
print for the
future government of the United States.40
While some of the crème de la crème in American political circles read or studied Lo
cke or
Hobbes, most Virginia and Massachusetts lawyers were common attorneys, dealing w
ith property
and personal rights in society, not in abstract theory. Still, ideas do seep thr
ough. Thanks to the
American love of newspapers, pamphlets, oral debate, and informal political disc
ussion, by 1775,
many of the Revolutionaries, whether they realized it or not, sounded like John
Locke and his
disciples.
Locke and his fellow Whigs who overthrew James II had spawned a second generatio
n of
propagandists in the 1700s. Considered extremists and “coffee house radicals” in pos
t-Glorious
Revolution England, Whig writers John Trenchard, Lord Bolingbroke, and Thomas Go
rdon warned
of the tyrannical potential of the Hanoverian Kings—George I and George II. Influe
ntial Americans
read and circulated these “radical Whig” writings. A quantified study of colonial li
braries, for
example, shows that a high number of Whig pamphlets and newspaper essays had mad
e their way
onto American bookshelves. Moreover, the Whig ideas proliferated beyond their or
iginal form, in
hundreds of colonial pamphlets, editorials, essays, letters, and oral traditions
and informal political
discussions.41
It goes without saying, of course, that most of these men were steeped in the tr
aditions and
teachings of Christianity—almost half the signers of the Declaration of Independen
ce had some
form of seminary training or degree. John Adams, certainly and somewhat derogato
rily viewed by
his contemporaries as the most pious of the early Revolutionaries, claimed that
the Revolution
“connected, in one indissoluble bond, the principles of civil government with the
principles of
Christianity.”42 John’s cousin Sam cited passage of the Declaration as the day that
the colonists
“restored the Sovereign to Whom alone men ought to be obedient.”43 John Witherspoon’s
influence before and after the adoption of the Declaration was obvious, but othe
r well-known
patriots such as John Hancock did not hesitate to echo the reliance on God. In s
hort, any reading of
the American Revolution from a purely secular viewpoint ignores a fundamentally
Christian
component of the Revolutionary ideology.
One can understand how scholars could be misled on the importance of religion in
daily life and
political thought. Data on religious adherence suggests that on the eve of the R
evolution perhaps no
more than 20 percent of the American colonial population was “churched.”44 That cert
ainly did not
mean they were not God-fearing or religious. It did reflect, however, a dominanc
e of the three
major denominations—Congregationalist, Presbyterian, and Episcopal—that suddenly fou
nd
themselves challenged by rapidly rising new groups, the Baptists and Methodists.
Competition
from the new denominations proved so intense that clergy in Connecticut appealed
to the assembly
for protection against the intrusions of itinerant ministers. But self-preservat
ion also induced church
authorities to lie about the presence of other denominations, claiming that “place
s abounding in
Baptists or Methodists were unchurched.”45 In short, while church membership rolls
may have
indicated low levels of religiosity, a thriving competition for the “religious mar
ket” had appeared,
and contrary to the claims of many that the late 1700s constituted an ebb in Ame
rican Christianity,
God was alive and well—and fairly popular!
Lexington, Concord, and War
Escalating the potential for conflict still further, the people of Massachusetts
established a
revolutionary government and raised an army of soldiers known as minutemen (able
to fight on a
minute’s notice). While all able-bodied males from sixteen to sixty, including Con
gregational
ministers, came out for muster and drill, each militia company selected and paid
additional money
to a subgroup—20 to 25 percent of its number—to “hold themselves in readiness at a min
ute’s
warning, complete with arms and ammunition; that is to say a good and sufficient
firelock, bayonet,
thirty rounds of powder and ball, pouch and knapsack.”46 About this they were reso
lute: citizens in
Lexington taxed themselves a substantial amount “for the purpose of mounting the c
annon,
ammunition, and for carriage and harness for burying the dead.”47 It is noteworthy
that the
colonists had already levied money for burying the dead, revealing that they app
roached the
coming conflict with stark realism.
The nearly universal ownership and use of firearms as a fact bears repetition he
re to address a
recent stream of scholarship that purports to show that Americans did not widely
possess or use
firearms.48 Some critics of the so-called gun culture have attempted to show thr
ough probate
records that few guns were listed among household belongings bequeathed to heirs
; thus, guns were
not numerous, nor hunting and gun ownership widespread. But in fact, guns were s
o prevalent that
citizens did not need to list them specifically. On the eve of the Revolution, M
assachusetts citizens
were well armed, and not only with small weapons but, collectively, with artille
ry.49
General Thomas Gage, the commander of the British garrison in Boston, faced two
equally
unpleasant alternatives. He could follow the advice of younger officers, such as
Major John
Pitcairn, to confront the minutemen immediately, before their numbers grew. Or h
e could take a
more conservative approach by awaiting reinforcements, while recognizing that th
e enemy itself
would be reinforced and better equipped with each passing day.
Gage finally moved when he learned that the minutemen had a large store of munit
ions at Concord,
a small village eighteen miles from Boston. He issued orders to arrest the polit
ical firebrands and
rhetoricians Samuel Adams and John Hancock, who were reported in the Lexington a
rea, and to
secure the cannons from the colonists. Gage therefore sought to kill two birds w
ith one stone when,
on the night of April 18, 1775, he sent 1,000 soldiers from Boston to march up t
he road via
Lexington to Concord. If he could surprise the colonials and could capture Adams
, Hancock, and
the supplies quietly, the situation might be defused. But the patriots learned o
f British intentions
and signaled the British route with lanterns from the Old North Church, whereupo
n two riders, Paul
Revere and William Dawes left Boston by different routes to rouse the minutemen.
Calling, “To
Arms! To Arms!” Revere and Dawes’s daring mission successfully alerted the patriots
at
Lexington, at no small cost to Revere, who fell from his horse after warning Han
cock and Adams
and was captured at one point, but then escaped.50 Dawes did not have the good f
ortune to appear
in Longfellow’s famous poem, “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere,” and his contributions
are less
appreciated; but his mission was more narrowly defined. Once alerted, the minute
men drew up in
skirmish lines on the Lexington town common when the British appeared. One of th
e British
commanders shouted, “Disperse, you dam’d rebels! Damn you, disperse!”51 Both sides pre
sented
their arms; the “shot heard ’round the world” rang out—although historians still debate
who fired
first—and the British achieved their first victory of the war. Eight minutemen had
been killed and
ten wounded when the patriots yielded the field. Major Pitcairn’s force continued
to Concord,
where it destroyed the supplies and started to return to Boston.52
By that time, minutemen in the surrounding countryside had turned out, attacking
the British in
skirmishing positions along the road. Pitcairn sent for reinforcements, but he k
new that his troops
had to fight their way back to Boston on their own. A hail of colonial musket ba
lls fell on the
British, who deployed in battle formation, only to see their enemy fade into the
trees and hills.
Something of a myth arose that the American minuteman were sharpshooters, weaned
on years of
hunting. To the contrary, of the more than five thousand shots fired at the redc
oats that day, fewer
than three hundred hit their targets, leaving the British with just over 270 cas
ualties.
Nevertheless, the perception by the British and colonists alike quickly spread t
hat the most
powerful army in the world had been routed by patriots lacking artillery, cavalr
y, or even a general.
At the Centennial Celebration at Concord on April 19, 1875, Ralph Waldo Emerson
described the
skirmish as a “thunderbolt,” which “falls on an inch of ground, but the light of it fi
lls the
horizon.”53 News crackled like electricity throughout the American colonies, spark
ing patriotic
fervor unseen up to that time. Thousands of armed American colonists traveled to
Boston, where
they surrounded Gage and pinned him in the town. Franklin worked under no illusi
ons that the war
would be quick. To an English acquaintance, he wrote, “You will have heard before
this reaches
you of the Commencement of a Civil War; the End of it perhaps neither myself, no
r you, who are
much younger, may live to see.”54
For the third time in less than a century, the opponents of these American milit
iamen had grossly
underestimated them. Though slow to act, these New Englanders became “the most imp
lacable of
foes,” as David Fischer observed. “Their many enemies who lived by a warrior-ethic a
lways
underestimated them, as a long parade of Indian braves, French aristocrats, Brit
ish Regulars,
Southern planters, German fascists, Japanese militarists, Marxist ideologues, an
d Arab adventurers
have invariably discovered to their heavy cost.”55
Resolutions endorsing war came from all quarters, with the most outspoken coming
from North
Carolina. They coincided with the meeting of the Second Continental Congress in
Philadelphia
beginning on May 10, 1775. All the colonies sent representatives, most of whom h
ad no sanction
from the colonial governors, leaving their selection to the more radical element
s in the colonies.
Accordingly, men such as John Adams attended the convention with the intent of d
eclaring
independence from England. Some conservatives, such as John Dickinson of Pennsyl
vania,
struggled to avoid a complete break with the mother country, but ultimately the
sentiments for
independence had grown too strong. As the great American historian George Bancro
ft observed,
“A new principle, far mightier than the church and state of the Middle Ages, was f
orcing itself into
power…. It was the office of America to substitute for hereditary privilege the na
tural equality of
man; for the irresponsible authority of a sovereign, a dependent government eman
ating from a
concord of opinion.”56 Congress assumed authority over the ragtag army that oppose
d Gage, and
appointed George Washington as the commander in chief. Washington accepted reluc
tantly, telling
his wife, Martha, “I have used every endeavor in power to avoid [the command], not
only from my
unwillingness to part with you…but from a consciousness of its being a trust too g
reat for my
capacity.”57 Nor did Washington have the same intense desire for separation from E
ngland that
burned within Samuel Adams or Patrick Henry: his officers still toasted the heal
th of King George
as late as January 1776.
The “Indispensable Man”
Washington earned respect in many quarters because he seldom beat his own drum.
His modesty
and self-deprecation were refreshing and commendable, and certainly he had real
reasons for
doubting his qualifications to lead the colonial forces (his defeat at Fort Nece
ssity, for example).
But in virtually all respects, Washington was the perfect selection for the job—th
e “indispensable
man” of the Revolution, as biographer James Flexner called him. Towering by coloni
al standards at
six feet four inches, Washington physically dominated a scene, with his stature
enhanced by his
background as a wealthy plantation owner of more than modest means and his reput
ation as the
greatest horseman in Virginia. Capable of extracting immense loyalty, especially
from most of his
officers (though there were exceptions), Washington also inspired his soldiers w
ith exceptional
self-control, personal honor, and high morals. While appearing stiff or distant
to strangers,
Washington reserved his emotions for his intimate friends, comrades in arms, and
his wife.
For such a popular general, however, Washington held his troops in low regard. H
e demanded clear
distinctions in rank among his officers, and did not tolerate sloth or disobedie
nce. Any soldier who
went AWOL (absent without leave) faced one hundred to three hundred lashes, wher
eas a soldier
deserting a post in combat was subject to the death penalty. He referred to Yank
ee recruits as “dirty
and nasty people,” and derided the “dirty mercenary spirit” of his men.58 On occasion,
Washington
placed sharpshooters behind his army as a disincentive to break ranks. Despite h
is skill,
Washington never won a single open-field battle with the British, suffering hear
tbreaking defeats
on more than one occasion.
Nevertheless, in the face of such losses, of constant shortages of supplies and
money, and of less
than unified support from the colonists themselves, Washington kept his army tog
ether—ignoring
some of the undisciplined antics of Daniel Morgan’s Virginians and the Pennsylvani
a riflemen—
and skillfully avoided any single crushing military debacle that would have doom
ed the Revolution.
What he lacked in tactics, he made up for in strategy, realizing that with each
passing day the
British positions became more untenable. Other colonial leaders were more intell
ectually astute,
perhaps; and certainly many others exhibited flashier oratorical skills. But mor
e than any other
individual of the day, Washington combined a sound mind with practical soldier’s s
kills; a faith in
the future melded with an impeccable character; and the ability to wield power e
ffectively without
aspiring to gain from it personally (he accepted no pay while commander in chief
, although he kept
track of expenses owed him). In all likelihood, no other single person possessed
these essential
qualities needed to hold the Revolutionary armies together.
He personified a spirit among militia and regular soldiers alike, that Americans
possessed superior
fighting capabilities to the British military. They “pressed their claim to native
courage
extravagantly because they went to war reluctantly.”59 Americans sincerely believe
d they had an
innate courage that would offset British advantages in discipline: “Gunpowder and
Lead shall be
our Text and Sermon both,” exclaimed one colonial churchgoer.60 Led by Washington’s
example,
the interrelationship between the freeman and the soldier strengthened as the wa
r went on.
“Give Me Liberty, or Give Me Death!”
Washington shuddered upon assuming command of the 30,000 troops surrounding Bost
on on July
3, 1775. He found fewer than fifty cannons and an ill-equipped “mixed multitude of
people”
comprising militia from New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachuse
tts. (Franklin
actually suggested arming the military with bows and arrows!)61 Although Washing
ton
theoretically commanded a total force of 300,000 scattered throughout the Americ
an colonies, in
fact, he had a tiny actual combat force. Even the so-called regulars lacked disc
ipline and
equipment, despite bounties offered to attract soldiers and contributions from p
atriots to bolster the
stores. Some willingly fought for what they saw as a righteous cause or for what
they took as a
threat to their homes and families, but others complained that they were “fed with
promises” or
clothed “with filthy rags.”62 Scarce materials drove up costs for the army and detra
cted from an
efficient collection and distribution of goods, a malady that plagued the coloni
al armies until the
end of the war. Prices paid for goods and labor in industry always exceeded thos
e that the
Continental Congress could offer—and beyond its ability to raise in taxation—making
it especially
difficult to obtain troops. Nevertheless, the regular units provided the only st
able body under
Washington’s command during the conflict—even as they came and went routinely becaus
e of the
expiration of enlistment terms.
Against the ragtag force mustered by the colonies, Great Britain pitted a milita
ry machine that had
recently defeated the French and Spanish armies, supplied and transported by the
largest, besttrained,
and most lavishly supplied navy on earth. Britain also benefited from numerous e
stablished
forts and outposts; a colonial population that in part remained loyal; and the a
bsence of immediate
European rivals who could drain time, attention, or resources from the war in Am
erica. In addition,
the British had an able war commander in the person of General William Howe and
several
experienced officers, such as Major General John Burgoyne and Lord Cornwallis.
Nevertheless, English forces faced a number of serious, if unapparent, obstacles
when it came to
conducting campaigns in America. First and foremost, the British had to operate
almost exclusively
in hostile territory. That had not encumbered them during the French and Indian
War, so, many
officers reasoned, it would not present a problem in this conflict. But in the F
rench and Indian War,
the British had the support of most of the local population; whereas now, Englis
h movements were
usually reported by patriots to American forces, and militias could harass them
at will on the
march.
Second, command of the sea made little difference in the outcome of battles in i
nterior areas.
Worse, the vast barrier posed by the Atlantic made resupply and reinforcement by
sea precarious,
costly, and uncertain. Communications also hampered the British: submitting a qu
estion to the high
command in England might entail a three-month turnaround time, contingent upon g
ood weather.
Third, no single port city offered a strategic center from which British forces
could deploy. At one
time the British had six armies in the colonies, yet they never managed to bring
their forces
together in a single, overwhelming campaign. They had to conduct operations thro
ugh a wide
expanse of territory, along a number of fronts involving seasonal changes from s
now in New
Hampshire to torrid heat in the Carolinas, all the while searching for rebels wh
o disappeared into
mountains, forests, or local towns.
Fourth, British officers, though capable in European-style war, never adapted to
fighting a frontier
rebellion against another western-style army that had already adapted to the new
battlefield.
Competent leaders such as Howe made critical mistakes, while less talented offic
ers like Burgoyne
bungled completely. At the same time, Washington slowly developed aggressive off
icers like
Nathaniel Greene, Ethan Allen, and (before his traitorous actions) Benedict Arno
ld.
Fifth, England hoped that the Iroquois would join them as allies, and that, conv
ersely, the colonists
would be deprived of any assistance from the European powers. Both hopes were da
shed. The
Iroquois Confederacy declared neutrality in 1776, and many other tribes agreed t
o neutrality soon
thereafter as a result of efforts by Washington’s able emissaries to the Indians.
A few tribes fought
for the British, particularly the Seneca and Cayuga, but two of the Iroquois Con
federacy tribes
actively supported the Americans and the Onondaga divided their loyalties. As fo
r keeping the
European nations out, the British succeeded in officially isolating America only
for a short time
before scores of European freedom fighters poured into the colonies. Casimir Pul
aski, of Poland,
and the Marquis de Lafayette, of France, made exemplary contributions; Thaddeus
Kosciusko,
another Pole, organized the defenses of Saratoga and West Point; and Baron von S
teuben, a
Prussian captain, drilled the troops at Valley Forge, receiving an informal prom
otion from
Benjamin Franklin to general.
Von Steuben’s presence underscored a reality that England had overlooked in the co
nflict—
namely, that this would not be a battle against common natives who happened to b
e well armed.
Quite the contrary, it would pit Europeans against their own. British success in
overcoming native
forces had been achieved by discipline, drill, and most of all the willingness o
f essentially free men
to submit to military structures and utilize European close-order, mass-fire tec
hniques.63 In
America, however, the British armies encountered Continentals who fought with th
e same
discipline and drill as they did, and who were as immersed in the same rights-of
-Englishmen
ideology that the British soldiers themselves had grown up with.
It is thus a mistake to view Lexington and Concord, with their pitiable shot-to-
kill ratio, as
constituting the style of the war. Rather, Saratoga and Cowpens reflected the es
sence of massed
formations and shock combat, with the victor usually enjoying the better ground
or generalship.
Worth noting also is the fact that Washington’s first genuine victory came over me
rcenary troops at
Trenton, not over English redcoats, though that too would come. Even that instan
ce underscored
the superiority of free soldiers over indentured troops of any kind.
Sixth, Great Britain’s commanders in the field each operated independently, and ea
ch from a
distance of several thousand miles from their true command center, Whitehall. No
British officer in
the American colonies had authority over the entire effort, and ministerial inte
rventions often
reflected not only the woefully outdated appraisals of the situation—because of th
e delay in
reporting intelligence—but also the internal politics that afflicted the British a
rmy until well after
the Crimean War.
Finally, of course, France decisively entered the fray in 1778, sensing that, in
fact, the young nation
might actually survive, and offering the French a means to weaken Britain by sli
cing away the
North American colonies from her control, and providing sweet revenge for France’s
humiliating
defeat in the Seven Years’ War. The French fleet under Admiral Françoise Joseph de G
rasse lured
away the Royal Navy, which secured Cornwallis’s flanks at Yorktown, winning at San
dy Hook one
of the few great French naval victories over England. Without the protection of
the navy’s guns,
Yorktown fell. There is little question that the weight of the French forces tip
ped the balance in
favor of the Americans, but even had France stood aside, the British proved inca
pable of pinning
down Washington’s army, and despite several victories had not broken the will of t
he colonists.
Opening Campaigns
Immediately before Washington took command, the first significant battle of the
conflict occurred
at Breed’s Hill. Patriot forces under General Israel Putnam and Colonel William Pr
escott had
occupied the bluffs by mistake, intending instead to occupy Bunker Hill. The pos
ition overlooked
the port of Boston, permitting the rebels to challenge ships entering or leaving
the port and even
allowing the Americans to shell the city itself if they so desired. William Howe
led a force of
British troops in successive assaults up the hill. Although the redcoats eventua
lly took Breed’s Hill
when the Americans ran out of ammunition, the cost proportionately to the Britis
h was enormous.
Almost half the British troops were either killed or wounded, and an exceptional
number of officers
died (12 percent of all British officers killed during the entire war). England
occupied the heights
and held Boston, but even that success proved transitory.
By March 1776, Henry Knox had arrived from Fort Ticonderoga in New York, where,
along with
Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold, the patriots had captured the British outpost.
Knox and his men
then used sleds to drag captured cannons to Dorchester Heights overlooking Bosto
n. The British,
suddenly threatened by having their supply line cut, evacuated on St. Patrick’s Da
y, taking a
thousand Tories, or Loyalists, with them to Halifax, Nova Scotia. Only two weeks
before, in North
Carolina, patriot forces had defeated a body of Tories, and in June a British as
sault on Charleston
was repulsed by 600 militiamen protected by a palmetto-wood fort.
Early in 1776 the Americans took the offensive. Benedict Arnold led a valiant ma
rch on Quebec,
making the first of many misguided attempts to take Canada. Americans consistent
ly misjudged
Canadian allegiance, thinking that exposure to American “liberators” would provoke t
he same
revolutionary response in Canada as in the lower thirteen colonies. Instead, Arn
old’s force battled
the harsh Canadian winter and smallpox, living on “boiled candles and roasted mocc
asins.”
Arriving at the city with only 600 men, Arnold’s small army was repulsed in its fi
rst attack on the
city. After receiving reinforcements, a second American attack failed miserably,
leaving three
hundred colonists prisoner. Arnold took a musket ball in the leg, while American
Colonel Aaron
Burr carried Montgomery’s slain body from the city. Even in defeat, Arnold staged
a stubborn
retreat that prevented British units under General Guy Carleton from linking up
with General Howe
in New York. Unfortunately, although Washington appreciated Arnold’s valor, few ot
hers did.
Arnold’s theater commanders considered him a spendthrift, and even held him under
arrest for a
short time, leading the hero of many of America’s early battles to become bitter a
nd vengeful to the
point of his eventual treason.
Gradually, even the laissez-faire American armies came to appreciate the value o
f discipline, drill,
and long-term commitment, bolstered by changing enlistment terms and larger cash
bonuses for
signing up. It marked a slow but critical replacement of Revolutionary zeal with
proven military
practices, and an appreciation for the necessity of a trained army in time of wa
r.64
While the northern campaign unfolded, British reinforcements arrived in Halifax,
enabling Howe to
launch a strike against New York City with more than 30,000 British and German t
roops. His
forces landed on Staten Island on July second, the day Congress declared indepen
dence. Supported
by his brother, Admiral Lord Howe, General Howe drove out Washington’s ill-fed and
poorly
equipped army, captured Long Island, and again threatened Washington’s main force.
Confronted
with a military disaster, Washington withdrew his men across the East River and
into Manhattan.
Howe missed an opportunity to capture the remainder of Washington’s troops, but he
had control of
New York. Loyalists flocked to the city, which became a haven for Tories through
out the war.
Washington had no alternative but to withdraw through New Jersey and across the
Delaware River,
in the process collecting or destroying all small vessels to prevent the British
from following easily.
At that point the entire Revolution might have collapsed under a less capable le
ader: he had only
3,000 men left of his army of 18,000, and the patriot forces desperately needed
a victory. In the
turning point of the war, Washington not only rallied his forces but staged a bo
ld counterattack,
recrossing the Delaware on Christmas night, 1776, against a British army (made u
p of Hessian
mercenaries) at Trenton. “The difficulty of passing the River in a very severe Nig
ht, and their
march thro’ a violent Storm of Snow and Hail, did not in the least abate [the troo
ps’] Ardour. But
when they came to the Charge, each seemed to vie with the other in pressing forw
ard,” Washington
wrote.65 At a cost of only three casualties, the patriots netted 1,000 Hessian p
risoners. Washington
could have chalked up a victory, held his ground, and otherwise rested on his la
urels, but he pressed
on to Princeton, where he defeated another British force, January 2–3, 1777. Washi
ngton, who
normally was reserved in his comments about his troops, proudly informed Congres
s that the
“Officers and Men who were engaged in the Enterprize behaved with great firmness,
poise,
advance and bravery and such as did them the highest honour.”66 Despite the fact t
hat large British
armies remained in the field, in two daring battles Washington regained all the
momentum lost in
New York and sent a shocking message to the befuddled British that, indeed, they
were in a war
after all.
Common Sense and the Declaration of Independence
As Washington’s ragtag army tied up British forces, feelings for independence grew
more intense.
The movement awaited only a spokesman who could galvanize public opinion around
resistance
against the king. How unlikely, then, was the figure that emerged! Thomas Paine
had come to
America just over a year before he wrote Common Sense, arriving as a failure in
almost everything
he attempted in life. He wrecked his first marriage, and his second wife paid hi
m to leave. He
destroyed two businesses (one as a tobacconist and one as a corset maker) and fl
opped as a tax
collector. But Paine had fire in his blood and defiance in his pen. In January 1
776 he wrote his
fifty-page political tract, Common Sense, but his “The American Crisis,” published a
month earlier,
began with some of the most memorable lines in history: “These are the times that
try men’s souls.
The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from th
e service of his
country.”67 Eager readers did not shrink from the book, which quickly sold more th
an a hundred
thousand copies. (Paine sold close to a half-million copies prior to 1800 and co
uld have been a
wealthy man—if he hadn’t donated every cent he earned to the Revolution!) Common Sen
se
provided the prelude to Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence that appeared in J
uly 1776. Paine
argued that the time for loyalty to the king had ended: “The blood of the slain, t
he weeping voice of
nature cries, ‘Tis Time to Part.’”
He thus tapped into widespread public sentiment, evidenced by the petitions urgi
ng independence
that poured into the Continental Congress. Many colonial delegations received in
structions from
home to support independence by May 1776. On May fifteenth, Virginia resolved in
its convention
to create a Declaration of Rights, a constitution, a federation, and foreign all
iances, and in June it
established a republican government, for all intents and purposes declaring its
independence from
England. Patrick Henry became governor. Virginia led the way, and when the state
congressional
delegations were sent to vote on independence, only Virginia’s instructions were n
ot conditional:
the Commonwealth had already thrown down the gauntlet.68
In June, Virginia delegate Richard Henry Lee introduced a resolution that “these U
nited Colonies
are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.” The statement so impr
essed John Adams
that he wrote, “This day the Congress has passed the most important resolution…ever
taken in
America.”69 As the momentum toward separation with England grew, Congress appointe
d a
committee to draft a statement announcing independence. Members included Adams,
Franklin,
Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston, and the chairman, Thomas Jefferson, to whom th
e privilege of
writing the final draft fell. Jefferson wrote so eloquently and succinctly that
Adams and Franklin
made only a few alterations, including Franklin’s “self-evident” phrase. Most of the c
hanges had to
do with adding references to God.
Even so, the final document remains a testament to the skill of Jefferson in cap
turing the essence of
American ideals. “We hold these truths to be self-evident,” he wrote, that “all men ar
e created
equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights; t
hat among these are
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”70 It is worth noting that Jefferson
recognized that
humans were “created” by a Supreme Being, and that all rights existed only in that c
ontext. Further
reiterating Locke, he wrote that “to secure these rights, governments are institut
ed among men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed; that, whenever any
form of
government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to a
lter or abolish it, and
to institute new government.” Government was natural, not artificial, so that when
one government
disappeared, the citizenry needed to establish another. But it should be kept in
mind that these
“self-evident” rights constituted “an escalating sequence of connected assertions” that
ended in
revolution, appealing not only to God, but to English history and law.71
This distanced Jefferson from the writings of Hobbes, and even though he borrowe
d heavily from
Locke, he had further backed away from the notion that the civil state was artif
icial. On the other
hand, Jefferson, by arguing that men “instituted” governments, borrowed entirely fro
m the
Enlightenment proposition that government was a human creation in the first plac
e. In short, the
Declaration clearly illustrated the dual strains of Western thought that had eme
rged as predominant
by the 1700s: a continuing reverence for the primacy of God in human affairs, an
d yet an increasing
attraction to the notion that earthly systems depended on human intellect and ac
tion, even when all
aspects of that philosophy were not fully embraced.
Jefferson’s original draft, however, contained “censures on the English people” that s
ome in
Congress found excessive, and revisions, despite John Adams’s frequent defenses of
Jefferson’s
words, excised those sentences. The most offensive was Jefferson’s traditional Vir
ginia account of
American slavery’s being the fault of England. But any criticism of slavery—no matte
r whose
fault—also indicted the slave colonies, and was not tolerated.72 After a bitter de
bate over these
phrases, and other editing that changed about half of the draft, Congress adopte
d the final
Declaration on July 4, 1776, after adopting a somewhat less refined version on J
uly second. Two
weeks later Congress voted to have the statement engrossed on parchment and sign
ed by the
members, who either appeared in person on August second or later affixed their n
ames (Hancock’s
being the largest since he, reportedly, wanted the king to be able to read it wi
thout his spectacles).
Each one of the fifty-six signers knew that the act of signing the Declaration m
ade them traitors to
the Crown, and therefore the line in which the delegates “mutually pledge to each
other our Lives,
our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor” literally exposed these heroes to execution. B
y the end of the
war, almost every one had lost his property; many had lost wives and families to
British guns or
prisons; and several died penniless, having given all to the Revolution.
North to Saratoga
Following his stunning surprise attack at Trenton and his subsequent victory at
Princeton,
Washington experienced more defeats at Brandywine Creek and Germantown. In the s
econd battle,
the Americans nearly won and only the timely arrival of reinforcements gave the
British a victory.
Washington again had to retreat, this time to winter quarters at Valley Forge, n
ear Philadelphia.
What ensued was one of the darkest times for Washington and his army: while the
British enjoyed
warmth and food in one of America’s richest cities, the Continentals suffered thro
ugh a miserable
winter, decimated by illness and starvation, eating soup made of “burnt leaves and
dirt.”
Washington deluged Congress with letters and appeals. “Soap, Vinegar, and other Ar
ticles allowed
by Congress we see none,” he wrote. Few men had more than a shirt, and some “none at
all, and a
number of Men confined to Hospitals for want of shoes.”73 Gradually, the army obta
ined supplies
and equipment, and in the Spartan environment Washington fashioned a disciplined
fighting force.
Washington proved the glue that held the entire operation together. Consistent a
nd unwavering, he
maintained confidence in front of the men, all the while pouring a steady stream
of requests for
support to the Congress, which was not so much unreceptive as helpless: its only
real source of
income was the confiscation of Tory properties, which hardly provided the kind o
f funds demanded
by armies in the field. The printing of paper money—continentals—had proven a disast
er, and
American commanders in the field had taken to issuing IOUs in return for food, a
nimals, and other
supplies. Yet in that frozen Pennsylvania hell, Washington hammered the American
s into a tough
fighting force while the British grew lazy and comfortable, especially in New Yo
rk and
Philadelphia. Franklin quipped that Howe did not take Philadelphia so much as Ph
iladelphia had
taken Howe. The policy of occupying and garrisoning “strategic hamlets” proved no mo
re
successful in the 1770s than it did just under two hundred years later when the
American army tried
a similar strategy in Vietnam, and with much the same effect on the morale of th
e occupiers.
Washington’s was not the only American army engaging the British. General John “Gent
leman
Johnny” Burgoyne launched an invasion of the Mohawk Valley, where he was to be sup
ported by a
second British column coming from Oswego under Barry St. Leger. A third British
force under
Howe was to join them by moving up the Hudson. The plan came apart rapidly in th
at Howe never
moved north, and St. Leger retreated in the face of Benedict Arnold and Nicholas
Herkimer’s
forces. Further, the Indian allies of the British abandoned them, leaving Burgoy
ne in a single
column with extended supply lines deep in enemy territory. Having forgotten the
fate of Varus’s
Roman legions in the Teutoburg Forest centuries earlier, Burgoyne’s wagons bore th
e general’s
fine china, best dress clothes, four-poster bed, and his mistress—with all her per
sonal belongings.
(His column’s entourage included four hundred “women camp-followers,” some wives; some
paid
servants; most, prostitutes.) Whatever their intangible contributions to morale,
they slowed
Burgoyne’s army to a crawl.
Burgoyne’s scavenging units ran into the famed Green Mountain Boys, commanded by E
than
Allen, who killed or captured all the British detachments. When news of the vict
ory reached New
England towns, militia flooded into General Horatio Gates’s command. He had 12,000
militia and
5,000 regulars facing Burgoyne’s 6,000 troops with their extended supply lines. Bu
rgoyne sensed
he had to break the colonial armies before he was surrounded or his overtaxed tr
ansport system
collapsed, prompting him to launch two attacks at Freeman’s Farm near Saratoga in
September and
October. The patriots decisively won the second encounter, leaving Burgoyne to p
onder escape or
surrender. Still placing his faith in reinforcements that, unbeknownst to him, w
ould not arrive,
Burgoyne partied in Saratoga, drinking and cavorting with his mistress. On Octob
er seventeenth,
when it at last dawned on him that no relief was coming, and with his army hungr
y, stranded, and
surrounded, Burgoyne surrendered his entire force as the band played “Yankee Doodl
e.” In this age
of civility in warfare, the defeated British troops merely turned in their arms
and marched to
Boston, where they boarded transports for England, promising only that they woul
d not take up
arms against Americans again.
Trust the French
When spring arrived, the victory at Saratoga, and the thousands of arms it broug
ht to Washington’s
forces, gave Americans a new resolve. The ramifications of Saratoga stretched fa
r beyond the
battlefields of North America, all the way to Europe, where the colonists had co
urted France as a
potential ally since the outbreak of hostilities. France sensibly stayed out of
the conflict until the
patriots proved they had a chance of surviving. After Saratoga, however, Louis X
VI agreed to
discreetly support the American Revolution with munitions and money. A number of
factors
accounted for the willingness of France to risk involvement. First, the wounds o
f the Seven Years’
War still ached, and France wanted revenge. Second, if America won independence
without the
help of European allies, French (and Spanish) territories in North America might
be considered fair
game for takeover by the new republic. Finally, any policy that weakened English
power abroad
was viewed favorably at Versailles. Thus, France furnished funds to the colonist
s through a front
business called Rodrigue Hortalez and Company. It is estimated that until 1780 t
he colonial army
received 90 percent of its powder from the French enterprise.
Even before official help arrived from Louis’s court, numbers of individual French
men had
volunteered for service in the Continental Army, many seeking merely to advance
mercenary
careers abroad. Some came strictly for glory, including the extremely talented L
ouis Berthier, later
to gain fame as Napoleon’s chief of staff. More than a few sincerely wished to see
America succeed
for idealistic reasons, including Lafayette, the young nobleman who in 1777 pres
ented himself to
Washington, who accorded him a nomination for major general. But the colonies ne
eded far more
than laundered money and a handful of adventurers: they needed the French navy t
o assist in
transporting the Continental Army—giving it the mobility the British enjoyed—and the
y could
benefit from the addition of French troops as well.
To that end, the Continental Congress dispatched Silas Deane in early 1776 as it
s agent to Paris,
and several months later Arthur Lee and Benjamin Franklin joined him. Franklin e
merged as the
premier representative in France, not just because Congress recalled Deane in 17
77, but because the
droll Franklin was received as a celebrity by the Parisians. Varying his dress f
rom Quaker
simplicity to frontier buckskins, the clever Pennsylvanian effortlessly quoted V
oltaire or Newton,
yet he appealed to common footmen and chambermaids. Most important to the strugg
le to enlist
French aid, however, Franklin adroitly utilized British conciliation proposals t
o convince France
that America might attain independence without her. In February 1778 France sign
ed commercial
and political treaties with the Continental Congress, agreeing that neither side
would make a
separate peace without the other.
Spain joined the war in April 1779 as an ally of France for the purpose of regai
ning Gibraltar,
Minorca, Jamaica, and Florida. By 1780, France and Spain had put more than 120 w
arships into
action in the American theater and, combined with the heroic, harassing escapade
s of John Paul
Jones, menaced British shipping lanes, besieged Gibraltar, threatened Jamaica, a
nd captured
Mobile and Pensacola. French ships commanded by Admiral Jean-Baptiste d’Estaing ev
en mounted
an unsuccessful attack on Newport, Rhode Island, before retreating to the West I
ndies.
British abuses at sea already had alienated Holland, which in 1780 joined Denmar
k, Sweden,
Portugal, and Russia in the League of Armed Neutrality, whose members agreed the
ir ships would
fire on approaching British vessels at sea rather than submit to boarding. In an
amazing display of
diplomatic ineptitude, Britain had managed to unite all the major navies of the
world against its
quest to blockade a group of colonies that lacked a navy of their own! Not only
did that place all of
England’s supply and transport strategies in America at risk, but it international
ized the war in such
a way as to make England seem a bully and a villain. Perhaps most important of a
ll, the aid and
support arrived at the very time that Washington’s army had dwindled to extremely
low levels.
Southern Invasion, Northern Betrayal
Despite the failures at Trenton, Princeton, and Saratoga, the British still fiel
ded five substantial
armies in North America. British generals also concluded, however, that their fo
cus on the northern
colonies had been misplaced, and that their true base of loyalist support lay in
the South. Georgia
and the Carolinas contained significant numbers of Tories, allowing the British
forces to operate in
somewhat friendly territory. In 1778 the southern offensive began when the Briti
sh landed near
Savannah.
In the meantime, Washington suffered a blow of a personal nature. Benedict Arnol
d, one of his
most capable subordinates and an officer who had been responsible for victories
at Ticonderoga,
Quebec, and, in part, Saratoga, chafed under the apparent lack of recognition fo
r his efforts. In
1778–79 he commanded the garrison in Philadelphia, where he married Peggy Shippen,
a wealthy
Tory who encouraged his spending and speculation. In 1779 a committee charged hi
m with misuse
of official funds and ordered Washington to discipline Arnold. Instead, Washingt
on, still loyal to
his officer, praised Arnold’s military record.
Although he received no official reprimand, Arnold had amassed huge personal deb
ts, to the point
of bankruptcy. Arnold played on Washington’s trust to obtain a command at the stra
tegic fort West
Point, on the Hudson, whereupon he intrigued to turn West Point over to British
general Henry
Clinton. Arnold used a courier, British major John André, and nearly succeeded in
surrendering the
fort. André—wearing civilian clothes that made him in technical terms a spy—stumbled i
nto the
hands of patriots, who seized the satchel of papers he carried. Arnold managed t
o escape to
England, but André was tried and executed for his treason (and later interred as a
n English national
hero at Westminster Abbey). Britain appointed Arnold a brigadier general and gav
e him command
of small forces in Virginia; and he retired to England in 1781, where he ended h
is life bankrupt and
unhappy, his name in America equated with treason. As colonial historian O. H. C
hitwood
observed, if Arnold “could have remained true to his first love for a year longer
his name would
probably now have a place next to that of Washington in the list of Revolutionar
y heroes.”74
Events in the South soon required Washington’s full attention. The British invasio
n force at
Savannah turned northward in 1779, and the following year two British columns ad
vanced into the
Carolinas, embattled constantly by guerrilla fighters Thomas Sumter, Andrew Pick
ens, and the
famed “Swamp Fox,” Francis Marion. Lord Cornwallis managed to forge ahead, engaging
and
crushing a patriot army at Camden, but this only brought the capable Nathaniel G
reene to command
over the inept Horatio Gates. Greene embraced Washington’s view that avoiding defe
at was as
important as winning battles, becoming a master at what Russell Weigley calls “par
tisem war,”
conducting a retreat designed to lure Cornwallis deep into the Carolina interior
.75
At Cowpens (January 1781), colonial troops under Daniel Morgan met Sir Banastre
Tarleton near
the Broad River, dealing the British a “severe” and “unexpected” blow, according to Corn
wallis. A
few months later Cornwallis again closed with the Greene’s forces, this time at Gu
ilford
Courthouse, and again Greene retreated rather than lose his army. Once more he s
ucked Cornwallis
farther into the American interior. After obtaining reinforcements and supplies,
Cornwallis pressed
northward after Greene into Virginia, where he expected to join up with larger c
ontingents of
British forces coming down from the northern seaboard.
Washington then saw his opportunity to mass his forces with Greene’s and take on C
ornwallis one
on one. Fielding 5,000 troops reinforced by another 5,000 French, Washington qui
ckly marched
southward from New York, joining with French Admiral Joseph de Grasse in a coord
inated strike
against Cornwallis in Virginia.
By that time, Washington’s men had not been paid for months, a situation soon reme
died by Robert
Morris, the “financier of the Revolution.” News arrived that the Resolve had docked
in Boston with
two million livres from France, and the coins were hauled to Philadelphia, where
the Continental
troops received their pay. Alongside the formal, professional-looking French tro
ops, Washington’s
men looked like a rabble. But having survived the winter camps and evaded the la
rger British
armies, they had gained confidence. It was hardly the same force that Washington
had led in retreat
two years earlier. Now, Washington’s and Rochambeau’s forces arrived in the Chesapea
ke Bay
region, where they met a second French column led by Lafayette, and together the
Franco-
American forces outnumbered the British by 7,000 men.
Cornwallis, having placed his confidence in the usually reliable Royal Navy, was
distressed to learn
that de Grasse had defeated a British fleet in early September, depriving the ge
neral of
reinforcements. (It was the only major victory in the history of the French navy
.) Although not cut
off from escape entirely, Cornwallis—then fortified at Yorktown—depended on rescue b
y a British
fleet that had met its match on Chesapeake Bay. Over the course of three weeks,
the doomed
British army held out against Henry Knox’s artillery siege and Washington’s encroach
ing trenches,
which brought the Continentals and French steadily closer. Ultimately, large Bri
tish redoubts had to
be taken with a direct attack, and Washington ordered nighttime bayonet charges
to surprise the
defenders. Alexander Hamilton captured one of the redoubts, which fell on the ni
ght of October 10,
1781, and the outcome was assured. Nine days later Cornwallis surrendered. As hi
s men stacked
their arms, they “muttered or wept or cursed,” and the band played “The World Turned U
pside
Down.”76 Nevertheless, in October of 1781, Britain fielded four other armies in No
rth America,
but further resistance was futile, especially with the French involved. Washingt
on had proven
himself capable not only of commanding troops in the field but also of controlli
ng a difficult
international alliance. The colonists had shown themselves—in large part thanks to
Robert
Morris—clever enough to shuffle money in order to survive. Tory sentiment in Ameri
ca had not
provided the support England hoped, and efforts to keep the rebels isolated from
the Dutch and
Spanish also had collapsed. As early as 1775, British Adjutant General John Harv
ey recognized
that English armies could not conquer America, and he likened it to driving a ha
mmer into a bin of
corn, with the probable outcome that the hammer would disappear. Although they c
ontrolled
Boston, New York, Newport, Philadelphia, and Charleston, the British never subdu
ed the
countryside, where nine out of their fourteen well-equipped forces were entirely
captured or
destroyed. In the nine Continental victories, British losses totaled more than 2
0,000 men—not
serious by subsequent Napoleonic standards, but decisive compared to the total B
ritish commitment
in North America of 50,000 troops.
Although Washington never equaled the great military tacticians of Europe, he sp
ecialized in
innovative uses of riflemen and skirmishers, and skillfully maneuvered large bod
ies of men in
several night operations, then a daunting command challenge. By surviving blow a
fter blow,
Washington (and Greene as well) conquered. (In 1781, Greene even quipped, “Don’t you
think that
we bear beating very well, and that…the more we are beat, the better we grow?”)77
The Treaty of Paris, 1783
In April 1782, John Adams, John Jay, and Benjamin Franklin opened negotiations w
ith British
envoy Richard Oswald.78 Oswald knew Franklin and was sympathetic to American pos
itions. By
November, the negotiations were over, but without the French, who still wanted t
o obtain territorial
concessions for themselves and the Spanish. Although the allies originally agree
d to negotiate
together, by 1783, French foreign minister Vergennes was concerned America might
obtain too
much western territory in a settlement, and thus become too powerful. America ig
nored the French,
and on November 30, 1792, representatives from England and America signed the Tr
eaty of Paris,
ending the War of Independence.
The treaty also established the boundaries of the new nation: to the south, Spai
n held Florida and
New Orleans; the western boundary was the Mississippi River; and the northern bo
undary
remained what it had been ante bellum under the Quebec Act. Americans had the ri
ghts to fish off
Newfoundland and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and vessels from England and Ameri
ca could
navigate the Mississippi River freely. France, having played a critical role in
the victory, came
away from the conflict with only a few islands in the West Indies and a terrific
debt, which played
no small part in its own revolution in 1789. Spain never recovered Gibraltar, bu
t did acquire the
Floridas, and continued to lay a claim to the Louisiana Territory until 1802. Co
mpensation for
losses by the Tories was a sticking point because technically the individual sta
tes, and not the
Continental Congress, had confiscated their properties. Nevertheless, the commis
sioners ultimately
agreed to recommend that Congress encourage the states to recompense Loyalists f
or their losses.
In sum, what Washington gained on the field, Jay and Franklin more than held at
the peace table.79
One final ugly issue raised its head in the negotiations. American negotiators i
nsisted that the treaty
provide for compensation to the owners of slaves who had fled behind British lin
es. It again raised
the specter, shunted away at the Continental Congress’s debate over the Declaratio
n, that the rights
of Englishmen—or, in this case, of Americans—still included the right to own slaves.
It was a dark
footnote to an otherwise impressive diplomatic victory won by the American emiss
aries at the
peace negotiations.80
CHAPTER FOUR
A Nation of Law, 1776–89
Inventing America
Gary Wills aptly described the early Revolutionaries’ efforts at making new govern
ments as
“inventing America.”1 Jefferson’s Declaration literally wiped the slate clean, providi
ng the new
nation’s leaders with tremendous opportunities to experiment in the creation of th
e Republic. Yet
these opportunities were fraught with dangers and uncertainties; the Revolutiona
ry Whigs might
fail, just as the Roundheads had failed in the English Civil War, and just as th
e Jacobins in France
would soon fail in their own revolution.
Instead, these “founding brothers” succeeded. The story of how they invented America
is crucial in
understanding the government that has served the United States for more than two
hundred years,
and, more broadly, the growth of republican institutions in Western civilization
. John Adams knew
the opportunities and perils posed by the separation from England and the format
ion of a new
government, noting that he and his contemporaries had been “thrown into existence
at a period
when the greatest philosophers and lawgivers of antiquity would have wished to l
ive. A period
when a coincidence of circumstances…has afforded to the thirteen Colonies…an opportu
nity of
beginning government anew from the foundation.”2 Contrary to popular belief, Ameri
ca’s federal
Constitution was not an immediate and inevitable result of the spirit of 1776. I
ndeed, briefly, in
March 1783, some question existed about whether an army mutiny over pay might no
t result either
in a military coup or Washington relenting to pressures to “take the crown,” as one
colonel urged
him to do. Instead, Washington met with the ringleaders, and while putting on hi
s eyeglasses,
shattered their hostility by explaining that he had “not only grown gray but almos
t blind in service
to my country.”3 Their resistance melted, as did the neonatal movement to make him
king—though
the regal bearing stayed draped over him until the end. As late as 1790, Frankli
n observed of
Washington’s walking stick, “If it were a sceptre, he would have merited it.”4 More th
an anyone,
Washington knew that he had helped found a republic and for that reason, if no o
ther, his presence
at the Constitutional Convention was important, if not necessary.
Washington’s actions aside, the story of the drafting and ratification of the fede
ral Constitution was
not one of “chaos and Patriots to the rescue,” with wise Federalists saving the nati
on from anarchy
and disarray under the Articles of Confederation. Rather, a complex story emerge
s—one that
contained the origins of political parties in the United States and the adoption
of the legal basis of
republican government.
Time Line
1776:
Declaration of Independence; states adopt new constitutions
1777:
Articles of Confederation (Congress adopts, but states do not finish ratifying u
ntil 1781); Articles
of Confederation ratified; Congress establishes Bank of North America
1783:
Treaty of Paris; Newburgh Conspiracy
1784:
Ordinance of 1784
1785:
Land Ordinance of 1785
1786:
Jay-Gardoqui Treaty rejected; Virginia Religious Freedom Act; Shays’ Rebellion; In
dian
Ordinance of 1786; Annapolis Convention
1787:
Constitutional Convention; Northwest Ordinance; the Federalist Papers
1788:
Constitution ratified by all states except Rhode Island and North Carolina
1789:
New government forms
Highways and Wolves
Having declared the American colonies independent of Great Britain, the patriot
Whigs
immediately set about the task of creating new governments as sovereign states.
The task was huge
and the possibilities were unprecedented; and one sentiment seemed unanimous: no
kings!
Americans, Jefferson observed, “shed monarchy” like an old suit of clothes. But what
kind of
government would the Whigs create? No nation in existence at the time had electe
d leaders; there
were no precedents. On the other hand, Americans had considerable experience gov
erning
themselves, and they possessed a vast arsenal of ideas about the proper forms an
d nature of
government.5 Governing a nation, however, was different. Adams worried that “the l
awgivers of
antiquity…legislated for single cities [but] who can legislate for 20 or 50 states
, each of which is
greater than Greece or Rome at those times?”6 His concerns, while not inconsequent
ial, ignored the
reality that the “lawgivers of antiquity” did not have a shared understanding of Enl
ightenment
precepts—a rich tapestry interwoven with the beliefs of radical English Whigs. Ada
ms also missed
a fundamental demographic fact of the infant United States, namely that it was y
oung. By 1790 half
the nation’s population of four million was under sixteen years of age, meaning a
homogenous
revolutionary generation started with the same Whig/Enlightenment principles and
, to some degree,
matured in their thinking along similar lines. Probably the most important value
they shared was a
commitment to the principle that constitutions should take the form of succinct,
written documents.
They rejected the ethereal English “constitution,” with its diffuse precedent-based
rulings,
unwritten common law bases, and patchwork of historic charters spanning five hun
dred years of
English history. About constitutions, Americans insisted on getting it down on p
aper, a trait that
would characterize virtually all of their legal processes, even to a fault.
Second, the designers of the post-Revolutionary governments were localists and p
rovincials. They
wanted government small and close to home. Just as they opposed royal rule from
a distance of
fifteen hundred miles, so too they distrusted suggestions to form a centralized
North American
state. Aside from fighting the British, they had few needs from a grand governme
ntal
establishment—perhaps commercial treaties and common weights and measures, but eve
n those
came under scrutiny. One Briton sarcastically wrote that Americans were primaril
y concerned with
“the regulation of highways and the destruction of wolves.”7
In eighteenth-century terms, these Whigs espoused egalitarianism and democracy:
the struggling
gods of monarchy, divine right, absolutism, and the rest of the feudal golems we
re utterly rejected.
But one should take care to temper terms like “democracy” and “republicanism” in the
understanding of the day. American Revolutionaries did not envision citizenship
for Indians,
women, and blacks, even in their most radical egalitarian fantasies. Yet despite
their narrow
definition of polity, these transplanted Englishmen lived in what was undoubtedl
y the most
radically democratic society on the face of the earth. Land was abundant and che
ap, and because
they tied the right to vote to property ownership, more Americans became voters
every year and,
with the age demographic noted earlier, a mass of politically active men obtaine
d the franchise at
nearly the same time.
It is difficult to quantify data in the period before the first federal census,
but most historians agree
that 50 to 75 percent of the white, male Revolutionary population obtained the r
ight to vote, leading
Tory governor Thomas Hutchinson to write disparagingly that in America, the fran
chise was
granted to “anything with the appearance of a man.”8 All did not share such a low vi
ew of the
yeomen, though, especially Jefferson, who thought that if a farmer and a profess
or were confronted
with the same problem, the “former will decide it often better than the latter, be
cause he had not
been led astray by artificial rules.”9 Surprisingly to some, Adams (initially) agr
eed: “The mob, the
herd and the rabble, as the Great always delight to call them,” were as entitled t
o political rights as
nobles or kings: the “best judges,” as editorialist Cato called the public.10
Implicit in the emerging vision of government was the separation-of-power doctri
ne borrowed from
Montesquieu—the division of authority between executive, judicial, and legislative
branches of
government. This did not equate with a belief in the balance of powers, which be
came more
popular after the Revolutionary War, especially among the Federalists. Rather, m
ost Whigs argued
that governmental branches should indeed be separate, but that one—the legislative—s
hould retain
most power. Given the colonists’ recent experience with King George and his royal
governors, such
a view is easy to understand. The legislature’s power of the purse entitled it, th
ey held, to a
paramount position in the government.
Whig political thinkers of the day also adopted what we today call civil liberta
rianism, or the
organized articulation of the Whig fear of abusive power and the people’s need to
sustain a militia
and to keep and bear firearms. “Due process,” a term derived from the Whigs’ advocacy
of jury
trial; the right to file petitions of habeas corpus; opposition to cruel and unu
sual punishment—all
flowed from this concern for government’s capacity for abuse. Other libertarian be
liefs revolved
around freedom of speech, petition, assembly, and religion, and freedom of the p
ress. Except for
religious practice, all of these freedoms dealt explicitly with political issues
. “Free speech” meant
the right to address publicly the shortcomings of government, the right to assem
bly related to
groups massing to demonstrate against the state, and so on. By the twenty-first
century, legislators
would become so concerned about the impact of money in financing political adver
tisements that
they would attempt to regulate it. But the founders’ intentions were clear: the ri
ght to speak out
against government (including financing of pamphlets, broadsides, or other forms
of “advertising”)
was the single most important right they addressed, aside from possession of fir
earms. Other widely
held beliefs included Locke’s declaration of a right to attain and keep property,
which Americans
radicalized even further by insisting on minimal taxation. All of it, of course,
had to be written
down.
Those who invented America did not forget their recent difficulties communicatin
g with Parliament
and George III, a point that led them to require that legislators directly repre
sent their constituents.
This translated into smaller legislative districts, short terms, and close conta
ct with the constituents.
It also meant, however, that since the legislatures would have the most power, t
he Whig
constitution makers would bridle them even more through frequent (annual) electi
ons, recall, and
impeachment. Concerns about character, when legislators and their constituents k
new each other
personally and met frequently, could be addressed firsthand.
Thus, the Revolutionary Whigs came to the task of creating a government with an
array of strong
principles grounded in localism, egalitarianism, and libertarianism expressed th
rough written
constitutions, and constrained by separation of power, legislative dominance, an
d direct
representation. Constraint, constraint, constraint—that was the overriding obsessi
on of the
Founders. Whigs recognized that while government was necessary to protect life,
liberty, and
property, the people who comprised the government inevitably tried to accumulate
and abuse
power unless properly checked by fundamental law. Sam Adams assessed it when he
wrote,
“Jealousy is the best security of publick Liberty.”11
Such priorities also underscored another important point, that despite enthusias
tically accepting the
end product of the Lockean view of rights, American political theorists had reje
cted the underlying
assumptions of both Hobbes and Locke that government was artificial. Jefferson s
aid so himself in
the Declaration, insisting that even when people abolished a tyrannical governme
nt, they had to
replace it with a just and benign one. At its very origins, therefore, the Ameri
can idea had certain
tensions between civil rights that emanated from a worldview and the basis of th
e worldview itself.
In part, the direction of the young Republic took the turns that it did precisel
y because the hands at
the tiller were those of Revolutionary liberals who shared the basic Whig assump
tions, and their
dominance, in turn, had in part arisen from the departure of more conservative,
pro-monarchy
voices that found remaining in the new nation untenable. The flight of the Loyal
ists to Canada and
England played no small role in guaranteeing one type of consensus at the delibe
rating bodies that
produced the subsequent state and federal constitutions.
Chaos and Patriots to the Rescue?
The standard fare for most twentieth-century high school and college texts expre
ssed the view that
the Articles of Confederation period constituted a “critical period” during which Am
erica
experienced a precarious brush with anarchy. Modern big-government liberals look
upon the era
with disgust. Genuine problems plagued the young nation. The economy plummeted a
nd crowds
rioted, with Shays’ Rebellion (1786) epitomizing the new nation’s problems stemming
from the
Articles. This “preconstitution” that governed the nation from 1783–87 proved ill suit
ed to
organizing the country, leaving the Confederation Congress corrupt, bankrupt, an
d inept—a body
that bungled domestic affairs and drifted into weakness against foreign powers.
Then, according to
this story, a band of heroes galloped to the rescue. Washington, Hamilton, Jay,
Franklin, and others
called the 1787 Philadelphia Convention and wrote the Constitution, lifting the
endangered nation
out of its morass and providing a sensible governing framework. These Founders s
aved America
from ruin and established a system of government that endured to the present day
.12 Unfortunately,
little of this interpretation is accurate. Historian Merrill Jensen, especially,
spent much of his career
debunking what he called the “Myth of the Confederation Era.”13
Like all good stories, the “Chaos and Patriots to the Rescue” interpretation of John
Fiske contains
several elements of truth. Certainly, Confederation governmental institutions di
d not provide all the
answers to the new nation’s most pressing problems. And some of the story, no doub
t, was driven
by the partisan political viewpoint of the early historians, who tended to glori
fy the role of the
Founders. The 1780s, in fact, witnessed a division of the early Whigs into facti
ons that strongly
disagreed over the course that the new nation should follow. Nationalists (later
called Federalists)
cried “anarchy,” while others (later known as Anti-Federalists or Jeffersonian Repub
licans) pointed
to the successes of the Confederation government and noted that, among its other
accomplishments,
it had waged a war against—and defeated—Great Britain, the greatest military power o
n earth. So
which historical view is correct? Although historians continue to debate the suc
cesses of the
Articles of Confederation, matters become clearer if it is approached as the doc
ument it was, the
first Constitution.
Even dating the Articles, though, is difficult. Although not legally adopted unt
il 1781, Congress in
fact functioned within the framework of the Articles from the time of its drafti
ng in 1777. To make
matters more complex, the First and Second Continental Congresses of 1774–76 opera
ted under a
system exactly like the one proposed in 1777; therefore, realistically, the Unit
ed States was
governed under the Articles of Confederation from the time of the Declaration of
Independence
until Washington was inaugurated as the first president of the United States und
er the federal
Constitution in March 1788.14
While the Continental Congress developed a structure for running the colonies’ aff
airs during the
early part of the Revolution, it remained informal until three weeks prior to th
e Declaration of
Independence, at which time the states sought to formalize the arrangements thro
ugh a government
that would fight the war while simultaneously leaving to the individual states m
ost of their powers
and prerogatives. On June 12, 1776, Congress appointed a committee with one repr
esentative from
each state to draft such a constitution. Headed by the “Pennsylvania Farmer,” John D
ickinson, the
committee one month later presented a draft of the Articles of Confederation (gi
ven its name by
another committee member, Benjamin Franklin).
Objections to the new plan surfaced quickly, and immediately drifted into territ
ory that many
delegates had avoided, the issue of slavery. The heavily populated areas protest
ed the fact that each
state had an equal vote in the Congress (akin to today’s United States Senate), bu
t the more lightly
populated southern colonies had different concerns involving the counting of sla
ves for
representation in a body determined by population (such as today’s House of Repres
entatives).
Perhaps more important at the time, however, the states disagreed over what is o
ften referred to as
public domain. Several of the thirteen states possessed sea-to-sea charters and
claimed lands within
the parallels stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans. These “landed” sta
tes (Virginia, the
Carolinas, Georgia, and others) were opposed by “landless” states (Maryland, Delawar
e, and New
Jersey), which insisted that the landed states relinquish all their claims west
of the Appalachian
crest to the Confederation as a whole. Ultimately, the parties agreed to postpon
e the discussion
until the ratification of the Articles of Confederation in 1781, but it raised t
he question of charters
and grants in a broad sense. Was a charter from the king an inviolable contract?
If so, did England’s
grip on the colonies remain, even after independence? If not, were all pre-Indep
endence contracts
null and void? And if such contracts were void, what did that say about property
rights—that they
only existed after the new nation was born?
Congress, meanwhile, continued to operate under the terms of the unratified Arti
cles throughout the
1776–78 period, becoming one of the most successful Revolutionary legislatures in
the history of
Western civilization. In retrospect, the Articles created a remarkably weak cent
ral government,
precisely because that was what the radical Whigs wanted. Not surprisingly, the
Whigs who had
battled royal governors and a king for seven years did not leap to place power i
n a new chief
executive in 1777, and the same logic applied to the courts, which Whigs assumed
functioned best
at the state, not national, level. There was provision in the Articles for congr
essional litigation of
interstate disputes, but it proved ineffective.
That left only the legislative branch of government at the national level, which
was exactly how the
Whigs wanted it. Their definition of federalism differed significantly from the
one taught in a
modern political science class. Federalism meant a system of parallel government
s—state, local,
and national—each with its specified powers, but sovereignty ultimately rested in
the states and, by
implication, the people themselves. Whigs saw this as completely different from “n
ationalism,”
which divided power among the same three levels (state, local, and national) but
with the national
government retaining the ultimate authority. This latter model appeared after th
e federal
Constitution of 1787, but a decade earlier, anyone who called himself a Federali
st embraced the
decentralized Confederation model, not that of a sovereign centralized state. In
this way, the
Articles preceded or, more appropriately, instigated, a raucous debate over the
federalism of the
American Revolution.
After independence, delegates to the Congress changed the name of that body from
Continental
Congress to Confederation Congress. The number of delegates each state sent had
varied
throughout the war, from two to seven per state, although each state retained on
e vote, cast
according to a majority of its congressmen. This aspect of the Confederation see
med to lend
credibility to the argument that the nation was merely an affiliation of states,
not a unified
American people. But other sections appeared to operate on different assumptions
. A seven-state
majority could pass most laws, but only a nine-state vote could declare war and
ratify treaties,
clauses that challenged the contention that the states were sovereign. After all
, if states were
sovereign, how could even a vote of twelve of them, let alone nine, commit all t
o a war? The
schizophrenic nature of some of these provisions came to a head in the amendment
clause, where
thirteen votes—unanimous agreement—were needed to amend the Articles themselves. Giv
en the
nature of Revolutionary state politics, this stipulation rendered certain provis
ions of the Articles,
for all intents and purposes, invulnerable to the amendment process.
Congressmen wrote all the national laws then executed them through a series of c
ongressional
committees, including foreign affairs, war, finance, post office, and so on. Con
gress possessed
limited fundamental powers. Only Congress could conduct diplomacy, make treaties
, and declare
war; it could coin and borrow money, deliver mail through a national post office
, and set a uniform
standard of weights and measures. As part of its diplomatic charge, Congress dea
lt with the Indian
tribes, negotiated treaties with them, and created a national Indian policy. And
, when a national
domain came into being in 1781, Congress had exclusive charge to legislate polic
ies for land sales
and territorial government (as it turned out, one of its most important powers).
These powers put Congress on a sound footing, but in true Whig fashion, the Arti
cles of
Confederation saved many important prerogatives for the states and the people. F
or example,
Congress could only requisition money and soldiers from the states, thus leaving
true taxation and
military power at the local level. This taxation provision meant that Congress c
ould not regulate
commerce through import and export duties. So the Confederation Congress was a t
rue Whig
government—which had its economic and military arm tied behind its back. As Articl
e 2 of the
Articles of Confederation stated clearly (and the Tenth Amendment to the Constit
ution would later
reiterate), “Each State retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and ev
ery power,
jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated
to the United States,
in Congress assembled.”
The New State Constitutions
Meanwhile, the states had simultaneously developed their own constitutions, clai
ming state
sovereignty over the national Congress in many matters. During the years immedia
tely following
the Declaration of Independence, eleven of the thirteen states drafted and ratif
ied new constitutions.
In nearly all cases, radicals squared off against moderates, with the radicals c
arrying the day. State
constitution making is a complex subject, with variations spanning the thirteen
new American
states. Yet certain patterns emerged: all of the constitution makers acknowledge
d the almost sacred
nature of writing constitutions and sharply differentiated that process from tha
t of merely passing
legislation. Moreover, most of the new constitutions showed marked radical Whig
tendencies,
including written bills of rights, and institutionalized broad suffrage for whit
e males. They fostered
republicanism through direct representation, and provided for separation of powe
r between
executive, legislative, and judicial branches, but not “balance” of power. Indeed, t
he thirteen state
governments, with notable exceptions, severely limited the executive and judicia
l branches of
government. The result was that there were smaller state versions of the nationa
l model: strong,
legislative government with important but less powerful judicial and executive c
omponents.15
Once again, the drafters all accepted the premise that their constitutions shoul
d appear in concise
written form. They also agreed that a crucial difference between constitutional
law and mere statute
law existed. Constitutional law stood as close to natural law (God’s law) as mere
mortals could
possibly place it. In this the drafters inherently sided with classical thinkers
like Aristotle over
modernists like Thomas Hobbes: the former all held that government was natural,
even to the point
of being a spiritual exercise, whereas the latter held that the state was artifi
cial. Thus, Jefferson, one
of the most vocal advocates of small government, wrote in the Declaration that a
fter altering or
abolishing government, it is the “right” of the people to “institute new Government.” By
siding
with the classical thinkers, Americans avoided some of the assumptions that weak
ened European
constitutions where the “artificiality” model dominated (think of post–World War II Fr
ance, with
its twenty-four governments in twelve years). Consequently, the natural basis of
constitutional law
made it fundamental law, which positioned it much higher than statute law. Thus,
constitutions
must, whenever possible, be drafted and ratified by special bodies—constitutional
conventions—
not merely state legislatures, and ultimately nine of the eleven new constitutio
ns were drafted and
appeared in this manner.
The state constitutions emerged during the most radical years of Revolutionary p
olitical thought,
and most of them reflect that radicalism, a point most noticeable in the constit
utions’ tendencies to
hedge and restrain their executives. After 1776, for example, governors could no
longer introduce
legislation, convene or adjourn assemblies, command state militia, pardon crimin
als, or veto bills.
Pennsylvania axed the governorship from its constitution, allowing the legislatu
re to serve in
executive capacity. The judiciary suffered similar checks on its powers. Legisla
tors and voters
selected judges to serve set terms in office, or even on the basis of “good behavi
or.” Judges’
salaries were fixed by the legislatures, which also retained the right to impeac
h or recall
magistrates, and no judge had the prerogative for judicial review or determining
constitutionality.
Like the executive, the judiciary in most states remained a creature of the legi
slature.
Nearly all of the new constitutions expanded suffrage, republicanism, and the ci
vil liberties of the
constituents. Eight constitutions contained bills of rights, delineating the ter
ms of freedom of
speech and religion, citizen protections from the military, the right to keep an
d bear arms, and
components of due process. Taxpayers saw their enfranchisement expanded to the e
xtent that
Rhode Island granted universal white male suffrage. Representation was proportio
nal; state capitals
moved westward to better serve growing frontier constituents; legislators stood
for annual election,
and voters kept them in check through term limits and recall. Three states elimi
nated their upper
legislative house, but in all other cases the lower house retained more power th
an the upper,
controlling each state’s economic and military policies as well as important judic
ial and executive
powers. Pennsylvania and Massachusetts represented two opposite extremes of stat
e constitution
making. Pennsylvania eliminated the governorship and the upper house of the legi
slature.
“We…never shall have a hereditary aristocracy,” wrote one Pennsylvania Whig in opposit
ion to a
state senate.
God and the Americans
Few issues have been more mischaracterized than religion, and the government’s att
itude toward
religion, in the early Republic. Modern Americans readily cite the “separation of
church and state,”
a phrase that does not appear in the Constitution, yet is a concept that has bec
ome a guiding force in
the disestablishment of religion in America. Most settlers had come to America w
ith the quest for
religious freedom constituting an important, if not the most important, goal of
their journey.
Maryland was a Catholic state; Pennsylvania, a Quaker state; Massachusetts, a Pu
ritan state; and so
on. But when Thomas Jefferson penned Virginia’sStatute for Religious Freedom (enac
ted 1786),
the state’s relationship to religion seemed to change. Or did it?
Jefferson wrote the Virginia sabbath law, as well as ordinances sanctioning publ
ic days of prayer
and fasting and even incorporated some of the Levitical code into the state’s marr
iage laws. In
1784, however, controversy arose over the incorporation of the Protestant Episco
pal Church, with
Baptists and Presbyterians complaining that the act unfairly bound church and st
ate. The matter,
along with some related issues, came before several courts, which by 1804 had le
d the legislature to
refuse petitions for incorporation by churches or other religious bodies.
By that time, the American religious experience had developed several characteri
stics that
separated it from any of the European churches. Americans deemphasized the clerg
y. Not only did
states such as Virginia refuse to fund the salaries of ministers, but the Calvin
ist/Puritan tradition
that each man read, and interpret, the Bible for himself meant that the clergy’s a
uthority had
already diminished. Second, Americans were at once both evangelically active and
liturgically lax.
What mattered was salvation and “right” living, not the form or structure of the rel
igion.
Ceremonies and practices differed wildly, even within denominations. And finally
, as with
America’s new government itself, the nation’s religion made central the personal sal
vation
experience. All of this had the effect of separating American churches from thei
r European
ancestors, but also of fostering sects and divisions within American Christianit
y itself.
Above all, of course, America was a Christian nation. Jews, nonbelievers, and th
e few Muslims or
adherents to other religions who might make it to the shores of North America in
the late 1700s
were treated not so much with tolerance as with indifference. People knew that J
ews, Muslims,
Buddhists, or others were a minority and, they thought, were going to remain a m
inority. So in the
legal context, the debates never included non-Christian groups in the deliberati
ons. At the same
time, this generic Christian faith, wherein everyone agreed to disagree, served
as a unifying
element by breaking down parish boundaries and, in the process, destroying other
political and
geographic boundaries. The Great Awakening had galvanized American Christianity,
pushing it
even further into evangelism, and it served as a springboard to the Revolution i
tself, fueling the
political fire with religious fervor and imbuing in the Founders a sense of righ
tness of cause. To
some extent, then, “the essential difference between the American Revolution and t
he French
Revolution is that the American Revolution…was a religious event, whereas the Fren
ch Revolution
was an anti-religious event.”16 John Adams said as much when he observed that the “R
evolution
was in the mind and hearts of the people; and change in their religious sentimen
ts of their duties
and obligations.”17
Consequently, America, while attaching itself to no specific variant of Christia
nity, operated on an
understanding that the nation would adopt an unofficial, generic Christianity th
at fit hand in glove
with republicanism. Alexis de Tocqueville, whose perceptive Democracy in America
(1835)
provided a virtual road map for the future direction of the young nation, observ
ed that in the United
States the spirit of religion and the spirit of freedom “were intimately united, a
nd that they reigned
in common over the same country.”18 Americans, he added, viewed religion as “indispe
nsable to
the maintenance of the republican institutions,” because it facilitated free insti
tutions.19 Certain
fundamentals seemed unanimously agreed upon: posting of the Ten Commandments in
public
places was appropriate; prayers in virtually all official and public functions w
ere expected;
America was particularly blessed because of her trust in God; and even when indi
viduals in civic
life did not ascribe to a specific faith, they were expected to act like “good Chr
istians” and conduct
themselves as would a believer. Politicians like Washington walked a fine line b
etween maintaining
the secularist form and yet supplying the necessary spiritual substance. In part
, this explains why so
many of the early writings and speeches of the Founders were both timeless and u
plifting. Their
message of spiritual virtue, cloaked in republican processes of civic duty, refl
ected a sense of
providential mission for the young country.
With no state boundaries to confine them, religious doctrines found themselves i
n a competition
every bit as sharp as Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” of the market. Most communities pu
t up a
church as one of their first civic acts, and traveling preachers traversed the b
ackwoods and frontiers
even where no churches existed. Ministers such as Lyman Beecher (1775–1863) charac
terized this
new breed of traveling evangelist. Beecher, a New Haven Presbyterian who later a
ssumed the
presidency of the Cincinnati Theological Seminary, gained fame for his essay aga
inst dueling after
Hamilton’s death in 1803. Well before that, however, he pioneered American religio
us voluntarism.
Like other westward-looking Americans, Beecher accepted the notion that the nati
on’s destiny
resided in the west—precisely where the frontier spread people out so much that a
revival was the
only way to reach them. Beecher’s revivals took place in settings that enjoyed gre
at popularity
among evangelists—the camp meetings. At these gatherings, occasionally in the open
air or in a
barn, the traveling preachers spread the Gospel, occasionally emphasizing the em
otional by urging
the participants to engage in frenzied shouting, jerking, or falling, presumably
under the influence
of the Holy Spirit.
With each new congregation that the itinerant ministers formed, new doctrines an
d sects appeared.
Regional differences in established churches produced reasoned differences, but
also encouraged
rampant sectarianism. Each new division weakened the consensus about what consti
tuted accepted
doctrines of Christianity, to the point that in popular references America cease
d being a “godly”
nation and became a “good” nation that could not agree on the specifics of goodness.
In education,
especially, the divisions threatened to undermine the Christian basis of the you
ng country. Other
dangerous splits in doctrine developed over the proper relationship with Indians
. Eleazar Wheelock
(1711–79), for example, a Congregationalist and a key influence in the Awakening m
ovement,
founded a school for Indians that became Dartmouth College in 1769. To the exten
t that Indians
were offered education, it had to occur in segregated schools like Wheelock’s, tho
ugh he was not
the first religious leader to establish a school. Religious groups of all denomi
nations and doctrines
accounted for the majority of quality education, especially at the higher levels
. Brown University,
in Rhode Island (1764), was established by the Baptists; Princeton, in New Jerse
y, by the Revivalist
Presbyterians (1746), which later became a theological institute(1812); Yale, in
New Haven,
Connecticut, by the Congregationalists (1701); William and Mary, in Virginia, by
the Anglicans
(1693); and Georgetown College in Washington, D. C. (then Maryland), by the Jesu
it father John
Carroll (1789); and so on.
Frequently, however, rather than reinforcing existing orthodoxy, colleges soon p
roduced heretics—
or, at least, liberals who shared few of their founders’ doctrinal views. At Harva
rd University,
founded to enforce Puritanism in 1636 by the Reverend John Harvard, its original
motto, Veritas,
Christo et Ecclesiae (Truth, Christ and the Church), and its logo of two books f
acing open and one
facing downward to represent the hidden knowledge of God, were ditched when the
school slipped
into the hands of liberal groups in 1707. The new motto, simply Veritas, and its
symbol of all three
books facing up aptly illustrated the dominance of a Unitarian elite that domina
ted the school,
including such notables as John Quincy Adams and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. By
focusing on
a rationalistic Enlightenment approach to salvation in which virtually all men w
ere saved—not to
mention the presumption that all knowledge could be known—the Unitarians (who deni
ed the
Trinity, hence the term “Unitarian,” from unity, or one) had opposed the Great Awake
ning of the
1740s. Henry Ware, at Harvard, and later William Ellery Channing, whose 1819 ser
mon,
“Unitarian Christianity” established the basis for the sect, challenged the Congrega
tional and
Puritan precepts from 1805–25. At that point, the American Unitarian Association w
as formed, but
much earlier it had exerted such a powerful influence in Boston that in 1785 Kin
g’s Chapel
removed all references to the Trinity in the prayer books.20
Unitarians were not alone in their unorthodox views. Many sects strained at the
limits of what was
tolerable even under the broadest definitions of Christianity. Yet they still ma
intained, for the most
part, a consensus on what constituted morality and ethics. Consequently, a subtl
e yet profound shift
occurred in which the religious in America avoided theological issues and instea
d sought to
inculcate a set of moral assumptions under which even Jews and other non-Christi
ans could fit.
This appeared in its most visible form in education. Jefferson’s concern over stat
e funding of a
particular religion centered on the use of tax money for clerical salaries. Even
tually, though, the
pressure to eliminate any sectarian doctrines from public schools was bound to l
ead to clashes with
state governments over which concepts were denominational and which were generic
ally Christian.
Church-state separation also spilled over into debates about the applicability o
f charters and
incorporation laws for churches. Charters always contained elements of favoritis
m (which was one
reason banks were steeped in controversy), but in seeking to avoid granting a ch
arter to any
particular church, the state denied religious organizations the same rights acco
rded hospitals and
railroads. Even in Virginia, where “separation of church and state” began, the reluc
tance to issue
religious charters endowed churches with special characteristics that were not a
pplied to other
corporations. Trying to keep religion and politics apart, Virginia lawmakers uni
ntentionally
“wrapped religion and politics, church and state ever more closely together.”21
The good news was that anyone who was dissatisfied with a state’s religion could m
ove west. That
dynamic would later propel the Methodists to Oregon and the Mormons to Utah. Mea
nwhile, the
call of the frontier was irrepressible for reasons entirely unrelated to heaven
and completely
oriented toward Mammon. And every year more adventurers and traders headed west,
beyond the
endless mountains.
Beyond the Endless Mountains
The end of the American Revolution marked the beginning of a great migration to
the West across
the Appalachian Mountains. The migrants followed four major routes. Pennsylvania
Germans and
Scots-Irish moved south, down the Great Valley of the Appalachians, to settle in
western Virginia
and North Carolina. The Wilderness Road, blazed by Daniel Boone in 1775, led som
e of them into
Kentucky and the Bluegrass region via the Cumberland Gap. One traveler described
this route as
the “longest, blackest, hardest road” in America. Carolinians traversed the mountain
s by horseback
and wagon train until they found the Tennessee River, following its winding rout
e to the Ohio
River, then ascending the Cumberland south to the Nashville region. But the most
common river
route—and the most popular route to the West—was the Ohio. Migrants made the arduous
journey
over Forbes Road through the Alleghenies to Pittsburgh. There they built or boug
ht a flatboat,
purchased a copy of Zadok Cramer’s river guide, The Western Navigator, and launche
d their crafts
and their fortunes into le belle rivière. If the weather and navigation depth was
good, and fortune
smiled upon them, the trip from Pittsburgh to Louisville took seven to ten days.
22
During the decade following the Revolution, tens of thousands of pioneers moved
southwest of the
Ohio River. Harrodsburgh, Boonesborough, Louisville, and Lexington, in Kentucky,
were joined
by the Wautauga and Nashville settlements in the northeastern and central portio
ns of what is now
the state of Tennessee. Pioneers like Daniel Boone played an irreplaceable role
in cutting the trails,
establishing relations with Native Americans (or defeating them, if it came to a
fight), and setting
up early forts from which towns and commercial centers could emerge. Daniel Boon
e (1734–1820)
had traveled from Pennsylvania, where his family bucked local Quakers by marryin
g its daughters
outside the Society of Friends, through Virginia, North Carolina, then finally t
o explore Kentucky.
Crossing the famed Cumberland Gap in 1769, Boone’s first expedition into the raw f
rontier
resulted in his party’s being robbed of all its furs. Boone returned a few years l
ater to establish the
settlement that bears his name. When the Revolutionary War reopened hostilities
in Kentucky,
Boone was captured by Shawnee Indians and remained a prisoner for months, then h
ad to endure a
humiliating court-martial for the episode. Nevertheless, few individuals did mor
e to open the early
West to British and American settlement than Daniel Boone.23
Daniel Boone, Civilizer or Misanthrope?
As Revolutionary-era Americans began to move beyond the “endless mountains” into the
frontier
of the Ohio and Mississippi valleys, they followed the trails blazed by Daniel B
oone. Stories of
Daniel Boone’s exploits as a hunter, pathfinder, Indian fighter, war hero, and com
munity builder,
loom large in the myth of the American West. Many of these stories are true. It
is interesting to
note, however, that the stories of Daniel Boone often portray him in two complet
ely different
ways—either as a wild, uncivilized frontiersman or as a leader of the vanguard aim
ing to tame and
civilize that wild frontier. Was Daniel Boone running away from civilization, or
was he bringing it
with him? Was he a misanthrope or a civilizer, or both?
Born in Pennsylvania in 1734, Daniel Boone became a hunter at twelve years of ag
e, soon staying
away from home years at a time on long hunts. He worked his way down the eastern
slope of the
Appalachians before plunging into the unexplored regions westward. From 1767–69, h
e blazed the
Wilderness Trail through the Cumberland Gap to the Kentucky Bluegrass region, wh
ere, in 1775,
he established Boonesborough, an outpost for his family and friends to settle th
e new West. He was
subsequently captured and adopted by Shawnee Indians in 1778, fought Indian and
Briton alike in
the Revolutionary War, and was elected sheriff in 1782 and, later, to the legisl
ature of the new state
of Kentucky. During this time Boone also worked as a land company scout and land
speculator.
Drawn into protracted court battles over disputed land claims, Boone went bankru
pt in 1798 and
then moved his large family to the uninhabited expanses west of the Mississippi
River. He died
near St. Charles Missouri in 1820, having spent an eventful eight decades on the
American frontier.
During the course of Daniel Boone’s life, stories of his exploits spread far and w
ide, and he became
America’s first frontier folk hero. Thousands claimed to know the exact spot where
Boone carved
on a tree, here d. boone cill’d a bar (bear). Americans have told Boone’s stories fo
r more than two
hundred years, and his legend has appeared in formal artistic works ranging from
James Fenimore
Cooper’s novel The Last of the Mohicans (1827), and painter George Caleb Bingham’s r
endering
Daniel Boone (1851) to twentieth-century movies and television shows, the most f
amous being
Fess Parker’s near-decade-long 1960s television role as Boone.
It is important to note the symbolic contrasts in the roles Daniel Boone takes o
n in the various
famous stories about him. On the one hand, he is portrayed as a loner and a misa
nthrope who longs
to escape society and live for years utterly alone in the wilderness. On the oth
er hand, there is the
Daniel Boone who was a husband and father, founder of Boonesborough, successful
politician, and
real estate developer. This Daniel Boone, another biographer wrote, was an “empire
builder” and
“philanthropist” known for his “devotion to social progress.”
Daniel Boone was above all else, an archetypal American. He loved the wilderness
and the freedom
that came with frontier individualism. Like all Americans, he simultaneously bel
ieved in progress
and the advance of capitalism and republican political institutions. While he ma
y have sometimes
wished that America would always remain a sparsely inhabited wilderness, he knew
that America
could not and should not stand still.
Sources: Theodore Roosevelt, The Winning of the West, 6 vols. (New York: G. P. P
utnam’s Sons,
1889); John Mack Faragher, Daniel Boone: The Life and Legend of an American Pion
eer (New
York: Henry Holt, 1992).
North of the Ohio, a slower pace of settlement took place because of strong Indi
an resistance. Even
there, the white presence grew. Marietta, Ohio, became the first permanent Ameri
can settlement in
the region, but soon was joined by Chillicothe, Fort Wayne, and Detroit. Census
figures in 1790
showed the non-Indian population at 73,000 Kentuckians and 35,000 Tennesseans, w
hile the Old
Northwest (Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin) boasted 5,000, with
numbers rising
daily. Counting the pre-1790 residents, the combined American population in all
areas between the
Appalachian crest and the Mississippi River numbered an impressive 250,000. As o
ne traveler later
observed:
Old America seems to be breaking up, and moving westward. We are seldom out of s
ight, as we
travel on this grand track towards the Ohio, of family groups, behind and before
us…. Add to these
numerous stages loaded to the utmost, and the innumerable travelers on horseback
, on foot, and in
light wagons, and you have before you a scene of bustle and business extending o
ver three hundred
miles, which is truly wonderful.24
On the eastern seaboard, the Confederation Congress watched the Great Migration
with interest and
concern. Nearly everyone agreed that Congress would have to create a national do
main, devise a
method for surveying and selling public lands, formulate an Indian policy, and e
ngage in
diplomatic negotiations with the British and Spanish in the Old Northwest and So
uthwest. Most
important, Congress had to devise some form of territorial government plan to es
tablish the rule of
law in the trans-Appalachian West. Nearly everyone agreed these measures were ne
cessary, but
that was about all they agreed to.
Western lands commanded much of Congress’s attention because of the lingering prob
lem of
national domain.25 The Articles remained unratified because some of the landed s
tates still refused
to surrender their sea-to-sea claims to the central government, and Maryland ref
used to ratify the
document until they did. This logjam cleared in 1781, when Virginia finally cede
d her western
claims to Congress. Maryland immediately ratified the Articles, officially makin
g the document, at
long last, the first Constitution of the United States. Although one state, Geor
gia, continued to
claim its western lands, the remaining states chose to ignore the problem.
Congress immediately set to work on territorial policy, creating legal precedent
s that the nation
follows to this day. Legislators saw the ramifications of their actions with rem
arkably clear eyes.
They dealt with a huge question: if Congress, like the British Parliament before
it, established
colonies in the West, would they be subservient to the new American mother count
ry or
independent? Although the British model was not illogical, Congress rejected it,
making the United
States the first nation to allow for gradual democratization of its colonial emp
ire.26
As chair of Congress’s territorial government committee, Thomas Jefferson played a
major role in
the drafting of the Ordinance of 1784. Jefferson proposed to divide the trans-Ap
palachian West into
sixteen new states, all of which would eventually enter the Union on an equal fo
oting with the
thirteen original states. Ever the scientist, Jefferson arranged his new states
on a neat grid of
latitudinal and longitudinal boundaries and gave them fanciful—classical, patrioti
c, and Indian—
names: Cherroneseus, Metropotamia, Saratoga, Assenisipia, and Sylvania. He direc
ted that the
Appalachian Mountains should forever divide the slave from the free states, inst
itutionalizing “free
soil” on the western frontier. Although this radical idea did not pass in 1784, it
combined with
territorial self-governance and equality and became the foundation of the Northw
est Ordinance of
1787.
Jefferson also applied his social liberalism and scientific method to a land pol
icy component of the
Ordinance of 1784. He called for use of a grid system in the survey of public la
nds. Moreover,
Jefferson aimed to use the national domain to immediately place free or, at leas
t, cheap land in the
hands of actual settlers, not the national government. His and David Howell’s land
policy proposal
reflected their agrarianism and acknowledgment of widespread de facto “preemption” (
squatter’s
rights) on the American frontier that was later codified into law. As economist
Hernando DeSoto
has argued in The Mystery of Capital, the American “preemption” process gave common
people a
means to get a legal title to land, which was an early basis for capital formati
on. This kind of
liberal—and legal—land policy is not present in 90 percent of the world even to this
day.27
By 1785, however, Jefferson had left Congress, and nationalists were looking to
public lands sales
as a source for much-needed revenue. A Congressional committee chaired by nation
alist
Massachusetts delegate Rufus King began to revise Jefferson’s proposal. Borrowing
the basic
policies of northeastern colonial expansion, Congress overlaid the New England t
ownship system
on the national map. Surveyors were to plot the West into thousands of townships
, each containing
thirty-six 640–acre sections. Setting aside one section of each township for local
school funding,
Congress aimed to auction off townships at a rate of two dollars per acre, with
no credit offered.
Legislators hoped to raise quick revenue in this fashion because only entreprene
urs could afford the
minimum purchase, but the system broke down as squatters, speculators, and other
wily
frontiersmen avoided the provisions and snapped up land faster than the governme
nt could survey
it. Despite these limitations, the 1785 law set the stage for American land poli
cy, charting a path
toward cheap land (scientifically surveyed, with valid title) that would culmina
te in the Homestead
Act of 1862. To this day, an airplane journey over the neatly surveyed, square-c
ornered townships
of the American West proves the legacy of the Confederation Congress’s Land Ordina
nce of
1785.28
Moving to Indian policy in 1786, Congress set precedents that remain in place, t
he most important
of which was the recognition of Indian “right of soil,” a right that could be remove
d only through
military conquest or bona fide purchase. No one pretended that this policy inten
ded that the laws
would favor the Indians, and certainly Congress had no pro-Indian faction at the
time. Rather,
nationalist leaders wanted an orderly and, if possible, peaceful settlement of t
he West, which could
only be accomplished if the lands obtained by Indians came with unimpeachable ti
tle deeds.
Congress then appointed Indian commissioners to sign treaties with the Iroquois,
Ohio Valley, and
southeastern “civilized” tribes. Treaty sessions soon followed at Fort Stanwix, Hope
well, and other
sites. Obviously, these agreements did not “solve the Indian problem” nor did they p
roduce
universal peaceful relations between the races. On the other hand, the Indian Or
dinance of 1786 did
formalize the legal basis of land dealings between whites and Indians. Most impo
rtant, it
established the two fundamental principles of American Indian policy: the sovere
ignty of the
national government (versus the states) in orchestrating Native American affairs
, and the right of
soil, which also necessitated written contractual agreements. To reiterate the p
oints made in earlier
chapters, the concept that land could be divided and privately owned was foreign
to some, though
not all, tribes, making the latter principle extremely important if only for cla
ims against the
government that might arise generations later.29
Congress returned to the territorial government question in a 1787 revision of J
efferson’s
Ordinance of 1784. Again, Rufus King, Nathan Dane, and the nationalists led the
effort to stabilize
westward expansion. The nationalist imprint in the Ordinances of 1786 and 1787 s
howed a marked
difference from the point of view of agrarian Whigs like Jefferson and David How
ell. Dane and
King acknowledged the inevitability of westward expansion, but they preferred th
at it be slow,
peaceful, and regulated by the government. Although not all their ideas were fea
sible, they
nevertheless composed the basis of the American territorial system. Even in twen
ty-first-century
America, when a territory becomes part of the American empire and, in some cases
, seeks
statehood (for example, Alaska, Hawaii, and perhaps someday Puerto Rico or the V
irgin Islands),
that territory’s governmental evolution is charted under the terms remarkably simi
lar to those
established by the Northwest Ordinance. Only a few states—Texas, an independent re
public that
never went through territorial status; West Virginia, which was admitted directl
y to the Union
during the Civil War; and Hawaii, which was annexed—did not come into the Union in
this
process.
The Northwest Ordinance established a territorial government north of the Ohio R
iver under a
governor (former Continental Army general and staunch Federalist Arthur St. Clai
r was soon
appointed) and judges whom the president chose with legislative approval. Upon r
eaching a
population of five thousand, the landholding white male citizens could elect a l
egislature and a
nonvoting congressional representative. Congress wrote a bill of rights into the
Ordinance and
stipulated, à la Jefferson’s 1784 proposal, that no slavery or involuntary servitude
would be
permitted north of the Ohio River.
Yet the slavery issue was not clear-cut, and residents themselves disagreed over
the relevant clause,
Article VI. William Henry Harrison, Indiana’s first territorial governor, mustered
a territorial
convention in Vincennes in 1802 for the purpose of suspending Article VI for ten
years.30
Petitioners in Illinois also sought to “amend” the clause. It is easy to miss the en
ormity of the
efforts to undercut the slavery prohibition in the Northwest, which became the b
asis for the popular
sovereignty arguments of the 1850s and, indeed, for the infamous Dred Scott ruli
ng of 1857. In a
nutshell, the proslavery forces argued that the U.S. Congress had no authority o
ver slaves in, say,
Indiana—only the citizens of Indiana did. In that context, the Northwest Ordinance
of 1787 put the
issue of slavery on the front burner. More than that, it spoke directly to the d
ivisive issue of state
sovereignty, which, fortunately, the people of the Northwest Territory and the C
ongress decided in
favor of the federal authority.31
The Ordinance produced other remarkable insights for the preservation of democra
cy in newly
acquired areas. For example, it provided that between three and five new states
could be organized
from the region, thereby avoiding having either a giant super state or dozens of
small states that
would dominate the Congress. When any potential state achieved a population of s
ixty thousand, its
citizens were to draft a constitution and apply to Congress for admission into t
he federal union.
During the ensuing decades, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin ent
ered the Union
under these terms. The territorial system did not always run smoothly, but it en
dured. The
Southwest Ordinance of 1789 instituted a similar law for the Old Southwest, and
Kentucky (1791)
and Tennessee(1786) preceded Ohio into the Union.
But the central difference remained that Ohio, unlike the southern states, aboli
shed slavery, and
thus the Northwest Ordinance joined the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and the Comp
romise of
1850 as the first of the great watersheds in the raging debate over North Americ
an slavery. Little
appreciated at the time was the moral tone and the inexorability forced on the n
ation by the
ordinance. If slavery was wrong in the territories, was it not wrong everywhere?
The relentless
logic drove the South to adopt its states’ rights position after the drafting of t
he Constitution, but
the direction was already in place. If slavery was morally right—as Southerners ar
gued—it could
not be prohibited in the territories, nor could it be prohibited anywhere else.
Thus, from 1787
onward (though few recognized it at the time) the South was committed to the exp
ansion of
slavery, not merely its perpetuation where it existed at the time; and this was
a moral imperative,
not a political one.32
Popular notions that the Articles of Confederation Congress was a bankrupt do-no
thing body that
sat by helplessly as the nation slid into turmoil are thus clearly refuted by Co
ngress’s creation of
America’s first western policies legislating land sales, interaction with Indians,
and territorial
governments. Quite the contrary, Congress under the Articles was a legislature t
hat compared
favorably to other revolutionary machinery, such as England’s Long Parliament, the
French
radicals’ Reign of Terror, the Latin American republics of the early 1800s, and mo
re recently, the
“legislatures” of the Russian, Chinese, Cuban, and Vietnamese communists.33
Unlike those bodies, several of which slid into anarchy, the Confederation Congr
ess boasted a
strong record. After waging a successful war against Britain, and negotiating th
e Treaty of Paris, it
produced a series of domestic acts that can only be viewed positively. The Congr
ess also benefited
from an economy rebuilding from wartime stresses, for which the Congress could c
laim little
credit. Overall, though, the record of the Articles of Confederation Congress mu
st be reevaluated
upward, and perhaps significantly so.
Two Streams of Liberty
Well before the Revolutionary War ended, strong differences of opinion existed a
mong the Whig
patriots. While the majority favored the radical state constitutions, the Articl
es of Confederation,
and legislative dominance, a minority viewpoint arose.34 Detractors of radical c
onstitutionalism
voiced a more moderate view, calling for increased governmental authority and mo
re balance
between the executive, judicial, and legislative branches at both the state and
national levels.
During this time, the radicals called themselves Federalists because the Article
s of Confederation
created the weak federal union they desired. Moderates labeled themselves nation
alists, denoting
their commitment to a stronger national state. These labels were temporary, and
by 1787, the
nationalists would be calling themselves Federalists and, in high irony, labelin
g their Federalist
opponents Anti-Federalists.35
The nationalist faction included Robert Morris, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, H
enry Knox,
Rufus King, and their leader, Alexander Hamilton. These men found much wanting a
t both the state
and national levels of government. They wanted to broaden the taxation and comme
rcial regulatory
powers of the Confederation Congress, while simultaneously curtailing what they
perceived as too
much democracy at the state level. “America must clip the wings of a mad democracy
,” wrote
Henry Knox. John Adams, retreating from his 1776 radicalism, concurred: “There nev
er was a
democracy that did not commit suicide.”36 “The people!” Hamilton snorted. “The people is
a great
beast.”37
Yet it should not be assumed that this antidemocratic language was monarchical o
r anti-
Revolutionary in nature, because Hamilton himself would also refer to “the majesty
of the
multitude.” Rather, the nationalist criticism reflected a belief in republicanism
as a compromise
before the tyranny of a monarch and what James Madison feared to be a potential “t
yranny of the
majority.” It was a philosophical stance dating back to Aristotle’s distinction betw
een a polis (good
government by the many) and a democracy (abusive government of the many). Nation
alists
concluded that the Spirit of ’76 had become too extreme.
At the state level, nationalists attacked the actions of all-powerful legislatur
es produced by
expanded suffrage. They were also disturbed when seven states issued inflated cu
rrency and
enacted legislation that required creditors to accept these notes (leading to sc
enes in which debtors
literally chased fleeing creditors, attempting to “pay” them in spurious money). Add
itional
“debtors’ laws” granted extensions to farmers who would have otherwise lost their prop
erty
through default during the postwar recession. Reaction to the state-generated in
flation is
explainable in part by the composition of the nationalists, many of whom were th
emselves creditors
in one way or another. But an underlying concern for contractual agreements also
influenced the
nationalists, who saw state meddling in favor of debtors as a potentially debili
tating violation of
property rights.38
When it came to government under the Articles, nationalists aimed their sharpest
jabs at the
unstable leadership caused by term limits and annual elections. A role existed f
or a strong executive
and permanent judiciary, they contended, especially when it came to commercial i
ssues. The
Confederation’s economic policy, like those of the states, had stifled the nation’s
enterprise, a point
they hoped to rectify through taxation of international commerce through import
tariffs.
Significantly, the new nationalists largely espoused the views of Adam Smith, wh
o, although
making the case for less government interference in the economy, also propounded
a viable—but
limited—role for government in maintaining a navy and army capable of protecting t
rade lanes and
national borders.
Weaknesses in the Articles also appeared on the diplomatic front, where America
was being bullied
despite its newly independent status. The British refused to evacuate their post
s in the Old
Northwest, claiming the region would fall into anarchy under the United States.3
9 Farther south,
the Spanish flexed their muscles in the lower Mississippi Valley, closing the po
rt of New Orleans
to the booming American flatboat and keelboat trade. Congress sent nationalist J
ohn Jay to
negotiate a settlement with Spain’s Don Diego de Gardoqui. Far from intimidating t
he Spaniards,
Jay offered to suspend American navigation of the Mississippi for twenty-five ye
ars in return for a
trade agreement favorable to his northeastern constituents! Western antinational
ists were furious,
but had to admit that without an army or navy, the Confederation Congress was po
werless to coerce
belligerent foreign powers. Nevertheless, Congress could not swallow the Jay-Gar
doqui Treaty, and
scrapped it.40
Mike Fink, King of the River
The complicated issues of politics in the 1780s were paralleled by related, real
-life dramas far
removed from the scenes of government. For example, shortly after John Jay negot
iated with
Spain’s Don Diego de Gardoqui over American trading rights on the inland rivers, B
ig Mike Fink
was pioneering the burgeoning river traffic of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.
Fink gained such a
mighty reputation during America’s surge west of the Appalachians that he was dubb
ed King of the
River.
Back in the days before steam power, the produce of the American frontier—pork, fl
our, corn,
animal skins, and whiskey—was shipped up and down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers
on
thousands of flatboats and keelboats. Flatboats were crude flat-bottomed craft t
hat could travel only
downstream; keelboats were sleeker sixty-foot craft that could be poled upstream
by the Herculean
efforts of their crewmen. Early rivermen lived hard lives, enduring the hazards
of ice, fog, snags,
sandbars, waterfalls, and even Indian attacks as they plied their trade in the e
arly West. Upon sale
of their cargoes in Natchez or New Orleans, most rivermen walked back to their O
hio Valley
homes via the Natchez Trace, braving the elements and attacks from outlaws.
Mike Fink so captured the public imagination that oral legends of his exploits s
pread far and wide
and ultimately found their way into print in newspapers and almanacs. According
to these stories,
Fink was “half horse, half alligator” and could “outrun, out-hop, out-jump, throw down
, drag out,
and lick any man in the country!” In some tales, Fink outfoxed wily farmers and bu
sinessmen,
cheating them out of money and whiskey. He could ride dangerous bulls, one of wh
ich, he said,
“drug me over every briar and stump in the field.” The most famous and oft-repeated
Mike Fink
story is one in which he, à la William Tell, shoots a “whiskey cup” off a friend’s head.
These are good yarns, and some of them were no doubt true. But who was the real
Mike Fink?
Born near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (at the headwaters of the Ohio River), around
1770, Fink grew
into a fine woodsman, rifleman, and frontier scout. He took up boating around 17
85 and rose in the
trade. He mastered the difficult business of keelboating—poling, rowing, sailing,
and cordelling
(pulling via a rope winch) keelboats upstream for hundreds of miles against the
strong currents of
the western rivers. Fink plied the Ohio and Mississippi during the very time fro
ntier Americans
angrily disputed Spanish control of America’s downriver trade.
By the early 1800s, Fink owned and captained two boats headquartered at Wheeling
, West
Virginia. Working his way west, Fink’s career paralleled that of American expansio
n into the
Mississippi Valley, while at the same time reflecting the coarse and violent nat
ure of the American
frontier. One of the few documented accounts of the historic Mike Fink is an ear
ly nineteenthcentury
St. Louis newspaper story of his shooting the heel off a black man’s foot.
Responding to an advertisement in the March 22, 1822, St. Louis Missouri Republi
can, which
called for “one hundred young men to ascend the Missouri River to its source” and es
tablish a fur
trading outpost in the Montana country, Fink was hired to navigate one of the co
mpany’s keelboats
up the Missouri, working alongside the legendary mountain man Jedediah Smith.
An 1823 feud between Fink and two fellow trappers flared into violence that led
to Fink’s murder.
Thus ended the actual life of the King of the River. But mythical Mike Fink had
only begun to live.
He soon became a folk hero whose name was uttered in the same breath with Daniel
Boone,
Andrew Jackson, and Davy Crockett. Celebrated in folklore and literature, Mike F
ink’s legend was
assured when he made it into a 1956 Walt Disney movie.
Source: Michael Allen, Western Rivermen, 1763–1861: Ohio and Mississippi Boatmen a
nd the
Myth of the Alligator Horse (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1990
), pp. 6–14, 137–
39.
Nationalists held mixed motives in their aggressive critique of government under
the Articles of
Confederation. Honest champions of stronger government, they advanced many valid
political,
economic, military, and diplomatic ideas. Their opponents, perhaps correctly, ca
lled them
reactionaries who sought to enrich their own merchant class. True, critics of th
e Articles of
Confederation represented the commercial and cosmopolitan strata of the new nati
on. It just so
happened that for the most part, the long-range interests of the young United St
ates coincided with
their own.
Throughout the early 1780s, nationalists unsuccessfully attempted to amend the A
rticles.
Congress’s treasury chief, Robert Morris, twice proposed a 5 percent impost tax (a
tariff), but
Rhode Island’s solo resistance defeated the measure. Next he offered a plan for a
privately owned
“national” bank to manage fiscal matters and, again, twelve states concurred, but no
t Rhode Island.
Matters came to a boil in September 1786, when delegates from the five states bo
rdering the
Chesapeake Bay convened in Annapolis, Maryland, ostensibly to discuss shared com
mercial
problems. The nationalists among the Annapolis Convention delegates proceeded to
plant the seed
of a peaceful counterrevolution against the Confederation Congress.41 Delegates
unilaterally called
for a new meeting of representatives of all thirteen states to occur in Philadel
phia in the spring of
1787. Although these nationalists no doubt fully intended to replace the existin
g structure, they
worded their summons to Philadelphia in less threatening tones, claiming only to
seek agreements
on commercial issues and to propose changes that “may require a correspondent adju
stment of
other parts of the federal system.” The broadest interpretation of this language p
oints only to
amending the Articles of Confederation, although Hamilton and his allies had no
such aim. They
intended nothing less than replacing the Articles with a new federal Constitutio
n. In that light,
Rufus King captured the attitudes of many of these former Revolutionaries when h
e wrote of the
delegate selection, “For God’s sake be careful who are the men.”42
The fly in the ointment when it came to making changes to the Articles was the c
lause requiring
unanimous consent among the states to ratify any alterations, which made any pla
n to change them
without such consent illegal. Consequently, the Constitutional Convention and th
e federal
Constitution it produced, technically, were illegal. Yet this was a revolutionar
y age—only ten years
earlier, these same Founders had “illegally” replaced one form of government with an
other. It is not
incongruous, then, that these same patriots would seek to do so again, and, to t
heir credit, they
planned for this change to be nonviolent.43
Still, the nationalists’ call to Philadelphia might have failed but for one event
that followed on the
heels of the Annapolis Convention. Shays’ Rebellion, a tax revolt in Massachusetts
, provided the
catalyst that convinced important leaders to attend the Philadelphia meeting. Un
like other states,
Massachusetts had not passed debtors’ laws, and thousands of farmers faced loss of
their lands to
unpaid creditors. Daniel Shays, a Pelham, Massachusetts, farmer and a retired ca
ptain in the
Continental Army, organized farmers to resist the foreclosures, and under his le
adership armed
bands closed the courts of western Massachusetts, ostensibly to protect their pr
operty. Creditors,
however, saw their own property rights in jeopardy.
By January 1787, Shays’ rebels were on the run. A lone battle in the rebellion occ
urred at
Springfield, in which Massachusetts militia, under Continental general Benjamin
Lincoln, attacked
the Shaysites and dispersed them. After the smoke cleared, four men lay dead and
Shays had fled
the state. Lincoln’s troops arrested some of the rebels, fourteen of whom were tri
ed and sentenced
to death. But the government hardly wanted the blood of these farmers on its han
ds, so it worked
out a compromise in which the governor commuted the men’s sentences and freed them
. Shays’
Rebellion, however, quickly transcended the military and legal technicalities of
the case, becoming
a cause célèbre among nationalists, who pointed to the uprising as a prime example o
f the Articles’
weak governance. Only a stronger government, they argued, could prevent the anar
chy of the
Shaysites from infecting America’s body politic.44
Armed with a new battle cry, nationalists prepared to march to Philadelphia and
conduct their own
revolution. Although the general public had not yet discovered the aims of this “r
evolutionary”
movement, Hamilton, Morris, Adams, Madison, Washington, and their fellow nationa
lists had
formulated a distinct program. They aimed to replace the Articles with a new gov
ernment that
would(1) suborn state sovereignty to that of a national government; (2) replace
legislative
dominance with a more balanced legislative-executive-judicial model; and(3) end
the equality of
states in Congressional decision making with a system of proportional representa
tion. Most
important, they planned to keep their deliberations secret, else, as Francis Hop
kinson noted, “No
sooner will the chicken be hatch’d than every one will be for plucking a feather.”45
Under strict
secrecy, and with clear and noble goals, the American Revolution truly entered i
ts second phase.46
A Republic, If You Can Keep It
Like the swing of a pendulum, momentum began to move in favor of the nationalist
s’ vision. Even
the suspicious Confederation Congress issued a belated February authorization fo
r the Philadelphia
convention, stipulating its “sole and express purpose” was “revising the articles of C
onfederation,”
not replacing them.47 State legislatures appointed delegates, and twelve of the
thirteen sent
representatives (Rhode Island, again, was the exception, leading one legislator
to refer to it as an
“unruly member…a reproach and a byeword”). By May fourteenth, most of the fifty-five d
elegates
(of whom thirty-nine stayed the summer to draft and ratify the completed Constit
ution) had arrived
at the meeting. Their names were so impressive that Jefferson, reading the list
from Paris, called the
Convention “an assembly of demi-gods.”48
Nearly all of the delegates were nationalists. A few who opposed the principles
of nationalism—
most notably Melancton Smith, Luther Martin, and Abraham Yates—refused to sign the
final
document, eventually becoming Anti-Federalists.49 Some opponents, such as Patric
k Henry, Sam
Adams, and Richard Henry Lee (all key instigators of the American Revolution) ha
d refused to
attend in the first place. “I smell a rat,” Henry fumed when informed of the convent
ion. But he
would have served himself and the nation if he had gone to personally investigat
e the odor!
Other delegates who did attend were relatively young (averaging forty-two years
of age) in
comparison to the older Whigs who had fomented the Revolution nearly twenty year
s earlier. Aside
from Washington, Franklin arrived with the most prominent reputation. His famous
and familiar
face, with his innovative bifocals and partially bald head, made him the best-kn
own American in
the world. He had become America’s public philosopher, a trusted soul whose wittic
isms matched
his insight. While in Philadelphia, Franklin, often posing as the voice of reaso
n, brought a distinct
agenda. He had only recently been named president of the Philadelphia Abolition
Society, and in
April 1787 he intended to introduce a proposal calling for a condemnation of sla
very in the final
document. Only through the persuasions of other northern delegates was he convin
ced to withdraw
it.
Franklin stood out from the other delegates in areas other than age as well. Nea
rly a third of the
delegates had held commissions in the Continental Army, and most came from the u
pper tier of
American society—planters, lawyers, merchants, and members of the professional cla
ss. They
were, above all, achievers, and men well familiar with overcoming obstacles in o
rder to attain
success. Contrary to the critiques of historians such as Charles Beard and Howar
d Zinn, who saw
only a monolithic “class” of men manipulating the convention, the fact that most of
the delegates
had been successful in enterprise was to their credit. (Does any society truly w
ant nonachievers,
chronic failures, malcontents, and perennial pessimists drafting the rules by wh
ich all should live?)
Each had blemishes, and even the leaders—Hamilton, Franklin, Madison, Morris, Jame
s Wilson,
Washington (who presided)—possessed flaws, some of them almost insurmountable. But
a rampant
lust for power was not among them. As British historian Paul Johnson noted, “These
were serious,
sensible, undoctrinaire men, gathered together in a pragmatic spirit to do somet
hing practical, and
looking back on a thousand years of political traditions, inherited from England
, which had always
stressed compromise and give-and-take.”50
Sharp differences existed between factions within the convention, not only from
the handful of
antinationalists, who threatened to disrupt any program that seemed odious, but
also from the
natural tensions between farmers and merchants, between slaveholders and free-so
il advocates, and
between Northerners and Southerners. A final source of contention, though, arose
between states
with larger populations, such as Virginia, and those with smaller populations, s
uch as New
Jersey.51
Another split emerged, this one between Madison and Hamilton, over the occupatio
ns of those who
would govern, Hamilton advocating a distinction between what he called the “privat
e interests”
(whether of individual members, states, or localities) and the “public interest” (wh
ich included the
continuation of republican ideals). It boiled down to a simple question, Were me
n governed by
altruistic motives or base self-interest? Washington thought the latter. It was
unrealistic, he
contended, to expect ordinary people to be influenced by “any other principles but
those of
interest.”52 Hamilton agreed, arguing that lawyers comprised the only class with n
o immediate
economic stake in matters. Offering a suggestion that tends to make modern Ameri
cans shudder,
Hamilton said that while the state legislatures should rightly be dominated by m
erchants, planters,
and farmers, the national legislature should be populated by lawyers! For all hi
s insight—French
minister Talleyrand called him the greatest of the “choice and master spirits of t
he age”—Hamilton
failed to foresee that by the middle of the twentieth century, through tort liti
gation, lawyers would
come to have an immediate and extremely lucrative “interest” in certain types of leg
islation, and
that every law passed by the national Congress would require a geometrical incre
ase in the numbers
of attorneys needed to decipher (and attempt to evade) it.
The ultimate irony is that no matter which group triumphed on the other compromi
se issues, it was
the inexorable demand generated by the need to write laws and the concomitant le
galisms that
gradually pushed the farmers and merchants out of the halls of the legislatures
and pulled the
lawyers in. Only toward the end of the twentieth century, when it was almost too
late, did
Americans start to appreciate the dangers posed by a bar that had virtually unli
mited access to the
lawmaking apparatus.
The division over proportional representation versus state representation formed
the basis for two
rival plans of government, the so-called Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan.
Madison,
Washington, and Edmund Randolph had drafted the Virginia Plan, an extreme nation
alist program
that aimed to scrap the Articles and create a powerful republican government in
its place. Their
proposal called for an end to state sovereignty and the creation of a viable nat
ional state comprised
of three equal branches. A president would serve alongside federal judges (with
lifetime terms) and
a bicameral legislature, in which the lower house would be elected proportionate
ly and the upper
house would be selected from a list of nominees sent from the state legislatures
on the basis of
equal representation for the states. According to their plan, the lower house wo
uld give the highly
populated states more representation. Finally, the Virginia Plan proposed a veto
power over state
laws so that, as John Jay said, the states would lose sovereignty and be viewed “i
n the same light in
which counties stand to the state of which they are parts…merely as districts.”53
Even the nationalist-dominated Philadelphia convention opposed such sweeping cha
nge. In June,
opponents rallied around William Paterson’s New Jersey plan, calling for a beefed-
up
confederation type of central government. Small states agreed that the national
government needed
muscle, most especially the powers to tax internally and externally.54 They also
proposed three,
but much less powerful, branches of government. Congress was to appoint a suprem
e court and
plural executive committee, creating the semblance of a three-branch system. Its
most important
feature, though, lay in what the New Jersey plan rejected: proportional represen
tation. Instead,
Paterson proposed a unicameral Congress, with equal representation for each stat
e, with all the
powers of the Confederation Congress.
Delegates began to debate the disparate plans, but all realized the Virginia Pla
n would triumph as
long as its adherents were willing to compromise over the proportional represent
ation feature and
the national veto of state laws. Several compromises ensued, the most important
of which, the
Connecticut Compromise, (or Great Compromise), concerned proportional representa
tion.
Divisions between large and small state factions dissolved as each gained one le
gislative body
tailored to its liking. The House of Representatives, in which members would be
elected directly by
the people, would be based on population determined by a federal census. It repr
esented “the
people” in the broadest sense, and terms of the members were kept at a brief two y
ears, requiring
representatives to face the voters more often than any other elected group. On t
he other hand, the
Senate would represent the interests of the states, with senators chosen by stat
e legislatures for sixyear
terms, one third of whom would come up for election every two years. Clearly, th
e structure of
the compromise not only addressed the concerns of each side, but it spoke to ano
ther overarching
concern—that change be difficult and slow. No matter what burning issue consumed A
mericans, at
any given time only one third of the Senate would be up for reappointment by the
state legislature,
providing a brake on emotion-driven legislation. Their wisdom in this matter has
been magnified
over time. Issues that one moment seemed momentous faded from popular interest i
n years or even
months. Slow the process down, the Founders would say, and many problems will ju
st disappear
without laws.
There was another touch of genius to the numerous staggered terms and differing
sets of
requirements. As the French observer Alexis de Tocqueville later pointed out, “Whe
n elections
recur only at long intervals, the state is exposed to violent agitation every ti
me they take place.
Parties then exert themselves to the utmost…to gain a price which is so rarely wit
hin their reach;
and as the evil is almost irremediable for the candidates who fail, everything i
s to be feared from
their disappointed ambition.”55 For a House seat, the loser of a contest could try
again in two
years, and after the Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution, at least one of
a state’s Senate
seats could be contested every four years. No matter how bad the election, and h
ow massive the
defeat, those out of power knew that political winds changed, and with the singl
e-member district
system, a person only had to win by one vote to win the seat. Thus the system en
couraged a
fundamental political patience that proved so successful that the Democrats, in
the late 1800s,
would go sixty-two years—from Lincoln to Franklin Roosevelt—and elect only three Dem
ocratic
presidents (one of them, Grover Cleveland, twice), while the Republicans, in the
late twentieth
century, went forty years without a majority in the House of Representatives. In
each case, the
party out of power never came close to desperation or violence. Indeed, the oppo
site occurred, in
which unceasing campaigning led to a new quest for office beginning the day afte
r an election.
If arguments over how to count representatives seemed at the top of the delegate
s’ agenda, the
disagreements often only masked an even more important, but unspoken, difference
over slavery
between the members from the northern and the southern sections. Virginia, Georg
ia, and the
Carolinas had sufficient population at the time to block antislavery legislation
under the new
proposed House of Representatives structure, but already ominous trends seemed t
o put the South
on the path to permanent minority status. First, the precedents being set that s
ame summer in the
Northwest Ordinance suggested that slavery would never cross the Ohio River. Mor
e important, the
competition posed by slave labor to free labor, combined with the large plantati
ons guaranteed by
primogeniture, made it a surety that immigration to southern states would consis
tently fall behind
that of the North. Fewer immigrants meant fewer representatives. So the House wa
s in jeopardy in
the foreseeable future. To ensure a continued strong presence in the House, sout
hern delegates
proposed to count slaves for the purposes of representation—a suggestion that outr
aged antislavery
New Englanders, who wanted only to count slaves toward national taxes levied on
the states by the
new government. (Indians would not count for either representation or taxation.)
On June 11, 1787, Pennsylvanian James Wilson who personally opposed slavery, int
roduced a
compromise in which, for purposes of establishing apportionment and for taxation
, a slave would
be counted as three fifths of a free inhabitant.56 (The taxation aspect of the c
ompromise was never
invoked: the new secretary of the treasury, Alexander Hamilton, had a different
plan in place, so it
became a moot element of the compromise, essentially giving the South an inflate
d count in the
House at no cost). At any rate, Wilson’s phrase referred obliquely to “free inhabita
nts” and all other
persons not comprehended in the foregoing description, and therefore “slavery” does
not appear in
the founding document.57
Putting aside the disturbing designation of a human as only three fifths of the
value of another, the
South gained a substantial advantage through the agreement. Based on the percent
age of voting
power by the five major slave states—Georgia, Maryland, Virginia, and the two Caro
linas—the
differential appeared as follows: (1) under the one-state-one-vote proposal, 38
percent; (2) counting
all inhabitants (except Indians), 50 percent; (3) counting only free inhabitants
, 41 percent; and (4)
using the eventual three-fifths compromise numbers, 47 percent.58 This amounted
to no less than a
tacit agreement to permanently lock a slave block into near-majority status, “perp
etually protecting
an institution the Fathers liked to call temporary.”59
Delegates to the Constitutional Convention thus arrived at the point at which th
ey all knew they
would come. Americans had twice before skirted the issue of slavery or avoided d
ealing with it. In
1619, when black slaves were first unloaded off ships, colonists had the opportu
nity and
responsibility to insist on their emancipation, immediately and unconditionally,
yet they did not.
Then again, in 1776, when Jefferson drafted the Declaration of Independence and
included the
indictment of Great Britain’s imposition of slavery on the colonies, pressure from
South Carolina
and other southern states forced him to strike it from the final version. Now, i
n 1787, the young
Republic had a third opportunity (perhaps its last without bloodshed) to deal wi
th slavery. Its
delegates did not.
Several examples can be cited to suggest that many of the delegates thought slav
ery was already
headed for extinction. In 1776 the Continental Congress had reiterated a prohibi
tion in the
nonimportation agreement against the importation of African slaves, despite repe
aling the rest.
During the war, various proposals were submitted to the Congress to offer freedo
m after the
conflict to slaves who fought for the Revolution. Southern colonies blocked thes
e. After the war,
several northern states, including New Hampshire (1779), Pennsylvania (1780), Ma
ssachusetts
(1783), Rhode Island (1784), and Connecticut (1784) all expressly forbade slaver
y in their
constitutions, adopted immediate or gradual emancipation plans, or had courts de
clare slavery
unconstitutional.60 Most encouraging to anti-slave forces, however, in 1782 Virg
inia passed a law
allowing slave owners discretion on freeing their slaves.
Jefferson’s own Notes on the State of Virginia imagined a time after 1800 when all
slaves would be
free, and Madison labeled proslavery arguments in 1790 “shamefully indecent,” callin
g slavery a
“deep-rooted abuse.”61 Founders such as Hamilton, who helped start the New York Manu
mission
Society, and Franklin, whose last major public debate involved a satirical lamba
sting of slavery,
had established their antislavery credentials. Perhaps the most radical (and sur
prising) was
Washington, who, alone among the southern Founders, projected an America that in
cluded both
Indians and freed slaves as citizens in a condition of relative equality. He eve
n established funds to
support the children of his (wife’s) slaves after her death and, in his last will
and testament, freed
his own slaves.62
The compromise over slavery did not come without a fight. Gouverneur Morris, one
of the most
outspoken critics of slavery at the convention, attacked Wilson’s fractional formu
la and asked of
the slaves counted under the three-fifths rule, “Are they admitted as Citizens? Th
en why are they
not admitted on an equality with White Citizens? Are they admitted as property?
Then why is not
other property admitted to the computation?”63 Massachusetts’ Elbridge Gerry, later
made famous
for gerrymandering, the creative shaping of legislative districts for political
gain, echoed this line of
thinking, sarcastically asking why New Englanders would not be allowed to count
their cattle if
Georgians could count their slaves.64
Morris and others (including Jefferson) recognized that slavery promised to inje
ct itself into every
aspect of American life. Consider “comity,” the principle that one state accept the
privileges and
immunities of other states to encourage free travel and commerce between them. A
rticle IV
required states to give “full faith and credit” to laws and judicial decisions of ot
her states. Fugitives
from justice were to be returned for trial to the state of the crime, for exampl
e. Almost immediately,
conflicts arose when slaves escaped to northern states, which then refused to ob
lige southern
requests for their return. Northern free blacks working in the merchant marine f
ound themselves
unable to disembark from their ships in southern ports for fear of enslavement,
regardless of their
legal status. Seven southern coastal states actually imprisoned free black sailo
rs upon their arrival
in port.65 At the time, however, the likelihood that the southerners would cause
the convention to
collapse meant that the delegates had to adopt the three-fifths provision and de
al with the
consequences later. Realistically, it was the best they could do, although it wo
uld take seventyeight
years, a civil war, and three constitutional amendments to reverse the three-fif
ths
compromise.66
Modern historians have leaped to criticize the convention’s decision, and one coul
d certainly apply
the colloquial definition of a compromise as: doing less than what you know is r
ight. Historian
Joseph Ellis noted that “the distinguishing feature of the [Constitution] when it
came to slavery was
its evasiveness.”67 But let’s be blunt: to have pressed the slavery issue in 1776 wo
uld have killed
the Revolution, and to have pressed it in 1787 would have aborted the nation. Wh
en the ink dried
on the final drafts, the participants had managed to agree on most of the import
ant issues, and
where they still disagreed, they had kept those divisions from distracting them
from the task at
hand. More important, the final document indeed represented all: “In 560 roll-call
s, no state was
always on the losing side, and each at times was part of the winning coalition.”68
The framers were
highly focused only on Republic building, acting on the assumption that the Unio
n was the highest
good, and that ultimately all problems, including slavery, would be resolved if
they could only keep
the country together long enough.
From the outset, the proceedings had perched perilously on the verge of collapse
, making the final
document indeed a miracle. When the convention ended, a woman buttonholed Frankl
in and asked
what kind of government the nation had. “A Republic, madam,” Franklin replied, “if you
can keep
it.”
Federalism Redefined
The completed constitution represented a marked transformation in the American s
ystem of
federalism. Defined in the early state constitutions, “federalism” meant a belief in
separate
governments—state, local, national, with state sovereignty—but the 1787 document tur
ned the
system upside down. Article VI is an uncompromising statement that the laws of C
ongress are “the
supreme law of the land.” Nevertheless, the purpose of this power—the preservation o
f liberty—
remained evident throughout the document.
This achievement required the delegates to endow the national government with a
grant of specific,
crucial “enumerated powers,” including the authority to tax internally and externall
y (via excises
and tariffs), regulate foreign and interstate commerce, enforce contracts and pr
operty rights, raise
armies in time of peace and war, make treaties, and make all laws “necessary and p
roper” to carry
out these enumerated powers. Conversely, the states could no longer levy tariff
and customs duties,
coin and print money, or impair contracts (via debtors’ laws). These changes had c
rucial, farreaching
consequences.
Under the three-branched federal government, which boasted the checks and balanc
es for which the
Federalists are rightly famous, Article II created a first-ever American nationa
l executive, the
president of the United States. Elected indirectly by an electoral college (a sh
ield against direct
democracy and the domination of large population centers), the president was to
serve a four-year
term with the option of perpetual reelection. He had authority to appoint all ex
ecutive officials and
federal judges, with the approval of the Senate. Most important, the president w
as to be the major
architect of American foreign policy, serving as the civilian commander in chief
of the military
forces and generally designing and executing foreign policy with the advice and
consent of the
Senate. Perhaps the most significant power given the president was the executive’s
ability to veto
congressional laws, subject to an override vote by Congress of two thirds of the
members,
“checking” an otherwise mighty chief executive.
In retrospect, despite concern raised at numerous points in America’s history abou
t an “imperial”
presidency or a chief executive’s wielding “dictator’s powers,” the Founders cleverly av
oided the
bloody instability that characterized many European nations like France, and the
complete
powerlessness that afflicted other foreign executives in places like the 1920s G
erman Weimar
Republic, site of the ill-considered splitting of executive authority. And if Am
erican presidents
have aggrandized their power, it is largely because Congress, the courts, and mo
st of all, the
people, have willingly tolerated unconstitutional acquisitiveness. Ironically, t
his has occurred
largely because of the very success and integrity of the process: Americans tend
to think, despite
frequent rhetoric to the contrary, that their leaders are not “crooks,” nor do they
view them as
power mad. The expansion of presidential power has, then, relied on the reality
that, over time, the
large majority of chief executives have done their job with a degree of humility
, recognizing that
the people remain sovereign in the end.
Article III outlined a first-ever national judiciary. Federal judges would have
the jurisdiction over
all federal and interstate legal disputes. They would serve lifetime terms on co
ndition of good
behavior, and federal district courts would hear cases that could be appealed to
federal circuit
courts and, ultimately, to the Supreme Court of the United States. It is importa
nt to note that the
Constitution in no way granted the federal courts the power of judicial review,
or an ultimate
interpretive power over constitutional issues. Modern federal courts possess thi
s huge power thanks
to a long series of precedents beginning with the 1803 case of Marbury v. Madiso
n. If the Founders
intended courts to possess this ultimate constitutional authority, they did not
say so in the
Constitution. Moreover, the federal courts’ authority was simultaneously checked b
y Congress’s
prerogative to impeach federal judges (and the president) for “high crimes and mis
demeanors,” and
a score of federal judges have been impeached and removed for offenses such as p
erjury as recently
as the 1980s.
Article I, the most complex section of the Constitution, outlined the legislativ
e branch of
government. Congressmen would serve in the House of Representatives at a number
proportional to
their states’ census figures, with the three-fifths clause intact. Representatives
were to be elected
directly by the people to two-year terms and, unlike the Confederation legislato
rs, would have the
option of perpetual reelection. The House members’ chief authority, the power of t
he purse,
descended from English and colonial precedent that tax and revenue measures had
to emanate from
the House of Representatives.
The United States Senate is the second legislative component. Each state legisla
ture elected two
senators to serve six-year terms with the option of perpetual reelection. Older
than congressmen,
senators ruled on bills passed by the House. Most important, the Senate had the
approval power
over all presidential appointees, and also had ratification power over treaties.
Both houses of
Congress had to agree to declare war, and both were involved in removal of a pre
sident should the
need arise: if a federal judge or the president committed high crimes and misdem
eanors, articles of
impeachment were to be voted out of the House, with the subsequent trial in the
Senate, where
senators served as jurors.
Surveying the Constitution, it is apparent that the nationalistic proponents of
the Virginia Plan
carried the day. No branch of the federal government had ultimate veto power ove
r state legislation,
as ardent nationalists advocated, and the Connecticut Compromise guaranteed a de
gree of state
equality and power in the Senate. Yet the new Constitution marked a radical depa
rture from the old
Confederation model, and ultimately the nationalists gained a veto of sorts thro
ugh the
extraconstitutional practice of judicial review. Opponents of centralized govern
mental authority
were awed by the proposed document, and many doubted that the public would ratif
y and institute
such a powerful central government so soon after overthrowing a monarch.
The ratification stipulations enumerated in the final article thus carried great
importance. How
would the proposed governmental plan be debated and voted upon? Had the delegate
s followed the
letter of the law, they would have been forced to submit the new Constitution to
the Confederation
Congress in vain hope of the unanimous approval necessary to legally change the
government. Of
course, the nationalists had no intention of obeying such a law. The Constitutio
n instead contained
its own new rules, calling each state to convene a special convention to debate
and ratify or defeat
the proposed governmental plan. If nine states (not thirteen) ratified, the Cons
titution stipulated a
new government would form.69
Having thus erected their grand plan to reshape American republicanism, the nati
onalists returned
to their home states to labor on behalf of its ratification. They did so well aw
are that the majority of
Americans were highly suspicious of the term “nationalism.” Politically aware citize
ns thought of
themselves as Whigs who backed the kind of federalism represented by the Confede
ration and the
New Jersey Plan. In modern parlance, then, an image makeover was due. Nationalis
ts shrewdly
began, in direct contradiction to historical and constitutional precedent, to re
fer to themselves and
their philosophy as federalism, not nationalism. Naturally, their Federalist opp
onents were aghast to
hear their political enemies using the name Federalists for their own purposes a
nd, worse, to hear
the original federalism now redefined by the new Federalists as Anti-Federalism!
Two rival
political factions had formed and the debate was on, but one already had perceiv
ed that control of
the language is everything in politics.70
Revolutionary and Early National Political Factions and Parties, 1781–1815
1776–1787
Federalists vs. Nationalists
1787–1793
Anti-Federalists vs. Federalists
1793–1815
Jeffersonian Republicans vs. Federalists
The Ratification Debate
The call for special ratifying conventions perfectly met the new Federalists’ prac
tical needs and
ideological standards, for they suspected they would lose a popular vote, a vote
in the
Confederation Congress, or a vote of the state legislatures. Their only hope lay
in a new venue
where they had a level playing field and could use their powers of persuasion an
d growing
command of the language of politics to build momentum. Their pragmatism dovetail
ed nicely with
ideological precedents that turned the tables on the radicals, who had always ar
gued that
constitutional law was fundamental law and should be approved by specially selec
ted governmental
bodies, not common state legislatures. Nearly all of the new state constitutions
were ratified by
special conventions, which added to the leverage of precedent. Combining the ide
ological
precedents with a rhetorical call for the sovereignty of the people, Federalist
orators masterfully
crafted a best-case scenario for their cause. They portrayed the special ratifyi
ng conventions as the
best means of voicing the direct will of the people, and did this while studious
ly avoiding both a
direct democratic vote and circumventing established elected bodies that stood a
gainst them. Their
strategy was nothing less than a political tour de force.71
Each state proceeded to select delegates in different ways. In four states, vote
rs directly elected
delegates, whereas in the remainder (except Rhode Island), delegates served by a
vote of state
legislators or executive appointment. Only Rhode Island held a direct voter refe
rendum on the
Constitution. The Federalists knew that by moving quickly they could frame the r
atification
process, and they won controlling majorities in five of the thirteen states. Eac
h of those states
ratified the document within a few weeks. Using this initial support as a base,
the Federalists
continued to wage a propaganda campaign calling for sovereignty of the people ov
er the state
legislatures and outflanking the less articulate Anti-Federalist majority.
Much printer’s ink has been spilled by historians arguing about the relative merit
s of the positions
held by the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists. Prior to the twentieth century
, the Federalists held
an elevated position in the minds of most Americans who were conscious of histor
y. But in 1913,
Charles Beard’s Economic Interpretation of the Constitution delivered a broadside
accelerated by
economic principles of class struggle.72 Beard argued that the Federalists, acti
ng on their own selfinterest
as planters and businessmen, greedily plotted to ensure their own economic supre
macy.
Using voting records of the delegates, and examining their backgrounds, Beard co
ncluded there
was little concern for the public interest by these founders. In 1958, Forrest M
cDonald dismantled
Beard’s economic determinism, only to be countered by Robert McGuire and Robert Oh
sfelt’s
voting-model analysis.73
It goes without saying that Beard is correct to identify the Anti-Federalists as
farmers and middleclass
workingmen, but this definition bridges a wide range of the population in 1787,
including
subsistence farmers in western Pennsylvania and upstate New York alongside elite
southern
planters who led the movement. Patrick Henry, Richard Henry Lee, William Grayson
, and James
Monroe, firm Anti-Federalist leaders, were as wealthy as any in the Federalist c
amp, and were
joined by Sam Adams (a chronic bankrupt), Melancton Smith, Luther Martin, and Ne
w York’s
George Clinton. Thomas Jefferson, arguably the best known Anti-Federalist of all
, did not join the
movement until the early 1790s and, at any rate, was out of the country from 178
7–88.
And yet, Beard’s definitions and the complaints by Howard Zinn and his disciples w
rongly assume
that people were (and are) incapable of acting outside of self-interest. Had not
the great Washington
argued as much? Yet Washington had to look no further than his own life to reali
ze the error of his
position: he was on track to gain a general officer’s commission in the British ar
my, replete with
additional land grants for dutiful service to His Majesty. Instead, Washington t
hrew it away to lead
a ragtag army of malcontents into the snow of Valley Forge and the icy waters of
the Delaware.
Self-interest indeed! What self-interest caused Francis Lewis, a signer of the D
eclaration, to lose
his properties and see his wife taken prisoner by the British? How does self-int
erest account for the
fate of Judge Richard Stockton, a delegate from New Jersey to the Continental Co
ngress, who spent
time in British jails and whose family had to live off charity—all because he dare
d sign the
Declaration? On the other hand, Patrick Henry, Richard Henry Lee, and others all
stood to gain
handsomely from the growing value of slave labor in the new Constitution—the one t
hey opposed!
In sum, no matter how Beard and his successors torture the statistics, they cann
ot make the
Constitutional Convention scream “class struggle.”74 The debate was genuine; it was
about
important ideas, and men took positions not for what they gained financially but
for what they saw
as the truth.
After a slow start, the Anti-Federalists rallied and launched an attack on the p
roposed Constitution.
Employing arguments that sounded strikingly Whiggish, Anti-Federalists spoke of
the Federalists
in the same language with which they had condemned the British monarchy in the p
revious decade.
They described the Constitution as a document secretly produced by lawyers and a
hated
“aristocratic monied interest” that aimed to rob Americans of their hard-won liberti
es. Echoing
Montesquieu and other Enlightenment thinkers, they insisted government should re
main close to
home, and that the nation would be too large to govern from a “federal town.” Richar
d Henry Lee
captured the emotion of the Constitution’s opponents, calling the document “dangerou
sly
oligarchic” and the work of a “silent, powerful and ever active conspiracy of those
who govern.”75
Patrick Henry warned Americans to “Guard with jealous attention the public liberty
. Suspect
everyone who approaches that jewel.”76 James Monroe, the future president, worried
that the
document would lead to a monarchical government.
Anti-Federalists expressed shock at the extent of the taxation and warfare power
s. One delegate
asked, “After we have given them all our money, established them in a federal town
, given them
the power of coining money and raising a standing army to establish their arbitr
ary government;
what resources [will] the people have left?”77 Anti-Federalists furiously attacked
the Federalists’
three-tiered system, arguing that the proposed constitutional districts did not
allow for direct
representation, that congressmen should be elected annually, and that the propos
ed Senate was
undemocratic. They saw the same aristocratic tendency in the proposed federal ju
diciary, with its
life terms. And, of course, because Whigs feared executive authority, Anti-Feder
alists were
appalled at the specter of an indirectly elected president serving unlimited ter
ms and commanding a
standing army. Cato, one of the most widely read Anti-Federalists, predicted suc
h a system would
degenerate into arbitrary conscription of troops for the army.
However, the Anti-Federalists’ most telling criticism, and the one for which Ameri
can civilization
will forever remain in their debt, was their plea for a bill of rights. Federali
sts, who believed the
state constitutions adequately protected civil liberties, were stunned by this l
ibertarian critique of
their work. Jefferson, who had studiously avoided the debate, wrote from France
that “a bill of
rights is what a people are entitled to against every government on earth, gener
al or particular, and
what no just government should refuse or rest on inference.”78 To grant such sweep
ing powers
without simultaneously protecting life, liberty, and property seemed like madnes
s. Political rhetoric
aside, Anti-Federalists were amazed at what they saw as a direct assault on the
principles of the
Revolution. One Anti-Federalist, writing as Centinel, spoke for all his brethren
when he expressed
“astonishment” that “after so recent a triumph over British despots…a set of men amongst
ourselves should have the effrontery to attempt the destruction of our liberties
.”79
Obviously, the Anti-Federalists opposed many things, but what were they for? By
1787–88 most of
them supported a Confederation government revised along the lines of the New Jer
sey Plan. They
maintained that no crisis actually existed—that the nation was fine and that a few
adjustments to
the Articles would cure whatever maladies existed. But the Anti-Federalists wait
ed too long to
agree to any amendment of the Articles, and they lost their opportunity. Even so
me of their leading
spokesmen, such as Patrick Henry, unwittingly undercut the sovereign-state posit
ion when he
wrote, “The question turns…on that poor little thing—the expression, We, the People in
stead of the
United States of America.”80 With that statement, Henry reinforced Jefferson’s own a
ssertion in
the Declaration that the people of the colonies—and not the colonies themselves—sepa
rated from
England. By invoking “the people” as opposed to the “states,” Henry also stated a positi
on not far
from that of Lincoln in 1861, when he argued that disunion was no more possible
than cutting a
building in half and thinking it would still keep out the rain. The Federalists
saw their opening and
brilliantly sidestepped the question of state-versus-federal sovereignty by argu
ing that the
Constitution made the people sovereign, not the state or the federal government.
Far from being the traitors or aristocrats alleged by their opponents, the Feder
alists showed that
they too had inherited the ideology of the Revolution, but only that they took f
rom it different
political lessons. Through a series of eighty-five Federalist Papers (written as
newspaper articles by
Hamilton, Madison, and Jay under the pseudonym Publius), they demonstrated the d
epth and
sophistication of their political philosophy.81 Hamilton, ever the republican ce
ntralist, saw the
Constitution as a way to foster a vigorous centralized republic (not a democracy
) that would
simultaneously promote order and economic liberty in the Lockean tradition.
Madison emerged as the most significant of the three Federalist Papers authors i
n one respect: he
correctly analyzed the necessity of political parties (“factions,” as he called them
) and understood
their role. An extensive republic, especially one as large as the United States
would become,
inevitably would divide society into a “greater variety of interests, of pursuits,
of passions, which
check each other.” Factions, then, should be encouraged. They provided the competi
tion that tested
and refined ideas. More important, they demanded that people inform themselves a
nd take a side,
rather than sliding listlessly into murky situations they did not choose to unde
rstand out of laziness.
Modern Americans are assaulted by misguided calls for “bipartisanship,” a code word
for one side
ceding its ideas to the party favored by the media. In fact, however, Madison de
tested compromise
that involved abandoning principles, and in any event, thought that the Republic
was best served
when factions presented extreme differences to the voters, rather than shading t
heir positions
toward the middle. The modern moderate voters—so highly praised in the media—would h
ave
been anathema to Madison, who wanted people to take sides as a means of creating
checks and
balances.
His emphasis on factions had another highly practical purpose that, again, refle
cted on his
fundamental distrust of human nature; namely, factions splintered power among gr
oups so that no
group dominated others. Like Hamilton then, and later Tocqueville and Thoreau, M
adison dreaded
the “tyranny of the majority,” and feared that mobs could just as easily destroy per
sonal rights as
could any monarch. Madison demanded an intellectual contest of ideas, and recogn
ized that the
Constitution’s separation of powers only represented one layer of protections agai
nst despotism.
The vigorous competition of political parties constituted a much more important
safeguard.82
Hamilton shared Madison’s dark view of human nature, but where Madison stressed pe
rsonal
liberties, Hamilton thought more in terms of the national interest and the dange
rs posed by the
Articles. Portrayed as more radical than Madison—one author referred to Hamilton a
s the Rousseau
of the Right—the New Yorker has often been viewed as a voice for elitism. In fact,
Hamilton
sought the alliance of government with elites because they needed to be enlisted
in the service of
the government on behalf of the people, a course they would not take if left to
their own devices.
To accomplish that, he intended to use the Treasury of the new republic, and its
financial/debt
structure, to encourage the wealthy to align themselves with the interests of th
e nation.83
Only the wealthy could play that role: middle-class merchants, farmers, or artis
ans were too
transient and, at any rate, did not have enough surplus to invest in the nation.
Permanent stability
required near-perpetual investment, which in turn required structuring property
laws so that the
wealthy would not hesitate to place their resources at the disposal of the gover
nment. Hamilton also
argued that the new government would thrive once the “power of the sword” (a standin
g army) was
established, opening the door for his detractors to label him both a militarist
and a monarchist,
whereas in reality he was a pragmatist.
Taken together, the ideas of Madison and Hamilton further divided power, and whe
n laid atop the
already decentralized and balanced branches, added still more safeguards to the
system of multiple
levels of voting restrictions, staggered elections, and an informed populace—all o
f which provided
a near-impenetrable shield of republican democracy. Laminating this shield, and
hardening it still
further, was the added security of religious conviction and righteousness that w
ould not only keep
elected and appointed officials in line on a personal level, but would infuse th
e voting public with a
morality regarding all issues. At least, this was the plan, as devised by the Fe
deralist Founders.
State after state cast votes, and the Federalists advanced to a dramatic victory
. Five states—
Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia, and Connecticut—ratified the Constitu
tion within
three months of first viewing the document. Anti-Federalists claimed the voters
had not been given
enough time to debate and assess the proposal, but the Federalists brushed away
their objections
and the Constitution sailed through. The process slowed in Massachusetts, New Yo
rk, North
Carolina, New Hampshire, and Virginia. In those states, Anti-Federalist majoriti
es attacked the
documents, but the Federalists answered them point by point.
As the spring and summer of 1788 wore on, the Anti-Federalist cause gradually lo
st support. In
some states, tacit and written agreements between the factions traded Anti-Feder
alist support for a
written bill of rights. New Hampshire’s June twenty-first ratification technically
made the
Constitution official, although no one was comfortable treating it as such until
New York and
Virginia had weighed in. Washington helped swing Virginia, stating flatly that “th
ere is no
alternative between the adoption of [the Constitution] and anarchy,” and “it or disu
nion is before us
to choose from.”84 Virginia, thanks to Washington’s efforts, ratified on June twenty
-fifth, and New
York followed a month later. Despite North Carolina’s and Rhode Island’s opposition,
the
Constitution became the “law of the land.”85 The Constitution was “a Trojan horse of r
adical social
and economic transformation,” placing once and for all the principles espoused by
Jefferson in the
Declaration into a formal code whose intent was usually, though not always, obvi
ous.86
The Anti-Federalist Legacy
Given the benefit of hindsight, it is remarkable that the Anti-Federalists fared
as well as they did.
They lost the battle, but not the war. In 1787–88, the Anti-Federalists lacked the
economic
resources, organizational skill, and political vision to win a national struggle
. Nor did they have the
media of the day: of one hundred Revolutionary newspapers, eighty-eight were sol
idly in the
Federalist camp. This proved advantageous when Virginians read false Federalist
newspaper
reports that New York had ratified on the eve of their own state’s narrow vote! Mo
reover, Franklin,
Jay, Hamilton, John Marshall, and General Washington himself—the cream of Revoluti
onary
society—all backed the Constitution and worked for its ratification. On the other
hand, the Anti-
Federalists were lesser-known men who were either aged or less politically activ
e at the time (for
example, Sam Adams, George Mason, and Patrick Henry) or young and just getting s
tarted in their
political careers (James Monroe and John Randolph).
And, ironically, the Anti-Federalists’ love of localism and states’ rights sealed th
eir fate. This first
national political election demanded a national campaign organization and strate
gy—the kind that
typifies our own two-party system in the present day. Anti-Federalists, though,
tended to cling to
local allegiances; they were fearful of outsiders and ill equipped to compete on
a national stage. To
their credit, when they lost, they grudgingly joined the victors in governing th
e new nation.87 Yet
the Anti-Federalists’ radicalism did not disappear after 1788. Instead, they shift
ed their field of
battle to a strategy of retaining local sovereignty through a philosophy constit
utional historians call
strict construction. This was an application of the narrowest possible interpret
ation of the
Constitution, and the Anti-Federalists were aided in arriving at strict construc
tion through their
greatest legacy, the Bill of Rights.
Following ratification, leaders of both factions agreed to draft amendments to t
he Constitution.88
Madison took charge of the project that started him on the path on which he soon
transformed from
a Federalist to an Anti-Federalist leader. Strong precedents existed for a bill
of rights. The English
Magna Charta, Petition of Right, and Bill of Rights enumerated, in various ways,
protections
against standing armies and confiscation of property, and guaranteed a number of
legal rights that
jointly are referred to as due process. These precedents had taken form in most
of the
Revolutionary state constitutions, most famously Virginia’s Declaration of Rights,
penned by
George Mason. Madison studied all of these documents carefully and conferred wit
h Anti-
Federalist leaders. He then forged twelve proposed constitutional amendments, wh
ich Congress
sent to the states in 1789. The states ratified ten of them by 1791.
The First Amendment combined several rights—speech, press, petition, assembly, and
religion—
into one fundamental law guaranteeing freedom of expression. While obliquely rel
ated to religious
speech, the clear intent was to protect political speech. This, after all, was w
hat concerned the Anti-
Federalists about the power of a national government—that it would suppress dissen
ting views. The
amendment strongly implied, however, that even those incapable of oral speech we
re protected
when they financially supported positions through advertising, political tracts,
and broadsides. Or,
put simply, money equals speech.
However, the Founders hardly ignored religion, nor did they embrace separation o
f church and
state, a buzz phrase that never appears in the Constitution or the Bill of Right
s. Madison had long
been a champion of religious liberty. He attended the College of New Jersey (lat
er Princeton),
where he studied under the Reverend John Witherspoon. In May 1776, when Virginia
lawmakers
wrote the state’s new constitution, Madison changed George Mason’s phrase that “all me
n should
enjoy the fullest toleration” of religion to “all men are entitled to the full and f
ree exercise of
religion” [emphasis ours].
Madison thus rejected the notion that the exercise of faith originated with gove
rnment, while at the
same time indicating that he expected a continual and ongoing practice of religi
ous worship. He
resisted attempts to insert the name Jesus Christ into the Virginia Bill for Rel
igious Liberty, not
because he was an unbeliever, but because he argued that “better proof of reverenc
e for that holy
name would be not to profane it by making it a topic of legislative discussion.” L
ate in his life
Madison wrote, “Belief in a God All Powerful wise and good, is so essential to the
moral order of
the World and the happiness of man, that arguments to enforce it cannot be drawn
from too many
sources.” Even at the time, though, he considered the widespread agreement within
the
Constitutional Convention “a miracle” and wrote, “It is impossible for the man of piou
s reflection
not to perceive in [the convention] a finger of that Almighty hand.”89
Religious, and especially Christian, influences in the Constitution and the Bill
of Rights were so
predominant that as late as the mid-twentieth century, the chairman of the Sesqu
icentennial
Commission on the Constitution answered negatively when asked if an atheist coul
d become
president: “I maintain that the spirit of the Constitution forbids it. The Constit
ution prescribes and
oath of affirmation…[that] in its essence is a covenant with the people which the
President pledges
himself to keep with the help of Almighty God.”90 Modern interpretations of the Co
nstitution that
prohibit displays of crosses in the name of religious freedom would rightly have
been shouted
down by the Founders, who intended no such separation.
The Second Amendment addressed Whig fears of a professional standing army by gua
ranteeing the
right of citizens to arm themselves and join militias. Over the years, the milit
ia preface has become
thoroughly (and often, deliberately) misinterpreted to imply that the framers in
tended citizens to be
armed only in the context of an army under the authority of the state. In fact,
militias were the exact
opposite of a state-controlled army: the state militias taken together were expe
cted to serve as a
counterweight to the federal army, and the further implication was that citizens
were to be as well
armed as the government itself!91 The Third Amendment buttressed the right of ci
vilians against
the government military by forbidding the quartering (housing) of professional t
roops in private
homes.
Amendments Four through Eight promised due process via reasonable bail, speedy t
rials (by a jury
of peers if requested), and habeas corpus petitions. They forbade self-incrimina
tion and arbitrary
search and seizure, and proclaimed, once again, the fundamental nature of proper
ty rights. The
Ninth Amendment, which has lain dormant for two hundred years, states that there
might be other
rights not listed in the amendments that are, nevertheless, guaranteed by the Co
nstitution. But the
most controversial amendment, the Tenth, echoes the second article of the Articl
es of
Confederation in declaring that the states and people retain all rights and powe
rs not expressly
granted to the national government by the Constitution. It, too, has been relati
vely ignored.
These ten clear statements were intended by the framers as absolute limitations
on the power of
government, not on the rights of individuals. In retrospect, they more accuratel
y should be known
as the Bill of Limitations on government to avoid the perception that the rights
were granted by
government in the first place.92
Two streams of liberty flowed from 1776. First, the Federalists synthesized Whig
opposition to
centralized military, economic, political, and religious authority into a progra
m built upon
separation of power, checks and balances, and staggered terms of office, which s
imultaneously
preserved many state and local prerogatives. Second, the Anti-Federalists comple
ted the process
with the Bill of Rights, which further reinforced laws that protected states, lo
calities, and
individuals from central government coercion. Both these streams flowed through
an American
Christianity that emphasized duty, civic morality, skeptical questioning of temp
oral authority, and
economic success. In addition, both streams were fed by Enlightenment can-do doc
trines tempered
by the realization that men were fallible, leading to an emphasis on competition
, political parties,
and the marketplace of ideas.
But it was a close-run thing. As Adams recalled, “All the great critical questions
about men and
measures from 1774 to 1778” were “decided by the vote of a single state, and that vo
te was often
decided by a single individual.”93 It was by no means inevitable. Nevertheless, th
e fountain of
hope had turned to a river of liberty, nourishing the new nation as it grew and
prospered.
CHAPTER FIVE
Small Republic, Big Shoulders, 1789–1815
George Washington’s famed 1796 Farewell Address contains one plea that, in retrosp
ect, seems
remarkably futile: the president expressed frustration over the ongoing politica
l strife and the rise of
permanent political parties. It was an odd statement, considering that if anyone
created parties (or
factions, as James Madison had termed them), it was Washington, along with his b
rilliant aide
Alexander Hamilton, through his domestic program and foreign policy. They had as
sistance from
the Federalist Papers coauthor Madison, who relished divisions among political g
roups as a means
to balance power. Washington’s warnings reflected his sorrow over the bitter debat
es that
characterized politics throughout his two administrations, more so because the d
ebates had made
enemies of former colleagues Hamilton, Madison, Jefferson, and Adams. By 1796 mo
st of those
men could not stand each other: only Jefferson and Madison still got along, and
Washington, before
his death, ceased corresponding with his fellow Virginian, Jefferson. Other Foun
ders chose sides
among these powerhouses.
Washington thought good men could disagree without the venom of politics overrid
ing all other
interests. He hoped that a band of American Revolutionaries could achieve consen
sus over what
their Revolution was all about. In fact, Washington might well have voiced as mu
ch pride as regret
over the unfolding events of the 1790s because he and his generation shaped an A
merican political
party system that endures, in recognizable form, to this day, and because the em
ergence of those
factions, of which he so strongly disapproved, in large part guaranteed the succ
ess and moderation
of that system.
From 1789 to 1815, clashes between Federalists and Anti-Federalists translated i
nto a continuing
and often venomous debate over the new nation’s domestic and foreign policies. Pol
itical parties
first appeared in this era, characterized by organized congressional leadership,
party newspapers
whose editorials established party platforms and attacked the opposition, and th
e nomination of
partisan national presidential candidates. Washington’s cabinet itself contained t
he seeds of this
partisanship. Secretary of State Jefferson rallied the old Anti-Federalists unde
r the banner of limited
government and a new Jeffersonian Republican Party. Meanwhile, Secretary of the
Treasury
Hamilton, chief author of the Federalist Papers with Madison (who himself would
make the
transition to Republican), set the agenda for the Federalists. Both sides battle
d over Hamilton’s
economic plan—his reports on debt, banking, and manufactures—while Madison, often th
e voice
of conciliation and compromise, quietly supported the Federalist position. They
simultaneously
fought over whether American foreign policy would favor France or Britain in the
European
struggle for power. In every case the debates came down to a single issue: given
that the people
retained all powers but those most necessary to the functioning of the Republic,
what powers did
the government absolutely need? Thus, from the moment the ink dried on the Const
itution, an
important development had taken place in American government whereby the debate
increasingly
focused on the size of government rather than its virtue.
Time Line
1789:
Washington elected; new government forms; Congress meets; French Revolution begi
ns
1790:
Hamilton issues the Report on Public Credit
1791:
First Bank of United States (BUS) established
1793:
Washington begins second term; Proclamation of Neutrality; cotton gin patented
1794:
Whiskey Rebellion; Battle of Fallen Timbers
1795:
Jay’s Treaty; Pinckney’s Treaty
1796:
Washington’s Farewell Address; John Adams elected president
1798:
X, Y, Z Affair; Quasi War with France; Alien and Sedition Acts; Virginia and Ken
tucky
Resolutions
1800:
Washington, D. C., becomes national capital
1801:
Congress narrowly selects Jefferson president; Adams appoints John Marshall and “m
idnight
judges”
1802:
Congress recalls most “midnight judges”
1803:
Marbury v. Madison; Louisiana Purchase; Lewis and Clark expedition
1804:
Aaron Burr kills Alexander Hamilton; Jefferson reelected
1805:
British seize American ships
1807:
Embargo Act; Burr acquitted of treason
1808:
African slave trade ends; James Madison elected president
1809:
Congress boycotts British and French trade
1810:
Fletcher v. Peck
1811:
Battle of Tippecanoe; BUS charter expires; first steamboat on Ohio and Mississip
pi rivers
1812:
United States and Britain engage in War of 1812; Madison reelected
1813:
Battles of Lake Erie and Thames
1814:
British burn Washington, D. C.; Battle of Lake Champlain/Plattsburgh; Hartford C
onvention;
Treaty of Ghent ends war
1815:
Battle of New Orleans
Following the ratification of the Constitution, the Federalists continued their
momentum under
Washington, and they deserve credit for implementing a sound program during the
general’s two
terms. Washington’s exit in 1796 constituted no small event: although the election
of his vice
president, the famed Revolutionary organizer and diplomat John Adams, essentiall
y maintained
Federalist power, a popular and respected leader had stepped down voluntarily. R
elinquishing the
“crown” under such circumstances was unheard of in Europe, much less in the rest of
the world,
where monarchs clung to their thrones even if it required the assassination of f
amily members. It is
not an overstatement to say that Adams’s election in 1796 was one of the most sign
ificant points in
the evolution of the Republic, and although not on the momentous scale of the co
mplete upheaval
four years later, it nevertheless marked a bloodless change in leadership seldom
seen in human
history.
When the Federalist dynasty evaporated in the span of Adams’s administration, and
the
Jeffersonian Republicans took over the ship of state in 1800, this, too, contain
ed elements of
continuity as well as the obvious components of change. For one thing, Jefferson
propagated the
“Virginia dynasty,” which began with Washington, then Jefferson, followed later by M
adison and,
still later, James Monroe. Never in the nation’s history would it again be dominat
ed by so many
from one state in such a brief span of time (although Texas, in the late twentie
th century, has come
close, electing three presidents in thirty-five years).
Movers and Shakers
In New York City in April of 1789, George Washington and John Adams took the oat
hs of office to
become the first president and vice president of the United States of America.1
Both had stood
unopposed in the country’s first presidential election five months earlier, and Wa
shington bungled
his words, appearing more “agitated and embarrassed…than he ever was by the leveled
Cannon or
pointed musket.”2 If ceremony threw the general off, neither the responsibility no
r the power of the
position unnerved him. After all, few knew what the office of the presidency was—i
ndeed, it would
have been little without a man such as Washington moving its levers—and someone wh
o had
commanded an army that defeated the British was unlikely to be reluctant to exer
cise power.
Washington, as always, disliked public speaking, and although he delivered his a
ddresses to
Congress in person, he found pomp and circumstance distasteful. He was, after al
l, a farmer and a
soldier.
Washington knew, however, that in this grand new experiment, the president was i
n a sense more
powerful than any king. A political priest, he governed by virtue of the power o
f the people,
making him in a sense beyond reproach. Certainly Washington had his critics—his en
emies
pummeled him mercilessly. Philip Freneu’s National Journal attacked Washington so
viciously that
the general referred to the editor as “that rascal”—damning words from Washington!3 Ra
dical Tom
Paine went even further. In a letter to the Aurora, Payne “celebrated Washington’s [
ultimate]
departure, actually prayed for his imminent death,” and contemptuously concluded t
hat the world
would have to decide “whether you are an apostate or an impostor, whether you have
abandoned
good principles or whether you ever had any.”4 Washington endured it with class. P
aine’s
reputation, already questionable, never recovered from his ill-chosen words rega
rding “the man
who unites all hearts.”5
If Washington was “the American Zeus, Moses, and Cincinnatus all rolled into one,” h
e was not
without faults.6 His rather nebulous personal religion left him exposed and isol
ated. Many of his
biographers trumpeted Washington’s faith, and a famous painting captures the colon
ial general
praying in a snowy wood, but if Washington had any personal belief in Jesus Chri
st, he kept it well
hidden. Like Franklin, Washington tended toward Deism, a general belief in a det
ached and
impersonal God who plays no role in human affairs. At any rate, Washington appro
ached his new
duties with a sense that although he appealed frequently to the Almighty for hel
p, he was going it
alone, and for better or worse, the new government rested on his large shoulders
.7
The president’s personality has proven elusive to every generation of American his
torians, none
more so than modern writers who, unsatisfied with what people wrote or said, see
k to reach the
emotions of the popular figures. At this, Washington would have scoffed. The son
of a prosperous
Virginia planter, Washington married well and rose to high economic, military, a
nd political power,
becoming undisputed leader of the American Revolution. Yet the qualities that br
ought him this
power and respect—self-control, solid intellect, hard work, tenacity, and respecta
bility—also
shielded the life of the inner man. No one, not even his wife and closest family
, really knew the
intensely private George Washington.
Washington was, reportedly, unhappy at home. Economics had weighed heavily in hi
s choice of a
wife—supposedly, he deeply loved another woman—and his relationship with his own mot
her was
strained. His goal of becoming a British army officer, a task for which he was p
articularly well
suited, evaporated with the Revolution. Although he assumed the duties of comman
der in chief, it
was a position the Virginian reluctantly took out of love of country rather than
for personal
fulfillment. Solace in religion or the church also evaded him, although he fully
accepted man’s
sinful nature and his own shortcomings. Stiff and cold, the general nevertheless
wept at the farewell
to his officers. Never flamboyant and often boring, Washington eludes modern wri
ters dazzled by
the cult of celebrity. Once, on a bet, a colleague approached Washington warmly
and greeted him
by patting him firmly on his back; the individual won his bet, but for the rest
of his life shivered at
the memory of the look of reproach on Washington’s face!
A top-down centralist and consolidator by the nature of his military experiences
, much like another
general/president, Dwight D. Eisenhower some two hundred years later, Washington
compromised
and negotiated when it seemed the right strategy.8 As a result, it is not surpri
sing that he thoroughly
endorsed, and spent the next eight years implementing, the centralist economic a
nd military
policies of his most important aide, Alexander Hamilton. To ignore Washington’s gr
eat vision and
innovations in government, however, or dismiss them as Hamilton’s, would shortchan
ge him. He
virtually invented out of whole cloth the extraconstitutional notion of a cabine
t. At every step he
carefully weighed not only the needs of the moment, but also the precedents he s
et for all future
leaders of the nation. For a man to refuse a crown from his adoring nation may h
ave been good
sense in light of the fate of Louis XVI a few years later; to refuse a third ter
m marked exceptional
character.
That character also revealed itself in those with whom he kept counsel—his associa
tes and political
appointees, most of whom had great virtues but also suffered from fatal flaws. V
ice President John
Adams, for example, possessed the genius, personal morality, and expertise to el
evate him to the
presidency. But he antagonized people, often needlessly, and lacked the politica
l savvy and social
skills necessary to retain the office. Short and stocky (his enemies disparaging
ly called Adams His
Rotundity), Adams rose from a humble Massachusetts farming family to attend Harv
ard College
and help lead the American Revolution.9 A brilliant attorney, patriot organizer,
and Revolutionary
diplomat, Adams exuded all the doctrinal religion missing in Washington, to the
point of being
pious to a fault. Other men at the Continental Congress simply could not stand h
im, and many a
good measure failed only because Adams supported it. (His unpopularity at the Co
ntinental
Congress required that a declaration of independence be introduced by someone el
se, even though
he was the idea’s chief supporter.) On the other hand, Adams brought a sense of th
e sacred to
government that Washington lacked, placing before the nation an unwavering moral
compass that
refused compromise. By setting such an unbending personal standard, he embarrass
ed lesser men
who wanted to sin, and sin greatly, without consequence.
Predictably, Adams failed in the arena of elective politics. His moderate Revolu
tionary views and
distrust of direct democracy combined with his ability to make others despise hi
m ensured his lack
of a political base. Thanks to his own failings and Republican propaganda, the p
ublic wrongly
came to perceive Adams as an elitist and monarchist (and in Adams’s terminology th
e phrase
executive and monarch were almost interchangeable). But to portray him as antith
etical to
Revolutionary principles is unwarranted and bizarre. Where Washington subtly man
euvered,
Adams stubbornly charged. He had much—perhaps too much—in common with Alexander
Hamilton, almost guaranteeing the two would be at odds sooner or later. Ultimate
ly, Adams’s great
legacy, including his Revolutionary-era record, his dealings with foreign powers
, and his judicial
appointments, overshadowed perhaps an even greater mark he made on America: esta
blishing the
presidency as a moral, as well as a political, position.10
The third of these Founder giants, James Madison, arguably the most brilliant th
inker of the
Revolutionary generation, soon put his talents to work against his fellow Federa
lists Washington
and Hamilton. A Virginian and Princeton graduate, Madison stood five feet four i
nches tall and
reportedly spoke in a near whisper. He compensated for a lack of physical presen
ce with keen
intelligence, hard work, and a genius for partisan political activity. Madison’s w
eapons of choice
were the pen and the party caucus, the latter of which he shares much credit for
inventing. Into his
endeavors he poured the fervent ideology of a Whig who believed that strands fro
m both the
national and state governments could be woven into a fabric of freedom.
Throughout the course of his intellectual development, Madison veered back and f
orth between the
poles of national versus state government authority. By the early 1790s, he lean
ed toward the latter
because his old protégé Hamilton had drifted too far toward the former. Always alert
to the
blessings of competition in any endeavor, Madison embraced the concept of factio
ns and divided
government. As the first Speaker of the House of Representatives, James Madison
began to
formulate the agenda of the party of Jefferson and in so doing became heir appar
ent to his Virginia
ally.11
Creating the Cabinet
One of Washington’s most important contributions to American constitutionalism inv
olved his
immediate creation of a presidential cabinet. Although the Constitution is silen
t on the subject,
Washington used executive prerogative to create a board of advisers, then instru
cted them to
administer the varied economic, diplomatic, and military duties of the executive
branch and report
directly back to him. He did so instantly and with surprisingly little controver
sy. He perceived that
these appointees should be specialists, yet the positions also could reward loya
lists who had worked
for the success of the party. As appointees, needing only the approval of the Se
nate, Washington
bypassed the gridlock of congressional selection systems.
Soon after his election and establishment of the cabinet, Washington realized th
at staffing the
government would be a permanent source of irritation, writing, “I anticipated in a
heart filled with
distress, the ten thousand embarrassments, perplexities, and troubles to which I
must again be
exposed…none greater [than those caused] by applications for appointments.”12 Little
could the
Virginian have dreamed that federal job seeking would only grow worse, and that
eighty years later
Abraham Lincoln would have lines of job seekers stacked up outside his office wh
ile he was in the
middle of running a war.
The importance of the cabinet to evolving party politics was, of course, that Wa
shington’s inner
circle hosted the two powerhouses of 1790s politics Hamilton and Jefferson. Secr
etary of State
Jefferson is ever present in the history of American Revolutionary culture and p
olitics.13 A tall,
slender, redheaded Virginian, Jefferson was the son of a modest Virginia planter
. Young Jefferson,
a student at William and Mary College, developed a voracious appetite for learni
ng and culture in
myriad forms. In his Notes on the State of Virginia, for example, he wrote ably
about Mound
Builder culture, Native American languages, meteorology, biology, geology, and,
of course, history
and political science.14 He spoke French fluently, learned architecture from boo
ks (and went on to
design and build his own elaborate Monticello home), and practiced his violin fo
r at least an hour
each day. Everything he touched reflected his wide and extraordinary tastes. For
example, military
expeditions that he ordered to explore the Louisiana Territory received their in
structions for
scientific endeavors from the-then president Jefferson; and he worked with his n
emesis Hamilton to
devise one of the most commonsense coinage systems in the world (based on tens a
nd hundreds),
an approach that Jefferson naturally tried to apply to the land distribution sys
tem.15 Widowed in
the 1780s, Jefferson promised his wife on her deathbed he would never remarry; h
e later apparently
pursued a decades-long love affair with one of his slaves, Sally Hemmings, with
a historical debate
still raging over whether this union resulted in the birth of at least one son.1
6
Jefferson’s political career soared. After authoring the Declaration of Independen
ce, he followed
Patrick Henry as Virginia’s wartime governor, although in that capacity he was mer
ely adequate.
Unlike Washington or Hamiliton, Jefferson never served in the Continental Army a
nd never saw
combat. After the war, as American ambassador to France, he developed a pronounc
ed taste for
French food, wine, and radical French politics. Back home in the 1790s, he claim
ed to detest
partisan politics at the very time he was embracing some of its most subtle and
important forms—
the anonymous political editorial, the private dinner party, and personal lobbyi
ng. Anyone who
knew Jefferson said he possessed a certain kind of magic—a charisma. Love of good
company and
conversation provided him great joy and, simultaneously, a lethal weapon to use
against his
political foes.
Fueling Jefferson’s political endeavors was a set of radical Whig beliefs that had
not changed much
since he penned the Declaration of Independence in 1776. That famed document’s den
unciation of
centralized economic, military, judicial, and executive governmental authority c
ombined with a
hatred of state religion to spotlight his classic radical Whig ideas. Although i
t is debatable whether
Jefferson in fact penned the celebrated words, “Government is best which governs l
east,” there is
no doubt that he believed and acted on them in virtually all areas except slaver
y. On all other
issues, though, Jefferson remained consistently oriented toward small government
, and he may well
have flirted with the principles behind the words later penned by Henry David Th
oreau: “That
government is best which governs not at all.”
Just as Jefferson did not unthinkingly favor small and weak government, as has b
een portrayed,
neither did his antithesis, the secretary of the treasury Alexander Hamilton, en
dorse a Leviathan
state, as his opponents have asserted. Hamilton was Washington’s brilliant aide-de
-camp during the
war and the nation’s most noted nationalist economic thinker. His origins were hum
ble. Born out of
wedlock in the British West Indies, he was saved from a life of obscurity when a
wealthy friend
recognized his talents and sent him to study in New York City at King’s College (n
ow Columbia
University).17 Possessing a talent for writing about economics, law, and radical
politics, he rose in
patriot ranks to stand as General Washington’s chief military, and later, politica
l, adviser. He
personally commanded one of the assaults on the redoubts at Yorktown. In the ear
ly 1780s,
Hamilton became a disciple of Robert Morris’s program to grant the Confederation n
ational taxing
and banking powers. A moderate Whig, Hamilton was neither a mercantilist nor a f
ollower of the
free-market ideas of Adam Smith, but was a fusion of the two—and so suspicious of
government
that he thought the only way to ensure it did not spin out of control was to tie
it to the wealthy.18
Like Adams, Hamilton was not a popular man. His illegitimate birth and humble or
igins always
loomed in his personal and professional background, building within him a combat
ive edge to his
demeanor early in life. Hamilton’s foreign birth prohibited him from becoming pres
ident,
sentencing him to be forever a power behind the throne. As treasury secretary, H
amilton hit the
ground running, proposing a bold economic program based on a permanent national
debt, internal
and external taxation, a national bank, and federal subsidies to manufacturers.
Whether agreeing or
not with his solutions, few could doubt that his reports constituted masterful a
ssessments of the
nation’s economic condition. Naturally, Jefferson and Madison opposed Hamilton’s vie
ws, setting
the stage for the dramatic political debate that came to characterize the Washin
gton
administration.19
Hamilton’s Three Reports
Congress spent the first two years of Washington’s administration launching the fe
deral ship and
attending to numerous problems inherent in a new government. James Madison’s first
order of
business had been to draft a bill of rights, move it through both houses of Cong
ress, and send it on
to the states, which had ratified all of the first ten amendments by 1791. Anoth
er weighty matter
involved the creation of the federal judiciary. Congress’s Judiciary Act of 1789 c
reated thirteen
federal district courts (one for each state of the union), three circuit courts
of appeal, and a supreme
court manned by six justices. John Jay became the first chief justice of the Sup
reme Court; he and
each of his five colleagues rode the circuit several weeks of the year, providin
g the system with
geographic balance. The remarkable feature of the plan was the latitude Congress
enjoyed in setting
the number of federal justices, courts, and the varied details of the operations
of the federal court
system.
Those issues, while of great importance, nevertheless took a backseat to the ove
rriding economic
issues that had, after all, sparked the creation of the new Republic in the firs
t place. Few people in
American history have been so perfectly suited to an administrative post as Alex
ander Hamilton
was to the position of Treasury secretary. His plans took the form of three repo
rts delivered to
Congress in 1790–91 that laid the problems before the lawmakers and forced them to
give legal
weight to his fiscal inclinations.20
His first paper, the “Report on Public Credit” (January 1790), tackled the nation’s de
bt problem. At
the end of the Revolution, the national government owed more than $70 million to
bondholders. On
top of that, some (not all) states owed monies amounting, collectively, to an ad
ditional $25 million.
A third layer of $7 million existed on top of that from various IOUs issued by W
ashington and
other generals on behalf of the Continental Congress. American speculators held
75 percent of this
combined $102 million debt; most of them had paid approximately fifteen cents on
the dollar for
national and state bonds at a time when many doubted their worth. Hamilton’s probl
em was how to
pay off the bondholders and simultaneously refinance the nation’s many upcoming ex
penses in
order to establish a sound fiscal policy and a good credit rating. It was an iro
nic situation in that
“the United States, which sprang from the stock of England, whose credit rating wa
s the model for
all the world, had to pull itself out of the pit of bankruptcy.”21
Hamilton called his proposal “assumption.” First, the national government would assu
me all of the
remaining state debts—regardless of the inequities between states—and combine them w
ith the
national debt and any legally valid IOUs to individuals. Then the federal govern
ment would pay off
that debt at face value (one hundred cents on the dollar), a point that caused a
n immediate firestorm
among those who complained that the debts should be paid to the original holders
of the
instruments. Of course, there was no proving who had originally held anything, a
nd the idea flew in
the face of Anglo-American tradition that possession is nine tenths of the law.
Originally, Hamilton
intended to tax the states to fund the payments—hence the source of the confusing “t
hree-fifths”
compromise for taxation—but this never occurred because of the success of Hamilton’s
other
proposals. Equally controversial, however, was the plan Hamilton submitted for p
aying the debts.
He wanted the federal government to issue new bonds to borrow more money at bett
er terms,
creating a permanent national debt to help finance the government’s operations. Ha
milton’s aims
were clear. He wanted to establish confidence in and good credit for the new gov
ernment among
creditors at home and abroad, and thus ally creditors with the new government, e
nsuring its
success.22 As he noted, “The only plan that can preserve the currency is one that
will make it the
immediate interest of the moneyed men to cooperate with the government.”23 “A nation
al debt,” he
wrote in a sentence that thoroughly shocked old Whigs, “if not excessive, is a nat
ional blessing”
[emphasis ours].24 The secretary had no intention that the nation, having broken
the shackles of
English oppression, should succumb to a form of debt peonage, but he fully under
stood that
monetary growth fueled investment and economic expansion. In that sense, he depa
rted from the
mercantilists and joined arms with Adam Smith.
Contrary to traditional portrayals, Hamilton and Jefferson shared much ground on
these issues.
Jefferson, in an oft-cited letter of September 1789, had stated that “the earth be
longs…to the
living,” or, in other words, those alive at any given time should not be saddled w
ith debts and
obligations of earlier generations.25 Defining a generation as nineteen years, J
efferson sought to
restrain the government from following the destructive French model and creating
a debt so high
the state would collapse. Yet Hamilton’s plan called for a Jeffersonian structure
through a sinking
fund that would require the legislature to always pay off old debt before legall
y being allowed to
issue new bonds. Or, in modern terms, it was an American Express form of credit,
whereby the
balance had to be paid, not just the interest on the debt, which he also feared.
So whereas Jefferson
wanted to put a generational time limit on the nation’s debts, Hamilton preferred
a functional limit,
but it was a distinction without a difference.
Both also boiled the debt issue down to the political dangers it presented, but
here they came to
radically different conclusions. Where Jefferson hated the notion of tying the w
ealthy to
government because he thought it put the bankers in power, Hamilton embraced it
for the same
reason. If the nation owed financiers a great deal of money, they were in the we
aker position, not
the government.
Hamilton’s desire to rally creditors and bankers to support the new federal govern
ment was also
apparent in his second paper, a “Report on a National Bank” (December 1790). This pl
an voiced
Hamilton’s desire for a national fiscal agency, a Bank of the United States modele
d after the Bank
of England. This Bank of the United States (BUS) would safeguard all federal tax
and land-sales
revenues, transact government financial affairs, meet the government payroll, an
d issue and
circulate currency, thereby regulating smaller banks. To Hamilton, all these mis
sions were
subordinated to the bank’s role as a steady source of credit to the national gover
nment. It did not
disturb Hamilton, though, that with 80 percent of its stock held by private inve
stors, the BUS would
provide its owners with access to public funds for their private speculative ven
tures. It is essential
to understand that, contrary to practices today, insider trading and insider inv
esting were among the
primary purposes of starting a bank.26 Virtually everyone understood that in ord
er to marshal a
community’s—or a nation’s—finances around important projects, the primary owners of bank
s had
to have legitimate access to those large pools of capital. Hamilton’s bank plan th
us aimed to bring
sound fiscal practices and a strong currency to the government through an allian
ce lucrative to
private bankers and the investor class at large.
At this point, it is worthwhile to reiterate that contrary to the popular image,
Hamilton had no
illusions about the dangers inherent in big government. He rightly understood th
at over the long
term, prices did not lie. Monetary values reflect real value in short order. Whi
le the will of the
people might swing wildly, depending on emotions, news coverage, propaganda, or
other factors,
markets generally are constrained by reality, and he wanted to let that reality
enforce its discipline
on American finances.27 It worked: when Hamilton’s plan took effect in 1791, U.S.
debt per
capita, in real dollars, stood at $197, but within twenty years it had plummeted
to $49.28
A third report, the “Report on Manufactures” (December 1791), proved significant mai
nly as a
portent of things to come: Congress rejected this ambitious neomercantilist plan
. Hamilton, keenly
aware of the significance of the burgeoning Industrial Revolution, sought a depa
rture from the
market disciplines he had invoked in his earlier reports. Without question, Hami
lton was one of the
few Americans who fully understood the impact of capitalists’ rapidly accelerating
use of
technology, capital, labor, raw materials, transportation, and global markets to
create wealth. In
this, the stodgy Adams wholeheartedly agreed, noting, “Property must be secured, o
r liberty cannot
exist.”29 Hamilton, however, went beyond merely protecting private property. He ca
lled on
America to immediately accelerate its own industrial revolution, creating a mode
rn nationally
regulated economic system. For all of his foresight, Hamilton’s serious flaw was l
ooking backward
to mercantilism to accomplish these ends. He advocated protective tariffs and fe
deral bounties
(subsidies) to incubate industry. Neither of the British finance ministers, Town
shend or Pitt, would
have criticized such policies. In a style anticipating Henry Clay, Abraham Linco
ln, and Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Hamilton wrote, “The public purse must supply the deficiency of private
resources.”30
Anti-Federalists, and even some Federalists, reacted to Hamilton’s three reports w
ith utter
amazement. In some specifics, the white papers recommended the creation of a sys
tem they
deemed suspiciously similar to the mercantilism Americans had just overthrown, w
ith the latter
report sparking Madison’s immediate and crucial defection to the Anti-Federalist c
ause.
Southerners, westerners, agrarians, and small-government men everywhere rallied
to challenge the
secretary. Madison represented Virginia, which had already paid off its debts. W
hy, asked
congressmen from the solvent states, should they subsidize the lax fiscal polici
es of the indebted
states? Moreover, why should they reward bondholders—stockjobbers, as some farmers
called
them—who had bought cheap during the nation’s crisis and now demanded payment at par
?
Further, Madison argued, the Constitution in no way authorized funding, assumpti
on, and a
permanent national debt.
A compromise temporarily settled this dispute over a permanent national debt. At
a dinner party
sponsored by Jefferson, and with Madison in attendance, Hamilton surrendered on
the location of
the national capital—at least this party concluded those behind-the-scenes negotia
tions, which had
been conducted for months. By agreeing to move the capital to Philadelphia and,
ultimately, to the
Virginia-Maryland border in a separate District of Columbia, Hamilton gained the
support of
southerners anxious to see the seat of government located in their neck of the w
oods. Philadelphia
relented, in part, because Pennsylvania congressmen thought that once they had t
he capital—even
for a while—it would never move. An attempt to move the location of government, sa
id one
representative in an ill-fated prophecy, “will be generally viewed…as a mere politic
al maneuver
[with no more credibility than] inserting Mississippi, Detroit, or Winniprocket
Pond.”31
Significantly, in the winter of 1791, Jefferson publicly joined Madison in oppos
ing the BUS.
Planters and farming folk were known for their antibanking prejudices (one south
erner wrote that
he deemed entering a bank as disgraceful as entering a “house of ill repute”); they
decried what
they perceived as bankers’ feeding at the public trough. Moreover, they argued for
cefully that the
Constitution was silent on the issue, precluding a BUS. Hamilton countered that
the BUS was
“necessary and proper” (Article I, Section 8) to carry out the enumerated powers of
taxation,
coining of money, and commercial regulation. Hamilton’s argument of implied powers—t
hat if the
end (taxation, and so forth) is constitutional, then the means of achieving that
end is too—would
become extremely important in years to come. Jefferson countered that “necessary a
nd proper”
included only powers indispensable to carrying out enumerated duties, but on thi
s count he met
defeat. Despite southern opposition, both houses of Congress voted to create a B
US and chartered it
for twenty years. It would fall to James Madison’s (and, later, Andrew Jackson’s) ad
ministration to
renew the ongoing battle over the BUS.
Feuding Patriots
By the end of 1791, America had harvested a bumper crop from the seeds of partis
an political
dispute. Adding to southern opposition to Hamilton’s program, a strong protesting
voice arose from
frontiersmen in western Pennsylvania, upstate New York, and the new frontier set
tlements of the
Ohio Valley. In these places frontiersmen rallied around the cause of Jefferson,
forging a
southern/western alliance that would affect national politics for more than a ge
neration.
Westerners were outraged by Hamilton’s initial fiscal policies and, later, by his “w
hiskey tax,” a
measure aimed to subsidize debt assumption by taxing western corn products at 25
percent.32 In
this case, again, Hamilton stood on weak economic ground. He primarily urged Was
hington to
enforce the tax to demonstrate the federal government’s ultimate taxation authorit
y. It constituted a
flexing of federal muscle that was unnecessary and immature. By levying these ex
cise taxes on one
of the most untaxed and unregulated groups in America—frontier farmers—Hamliton spar
ked a
firestorm of opposition.
Most economic life in the West revolved around corn; corn whiskey even served as
a medium of
exchange in the cash-short territories. Many farmers lacked cash at all, using w
hiskey as their
currency. Protesting the tax, furious westerners resorted to violence, just like
the Shaysites before
them. Riots erupted in the Pittsburgh region, Kentucky, the Carolina backcountry
, and even
Maryland. Led by David Bradford and James Marshall, these self-styled “whiskey reb
els”
terrorized tax collectors, closed down courts, and threatened to invade Pittsbur
gh. When President
Washington offered amnesty for surrender, the rebels rejected the offer.
The Whiskey Rebellion marked a critical juncture for the new Federalist governme
nt. Unless it was
crushed, Washington believed, “We can bid adieu to all government in this country
except mob and
club government.” He added, “If the laws are to be trampled upon with impunity, then
there is an
end put, with one stroke, to republican government.”33 In August, Washington sent
Hamilton to
lead a 13,000–man army (larger than the Continental Army) to crush the rebels. Wit
h this show of
force the rebel cause instantly evaporated; Bradford, Marshall, and others bid a
hasty retreat by
flatboat down the Ohio River. Although courts convicted two whiskey rebels of tr
eason,
Washington magnanimously pardoned them both in July of 1795.
Washington and Hamilton took pride in their decisive action; the Federalists had
proven the ability
of the new government to enforce the law. In the process, however, they handed t
he Republicans a
political victory. Many Revolutionary-era Americans were alarmed at the sight of
an American
standing army moving against a ragged band of Pennsylvania farmers—fellow American
s, no less!
Rightly or wrongly, the Republicans saw an uncanny resemblance between the Whisk
ey Rebellion
and the patriots’ stamp and tea tax revolts of the Revolutionary era.34
Federalists rightly feared new frontier states would bolster Jefferson’s support i
n Congress, and
they opposed the statehood of these new territories. A compromise exchanged stat
ehood for
Kentucky with that of Vermont in 1791, but Tennessee proved to be an entirely di
fferent matter. In
1796, Federalists vainly threw roadblocks in front of the statehood drive, argui
ng that Tennessee’s
census and constitution were problematic, and that statehood was “just one more tw
ig in the
electioneering cabal of Mr. Jefferson.”35 Despite this arch-Federalist opposition,
Tennessee
entered the Union in time to cast its 1796 electoral votes for Jefferson and sen
d a young
Jeffersonian, Andrew Jackson, to Congress.
Meanwhile, by the start of Washington’s second term in office, the Hamilton-Jeffer
son feud had
spun out of control, well past the point of resolution. Worse, their political d
ifferences only
exacerbated an obvious personality conflict between these two young lions. Washi
ngton’s cabinet
meetings lost civility as the men settled into a pattern of continued verbal spa
rring and political
oneupsman-ship. When not debating in person, they maneuvered in congressional ca
ucuses and
cloakrooms or sniped by letter to acquaintances before finally ceasing speaking
to each other
altogether, resorting to firing anonymous newspaper editorials.
Jefferson initially clung to the hope that the president’s evenhandedness would ul
timately manifest
itself in public policy. Employing his considerable skills of persuasion to lobb
y the president,
Jefferson urged Washington to break from Hamilton or to at least blend some of M
adison’s and his
own ideas into the Federalist policy mix. Continually thwarted on the domestic f
ront, Jefferson
might have endured had he not been so often overruled in his own area of experti
se, foreign affairs.
Over the course of Washington’s first term, the secretary of state saw his foreign
policy aims
slowly erode under Hamilton’s assaults, and it was in the area of foreign policy w
here the
disagreements reached their most vindictive stage.
Beyond the Oceans
Although America was an independent nation under the terms of the Treaty of Pari
s of 1783, that
independence was fraught with ironies and contradictions. In the family of natio
ns, America was a
kitten among tigers. European powers with strong armies and navies still ruled t
he oceans and
much of North and South America, despite American independence. In addition, fad
ing, but still
dangerous, forces such as those of the Ottoman Empire and the Barbary States wer
e constantly a
concern on the high seas. But an alliance with France threatened to embroil the
young nation in
continental warfare almost immediately with the French Revolution of 1789.
What course would American foreign policy follow? Would Americans form alliances
with their
democratic brethren in France, or honor their English roots? Would they be able
to trade with both
nations? Was neutrality an option? These were the questions the secretary of sta
te faced, yet his
proposed solutions ran counter to those of his archenemy Hamilton and his Federa
list allies. Under
this cloud the members of the administration attempted to shape a foreign policy
. Their first foreign
policy initiative was to re-create the military establishment Congress had disba
nded following the
Revolutionary War.36 Federalist proponents of the Constitution had called for a
viable army and
navy to back up national foreign policy decrees; the ratification of the Constit
ution brought this
“power of the sword” once again to American government.
Led by the secretary of war, Henry Knox, Washington’s artillery chief during the R
evolution,
Federalists reconstituted the Continental Army, renaming it the United States Ar
my. Knox recruited
5,000 troops and commissioned an officer corps comprised mainly of Revolutionary
War veterans
and Federalist stalwarts. Then Congress turned its attention to the navy, which,
since the
Revolution, had been a small collection of privateers. Congress appropriated mon
ies for
construction and manning of six frigates capable of long-range operations.37 Fol
lowing
Revolutionary precedent, small companies of U.S. Marines accompanied each navy c
ommand unit.
Congress did not create a separate Department of the Navy until 1798, when Feder
alists would
realize their aim of a 10,000–man combined American military force.
As is often the case, events did not wait on policy makers to fully prepare. The
Ohio Valley frontier
had erupted into warfare after a flood of immigrants crossed the Appalachians, i
nfringing on Indian
lands. Miami, Shawnee, Delaware, and other tribes witnessed hordes of American p
ioneers
streaming into their ancestral domain. Indian warfare escalated into attacks on
rivermen; one
boatman reported that “the Indians were very troublesome on the river, having fire
d upon several
boats” and killing and wounding the boat crews.38 The U.S. government had to respo
nd. General
Arthur St. Clair, Federalist governor of the Northwest Territory, led an army in
to the fray, but met
initial defeat. Newly recommissioned U.S. Army general Mad Anthony Wayne fared b
etter,
marching a large column into Indian territory in 1794 to win an important victor
y at the Battle of
Fallen Timbers. Arrayed against a broad alliance of Indian tribes (Shawnee, Otta
wa, Chippewa,
Potawatomi), as well as Canadians, British, some French, and even a handful of r
enegade
Americans, Wayne’s larger force pushed the 2,000 Indians through the forest and pi
nned them
against a British fort, which refused to open its gates.39 “Mad” Anthony preferred t
o let the Indians
escape and deal with the chiefs, who, having their influence shattered, signed t
he Treaty of
Greenville (1795). Although these events temporarily marked the defeat of the up
per Ohio Valley
tribes, violence plagued the lower Ohio and Mississippi valleys for another fift
een years.40
This warfare revived concerns that Britons and Spaniards aided and encouraged In
dian uprisings.
These accusations highlighted another western foreign policy problem—the hostile B
ritish and
Spanish presence in, respectively, the Old Northwest and Southwest. Spain laid c
laim south of
Natchez and west of the Mississippi by virtue of a French grant and the 1763 Tre
aty of Paris.
Americans desperately wanted to sail goods down the river to New Orleans, but th
e Spaniards
rightly saw this trade as the proverbial foot in the door, and resisted it. Both
sides found a
temporary solution in Pinckney’s Treaty, also called the Treaty of San Lorenzo (17
95), which
granted American traders a three-year privilege of deposit (the ability to unloa
d, store, and
transship produce) in Spanish New Orleans.41
English presence in the Ohio Valley presented an even more severe problem. In ad
dition to being a
violation of the 1783 Treaty of Paris, British ties to Indian tribes made every
act by hostiles on the
frontier seem suspiciously connected to British interests. Washington’s solution t
o these challenges,
however, requires us to take a detour through events in France.
The French Revolution and Neutrality
The French Revolution of 1789 precipitated a huge crisis in American foreign pol
icy. It was a
paradoxical development, for on the surface Americans should have been pleased t
hat their own
Revolution had spawned a similar republican movement across the Atlantic, just a
s European
intellectuals pointed with pride to America’s war for independence as validation o
f Enlightenment
concepts. Many Americans, most notably Jefferson and his Anti-Federalist support
ers, as well as
the rabble-rouser Tom Paine, enthusiastically supported France’s ouster of the cor
rupt regime of
Louis XVI. French republican leaders echoed Jefferson’s words in the Declaration w
hen they called
for liberté, égalité, fraternité and issued their own Declaration of the Rights of Man a
nd the Citizen.
Unfortunately, France’s revolutionary dreams went largely unfulfilled, in part bec
ause of important
differences in the presumption of power and the state in their revolutionary dec
larations. The
tyranny of King Louis was soon replaced by the equally oppressive dictatorship o
f the mob and
Robespierre. Blood ran in the streets of Paris and heads literally rolled, begin
ning with Louis’ own
in 1793. A new wave of violence and warfare swept across Europe, pitting France
against every
monarchy on the continent, exactly as John Adams had predicted in a letter to hi
s wife.42
Federalist leaders wisely saw that the fledgling United States could ill afford
to become entangled
in Europe’s power struggle.43 There were plenty of problems at home, and certainly
neither the
army nor the navy could stand toe to toe with European forces on neutral ground
for any length of
time. With Britain and France at war, however, America had to choose. Washington
did so when—
in opposition to Jefferson’s advice and the Constitution’s stipulation that the pres
ident must seek
the advice and consent of the Senate—he unilaterally issued the Proclamation of Ne
utrality in April
of 1793. The United States, declared the president, was neutral and would not ai
d or hurt either
Britain or France.44
What constituted “neutrality” when three quarters of American exports went to Britai
n, and 90
percent of American imports emanated from Britain or her colonies? The British a
ggressively
thwarted French-bound American commerce, and neither American traders nor the U.
S. Navy
resisted. Throughout the 1790s and early 1800s, British naval vessels routinely
halted, boarded, and
inspected American ships, sometimes seizing cargo in direct violation of propert
y rights, free trade,
and “freedom of the seas.” To add insult to injury, Britain began a policy of impres
sment, in which
American sailors on a boarded vessel could be forced into British service as vir
tual slaves under the
dubious claim that the sailors had deserted the British navy. By her actions, Br
itain shredded
concepts of “right to life and liberty” that had rested at the center of the Declara
tion. France rightly
questioned and furiously denounced the neutrality of a nation that bowed so easi
ly to Great Britain.
The French found enthusiastic supporters in Madison and Jefferson, who conspired
to undercut the
president. At the height of debate over Washington’s Proclamation of Neutrality, J
efferson wrote
Madison a heated note attacking Hamilton and imploring, “For God’s sake, my dear sir
, take up
your pen, select his most striking heresies, and cut him to pieces in the face o
f the public.”45
Adams was equally horrified at the changes he noticed in Jefferson. “I am really a
stonished,” he
wrote to Abigail, “at the blind spirit of party which has seized on the whole soul
of this
Jefferson.”46 Worse, Washington had already ceased to listen to the foreign policy
advice of his
own secretary of state, leaving Jefferson no choice but to resign. On January 31
, 1794, he officially
left his post, returned home to Monticello, and plotted his political revenge.
Washington, meanwhile, had come under a relentless barrage of vitriol. More than
two hundred
years later the temptation is to think that the Father of our country was loved
by all. Yet then, as
now, no one was safe from criticism, least of all the president. The Aurora, for
example, led the
pack of wolves after Washington: “If ever a nation was debauched by a man, the Ame
rican nation
has been debauched by Washington.”47 In a line destined to go down as one of the s
tupidest
statements ever made, the paper warned, “Let his conduct, then, be an example to f
uture ages.”48
(The author did not mean that Washington’s conduct would be a good example!) Adams
, for one,
favored retaliation: the Federalists must let “nothing pass unanswered; reasoning
must be answered
by reasoning; wit by wit; humor by humor; satire by satire; burlesque by burlesq
ue and even
buffoonery by buffoonery.”49
The opportunity for “buffoonery” reached epic proportions when, in 1793, the new Fre
nch
Revolutionary government sent Edmund Genet to represent it in America. Jefferson
, at the time still
in his post, and his ally Madison were initially delighted. Edmund Charles Genet
, who could speak
fluently seven languages, enjoyed a reputation as a true believer in the French
radicalism that
American radicals saw as a welcome extension of their own Revolutionary experime
nt. “War with
all kings and peace with all peoples,” as the French revolutionary saying went, mi
ght have
originated with Genet. Jefferson and his followers welcomed Citizen Genet, as he
was called, with
open arms.
They soon regretted their enthusiasm. The obnoxious little man had scarcely set
his shoes on
American soil before he launched into an attack on the Federalists. Ignoring the
standard protocol
for diplomats serving in foreign lands, he immediately waded into domestic polit
ics. He helped to
organize pro-French Jacobin clubs and “democratick” societies to spur the Jeffersoni
ans’ support of
France. He actually tried to engage in military campaigns—organizing armed expedit
ions against
France’s Spanish and English enemies in Florida, Louisiana, and Canada. Perhaps wo
rst of all,
Genet, while ambassador, hired privateers to attack America-bound British shippi
ng in the Atlantic
Ocean.
Needless to say, Federalists like Washington, Hamilton, and Adams were aghast at
Citizen Genet’s
audacity and lack of professionalism. The last straw came when Genet threatened
to go, in essence,
over Washington’s head to the public via the press. Genet literally gave Jefferson
one of his famous
migraine headaches, so the secretary was unavailable when Washington sought Gene
t’s head or, at
least, his credentials. To make matters worse, broadside publisher Philip Frenea
u, of the Anti-
Federalist and anti-Washington National Gazette, infuriated Washington with an e
ditorial called
“The Funeral of George Washington.” By then, even Jefferson and Madison were humilia
ted by
their arrogant French ally, retreating into an embarrassed silence. Jefferson de
scribed Genet as
“hotheaded, all imagination, no judgment, passionate, disrespectful, and even inde
cent towards the
President.”50 Genet lost his job, but when his own party in France was swept out—and
more than a
few Jacobin heads swept off—Genet begged Washington for mercy. Given another chanc
e, Genet
settled in New York State, married into the respected Schuyler family, and spent
the rest of his days
basking in the receding light of perhaps the most infamous foreign diplomat of t
he early national
era.51 Genet’s end, however, did not solve Washington’s ongoing foreign policy tensi
ons with
France and England. Rather, the path that began in Paris now turned toward Londo
n as a new
traveler, John Jay, came to the fore.
Jay’s Treaty
Unable to stabilize volatile French diplomacy, Washington heightened tension by
sending New
Yorker and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court John Jay to negotiate a long overd
ue treaty with the
British. American conflicts with Britain were numerous: finalization of the disp
uted Maine-
Canadian boundary; British evacuation of the Northwest posts (which they occupie
d in direct
violation of the 1783 Treaty of Paris); overdue compensation to American slave o
wners (those
whose slaves Britain had liberated during the war); and, most important, British
acknowledgment
of freedom of the seas—the right of American ships to trade with the French West I
ndies and
continental Europe without fear of seizure and impressment.
Jay received sharp criticism for his handling of the negotiations. The stalwart
Federalist was an
Anglophile inclined to let the British have their way. In Jay’s defense, however,
he was in no
position to talk tough to Great Britain in 1794. America completely lacked the m
ilitary and
economic clout necessary to challenge Britain so soon after the improbable milit
ary victory in the
Revolution. More important, the United States needed what Britain could offer—trad
e—and lots of
it.
Nevertheless, Jay’s negotiations were marked by a tone of appeasement that enraged
pro-French
Jeffersonians. His treaty, signed in November of 1794, yielded to the British po
sition by dropping
compensation for American slavers, and agreed to the British definition of neutr
ality at sea, namely
the shipment of naval stores and provisions to enemy ports. Maine’s boundary dispu
te was turned
over to a commission, and the U.S. government agreed to absorb all losses arisin
g from debts to
British merchants. In return for these concessions, Britain agreed to evacuate t
he Northwest posts
by 1796, in essence opening the fur trade in the region. As for the French West
Indies, the British
begrudgingly agreed to allow small American ships (seventy tons or less) to do b
usiness with the
French, whereas both England and the United States granted most-favored-nation t
rading status to
each other, providing both nations with the most lucrative trading partner possi
ble.52
Although John Jay believed he had gained the best deal possible, his Jeffersonia
n opponents cried
treason. Southerners hated his concessions on slavery, whereas some northerners
disliked the trade
clauses. One editor wrote, “I believe that the treaty formed by Jay and the Britis
h king is the
offspring of a vile aristocratic few…who are enemies to the equality of men, frien
ds to no
government but that whose funds they can convert to their private employment.”53 J
ay was not
unaware of such vitriol, observing in 1794 that he could travel from New York to
Boston by the
light of his own burning effigies (a line repeated by several politicians at lat
er dates).54 New
Yorkers threatened impeachment, and Jay’s colleague Alexander Hamilton was stoned
by angry
mobs. “To what state of degradation are we reduced,” a Jeffersonian newspaperman exc
laimed,
“that we court a nation more perfidious than Savages—more sanguinary than Tigers—barba
rous as
Cannibals—and prostituted even to a proverb!”55
Over Jeffersonian opposition, the Senate ratified Jay’s Treaty in June of 1795. Aw
are it
antagonized some of his former friends and allies, Washington let the bill sit o
n his desk before
finally signing it in August, convinced this was the proper course for an honora
ble man to follow.
Jay’s success allowed Washington to deploy Pinckney to Spain to secure the Mississ
ippi navigation
rights. Taken together, Jay’s and Pinckney’s treaties opened the West for expansion.
Lost in the
international diplomacy was a remarkable reality: what some saw as a sign of wea
kness in the
political system in fact emerged as its strength, proving Madison right. Foreign
policy honed each
side’s positions, and the partisanship resulted in clearly defined opposing views.
Republicans Versus Federalists
These fierce disputes created a political enmity Washington and others sought to
avoid—two
vibrant, disputing political parties instead of consensus.56 Although Republican
s and Federalists of
the 1790s may appear old-fashioned in comparison to modern politicians, they per
formed the same
vital functions that characterize members of all modern political parties. They
nominated
candidates, conducted election campaigns, wrote platforms, pamphlets, and newspa
per editorials,
organized partisan activity within the executive and legislative branches of gov
ernment, dispensed
patronage, and even conducted social events like parties, barbecues, fish fries,
and so on.
Unfortunately, some have overgeneralized about the parties, characterizing them
as rich versus
poor men’s parties, big government versus small government parties, or even prosla
very and
antislavery parties. The truth is much more complex. The Federalists and the Rep
ublicans were
closely related to their 1787–89 Federalist and Anti-Federalist predecessors. For
the most part,
Republicans were more rural and agricultural than their Federalist opponents. Wh
ereas an
Alexander Hamilton would always be suspicious of the masses and their passions,
to the
Republicans, “Honest majorities, unmolested by priests, quacks, and selfish deceiv
ers, necessarily
would make good decisions.”57 This did not mean that all Republicans were poor yeo
men farmers,
because much of their leadership (for example, Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe) c
onsisted of
affluent southern planters; at the same time affluent merchants and entrepreneur
s led a Federalist
following of poorer, aspiring middle-class tradesmen. Because the northeastern p
art of the United
States was more populous and enjoyed a more diverse economy than the agricultura
l South and
West, this rural/urban dichotomy tended to manifest itself into a southern/weste
rn versus
northeastern party alignment. Characterizing the first party system as one of ag
rarian versus
cosmopolitan interests would not be wholly inaccurate.
Ideologically, Republicans clung to the Anti-Federalists’ radical Whig embrace of
small,
democratic, decentralized government. They accepted the Constitution, but they r
ead and
interpreted it closely (strict constructionism), with special attention to the f
irst ten amendments. In
this spirit they retained their suspicion of direct taxation and standing armies
; in foreign policy they
were naturally drawn to the radical French Revolutionaries. Federalists, on the
other hand,
continued their drift toward a policy of expansive, vigorous national government—c
ertainly not a
monarchy or coercive state, but a government that nevertheless could tax, fight,
regulate commerce,
and provide Hamilton’s revered “general welfare” for all Americans. Federalists wanted
a viable
army and a foreign policy that courted New England’s foremost trading partner, Gre
at Britain.
Members of both parties strongly believed in republican government and the divis
ion of power;
both aimed to use the Constitution to govern fairly and avoid a return to author
itarianism; and both
ultimately rejected violence as a legitimate means of achieving their political
goals. While both
groups feared tyranny, only the Federalists thought it likely to come from the m
asses as easily as
from a monarch, with Adams arguing that “unbridled majorities are as tyrannical an
d cruel as
unlimited despots.”58
One supremely important issue was missing from the list: slavery. It would be ha
rd to claim that the
Federalists were antislave, especially with slaveholders such as Washington at t
he helm. On the
other hand, it would seem to be equally difficult to paint the small-government
Republicans as
proslave. Yet that is exactly the direction in which each party, respectively, w
as headed. Because of
their view of general welfare and equality for all, but even more so because of
their northern
origins, the Federalists laid the framework for ultimately insisting that all me
n are created equal,
and that included anyone defined as a man. Under other circumstances, few Republ
icans would
have denied this, or even attempted to defend the proslavery position. Their def
ense of states’
rights, however, pushed them inevitably into the proslavery corner.
How to Recognize a 1790s Republican or Federalist*
REPUBLICANS
FEDERALISTS
Leaders:
Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Gallatin, Clinton, Burr
Washington, Adams, Hamilton, Morris, Pickering, King, Knox
Origins:
Anti-Federalist faction of Revolutionary Whigs
Federalist faction of Revolutionary Whigs
Regional Demographic Base:
South, West, and Middle States
New England and Middle States
Local Demographic Base:
Rural (farms, plantations, and villages)
Urban (cities, villages, and river valleys)
Economic Base:
Farmers, planters, artisans, and workingmen
Merchants, financiers, tradesmen, and some exporting farmers
Class:
Lower and middling classes led by planter elite
Upper and middling classes
Ideology:
Radical Whig
Moderate Whig
Localists
More centralist
Agrarians
Commercial
Promilitia
Professional military
Less taxation, balanced budget
Taxation and deficit
Egalitarian
More elitist enlighted paternalists
Strict construction (of Constitution)
Broad constructionist
Pro-French
Pro-British
Expansionists
Reluctant expansionists
Future incarnations:
Democratic Party
Whig Party and Modern Republican Party (GOP)
Sometime in the early 1790s, Madison employed his political savvy in officially
creating the
Jeffersonian Republican Party. He began his organization in Congress, gathering
and marshaling
representatives in opposition to Hamilton’s reports and Jay’s Treaty. To counter the
Hamiltonian
bias of John Fenno’s influential Gazette of the United States, Madison, in 1791, e
ncouraged
Freneau to publish a rival Republican newspaper, the National Gazette. Madison h
imself wrote
anonymous National Gazette editorials lambasting Hamilton’s three reports and Wash
ington’s
foreign policy. He simultaneously cultivated national support, encouraged grassr
oots Republican
political clubs, and awaited an opportunity to thwart the Federalists’ electoral d
ominance. When
Jefferson resigned as secretary of state in protest in 1793, the stage was set f
or the first national
electoral showdown between Republicans and Federalists.
It is true these were not parties in the modern sense of the word.59 They lacked
ward/precinct/district organizations; since voting was still the privilege of a
few, they did not rely
on “getting out the vote.” The few existing party papers were not comparable in infl
uence to those
of the Jacksonian age twenty years later. Most important, these parties still re
lied on ideology—the
person’s philosophy or worldview—to produce votes; whereas the Second American Party
System,
founded by Martin Van Buren and William Crawford in the 1820s, was built on a mu
ch more crass
principle, patronage. Still, these organs did galvanize those holding the franch
ise into one of two
major groups, and to that extent they generated excitement during elections.
Democracy’s First Test
Whereas Hamilton crafted the major Federalist victories of the 1790s, Vice Presi
dent John Adams
dutifully defended them. After Washington, unwilling to serve a third term, fina
lly announced his
retirement in 1796, Adams became his party’s de facto standard-bearer against Jeff
erson in the
nation’s first contested presidential election. At an early point, then, the natio
n came to this key
crossroads: could the people transfer power, without bloodshed, from one group t
o another group
holding views diametrically opposed to the first group?
Federalists enjoyed a distinct advantage, thanks to Washington’s popularity and th
e lateness of his
retirement announcement (the Republicans did not dare announce opposition until
it was certain the
venerated Washington would not run). Yet Jefferson’s popularity equaled that of th
e tempestuous
Adams, and the two joined in a lively race, debating the same issues that raged
in Congress—Jay’s
Treaty, the BUS, national debt, and taxation, especially the whiskey tax.
Adams’s worst enemy turned out to be a former ally, Hamilton, whom the vice presid
ent referred to
as “a Creole bastard,” and whom Abigail Adams termed Cassius, out to assassinate her
Caesar.60
Hamilton distrusted Adams, whom he considered too moderate, and schemed to use t
he electoral
college to elect Federalist vice presidential candidate Thomas Pinckney to the p
residency. Similar
machinations would reemerge in 1800, when Hamilton and Aaron Burr both tried to
manipulate the
electoral college for their Machiavellian ends. Under the system in place at the
time, the electors
voted separately for president and vice president, leaving open the possibility
that there could be a
president of one party and a vice president of another. (Bundling the two togeth
er did not occur
until later.) The Founders had anticipated that each state would vote for its ow
n favorite son with
one vote, and for the next best candidate with the other elector. Adams won with
71 electoral votes
to Jefferson’s 68; Pinckney gathered 59, and Aaron Burr, Jefferson’s vice presidenti
al running
mate, finished last with 30. Yet it was a divided and bitter victory. Georgia’s ba
llot had
irregularities that put Adams, in his capacity as presider over the Senate, whic
h counted the votes,
in a pickle. If he acknowledged the irregularities, the election could be thrown
open because no
candidate would have a majority. Adams took the unusual step of sitting down whe
n Georgia’s
ballot was handed to him, thereby giving the Jeffersonians an opportunity to pro
test the ballot.
Jefferson, aware of the incongruities, instructed his followers to say nothing.
After a moment,
Adams affirmed the Georgia ballot and thereby assumed the presidency. This Const
itutional
confusion (which would soon be corrected by the Twelfth Amendment) made Adams’s ri
val
Jefferson his reluctant vice president. Adams seemed not to mind this arrangemen
t, thinking that at
least “there, if he could do no good, he could do no harm.”61 But the arrangement wa
s badly
flawed, ensuring constant sniping at the administration from within and a reluct
ance to pass
legislation because of the anticipation that a new election would bring Jefferso
n into power. Indeed,
Jefferson and Madison immediately began to look to the election of 1800.
Two months earlier, President Washington had delivered his famed Farewell Addres
s. Physically
and mentally wearied by decades of service, and literally sickened by the politi
cal bickering that
characterized his last term in office, Washington decided to step down. He was a
lso motivated by a
desire to set a precedent of serving only two terms, a move that evinced the str
ong fear of
authoritarianism shared by all Whig Revolutionaries, Federalist and Republican a
like. The
Constitution placed no limit on the number of terms a chief executive could serv
e, but Washington
set such a limit on himself, and every president adhered to the 1796 precedent u
ntil 1940. Franklin
Delano Roosevelt’s reversal (via third and fourth terms), even if coming as it did
during national
crises, so concerned the nation that the Twenty-second Amendment (1951) was adde
d to the
Constitution, making Washington’s practice a fundamental law.
Appropriately, Washington’s farewell speech was written to a great extent by Hamil
ton, although
the president read and edited several drafts. The address called for nationalism
, neutrality, and
nonpartisanship; Republicans no doubt pondered over the sincerity of Washington’s
and
Hamilton’s last two points. Certainly, nationalism was a Federalist hallmark, and
Washington
reiterated his deep belief in the need for union versus the potential dangers of
regionalism, states’
rights, and “geographical distinction.” In foreign policy, the chief executive reemp
hasized the goals
of his Proclamation of Neutrality—to offer friendship and commerce with all nation
s, but to “steer
clear” of “political connection…and permanent alliances with any portion of the foreig
n world.”
Much has been made of Washington’s warning not to become involved in European affa
irs—this,
after having just cemented new international trade agreements with Spain and Gre
at Britain!
Washington knew better than to think the United States could isolate itself perm
anently. He stated,
“Twenty years peace with such an increase of population and resources as we have a
right to
expect; added to our remote situation from the jarring powers, will in all proba
bility enable us in a
just cause to bid defiance to any power on earth” [emphasis ours].62 His concern t
hat the young
nation would be drawn into strictly Continental squabbles, especially those betw
een Britain and
France, reflected not an unwillingness to engage in the international use of pow
er, but an admission
of the weakness of American might. In North America, for example, Washington him
self had
virtually instigated the French and Indian War, so he certainly was under no ill
usions about the
necessity for military force, nor did he discount the ability of the Europeans t
o affect America with
their policies. Rather, the intent was to have the United States lay low and whe
re prudent refrain
from foreign interventions. Note that Washington gave the United States twenty y
ears to gain
international maturity, a time frame ending with the the War of 1812.63 Further,
America’s
insulation by the oceans kept these goals at the core of American foreign policy
for the next
century, until transportation and communication finally rendered them obsolete.
But would
Washington, a man willing to fight for liberty, have stood by and allowed an Ado
lf Hitler to invade
and destroy England, or Japanese aggressors to rape Nanking? His phrase, “in a jus
t cause,”
suggests not.
Finally, and incongruously, Washington cautioned against political partisanship.
This phrase,
penned by Hamilton, at best was a call to better behavior on all sides and at wo
rst was simply a
throwaway phrase for public consumption. Washington apparently did not see Hamil
ton’s
scheming and political maneuvering as partisan endeavor, and therefore saw no ir
ony in the
pronouncement.
Concluding with an appeal to the sacred, as he frequently did, Washington stated
that “Religion and
Morality are indispensable supports.”64 It would be hopeless, he implored, to thin
k that men could
have “security for property, for reputation, for life if the sense of religious ob
ligation desert the
oaths” of officeholders [emphasis ours]. In such arenas as the Supreme Court, wher
e oaths provided
enforcement of those protections, Washington somberly noted, mere morality alone
could not
survive without “religious principle.” His speech was the quintessential embodiment
of a phrase
often ridiculed more than two hundred years later, “Character counts.” Washington’s wa
rning to
the nation, though, was that effective government required more than a chief exe
cutive of high
moral fiber—the entire nation had to build the country on the backs of its citizen
s’ behavior.
Having delivered this important speech, the general quietly finished out his ter
m and returned to his
beloved Virginia, attending one last emotional ceremony inaugurating his vice pr
esident, John
Adams, after he had won the election of 1796.
The Father of Our Country would not live to see the new century, but his legacy
to American
posterity was never exceeded, and rarely matched. Historian John Carroll listed
no fewer than ten
achievements of Washington’s two administrations, including developing a policy fo
r the
disposition of public lands, establishing credit at home and abroad, removing th
e British troops
from the Northwest, and several others.65 Another historian concluded, “By agreein
g to serve not
one, but two terms of office, Washington gave the new nation what above all else
it needed:
time.”66 It might also be said that Washington loaned the young republic some of h
is own
character, modeling virtuous behavior of a president for all who followed.
Quasi War
Despite the succession of a member of Washington’s own party and administration, t
he election of
1796 elevated to power a man much different in temperament and personality than
the great general
he replaced. John Adams was both ably suited for, and considerably handicapped i
n, the fulfillment
of his presidential duties. The sixty-two-year-old president-elect still possess
ed a keen intellect,
pious devotion, and selfless patriotism, but age had made him more irascible tha
n ever. His enemies
pounced on his weaknesses. The Aurora referred to him as “old, Guerelous [sic], ba
ld, blind, and
crippled,” to which Abigail quipped that only she was capable of making such an as
sessment about
her husband!67 Adams, however, excelled in foreign policy matters, which was for
tunate at a time
when the nation had been thrust into the imbroglio of Anglo-French rivalry. With
no help from
Republican opponents or Federalist extremists within his own party, Adams rose a
bove
factionalism and averted war. In the process he paid a huge political price for
his professionalism.
For at least a decade the British had bullied Americans on the high seas and at
the treaty table; in
1797 the French decided it was their turn. Angered by Federalist Anglophilia and
the subservience
evidenced in Jay’s Treaty, France, too, began to seize and confiscate American shi
pping to the tune
of three hundred vessels. French aggression shocked and silenced Republicans. Am
ong the
Federalists, the response was surprisingly divided. Predictably, Hamiltonians an
d other arch-
Federalists, who had bent over backward to avoid war with Britain, now pounded t
he drums of war
against France. A popular toast of the day to Adams was, “May he, like Samson, sla
y thousands of
Frenchmen with the jawbone of a Jefferson.”68 Adams himself and the moderates, how
ever,
followed the president’s lead and tried to negotiate a peace. They were stymied in
itially by
unscrupulous Frenchmen.
To negotiate with the French foreign minister Charles Talleyrand—a master of perso
nal survival
skills who had avoided the guillotine under the Jacobins, later survived the irr
ationalities of
l’empereur Napoléon, and later still had returned to represent the restored Bourbon
monarchy—
Adams sent Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Thomas’s brother), John Marshall, and Elbr
idge Gerry
to Paris. Upon arrival, however, the Americans were not officially allowed to pr
esent their
credentials to the foreign minister—an immense snub. At an unofficial meeting with
three French
agents—referred to anonymously by the American press as Agents X, Y, and Z—the Ameri
cans
learned that the French agents expected a bribe before they would be granted an
audience with
French officials. Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry refused such a profane act, and
immediately
returned home. Newspapers later reported that Pinckney had proclaimed to Agents
X, Y, and Z that
Americans would gladly spend “millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute.” I
t’s more
probable he uttered the less quotable, “It is no, not a sixpence,” but regardless, t
he French got the
message. The negotiations abruptly ended, and the arch-Federalists had their iss
ue.69
Before long, the infamous X, Y, Z Affair produced a war fever and temporarily so
lidified the
Federalists’ power base. After recovering somewhat from their initial shock, Repub
licans asked
why Americans should declare war on France for aggression identical to that whic
h Great Britain
had perpetrated with impunity for nearly a decade. Adams stood between the two g
roups of
extremists, urging more negotiations while simultaneously mustering thousands of
soldiers and
sailors in case shooting started. He had benefited from the authorization by Con
gress, two years
earlier, of six frigates, three of which were rated at forty-four guns, although
only the United States
and the Constellation actually carried that number.70 These vessels, which Adams
referred to as
“floating batteries and wooden walls,” entered service just as tensions on the ocean
s peaked. In
February 1799, open fighting between American and French ships erupted on the hi
gh seas,
precipitating an undeclared war, dubbed by historians thereafter as the Quasi Wa
r.
Adams already had his hands full with peacemaking initiatives without the interf
erence of George
Logan, a Pennsylvania Quaker who traveled to Paris on his own funds to secure th
e release of some
American seamen. Logan may have been well intentioned, but by inserting himself
into
international negotiations, he endangered all Americans, not the least of which
were some of those
he sought to help.71 His actions spawned the Logan Act of 1799, which remains in
effect to the
present, forbidding private citizens from negotiating with foreign governments i
n the name of the
United States.
Meanwhile, buoyed by a 1798 electoral sweep, the so-called arch-Federalists in C
ongress continued
to call for war against France. Pointing to alleged treason at home, they passed
a set of extreme
laws—the Alien and Sedition Acts—that would prove their political undoing. A Natural
ization Act,
aimed at French and Irish immigrants, increased from four to fourteen the number
of years required
for American citizenship. The fact that these immigrants were nearly all Catholi
cs and Republicans
no doubt weighed heavily in deciding their fate. A new Alien Act gave the presid
ent the power to
deport some of these “dangerous Aliens,” while the Sedition Act allowed the Federali
sts to escalate
their offensive against American Francophiles by abridging First Amendment speec
h rights. The
Sedition Acts forbade conduct or language leading to rebellion, and although the
wording remained
rather vague, Federalist judges evidently understood it. Under the act, they arr
ested, tried,
convicted, and jailed or fined twenty-five people, mostly Republican newspaper e
ditors, including
Matthew Lyon, a jailed Republican congressman who won his reelection while still
behind bars.
Application of modern-day values, not to mention civil liberties laws, would mak
e the Alien and
Sedition Acts seem outrageous infringements on personal liberties. In context, t
he sedition clauses
originated in the libel and slander laws of the day. Personal honor was a value
most Americans held
quite dear, and malicious slurs often resulted in duels. The president of the Un
ited States, subjected
to vile criticism, had no means of redress to defamatory comments. It would be a
lmost a half
century before courts routinely held that a much higher bar governed the protect
ion of public
figures’ reputations or character from attacks that, to an ordinary citizen, might
be considered
libelous or slanderous.
Newspapers rushed to Adams’s defense, with the Guardian of New Brunswick declaring
“Sedition
by all the laws of God and man, is, and ever has been criminal.” Common law tradit
ion in England
long had a history of restricting criticism of the government, but with the Fren
ch Revolution
threatening to spread the Reign of Terror across all of Europe, public criticism
took on the aura of
fomenting rebellion—or, at least, that was what most of the Federalists thought, p
rovoking their
ham-handed response. Adams, above all, should have known better.
Suffering from one of his few moral lapses, Adams later denied responsibility fo
r these arguably
unconstitutional laws, yet in 1798 he neither vetoed nor protested them. Republi
cans countered
with threats to disobey federal laws, known as the Virginia and Kentucky Resolut
ions. Authored in
1798 and 1799 by Madison and Jefferson, respectively, the resolutions revived th
e Anti-Federalist
spirit with a call for state sovereignty, and comprised a philosophical bridge b
etween the Articles of
Confederation (and Tenth Amendment) and John C. Calhoun’s 1832 Doctrine of Nullifi
cation.
Madison and Jefferson argued from a “compact” theory of government. States, they cla
imed,
remained sovereign to the national government by virtue of the fact that it was
the states, not the
people, who formed the Union. Under this interpretation the states had the duty
to “judge the
constitutionality of federal acts and protect their citizens from unconstitution
al and coercive federal
laws.”72 Such a Lockean argument once thrilled true Revolutionaries, but now the D
eclaration
(through inference) and the Constitution (through express statement) repudiated
these doctrines. If
one follows the Jeffersonians’ logic of deriving all government from “first things,” h
owever, one
must go not to the Constitution, per se, but to its roots, the Declaration, wher
ein it was the people of
the colonies who declared independence; and the preamble to the Constitution—which
, admittedly
is not law itself but the intention for establishing the law—still begins, “We the P
eople of the
United States of America…” In either case, the states never were the activating or m
otivating body,
rather simply the administering body. No other state supported Madison or Jeffer
son’s resolutions,
which, if they had stood, would have led to an endless string of secessions—first,
states from the
Union, then, counties from states, then townsips from cities.
Adams’s Mettle and the Election of 1800
In one of his greatest triumphs, John Adams finally rose above this partisan ran
cor. Over the violent
objections of Hamilton and his supporters, he dispatched William Vans Murray to
negotiate with
Talleyrand. The ensuing French capitulation brought an agreement to leave Americ
an shipping
alone. With long-term consequences unsure, the short-term results left the Quasi
War in abeyance
and peace with France ensued. Adams showed his mettle and resolved the crisis. A
s his reward, one
month later, he was voted out of office.
Much of the anger stemmed from higher tax burdens, some of which the Federalists
had enacted for
the large frigates. A new tax, though, the Direct Tax of 1798, penalized propert
y ownership,
triggering yet another tax revolt, Fries’s Rebellion, wherein soldiers sent into P
hiladelphia to
enforce the tax encountered not bullets but irate housewives who doused the troo
ps with pails of
hot water. Fries was arrested, convicted of treason, and sentenced to be execute
d, but he found the
Federalists to be far more merciful than their portrayal in the Jeffersonian pap
ers. Adams pardoned
Fries, and although the tax protest shriveled, so did Federalist support in Penn
sylvania.73 It bears
noting, however, that in the twenty-nine years since the conclusion of the Revol
utionary War,
Americans had already risen in revolt three times, and on each occasion over tax
ation.
By 1800, the president had spent much of his time in the new “city” of Washington. H
ardly a city
at all, the District of Columbia was but a clump of dirty buildings, arranged ar
ound “unpaved,
muddy cesspools in winter, waiting for summer to transform them into mosquito-in
fested
swamps.”74 Adams disliked Washington—he had not liked Philadelphia much better—and
managed to get back to Quincy, Massachusetts, to his beloved Abigail whenever po
ssible. Never
possessed of a sunny disposition, Adams drifted into deep pessimism about the ne
w nation.
Although he ran against Jefferson again in 1800, this time the Virginian (a “shado
w man,” Adams
called him, for his ability to strike without leaving his fingerprints on any we
apon) bested him.
Anger and bitterness characterized the two men’s relationship by that point. Of Je
fferson, Adams
wrote, “He has talents I know, and integrity, I believe; but his mind is now poiso
ned with passion,
prejudice, and faction.”75 Political warfare had soured Adams even more since he h
ad become
president. Hamilton, whom Adams called the “bastard brat of a Scotch pedlar,” vexed
him from
behind and Jefferson, from in front. Besieged from both ends of the political sp
ectrum—the
Jeffersonian Republicans blamed him for the Alien and Sedition Acts, while Hamil
ton’s arch-
Federalists withdrew their support because of his peace with France—Adams was left
with few
friends. When the electoral college met, Jefferson and his vice presidential can
didate Aaron Burr
tied with 73 electoral votes each; Adams trailed in third place with 65.
Then, as in 1796, wily politicians tried to alter the choice of the people and t
he rule of law.
Jefferson and Burr had tied in the electoral college because the Constitution di
d not anticipate
parties or tickets and gave each elector two votes, one each for president and v
ice president. A tie
threw the election to the lame-duck Federalist House of Representatives, which n
ow had the
Constitutional prerogative to choose between the two Republicans. To make matter
s worse, the
Federalists expected from Burr, but never received, a polite statement declining
the presidency if it
were to be offered to him. Burr had other ideas, hoping some deadlock would resu
lt in his election,
in spite of failing to win the electoral college and all of his prior agreements
with the Republican
leadership.
House Federalists, with Hamilton as their de facto leader, licked their chops at
the prospect of
denying Jefferson the presidency. Yet the unscrupulous and unpredictable Burr wa
s just not
tolerable. Hamilton was forced to see the truth: his archenemy Jefferson was the
lesser of two evils.
By siding with the Virginian, Hamilton furthered American democracy while simult
aneously (and
literally) signing his own death warrant: Colonel Burr would soon take vengeance
against Hamilton
over letters the secretary had written supposedly impugning Burr’s honor.
Meanwhile, the lame-duck president frantically spent his last hours ensuring tha
t the Jeffersonians
did not destroy what he and Washington had spent twelve years constructing. The
Republicans had
decisively won both the legislative and executive branches of government in Nove
mber, leaving
Adams only one hope for slowing down their agenda: judicial appointments. His un
reasonable fear
and hatred of the Jeffersonians led him to take a step that, although constituti
onal, nevertheless
directly defied the will of the voters. In February 1801, Adams sent a new Judic
iary Act to the
lame-duck Congress, and it passed, creating approximately five dozen new federal
judgeships at all
levels, from federal circuit and district courts to justices of the peace. Adams
then proceeded to
commission ardent Federalists to each of these lifetime posts—a process so time co
nsuming that
the president was busy signing commissions into the midnight hours of his last d
ay in office. These
“midnight judges,” as the Republicans soon dubbed them, were not Adams’s only judiciar
y legacy
to Jefferson. In the final weeks of his tenure, Adams also nominated, and the la
me-duck Senate
approved, John Marshall as chief justice of the United States Supreme Court.76
Marshall’s appointment was, Adams later wrote, “a gift to the people of the United S
tates” that was
“the proudest of my life.”77 Throughout a brilliant career that spanned the entirety
of the American
Revolutionary era, Adams left America many great gifts. In Marshall, Adams beque
athed to the
United States a chief justice fully committed to capitalism, and willing to amen
d pristine property
rights to the cause of rapid development. Unlike Jefferson and fellow Virginian
John Taylor, who
weighed in as one of the leading economic thinkers of the day, Marshall perceive
d that true wealth
came from ideas put into action, not vaults of gold or acres of land.78 Whereas
the Jeffersonians,
Taylor, and other later thinkers such as William Gouge would pin the economic ho
pes of the
country on agriculture and metallic money, Marshall understood that the world ha
d moved past
that. Without realizing it, Adams’s last-minute appointment of Marshall ensured th
e defeat of the
Jeffersonian ideal over the long run, but on the morning of Jefferson’s inaugurati
on, America’s first
involuntary one-term president (his son John Quincy would be the second) scarcel
y felt victorious.
Adams departed Washington, D.C., at sunrise, several hours before his rival’s inau
guration. Adams
was criticized for lack of generosity toward Jefferson, but his abrupt departure
, faithful to the
Constitution, echoed like a thunderclap throughout the world. Here was the clear
heir to
Washington, narrowly beaten in a legitimate election, not only turning the lever
s of power over to a
hated foe, but entrusting the entire machinery of government to an enemy faction—a
ll without so
much as a single bayonet raised or a lawsuit threatened. That event could be des
cribed as the most
important election in the history of the world. With one colossal exception in 1
860, the fact is that
with this selfless act of obedience to the law, John Adams ensured that the prin
ciple of a peaceful
and legal transfer of power in the United States would never even be questioned,
let alone seriously
challenged.
Growing America
Adams handed over to Jefferson a thriving, energetic Republic that was changing
before his very
eyes. A large majority of Americans remained farmers, yet increasingly cities ex
panded and gained
more influence over the national culture at a rate that terrified Jefferson. Bal
timore, Savannah,
Boston, Philadelphia, and Charleston all remained central locations for trade, s
hipping, and
intellectual life, but new population centers such as Cincinnati, Mobile, Richmo
nd, Detroit, Fort
Wayne, Chicago, Louisville, and Nashville surfaced as regional hubs. New York gr
adually
emerged as a more dominant city than even Boston or Philadelphia. A manumission
society there
worked to end slavery, and had won passage of the Gradual Manumission Act of 179
9. Above all,
New York symbolized the transformation in city government that occurred in most
urban areas in
the early 1800s. Government, instead of an institution that relied on property h
oldings of a few as
its source of power, evolved into a “public body financed largely by taxation and
devoting its
energies to distinctly public concerns.”79
A city like New York, despite its advances and refinements, still suffered from
problems that would
jolt modern Americans. An oppressive stench coming from the thousands of horses,
cattle, dogs,
cats, and other animals that walked the streets pervaded the atmosphere. (By 185
0, one estimate put
the number of horses alone in New York City at one hundred thousand, defecating
at a rate of
eighteen pounds a day and urinating some twenty gallons per day, each!) If livin
g creatures did not
suffice to stink up the city, the dead ones did: city officials had to cope with
hundreds of carcasses
per week, hiring out the collection of these dead animals to entrepreneurs.
Combined with the garbage that littered the streets, the animal excrement and ro
ad kill made for a
powerful odor. And human bodies mysteriously turned up too. By midcentury, the N
ew York City
coroner’s office, always underfunded, was paying a bounty to anyone collecting bod
ies from the
Hudson River. Hand-to-hand combat broke out on more than one occasion between th
e aquatic
pseudoambulance drivers who both claimed the same floating cadaver and, of cours
e, its reward.
Most important, though, the urban dwellers already had started to accept that th
e city owed them
certain services, and had gradually developed an unhealthy dependence on city ha
ll for a variety of
services and favors. Such dependence spawned a small devil of corruption that th
e political spoils
system would later loose fully grown. City officials, like state officials, also
started to wield their
authority to grant charters for political and personal ends. Hospitals, schools,
road companies, and
banks all had to “prove” their value to the community before the local authorities w
ould grant them
a charter. No small amount of graft crept into the system, quietly undermining S
mithian concepts
that the community was served when individuals pursued profit.
One fact is certain: in 1800, Americans were prolific. Population increases cont
inued at a rate of 25
percent per decade and the constitutionally mandated 1800 census counted 5,308,4
73 Americans,
double the 1775 number.80 Foreign immigrants accounted for some of that populati
on increase, but
an incredibly high birthrate, a result of economic abundance and a relatively he
althier lifestyle,
explained most of the growth. Ethnically, Americans were largely of Anglo, Celti
c (Scots and
Scots-Irish), and African descent, with a healthy smattering of French, Swedes,
Dutch, and
Germans thrown in. And of these 5.33 million Americans, 24 of 25 lived on farms
or in country
villages.
At least 50 percent of all Americans were female, and although their legal statu
s was unenviable, it
had improved considerably from that of European women. Most accepted the idea th
at a woman’s
sphere of endeavor was dedicated to the house, church, and the rearing of childr
en, a belief
prevailing among American men and women alike. Women possessed no constitutional
political
role. Economically, widows and single women (feme sole) could legally hold prope
rty, but they
surrendered those rights with marriage (feme covert). Trust funds and prenuptial
agreements (an
American invention) helped some middle-class families circumvent these restricti
ons. A few
women conducted business via power of attorney and other American contractual in
novations, and
a handful engaged in cottage industry. None of the professions—law, medicine (midw
ifery
excepted), ministry, or of course the army—were open to females, although, in the
case of
medicine, this had less to do with sexism than it did the physical necessity of
controlling large male
patients while operating without anesthetic. Women could not attend public schoo
ls (some attended
private schools or were tutored at home), and no colleges accepted women student
s.
Divorce was extremely difficult to obtain. Courts limited the grounds for separa
tion, and in some
states only a decree from the state legislature could effect a marital split. De
spite the presentist
critique by some modern feminists, the laws in the early Republic were designed
as much to protect
women from the unreliability and volatility of their husbands as to keep them un
der male control.
Legislatures, for example, tailored divorce laws to ensure that husbands honored
their economic
duties to wives, even after childbearing age.
In stark contrast to women stood the status of African Americans. Their lot was
most unenviable.
Nearly one million African Americans lived in the young United States (17 percen
t), a number
proportionately larger than today. Evolving slowly from colonial days, black sla
very was by 1800
fully entrenched. Opponents of slavery saw the institution thrive after the 1794
invention of the
cotton gin and the solidification of state black codes defining slaves as chatte
ls personal—
moveable personal property.
No law, or set of laws, however, embedded slavery in the South as deeply as did
a single invention.
Eli Whitney, a Yankee teacher who had gone south as a tutor, had conceived his c
otton gin while
watching a cat swipe at a rooster and gather a paw full of feathers. He cobbled
together a machine
with two rollers, one of fine teeth that sifted the cotton seeds out, another wi
th brushes, that swept
off the residual cotton fibers. Prior to Whitney’s invention, it took a slave an h
our to process a
single pound of cotton by hand; afterward, a slave could process six to ten time
s as much.81 In the
decade of the 1790s, cotton production increased from 3,000 bales a year to 73,0
00; 1810 saw the
production soar to 178,000 bales, all of which made slaves more indispensable th
an ever.82
Somehow, most African American men and women survived the ordeal of slavery. The
reason for
their heroic survival lies in their communities and family lives, and in their r
eligion. The slaves
built true sub-rosa societies with marriage, children, surrogate family members,
and a viable folk
culture—music, art, medicine, and religion. All of this they kept below the radar
screen of white
masters who, if they had known of these activities, would have suppressed them.
A few slaves
escaped to freedom, and some engaged in sabotage and even insurrections like Gab
riel’s Uprising
in 1800 Virginia. But for the most part, black survival came through small, day-
to-day acts of
courage and determination, fueled by an enthusiastic black Christian church and
Old Testamaent
tales of the Hebrews’ escape from Egyptian slavery.
Between the huge social gulf of master and slave stood a vast populace of “cracker
s,” the plain
white folk of the southern and western frontier.83 Usually associated with humbl
e Celtic-American
farmers, cracker culture affected (and continues to affect) all aspects of Ameri
can life. Like many
derogatory terms, cracker was ultimately embraced by those at whom it was aimed.
Celtic-
American frontiersmen crossed the Appalachian Mountains, and their coarse, uniqu
e folk culture
arose in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys. As they carved out farms from the for
est, crackers
planted a few acres of corn and small vegetable gardens. Cattle, sheep, and the
ubiquitous hogs
(“wind splitters” the crackers called them) were left to their own devices in a sort
of laissez-faire
grazing system. Men hunted and fished, and the women worked the farms, kept hous
e, and bore
and raised children. They ate mainly meat and corn—pork, beef, hominy, johnnycake,
pone, and
corn mush. Water was bad and life was hard; the men drank corn whiskey.
Their diet, combined with the hardships of frontier lifestyle, led to much sickn
ess—fevers, chills,
malaria, dysentery, rheumatism, and just plain exhaustion. Worms, insects, and p
arasites of every
description wiggled, dug, or burrowed their way into pioneer skin, infecting it
with the seven-year
itch, a generic term covering scabies and crabs as well as body lice, which almo
st everyone
suffered from. Worse, hookworm, tapeworm, and other creatures fed off the flesh,
intestines, and
blood of frontier Americans. Crackers seemed particularly susceptible to these m
aladies. Foreign
travelers were shocked at the appearance of the “pale and deathly looking people” of
bluish-white
complexion.
Despite such hardships, the crackers were content with their hard lives because
they knew that land
ownership meant freedom and improvement. Armed with an evangelical Christian per
spective,
crackers endured their present hardships with the confidence that their lives ha
d improved, and
would continue to get better. Historian George Dangerfield captured the essence
of cracker
ambitions when he wrote of their migration: “[T]he flow of human beings beyond the
Alleghenies
was perhaps the last time in all history when mankind discovered that one of its
deepest needs—the
need to own—could be satisfied by the simple process of walking towards it. Harsh
as the journey
was…the movement could not help but be a hopeful one.”84
“We Are All Republicans, We Are All Federalists”
The election of 1800 marked the second peaceful transfer of power (the first was
1788) in the brief
history of the new nation. Perhaps it was the magnanimity of this moment that le
d Jefferson, in his
1801 inaugural address, to state, “We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists.”
Reading the
entire text of the speech two hundred years later, however, it appears that most
of the audience
members must have been Republicans.
Far from the Revolution of 1800 that some historians have labeled the election,
Jefferson and his
followers did not return the nation to the radical Whig precepts of Anti-Federal
ism and the Articles
of Confederation era, although they did swing the political pendulum in that dir
ection. Jefferson’s
two terms in office, from 1801 to 1809, did, however, mark a radical departure f
rom the 1789–1800
Federalist policies that preceded them.
By the time he became president—the first to function from Washington, D.C.—Jefferso
n already
had lived a remarkable life. Drafter of the Declaration, lawyer, member of the V
irginia House of
Burgesses, governor of Virginia, minister to France, secretary of state, the Sag
e of Monticello (as
he would later be called) had blessed the nation richly. His personal life, howe
ver, never seemed to
reflect the tremendous success he had in public. When his wife died in 1782, it
left him
melancholy, and whereas he still had daughters upon whom to lavish affection, he
reimmersed
himself in public life thereafter. His minimal religious faith offered little so
lace. Monticello, the
mansion he built with his own hands, offered little pleasure and produced an end
less stream of
debts. He founded the University of Virginia and reformed the curriculum of Will
iam and Mary,
introducing medicine and anatomy courses. A slaveholder who freed only a handful
of his chattel,
Jefferson is said to have fathered children with his slave Sally Hemings. But mo
dern DNA testing
has proven only the strong probability that one of the Hemingses, Eston, was fat
hered by one of
some twenty-four Jefferson males in Virginia at the time, including at least sev
en whom
documentary evidence suggests were at Monticello at the time. This left only a h
andful of
candidates, most noticeably Thomas’s brother Randolph Jefferson. But archival evid
ence putting
him at Monticello on the key dates does not entirely support naming him as Eston’s
father—but it
cannot rule him out either.85
The public, political Jefferson was more consistent. His first inaugural address
set the tone for the
Jefferson that most Americans would recognize. He called for a return to Revolut
ionary principles:
strict construction of the Constitution, state power (“the surest bulwark against
antirepublican
tendencies”), economy in government, payment of the national debt, “encouragement of
agriculture, with commerce as its hand maiden,” and, in an obvious reference to th
e reviled Alien
and Sedition Acts, “Freedom of religion, press, and person.” These were not empty ph
rases to
Thomas Jefferson, who waited his whole life to implement these ideals, and he pr
oceeded to build
his administration upon them.
Albert Gallatin, Jefferson’s secretary of the treasury, was point man in the immed
iate assault on
Alexander Hamilton’s economic policy and the hated three reports. Gallatin, a Fren
ch immigrant to
Pennsylvania, an Anti-Federalist, and an early target of Federalist critics of s
o-called alien radicals,
had led the attack on speculators and stockjobbers. A solid advocate of hard mon
ey, balanced
budgets, and payment of the national debt, Gallatin was one of the most informed
critics of
Hamilton’s system.
With a Republican Congress passing enabling legislation, Gallatin abolished inte
rnal taxation and
built a Treasury Department funded solely by customs duties and land sales. The
Federalists’
annual $5 million budgets were slashed in half, and the Treasury began to pay of
f the national debt
(by 1810, $40 million of the $82 million debt had been paid, despite Jefferson’s e
xtravagant
purchase of the Louisiana Territory).
Lest one credit the Jeffersonians with genius or administrative magic, this succ
ess was to a large
degree Hamilton’s legacy. He had stabilized the money supply by insisting that the
debt holders
would, in fact, be repaid. The blessings of the Federalist years, including soar
ing commerce that
could support the customs base (Jay’s and Pinckney’s treaties at work), the stable f
rontiers and safe
oceans, the pacification of the Indians, and the state of peace (the result of W
ashington and
Adams’s commitment to neutrality), all provided the undergirding that allowed reve
nues to flow in
while expenses were kept relatively low. Land, already abundant, would become ev
en more so after
Jefferson’s acquisition of Louisiana, and this, too, gave the Republicans the free
dom to pursue
budget cutting, as the revenues of land sales were enormous, giving the Land Off
ice plenty of work
for decades.86 More broadly, though, the nation had already adopted critical bus
iness practices and
philosophies that placed it in the middle of the capitalist revolution, includin
g sanctity of contracts,
competition, and adoption of the corporate form for business. This foundation of
law and good
sense guaranteed relative prosperity for a number of years.
Jefferson wanted to benefit his natural constituency, the farmers, just as Hamil
ton had befriended
the bankers. He did not believe in any direct subsidies for farmers, but he task
ed Gallatin to help
the agrarian interests in other ways, specifically in reducing transportation co
sts.87 Congress
“experimented after 1802 with financing western roads from the proceeds of federal
land sales, and
Congress in 1806 ordered Jefferson to build a national road to Ohio.”88 Even Jeffe
rson inquired as
to whether Congress could do anything else to “advance the general good” within “the p
ale” of its
“constitutional powers.”89 But in 1806, Jefferson became even more aggressive with i
nternal
improvements, recognizing a federal role in the “improvement of the country.”90 It i
s significant
that Jefferson, like Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun after him, saw this physical
uniting of the
nation as a means to defuse the slavery issue. Calhoun, of South Carolina—a leadin
g advocate of
slavery—would argue in 1817 that the Congress was under the “most imperious obligati
on to
counteract every tendency to disunion” and to “bind the republic together with a per
fect system of
roads and canals.”91
In an extensive report to Congress, finally delivered in 1808, Gallatin outlined
a massive plan for
the government to remove obstacles to trade.92 Proposing that Congress fund a te
n-year, $20
million project in which the federal government would construct roads and canals
itself, or provide
loans for private corporations to do so, Gallatin detailed $16 million in specif
ic programs. He
wanted a canal to connect the Atlantic Coast and the Great Lakes, and he include
d more than $3
million for local improvements.93 Jefferson endorsed the guts of the plan, havin
g reservations only
about the possible need for a constitutional amendment to ensure its legality. B
ut for the smallgovernment
Republicans, it constituted a breathtaking project, amounting to five times all
of the
other total government outlays under Jefferson.94 The project showed the selecti
vity of Jefferson’s
predisposition to small government. He concluded in 1807 that “embracing every loc
al interest, and
superior to every local consideration [was] competent to the selection of such n
ational objects” and
only the “national legislature” could make the final determination on such grand pro
posals.95
(Madison did not dissent at the time, but a decade later, as president, he vetoe
d the Bonus Bill,
which called for an internal improvement amendment.)96
However Jefferson and Gallatin justified their plan, it remained the exception t
o the Republicans’
small-government/budget-cutting character, not the norm. While Gallatin labored
over his report—
most of which would eventually be funded through private and state efforts, not
the federal
government—Jefferson worked to roll back other federal spending. The radical $2.4
million
reduction of the national budget (one can barely imagine the impact of a 50 perc
ent budget cut
today!) sent shock waves through even the small bureaucracy. Gallatin dismissed
all excise tax
collectors and ordered every federal agency and cabinet office to cut staff and
expenses. (Only a
few years later, James Madison conducted the business of the secretary of state
with a staff of three
secretaries.) Then half of the remaining federal employees were replaced with Je
ffersonian
Republican employees. The Federalist bureaucracy, in which a mere six of six hun
dred federal
employees were Republicans, was thus revolutionized.
The Department of War was the next target for the budget slashers. Jefferson and
his followers had
never been friendly to the military establishment, and they cut the navy nearly
out of existence,
eliminating deep-sea vessels and maintaining only a coastal gunboat fleet, virtu
ally all of which
were sunk in the War of 1812. With the Northwest Indian wars concluded, the Repu
blicans
chopped the army’s budget in half; troop strength shrank from 6,500 to 3,350 men i
n uniform. To
further eliminate what they saw as an overly Federalist officer corps, the Jeffe
rsonians launched a
radical experiment—a military academy to train a new “republican” officer class, thus
producing a
supreme irony, in that the United States Military Academy at West Point became a
great legacy of
one of America’s most antimilitary presidents.
Finally, Jefferson sought to change the alleged undemocratic tone of the Federal
ist years through
simplicity, accessibility, and lack of protocol. The president literally led the
way himself, riding
horseback to his March 1801 inauguration, instead of riding in a carriage like W
ashington or
Adams. He replaced the White House’s rectangular dinner table with a round one at
which all
guests would, symbolically at least, enjoy equal status. Widower Jefferson ran a
much less formal
household than his predecessors, hosting his own dinner parties and even persona
lly doing some of
the serving and pouring of wine. The informality distressed the new British amba
ssador to the
United States when, upon paying his first visit to the White House, his knock up
on the door was not
answered by house servants, but rather by the president of the United States, dr
essed in house robe
and slippers.
Judiciary Waterloo for Minimalist Government
While the Federalists in Congress and the bureaucracy ran before this flood of J
effersonian
democrats, one branch of government defiantly stood its ground. The lifetime app
ointees to the
judiciary branch—the United States federal courts and the Supreme Court—remained sta
unchly
Federalist. Jefferson thus faced a choice. He could let the judges alone and wai
t for age and attrition
to ultimately create a Republican judiciary, or he could adopt a more aggressive
policy. He chose
the latter course, with mixed results.
Much of Jefferson’s vendetta against Federalist judges came from bitterness over J
ohn Adams’s
last two years in office. Federalist judges had unfairly convicted and sentenced
Republican editors
under the Sedition Act. Adams and the lame-duck Congress added insult to injury
by passing a new
Judiciary Act and appointing a whopping sixty new Federalist judges (including C
hief Justice John
Marshall) during Adams’s last sixty days in office. Jefferson now sought to legall
y balance the
federal courts.
The Virginian might have adopted an even more incendiary policy, because his mos
t extreme
advisers advocated repealing all prior judiciary acts, clearing the courts of al
l Federalist judges, and
appointing all Republicans to take their place. Instead, the administration wise
ly chose to remove
only the midnight judges and a select few sitting judges. With the Amendatory Ac
t, the new
Republican Congress repealed Adams’s 1801 Judiciary Act, and eliminated thirty of
Adams’s
forty-seven new justices of the peace (including a fellow named William Marbury)
and three
federal appeals court judgeships. Attempts to impeach several Federalist judges,
including Supreme
Court justice Samuel Chase, met with mixed results. Chase engaged in arguably un
professional
conduct in several of the Sedition Act cases, but the attempt to remove him prov
ed so partisan and
unprofessional that Republican moderates joined the minority Federalists to acqu
it Chase.
Congressional Republicans won a skirmish with the Amendatory Act, but the Federa
lists, under
Supreme Court chief justice John Marshall, ultimately won the war. This victory
came thanks to a
subtle and complex decision in a case known as Marbury v. Madison (1803), and st
emmed from the
appointment of William Marbury as a midnight judge. Adams had commissionied Marb
ury as a
justice of the peace, but Marbury never received the commission, and when he inq
uired about it, he
was told by the secretary of state’s office that it had vanished. Marbury then sue
d the secretary of
state James Madison in a brief he filed before the United States Supreme Court i
tself.
Chief Justice Marshall wrote an 1803 opinion in Marbury that brilliantly avoided
conflict with
Jefferson while simultaneously setting a precedent for judicial review—the preroga
tive of the
Supreme Court, not the executive or legislative branches—to decide the constitutio
nality of federal
laws. There is nothing in the U.S. Constitution that grants the Supreme Court th
is great power, and
the fact that we accept it today as a given has grown from the precedent of John
Marshall’s
landmark decision. Marshall sacrificed his fellow Federalist Marbury for the gre
ater cause of a
strong centralized judiciary. He and fellow justices ruled the Supreme Court cou
ld not order
Marbury commissioned because they lacked jurisdiction in the case, then shrewdly
continued to
make a ruling anyway. The Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction, Marshall ruled, bec
ause a 1789
federal law granting such jurisdiction was unconstitutional; the case should hav
e originated in a
lower court. While the ruling is abstruse, its aim and result were not. The Supr
eme Court, said
Marshall, was the final arbiter of the constitutionality of federal law. In Flet
cher v. Peck (1811),
Marshall’s court would claim the same national authority over state law. Chief Jus
tice Marshall
thus paved the first segment of a long road toward nationalism through judicial
review. In the
Aaron Burr treason trial (1807), when the chief justice personally issued a subp
oena to President
Jefferson, it sent a powerful message to all future presidents that no person is
above the law.
Equally as important as judicial review, however, Marshall’s Court consistently ru
led in favor of
capitalism, free enterprise, and open markets. Confirming the sanctity of privat
e contracts, in
February 1819 the Supreme Court, in Dartmouth College v. Woodward, ruled that a
corporate
charter (for Dartmouth College) was indeed a contract that could not be violated
at will by the state
legislature. This supported a similar ruling in Sturges v. Crowninshield: contra
cts are contracts, and
are not subject to arbitrary revision after the fact. Some of the Marshall Court’s
rulings expanded
federal power, no doubt. But at the same time, they unleashed market forces to r
ace ahead of
regulation. For example, five years after Dartmouth, the Supreme Court held that
only the federal
government could limit interstate commerce. The case, Gibbons v. Ogden, involved
efforts by the
famous Cornelius Vanderbilt, who ran a cheap water-taxi service from New York to
New Jersey for
a steamboat operator named Thomas Gibbons. Their service competed against a New
York firm
that claimed a monopoly on the Hudson River. The commodore boldly carried passen
gers in
defiance of the claim, even offering to transport them on his People’s Line for no
thing if they
agreed to eat two dollars’ worth of food on the trip. Flying a flag reading new je
rsey must be free,
Vanderbilt demonstrated his proconsumer, low-price projects over the next thirty
years and, in the
process, won the case.97
Lower courts took the lead from Marshall’s rulings. For thirty years American cour
ts would favor
developmental rights over pure or pristine property rights. This was especially
explicit in the socalled
mill acts, wherein state courts affirmed the primacy of privately constructed mi
lls that
required the owners to dam up rivers, thus eroding or destroying some of the pro
perty of farmers
having land adjacent to the same river. Emphasizing the public good brought by t
he individual
building the mill, the courts tended to side with the person developing property
as opposed to one
keeping it intact.98 Legal historian James Willard Hurst has labeled this propen
sity toward
development “release of energy,” a term that aptly captures the courts’ collective goa
l: to unleash
American entrepreneurs to serve greater numbers of people. As policy it pleased
neither the hardcore
antistatists, who complained that it (rightly) put government authority on the s
ide of some
property owners as opposed to others, nor militant socialists, who hated all pri
vate property anyway
and called for heavy taxation as a way to spur development.99
A final pair of Marshall-like rulings came from Roger B. Taney, a Marylander nam
ed chief justice
when Marshall died in 1835. Having established the sanctity of contracts, the pr
imacy of
development, and the authority of the federal government over interstate trade,
the Court turned to
issues of competition. In Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, the Charles Riv
er Bridge
Company claimed its charter implicitly gave it a monopoly over bridge traffic, a
nd thus sued
Warren Bridge Company which sought to erect a competing crossing. Although many
of the early
colonial charters indeed had implied a monopoly power, the Court took a giant st
ep away from
those notions by ruling that monopoly powers did not exist unless they were expr
essly stated and
delegated in the charter. This opened the floodgates of competition, for no comp
any could hide
behind its state-originated charters any longer. Then, in 1839, in Bank of Augus
ta v. Earle, a debtor
from Alabama, seeking to avoid repaying his debts to the Bank of Augusta in Geor
gia, claimed that
the bank had no jurisdiction in Alabama. Appreciating the implications for stifl
ing all interstate
trade with a ruling against the bank, the Court held that corporations could con
duct business under
laws of comity, or mutual good faith, across state lines unless explicitly prohi
bited by the
legislatures of the states involved.100 Again the Court opened the floodgates of
competition by
forcing companies to compete across state boundaries, not just within them. Take
n together, these
cases “established the framework that allowed entrepreneurs in America to flourish
.”101
“We Rush Like a Comet into Infinite Space!”
Prior to the American Revolution, few white men had seen what lay beyond the “endl
ess
mountains.”102 By 1800, the Great Migration had begun in earnest, and American set
tlers poured
into and settled the trans-Appalachian West. Jefferson aimed to assist frontier
immigrants by
securing a free-trade route down the entirety of the Mississippi River to the Gu
lf of Mexico,
requiring the United States of America to purchase the port of New Orleans. Jeff
erson’s motives
appeared solely economic, yet they were also based on strategic concerns and an
overriding
agrarian philosophy that sought new outlets for America’s frontier farmers. At the
time, Jefferson
sought to secure only the port of New Orleans itself. American purchase of all o
f the Louisiana
Territory came as a surprise to nearly everyone involved.
Spain, ever fearful of the American advance, had returned the Louisiana Territor
y to France in the
secret Treaty of San Ildefonso (1800), then later made public. Napoléon Bonaparte,
on his rise to
become France’s post-Revolutionary emperor, promised the Spanish he would not sell
Louisiana.
He then immediately proceeded to do exactly that, convinced, after a revolution
in Haiti, that he
could not defend French possessions in the New World. The British, ever anxious
to weaken
France, made the information of the 1801 treaty available to the envoy to Englan
d, Rufus King,
who hastily passed the news on to Jefferson. America’s minister to France, Robert
Livingston, was
quickly authorized to negotiate for the right of deposit of American goods in Ne
w Orleans.
Livingston got nowhere, at which point Jefferson dispatched his Virginia friend,
James Monroe, to
Paris to assist in the negotiations.
Monroe arrived in Paris to parlay, whereupon he was astounded to hear Napoleon’s m
inister,
Talleyrand, ask, “What will you give for the whole?” By “the whole,” Talleyrand offered
not just
New Orleans, but all of the remaining Louisiana Territory—that area draining the M
ississippi River
from the Rocky Mountains to the Mississippi—for $15 million, a sum that included $
3 million in
debts American citizens owed the French.103 The actual price tag of Louisiana wa
s a stunningly
low $11.2 million, or less than one-tenth the cost of today’s Louisiana Superdome
in New Orleans!
The Jefferson administration, which prided itself on fiscal prudence and strict
adherence to the
Constitution, now found itself in the awkward position of arguing that Hamiltoni
an means
somehow justified Jeffersonian ends. Livingston and Monroe never had authority t
o purchase
Louisiana, nor to spend 50 percent more than authorized, no matter what the barg
ain. In the dollars
of the day, the expense of Louisiana was enormous, and nothing in the Constituti
on specifically
empowered the federal government to purchase a territory beyond its boundaries,
much less grant
American citizenship to tens of thousands of French nationals who resided within
that territory.
After a little hand-wringing and inconsequential talk of constitutional amendmen
ts, however, the
administration cast aside its fiscal and constitutional scruples. Minority Feder
alists erupted over the
hypocrisy of this stance, and one cried in protest over spending “fifteen million
dollars for bogs,
mountains, and Indians! Fifteen million dollars for uninhabited wasteland and re
fuge for
criminals!”104
The Federalists no doubt appreciated the fact that this new land would also beco
me a cradle for
numerous Jeffersonian Republican senators and congressmen representing a number
of new
agricultural states. Jefferson typically framed the argument in more philosophic
al terms: Louisiana
would become an “empire of liberty” populated by farmers who just happened to vote f
or his party.
In the end, the majority Republicans prevailed and, of thirty-two U.S. senators,
only six Arch-
Federalists voted against the Louisiana Purchase. In a telling example of the se
lf-destructive nature
of old Federalism, Fisher Ames wrote gloomily, “Now by adding this unmeasured worl
d beyond
[the Mississippi] we rush like a comet into infinite space. In our wild career w
e may jostle some
other world out of its orbit, but we shall, in any event, quench the light of ou
r own.”105
Even before receiving senatorial approval for the Louisiana Purchase, Jefferson
secretly ordered a
military expedition to explore, map, and report on the new territory and its bor
ders.106 The
president chose his personal aide, U.S. Army captain Meriwether Lewis, to lead t
he force, making
sure that the captain was sufficiently attuned to the scientific inquiries that
had captivated Jefferson
his entire life. Lewis, a combat veteran and woodsman who possessed considerable
intellect, went
to Philadelphia for a crash course in scientific method and biology under Charle
s Wilson Peale
prior to departure. For his coleader, Lewis chose William Clark, an affable, red
headed soldier (and
much younger brother of Revolutionary hero George Rogers Clark). The two spent t
he winter of
1803–04 encamped on the Mississippi at Wood River, directly across from French St.
Louis.
Official word of the Louisiana Purchase arrived, and in May of 1804, Lewis and C
lark led their
fifty-man Corps of Discovery across the Mississippi and up the Missouri River, b
ound for the
unknown lands of the North American Great Plains.107
Lewis and Clark aimed to follow the Missouri River to its headwaters in present-
day western
Montana. While encamped near modern-day Bismarck, North Dakota, during the winte
r of 1804–5,
they met and hired a pregnant Indian woman, Sacajawea, and her husband, Toussain
t Charbonneau,
to act as their translators and guides. After an arduous upriver journey, the co
rps arrived in the
summer of 1805 at the Missouri’s headwaters, ending serious discussion of an all-w
ater Northwest
Passage route to Asia. Then the expedition crossed the Rocky Mountains, leaving
the western
bounds of the Louisiana Purchase. Near the western base of the Rockies, Sacajawe
a secured horses
for the explorers, and they rode onto the Columbia Plateau in the late fall. Sai
ling down the Snake
and Columbia rivers, Lewis and Clark arrived at the Pacific Ocean on November se
venth, and
promptly carved by land from the u. states in 1804 & 1805 on a tree. They winter
ed on the Oregon
coast, then returned east, arriving to a hero’s welcome in St. Louis, Missouri, in
September 1806.
Lewis and Clark’s great journey has become legendary, and a reading of the Lewis a
nd Clark
extensive journals today reveals not only Jefferson’s strategic and economic motiv
es, but other,
more idealistic, motives as well. President Jefferson sent Lewis and Clark west
in search of
scientific data to further man’s knowledge and, at the same time, to explore what
he dreamed would
become an expanded agrarian American Republic.
Other American adventurers headed west to explore the new Louisiana Territory. I
n 1806, U.S.
Army captain Zebulon Pike led an official expedition up the Arkansas River to wh
at is now
Colorado, then attempted, but failed, to climb Pike’s Peak.108 Like Lewis and Clar
k’s, Pike’s
expedition set out with keenly defined instructions for what the government soug
ht to find, making
it truly an exploration as opposed to a discovery expedition. Uncle Sam expected
political,
diplomatic, economic, and scientific fruits from its expenditures, and Congress
routinely shared this
information with the public in a series of some sixty reports. However, the most
fascinating probe
of the West in these early years came not from an official U.S. expedition, but
from an illegal and
treasonous foray into the West by none other than former vice president Aaron Bu
rr.
The Cataline of America
John Adams, no friend of Burr’s, once wrote of him, “Ambition of military fame and a
mbition of
conquest over female virtue were the duplicate ruling powers of his life.”109 A di
rect descendant
of theologian Jonathan Edwards, Burr’s early military and political career seemed
promising. As a
patriot colonel, he heroically, though unsuccessfully, stormed the British garri
son at Quebec;
afterward he practiced law, espoused Anti-Federalism, and was elected a Republic
an senator from
New York State. A relentless schemer, Burr entertained notions of getting New En
gland to secede;
when that went nowhere, he moved on to more elaborate and fantastic designs. As
has been noted,
he attempted to stab his running mate, Jefferson, in the back in 1800, ending hi
s career in
Washington, D.C., as soon as it began. He ran for the governorship of New York i
n 1804 while still
serving as vice president. Thwarted in this attempt by his old rival Alexander H
amilton, Burr and
Hamilton exchanged heated letters. Neither would back down, and a duel ensued, a
t Weehawken,
New Jersey, where dueling was still legal.
Dueling was common in Burr’s day. Some of America’s most respected early leaders wer
e
duelists—indeed, in some parts of the South and West, dueling had become an essent
ial component
of political résumés. Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, John Randolph, Jefferson Davis, Sa
m Houston,
Thomas Hart Benton, and a score of other national leaders fought duels during th
e first half of the
nineteenth century. Hamilton had slandered Burr on numerous occasions, once call
ing him the
Cataline of America, in reference to the treacherous schemer who nearly brought
down the Roman
Republic.110
At Weehawken Heights in New Jersey in the late Autumn of 1804, the two scaled a
narrow ledge
more than 150 feet above the water. They prepared to duel in formal, time-honore
d tradition,
pacing off steps, then turning to face one another. Two shots were fired, though
historians know
little else. Letters published later revealed that Hamilton had said he intended
to throw away his
shot. No one knows exactly what Hamilton had on his mind, though it appeared to
one of the
seconds that Hamilton fired first and that his shot went high and wide, just as
he had planned.
Whether Burr, as some suspect, was jolted into firing quickly, or whether he mal
iciously took his
time, one thing is certain: only Colonel Burr left the field alive.
After winning his duel—and losing what little reputation, he had left—Burr continued
his
machinations without pause. He wandered west; in 1806, along with a hundred arme
d followers,
Burr sailed in gunboats down the Ohio and Mississippi to Natchez, Mississippi, w
here he was
arrested and marched to Richmond, Virginia, to stand trial for treason. Versions
of Burr’s plans
vary wildly, and he evidently told all of his confidants whatever they wanted to
hear so long as they
would lend him money.111 In court Burr claimed he was only moving to Louisiana t
o start a farm
and perhaps begin political life anew. Others suspect he had formed a western U.
S. secession
movement. Jefferson learned of it from Burr’s coconspirator, U.S. Army general Jam
es Wilkinson.
The president charged Burr with planning not only secession, but a unilateral wa
r against Spain
with the aim of bringing Spanish Texas under his own leadership.
The administration tried mightily to convict Burr of treason, but the former vic
e president had
outsmarted everyone. The federal circuit court, presided over by the chief justi
ce John Marshall,
was quick to spotlight the weakness of the administration’s case, setting huge leg
al precedents in
the process. When President Jefferson claimed executive privilege in refusing to
supply the court
with original documents as evidence, Marshall insisted on a compromise. As for t
reason, the court
ruled that since the government could not prove that Burr had levied war against
the United States,
he was not guilty. Freed, Burr returned to New York City, where he practiced law
, courted rich
widows, and schemed and dreamed to no avail for three decades. He never again cr
ossed the
Hudson to visit New Jersey, where there was a murder warrant for him. Having ext
inguished his
own career, as well as that of one of America’s brightest lights, Aaron Burr depar
ted into infamy.
America’s First Preemptive War
Throughout the 1790s, Republicans had leveled a number of highly critical attack
s at Federalist
foreign policy makers. Now, at last, the party of Jefferson was free to mold its
own foreign policy.
Jefferson dealt with some of North Africa’s Barbary pirates, sea-going Muslim outl
aws from
Morocco, Tunis, Algiers, and Tripoli who regularly plundered 1790s American Medi
terranean
shipping. Washington and Adams had paid some small bribes at first—the trade was n
ot sufficient
to warrant a military expedition—and it could be rationalized as the way of doing
business in that
part of the world. But when the pasha of Tripoli chopped down the flagpole at th
e U.S. consulate
there, it was a direct affront and an act of war. In 1801, Jefferson slowed down
his mothballing of
the naval fleet and sent ships to blockade the port. Operating only under a set
of joint resolutions,
not a declaration of war, Jefferson nevertheless informed all the Barbary States
that the United
States was at war with them. He sought to get an international coalition to help
, but no European
states wanted to alter the status quo. So, in 1804, Lieutenant Stephen Decatur w
ent ashore with
eight U.S. Marines; set fire to a captured frigate, the Philadelphia; and throug
h an expedition across
the desert led by William Eaton and Greek mercenaries, organized locals who dete
sted the pasha.
The American desert army also threatened the pirates’ lucrative slave trade, and t
he presence of the
powerful British fleet not far away put even more teeth into this threat. This s
tick, combined with a
carrot of a small ransom for the Philadelphia’s crew, sufficed to force the pirate
s down, and after
releasing the crew, they recognized American freedom to sail the high seas unint
errupted.112 By
dispatching even such a small body of men so far to secure American national int
erests, Jefferson
put the world on notice that the United States intended to be a force—if only a mi
nor one—in
world affairs. It was a remarkably brazen display of preemptive war by a preside
nt usually held up
as a model of limited government, and it achieved its results. The United States
squashed the threat
of the Barbary pirates—alone. Yet these foreign policy successes only served as a
prelude to a
recurrence of America’s major diplomatic headache—continuing Anglo-French warfare du
ring the
rise of Napoleonic Europe. As before, American foreign policy became bogged down
in this
European morass; like his Federalist predecessors, Jefferson floundered in the h
igh seas of
European diplomacy.
Between John Adams’s conclusion of the Quasi War in 1799 and renewed attacks on ne
utral
American commerce in 1806, New England traders had carried on a brisk trade with
both France
and Britain, earning an estimated $60 million annually. But Britain objected to
a particularly
lucrative aspect of this trade—Caribbean goods shipped to America in French vessel
s and then
reshipped to France in neutral American vessels. Britain aimed to crush these “bro
ken voyages”
through the Orders in Council (1806 and 1807), prohibiting American trade with F
rance and
enforced by a British blockade. When Americans tried to run the blockade, the Ro
yal Navy seized
their ships and impressed (drafted) American sailors to serve His Majesty. Brita
in justified this
kidnapping by insisting that all of the impressed sailors—ultimately numbering 10,
000—were in
fact British deserters. Americans once again found themselves treated like colon
ial subjects in a
mercantile system, forced yet again to demand fundamental neutral rights and fre
edom of the seas.
As tempers flared, the U.S. administration aimed its fury at Great Britain, whos
e strong navy
represented a greater threat to American shipping than France’s. Jefferson’s old pre
judices now
resurfaced with dangerous consequences: failing to construct large warships as t
he Federalists had,
Jefferson’s navy consisted of some two hundred, single-gun gunboats incapable of a
nything other
than intercepting ill-armed pirates or the most basic coastal defense.
Jefferson avoided war for many reasons, not the least of which was that he had s
pent much of his
administration dismantling the federal army and navy and now was in no position
at all to fight on
land or sea. Congress sought to accommodate his policies with the 1806 Nonimport
ation Act.
Britain, however, was unfazed by the boycotts and continued to attack and seize
shipping. An 1807
clash on the open oceans between the American ship Chesapeake and Britain’s Leopar
d resulted in
four Americans dead, eighteen wounded, and four impressed. “Never since the battle
of
Lexington,” wrote Jefferson, “have I seen the country in such a state of exasperatio
n.”113
In order to avoid the war that should have naturally followed the Chesapeake-Leo
pard duel,
Jefferson combined nonexportation with nonimportation in the Embargo Act of Dece
mber 1807.
This law prohibited Americans from trading with any foreign countries until Fran
ce and Britain
buckled under to national and international pressure and recognized America’s free
-trade rights.
But the results of the Embargo Act were disastrous. Neither Britain nor France a
cquiesced and in
blatant violation of federal law, New Englanders continued to trade with Britain
, smuggling
products along the rugged New England coast and through the ports of Nova Scotia
and New
Brunswick. When Jefferson left office in 1809, the main results of his well-inte
ntioned foreign
policy were economic downturn, a temporarily revived Federalist opposition, and
a perception by
both France and England that the United States was weak and lacking in convictio
n.
Exit the Sage of Monticello
Former president Jefferson at last returned to his beloved Monticello in 1809. A
ppropriately,
Monticello faced west, anticipating the future, not replaying the past. Jefferso
n’s record had, in
fact, replayed some past mistakes too often. Republicans had undoubtedly reshape
d the federal
government in a democratic and leaner form. The Louisiana Purchase and the Lewis
and Clark
Expedition were nothing less than magnificent triumphs. But the (technically ill
egal) Louisiana
Purchase had added more to the public domain than Washington or Adams had, requi
ring, even in
minimalist Jeffersonian terms, a bigger army, navy, and federal bureaucracy to p
rotect and govern
it. The judiciary contests and foreign policy exercises, except for the decisive
preemptive war
against the pirates, had not advanced the nation’s interests. In losing the judici
ary battles to
Marshall, Jefferson’s obsolete agrarian Republic was scraped away to make room for
a capitalist
engine of wealth creation. Moreover, his years in office had done nothing to rel
ieve his personal
debts, rebuild his deteriorated friendship with Adams, or constrain the size of
government. In some
ways, the nation he helped found had, like an unruly teenager, grown beyond his
ability to manage
it in the way he had envisioned. His successor, fellow Founder James Madison, in
many ways
proved a far better father for the child.
Quids and War Hawks
The career of James Madison symbolized the breadth of early American republicani
sm. Beginning
in 1787 as a Federalist advocate of a strengthened national state, Madison jumpe
d ship in the 1790s
to form a Republican opposition party demanding a return to decentralized, agrar
ian, frugal, and
peaceful government. It was in this philosophical mood that Madison inherited Je
fferson’s mantle
of succession in 1809, but he also inherited the foreign policy and war fever he
had helped create as
Jefferson’s secretary of state. The War of 1812 naturally swung the American polit
ical pendulum
back to the more vigorous nationalist beliefs of early Federalism, returning Mad
ison’s
philosophical journey to a point near, though not exactly coinciding with, his 1
787 Federalist
beginnings.
As the Republicans amassed a huge national following during the 1800–1808 period,
their
Federalist opponents began to wither. This important political development was m
uch more
complex than it appears on the surface. To begin with, the Federalist party died
a slow death that
was not absolutely apparent until around 1815. Throughout Madison’s two terms in o
ffice, he faced
stiff Federalist opposition and even saw a brief revival of Federalism at the ba
llot box. At the same
time, whatever ideological purity the Republicans may have possessed in the 1790
s became diluted
as more and more Americans (including former Federalists) flocked to their banne
r.
That this specter of creeping Federalist nationalism was seen as a genuine threa
t to Republican
ideological purity is evident in the clandestine efforts of James Monroe to wres
t the 1808
Republican presidential nomination from his colleague Madison. Monroe, an old An
ti-Federalist
who had served the Jeffersonians well as a congressman and diplomat, led a group
of radical,
disaffected southern Republicans known as the Quids, an old English term for opp
osition leaders.
Quids John Randolph, John Taylor, and Randolph Macon feared the Revolution of 18
00 had been
sidetracked by a loss of vigilance. They complained there was too much governmen
tal debt and
bureaucracy, and the Federalist judiciary had too free a reign. Quids aimed to r
everse this turn to
centralization by nominating the radical Monroe to succeed Jefferson. But they m
et defeat in the
Madison-dominated Republican congressional caucus.
That November, Madison and his running mate George Clinton (the aged New York An
ti-
Federalist) faced off against Federalists Charles Cotesworth Pinkney and Rufus K
ing. Madison
won handily—122 electoral votes to 47—yet the Federalists had actually bettered thei
r 1804
numbers; furthermore, they gained twenty-four new congressmen (a 34 percent incr
ease) in the
process. They fared even better in 1812, with antiwar sentiment fueling support
for Federalist De
Witt Clinton, who garnered 89 electoral votes to Madison’s 128. This temporary Fed
eralist
resurgence was partially due to the administration’s mistakes (especially the emba
rgo), but much
credit goes to the Young Federalists, a second generation of moderates who infus
ed a more downto-
earth style into the formerly stuffy Federalist political demeanor.
Many Young Federalists, however, bolted the party altogether and joined the oppo
sition. A prime
example was John Quincy Adams, who resigned as Massachusetts’ Federalist senator a
nd joined
the party of his father’s archenemies. Adams’s defection to Republicanism may seem i
ncredible,
yet on reflection it shows considerable political savvy. Adams had already recog
nized that the
Federalist Party was dying and he wisely saw there was room for moderate nationa
list viewpoints
in an expanded Republican Party. Most important, however, young Adams astutely p
erceived that
his only hope for a meaningful national political career (and the presidency) la
y within the political
party of Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe.
During his first term in office, Madison attempted to carry forward the domestic
aims of the
Revolution of 1800. Gallatin, the chief formulator of Republican fiscal policy,
stayed on as
secretary of the treasury, and he and the president continued the Republicans’ pol
icy of balanced
budgets and paying off the national debt, pruning administrative and military ex
penditures to
balance the ledgers. Republicans continued to replace retiring Federalist judges
, though the new
ideological breadth of the Republican Party, combined with Marshall’s dominance of
the Supreme
Court, tempered the impact of these appointments. Meanwhile, the diplomatic cris
is continued,
ultimately rendering many of the administration’s domestic policies unattainable.
Madison assumed office at a time when diplomatic upheaval and impending warfare
made foreign
policy the primary focus of his administration. The former secretary of state ce
rtainly possessed the
credentials to launch a forceful foreign policy, yet through his political party’s
own efforts, he
lacked an army and navy to back that policy up. This fact would ultimately bring
the administration
to the brink of disaster.
Because of strong domestic opposition to Jefferson’s embargo, Madison immediately
called for its
repeal. He replaced it with the Nonintercourse Act(1809), which forbade trade on
ly with France
and Britain (the embargo had forbidden all foreign trade) and promised to reopen
trade with
whichever party first recognized America’s neutral rights. This policy, a smuggler’s
dream, failed
utterly; it was replaced by Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810), which reopened trade with b
oth France and
Britain, but again promised exclusive trade with whichever power recognized Amer
ica’s right to
trade. The French eagerly agreed, and with their weak navy, they had nothing to
lose. But the
British naturally resumed seizing American ships bound for France, at which poin
t the
administration was stymied. Peaceable coercion had failed. War with Britain seem
ed America’s
only honorable alternative.
Pushing Madison and the nation toward war was a group of newly elected congressm
en, many from
the West, most notably Henry Clay of Kentucky. Known as the War Hawks, the group
included
Peter Porter of New York, Langdon Cheves and John C. Calhoun of South Carolina,
Felix Grundy
of Tennessee, and Clay’s Kentucky colleague, Richard M. Johnson. They elected Clay
Speaker;
then, using his control of the committee system, they named their own supporters
to the Foreign
Relations and Naval Committees. Although some of the maritime issues only touche
d their
constituencies indirectly, the War Hawks saw Britain (and her ally Spain) as pos
ing a danger in
Florida and the Northwest, in both cases involving incitement of Indians. In 181
1, General William
Henry Harrison won the Battle of Tippecanoe against British-aided Shawnee warrio
rs in Indiana,
launching a renewed Indian war in the Old Northwest. At the same time, frontier
warfare fueled
expansionist desires to invade Canada, and perhaps Spanish Florida as well. Sout
hern and western
farmers openly coveted the rich North American agricultural lands held by Britai
n and Spain.
Madison’s war message of June 1, 1812, concentrated almost exclusively on maritime
rights,
noting “evidence of hostile inflexibility” on the part of the British. This put the
Federalists, whose
New England ships were the ones being attacked, in the ironic position of having
to vote against
that declaration, in part because of their pro-British sentiments and in part be
cause they just
opposed “anything Republican.”114 The War Hawks, equally paradoxically, did not suff
er directly
from impressment, but they represented deep-seated resentment and anger shared b
y many
Americans. They fumed that a supposedly free and independent American republic s
till suffered
under the yoke of British military and buckled under her trade policies.
On June 4 and June 18, 1812, Congress voted for war, with the House splitting 79
to 49 and the
Senate 19 to 13. This divided vote did not bode well for a united, successful wa
r effort. Nor could
the nation expect to successfully fight with its most advanced and industrialize
d section ambivalent
about the conflict. Yet strong Federalist opposition (and a weak military) did n
ot seem to dampen
Republican enthusiasm for a war they now termed the “Second War of American Indepe
ndence.”
“Half Horse and Half Alligator” in the War of 1812
Americans’ recollections of the War of 1812 provide an excellent example of select
ive memory.
Today, those Americans who know anything about it at all remember the War of 181
2 for Andrew
Jackson’s famed Battle of New Orleans(1815), one of the most spectacular victories
in the history
of the American military, and more generally, that we won. What most Americans d
o not know, or
tend to forget, is that the Battle of New Orleans was fought two weeks after the
war ended. Slow
communications delayed news of the peace treaty, and neither British nor America
n troops in
Louisiana learned of the war’s end until after the famed battle.
The United States squared off against a nation that possessed the greatest navy
on earth and would
soon achieve land superiority as well. The British could count on 8,000 Anglo-Ca
nadian and Indian
allies to bolster their strength. Americans enjoyed many of the same military ad
vantages held
during the Revolution—a defensive stance and Britain’s embroilment in global warfare
with
France. As in the Revolution, however, the Yankees had few regular troops and sa
ilors to press
those advantages. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy possessed a competent officer corps,
but few ships
and gunboats for them to command—or, to use the British assessment of American nav
al
capabilities, “a few fir-built frigates, manned by a handful of bastards and outla
ws.”115
Events seemed ominous indeed when General William Hull marched his 1,600 regular
U.S. Army
troops and militia supplement into Canada via Detroit in July of 1812, only to s
urrender to Anglo-
Canadian troops without firing a shot! (Hull became a scapegoat and was court-ma
rtialed for
cowardice but pardoned by President Madison.) A second Canadian land invasion (i
n December
1813) fared only a little better, resulting in stalemate, followed by General Ja
cob Brown’s July
1814 campaign on the Niagara Peninsula, again ending in a stalemate. Three Canad
ian campaigns,
three embarrassments. The long-held American dream of adding Canada to the Unite
d States by
military conquest ended once and for all during the War of 1812.
On the high seas, the United States fared somewhat better. American privateers c
arried on the
Revolutionary strategy of looting British shipping, but with little tactical imp
act. The U.S. Navy,
with minimal forces, somehow won 80 percent of its initial sea battles. Although
the strategic
impact was insignificant, these actions yielded the most famous lines in America
n seafaring.
Captain James Lawrence in 1807, for example, his ship the Chesapeake defeated by
the Leopard
and her veteran crew lying mortally wounded, shouted, “Don’t give up the ship. Fight
her till she
sinks.”116 The war also produced the most notable one-on-one naval confrontation i
n the annals of
the U.S. Navy when the Constitution engaged the British Guerriere. Marines board
ed the British
ship, and after blasting away her rigging, forced her to surrender. After the ba
ttle, the resiliency of
the Constitution’s hull left her with the nickname, Old Ironsides. It was a single
engagement, but
the London Times noted its galling significance: “Never before in the history of t
he world did an
English frigate strike to an American.”117
Much of the war at sea did not go as well. Jefferson’s gunboats, thoroughly outcla
ssed by British
frigates, retreated to guard duty of ports. This constituted a demoralizing admi
ssion that Jefferson’s
policies had failed, and was confirmed by a congressional vote in 1813 to fund s
ix new frigates,
essentially doubling the U.S. fleet in a single stroke!118 There were also famou
s naval battles on
inland waters. On Lake Erie in 1813, Captain Oliver Hazard Perry built a fleet f
rom scratch,
deployed it on the lake, and defeated the British in an impressive victory at Pu
t-in-Bay. Not to be
outclassed by Captain Lawrence, Perry declared afterward, “We have met the enemy a
nd they are
ours.”119 Those few victories gave Americans hope that after the second full year
of war, the tide
was turning.
After the British defeated Napoleon at Leipzig in October 1813, they turned thei
r attention to the
North American war. Fortified by battle-hardened veterans of the European theate
r, England
launched an ambitious three-pronged offensive in 1814 aimed at the Chesapeake Ba
y (and
Washington, D.C.), Lake Champlain, and New Orleans. They planned to split Americ
a into thirds,
crippling resistance once and for all.
Initially their plan worked well. On August 24, 1814, 7,000 American militiamen
turned tail,
allowing the British army to raid Washington, D.C., and burn government building
s, sending
President Madison and his wife running to the countryside, literally yanking val
uables off the
White House walls as they ran to save them from the invaders. The British had no
t intended to burn
the White House, preferring to ransom it, but when they could find no one to par
lay with, they
torched everything. This infamous loss of the nation’s capital, albeit temporary,
ranks alongside
Pearl Harbor and the surrender of Corregidor as low points in American military
history, and the
destruction of the White House marked the most traumatic foreign assault on main
land American
soil until the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. As the British withdrew,
they unsuccessfully
bombarded Baltimore’s Fort McHenry, inspiring patriot Francis Scott Key to compose
“The Star-
Spangled Banner.”
Farther north, at Plattsburgh, New York, Sir George Prevosts’s 10,000–man army met d
efeat at the
hands of an American force one-tenth its size at the Battle of Chippewa. There A
merican regulars
relieved the militia—with stunning results. At a distance of seventy yards, the Br
itish and American
infantry blasted at each other until the British broke, and the Americans, clad
in the gray cadet
uniforms of the United States Military Academy, chased them off the field. The B
ritish
commander, shocked that he had not come up against militia, blurted, “Those are Re
gulars, by
God.”
On nearby Lake Champlain, a concurrent naval battle brought a spectacular Americ
an victory.
Captain Thomas Macdonough, the thirty-year-old American commander, rallied his s
ailors,
reminding them, “Impressed seamen call on every man to do his duty!” Although knocke
d
unconscious by a soaring decapitated sailor’s head, Macdonough delivered so much f
irepower that
he sent Prevost and the British running.
Despite these morale builders, there was more potential trouble in store. By lat
e fall of 1814, a
3,000–man British army under General Edward Packenham was en route, via ocean vess
el, to
attack New Orleans. More than two years of warfare on land and sea had produced
no clear victor.
Combat and stalemate had, however, inspired new opposition from New England’s Fede
ralists.
When war commenced, Federalists thwarted it in many ways, some bordering on trea
son. A
planned invasion of Canada through lower Maine proved impossible because the Mas
sachusetts
and Connecticut militias refused to assist. Meanwhile, New Englanders maintained
personal lines
of communication with Britons, providing aid and comfort and thereby reducing th
e bargaining
powers of American negotiators at Ghent. And they appeared to be rewarded at the
polls with solid
1812 electoral gains in the presidential campaign and large 1814 victories for F
ederalists in
Massachusetts, Connecticut, Delaware, and Maryland.
Their dissent came to a head with the Hartford Convention of December 1814, whic
h marked the
height of Federalists’ intransigence and the last installment in their dark descen
t. Federalist
delegates from Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, and Rhode Island gathered in
Hartford,
Connecticut; discussed and debated administration foreign policy and other issue
s; and concluded
by issuing a call for a separate peace between New England and Britain and const
itutional
amendments limiting the power of southern and western states. (This was the seco
nd time New
Englanders had danced around the issue of secession, having hatched a plot in 18
04 to leave the
Union if Jefferson was reelected.)
Across the ocean at Ghent, in Belgium, British and American negotiators, includi
ng Henry Clay,
John Quincy Adams, and Albert Gallatin, parlayed well into the Christmas season.
The days wore
on, and Adams complained to his diary that the gregarious Clay kept him awake al
l night drinking
and gambling with their British colleagues. At last, both sets of negotiators co
nceded they
possessed no military advantage. Britain’s European victory over Napoléon, meanwhile
, opened up
a series of prospects and obligations they needed to immediately pursue. At long
last, both nations
agreed it was time to compromise and end the War of 1812.
On Christmas Eve the deal was struck. Americans withdrew their two major demands—t
hat Britain
stop impressing American seaman and officially acknowledge neutrals’ trade rights
and freedom of
the seas. Both sides knew that Britain’s European victory meant England would now
honor those
neutral rights de facto if not de jure. Other territorial disputes over fishing
waters and the
American-Canadian boundary near Maine were referred to commissions (where they l
anguished for
decades). The Treaty of Ghent thus signified that, officially at least, the war
had changed nothing,
and the terms of peace were such that conditions were now the same as they had b
een prior to the
war—status quo ante bellum.
Madison must have been apprehensive about presenting such a peace without victor
y for the
approval of the U.S. Senate. Fortunately for Madison’s party, news of the Ghent Tr
eaty arrived in
Washington, D.C., at exactly the same time as news of an untimely, yet neverthel
ess glorious,
American military victory. On January 8, 1815, Andrew Jackson’s odd coalition of A
merican
troops had pounded General Packenham’s British regulars and won the famed Battle o
f New
Orleans.
Jackson’s victory was mythologized, once again with a David and Goliath twist in w
hich
outnumbered American sharpshooters defeated the disciplined redcoats.
The fact was that Jackson’s men were seasoned combat veterans of the Creek Indian
theater of the
War of 1812 and the Battle of Horseshoe Bend(1814). Now, at New Orleans, they we
re joined by a
polyglot collection of local French (Creole and Cajun), Spanish, and free black
troops, with a few
Caribbean pirates under Jean Laffite thrown in for good measure. The nub of the
army remained
hard-core Jackson veterans, except for key Creole militia artillery units. Toget
her they manned the
breastworks of Chalmette (near New Orleans) and awaited Packenham’s force of 2,600
.
Jackson had all the advantages. His men were dug in on both sides of the Mississ
ippi protected by a
thick breastwork, and the British had to either endure murderous enfilade fire o
r simultaneously
attack both positions—always a tricky proposition. Most important, Jackson had ple
nty of artillery
and had chosen the perfect ground—a dense swamp forest on his left, the canal on h
is right, and a
huge expanse of open field over which the redcoats would have to cross. Merely g
etting to the
battlefield had proven a disaster for the British because their troops had had t
o row through the
lakes and marshes, and each British guardsman carried an eight-pound cannonball
in his knapsack.
When several of those boats tipped over, the soldiers sank like the lead they ca
rried.120
Under the cover of a dawn fog, the British drew up for a bold frontal assault on
the American
position. Then, suddenly, the same fog that had concealed their formation on the
field lifted,
revealing them to Jackson’s guns. Sharp-shooting militiamen, using Kentucky long r
ifles—accurate
at hundreds of yards—took their toll, but the British ranks were broken by the Lou
isiana
artillerymen. Packenham himself was shot several times and died on the field, al
ongside more than
2,000 British regulars, dramatically contrasting the 21 Americans killed. Adding
insult to injury (or
death in this case), the deceased Packenham suffered the indignity of having his
body stuffed into a
cask of rum for preservation en route to England.
Jackson emerged a hero, Madison pardoned pirate Jean Laffite as thanks for his c
ontributions, and
the Federalists looked like fools for their untimely opposition. It was a bloody
affair, but not, as
many historians suggest, a useless one—a “needless encounter in a needless war,” the r
efrain goes.
One conclusion was inescapable after the war: the Americans were rapidly becomin
g the equals of
any power in Europe.
A Nation Whose Spirit Was Everywhere
“Notwithstanding a thousand blunders,” John Adams wrote candidly (and jubilantly) to
Jefferson in
1814, President James Madison had “acquired more glory and established more Union
than all his
three predecessors, Washington, Adams, Jefferson, put together.”121 Perhaps Adams
meant to rub
salt in Jefferson’s wounds, but by any measure, the changes for America over a per
iod of just a few
months were, indeed, stunning.
America’s execution of the war had extracted a begrudging respect from Britain. In
the future,
Britain and all of Europe would resort to negotiation, not war, in disputing Ame
rica; they had
learned to fear and respect this new member in the family of nations. Americans’ s
ubsequent
reference to the War of 1812 as the Second War for Independence was well founded
.
On the home front, the war produced important military and political changes, es
pecially in the
Ohio Valley, where the hostile Indian tribes were utterly defeated. But so too w
ere the Creek of
Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida. The War of 1812 set the stage for the first S
eminole War
(1818), Black Hawk’s War (1832), and the federal Indian Removal that would, in a m
ere twentyfive
years, exile most remaining Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, Seminole, and Chickasaw In
dians to
the Indian Territory in Oklahoma. In a sense, the War of 1812 was not so much a
victory over
England as over the Indians, smashing the power forever of all tribes east of th
e Mississippi.
Politically, the Federalist Party died, its last stalwarts slinking into the Rep
ublican opposition and
forming a viable new National Republican caucus. They learned to practice the de
mocratic politics
the Jeffersonians had perfected—mingle with the crowds (and buy rounds of liquor),
host campaign
barbecues and fish fries, shake hands, and, perhaps, even kiss a few babies. In
this way these
nationalists were able to continue to expound Hamilton’s program of tariffs, banks
, and subsidized
industrialism, but do so in a new democratic rhetoric that appealed to the commo
n man, soon seen
in the programs championed by Henry Clay.122 Within the Republican Party, Nation
al
Republicans continued to battle Old Republicans over the legacy of the American
Revolution.
Within a generation, these National Republicans would form the Whig Party. Jeffe
rson’s
ideologically pure Old (“democratic”) Republicans died, yielding to a newer, more ag
gressive
political machine under the Jacksonians.
Tragically, the increasingly southern bent of the Old Republicans meant that the
radical
individualism, decentralism, and states’ rights tenets of Jeffersonianism would, u
nder the southern
Democrats, be perverted. Jefferson’s libertarian ideals—the ideals of the American R
evolution—
would, incongruously, be used to defend the enslavement of four million human be
ings.
CHAPTER SIX
The First Era of Big Central Government, 1815–36
Watershed Years
Northeastern Americans awoke one morning in 1816 to find a twenty-inch snowfall
throughout
their region, with some flakes reported as being two inches across. This might n
ot seem unusual
except that it was June sixth, and snow continued throughout July and August in
what one diarist
called “the most gloomy and extraordinary weather ever seen.”1 Little did he know th
at on the
other side of the world, the eruption of Mount Tambora in Java had shot clouds o
f dust into the
stratosphere, creating a temporary global cooling that left Kansas farmers to de
al with a rash of
ruined crops and a disorienting haze to match the economic malaise gripping the
nation. Within just
twenty years, the United States would suffer another depression blamed on the fi
nancial
repercussions of Andrew Jackson’s war on the Bank of the United States. Journalist
s of the day and
generations of historians since—until well into the 1960s—agreed that government pol
icies had
brought on the recession. In fact, the root cause was outside our borders, in th
e case of the Panic of
1837, in Mexico, where the silver mines dried up.
In each case Americans experienced the effects at home of relatively normal and
natural events (a
volcano and the depletion of a silver vein) that had their origins abroad. And i
n each case, despite
the desire of many citizens to quietly live isolated within the nation’s 1815 boun
daries, the
explosion of Mount Tambora and the silver depletion of Mexican mines revealed ho
w integrated
the young United States already was with the natural, financial, and political l
ife of the entire
world.
Having stood toe to toe with Britain for the second time in forty years, in the
War of 1812, the
young Republic had indeed attained a new position in world affairs and in intern
ational influence.
Although hardly a dominant national state capable of forcing the Europeans to re
think most of their
balance-of-power principles, the United States nevertheless had proven its mettl
e through a victory
over the Barbary pirates, careful diplomacy with Napoleon’s France, and a falterin
g but eventually
successful war with England.
At home the nation entered its most important era since the early constitutional
period. James
Madison, successor to Jefferson, and John Adams’s own son, John Quincy Adams, both
referred to
themselves as republicans. Consensus blended former foes into a single-party rul
e that yielded the
Era of Good Feelings, a term first used by a Boston newspaper in 1817.
In a natural two-party system, such unanimity is not healthy and, at any rate, i
t began to mask a
more substantial transformation occurring beneath the tranquil surface of unipar
ty politics. Change
occurred at almost every level. States individually started to reduce, or waive
entirely, property
requirements to vote. New utopian movements and religious revivals sprang up to
fill Americans
with a new spiritual purpose. The issue of slavery, which so many of the Founder
s hoped would
simply go away, thrust itself into daily life with an even greater malignant pre
sence. How the
generation who came to power during the Age of Jackson, as it is called, dealt w
ith these issues has
forever affected all Americans: to this day, we still maintain (and often strugg
le with reforming) the
two-party political system Jacksonians established to defuse the explosive slave
ry issue. We also
continue to have daily events explained by—and shaped by—a free journalistic elite t
hat was born
during the Jacksonian era. And modern Americans frequently revert to class demag
oguery that
characterized debates about the economic issues of the day, especially the secon
d Bank of the
United States.
Time Line
1815:
Treaty of Ghent ends War of 1812
1816:
James Monroe elected president
1818:
Andrew Jackson seizes Florida from Spain and the Seminoles
1819:
Adams-Onis Treaty
1819:
McCulloch v. Maryland
1819–22:
Missouri Compromises
1823:
Monroe Doctrine; American Fur Company establishes Fort Union on Missouri River
1824:
John Quincy Adams defeats Jackson in controversial election
1828:
Tariff of Abominations; Jackson defeats Adams
1831:
William Lloyd Garrison publishes first issue of The Libertator
1832:
Nullification Crisis; Worster v. Georgia
1836:
Texas Independence; Martin Van Buren elected president
1837:
Panic of 1837
The Second Bank of the United States
Contrary to the notion that war is good for business, the War of 1812 disrupted
markets, threw the
infant banking system into confusion, and interrupted a steady pattern of growth
. Trade was
restored to Britain and Canada quickly and, after Waterloo, markets to France op
ened as well. But
the debts incurred by the war made hash of the Jeffersonians’ strict fiscal polici
es, sending the
national debt from $45 million in 1812 to $127 million in 1815, despite the impo
sition of new
taxes.2 Since the nation borrowed most of that money, through short-term notes f
rom private
banks, and since Congress had refused to recharter the Bank of the United States
in 1811, both the
number of banks and the amount of money they issued soared. Banking practices of
the day
differed so sharply from modern commercial banking that it bears briefly examini
ng the basics of
finance as practiced in the early 1800s. First, at the time, any state-chartered
bank could print
money (notes) as long as the notes were backed by gold or silver specie in its v
ault. During the War
of 1812, most state-chartered banks outside New England suspended specie payment
s, even though
they continued to operate and print notes without the discipline of gold backing
.
Second, state legislatures used the chartering process to exert some measure of
discipline on the
banks (a number of private banks operated outside the charter process, but they
did not print notes).
Nevertheless, it was the market, through the specie reserve system, that really
regulated the banks’
inclination to print excessive numbers of notes. Most banks in normal times tend
ed to keep a
reserve of 5 to 20 percent specie in their vaults to deal with runs or panics. P
ressures of war,
however, had allowed the banks to suspend and then continue to print notes, gene
rating inflation.
Rather than wait for the private banking system to sort things out—and with some s
upport from the
financiers themselves, who wanted a solution sooner rather than later—in 1816 Cong
ress chartered
a new national bank, the second Bank of the United States (BUS). Like its predec
essor, the second
BUS had several advantages over state-chartered private banks, most notably its
authority to open
branches in any state it chose. Its $35 million capitalization dwarfed that of a
ny state-chartered
private bank, but more important, its designation as the depository of federal f
unds gave the BUS a
deposit base several times greater than its next largest competitor. “Special priv
ilege” became an
oft-repeated criticism of the BUS, especially the uncertain nature of who, exact
ly, enjoyed that
special privilege. More than a few Americans of a conspiratorial bent suspected
that foreigners,
especially British investors, secretly controlled the bank. Combined with the ba
nk’s substantial
influence and pervasive presence throughout the nation, special privilege made t
he BUS an easy
target for politicians, who immediately took aim at the institution when any ser
ious economic
dislocation occurred.
It should be restated that the BUS carried strong overtones of Hamilton’s Federali
sts, whose
program, while dormant, was quietly transforming into the American system of the
National
Republicans (soon-to-be Whigs). Immediately after the War of 1812, the Federalis
t political
identification with the BUS faded somewhat, even though important backers, such
as Stephen
Girard and Albert Gallatin, remained prominent. More important were the economic
fluctuations
the bank dealt with as it attempted to rein in the inflation that had followed t
he Treaty of Ghent.
Calling in many of its outstanding loans, the BUS contracted the money supply, p
roducing lower
prices. That was both good news and bad news. Obviously, consumers with money th
rived as
prices for finished goods fell. At the level of the common man, in a still large
ly agrarian republic,
falling farm prices and a widespread difficulty in obtaining new loans for agric
ulture or business
caused no small degree of economic dislocation. Cotton prices crashed in January
1819, falling by
half when British buyers started to import Indian cotton. Land prices followed.
Although the BUS
had only limited influence in all this, its size made it a predictable target. B
US president William
Jones shouldered the blame for this panic, as depressions were called at the tim
e. Bank directors
replaced Jones with South Carolinian Langdon Cheves. To the directors’ horror, Che
ves continued
Jones’s policy of credit contraction, which left the bank with substantial lands t
aken as mortgage
foreclosures, and added to complaints that the BUS existed for a privileged elit
e.
By that time, the depression had spread to the industrial sector. Philadelphia m
ills that employed
more than 2,300 in 1816 retained only 149 in 1819, and John Quincy Adams warned
that the
collapse posed a “crisis which will shake the Union to its center.”3 Cheves was not
intimidated,
however, by the necessity to purge the once-inflated bank paper or dump worthles
s land. Despite
recriminations from Congress and complaints from monetary experts like William G
ouge, who
moaned that “the Bank was saved but the people were ruined,” Cheves kept the BUS ope
n while
continuing a tight money policy.4 The economy revived before long, though its re
covery was
linked more to the influx of Mexican silver than to any central bank policies un
dertaken by Cheves.
The episode convinced many Americans, however, that the bank wielded inordinate
powers—for
good or evil.
Marshall and Markets
In the meantime, the BUS was at the center of one of the more important cases in
American law,
McCulloch v. Maryland. The state of Maryland sought to levy a tax on the Baltimo
re branch of the
BUS, which the cashier of the bank, James McCulloch, refused to pay, forcing a t
est of federal
power. Two constitutional issues came before the Court. First, did states have t
he power to tax
federal institutions within their borders? Second, since the BUS was not explici
tly mentioned in the
Constitution, was it even legal in the first place? Chief Justice Marshall, famo
us for his perception
that “the power to tax involves the power to destroy,” led a unanimous Court in upho
lding the
1790s decision that no state could tax federal property. Marshall’s ruling was a r
easonable and
critical position on the primacy of the national government in a federal system.
When it came to the legality of the BUS, Marshall turned to Article I, Section 8
, of the
Constitution, which Hamilton had used to justify the first BUS: Congress has the
power “to make
all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the for
egoing powers.”
Referred to as the “necessary and proper” clause, Section 8 essentially allowed Cong
ress to do
anything that either the United States Supreme Court by a ruling or the people t
hrough an
amendment to the Constitution itself did not prohibit. In future generations tha
t would include such
questionable initiatives as Social Security, welfare, funding for the arts and h
umanities, establishing
scientific and medical agencies, and creating the Departments of Energy, Educati
on, and
Commerce. Still, the essential power always rested with the people—regardless of C
ourt
decisions—because, as the old maxim goes, “The people generally get what they want.” I
f the
public ever grew fearful or dissatisfied with any governmental agency, the voter
s could abolish it
quickly through either the ballot box or an amendment process. Marshall well kne
w that every
undertaking of the federal government could not be subject to specific constitut
ional scrutiny, a
point reflected by his ruling in favor of the constitutionality of the BUS.5 Mar
shall then turned the
states’ rights arguments against the states themselves in 1821 with Cohens v. Virg
inia, wherein the
Supreme Court, citing New Hampshire courts’ proclivity for judicial review of that
state’s
legislature, affirmed that the United States Supreme Court had judicial review a
uthority over the
states’ courts as well.
McCulloch came the same year as the Dartmouth College decision and coincided wit
h another
ruling, Sturgis v. Crowninshield, in which Marshall’s Court upheld the Constitutio
n’s provisions on
contracts. That Marshall sided with greater centralized federal power is undenia
ble, but the
conditions were such that in these cases the struggles were largely between priv
ate property and
contract rights against government authority of any type. In that sense, Marshal
l stood with private
property. In the Dartmouth College case, the state of New Hampshire had attempte
d to void the
charter of Dartmouth College, which had been founded in 1769 by King George III,
to make it a
public school. Dartmouth employed the renowned orator and statesman Daniel Webst
er—and
Dartmouth alumnus—to argue its case. Marshall’s Court ruled unanimously that a contr
act was a
contract, regardless of the circumstances of its origination (save duress) and t
hat New Hampshire
was legally bound to observe the charter. The Marshall Court’s unanimous decision
reinforced the
1810 Fletcher v. Peck ruling in which the Court upheld a state legislature’s grant
of land as a valid
contract, even though a subsequent legislature repealed it.
Taken with Peck, the Dartmouth decision established without question the primacy
of law and
contractual arrangements in a free society. Later supplemented by other decision
s that maintained a
competitive marketplace, such as Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) and Charles River Bridg
e v. Warren
Bridge (1837, under Chief Justice Roger Taney), the Supreme Court continually re
affirmed the
importance of property rights in a free society. At first glance, Gibbons v. Ogd
en related only to
federal authority over waterways, but in fact the Court in broad terms establish
ed that, barring
federal prohibitions, interstate trade was open to all competitors. And in the C
harles River Bridge
case, the Court again upheld the principle of competition, stating that the char
ter did not imply a
monopoly, and that a monopoly could exist only if expressly granted by a state.
Thus, as the Marshall era came to a close, the Supreme Court had chipped away at
some state
powers, but Marshall himself enthusiastically admitted that when it came to the
federal
government, “the powers of the government are limited, and…its limits are not to be
transcended.”
To those who complained about Marshall’s aggrandizement of power at the federal le
vel, the chief
justice in clear Hamiltonian tones stated guidelines: “Let the end be legitimate,
let it be within the
scope of the Constitution, and all means, which are appropriate, which are plain
ly adapted to that
end, which are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the Con
stitution, are
constitutional” [emphasis ours].6 It is equally true, though, that Marshall—later ai
ded and abetted
by Taney—enhanced the broader and more important mechanisms of the free market ove
r state
government, and in the process solidified the critical premise of “sanctity of con
tract.”7 Without
John Marshall, whom John Taylor, one of his severest critics, denigrated as part
of a “subtle corps
of miners and sappers [working] to undermine the foundations of our confederated
fabric,” that
fabric would have unraveled in a frenzy of property rights abridgments at the st
ate level.8
The Virginia Dynasty, Continued
In December 1816, James Monroe of Virginia perpetuated the dominance of Virginia
ns in the
office of the presidency, defeating the Federalist, Rufus King of New York, in a
landslide (183 to
34 votes in the electoral college). Virginia’s continued grip on the nation’s highes
t office had in
fact been ensured earlier when Monroe bested William H. Crawford of Georgia in a
narrow vote
for the Republican nomination. That meant that of America’s first five presidents,
all had come
from Virginia except Adams. Following the Burr fiasco, the Twelfth Amendment to
the
Constitution eliminated the possibility that a president and vice president coul
d come from different
parties, meaning that the Republicans’ choice for vice president, Daniel D. Tompki
ns of New York,
helped initiate a common practice of adding sectional balance to a ticket.
Monroe (born 1758) had attended William and Mary College before leaving to serve
in the
Continental Army under Washington. He saw action at many of the Revolution’s famou
s battles,
including White Plains, Trenton (where he was wounded), Germantown, Brandywine,
and
Monmouth, attaining the rank of colonel. A deliberate, even slow, thinker, Monro
e gathered ideas
and advice from associates and subordinates before proceeding, a trait that kept
him from a field
command in the Revolution. He therefore resigned his commission to study the law
under Jefferson
and then won a seat in the Virginia House of Delegates(1782), the Continental Co
ngress (1783–86),
and the Virginia state convention(1788). Working under Jefferson led to a friend
ship between the
two, and drew Monroe somewhat naturally into the Sage’s antifederal views. Consequ
ently, he was
not a delegate at the Constitutional Convention, yet when Virginia needed a U.S.
senator in 1790,
Monroe won the seat. Senator Monroe proved an able lieutenant to Secretary of St
ate Jefferson and
clashed repeatedly with Alexander Hamilton and President Washington himself.
A natural successor to Jefferson as the minister to France (1794), Monroe failed
to assuage French
concerns over the pro-British treaty negotiated by John Jay, and thus was recall
ed after two years,
although he returned as an envoy extraordinaire in 1802. During the gap in his y
ears abroad,
Monroe became governor of Virginia. He joined Robert Livingston during the negot
iations over
Louisiana, then made ministerial journeys to England and Spain. None of these ov
ertures
accomplished their intended purposes, indeed failing miserably to placate the Fr
ench over Jay’s
Treaty, settle the boundary dispute with Spain, or obtain a commercial treaty wi
th England. In the
case of the British negotiations conducted with special envoy William Pinkney, M
onroe was
convinced he had obtained reasonable terms easing trade restrictions. Jefferson,
however, dismissed
the effort as unworthy of submission to the Senate—an act by Monroe’s mentor that st
ung him
deeply. Whether a better diplomat might have succeeded, of course, is speculatio
n. By the time
Monroe had become Madison’s secretary of state in 1811, he had as much experience
as any living
American with diplomatic issues and much experience at failing at such undertaki
ngs. It is ironic,
then, that Monroe is best remembered for a foreign policy success, the Monroe Do
ctrine.
Lacking the fiery oratorical skills of his fellow Virginian Patrick Henry, the u
nceasing questioning
mind of Jefferson, or the wit and intellect of Franklin, Monroe nonetheless poss
essed important
qualities. He had a reputation for the highest integrity (Jefferson once said th
at if Monroe’s soul
was turned inside out there would not be a spot on it), and at the same time the
man refused to bear
a grudge. It was this genial personality and willingness to work with others tha
t inspired him to take
a goodwill tour of the Northeast in 1816, initiating the Era of Good Feelings. O
ld-fashioned in his
dress (he was the last president to wear his hair in a queue), Monroe in many wa
ys was a throwback
to the pre-Revolutionary period. Above all, he valued productivity and practical
ity, which
accounted for his policies and his toleration—even embrace—of those who held sharply
different
views but with whom he thought compromise possible. Unlike either Ronald Reagan
or Dwight
Eisenhower—two twentieth-century advocates of limited or small government—Monroe fav
ored a
weak executive, seeing the power as emanating from the people through the legisl
ature.
Monroe’s past failures at diplomacy notwithstanding, he quickly secured an arrange
ment with
Great Britain limiting warships on the Great Lakes.9 This he followed by an equa
lly rapid
settlement of the U.S.–Canadian boundary dispute. Then came Andrew Jackson’s campaig
ns
against Indian incursions in Florida, which led to the Adams-Onis Treaty in 1819
, all of which gave
Monroe the international capital to issue the famous doctrine that bore his name
.
It also helped that Monroe’s own sense of security led him to name some of the mos
t powerful and
politically contentious men in the nation to his cabinet: John C. Calhoun of Sou
th Carolina as
secretary of war; his rival William H. Crawford as secretary of the treasury; an
d John Quincy
Adams as secretary of state. Only a man unintimidated by powerful personalities
would tolerate
such characters, let alone enlist them. Ultimately, they jointly failed to live
up to their potential,
although individually Adams and Calhoun achieved reputations apart from the Monr
oe
administration. Inside the cabinet they bickered, eventually turning the atmosph
ere poisonous.
Monroe acceded to a legislative program of internal improvements—a name given to f
ederally
funded harbor and river clearing efforts, road building, and otherwise upgrading
infrastructure, to
use the twenty-first-century buzzword. Although he disapproved of government act
ivism, he
thought it proper to facilitate a climate of cooperation that funded constructio
n of coastal forts,
which fell perfectly within the constitutional mandates of national defense. In
other areas, however,
Monroe’s strict constructionist side would not approve, without a constitutional a
mendment,
appropriations for internal improvements that did not relate directly to nationa
l defense,
maintaining that the Constitution had not given the government the authority to
spend money for
such programs.
In the short term, minor government-funded construction programs paled beside th
e phenomenal
economic explosion about to envelop the country. Despite the lingering economic
dislocations of
the War of 1812, already one could sense a restless, growing, entrepreneurial na
tion replete with its
share of vigor, vice, and virtue. This stirring occurred largely outside of Monr
oe’s influence,
although he certainly kept the government out of the way of growth. During the M
adison-Monroe
years, the United States gained ground on the British in key industries, so much
so that by 1840 the
Industrial Revolution that had started in England had not only reached American
shores, but had
accelerated so fast that Yankee shippers, iron merchants, publishers, and textil
e manufacturers
either equaled or exceeded their John Bull competitors in nearly all categories.
The Restless Spirit
From the outset, America had been a nation of entrepreneurs, a country populated
by restless souls.
No sooner had settlers arrived along the port cities, than they spread inland, a
nd after they had
constructed the first inland forts, trappers and explorers pressed farther into
the forests and
mountains. The restless spirit and the dynamic entrepreneurship fed off each oth
er, the former
producing a constant itch to improve and invent, the latter demanding better way
s of meeting
people’s needs, of organizing better systems of distribution and supply, and of ad
ding to the
yearning for still more, and improved, products.
In a society where most people still worked the land, this incessant activity wo
rked itself out in the
relationship with the land—cutting, clearing, building, irrigating, herding, hunti
ng, lighting (and
fighting) fires, and populating. Unlike Europeans, however, Americans benefited
from a constantly
expanding supply of property they could possess and occupy. Unlike Europeans, Am
ericans often
never saw themselves as permanently fixed to a location. Alexis de Tocqueville,
the observant
French visitor, remarked,
An American will build a house in which to pass his old age and sell it before t
he roof is on…. He
will plant a garden and rent it just as the trees are coming into bearing; he wi
ll clear a field and
leave others to reap the harvest; he will take up a profession and leave it, set
tle in one place and
soon go off elsewhere with his changing desires. If his private business allows
him a moment’s
relaxation, he will plunge at once into the whirlpool of politics.10
To some degree, money (or the lack of it) dictated constant churning. The same d
esire to
experience material abundance drove men and women to perpetually invent and desi
gn, innovate
and imagine. The motivations for moving, though, were as diverse as the country
itself. For every
Daniel Boone or Davy Crockett who constantly relocated out of land fever, there
was a Gail
Borden, a New York farm boy who wound up in Galveston, Texas, where he invented
the terrapin
wagon, a completely amphibious vehicle, before returning to New York to invent h
is famous
condensed-milk process.11 In the same vein, Vermonter John Deere, who moved his
farmimplement
business steadily westward, developing the finest farm implements in the world,
epitomized the restless frontier spirit observed by Tocqueville.
This restless generation produced a group of entrepreneurs unparalleled in Ameri
can history,
including Andrew Carnegie (born 1835), J. P. Morgan (1837), John D. Rockefeller
(1839), and
Levi Strauss (1829). Most came from lower-to middle-class backgrounds: Carnegie
arrived in
America virtually penniless, and Strauss worked his way up with a small mercanti
le store. They
typified what a Cincinnati newspaper stated of this generation: “There is not one
who does not
desire, even confidently expect, to become rich.”12
Yet the lure of the land had its own dark side, turning otherwise honorable men
into scalawags and
forgers. Jim Bowie, who would die at the Alamo with Davy Crockett in 1836, surpa
ssed everyone
with his ingenuity in developing fraudulent land grants. (One writer noted that
whereas Bowie was
“hardly alone in forging grants…he worked on an almost industrial scale compared to
others.”)13
Through a labyrinth of forged documents, Bowie managed to make himself one of th
e largest
landowners in Louisiana—garnering a total holding of 45,700 acres. An official sme
lled the rat, but
Bowie managed to extract all the suspicious documents before they landed him in
jail.
Land attracted small farmers to Indiana, then Illinois, then on to Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
Assuming that the minimal amount of land for self-sufficiency was forty to fifty
acres, it took only
a few generations before a father would not bequeath to his son enough land to m
ake a living,
forcing countless American young men and their families westward. Southern legal
traditions, with
vestigial primogeniture, or the custom of bequeathing the entire estate to the e
ldest son, resulted in
fewer landowners—and a smaller population—but much larger estates. Men like Bowie th
us dealt
not only in land, but also in slaves needed to run the plantations. Whether it w
as the Yazoo in
Mississippi or the forested sections of Michigan, land hunger drew Americans ste
adily westward.
Abundant land—and scarce labor—meant that even in agriculture, farmer-businessmen su
bstituted
new technology for labor with every opportunity. Handmade hoes, shovels, rakes,
and the like,
soon gave way to James Wood’s metal plow, whose interchangeable parts made for eas
y repair.
This, and other designs, were mass-produced by entrepreneurs like Charles Lane o
f Chicago, so
that by the 1830s metal plows were commonplace. Pittsburgh had “two factories…making
34,000
metal plows a year even in the 1830s,” and by 1845, Massachusetts had seventy-thre
e plowmanufacturing
firms turning out more than 60,000 farm implements a year.14 No more important,
but certainly more celebrated, the famous McCormick reaper, perfected by Cyrus M
cCormick,
opened up the vast prairies to “agribusiness.” McCormick began on the East Coast, bu
t relocated to
Chicago to be closer to the land boom. After fashioning his first reaper in 1834
, he pumped up
production until his factory churned out 4,000 reapers annually. In an 1855 expo
sition in Paris,
McCormick stunned Europeans by harvesting an acre of oats in twenty-one minutes,
or one third of
the time taken by Continental machines.15
If land provided the allure for most of those who moved to the Mississippi and b
eyond, a growing,
but important, substrata of mechanics, artisans, inventors, salesmen, and mercha
nts soon followed,
adapting their businesses to the new frontier demands.
No one captured the restless, inventive spirit better than Eli Whitney. After wo
rking on his father’s
farm in Connecticut, Whitney enrolled in and graduated from Yale. There he met P
hineas Miller,
who managed some South Carolina properties for Catherine Greene, and Miller invi
ted the young
Whitney to take a position as a tutor to the Greene children on a plantation. Hi
s cotton gin—in
retrospect a remarkably simple device—shook the world, causing an explosion in tex
tile
production.
In 1810, 119 pounds of cotton per day could be cleaned, and by 1860 that number
had risen to 759
per day.16 Mrs. Greene soon came to say of Whitney, “He can make anything.” Indeed h
e could.
Whitney soon tried his hand at musket production, using a largely unskilled work
force. What
emerged was the American system of manufacturing, which served as the basis for
a powerful
system.17
Advances in mass production, steam power, and management techniques coalesced in
the textile
mills founded in New England by Samuel Slater, a British emigrant. Slater built
a small mill in
Rhode Island with the support of Moses Brown, a Providence candle manufacturer,
first using
water wheels, then replacing water with steam power. Within twenty years, Slater
and his close
circle of associates had 9,500 spindles and controlled nearly half of all Americ
an spinning mills—
Brown even wrote to his children that the mill founders had “cotton mill fever.”18 F
rancis Cabot
Lowell exceeded even Slater’s achievements in texile production, employing young g
irls who lived
on site. Lowell further advanced the organizational gains made by Whitney and Sl
ater.19
Gains in manufacturing resulted in part from widespread application of steam pow
er. Steam
revolutionized transportation, with Robert Fulton’s Clermont demonstrating steam p
ropulsion on
water in 1807.
Within a decade, Cornelius Vanderbilt began using steam technology to cut costs
in the New York–
New Jersey ferry traffic, and steam power started to find its way to inland wate
rways.
Entrepreneurs had already started to shift the focus of water travel in the inte
rior from natural rivers
to man-made canals. The period from 1817 to 1844 has been referred to as the can
al era, in which
some 4,000 miles of canals were constructed at a cost of $200 million. States co
llaborated with
private interests in many of these projects, usually by guaranteeing state bond
issues in case of
default. But some of the earliest, and best, were built by private businesses, s
uch as the Middlesex
Canal in Massachusetts and the Santee and Cooper Canal in South Carolina. The mo
st famous, the
Erie Canal, linked the Hudson River and Lake Erie and opened up the upstate New
York markets to
the coast. Unlike some of the other early privately financed canals, the Erie wa
s built at state
expense over an eight-year period, and its completion was so anticipated that th
e state collected an
advance $1 million in tolls before the canal was even opened.20 It was a massive
engineering feat:
the canal was 40 feet wide, 4 feet deep, and 363 miles long—all bordered by towpat
hs to allow
draft animals to pull barges and flatboats; 86 locks were used to raise and lowe
r boats 565 feet.
When the Erie opened in 1825, it earned 8 percent on its $9 million from the 3,0
00 boats traversing
the canal. After the board of commissioners approved enlarging the canal in 1850
, it reached its
peak tonnage in 1880.21
Steam power soon replaced animal power on all the nation’s waterways. Well before
steam power
was common, however, canals had driven down the costs of shipping from twenty ce
nts per ton
mile to a tenth of that amount, and even a “noted financial failure like the Ohio
Canal yielded a
respectable 10 percent social rate of return.”22 Steam vessels on the Great Lakes,
where ships
occasionally exceeded 1,000 tons, and in the case of the City of Buffalo, displa
ced a whopping
2,200 tons, also played an important role. By midcentury, “The tonnage on the Miss
issippi River
and on the Great Lakes exceeded that of all shipping from New York City by over
200 percent.”23
The canal era provided the first model of state government support of large-scal
e enterprise
(through bond guarantees), often with disastrous results. In the Panic of 1837,
many states were
pushed to the brink of bankruptcy by their canal-bond obligations.
Steam also reduced shipping costs for oceanic travel, where, again, Cornelius Va
nderbilt emerged
as a key player. Facing a competitor who received sizable federal mail subsidies
, Vanderbilt
nevertheless drove down his own transatlantic costs to the point where he consis
tently
outperformed his government-supported opponent.24
Having won on the Hudson, then on the Atlantic, Vanderbilt next struck on the Pa
cific Coast,
breaking into the subsidized packet-steamer trade. Vanderbilt’s competition receiv
ed $500,000 in
federal subsidies and charged a staggering $600 per passenger ticket for a New Y
ork to California
trip, via Panama, where the passengers had to disembark and travel overland to b
oard another
vessel. After constructing his own route through Nicaragua, rather than Panama,
Vanderbilt
chopped passenger prices to $400 and offered to carry the mail free! Within a ye
ar, thanks to the
presence of Vanderbilt, fares dropped to $150, then $100. As occurred in the Hud
son competition,
the commodore’s competitors finally bought his routes, but even then they found th
ey could never
return to the high ticket prices they had charged before he drove costs down. Wh
en Vanderbilt left
the packet-steamer business, a ticket cost just half what could be fleeced from
passengers in the
pre-Vanderbilt era.25
Steam technology also provided the basis for another booming American industry w
hen Phillip
Thomas led a group of Baltimore businessmen to found the Baltimore and Ohio (B&O
) Railroad in
1828. Two years later, the South Carolina Canal and Railroad Company began a ste
am locomotive
train service westward from Charleston, with its locomotive Best Friend of Charl
eston being the
first constructed for sale in the United States. The king of American locomotive
building was
Matthias Baldwin, who made his first locomotive in 1832 and founded the Baldwin
Engine and
Locomotive works. His firm turned out more than fifteen hundred locomotives duri
ng his lifetime,
including many for export.
Within a few years, contemporaries were referring to railroad building as a feve
r, a frenzy, and a
mania. There were enormous positive social consequences of better transportation
. By linking
Orange County, New York, the leading dairy county, to New York City, the railroa
d contributed to
the reduction of milk-borne diseases like cholera by supplying fresh milk.26
By 1840 most states had railroads, although the Atlantic seaboard states had mor
e than 60 percent
of total rail mileage. Like the canals, many railroads received state backing. S
ome were constructed
by individual entrepreneurs. But the high capital demands of the railroads, comb
ined with the
public’s desire to link up every burg by rail, led to states taking a growing role
in the financing of
American railroads.27 Railroads’ size and scope of operations required huge amount
s of capital
compared to textile mills or iron works. This dynamic forced them to adopt a new
structure in
which the multiple stockholder owners selected a professional manager to run the
firm. By the
1840s, banks and railroads were inexorably linked, not only through the generati
on of capital, but
also through the new layer of professional managers (many of them put in place b
y the banks that
owned the majority stock positions). As transportation improved, communications
networks also
proliferated. Banks could evaluate the quality of private bank note issues throu
gh Dillistin’s Bank
Note Reporter, which was widely circulated. The Cincinnati-based Bradstreet Comp
any provided
similar evaluation of businesses themselves. Investor knowledge benefited from t
he expansion of
the U.S. Post Office, which had over 18,000 branches by 1850—one for every 1,300 p
eople.
Congress had a direct stake in the Post Office in that congressional apportionme
nt was based on
population, and since constituents clamored for new routes, there was a built-in
bias in favor of
expanding the postal network. Most routes did not even bear more than 1 percent
of their cost, but
that was irrelevant, given the political gains they represented. In addition to
their value in
apportionment, the postal branches offered legislators a free election tool. Con
gressmen shipped
speeches and other election materials to constituents free, thanks to the franki
ng privileges. Partisan
concerns also linked post office branches and the party-controlled newspapers by
reducing the cost
of distribution through the mails. From 1800 to 1840, the number of newspapers t
ransmitted
through the mails rose from 2 million to almost 140 million at far cheaper rates
than other printed
matter. Postal historian Richard John estimated that if the newspapers had paid
the same rate as
other mails, the transmission costs would have been 700 times higher.28
The new party system, by 1840, had thus compromised the independence of the mail
s and a large
part of the print media, with no small consequences. Among other defects, the su
bsidies created
incentives to read newspapers rather than books. This democratization of the new
s produced a
population of people who thought they knew a great deal about current events, bu
t who lacked the
theoretical grounding in history, philosophy, or politics to properly ground the
ir opinions. As the
number of U.S. Post Office branches increased, the Post Office itself came to wi
eld considerable
clout, and the position of postmaster became a political plum. The postmaster ge
neral alone
controlled more than 8,700 jobs, more than three fourths of the federal civilian
workforce—larger
even than the army. Patronage explained the ability of companies receiving feder
al subsidies to
repel challenges from the private sector, allowing the subsidized postal compani
es to defeat several
private expresses in the 1830s. The remarkable thing about the competition to th
e subsidized mails
was not that it lasted so long (and did not resurface until Fred Smith founded F
ederal Express in
1971), but that it even appeared in the first place.
Setting the Table for Growth
At the end of the War of 1812 America emerged in a strong military and diplomati
c position. The
end of the Franco-British struggle not only quickened an alliance between the tw
o European
powerhouses, but also, inevitably, drew the United States into their orbit (and,
a century later, them
into ours). American involvement in two world wars fought primarily in Europe an
d a third cold
war was based on the premise that the three nations shared fundamental assumptio
ns about human
rights and civic responsibilities that tied them together more closely than any
other sets of allies in
the world. Getting to that point, however, would not have been possible without
consistently solid
diplomacy and sensible restraint at critical times, as in the case of Florida, w
hich remained an
important pocket of foreign occupation in the map of the United States east of t
he Mississippi. In
1818, Spain held onto Florida by a slender thread, for the once mighty Spanish e
mpire was in
complete disarray. Spain’s economic woes and corrupt imperial bureaucracy encourag
ed
revolutionaries in Argentina, Columbia, and Mexico to follow the American exampl
e and
overthrow their European masters. Within five years Spain lost nearly half of it
s holdings in the
western hemisphere.
From the point of view of the United States, Florida was ripe for the plucking.
President Monroe
and his secretary of state John Quincy Adams understandably wanted to avoid over
tly seizing
Florida from Spain, a nation with which they were at peace. Adams opened negotia
tions with the
Spanish minister Luis de Onis. Before they could arrive at a settlement, General
Andrew Jackson
seized Florida for the United States. But Jackson followed a route to Pensacola
that is more
complex and troublesome for historians to trace today than it was for Jackson an
d his men to march
through it in 1818.
Jackson’s capture of Florida began when Monroe sent him south to attack Seminole I
ndians, allies
of the reviled Creeks he had defeated at Horseshoe Bend in 1814. Some Seminole u
sed northern
Florida’s panhandle region as a base to raid American planters and harbor escaped
slaves.
Alabamians and Georgians demanded government action. On December 26, 1817, the s
ecretary of
war John C. Calhoun ordered Jackson to “adopt the necessary measures” to neutralize
the
Seminoles, but did not specify whether he was to cross the international boundar
y in his pursuit. In
a letter to Monroe, Jackson wrote that he would gladly defeat the Seminoles and
capture Spanish
Florida if it was “signified to me through any channel…that the possession of the Fl
oridas would be
desirable to the United States.” Jackson later claimed he received the go-ahead, a
point the
administration staunchly denied.29 The general went so far as to promise that he
would “ensure
you Cuba in a few days” if Monroe would supply him with a frigate, an offer the pr
esident wisely
refused. (Later, when questioned about his unwillingness to rein in the expansio
nist Jackson,
Monroe pleaded ill health.)
Whoever was telling the truth, it mattered little to the Indians and Spaniards w
ho soon felt the
wrath of the hero of New Orleans. Between April first and May twenty-eighth, And
rew Jackson’s
military accomplishments were nothing short of spectacular (indeed, some deemed
them
outrageous). He invaded Florida and defeated the Seminole raiders, capturing the
ir chiefs along
with two English citizens, Alexander Arbuthnot and Robert Ambrister, who had the
great
misfortune of being with the Indians at the time. Convinced the Englishmen were
responsible for
fomenting Indian attacks, Jackson court-martialed and hanged both men. By mid-Ma
y, he had
moved on Fort Pensacola, which surrendered to him on May 28, 1818, making Florid
a part of the
United States by right of conquest, despite the illegality of Jackson’s invasion—all
carried out
without exposure to journalists. Although Monroe and Adams later disclaimed Jack
son’s actions,
they did not punish him, nor did they return the huge prize of his warfare—nor did
Congress
censure him for usurping its constitutional war power. Jackson was able to wildl
y supercede his
authority largely because of the absence of an omnipresent media, but the United
States gained
substantially from the general’s actions.
Illegal as Jackson’s exploits were, the fact was that Spain could not patrol its o
wn borders. The
Seminole posed a “clear and present danger,” and the campaign was not unlike that la
unched by
General John Pershing in 1916, with the approval of Woodrow Wilson and Congress,
to invade
Mexico for the purpose of capturing the bandit Pancho Villa. Jackson set the sta
ge for Adams to
formalize the victory in a momentous diplomatic agreement. The Adams-Onis Treaty
of 1819
settled the Florida question and also addressed three other matters crucial to A
merica’s westward
advance across the continent. First, the United States paid Spain $5 million and
gained all of
Florida, which was formally conveyed in July 1821. In addition, Adams agreed tha
t Spanish Texas
was not part of the Louisiana Purchase as some American expansionists had errone
ously claimed.
(Negotiators had formalized the hazy 1803 Louisiana Purchase boundary line all t
he way to the
Canadian border.) Finally, Spain relinquished all claims to the Pacific Northwes
t—leaving the
Indians, Russians, and British with the United States as the remaining claimants
.
From Santa Fe to the Montana Country
In 1820, Monroe dispatched an army expedition to map and explore the Adams-Onis
treaty line.
Major Stephen H. Long keelboated up the Missouri and Platte rivers in search of
(but never
finding) the mouth of the Red River and a pass through the Rocky Mountains. Labe
ling the central
Great Plains a “Great American Desert,” Long helped to perpetuate a fear of crossing
, much less
settling, what is now the American heartland. He also helped to foster a belief
that this remote and
bleak land was so worthless that it was suitable only for a permanent Indian fro
ntier—a home for
relocated eastern Indian tribes.
Concurrent with Long’s expedition, however, a trade route opened that would ultima
tely encourage
Americanization of the Great Plains. Following the Mexican Revolution of 1820, t
he Santa Fe Trail
opened, bringing American traders to the once forbidden lands of New Mexico. San
ta Fe, in the
mountains of northernmost Mexico, was closer to St. Louis than it was to Mexico
City, a fact that
Missouri merchants were quick to act upon. Santa Fe traders brought steamboat ca
rgoes of goods
from St. Louis up the Missouri to Independence (founded officially in 1827). The
re they outfitted
huge two-ton Conestoga wagons (hitched to teams of ten to twelve oxen), gathered
supplies, and
listened to the latest reports from other travelers. They headed out with the gr
een grass of May and,
lacking federal troop escorts, traveled together in wagon trains to fend off Kio
wa and Comanche
Indians. The teamsters carried American cloth, cutlery, and hardware and returne
d with much
coveted Mexican silver, fur, and mules.30
The Santa Fe trade lasted until 1844, the eve of the Mexican-American War, provi
ding teamsters
practice that perfected Plains wagoneering techniques, and their constant presen
ce in the West
chipped away at the great American desert myth. Moreoever, they established the
Missouri River
towns that would soon serve the Oregon Trail immigrant wagon trains.
At the same time, Rocky Mountain fur traders—the “Mountain Men”—headed up the Missouri t
o
Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado country. British and American fur companies, such
as the
Northwest, American, and Hudson’s Bay companies, had operated posts on the Pacific
Northwest
coast since the 1790s, but in the 1820s, Americans sought the rich beaver trade
of the inland
mountains. St. Louis, at the mouth of the Missouri, served again as a major entr
epôt for early
entrepreneurs like Manuel Lisa and William H. Ashley. Ashley’s Rocky Mountain Fur
Company
sent an exploratory company of adventurers up the Missouri to the mouth of the Y
ellowstone River
in 1822–23, founding Fort William Henry near today’s Montana–North Dakota boundary. Th
is
expedition included Big Mike Fink, Jedediah Smith, and other independent trapper
s who would
form the cadre of famous mountain men during the 1820s and 1830s.
But by the 1840s, the individual trappers were gone, victims of corporate buyout
s and their own
failure to conserve natural resources. They had, for example, overhunted the onc
e plentiful beaver
of the northern (and southern) Rockies. Significantly, mountain men explored and
mapped the
Rockies and their western slopes, paving the way for Oregon Trail migrants and C
alifornia Fortyniners
to follow.
Beyond the Monroe Doctrine
Expansion into the great American desert exposed an empire in disarray—Spain—and rev
ealed a
power vacuum that existed throughout North and South America. The weak new Mexic
an and
Latin American republics provided an inviting target for European colonialism. I
t was entirely
possible that a new European power—Russia, Prussia, France, or Britain—would rush in
and claim
the old Spanish colonies for themselves. America naturally wanted no new Europea
n colony
standing in its path west.
In 1822, France received tacit permission from other European powers to restore
a monarchy in
Spain, where republican forces had created a constitutional government. To say t
he least, these
developments were hardly in keeping with American democratic ideals. Monroe cert
ainly could do
little, and said even less given the reality of the situation. However, a somewh
at different twist to
the Europeans’ suppression of republican government occurred in the wake of the Fr
ench invasion
of Spain. Both Monroe and John C. Calhoun, the secretary of war, expressed conce
rns that France
might seek to extend its power to Spain’s former colonies in the New World, using
debts owed by
the Latin American republics as an excuse to either invade or overthrow South Am
erican
democracies.
Britain would not tolerate such intrusions, if for no other reason than traditio
nal balance-of-power
politics: England could not allow even “friendly” former enemies to establish geostr
ategic enclaves
in the New World. To circumvent European attempts to recolonize parts of the Wes
tern
Hemisphere, British foreign minister George Canning inquired if the United State
s would like to
pursue a joint course of resistance to any European involvement in Latin America
.
Certainly an arrangement of this type was in America’s interests: Britain wanted a
free-trade zone
for British ships in the Western Hemisphere, as did the United States. But Adams
, who planned to
run for president in 1824, knew better than to identify himself as an “ally” of Engl
and, reviving the
old charges of Adams’s Anglophilia. Instead, he urged Monroe to issue an independe
nt declaration
of foreign policy.
The resulting Monroe Doctrine, presented as a part of the message to Congress in
1823, formed the
basis of American isolationist foreign policy for nearly a century, and it forms
the basis for
America’s relationship with Latin America to this day. Basically, the doctrine ins
tructed Europe to
stay out of political and military affairs in the Western Hemisphere and, in ret
urn, the United States
would stay out of European political and military affairs. In addition, Monroe p
romised not to
interfere in the existing European colonies in South America. Monroe’s audacity ou
traged the
Europeans. Baron de Tuyll, the Russian minister to the United States, wrote that
the doctrine
“enunciates views and pretensions so exaggerated, and establishes principles so co
ntrary to the
rights of the European powers that it merits only the most profound contempt.”31 P
rince
Metternich, the chancellor of Austria, snorted that the United States had “cast bl
ame and scorn on
the institutions of Europe,” while L’Etoile in Paris asked, “By what right then would
the two
Americas today be under immediate sway [of the United States]?”32 Monroe, L’Etoile p
ointed out,
“is not a sovereign.” Not all Europeans reacted negatively: “Today for the first time,”
the Parisbased
Constitutionnel wrote on January 2, 1824, “the new continent says to the old, ‘I am
no longer
land for occupation; here men are masters of the soil which they occupy, and the
equals of the
people from whom they came….’ The new continent is right.”33
While no one referred to the statement as the Monroe Doctrine until 1852, it qui
ckly achieved
notoriety. In pragmatic terms, however, it depended almost entirely on the Royal
Navy.
Although the Monroe Doctrine supported the newly independent Latin American repu
blics in
Argentina, Columbia, and Mexico against Europeans, many Americans hoped to do so
me
colonizing of their own. Indeed, it is no coincidence that the Monroe Doctrine p
aralleled the
Adams-Onis Treaty, Long’s expedition, the opening of the Santa Fe Trail, and the R
ocky Mountain
fur trade. America had its eyes set west—on the weak Mexican republic and its nort
hernmost
provinces—Texas, New Mexico, and California. Nevertheless, when James Monroe left
office in
1825, he handed to his successor a nation with no foreign wars or entanglements,
an economy
booming with enterprise, and a political system ostensibly purged of partisan po
litics, at least for a
brief time. What Monroe ignored completely was the lengthening shadow of slavery
that continued
to stretch its hand across the Republic, and which, under Monroe’s administration,
was revived as a
contentious sectional issue with the Missouri Compromise.
The Fire Bell in the Night
Opening Missouri to statehood brought on yet another—but up to that point, the mos
t important—
of many clashes over slavery that ended in secession and war. Proponents of slav
ery had started to
develop the first “overtly distinct southern constitutional thought” that crafted a
logical, but
constitutionally flawed, defense of individual states’ rights to protect slavery.3
4 Once again, it was
Jefferson who influenced both the advance of liberty and the expansion of slaver
y simultaneously,
for it was in the southern regions of the Louisiana Purchase territory—Oklahoma, A
rkansas,
Kansas, and Missouri—that slavery’s future lay.
Difficulties over the admission of Missouri began in late 1819, when Missouri ap
plied to Congress
for statehood. At the time, there were eleven slave states (Virginia, the Caroli
nas, Georgia,
Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana) an
d eleven free
states (New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont,
New
Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois). Population differences pr
oduced a disparity
in House seats, where, even with the three-fifths ratio working in favor of the
South, slave states
only counted 81 votes to 105 held by free states. Moreover, free-state populatio
n had already
started to grow substantially faster than that of the slave states. Missouri’s sta
tehood threatened to
shift the balance of power in the Senate in the short term, but in the long term
it would likely set a
precedent for the entire Louisiana Purchase territory.
Anticipating that eventuality, and that since Louisiana had already become a sta
te in 1812, the
South would try to further open Louisiana Purchase lands to slavery, Congressman
James
Tallmadge of New York introduced an amendment to the statehood legislation that
would have
prevented further introduction of slaves into Missouri. A firestorm erupted. Sen
ator Rufus King of
New York claimed the Constitution empowered Congress to prohibit slavery in Miss
ouri and to
make prohibition a prerequisite for admission to the Union. As a quick reference
, his could be
labeled the congressional authority view, which was quickly countered by Senator
William Pinkney
of Maryland, who articulated what might be called the compact view, wherein he a
sserted that the
United States was a collection of equal sovereignties and Congress lacked the co
nstitutional
authority over those sovereignties.
Indeed, the Constitution said nothing about territories, much less slavery in th
e territories, and left it
to statute law to provide guidance. That was the case with the Northwest Ordinan
ce. But since the
Louisiana Purchase was not a part of the United States in 1787, the Northwest Or
dinance made no
provision for slavery west of the Mississippi, necessitating some new measure. N
o sooner had the
opposing positions been laid out than the territory of Maine petitioned Congress
for its admission to
the Union as well, allowing for not only sectional balance, but also providing a
resolution
combining the Maine and Missouri applications. A further compromise prohibited s
lavery north of
the 36-degree, 30-minute line. There were also more insidious clauses that prohi
bited free black
migration in the territory and guaranteed that masters could take their slaves i
nto free states, which
reaffirmed the state definitions of citizenship in the latter case and denied ce
rtain citizenship
protections to free blacks in the former.35 Packaging the entire group of bills
together, so that the
Senate and House would have to vote on the entirety of the measure, preventing a
ntislave
northerners from peeling off distasteful sections, was the brainchild of Henry C
lay of Kentucky.
More than any other person, Clay directed the passage of the compromise, and sta
ked his claim to
the title later given him, the Great Compromiser. Some, perhaps including Clay,
thought that with
passage of the Missouri Compromise, the question of slavery had been effectively
dealt with.
Others, however, including Martin Van Buren of New York, concluded just the oppo
site: it set in
motion a dynamic that he was convinced would end only in disunion or war. Van Bu
ren
consequently devised a solution to this eventuality. His brilliant, but flawed,
plan rested on certain
assumptions that we must examine.
Southern prospects for perpetuating slavery depended on maintaining a grip on th
e levers of power
at the federal level. But the South had already lost the House of Representative
s. Southerners could
count on the votes of enough border states to ensure that no abolition bill coul
d be passed, but little
else. Power in the Senate, meanwhile, had started to shift, and with each new st
ate receiving two
senators, it would only take a few more states from the northern section of the
Louisiana Purchase
to tilt the balance forever against the South in the upper chamber. That meant f
orcing a balance in
the admission of all new states. Finally, the South had to hold on to the presid
ency. This did not
seem difficult, for it seemed highly likely that the South could continue to ens
ure the election of
presidents who would support the legality (if not the morality) of slavery. But
the courts troubled
slave owners, especially when it came to retrieving runaways, which was nearly i
mpossible. The
best strategy for controlling the courts was to control the appointment of the j
udges, through a
proslavery president and Senate.
Still, the ability of the nonslave states to outvote the South and its border al
lies would only grow.
Anyone politically astute could foresee a time in the not-distant future when no
t only would both
houses of Congress have northern/ antislave majorities, but the South would also
lack the electoral
clout to guarantee a proslavery president. On top of these troublesome realities
lay moral traps that
the territories represented. Bluntly, if slavery was evil in the territories, wa
s it not equally evil in the
Carolinas? And if it was morally acceptable for Mississippi, why not Minnesota?
These issues combined with the election of 1824 to lead to the creation of the m
odern two-party
system and the founding of the Democratic Party. The father of the modern Democr
atic Party,
without question, was Martin Van Buren, who had come from the Bucktail faction o
f the
Republican Party. As the son of a tavern owner from Kinderhook, New York, Van Bu
ren resented
the aristocratic landowning families and found enough other like-minded politici
ans to control the
New York State Constitutional Convention in 1821, enacting universal manhood suf
frage. On a
small scale, suffrage reflected the strategy Van Buren intended to see throughou
t the nation—an
uprising against the privileged classes and a radical democratization of the pol
itical process. He
learned to employ newspapers as no other political figure had, linking journalis
ts’ success to the
fortunes of the party. Above all, Van Buren perceived the necessity of disciplin
e and organization,
which he viewed as beneficial to the masses he sought to organize. With his alli
es in the printing
businesses, Van Buren’s party covered the state with handbills, posters, editorial
s, and even ballots.
Van Buren’s plan also took into account the liberalization of voting requirements
in the states. By
1820 most states had abandoned property requirements for voting, greatly increas
ing the electorate,
and, contrary to expectations, voter participation fell.36 In fact, when propert
y restrictions were in
place, voter participation was the highest in American history—more than 70 percen
t participation
in Mississippi (1823) and Missouri (1820); more than 80 percent in Delaware(1804
) and New
Hampshire (1814); and an incredible 97 percent of those eligible voting in 1819.
37
The key to getting out the vote in the new, larger but less vested electorate wa
s a hotly contested
election, especially where parties were most evenly balanced. There occurred the
“highest voter
turnout [with] spectacular increases in Maine, New Hampshire, the Middle States,
Kentucky, and
Ohio.”38 Or, put another way, good old-fashioned “partisanship,” of the type Madison h
ad
extolled, energized the electorate.
Van Buren absorbed the impact of these changes. He relished confrontation. Known
as the Little
Magician or the Red Fox of Kinderhook, Van Buren organized a group of party lead
ers in New
York, referred to as the Albany Regency, to direct a national campaign.39 Wherea
s some scholars
make it appear that Van Buren only formed the new party in reaction to what he s
aw as John
Quincy Adams’s outright theft of the 1824 election, he had in fact already put the
machinery in
motion for much different reasons. For one thing, he disliked what today would b
e called a new
tone in Washington—Monroe’s willingness to appoint former Federalists to government
positions,
or a practice called the Monroe heresy.40 The New Yorker wanted conflict—and wante
d it hot—as
a means to exclude the hated Federalists from power. The election of 1824 at bes
t provided a
stimulant for the core ideas for future action already formed in Van Buren’s brain
.
Thus he saw the Missouri Compromise as a threat and, at the same time, an opport
unity. Intuitively,
Van Buren recognized that the immorality of slavery, and the South’s intransigence
on it, would
lead to secession and possibly a war. His solution was to somehow prevent the is
sue from even
being discussed in the political context, an objective he sought to attain throu
gh the creation of a
new political party dedicated to no other principle than holding power.
When the Jefferonians killed off the Federalist Party, they lost their identity:
“As the party of the
whole nation [the Republican Party] ceased to be responsive to any particular el
ements in its
constituency, it ceased to be responsive to the South.”41
As he would later outline in an 1827 letter to Virginian Thomas Ritchie, Van Bur
en argued that
“political combinations between the inhabitants of the different states are unavoi
dable & the most
natural & beneficial to the country is that between the planters of the South an
d the plain
Republicans of the North.”42 This alliance, soon called the Richmond-Albany axis,
joined the freesoil
Van Buren with the old Richmond Junto, which included Ritchie, editor of the Enq
uirer, and
other southern leaders, including William Crawford of Georgia. Without a nationa
l party system, he
contended, “the clamour against the Southern Influence and African Slavery” would in
crease.43
But on the other hand, if Van Buren successfully managed to align with southern
interests, how
could his party avoid the charge of being proslavery in campaigns? The answer, h
e concluded,
rested in excluding slavery from the national debate in entirety. If, through pa
rty success and
discipline, he could impose a type of moratorium on all discussion of slavery is
sues, the South, and
the nation, would be safe. Thus appeared the Jacksonian Democratic Party, or sim
ply, the
Democrats. Van Buren’s vision for maintaining national unity evolved from the noti
on that money
corrupts—a point that Andrew Jackson himself would make repeatedly, and which Jeff
erson
endorsed—and therefore the “majority was strongest where it was purest, least subjec
t to the
corrupting power of money,” which was the South.44 Ironically, it was exactly the “c
orrupting
power of money” that Van Buren intended to harness in order to enforce discipline.
The growing
size of the federal government, especially in some departments like the Post Off
ice, provided an
ever-larger pool of government jobs with which to reward supporters. At the stat
e level, too,
governments were growing. Van Buren realized that when federal, state, local, an
d party jobs were
combined, they provided a significant source of compensation for the most loyal
party leaders.
Certainly not everyone would receive a government—or party—job. But a hierarchy was
established from precinct to ward to district to state to the national level thr
ough which effective
partisans were promoted; then, when they had attained a statewide level of succe
ss, they were
converted into federal or state employees.
This structure relied on an American tradition, the spoils system, in which the
winner of the
election replaced all the government bureaucrats with his own supporters; hence,
To the victor
belong the spoils. It was also called patronage. However one defined it, the bot
tom line was jobs
and money. Van Buren hitched his star to a practice that at its root viewed men
as base and without
principle. If people could be silenced on the issue of slavery by a promise of a
job, what kind of
integrity did they have? Yet that was precisely Van Buren’s strategy—to buy off vote
s (in a
roundabout way) with jobs for the noble purpose of saving the nation from a civi
l war.
In turn, the spoils system inordinately relied on a fiercely partisan (and often
nasty) press to churn
out reasons to vote for the appropriate candidate and to besmirch the record and
integrity of the
opponent. All the papers were wholly owned subsidiaries of the political parties
, and usually
carried the party name in the masthead, for example, Arkansas Democrat. Such par
tisan papers had
existed in the age of the Federalists, who benefited from Noah Webster’s The Miner
va, and
Jefferson’s counterpart, Freneau’s National Gazette. But they were much smaller oper
ations, and
certainly not coordinated in a nationwide network of propaganda as Van Buren env
isioned. Under
the new partisan press, all pretense of objective news vanished. One editor wrot
e that he saw it as
irresponsible to be objective, and any paper which pretended to be fair simply w
as not doing its job.
Readers understood that the papers did not pretend to be unbiased, and therefore
they took what
they found with an appropriate amount of skepticism.
There was another dynamic at work in the machinery that Van Buren set up, one th
at he likely had
not thought through, especially given his free-soil predilections. Preserving a
slave South free from
northern interference not only demanded politicians who would (in exchange for p
atronage) loyally
submit to a party gag order, but also required the party elect as president a ma
n who would not use
the power of the federal government to infringe on slavery. The successful candi
date, for all
practical purposes, had to be a “Northern man of Southern principles,” or “Southerners
who were
predominantly Westerners in the public eye.”45 As long as the territorial issues w
ere managed, and
as long as the White House remained in “safe” hands with a sympathetic northerner, o
r a westerner
with sufficient southern dispositions, the South could rest easy.
Unwittingly, though, Van Buren and other early founders of the new Democratic Pa
rty had already
sown the seeds of disaster for their cause. Keeping the issue of slavery bottled
up demanded that
the federal government stay out of southern affairs. That, in turn, required a r
elatively small and
unobtrusive Congress, a pliant bureaucracy, and a docile chief executive. These
requirements fell
by the wayside almost immediately, if not inevitably. Certainly the man that Van
Buren ultimately
helped put in the White House, Andrew Jackson, was anything but docile. But even
if Jackson had
not been the aggressive president he was, Van Buren’s spoils system put in place a
doomsday
device that guaranteed that the new Jacksonian Democrats would have to deal with
the slavery
issues sooner rather than later.
With each new federal patronage job added, the bureaucracy, and the power of Was
hington, grew
proportionately. Competition was sure to come from a rival party, which would al
so promise jobs.
To get elected, politicians increasingly had to promise more jobs than their opp
onents,
proportionately expanding the scope and power of the federal government. The las
t thing Van
Buren and the Democrats wanted was a large, powerful central government that cou
ld fall into the
hands of an antislave party, but the process they created to stifle debate on sl
avery ensured just that.
By the 1850s, all it would take to set off a crisis was the election of the wron
g man—a northerner
of northern principles, someone like Abraham Lincoln.
Other changes accelerated the trend toward mass national parties. Conventions ha
d already come
into vogue for securing passage of favored bills—to marshal the support of “the peop
le” and “the
common man.” Conventions “satisfied the great political touchstone of Jacksonian dem
ocracy—
popular sovereignty.”46 Reflecting the democratic impulses that swept the nation,
the nominating
convention helped bury King Caucus. It was the election of 1824, however, that k
illed the king.
Corrupt Bargains?
A precedent of some degree had been set in American politics from the beginning
when, aside from
Vice President Adams, the strongest contender to succeed a president was the sec
retary of state.
Jefferson, Washington’s secretary of state, followed Adams; Madison, who was Jeffe
rson’s
secretary of state, followed Jefferson; Monroe, Madison’s secretary of state, foll
owed Madison; and
John Quincy Adams, Monroe’s secretary of state, now intended to keep the string in
tact.
Advantages accompanied the position: it had notoriety and, when the man holding
the job was
competent, a certain publicity for leadership traits whenever important treaties
were negotiated. It
was one of the few jobs that offered foreign policy experience outside of the pr
esidency itself.
Nevertheless, Adams’s personal limitations made the election of 1824 the most clos
ely and bitterly
fought in the life of the young Republic.
John Quincy Adams, the former president’s son, had benefited from his family name,
but it also
saddled him with the unpleasant association of his father’s Anglophilia, the gener
al aroma of
distrust that had hung over the first Adams administration, and, above all, the
perception of
favoritism and special privilege that had become aspersions in the new age of th
e common man.
Adams suffered from chronic depression (he had two brothers and a son die of alc
oholism),
whereas his self-righteousness reminded far too many of his father’s piousness. Un
afraid of hard
work, Adams disdained “politiking” and refused to play the spoils system. Like Clay,
he was an
avowed nationalist whose concepts for internal unity harkened back to—indeed, far
surpassed—the
old Federalist programs. But in 1808, to remain politically viable, Adams abando
ned the Federalists
and became a Republican.
To some extent, Adams was overqualified to be president. Even the slanted Jackso
n biographer
Robert Remini agreed that “unquestionably, Adams was the best qualified” for the job
, unless, he
added, “political astuteness” counted.47 Having served as the U.S. minister to Russi
a and having
helped draft the Treaty of Ghent, Adams had excellent foreign policy skills. Int
elligent, well
educated, and fiercely antislave (he later defended the Amistad rebels), Adams n
evertheless (like
his father) elicited little personal loyalty and generated only the smallest spa
rk of political
excitement. Worse, he seemed unable (or unwilling) to address his faults. “I am a
man of reserved,
cold, austere and forbidding manners,” he wrote, and indeed, he was called by his
political
adversaries “a gloomy misanthrope”—character defects that he admitted he lacked the “pli
ability”
to reform.48
Another equally flawed contender, Henry Clay of Kentucky, had a stellar career a
s Speaker of the
House and a reputation as a miracle worker when it came to compromises. If anyon
e could make
the lion lie down with the lamb, wasn’t it Henry Clay? He had revolutionized the S
peaker’s
position, turning it into a partisan office empowered by constitutional authorit
y that had simply lain
dormant since the founding.49 Clay had beaten the drums for war in 1812, then ex
tended the olive
branch at Ghent in 1815. A ladies’ man, he walked with an aura of power, magnified
by a gift of
oratory few could match, which, when combined with his near-Napoleonic hypnotism
,
simultaneously drew people to him and repulsed them. John Calhoun, who opposed t
he Kentuckian
in nearly everything, admitted, “I don’t like Clay…but, by God, I love him.”50 The Kentu
ckian
could just as easily explode in fury or weep in sympathy; he could dance (well),
and he could duel,
and he could attract the support of polar opposites such as Davy Crockett and Jo
hn Quincy Adams.
Possessing so much, Clay lacked much as well. His ideology hung together as a ga
rment of fine,
but incompatible, cloths. Having done as much as anyone to keep the nation from
a civil war,
Henry Clay in modern terminology was a moderate, afraid to offend either side to
o deeply. Like
Webster and Jackson, he stood for union, but what was that? Did “Union” mean “compact”?
Did it
mean “confederation”? Did it mean “all men are created equal”? Clay supposedly opposed s
lavery
in principle and wanted it banned—yet like the Sage of Monticello, he and his wife
never freed
their own slaves.
Ever the conciliator, Clay sought a middle ground on the peculiar institution, s
earching for some
process to make the unavoidable disappear without conflict. He thought slavery w
as not a
competitive economic structure in the long run, and thus all that was needed was
a national market
to ensure slavery’s demise—all the while turning profits off slavery. Such inconsist
encies led him
to construct a political platform along with other nationalists like Adams, John
Calhoun, and Daniel
Webster that envisioned binding the nation together in a web of commerce, whereu
pon slavery
would disappear peacefully.
Clay’s American system (not to be confused with Eli Whitney’s manufacturing process
of the same
name) involved three fundamental objectives: (1) tie the country together with a
system of internal
improvements, including roads, harbor clearances, river improvements, and later,
railroads all built
with federal help; (2) support the Bank of the United States, which had branches
throughout the
nation and provided a uniform money; and (3) maintain a system of protective tar
iffs for southern
sugar, northeastern textiles, and iron. What was conspicuous by its absence was
abolition of
slavery. Without appreciating the political similarities of the American system,
Clay had advanced
a program that conceptually mirrored Van Buren’s plans for political dominance. Th
e American
system offered, in gussied-up terms, payoffs to constituent groups, who in retur
n would ignore the
subject standing in front of them all.
Thus, between Adams and Clay, the former had the will but not the skill to do an
ything about
slavery, whereas the latter had the skill but not the will. That opened the door
for yet another
candidate, William Crawford of Georgia. Originally, Van Buren had his eye on Cra
wford as the
natural leader of his fledgling Democratic Party. Unlike Adams and Clay, however
, Crawford stood
for slavery, veiled in the principles of 1798, as he called them, and strict con
struction of the
Constitution. Lacking any positive message, Crawford naturally appealed to a min
ority, building a
base only in Virginia and Georgia, but he appealed to Van Buren because of his w
illingness to
submit government control to party discipline. Van Buren therefore swung the cau
cus behind the
Georgian. Instead of providing a boost to Crawford, the endorsement of him spark
ed a revolt on the
grounds that Van Buren was engaging in king making. Van Buren should have seen t
his democratic
tide coming, as he had accounted for it in almost everything else he did, but he
learned his lesson
after the election. Crawford’s candidacy also suffered mightily in 1823 when the g
iant man was hit
by a stroke and left nearly paralyzed, and although he won some electoral votes
in the election of
1824, he no longer was an attractive candidate for national office.
None of the three major candidates—Adams, Clay, or Crawford—in fact, could claim to
be “of the
people.” All were viewed as elites, which left room for one final entry into the p
residential
sweepstakes, Andrew Jackson of Tennessee. Beginning with the Tennessee legislatu
re, then
followed by Pennsylvania, Jackson was endorsed at a mass meeting. Sensing his op
portunity,
Jackson ensured southern support by encouraging John C. Calhoun to run for vice
president.
Jackson appeared to have the election secure, having mastered the techniques Van
Buren espoused,
such as avoiding commitment on key issues, and above all avoiding the slavery is
sue.
When the ballots came in to the electoral college, no one had a majority, so the
decision fell to the
House of Representatives. There, only the three receiving the highest electoral
count could be
considered, and that eliminated Clay, who had won only 37 electoral votes. The c
ontest now came
down to Jackson with 99, Adams with 84, and Crawford with 41. Clay, the Speaker
of the House,
found himself in the position of kingmaker because his 37 electoral votes could
tip the balance.
And Clay detested Jackson: “I cannot believe that killing 2,500 Englishmen at New
Orleans
qualifies for the…duties of the First Magistracy,” he opined.51
Clay should have known better. Washington before him had ridden similar credenti
als to the
presidency. Nevertheless, between Crawford’s physical condition and Clay’s view of t
he “hero of
New Orleans,” he reluctantly threw his support to Adams. He had genuine agreements
with Adams
on the American system as well, whereas Crawford and Jackson opposed it. Whateve
r his thinking,
Clay’s decision represented a hideously short-sighted action.
Jackson had won the popular vote by a large margin over Adams, had beaten Adams
and Clay put
together, and had the most electoral votes. No evidence has ever surfaced that C
lay and Adams had
made a corrupt bargain, but none was needed in the minds of the Jacksonians, who
viewed Clay’s
support of Adams as acquired purely through bribery. Nor was anyone surprised wh
en Adams
named Clay secretary of state in the new administration. Jackson exploded, “The Ju
das of the West
has closed the contract and will receive the thirty pieces of silver, but his en
d will be the same.”52
It mattered little that Clay, in fact, had impeccable credentials for the positi
on. Rather, the Great
Compromiser muddied the waters by offering numerous, often conflicting, explanat
ions for his
conduct. Meanwhile, Calhoun, who saw his own chances at the presidency vanish in
an Adams-
Clay coalition, threw in completely with the Jacksonians; and overnight, Adams c
reated an instant
opposition built on the single objective of destroying his administration.53
Adams’s Stillborn Administration
At every turn, Adams found himself one step behind Jackson and the Van Buren mac
hine. Lacking
an affinity for the masses—even though he spent countless hours receiving ordinary
citizens daily,
dutifully recording their meetings in his diary—Adams seemed incapable of cultivat
ing any public
goodwill. In his first message to Congress, Adams laid out an astounding array o
f plans, including
exploration of the far West, the funding of a naval academy and a national astro
nomical
observatory, and the institution of a uniform set of metric weights and measures
. Then, in one of
the most famous faux pas of any elected official, Adams lectured Congress that t
he members were
not to be “palsied by the will of our constituents.”54 Bad luck and poor timing char
acterized the
hapless Adams administration, which soon sought to pass a new tariff bill to rai
se revenue for the
government, a purpose that seldom excited voters. When the Tariff of 1824 finall
y navigated its
way through Congress, it featured higher duties on cotton, iron, salt, coffee, m
olasses, sugar, and
virtually all foreign manufactured goods. Legislators enthusiastically voted for
duties on some
products to obtain higher prices for those made by their own constituents, hardl
y noticing that if all
prices went up, what came into one hand went out of the other. Calhoun saw an op
portunity to twist
the legislation even further, giving the Jacksonians a political victory. A bill
was introduced with
outrageously high duties on raw materials, which the Machiavellian Calhoun felt
certain would
result in the northeastern states voting it down along with the agricultural sta
tes. As legislation
sometimes does, the bill advanced, bit by bit, largely out of the public eye. Wh
at finally emerged
threatened to blow apart the Union.
The stunned Calhoun saw Van Buren’s northerners support it on the grounds that it
protected his
woolen manufacturing voters, whereas Daniel Webster of Massachusetts, one of tho
se Calhoun
thought would be painted into a corner, backed the tariff on the principle that
he supported all
protective tariffs, even one that high. Thus, to Calhoun’s amazement and the disma
y of southern
and western interests, the bill actually passed in May 1828, leaving Calhoun to
attack his own bill!
He penned (anonymously) the “South Carolina Exposition and Protest,” and quickly the
tariff was
dubbed the Tariff of Abominations.
As the next election approached, on the one side stood Jackson, who, despite his
military record
seemed a coarse man of little character. At the other extreme stood the equally
unattractive Adams,
who thought that only character counted. Jackson and his followers believed in “ro
tation in office,”
whereby virtually any individual could be plugged into any government job. The W
higs, on the
other hand, emphasized character and social standing.55 To Adams, and other late
r Whigs, simply
stacking men of reputation in offices amounted to good government. Common experi
ence at the
end of Adams’s term suggested that some men of character lacked sense, and some me
n of sense
seemed to lack character. Therefore, sometime after Jefferson, the fine balance
that demanded both
effectiveness and honor among elected officials had taken a holiday.
The Rise of the Common Man
Hailed by many historians as the first true democratic election in American hist
ory, the contest of
1828 was nearly a foregone conclusion owing to the charges of the “corrupt bargain”
and the inept
political traits of the incumbent Adams. The four years of the Adams administrat
ion actually
benefited Van Buren’s political machine, giving him the necessary time to line up
the papers, place
the proper loyalists in position, and obtain funding. By 1828, all the pieces we
re in place. Adams’s
supporters could only point to Jackson’s “convicted adulteress” of a wife (the legal s
tatus of her
earlier divorce had been successfully challenged) and his hanging of the British
spies in Florida,
going so far as to print up handbills with two caskets on them, known fittingly
as the coffin
handbills. Modern Americans disgusted by supposedly negative campaigning have li
ttle
appreciation for the intense vitriol of early American politics, which makes twe
nty-first-century
squabbles tame by comparison.
Jackson and his vice president, John Calhoun, coasted into office, winning 178 e
lectoral votes to
Adams’s 83, in the process claiming all the country except the Northeast, Delaware
, and Maryland.
Old Hickory, as he was now called, racked up almost 150,000 more popular votes t
han Adams.
Jackson quickly proved more of an autocrat than either of the Adamses, but on th
e surface his
embrace of rotation in office and the flagrant use of the spoils system to bring
in multitudes of
people previously out of power seemed democratic in the extreme. More than 10,00
0 celebrants
and job seekers descended on Washington like locusts, completely emptying the sa
loons of all
liquor in a matter of days. Washington had no place to put them, even when gougi
ng them to the
tune of twenty dollars per week for hotel rooms. Webster, appalled at the rabble
, said, “They really
seem to think the country has been rescued from some general disaster,” while Clay
succinctly
identified their true objective: “Give us bread, give us Treasury pap, give us our
reward.”56 The
real shock still awaited Washingtonians. After an inaugural speech that no one c
ould hear, Jackson
bowed deeply to the crowd before mounting his white horse to ride to the preside
ntial mansion,
followed by the enormous horde that entered the White House with him! Even those
sympathetic to
Jackson reacted with scorn to “King Mob,” and with good reason: The throng jumped on
chairs
with muddy boots, tore curtains and clothes, smashed china, and in general raise
d hell. To lure
them out, White House valets dragged liquor stocks onto the front lawn, then sla
mmed the doors
shut. But Jackson had already left his adoring fans, having escaped out a back w
indow to have a
steak dinner at a fancy eatery.
The entire shabby event betrayed Jackson’s inability to control his supporters, on
the one hand, and
his lack of class and inherent hypocrisy on the other. He had no intention of ha
nging out with his
people, but rather foisted them off on helpless government employees. Jackson ra
n the country in
the same spirit. Having hoisted high the banner of equality, in which any man wa
s as good as
another, and dispersed patronage as none before, Old Hickory relied on an entire
ly different
group—elite, select, and skilled—to actually govern the United States. His kitchen c
abinet
consisted of newspaper editor Francis Preston Blair, scion of a wealthy and infl
uential family;
Amos Kendall, his speechwriter as well as editor; the ubiquitous Van Buren; and
attorney Roger B.
Taney. These individuals had official positions as well. Kendall received a Trea
sury auditorship,
and Taney would be rewarded with a Supreme Court nomination.
Perhaps, if the Peggy Eaton affair had not occurred, Jackson might have governed
in a more
traditional manner, but the imbroglio of scandal never seemed far from him. Out
of loyalty, he
selected as secretary of war an old friend, John Eaton, who had recently married
a pretty twentynine-
year-old widow named Peggy. She came with a reputation. In the parlance of the d
ay, other
cabinet wives called Peggy a whore, and claimed she had “slept with ‘at least’ twenty
men, quite
apart from Eaton.”57 Her first husband, an alcoholic sailor, committed suicide aft
er learning of her
extramarital shenanigans with Eaton. To the matrons of Washington, most of whom
were older and
much less attractive, Peggy Eaton posed the worst kind of threat, challenging th
eir propriety, their
mores, and their sexuality. They shunned her: Mrs. Calhoun refused even to trave
l to Washington
so as to avoid having to meet Peggy. Adams gleefully noted that the Eaton affair
divided the
administration into moral factions headed by Calhoun and Van Buren, a widower, w
ho hosted the
only parties to which the Eatons were invited—a group Adams called the “party of the
frail
sisterhood.”
Jackson saw much of his departed Rachel in Peggy Eaton (Rachel had died in 1828)
, and the
president demanded that the cabinet members bring their wives in line and invite
Peggy to dinner
parties, or face dismissal. But Jackson could not even escape “Eaton malaria” at chu
rch, where the
local Presbyterian minister, J. M. Campbell, obliquely lectured the president on
morality. A worse
critic from the pulpit, the Reverend Ezra Stile Ely of Philadelphia, was, along
with Campbell,
summoned to an unusual cabinet meeting in September 1829, where Jackson grilled
them on their
information about Peggy. Jackson likely regretted the move when Ely brought up n
ew vicious
charges against the Eatons, and he uttered “By the God eternal” at pointed intervals
. “She is chaste
as a virgin,” Jackson exclaimed.
The affair ended when Peggy Eaton withdrew from Washington social life, but Calh
oun paid a
price as well by alienating the president, who fell completely under the spell o
f Van Buren. When
William Eaton died twenty-seven years later, Peggy Eaton inherited a small fortu
ne, married an
Italian dance teacher, then was left penniless when he absconded with her inheri
tance. Meanwhile,
she had indirectly convinced Jackson to rely almost exclusively on his kitchen c
abinet for policy
decisions. With high irony, the “man of the people” retreated to the confidence of a
select, secret
few whose deliberations and advice remained well outside of the sight of the pub
lic.
Historians such as Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and others have tried to portray the t
riumph of Jackson as
a watershed in democratic processes. That view held sway until so-called social
historians, like Lee
Benson and Edward Pessen, using quantitative methodology, exposed such claims as
fantasy.58
Thus, unable any longer to portray Jackson as a hero of the common man, modern l
iberal historians
somewhat predictably have revised the old mythology of Jacksonian democracy, now
explained
and qualified in terms of “a white man’s democracy that rested on the subjugation of
slaves,
women,” and Indians.59
Andrew Jackson, Indian Fighter
For several generations, Europeans had encroached on Indian lands and, through a
process of
treaties and outright confiscation through war, steadily acquired more land to t
he west. Several
alternative policies had been attempted by the United States government in its d
ealings with the
Indians. One emphasized the “nationhood” of the tribe, and sought to conduct foreign
policy with
Indian tribes the way the United States would deal with a European power. Anothe
r, more frequent,
process involved exchanging treaty promises and goods for Indian land in an atte
mpt to keep the
races separate. But the continuous flow of settlers, first into the Ohio and Moh
awk valleys, then
into the backwoods of the Carolinas, Kentucky, Georgia, and Alabama, caused the
treaties to be
broken, usually by whites, almost as soon as the signatures were affixed.
Andrew Jackson had a typically western attitude toward Indians, respecting their
fighting ability
while nonetheless viewing them as savages who possessed no inherent rights.60 Ol
d Hickory’s
campaigns in the Creek and Seminole wars made clear his willingness to use force
to move Indians
from their territories. When Jackson was elected, he announced a “just, humane, li
beral policy” that
would remove the Indians west of the Mississippi River, a proposal that itself m
erely copied
previous suggestions by John C. Calhoun, James Monroe, and others.
Jackson’s removal bill floundered, however, barely passing the House. National Rep
ublicans
fought it on the grounds that “legislative government…was the very essence of republ
icanism;
whereas Jackson represented executive government, which ultimately led to despot
ism.”61 Put
another way, Indian removal exemplified the myth of the Jacksonian Democrats as
the party of
small government. No doubt the Jacksonians wanted their opponents’ power and influ
ence shrunk,
but that never seemed to translate into actual reductions in Jackson’s autonomy.
In 1825 a group of Creek Indians agreed to a treaty to turn over land to the sta
te of Georgia, but a
tribal council quickly repudiated the deal as unrepresentative of all the Creek.
One problem lay in
the fact that whites often did not know which chiefs, indeed, spoke for the nati
on; therefore,
whichever one best fit the settlers’ plan was the one representatives tended to ac
cept as
“legitimate.” Before the end of the year troops from Georgia had forced the Creek ou
t.
A more formidable obstacle, the Cherokee, held significant land in Tennessee, Ge
orgia,
Mississippi, and Alabama. The Cherokee had a written constitution, representativ
e government,
newspapers, and in all ways epitomized the civilization many whites claimed they
wanted the tribes
to achieve. Land hunger, again, drove the state of Georgia to try to evict the t
ribe, which implored
Jackson for help. This time Jackson claimed that states were sovereign over the
people within their
borders and refused to intervene on their behalf. Yet his supporters then drafte
d a thoroughly
interventionist removal bill, called by Jackson’s most sympathetic biographer “harsh
, arrogant, and
racist,” passed in 1830, with the final version encapsulating Jackson’s basic assump
tions about the
Indians.62 The bill discounted the notion that Indians had any rights whatsoever—c
ertainly not
treaty rights—and stated that the government not only had that authority, but the
duty, to relocate
Indians whenever it pleased. In fact, the Removal Bill did not authorize unilate
ral abrogation of the
treaties, or forced relocation—Jackson personally exceeded congressional authority
to displace the
natives.63 Jackson’s supporters repeatedly promised any relocation would be “free an
d voluntary,”
and to enforce the removal, the president had to ride roughshod over Congress.
Faced with such realities, some Cherokee accepted the state of Georgia’s offer of
$68 million and
32 million acres of land west of the Mississippi for 100 million acres of Georgi
a land. Others,
however, with the help of two New England missionaries (who deliberately violate
d Georgia law to
bring the case to trial), filed appeals in the federal court system. In 1831, Th
e Cherokee Nation v.
Georgia reached the United States Supreme Court, wherein the Cherokee claimed th
eir status as a
sovereign nation subject to similar treatment under treaty as foreign states. Th
e Supreme Court, led
by Chief Justice Marshall, rejected the Cherokee definition of “sovereign nation” ba
sed on the fact
that they resided entirely within the borders of the United States. However, he
and the Court
strongly implied that they would hear a challenge to Georgia’s law on other ground
s, particularly
the state’s violation of federal treaty powers under the Constitution.
The subsequent case, Worcester v. Georgia (1832), resulted in a different ruling
: Marshall’s Court
stated that Georgia could not violate Cherokee land rights because those rights
were protected
under the jurisdiction of the federal government. Jackson muttered, “John Marshall
has made his
decision, now let him enforce it,” and proceeded to ignore the Supreme Court’s rulin
g. Ultimately,
the Cherokee learned that having the highest court in the land, and even Congres
s, on their side
meant little to a president who disregarded the rule of law and the sovereignty
of the states when it
suited him.64
In 1838, General Winfield Scott arrived with an army and demanded that the “emigra
tion must be
commenced in haste, but…without disorder,” and he implored the Cherokee not to resis
t.65
Cherokee chief John Ross continued to appeal to Washington right up to the momen
t he left camp:
“Have we done any wrong? We are not charged with any. We have a Country which othe
rs covet.
This is the offense we have ever yet been charged with.”66 Ross’s entreaties fell on
deaf ears. Scott
pushed more than twelve thousand Cherokee along the Trail of Tears toward Oklaho
ma, which was
designated Indian Territory—a journey in which three thousand Indians died of star
vation or
disease along the way. Visitors, who came in contact with the traveling Cherokee
, learned that “the
Indians…buried fourteen or fifteen at every stopping place….”67 Nevertheless, the bure
au-cracy—
and Jackson—was satisfied. The Commissioner on Indian Affairs in his 1839 report a
stonishingly
called the episode “a striking example of the liberality of the Government,” claimin
g that “good
feeling has been preserved, and we have quietly and gently transported eighteen
thousand friends to
the west bank of the Mississippi” [emphasis ours].68 From the Indians’ perspective,
the obvious
maxim With friends like these…no doubt came to mind, but from another perspective
the
Cherokee, despite the horrendous cost they paid then and in the Civil War, when
the tribe, like the
nation, had warriors fighting on both sides, ultimately triumphed. They survived
and prospered,
commemorating their Trail of Tears and their refusal to be victims.69
Other Indian tribes relocated or were crushed. When Jackson attempted to remove
Chief Black
Hawk and the Sauk and Fox Indians in Illinois, Black Hawk resisted. The Illinois
militia pursued
the Indians into Wisconsin Territory, where at Bad Axe they utterly destroyed th
e warriors and
slaughtered women and children as well. The Seminole in Florida also staged a ca
mpaign of
resistance that took nearly a decade to quell, and ended only when Osceola, the
Seminole chief,
was treacherously captured under the auspices of a white flag in 1837. It would
be several decades
before eastern whites began to reassess their treatment of the Indians with any
remorse or taint of
conscience.70
Internal Improvements and Tariff Wars
If John Quincy Adams wished upon Jackson a thorn in the flesh, he certainly did
so with the tariff
bill, which continued to irritate throughout the transition between administrati
ons. By the time the
smoke cleared in the war over the so-called Tariff of Abominations, it had made
hypocrites out of
the tariff’s major opponent, John C. Calhoun, and Andrew Jackson, who found himsel
f maneuvered
into enforcing it.
In part, the tariff issue was the flip side of the internal improvements coin. S
ince Jefferson’s day
there had been calls for using the power and wealth of the federal government to
improve
transportation networks throughout the Union. In particular, advocates of federa
l assistance
emphasized two key areas: road building and river and harbor improvements. In th
e case of road
building, which was substantially done by private companies, Congress had author
ized a national
highway in 1806, from Cumberland, Maryland, westward. Construction actually did
not start until
1811, and the road reached Wheeling, Virginia, in 1818. Work was fitful after th
at, with Congress
voting funds on some occasions, and failing to do so on others. By 1850 the road
stretched to
Illinois, and it constituted a formidable example of highway construction compar
ed to many other
American roads. Paved with stone and gravel, it represented a major leap over “cor
duroy roads,”
made of logs laid side by side, or flat plank roads. More typical of road constr
uction efforts was the
Lancaster Turnpike, connecting Philadelphia to Lancaster, and completed in 1794
at a cost of a half
million dollars. Like other private roads, it charged a fee for use, which tollh
ouse dodgers carefully
avoided by finding novel entrances onto the highway past the tollhouse. Hence, r
oads such as this
gained the nickname “shunpikes” for the short detours people found around tollhouses
. The private
road companies never solved this “free rider” problem. While the Pennsylvania road p
roved
profitable for a time, most private roads went bankrupt, but not before construc
ting some ten
thousand miles of highways.71
Instead, road builders increasingly went to the state, then the federal governme
nt for help.
Jefferson’s own treasury secretary, Albert Gallatin, had proposed a massive system
of federally
funded canals and roads in 1808, and while the issue lay dormant during the War
of 1812, internal
improvements again came to the fore in Monroe’s administration. National Republica
ns argued for
these projects on the ground that they (obviously, to them) were needed, but als
o, in a more ethereal
sense, that such systems would tie the nation together and further dampen the ho
stilities over
slavery.
When Jackson swept into office, he did so ostensibly as an advocate of states’ rig
hts. Thus his veto
of the Maysville Road Bill of 1830 seemed to fit the myth of Jackson the small-g
overnment
president. However, the Maysville Road in Kentucky would have benefited Jackson’s
hated rival,
Henry Clay, and it lay entirely within the state of Kentucky. Other projects, ho
wever—run by
Democrats—fared much better. Jackson “approved large appropriations for river-and ha
rborimprovement
bills and similar pork-barrel legislation sponsored by worthy Democrats, in retu
rn for
local election support.”72 In short, Jackson’s purported reluctance to expand the po
wer of the
federal government only applied when his political opponents took the hit.
Battles over internal improvements irritated Jackson’s foes, but the tariff bill p
ositively galvanized
them. Faced with the tariff, Vice President Calhoun continued his metamorphosis
from a biggovernment
war hawk into a proponent of states’ rights and limited federal power. Jackson,
meanwhile, following Van Buren’s campaign prescription, had claimed to oppose the
tariff as an
example of excessive federal power. However distasteful, Jackson had to enforce
collection of the
tariff, realizing that many of his party’s constituents had benefited from it. For
four years antitariff
forces demanded revision of the 1828 Tariff of Abominations. Calhoun had written
his “South
Carolina Exposition and Protest” to curb a growing secessionist impulse in the Sou
th by offering a
new concept, the doctrine of nullification.73
The notion seemed entirely Lockean in its heritage, and Calhoun seemed to echo M
adison’s
“interposition” arguments raised against the Alien and Sedition Acts. At its core, t
hough, Calhoun’s
claims were both constitutionally and historically wrong. He contended that the
unjust creation of
federal powers violated the states’ rights provisions of the Constitution. This wa
s an Anti-Federalist
theme that he had further fleshed out to incorporate the compact theory of union
, in which the
United States was a collection of states joined to each other only by common con
sent or compact,
rather than a nation of people who happened to be residents of particular states
. Claiming sovereign
power for the state, Calhoun maintained that citizens of a state could hold spec
ial conventions to
nullify and invalidate any national law, unless the federal government could obt
ain a constitutional
amendment to remove all doubt about the validity of the law. Of course, there wa
s no guarantee
that even proper amendments would have satisfied Calhoun, and without doubt, no
constitutional
amendment on slavery would have been accepted as legitimate.
Many saw the tariff debate itself as a referendum of sorts on slavery. Nathan Ap
pleton, a textile
manufacturer in Massachusetts, noted that southerners’ hostility to the tariff aro
se from the “fear
and apprehension of the South that the General Government may one day interfere
with the right of
property in slaves. This is the bond which unites the South in a solid phalanx.”74
Adoption of the
infamous gag rule a few years later would reinforce Appleton’s assessment that wha
tever
differences the sections had over the tariff and internal improvements on their
own merits, the
disagreement ultimately came down to slavery, which, despite the efforts of the
new Democratic
Party to exclude it from debate, increasingly wormed its way into almost all leg
islation.
Amid the tariff controversy, for example, slavery also insinuated itself into th
e Webster-Hayne
debate over public lands. Originating in a resolution by Senator Samuel Foot of
Connecticut, which
would have restricted land sales in the West, it evoked the ire of westerners an
d southerners who
saw it as an attempt to throttle settlement and indirectly provide a cheap work
force for eastern
manufacturers. Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri, a staunch Jackson man who
denounced
the bill, found an ally in Robert Y. Hayne of South Carolina. Hayne contended th
at the bill placed
undue hardships on one section in favor of another, which was the essence of the
dissatisfaction
with the tariff as well. During the Adams administration, Benton had proposed a
reduction on the
price of western lands from seventy-five to fifty cents per acre, and then, if n
o one purchased
western land at that price, he advocated giving the land away. Westerners applau
ded Benton’s plan,
but manufacturers thought it another tactic to lure factory workers to the West.
Land and tariffs were inextricably intertwined in that they provided the two chi
ef sources of federal
revenue. If land revenues declined, opponents of the tariff would have to acknow
ledge its necessity
as a revenue source. National Republicans, on the other hand, wanted to keep lan
d prices and tariff
rates high, but through a process of “distribution,” turn the excess monies back to
the states for
them to use for internal improvement.75
Closing western lands also threatened the slave South, whose own soil had starte
d to play out.
Already, the “black belt” of slaves, which in 1820 had been concentrated in Virginia
and the
Carolinas, had shifted slowly to the southeast, into Georgia, Alabama, and Missi
ssippi. If the North
wished to permanently subjugate the South as a section (which many southerners,
such as Calhoun,
feared), the dual-pronged policy of shutting down western land sales and enactin
g a high tariff
would achieve that objective in due time. This was the case made by Senator Hayn
e in 1830, when
he spoke on the Senate floor against Foot’s bill, quickly moving from the issue of
land to
nullification.
Hayne outlined a broad conspiracy by the North against westerners and southerner
s. His defense of
nullification merely involved a reiteration of Calhoun’s compact theories presente
d in his
“Exposition,” conjuring up images of sectional tyranny and dangers posed by properti
ed classes.
The eloquent Black Dan Webster challenged Hayne, raising the specter of civil wa
r if sectional
interests were allowed to grow and fester. Although he saved his most charged rh
etoric for last,
Webster envisioned a point where two sections, one backward and feudal, one adva
nced and free,
stood apart from each other. He warned that the people, not state legislatures,
comprised the Union
or, as he said, the Union was “a creature of the people.”76 To allow states to nulli
fy specific federal
laws would turn the Constitution into a “rope of sand,” Webster observed—hence the exi
stence of
the Supreme Court to weigh the constitutionality of laws. Liberty and the Union
were not
antithetical, noted Webster, they were “forever, one and inseparable.”77 The Foot re
solution went
down to defeat.
Jackson, who sat in the audience during the Webster-Hayne debate, again abandone
d the states’
rights-small government view in favor of the federal government. At a Jefferson
Day Dinner,
attended by Calhoun, Jackson, and Van Buren, Jackson offered a toast directed at
Calhoun, stating,
“Our Union. It must be preserved.”78 Calhoun offered an ineffectual retort in his to
ast—“The
Union, next to our liberty most dear!”—but the president had made his point, and it
widened the rift
between the two men.
An odd coalition to reduce tariff rates arose in the meantime between Jackson an
d the newly
elected congressman from Massachusetts, John Quincy Adams, who had become the on
ly president
in American history to lose an election and return to office as a congressman. T
he revised Adamssponsored
tariff bill cut duties and eliminated the worst elements of the 1828 tariff, but
increased
duties on iron and cloth. South Carolina’s antitariff forces were not appeased by
the revisions nor
intimidated by Jackson’s rhetoric. In 1832 the legislature, in a special session,
established a state
convention to adopt an ordinance of nullification that nullified both the 1828 a
nd the 1832 tariff
bills. South Carolina’s convention further authorized the legislature to refuse to
collect federal
customs duties at South Carolina ports after February 1, 1833, and, should feder
al troops be sent to
collect those duties, to secede from the Union. Calhoun resigned the vice presid
ency and joined the
nullification movement that advanced his theories, and soon ran for the U.S. Sen
ate.
Jackson now faced a dilemma. He could not permit South Carolina to bandy about s
uch language.
Nullification, he rightly noted, was “incompatible with the existence of the Union
.” More
pointedly, he added, “be not deceived by names. Disunion by armed force is treason
.”79 The
modern reader should pause to consider that Jackson specifically was charging Jo
hn C. Calhoun
with treason—an accurate application, in this case, but still remarkable in its fo
rthrightness and
clarity, not to mention courage, which Old Hickory never lacked. Jackson then ap
plied a carrotand-
stick approach, beginning with the stick: he requested that Congress pass the Fo
rce Act in
January 1833, which allowed him to send military forces to collect the duties. I
t constituted
something of a bluff, since the executive already had such powers. In reality, b
oth he and South
Carolinians knew that federal troops would constitute no less than an occupation
force. The use of
federal troops in the South threatened to bring on the civil war that Jefferson,
Van Buren, and
others had feared. Yet Jackson wanted to prove his willingness to fight over the
issue, which in his
mind remained “Union.” He dispatched General Winfield Scott and additional troops to
Charleston,
making plain his intention to collect the customs duties. At the same time, Jack
son had no interest
in the central issue, and the underlying cause of the dissatisfaction with the t
ariff, slavery, nor did
he intend to allow the tariff to spin out of control. While acting bellicose in
public, Jackson worked
behind the scenes to persuade South Carolina to back down. Here, Jackson receive
d support from
his other political adversary, Henry Clay, who worked with Calhoun to draft a co
mpromise tariff
with greatly reduced duties beginning in 1833 and thereafter until 1842. Upon si
gning the bill,
Jackson gloated, “The modified Tariff has killed the ultras, both tarifites, and t
he nullifiers,”
although he also praised the “united influence” of Calhoun, Clay, and Webster.80 The
n Congress
passed both the tariff reduction and the Force Bill together, brandishing both t
hreat and reward in
plain sight. After the Tariff of 1833 passed, Clay won accolades, again as the G
reat Compromiser;
Calhoun had earned Jackson’s scorn as a sectionalist agitator, but Jackson, althou
gh he had
temporarily preserved the Union, had merely skirted the real issue once again by
pushing slavery
off to be dealt with by another generation.
Far from revealing a visionary leader, the episode exposed Jackson as supremely
patriotic but
shallow. In his election defeat to Adams, then his clash with Calhoun, he person
alized party,
sectional, and ideological conflicts, boiling them down into political bare-knuc
kle fighting. He
stood for Union, that much was assured. But to what end? For what purpose? Jacks
on’s next
challenge, the “war” with the Bank of the United States, would again degenerate into
a mano a
mano struggle with a private individual, and leave principle adrift on the shore
.
Jackson’s “War” on the BUS
Having deflated the Nationalist Republicans’ programs on internal improvements and
tariffs, there
remained only one plank of their platform to be dismantled, the second Bank of t
he United States.
Again, a great mythology arose over Jackson and his attitude toward the BUS. Tra
ditional
interpretations have held that the small-government-oriented Jackson saw the BUS
as a creature in
the grip of “monied elites” who favored business interests over the “common man.” A “hard
money” man, so the story goes, Jackson sought to eliminate all paper money and put
the country on
a gold standard. Having a government-sponsored central bank, he supposedly thoug
ht, was both
unconstitutional and undesirable. At least that was the generally accepted story
for almost a century
among American historians.81
Nicholas Biddle had run the bank expertly for several years, having replaced Lan
gdon Cheves as
president in 1823. A Philadelphian, Biddle had served as a secretary to the U.S.
minister to France,
edited papers and helped prepare the documents detailing the Lewis and Clark Exp
edition’s history,
and briefly served in the Pennsylvania state senate. Biddle’s worldliness and savo
ir faire
immediately branded him as one of the noxious elites Jackson fretted about. But
he intuitively
knew banking and finance, even if he had little practical experience. He appreci
ated the BUS’s
advantages over state-chartered banks and used them, yet all the while cultivati
ng good
relationships with the local commercial banks.
What made Biddle dangerous, though, was not his capabilities as a bank president
, but his political
powers of patronage in a large institution with branches in many states—all with t
he power to lend.
Only the Post Office and the military services, among all the federal agencies,
could match
Biddle’s base of spoils. Biddle also indirectly controlled the votes of thousands
through favorable
loans, generous terms, and easy access to cash. Whether Biddle actually engaged
in politics in such
manner is irrelevant: his mere capability threatened a man like Jackson, who saw
eastern cabals
behind every closed door. Thus, the “bank war” was never about the BUS’s abuse of its
central
banking powers or its supposed offenses against state banks (which overwhelmingl
y supported
rechartering of the BUS in 1832). Rather, to Jackson, the bank constituted a pol
itical threat that
must be dealt with.
Jackson sided with the hard-money faction, as governor of Tennessee having stron
gly resisted both
the chartering of state banks and placement of a BUS branch in his state. But th
at was in the early
1820s, on the heels of the panic. His views moderated somewhat, especially when
it came to the
idea of a central bank. Jackson’s hatred of a central bank is exaggerated.82 Like
Thomas Hart
Benton, William Gouge, and Thomas Ritchie of the Richmond Enquirer, Democrats an
d Jackson
supporters had reputations as hard-money men. Jackson himself once heaped scorn
on the paper
money he called rags emitted from banks. Still, a decade’s worth of prosperity had
an impact on
Jackson’s views, for by 1829, when he started to consider eliminating the BUS, he
had asked his
confidant Amos Kendall to draft a substitute plan for a national bank.83 Few his
torians deal with
this proposal: Jackson’s best biographer, Robert Remini, dedicates approximately o
ne page to it,
but he misses the critical implications. Other noted writers all but ignore the
draft message.84 The
president did not intend to eliminate central banking entirely, but to replace o
ne central bank with
another in a continuation of the spoils system. Why was the current BUS corrupt?
Because, in
Jackson’s view, it was in the hands of the wrong people. As governor, he had not h
esitated to write
letters of recommendation to staff the Nashville branch of the BUS, using the sa
me arguments—
that the “right” people would purge the system of corruption. The existing BUS was c
orrupt, in
Jackson’s view, only partly because it was a bank; what was more important was its
heritage as the
bank of the panic, the bank of the elites.
Given the intensity to which pro-Jacksonian authors cling to the antibank Andrew
Jackson, let the
reader judge. According to his close associate James Hamilton, Jackson had in mi
nd a national
money: his proposed bank would “afford [a] uniform circulating medium” and he promis
ed to
support any bank that would “answer the purposes of a safe depository of the publi
c treasure and
furnish the means of its ready transmission.” He was even more specific, according
to Hamilton,
because the 1829 plan would establish a new “national bank chartered upon the prin
ciples of the
checks and balances of our federal government, with a branch in each state, and
capital apportioned
agreeably to representation…. A national bank, entirely national Bank, of deposit
is all we ought
tohave.”85
Was the same man who had proposed a “national” bank with interstate branches capable
of
furnishing the “ready transmission” of national treasure also eager to eliminate sta
te banks? It
seems unlikely, given his supposed affinity for the rights of states to exercise
their sovereignty.
Nothing in the U.S. Constitution prohibited a bank (or any other business, for t
hat matter) from
issuing and circulating notes. However, based on Jackson’s willingness to crush st
ate sovereignty
in the Indian Removal and his repudiation of South Carolina’s nullification, it is
clear that to
Andrew Jackson the concept of states’ rights meant what Andrew Jackson said it mea
nt. More
disturbing, perhaps, and more indicative of his true goals, was a series of meas
ures introduced by
the Democrats to limit the country to a hard-money currency. Again, historians c
oncentrated on the
hard-money aspect of the bills while missing the broader strategy, which involve
d a massive
transfer of state power to the federal government.86 Jackson’s forces in Congress
began their
assault seeking to eliminate small bills, or change notes, which in and of thems
elves testified to the
shocking shortage of small coin needed for change. Prohibition of small notes co
nstituted the first
step in the elimination of all paper money to these zealots, and would have move
d the control of the
money supply from market forces to a federal, central bank such as Jackson propo
sed.87
Whatever his final intentions, Jackson needed to eliminate the BUS as both an in
stitutional rival to
whatever he had planned and as a source of political patronage for his foes. Bet
ween 1829, when he
had asked Kendall to draft his own plan, and 1833, Jackson and his allies attemp
ted to work out a
compromise on the existing BUS recharter effort. They outlined four major areas
where the bank
could alter its charter without damaging the institution.88 In fact, thanks to t
he advice of Clay and
Webster, Biddle was assured that the BUS had enough support in Congress that a r
echarter would
sail through without the compromises. Probank forces introduced legislation in 1
832 to charter the
BUS four years ahead of its 1836 expiration, no doubt hoping to coordinate the e
ffort with the
presidential campaign of Henry Clay, who had already been nominated as the choic
e of the
National Republicans to run against Jackson. The gauntlet had been thrown.
Many bank supporters thought Jackson would not risk his presidential run by oppo
sing such a
popular institution, but Old Hickory saw it as an opportunity to once again tout
his independence.
In May 1832, typically personalizing the conflict, Jackson told Van Buren, “The Ba
nk is trying to
kill me. But I will kill it.”89 When the BUS recharter passed in Congress, Jackson
responded with a
July veto. In his eight-year term, Jackson issued more vetoes than all previous
presidents put
together, but the bank veto, in particular, represented a monumental shift in po
wer toward the
executive. Other presidential vetoes had involved questions surrounding the cons
titutionality of
specific legislation, with the president serving as a circuit breaker between Co
ngress and the
Supreme Court. No longer. In a message written by Roger B. Taney of Maryland, Ja
ckson invoked
thin claims that the bank was “unnecessary” and “improper.” Of course, Marshall’s Court ha
d
already settled that issue a decade earlier. Jackson’s main line of attack was to
call the bank evil
and announce that he intended to destroy it. Clay misjudged the appeal of Jackso
n’s rhetoric,
though, and printed thousands of copies of the veto message, which he circulated
, thinking it would
produce a popular backlash. Instead, it enhanced Jackson’s image as a commoner sta
nding against
the monied elites who seemingly backed the Kentuckian. Jackson crushed Clay, tak
ing just over 56
percent of the popular vote and 219 electoral votes to Clay’s 49, but voter turnou
t dropped,
especially in light of some earlier state elections.90
Upon winning, Jackson withdrew all federal deposits from the BUS, removing its m
ain advantage
over all private competitors. Without deposits, a bank has nothing to lend. Jack
son then placed the
deposits in several banks whose officials had supported Jackson, and while not a
ll were Democrats,
most were. These “pet banks” further revealed the hypocrisy of Jackson’s antibank stan
ce: he
opposed banks, as long as they were not working for his party. Jackson’s disdain f
or the law finally
met with resistance. His own secretary of the treasury, Louis McLane, who had su
pported Jackson
in his “war,” now realized the dangerous constitutional waters in which the administ
ration sailed.
When Jackson instructed him to carry out the transfer of the deposits, McLane re
fused, and Jackson
sacked him. The president then named William J. Duane to the post (which require
d senatorial
approval by custom, though not according to the Constitution). Jackson ignored c
ongressional
consent, then instructed Duane to remove the deposits. Duane, too, viewed the ac
t as
unconstitutional and refused. Out went Duane, replaced by Jackson loyalist Roger
B. Taney, who
complied with Old Hickory’s wishes, although Jackson had finally persuaded Congres
s to pass the
Deposit Act of 1836, giving the actions a cloak of legitimacy. As a reward, Tane
y later was
appointed chief justice of the United States. All in all, the entire bank war wa
s a stunning display of
abuse of power by the chief executive and demonstrated a willingness by the pres
ident to flout the
Constitution and convention in order to get his way. At the same time, it reaffi
rmed the adage that
the American people usually get what they deserve, and occasionally allow those
who govern to
bend, twist, or even trample certain constitutional principles to attain a goal.
What occurred next was misunderstood for more than a century. Biddle called in l
oans, hoping to
turn up the heat on Jackson by making him appear the enemy of the nation’s economy
. A financial
panic set in, followed by rapid inflation that many observers then and for some
time to come laid at
the feet of the bank war. Without the BUS to restrain the printing of bank notes
, so the theory went,
private banks churned out currency to fill the void left by Biddle’s bank. A new t
ype of institution,
the “wildcat” bank, also made its first appearance. Wildcat banks were in fact “free b
anks,”
organized by state general incorporation statutes to relieve the burden on the s
tate legislatures from
having to pass special chartering ordinances to allow banks to open. In modern t
imes, virtually no
businesses need special legislation from government to operate, but the free ban
k and general
incorporation laws had only just appeared in the 1830s. Supposedly, the wildcat
banks printed up
far more money than they had specie in vault, but established branches “where a wi
ldcat wouldn’t
go” made it nearly impossible to redeem the notes. Or, in other words, the banks p
rinted unbacked
currency. Again, the theory held that without the BUS to control them, banks iss
ued money willynilly,
causing a massive inflation.
Much of this inflation, it was thought, moved westward to purchase land, driving
up land prices. By
the end of Jackson’s second term, rising land prices had become, in his view, a cr
isis, and he moved
to stem the tide by passing the Specie Circular of 1836, which required that all
public land
purchases be with gold or silver. Attributing the rising prices to speculation,
Jackson naturally was
pleased when the boom abruptly halted.
Economist Peter Temin found that for more than a century this consistent explana
tion of what
happened after Jackson killed the BUS remained universally accepted.91 The tale
had no internal
conflicts, and the technology did not exist to disprove it. But after the availa
bility of computing
tools, economists like Temin could analyze vast quantities of data on gold and s
ilver movements,
and they came to a startlingly different conclusion about Jackson’s war—it meant lit
tle. What
happened was that large supplies of Mexican silver had come into the country in
the late 1820s
over the newly opened Santa Fe Trail, causing the inflation (increasing prices),
and this silver
flowed into the trade network, financing porcelain and tea exchanges with China
and ending up in
England after the Chinese bought British goods. The British, in turn, lent it ba
ck to American
entrepreneurs. But in the early 1830s, with the Texas revolt, the Mexican silver
dried up, and so did
the flow of silver around the world that finally found its way into English vaul
ts. With the silver
reserve disappearing, the Bank of England raised interest rates, which spun the
U.S. economy into a
depression. Temin proved that the BUS did not have the size or scope of operatio
ns to affect the
American economy that historians had previously thought. No matter how petty and
ill conceived
Jackson’s attack on the bank was, he must be absolved of actually causing much dir
ect harm to
industrial growth—although new research suggests that his redistribution of the su
rplus probably
contributed to the damage in financial markets.92 On the other hand, whatever be
nefits his
supporters thought they gained by killing “the monster” were imagined.
Jackson and Goliath
By the end of his second term, Old Hickory suffered constantly from his lifetime
of wounds and
disease. Often governing from bed, the Hero of New Orleans had become a gaunt, s
keletal man
whose sunken cheeks and white hair gave him the appearance of a scarecrow in a t
rench coat.
Weak and frail as he may have been, when he left office, Andrew Jackson had more
totally
consolidated power in the executive branch than any previous president, unwittin
gly ensuring that
the thing Van Buren most dreaded—a powerful presidency, possibly subject to sectio
nal
pressures—would come to pass. His adept use of the spoils system only created a la
rge-scale
government bureaucracy that further diminished states’ rights, overriding state pr
erogative with
federal might.
Jackson’s tenure marked a sharp upward spike in real expenditures by the U.S. gove
rnment,
shooting up from about $26 million when Old Hickory took office to more than $50
million by the
time Van Buren assumed the presidency.93 In addition, real per capita U.S. gover
nment
expenditures also rose suddenly under Jackson, and although they fell dramatical
ly at the beginning
of Van Buren’s term, by 1840 they had remained about 50 percent higher when Van Bu
ren left
office than under Adams. The levels of spending remained remarkably small—about $3
per person
by the federal government from 1800 to 1850. If optimistic claims about personal
income growth
during the era are accurate, it is possible that, in fact, government spending a
s a percent of real per
capita income may have fallen. But it is also undeniable that the number of U.S.
government
employees rose at a markedly faster rate from 1830 to 1840, then accelerated fur
ther after 1840,
although per capita government employment grew only slightly from 1830 to 1850.
The best case
that can be made by those claiming that the Jacksonian era was one of small gove
rnment is that
relative to the population, government only doubled in size; but in actual terms
, government grew
by a factor of five between the Madison and Harrison administrations. In short,
citing the
Jackson/Van Buren administrations as examples of small government is at best mis
leading and at
worst completely wrong.
More important, no matter what had happened immediately, the Jacksonians had pla
nted the seeds
of vast expansions of federal patronage and influence. Jackson’s Democrats had pre
figured the
New Deal and the Great Society in viewing the federal government—and the executive
branch
especially—as the most desirable locus of national power.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Red Foxes and Bear Flags, 1836–48
The End of Jackson, but not Jacksonianism
When Andrew Jackson polished off the BUS, he piously announced: “I have obtained a
glorious
triumph…and put to death that mammoth of corruption.”1 It was an ironic and odd stat
ement from
a man whose party had now institutionalized spoils and, some would say, a certai
n level of
corruption that inevitably accompanied patronage. By that time, Jackson’s opponent
s recognized as
much, labeling him ‘King Andrew I,’ without much apparent effect on his popularity.
Judging
Jackson’s clout, though, especially in light of the Panic of 1837, is problematic.
His protégé was
unceremoniously tossed out of office after one term, becoming the third one-term
president in the
short history of the Republic.
Old Hickory, of course, had named his vice president, Martin Van Buren, as his s
uccessor. In a
sense, Van Buren had rigged the system to ensure his election when he crafted th
e Democratic
Party structure years earlier, using Jackson as the pitch man to get the party o
ff the ground. Van
Buren was full of contradictions. He stood for liberty and later moved to the Fr
ee Soil Party. Yet
before his departure, his Democratic Party structure required the quelling of di
scussions of slavery.
He sided with free enterprise, except when it involved the freedom to start and
operate banks, and
he had voted for tariffs in the past. Associated with small government, he suppo
rted public funding
of the early national road. Ultimately, the Red Fox of Kinderhook, as Van Buren
was also known,
led a third antislavery party, but it marked a deathbed conversion of sorts, sin
ce he had ensured the
dominance of a proslavery party in national politics.
Squaring off against Van Buren and the Democrats was the new opposition party, t
he Whigs, who
drew their name from the English and American Revolutionary opponents to the Tor
ies. These
Whigs were hardly the laissez-faire, limited-government firebrands who had broug
ht about the
Revolution: they supported a high protective tariff, a new national bank, and fe
deral subsidies for
internal improvements. Some Whigs were abolitionists; some advocated temperance;
and many
came from Protestant evangelical backgrounds, such as Presbyterians, Baptists, a
nd
Congregationalists.
Mostly, however, the men who composed the Whig Party were united only by their h
atred of
Jackson. The three leading Whigs—Clay, Calhoun, and Webster—could not agree on the m
ost
pressing issue of the day, slavery. Webster hated it, attacking the peculiar ins
titution at every
opportunity, although he also embraced compromises that, he thought, might put s
lavery on the
road to extinction. Calhoun, on the other end of the spectrum, defended slavery
with the most
radical arguments.2 Clay adopted a firm position: he was both for it and against
it. One other thing
they had in common was a shared view that the best men should rule—the notion that
educated,
landed elites were best suited to govern by virtue of their character. In the ag
e of the common man,
such views were doomed.
Clay emerged as the chief spokesman for the new party. He was clearly the most r
ecognizable, had
a sterling reputation as an influence in both the House and Senate, had drafted
the famous Missouri
Compromise, and represented the West or, at least, sections of the West. Clay ar
gued that each part
of his American system supported the other and that all sections benefited by pu
lling the nation
together rather than tearing it apart. Internal improvements aided southerners a
nd westerners in
getting their crops to markets, including markets abroad. The tariff protected i
nfant manufacturing
industries, so that the workingmen, too, had their share of the pie. And the ban
k held it all together
by providing a uniform currency and plenty of credit to both agriculture and ind
ustry.3
All of this seemed plausible, and might have been sufficient in other eras. In t
he 1830s, however, it
seemed unrealistic at best to ignore the looming sectional divisions over slaver
y, none of which
would be solved by Clay’s somewhat superficial proposals. Indeed, northerners argu
ed, the
presence of a bank would only perpetuate slavery by lending to plantation owners
, whereas
southerners countered that the tariff only benefited the industrialists and abol
itionists. Most agreed
on internal improvements, but disagreed over where the government should involve
itself, and to
what degree. Naturally, the sections split over the locus of the proposed larges
se.
Swimming upstream against an increasingly egalitarian sentiment, the Whigs were
throwbacks to
the Federalists. While they still commanded the votes of significant sections of
the country (and, on
occasion, a majority), their music simply was out of tune with the democratic rh
ythms of the mid-
1800s. This emphasis on expanding the franchise and broadening educational oppor
tunities—all
spearheaded by a polyglot of reform and utopian movements—characterized Jacksonian
culture in
the age of the common man.
Time Line
1836:
Martin Van Buren elected president; Alamo overrun by Santa Anna’s forces; Battle o
f San Jacinto
makes Texas an independent Republic
1837:
Panic of 1837
1840:
William Henry Harrison elected president; Harrison dies; John Tyler assumes pres
idency
1841:
Amistad decision: Supreme Court frees African slave mutineers
1844:
James K. Polk pledges to annex both Texas and Oregon Territory; Polk elected pre
sident
1845:
Texas annexation
1846–47:
Mexican-American War
1848:
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ends Mexican War; annexation of Oregon Territory and
Southwest
(California, New Mexico, Nevada, and Utah); Zachary Taylor elected president
1849:
Gold discovered in California
Buckskins and Bible Thumpers
The Jacksonian period ranks as one of the great periods of American social refor
m and cultural
change. America’s Hudson River school of artists emerged, as did distinct and tale
nted regional
northeastern and southwestern writers. There were transformations of attitudes a
bout social
relationships, health, prisons, education, and the status of women and African A
merican slaves.
Advocates of communalism, vegetarianism, temperance, prison reform, public schoo
ls, feminism,
and abolition grew into a substantial Jacksonian reform movement.4
Religious revivals washed over America in six great waves, ranging from the Puri
tan migration and
Great Awakening of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to the new millennia
lism of the late
twentieth century. In between came the Age of Jackson’s monumental Great Revival,
known to
scholars as the Second Great Awakening. Throughout the 1815–1860 period, religious
enthusiasm
characterized American culture, from the churches of New England, to the camp me
etings on
western frontiers, to the black slave churches of the Old South.5
Why did this era foster religious fundamentalism? The emergent Industrial Revolu
tion caused huge
changes in the lives of Americans, an upheaval that, in part, explains the urgen
cy with which they
sought spiritual sustenance. Industry, urbanization, and rapid social shifts com
bined with the
impending crisis over slavery to foment a quest for salvation and perfection. Hu
ndreds of thousands
of Americans found answers to their profound spiritual questions in Protestant C
hristianity. They
adopted a democratic brand of religion open to all, featuring a diverse number o
f Protestant sects.
Great Revival Christianity was also enthusiastic: worshippers sang and shouted t
o the heavens
above. Together, believers sought perfection here on earth.
“Perfectionism,” or a belief that any sinner could be saved by Christ and, upon salv
ation, should
pursue good works to ensure that saving grace, shifted the focus from the Purita
n emphasis on the
afterlife to the possibility of a sin-free world in this life. A few perfectioni
sts were millenarians
who believed that Christ’s second coming was imminent. The Millerites (named for t
heir leader,
William Miller), America’s most famous millenarians, actually donned white robes a
nd climbed
atop barn and house roofs in 1843 to meet Christ as he joined them on earth. He
did not appear as
the Millerites had prophesied—a nonevent they referred to as the Great Disappointm
ent.6
Thousands left the faith, although a young woman named Ellen G. (Harmon) White (
herself
converted at a Methodist camp meeting and a protégé of Miller’s), a virtual American J
oan of Arc,
picked up the standard. She had several visions, and despite her sex and youth b
ecame a de facto
leader of a group that, by 1860, had chosen the name Seventh-Day Adventists, ref
erring to the
impending advent of Christ. The church’s membership rolls swelled. Espousing a hea
lthy lifestyle
and avoidance of certain foods and meat, Adventists produced the cereal empire o
f John and Will
Kellogg and influenced the career of another cereal giant, Charles W. Post.7
Mary Baker Eddy (1821–1910), who made her most important mark in American religiou
s history
slightly after the Jacksonian era, nevertheless rode the Second Great Awakening
revivalist quest,
adding to the health-food orientation of Ellen White the more radical doctrine o
f faith healing.
Healed of great pain in her youth, Eddy founded the First Church of Christ Scien
tist (today known
as Christian Scientists), in which spiritual healing depended heavily on mind ov
er matter. Like
others, she founded a college and an influential newspaper, The Christian Scienc
e Monitor.8
These new millennial groups differed from the traditional churches not only in t
heir perfectionist
doctrine, but also in their religious practice. In sharp contrast to the prim an
d proper Puritans, many
of the new sects exhibited an emotionalism characterized by falling, jerking, la
ughing, and crying.
And it worked. Where old-line churches like the Presbyterians scoffed at the ent
husiasm of the
camp meetings (which had started as early as 1801 at Cane Ridge, in Kentucky), t
hey could not
match the attractiveness and energy of the evangelists. The Methodists, whose so
ngs John Wesley
had adapted from English pub tunes, grew rapidly to become the largest church in
the United States
by 1844. Like the Baptists, the Methodists believed in revivals, in which the ev
angelical fires
would be fanned periodically by hellfire-and-brimstone preachers who crossed the
countryside.
While the sects posed doctrinal challenges for the established denominations, no
one could deny
that they nevertheless added to a climate of religious excitement, leading to th
e establishment of
theological colleges in nearly every state.9
Most perfectionists believed that Christ’s coming would be preceded by the millenn
ium
(Revelations 20:1–3), a thousand-year period on earth of perfection—peace, prosperit
y, and
Christian morality. The Second Great Awakening was a time when perfectionists co
mmenced this
millennium of peace on earth. Perfectionists preached that although man was sinf
ul, he did not have
to be. Individuals possessed the power to save themselves and join together to c
reate a perfect
world order. “To the universal reformation of the world,” evangelist Charles Grandis
on Finney
exhorted, “they stand committed.”10
The Second Great Awakening was thus a radical extension of the religious enthusi
asm of the
Puritan migration and the First Great Awakening. Down-to-earth Jacksonian preach
ers and laymen
fanned out to convert tens of thousands of sinners and lead them to salvation. B
aptists and
Methodists, sects less than a century old, figured prominently, but so too did P
resbyterians,
Congregationalists, and Mormons. The Erie Canal route of upstate New York, a sce
ne of
tumultuous economic and social change, became such a hotbed of religious fervor
that it was
dubbed the “Burned-Over District” because of the waves of religious fire that regula
rly passed
through. Here a new figure strode onto the scene: Charles Grandison Finney, a la
w student who
simply woke up one morning to a realization that he needed the Lord. When he app
eared before the
bench that day, Finney was asked if he was ready to try the case. He responded, “I
have a retainer
from the Lord Jesus Christ to plead his cause, I cannot plead yours.”11 Abandoning
the passive
Puritan view of salvation—one either was or was not saved—Finney initiated an activi
st,
evangelical ministry that introduced many new practices that shocked the prim an
d pious
churchgoers of the day. Among Finney’s new measures, as he called them, were allow
ing women
to pray in mixed-sex meetings, camp services that ran for several days in a row,
the use of
colloquial language by the preachers, and praying for people by name. In 1827 th
e Presbyterians
called a convention to investigate Finney’s methods, but they adjourned without ta
king any action
against the new measures, and Finney’s revivals continued. The tall, athletic, spe
llbinding
Presbyterian minister, whose popularity equaled that of Old Hickory himself, cal
led on all
Americans to “Stand up! Stand up for Jesus!”12
A much more radical sect appeared in Palmyra, New York, when Joseph Smith claime
d that he had
been visited by the angel Moroni. The angel showed him golden tablets, which he
was allowed to
translate through two mystical seer stones that broke the language code, dictati
ng what was called
the Book of Mormon (1830). Smith’s remarkable book related the history of the migr
ation of an
ancient tribe of Israel to the New World and the Indian tribes prior to the arri
val of Europeans as
well as the New World appearance of Christ. Smith quickly built a loyal followin
g, and the group
took the name Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, generally known as th
e Mormons. The
members moved to Ohio, where they became entangled in a bank collapse, then to M
issouri, where
they were ensnared in the slavery debate, taking the antislavery side. Eventuall
y settling in Nauvoo,
Illinois—the largest town in the state—the Mormons posed a threat to the political s
tructure by
their policy of voting as a block. When the Whig Party in Illinois introduced a
new charter, the
Mormons supported it, and in 1844 Smith ran for the U.S. presidency as an indepe
ndent on an
abolition platform.13 At the same time, Smith had (according to revelation) laid
down as church
doctrine the practice of polygamy. Clashes with local anti-Mormon groups led to
Smith’s arrest and
then assassination while he was in a Carthage, Illinois, jail in 1844, so the Mo
rmons prepared to
move yet again, this time to the far West.14
Mormonism flourished on the frontiers of Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois, but so di
d other churches.
Itinerant Baptist and Methodist preachers answered the “call” to scour the Ohio and
Mississippi
valleys in search of sinners, and most found their share. Westerners flocked to
camp meetings,
staying for as long as a week to hear preachers atop tree stumps deliver round-t
he-clock sermons.
In 1832, Englishwoman Frances Trollope witnessed a rural Indiana revival and rec
orded this word
picture of the scene:
The perspiration ran in streams from the face of the preacher [as the camp meeti
ng] became a scene
of Babel; more than twenty men and women were crying out at the highest pitch of
their voices and
trying apparently to be heard above the others. Every minute the excitement incr
eased; some wrung
their hands and called out for mercy; some tore their hair…. It was a scene of hor
rible agony and
despair; and when it was at its height, one of the preachers came in, and raisin
g his voice high
above the tumult, [e]ntreated the Lord to receive into his fold those who had re
pented…. Groans,
ejaculations, broken sobs, frantic motions, and convulsions succeeded; some fell
on their backs
with a slow motion and crying out—“Glory, glory, glory!!”15
The religious fervor of the Second Great Awakening had not yet subsided even by
1857–58, the
eve of the Civil War. That year city folk thronged to reach out to God. Philadel
phians and New
Yorkers witnessed a remarkable spectacle as thousands of clerks and businessmen
gathered daily
for prayer meetings in their cities’ streets. These meetings were purely lay event
s; no clergy were
present. Observers witnessed the remarkable sight of wealthy stockbrokers and me
ssenger boys
kneeling and praying side by side.
With such a wide variety of religious experiences in America, toleration was mor
e than ever
demanded. Schools certainly had to avoid specific denominational positions, so t
hey emphasized
elements of Christianity that almost all believers could agree upon, such as the
Resurrection, love,
faith, and hope. That in turn led to a revitalization of the Ten Commandments as
easily agreed-upon
spiritual principles. This doctrinal latitude of toleration, which applied to mo
st Christians with
different interpretations of scripture, did not extend to Catholics, who did not
engage in the same
level of evangelization as the revivalist sects, yet competed just as effectivel
y in more traditional
church-building and missionary activity among the Indians (where the Jesuits enj
oyed much more
success than Protestants).16
The “Isms”
Perfectionists sought not only to revise the traditional understandings of sin a
nd redemption, but
also to reorder worldly social and economic systems. Communalism—systems of govern
ment for
virtually autonomous local communities—emerged in “hundreds of utopian societies tha
t dotted the
landscape of American reform.”17 Jacksonian communalism did not in any way resembl
e modern
socialist states with their machines of autocratic centralized economic control.
Early American
communalism was voluntary and local and represented the most radical antebellum
reform ideas.
The most successful of the communes were rooted in religious fundamentalism. Lik
e Hopedale
communalist Adin Ballou, religious utopians believed man was ruled by “the law of
God, written
on his heart, without the aid of external bonds.”18
Communalism in America began with the 1732 emigration of German Lutheran pietist
s, under
Conrad Bissell, to Ephrata, Pennsylvania. Later, in 1805, George Rapp founded Ha
rmony, in
western Pennsylvania, moving to the Wabash River (in Indiana Territory) in 1815.
Englishwoman
Ann Lee brought her Shaker sect to upstate New York in 1774, where it grew and s
pread after her
death. Like the radical Lutherans, Shakers experimented with property-sharing, v
egetarianism, and
sexual abstinence (their church membership thus grew only through conversion and
adoption).
They claimed private property was sinful and that sex was “an animal passion of th
e lower orders.”
Shakers also took the radical position that God was both male and female. Frugal
and humble,
Shakers practiced wildly enthusiastic religious dances (from which the term Shak
er is derived, as
was the earlier Quaker) and spoke to God in tongues.19 Perhaps more significant,
many of the new
religious sects actually “had very ancient origins but it was only in the free air
and vast spaces of
America that they blossomed.”20
The Transcendentalists, a famous group of Massachusetts reformers, left an impor
tant legacy in the
field of American literature, but their attempts at communalism proved fairly di
sastrous.
Transcendentalists were Congregationalists run wild. Unorthodox Christians, they
espoused, in
varying degrees, God in nature (Deism), deep meditation, individualism and nonco
nformity,
perpetual inspiration, ecstasy, and a transcendence of reality to reach communio
n with God.
Among the transcendentalists stand some of early America’s greatest intellectuals
and writers:
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, Bronson Alcott, and o
thers. To
achieve their high goals, transcendentalists founded two utopias. Bronson Alcott’s
and Charles
Lane’s 1843 Fruitlands was a socialistic, agrarian colony whose members proved so
inept at
farming that they endured for less than a year.21 George Ripley’s Brook Farm and o
ther communes
likewise either buckled under the sacrifices or substantially modified their pro
grams, leading
Nathaniel Hawthorne to parody them in The Blithedale Romance (1852).22
The failure of one group seemed to have no impact on the appearance of others, a
t least in the short
run. John Humphrey Noyes—an eccentric among eccentric reformers—founded one of the m
ost
famous American communes at Oneida, New York. Originally a millenarian, Noyes co
ined the
term perfectionist in advocating what he called Bible Communism, which forbade p
rivate property,
and instigated polygamous marriages. All the members, Noyes declared, “recognize t
he right of
religious inspiration to shape identity and dictate the form of family life.”23
Noyes demonstrated the great danger of all the utopian thinkers, whose search fo
r freedom led them
ultimately to reject any social arrangements, traditions, church doctrine, or ev
en familial
relationships as expressions of power. Marriage, they held, constituted just ano
ther form of
oppression, even slavery—a point upon which Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels would c
ompletely
agree. Their oft-quoted ideals of liberty masked darker repudiation of the very
order envisioned by
the Founders, not to mention most Christian thinkers. Still other utopians aband
oned social
activism and turned to philosophy, most notably Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–82) and
his fellow
Transcendentalists.24 Fittingly, Emerson described himself as a “transparent eyeba
ll.”25
Scottish and French socialists Robert Dale Owen and Charles Fourier attracted Am
erican converts,
but their experiments also failed miserably. Owen sought to eradicate individual
ism through
education in New Harmony, Indiana, which he bought from the Rappites in 1825.26
Yet despite
Owen’s doctrinal desires, individualism went untamed among the eight hundred unrul
y Owenites,
whose children ran amok and who eagerly performed “head work” (thinking) but disdain
ed “hand
work” (physical labor of any sort). Predictably, New Harmony soon ran out of food.
Promising to
destroy the “Three Headed Hydra: God, marriage, property,” Owen himself was nearly d
estroyed.
He poured good money after bad into the colony, losing a fortune calculated in m
odern terms to
have been in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Likewise, twenty-eight separat
e attempts to
establish Fourierist “phalanxes” (Fouriers’ utopian organizational scheme) from Massac
husetts to
Iowa from 1841 to 1858 also failed.27 Members were expected to live on eighty ce
nts a week, a
sum below even what contemporary Benedictine and Franciscan monks survived on.
Most of these utopians advocated greatly expanded rights (some would say, roles)
for women.
White women had gained property rights within marriage in several Ohio and Missi
ssippi Valley
states. Divorce became slightly more prevalent as legal grounds increased, and a
woman was
awarded custody of children for the first time ever in the precedent-setting New
York State court
case Mercein v. People (1842). At the same time, the emerging industrial revolut
ion brought young
women work in New England’s numerous new textile and manufacturing industries. Jac
ksonian
education reforms and the growth of public schools opened up a new white-collar
profession for
females—teaching. Steadily, the woman’s sphere overlapped the men’s sphere in economic
endeavor. As demand for teachers grew, women began to attend institutions of hig
her education;
Oberlin, the radical abolitionist college presided over by Charles Grandison Fin
ney, produced
America’s first female college graduate. And during the Civil War, nursing joined
teaching as a
profession open to educated women.
Women also became involved in social activism through the temperance movement. A
s wives and
mothers, females sometimes bore the brunt of the alcoholism of husbands and male
family
members. The American Society for the Promotion of Temperance was one of many wo
men’s
organizations educating the public on the evil of “strong drink” and seeking its era
dication. The
Washington Society, an antebellum equivalent of Alcoholics Anonymous, was formed
to assist
problem drinkers. A single overarching theme emerged, however—solving personal pro
blems
through political means. Women helped pass the Maine Law (1851), which forbade a
lcohol
throughout the entire state. Enforcement proved difficult, yet as society saw th
e implications of
widespread drunkenness, thousands of Americans (including a young Whig named Abr
aham
Lincoln) joined the campaign against “Demon Rum.” By 1850 the movement had slashed a
lcohol
consumption by three fourths.
All of these causes combined to lead women, inevitably, toward feminism, a relig
io-socio-political
philosophy born at the end of the Age of Jackson. Sarah and Angelina Grimké, Lucy
Stone,
Frances Wright, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and others led a small, f
iery band of
Jacksonian feminists. These women gathered together in Seneca Falls, New York, i
n 1848, where
they issued a proclamation—a Declaration of Sentiments—touching on nearly all of the
issues
(abortion is the notable exception) of today’s feminists. They decried the lack of
education,
economic opportunities (especially in medicine, law, and the pulpit), legal righ
ts, marital power,
and, most important, the “elective franchise” (the right to vote). “The history of man
kind is a
history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man towards woman,” th
ey declared,
“having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her.”28
Abolitionism—the radical belief in the immediate prohibition of slavery—reached feve
r pitch
during the Age of Jackson. It is important to distinguish at the outset the diff
erence between
abolitionists and those who merely opposed slavery: abolitionists wanted to abol
ish all American
slavery immediately without compensation. Antislavery politicians (like some Whi
gs and Free-
Soilers, and after 1854, Republicans) wanted only to keep slavery out of the wes
tern territories,
while permitting it to continue in the South.
Quakers initially brought English abolitionist views to America, where they enjo
yed limited
popularity in the northern colonies. Revolutionary ideals naturally sparked anti
slavery sentiment,
especially in Philadelphia and Boston. After the Revolution, the American Coloni
zation Society
was formed to advocate freeing and colonizing slaves (sending them back to Liber
ia in Africa). But
the rise of the cotton kingdom fueled even more radical views. On January 1, 183
1, a
Massachusetts evangelical named William Lloyd Garrison published the first issue
of The
Liberator, calling the slave “a Man and a brother” and calling for his “immediate eman
cipation.”
The New England Anti-Slavery Society and the American Anti-Slavery Society forme
d soon
thereafter. Garrison, joined by Lewis Tappan, Elijah P. Lovejoy, and Sarah and A
ngelina Grimké,
gained a growing audience for the abolitionist cause. The Grimké sisters were them
selves former
slaveholders, but when they inherited their father’s South Carolina plantation, th
ey freed its black
workers, moved north, and joined the Quaker church. They created a minor sensati
on as two of the
nation’s first female lecturers touring the northern states, vehemently speaking o
ut against the evils
of slavery.29
Former slaves also proved to be powerful abolitionist activists. Frederick Dougl
ass, Sojourner
Truth, Solomon Northrup, Harriet Tubman, and others brought their own shocking l
ife experiences
to the lecture stages and the printed pages of the abolitionist movement. Dougla
ss, the son of a
white slave master whom he had never even met, escaped Maryland slavery and head
ed north as a
young man. In his autobiography, My Bondage and My Freedom, Douglass spoke eloqu
ently of the
hardships he had endured, how his slave mother had taught him to read, and how h
e rose from
obscurity to become North America’s leading Negro spokesman. His story served as a
lightning rod
for antislavery forces. At the same time, Harriet Tubman devoted much of her eff
ort to helping the
Underground Railroad carry escaped slaves to freedom in the North. Tubman put he
r own life on
the line during a score of secret trips south, risking recapture and even death.
30
The abolitionists succeeded in putting great pressure on the major political par
ties and beginning
the long process by which their radical ideas became mainstream ideas in a democ
racy.
Abolitionists succeeded at provoking an immediate and violent reaction among sou
thern
slaveholders. Georgians offered a five-thousand-dollar reward to anyone who woul
d kidnap
Garrison and bring him south. Abolitionist Arthur Tappan boasted a fifty-thousan
d-dollar price on
his head. In North and South alike, proslavery mobs attacked abolitionists’ homes
and offices,
burning their printing presses, and threatening (and delivering) bodily harm. An
ti-abolitionist
violence culminated in the 1837 mob murder of Illinois abolitionist Elijah P. Lo
vejoy.
American Renaissance
Education and the arts also experienced great change, to the point that some hav
e described
Jacksonian high culture as an American “renaissance” and a “flowering” of the arts.31 Al
though
such language is exaggerated, it is true that America saw its second generation
of native
intellectuals, writers, and artists achieve bona fide success and recognition du
ring the antebellum
years. Jacksonian writers and artists came into their own, but they did so in a
uniquely American
way.
American educators continued to pursue aims of accessibility and practicality. N
ew England public
schools provided near-universal co-ed elementary education, thanks to the effort
s of Massachusetts
state school superintendent Horace Mann and a troop of spirited educational refo
rmers. Public
school teachers, many of them women, taught a pragmatic curriculum stressing the
three R’s
(reading, ’riting, and ’rithmetic). Noah Webster’s “blue-backed speller” textbook saw exte
nsive,
and nearly universal, use as teachers adopted Webster’s methodology of civics, pat
riotism, and
secular but moralistic teachings.
New “booster colleges” appeared to supplement the elite schools and were derided bec
ause their
founders often were not educators—they were promoters and entrepreneurs aiming to “b
oost” the
image of new frontier towns to prospective investors. Illinois College and Trans
ylvania College
appeared west of the Appalachians and eventually became respected institutions.
Ohio alone
boasted nearly three dozen degree-granting institutions during the Age of Jackso
n. And although
Ohio’s Oberlin College produced excellent scholars (and scores of abolitionist rad
icals), many
booster colleges failed to meet the high standards of, for example, Great Britai
n’s degree-granting
colleges—Oxford, Cambridge, and Edinburgh.
The arts flourished along with academics in this renaissance. Beginning in the 1
820s and 1830s,
northern painters Thomas Cole, George Innes, and others painted evocative scenes
of New York’s
Hudson River Valley. Nature painting drew wide praise, and a market developed fo
r their
landscape art that spread to all regions. Missouri’s George Caleb Bingham, for exa
mple, earned
acclaim for painting scenes of the Mississippi and Missouri river valleys, fur t
rappers, local
elections, and his famed Jolly Flatboatmen. Landscape and genre painters adopted
America’s
unique frontier folkways as the basis for a democratic national art that all Ame
ricans—not just the
educated and refined—could enjoy.
James Fenimore Cooper did for literature what the Hudson River school did for pa
inting. A native
of an elite upstate New York family, Cooper wandered from his socioeconomic root
s to create his
literary art. After a childhood spent on the edge of the vanishing New York fron
tier, Cooper
dropped out of Yale College to become a merchant seaman and, ultimately, a novel
ist. In The
Pioneers (1823) and The Last of the Mohicans (1826), he masterfully created what
we now
recognize as the first Western-genre novel. During two decades, Cooper wrote a f
ive-book series
featuring his hero Hawkeye (whose name changed in each book as his age advanced)
, who fought
Indians and wily Frenchmen and battled the wild elements of nature. Hawkeye, a w
ild and woolly
frontiersman, helped to advance the cause of American civilization by assisting
army officers,
settlers, townspeople, and, of course, damsels in distress. In classic American
style, however,
Hawkeye also constantly sought to escape the very civilization he had assisted.
At the end of every
tale he had moved farther into the wilderness until at last, in The Prairie (182
7), he died—an old
man, on the Great Plains, with the civilization he had both nurtured and feared
close at his heels.
It is no accident that during this time of industrial revolution and social and
political upheaval,
America produced a literature that looked back longingly at a vanished (and, oft
en, imagined)
agrarian utopia. Henry David Thoreau’s Walden, or Life in the Woods (1854) is perh
aps the most
famous example of American writers’ penchant for nature writing. Thoreau spent nea
rly two years
in the woods at Walden Pond (near Concord, Massachusetts) and organized his evoc
ative Walden
narrative around the four seasons of the year. His message was for his readers t
o shun civilization
and urban progress, but unlike Hawkeye, Henry David Thoreau traveled to town per
iodically for
fresh supplies! After his two-year stint in the “wilderness” of Walden Pond, Thoreau
returned to his
home in Concord and civilization only to land in the town jail for tax evasion.
He wrote of this
experience (and his opposition to slavery and the Mexican-American War) in his f
amed essay “On
the Duty of Civil Disobedience” (1849).
Although Thoreau’s fellow Massachusetts author Nathaniel Hawthorne was not a natur
e writer, he
addressed crucial Jacksonian issues of democracy, individual freedom, religion,
feminism, and
economic power in his elegantly written novels The Scarlet Letter (1850) and Hou
se of the Seven
Gables (1852). Later, Herman Melville provided a dark and powerful view of natur
e in the form of
the great white whale of Moby Dick (1851). Indeed, some experts point to Melvill
e’s and
Hawthorne’s artful prose to refute Alexis de Tocqueville’s criticism of the quality
of American
literature. They note their literary skill and that of their fellow northeastern
ers—Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Emily Dickinson, and the
transcendentalist authors as evidence of an accomplished Jacksonian literati. Ye
t another school of
writers, active at the same time as the New Englanders, actually proves Tocquevi
lle partially
correct. The southwestern school of newspaper humorists was not as well known as
the
northeastern, yet it ultimately produced one of the most famous (and most Americ
an) of all
American writers, Mark Twain. The southwestern writers were newspapermen residin
g in the Old
Southwest—the emergent frontier towns along the banks of the Ohio and Mississippi
rivers. In
Louisville, St. Louis, Natchez, Baton Rouge, Cincinnati, and New Orleans newspap
ermen like
James Hall, Morgan Neville, and Thomas Bangs Thorpe wrote short prose pieces for
newspapers,
magazines, and almanacs throughout the Jacksonian era.32
A new, entirely American frontier folk hero emerged through the exploits of Dani
el Boone and
Davy Crockett, although contemporaries thought Boone “lacked the stuff of a human
talisman.”33
Instead, Crockett captured the imagination of the public with his stories of sho
oting, fighting, and
gambling—all of which he repeated endlessly while running for public office. Crock
ett liked a
frequent pull on the whiskey bottle—phlegm cutter and antifogmatic, he called it—and
he bought
rounds for the crowd when campaigning for Congress. Crockett named his rifle Old
Betsy, and he
was indeed a master hunter. But he embellished everything: in one story he claim
ed to have killed
105 bears in one season and told of how he could kill a racoon without a bullet
by simply “grinning
it” out of a tree!34 Not one to miss an opportunity to enhance his legend (or his
wallet), Crockett
wrote, with some editorial help, an autobiography, Life and Adventures of Colone
l David Crockett
of West Tennessee. It became an instant best seller, and far from leaving the au
thor looking like a
hick, Crockett’s book revealed the country congressman for what he really was, a g
enuine
American character, not a clown.35
Nearly all of the southwestern tales, like the Western genre they helped to spaw
n, featured heroes
in conflicts that placed them in between nature and civilization. Like Hawkeye,
the southwestern
folk hero always found himself assisting American civilization by fighting India
ns and foreign
enemies and, above all, constantly moving west. Crockett’s life generated still mo
re romantic
revisions after his fabled immigration to Texas, where he died a martyr for Amer
ican expansion at
the Alamo in 1836.36
Had Crockett lived long enough to make the acquaintance of a young author named
Samuel
Clemens from Missouri, the two surely would have hit it off, although the Tennes
sean’s life may
have surpassed even Mark Twain’s ability to exaggerate. In his job as a typesetter
and cub reporter
for Missouri and Iowa newspapers, Sam Clemens learned well his lessons from the
southwestern
writers. One day Clemens—under the nom de plume Mark Twain—would create his own
wonderful version of the Western. Speaking the language of the real American hea
rtland, Twain’s
unlikely hero Huckleberry Finn and his friend the escaped slave Jim would try to
flee civilization
and slavery on a raft headed down the mighty Mississippi. Like Twain, Cooper, Th
oreau, the
Hudson River school, and scores of Jacksonian artists, Huck and Jim sought solac
e in nature—they
aimed to “light out for the Territories” and avoid being “sivilized”!
Such antipathy for “sivilization” marked the last years of Andrew Jackson’s tenure. Wh
en he
stepped down, America was already headed west on a new path toward expansion, gr
owth, and
conflict. Perhaps symbolically, westerner Jackson handed over the reins to a New
Yorker, Martin
Van Buren, at a time when the nation’s cities had emerged as centers for industry,
religion, reform,
and “politicking.”
The Little Magician Takes the Stage
Martin Van Buren ran, in 1836, against a hodgepodge of Whig candidates, includin
g William
Henry Harrison (Old Tippecanoe), Daniel Webster, and North Carolinian W. P. Mang
um. None
proved a serious opponent, although it appeared that there might be a repeat of
1824, with so many
candidates that the election would be thrown into the House. The Little Magician
avoided that
alternative by polling more of the popular vote than all the other four candidat
es put together and
smashing them all combined in the electoral college, 170 to 124. (Harrison recei
ved the most of the
opposing votes—73.) Notably, the combined positions of those who preferred to elim
inate slavery,
constitutionally or otherwise, accounted for more than half the electoral vote i
n the presidential
election.37
Andrew Jackson exited the presidency just as a number of his policies came home
to roost. His
frenzied attacks on the BUS had not done any specific damage, but had contribute
d to the general
erosion of confidence in the national economy. His lowbrow approach to the White
House and
diatribes against speculators who damaged “public virtue” in fact diminished the dig
nity and
tarnished the class of the presidency. The vetoes and arbitrary backhanding of s
tates’ rights ate
away at important principles of federalism.
Thus, no sooner did Van Buren step on the stage than it collapsed. The Panic of
1837 set in just as
Van Buren took the oath of office. Wheat and cotton prices had already fallen, k
nocking the props
out from under the agricultural sector and sending lenders scurrying to foreclos
e on farmers. Once
banks repossessed the farms, however, they could do little with them in a stalle
d market, forcing
land prices down even further. In the industrial sector, where rising interest r
ates had their most
severe effects, some 30 percent of the workforce was unemployed and still others
suffered from
falling wages. A New York City journalist claimed there were two hundred thousan
d people “in
utter and hopeless distress,” depending entirely on charity for relief.38 Even the
shell of the old
BUS, still operating in Philadelphia, failed.
Van Buren railed against the ever-convenient speculators and jobbers. Some sagac
ious individuals
promised the president that the economy would rebound, and that land prices, esp
ecially, would
return. But Van Buren, contrary to the claims that he embraced the concept of a
small federal
government, hastily convened a special session of Congress to stop the distribut
ion of the surplus.
It was static economic thinking: the federal government needed more money, so th
e additional
funds were kept in Washington rather than sent back to the states, where they mi
ght in fact have
spurred a more rapid recovery. He also advocated a new Independent Treasury, in
which the
government of the United States would hold its deposits—little more than a nationa
l vault.
The Independent Treasury became the pole star of the Van Buren presidency, but w
as hardly the
kind of thing that excited voters. Whigs wanted another national bank, and lost
again as Van
Buren’s Treasury bill passed in 1840. Meanwhile, without the BUS, the American ban
king system
relied on private, state-chartered banks to issue money.
The panic exposed a serious weakness in the system that could be laid at the fee
t of the Democrats.
A number of states had created state banks that were specifically formed for the
purpose of
providing loans to the members of the dominant party, particularly in Arkansas a
nd Alabama.39 In
other states, the legislatures had provided state government guarantees to the b
ond sales of private
banks. Either way, these state governments made a dramatic and unprecedented int
rusion into the
private sector, and the legislatures expected to tax the banks’ profits (instead o
f levying direct taxes
on the people). Packing the management of these banks ensured that they provided
loans to the
members of the ruling party. These perverted state/bank relationships had two th
ings in common:
(1) they occurred almost exclusively in states where the legislatures were contr
olled by the
Jacksonians; and (2) they resulted in disaster when the market was subjugated to
the demands of
politicians. Arkansas and Alabama saw their state banks rapidly go bankrupt; in
Wisconsin,
Mississippi, and the Territory of Florida, the banks collapsed completely. Stung
by their failed
forays into finance, Democrats in some of these states (Arkansas, Wisconsin, the
n later, Texas)
banned banks altogether.
And so even as the national economy revived by itself, as many knew it would, Ar
kansas,
Mississippi, Michigan, Wisconsin, Missouri, and the Territory of Florida all tee
tered on
bankruptcy; witnessed all of their banks close; or owed phenomenal debts because
of defaulted
bonds. Lacking any banks to speak of, Missouri—the center of the fur trade—often rel
ied on fur
money—hides and pelts that circulated as cash.
Van Buren rightly warned that “All communities are apt to look to government for t
oo
much…especially at periods of sudden embarrassment or distress.” He urged a “system fo
unded on
private interest, enterprise, and competition, without the aid of legislative gr
ants or regulations by
law [emphasis added].”40 This might have been laudable, except that Van Buren’s part
y had been
directly responsible for the “aid of legislative grants or regulations by law” that
had produced, or at
the very least contributed to, the “embarrassment and distress” that the government
was called upon
to relieve.
Those seeking to portray Van Buren as a free-market politician who brought the p
anic to a quick
end have to explain why voters were so eager to give him the boot in 1840. It wa
s no accident that
Van Buren spent four years dodging the most important issue of the day, slavery;
but then, was that
not the purpose of the Democratic Party—to circumvent all discussions of the Pecul
iar Institution?
Tippecanoe and Tyler Too
By 1840, Van Buren had sufficiently alienated so many of the swing voters who ha
d given him a
decided edge in 1836 that he could no longer count on their votes. The economy,
although showing
signs of recovery, still plagued him. His opponent, William Henry Harrison, had
run almost from
the moment of his defeat four years earlier. Old Tippecanoe came from a distingu
ished political
family. His father had signed the Declaration of Independence (and later his gra
ndson would win
the presidency in his own right). An officer at the Battle of Tippecanoe (1811),
then at the Battle of
the Thames (1813), both of which helped shatter the grip of the Indians in the O
ld Northwest,
Harrison already had political experience as governor of Indiana. Like Calhoun a
nd other
disaffected Jacksonians, Harrison had once stood with the Democrats, and shared
their states’ rights
sentiments. Also like Calhoun, he thought the federal government well within its
constitutional
rights to improve harbors, build roads, and otherwise fund internal improvements
. Although he
favored a national bank, Harrison did not make the BUS his main issue. Indeed, m
any of his critics
complained that they did not know what Harrison stood for.
Harrison’s inscrutability stemmed largely from his middle-of-the-road position on
slavery,
especially his view that whatever solution was enacted, it had to emanate from t
he states. He did
urge the use of the federal surplus to purchase, and free, slaves. In 1833 he wr
ote that “we might
look forward to a day…when a North American sun would not look down upon a slave.”41
Despite
Van Buren’s nebulous position, Calhoun had no doubts that “the soundest friends of s
lavery…were
in the Democratic party”; moreover, had either Harrison’s or Van Buren’s hostility to
slavery been
apparent, it would have been impossible for a Liberty Party to appear in 1840.42
Unlike Van
Buren, it should be noted, Calhoun did not wish to avoid discussion of slavery,
but, quite the
opposite, he relished confronting it head on to demand concessions from the Nort
h. “[C]arry the
war to the non-slave holding states,” he urged in 1837.43
Van Buren had the recession working against him. Old Tippecanoe started his camp
aign at age
sixty-eight, and it appeared that age would, in fact, prove detrimental to his a
spirations when,
seeking the Whig nomination, rival Henry Clay’s supporters suggested Harrison reti
re to his log
cabin and enjoy his hard cider. Harrison turned the tables on his opponents by a
dopting his “Log
Cabin and Hard Cider Campaign.” It appealed to the masses, as did the slogan “Tippec
anoe and
Tyler Too,” referring to his Virginia vice presidential candidate, John C. Tyler.
Harrison could also
count on almost 200,000 votes of the men who had served under him at one time or
another, and
who knew him as “the General.”
When the totals came in, Harrison and Tyler carried nineteen states to Van Buren’s
seven and
crushed him in the electoral college, 234 to 60. (Ironically, Virginia voted for
Van Buren and not
her two native sons.) Harrison had improved his popular vote totals by almost 2
million from 1836.
Paradoxically, it was the first true modern campaign in the two-party system tha
t Van Buren had
created. Vote totals rose from 1.2 million in 1828, when Van Buren first inaugur
ated the party
machinery, to double that in 1840; and from 1836 to 1840, the popular vote skyro
cketed up by 60
percent, the “greatest proportional jump between two consecutive elections in Amer
ican
history.”44
Old Tippecanoe would not live long to enjoy his victory. Arriving in Washington
in February 9,
1841, during a mild snowstorm, Harrison delivered the March inaugural in a brisk
, cold wind. The
new president then settled in to deal with an army of job seekers—a gift from the
Van Buren party
system. On Clay’s advice, Harrison gave Webster his choice of the Treasury or Stat
e Department—
Black Dan chose to be secretary of state—but otherwise the president-elect kept hi
s distance from
Clay. With the Whig victory, the Kentuckian had taunted the Democrats with their
defeat and
“descriptions of him at this time invariably contain the words ‘imperious,’ ‘arrogant,’
‘domineering.’”45 Whether he could manipulate Harrison is doubtful, but before Clay ha
d the
opportunity to try, Harrison caught a cold that turned into pneumonia. On March
27, 1841, a doctor
was summoned to the deteriorating president’s bedside, and Harrison died on April
third. Daniel
Webster sent his son to recall Vice President Tyler from Williamsburg, arriving
to join the
mourners at the Episcopal Church. America’s shortest presidency had lasted one mon
th, and Old
Tippecanoe became the first chief executive to die in office.
Upon Harrison’s death, Democrats fidgeted, terrified that Clay would seize power a
nd make Tyler
his “pliant tool.”46 Instead, they found former Democrat John Tyler quite his own ma
n. Although
he was elected to Congress as a Jeffersonian Republican, he broke with Jackson i
n 1832 over the
BUS veto. But he also voted against the Missouri Compromise bill, arguing that a
ll the Louisiana
Territory should be open to slavery.
At age fifty-one, Tyler was the youngest American president to that point—ironical
ly following the
oldest. He had not actively sought the vice presidency, and he owed few politica
l debts. There was
a brief stew about Article II, Section 1, Paragraph 6, in which the Constitution
said that if the
president died or could not discharge the duties of his office, “the same shall de
volve on the Vice
President.” But the same what? Powers? Title? Was a special election necessary? A
weaker, or less
confident (certainly less stubborn), man would have vacillated, and many constit
utional historians
suspect that the Founders intended for the vice president to remain just that, u
ntil a new election
made him president in his own right.47 Instead, the Virginian boldly assumed tha
t the office and
duties were his, and he took control. In a little-noticed act, Tyler cemented th
e foundation of the
Republic for future times of chaos and instability.
A classic ticket balancer with few genuine Whig sentiments, Tyler nevertheless i
mmediately
antagonized many of the extreme states’ rights advocates from his own state and ot
her parts of the
Deep South by retaining nationalistic “Black Dan” Webster as his secretary of state.
48 This, too,
set a precedent of a succeeding president accepting as his own the cabinet of th
e person who had
headed the ticket in the general election.
A number of problems greeted the new president, most notably the depression stil
l lingering from
Van Buren’s term. It had left the nation with a deficit of more than $11 million,
which caused some
in the May 1841 special session of Congress to press for additional tariffs. Tyl
er resisted. He did
side with the Whigs on the distribution of monies from the sales of public lands
and, in true Whig
fashion, denounced the Independent Treasury as an unsatisfactory means of dealin
g with economic
distress. Most stunning, this Virginian called for a new effort to suppress the
slave trade.
Clay, meanwhile, thinking that a Whig occupant of the White House equated with v
ictory for his
American system, immediately pushed for a new BUS. When a Whig bill for a new na
tional bank
came out of Congress in August 1841, however, Tyler vetoed it, as well as a seco
nd modified bill.
Far from opposing a national bank, Tyler disliked some of the specific provision
s regarding local
lending by national bank branches, and he might have yielded to negotiations had
not Clay, full of
venom at the first veto, taken to the Senate floor to heap scorn on the presiden
t. Rumors swirled
that the Whigs planned to spring a trap on Tyler by inserting phrases he would o
bject to, then
threatening to encourage his cabinet to resign if he dared veto the second bill.
For the second time
in ten years, the national bank had become the centerpiece in a political strugg
le largely removed
from the specifics of the bill.
By that time, the Whigs felt betrayed. Although doubtless that some of the dissa
tisfaction
originated with the Clay faction, their protests were an astounding response by
members of one
party to their own president. It did not end with the bank bill either.
Whigs and Tyler clashed again over the reduction in tariff rates. By that time,
the tariffs existed
almost exclusively for generating federal revenue. Any beneficial effects for Am
erican industries—
if any ever existed at all—had disappeared by 1830, but the tariff still held grea
t appeal for those
industries that could keep prices high because of protection and, more important
, to the politicians
who had money to dole out to their constituents. It was that money, in the early
1840s, that was in
danger of disappearing if the scheduled rate reductions already enacted drove th
e rates down from
33 percent to 20 percent. Consequently, two bills came out of the Whig Congress
in 1842 to delay
the reductions, and, again, true to his earlier Democratic heritage, Tyler vetoe
d them both. With his
shrinking constituencies about to abandon him, even to the point of suggesting i
mpeachment, Tyler
conceded on a third bill that delayed some tariff reductions, but at the same ti
me ended plans to
distribute federal revenues to the states. Tyler not only managed to make himsel
f unpopular, but by
forcing concessions, he also eliminated the few bones that the Whigs had hoped t
o throw to
southern interests. In response, the South abandoned the Whigs in the midterm el
ections, giving the
House back to the Democrats. Tyler’s bullheadedness in vetoing the bank bill spark
ed a rebellion in
which his entire cabinet resigned.
The resulting gridlock proved problematic for American foreign policy. Tyler had
navigated one
rocky strait when Daniel Webster, prior to his resignation as secretary of state
, negotiated a treaty
with the British in 1842 called the Webster-Ashburton Treaty. It settled the dis
puted Maine
boundary with Canada, producing an agreement that gave 50 percent of the territo
ry in question to
the United States. He also literally dodged a bullet in early 1844, when, with W
ebster’s
replacement, Abel Upshur, and Senator Thomas Hart Benton, the president visited
a new warship,
the Princeton, with its massive new gun, the “peacemaker.” Tyler was below decks dur
ing the
ceremony when, during a demonstration, the gun misfired, and the explosion kille
d Upshur, Tyler’s
servant, and several others.
Following Upshur’s death, Tyler named John C. Calhoun as the secretary of state. T
his placed a
strong advocate of the expansion of slavery in the highest diplomatic position i
n the government. It
placed even greater emphasis on the events occurring on the southern border, whe
re, following
Mexican independence in 1821, large numbers of Americans had arrived. They soon
led a new
revolutionary movement in the northern province known as Texas.
Empire of Liberty or Manifest Destiny?
Manifest destiny, often ascribed to the so-called Age of Jackson (1828–48), began
much earlier,
when the first Europeans landed on the sixteenth-and seventeenth-century colonia
l frontier. Later,
eighteenth-century Americans fanned out into the trans-Appalachian West after th
e American
Revolution, exploring and settling the Ohio and Mississippi valleys. It was from
this perspective,
then, that Jacksonian Americans began to see and fulfill what they believed to b
e their destiny—to
occupy all North American lands east and west of the Mississippi and Missouri ri
ver valleys.
Thomas Jefferson had expounded upon a similar concept much earlier, referring to
an Empire of
Liberty that would stretch across Indian lands into the Mississippi Valley. Jeff
erson, as has been
noted, even planned for new territories and states with grandiose-sounding names
: Saratoga,
Vandalia, Metropotamia, and so on. The Sage of Monticello always envisioned a na
tion with
steadily expanding borders, comprised of new farms and citizen-farmers, bringing
under its wings
natives who could be civilized and acculturated to the Empire of Liberty.
During the 1830s and 1840s the embers of Jefferson’s Empire of Liberty sparked int
o a new flame
called manifest destiny. It swept over a nation of Americans whose eyes looked w
estward. The
term itself came from an 1840s Democratic newspaper editorial supporting the Mex
ican-American
War, in which the writer condemned individuals and nations who were “hampering our
[America’s]
power, limiting our greatness, and checking the fulfillment of our manifest dest
iny to overspread
the continent allotted by Providence for the free development of our yearly mult
iplying
millions.”49 Ralph Waldo Emerson’s speech the “Young American” extolled the virtues of
expansion, and John L. O’Sullivan agreed: “Yes, more, more, more!”50
Given that most of the expansionist talk revolved around Texas and points south,
the popularization
of manifest destiny by the press, to a certain extent, validated the abolitionis
ts’ claim that a “slave
power” conspiracy existed at the highest reaches of power. A majority of newspaper
s owed their
existence to the Democratic Party, which in turn loyally supported the slave own
ers’ agenda, if
unwittingly. Even the Whig papers, such as Horace Greeley’s Daily Tribune, which w
as
antislavery, indirectly encouraged a western exodus. Then, as today, contemporar
ies frequently
fretted about overpopulation: President James K. Polk, in his inaugural address
in 1845, warned
that the nation in the next decade would grow from 3 to 20 million and obliquely
noted that
immigrants were pouring onto our shores.51
There were other, more common, economic motives interwoven into this anxiety, be
cause the Panic
of 1837 created a class of impoverished individuals eager to seek new opportunit
ies in the West.
Yet many of these individuals were white Missourians, not slaveholders, who head
ed for the
Pacific Northwest, where they aimed to escape the South’s slave-based cotton econo
my and the
slave masters who controlled it. Complex economic motives constituted only one v
oice in the choir
calling for manifest destiny. Religion played an enormous factor in the westward
surge as Great
Awakening enthusiasm prompted a desire to expunge Spanish Catholicism, spread Pr
otestantism,
and convert the Indians.
Other than California, if any one area captured the imagination of American vaga
bonds and settlers,
it was Texas. Before Mexican independence, Texas had failed to attract settlers
from Spain and
subsequently proved difficult to secure against Indian raids. Since few Mexicans
would settle in
Texas, the Spanish government sought to entice American colonists through genero
us land grants.
Moses Austin had negotiated for the original grant, but it was his son, Stephen
F. Austin, who
planted the settlement in 1822 after Mexico won independence from Spain. By 1831
, eight
thousand Texan-American farmers and their thousand slaves worked the cotton fiel
ds of the Brazos
and Colorado river valleys (near modern-day Houston). Although the Mexican gover
nment
originally welcomed these settlers in hopes they would make the colony prosperou
s, the
relationship soured. Settlers accepted certain conditions when they arrived, inc
luding converting to
Catholicism, conducting all official business in Spanish, and refraining from se
ttling within sixty
miles of the American border. These constraints, the Mexican government thought,
would ensure
that Texas became integrated into Mexico. However, few Protestant (or atheist) T
exans converted
to Catholicism; virtually no one spoke Spanish, even in official exchanges; and
many of the new
settlers owned slaves. The Republic of Mexico had eliminated slavery in the rest
of the country, but
had ignored the arrival of Americans slaveholders in Texas. With the Mexican Col
onization Act of
1830, however, the government of Mexico prohibited further American settlement a
nd banned
slavery in the northern provinces, specifically aiming the ordinance at Texas. T
hese disputes all led
to the 1830 formation of a Texan-American independence movement, which claimed i
ts rights
under the Mexican Constitution of 1824.
When Texans challenged Mexican authority, General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna ma
rched north
from Mexico City in 1836. His massive column, which he quickly divided, numbered
some 6,000
troops, some of whom he dispatched under General José de Urrea to mop up small poc
kets of
resistance. The Texans responded with a March 1, 1836, Declaration of Independen
ce founding the
Republic of Texas. Sam Houston, an 1832 emigrant from Tennessee, was elected pre
sident of the
Lone Star Republic, and subsequently the general of the Texan army, which prepar
ed to fight Santa
Anna’s column.
Even before the declaration of Texan independence, Santa Anna had had to deal wi
th a small
resistance in San Antonio at the Alamo, an adobe mission-turned-fort. Opposing S
anta Anna’s
4,000-man army was the famed 187-man Texan garrison led by Colonel William B. Tr
avis and
including the already famous Jim Bowie and David Crockett. “Let’s make their victory
worse than
a defeat,” Travis implored his doomed men, who sold their lives dearly. It took Sa
nta Anna more
than a week to bring up his long column, and his cannons pummeled the Alamo the
entire time.
Once arrayed, the whole Mexican army attacked early in the morning on March sixt
h, following a
long silence that sent many of the lookouts and pickets to sleep. Mexicans were
at—or even over—
the walls before the first alarms were raised. The Texans, having spent much of
their ammunition,
died fighting hand to hand. Crockett, one of the last survivors found amid a sta
ck of Mexican
bodies, was shot by a firing squad later that day. “Remember the Alamo” became the b
attle cry of
Houston’s freedom fighters.
The generalissimo had won costly victories, whereas the Texans staged a retreat
that, at times,
bordered on a rout. Only Houston’s firm hand—Washington-like, in some respects—kept an
y
semblance of order. Unknown to him, Santa Anna had sustained substantial losses
taking an
insignificant fort: some estimate that his assault on the Alamo left 500 dead ou
tside the walls,
reducing his force from one fourth to one third after accounting for the wounded
and the pack trains
needed to deal with them. If he won the Alamo, he soon lost the war. Pursuing Ho
uston, Santa
Anna continued to divide his weary and wounded force. Houston, convinced he had
lured the
enemy on long enough, staged a counterattack on April 21, 1836, at San Jacinto,
near Galveston
Bay. Ordering his men to, “Hold your fire! God damn you, hold your fire!” he approac
hed the
larger Mexican force in the open, struggling to push two cannons called the Twin
Sisters up a ridge
overlooking the Mexican positions. Given the nature of Houston’s advance, Santa An
na apparently
did not think the Texans would charge. He could not help but see their movements
: the Texans had
to unlimber their cannons and form up in battle lines, all within sight of Santa
Anna’s scouts,
Mexican pickets who did not sound the alarm. Houston’s troops charged and routed S
anta Anna,
who was seen “running about in the utmost excitement, wringing his hands and unabl
e to give an
order.”52 When the Texans screamed out the phrases, “Remember the Alamo, Remember Go
liad,”
the Mexican forces broke and ran. Santa Anna escaped temporarily, disguised as a
servant. His
capture was important in order to have the president’s signature on a treaty ackno
wledging Texan
independence, and the general was apprehended before long, with 730 of his troop
s. Texan
casualties totaled 9 killed, whereas the Mexicans lost 630. In return for his fr
eedom, and that of his
troops, Santa Anna agreed to cede all of Texas to the new republic, but repudiat
ed the agreement as
soon as he was released. He returned to Mexico City and plotted revenge. Meanwhi
le, the
government of the Texas Republic officially requested to join the United States
of America.53
The request by Texas brought to the surface the very tensions over slavery that
Van Buren had
sought to repress and avoid. In the House of Representatives, John Quincy Adams,
who had
returned to Washington after being elected as a Massachusetts congressman (he an
d Andrew
Johnson, a senator, were the only former presidents ever to do so) filibustered
the bill for three
weeks. Van Buren opposed annexation, the Senate rejected a ratification treaty,
and Texas
remained an independent republic sandwiched between Mexico and America.
Mr. Polk’s War
When, in 1842, the president of the Republic of Texas, Sam Houston, again invite
d the United
States to annex his “nation,” the secretary of state at the time, Daniel Webster, im
mediately
suppressed the request. Webster, an antislavery New Englander, wanted no part in
helping the
South gain a large new slave state and, at a minimum, two Democratic senators. I
n 1844, however,
with Calhoun shifting over from the Department of War to head the State Departme
nt, a new treaty
of annexation was negotiated between Texas and the United States with an importa
nt wrinkle: the
southern boundary was the Rio Grande. This border had been rejected by the Mexic
an Congress in
favor of the Nueces River farther north.
Northern-based Whigs, of course, stood mostly against incorporating Texas into t
he Union, and
thus to win their support, the Whig candidate, Henry Clay, whose name was synony
mous with
sectional compromise, could not come out in favor of an annexation program that
might divide the
nation. Both Clay and Van Buren, therefore, “issued statements to the effect that
they would agree
to annexation only if Mexico agreed.”54 In an amazing turn of events, the leaders
of each major
party, who personally opposed the expansion of slavery, adopted positions that k
ept them from
addressing slavery as an issue. The system Van Buren designed had worked to perf
ection.
Yet there was a catch: at least half the nation wanted Texas annexed, and the im
petus for
annexation was the November 1844 election of Tennessean James K. Polk. With both
Van Buren
and Clay unpopular in large parts of nonslaveholding states, and with Van Buren
having to fight off
a challenge within the Democratic Party from Lewis Cass of Michigan, a northerne
r who supported
annexation, a deadlock ensued that opened the door for another annexationist nom
inee, a dark horse
candidate congressman—Polk. The son of a surveyor, James Knox Polk was a lawyer, T
ennessee
governor, former Speaker of the House, and a southern expansionist who not only
supported
annexation, but even labeled it reannexation, claiming that Texas had been a par
t of the Louisiana
Purchase. Defeated for reelection as Tennessee governor in 1843, he turned his a
ttention to the
national stage. Polk maneuvered his way to the Democratic nomination after nine
ballots, to his
own surprise.
Facing Clay in the general election, Polk turned Clay’s conservatism against him.
The Kentuckian
said he had “no personal objection to the annexation of Texas,” but he did not openl
y advocate it.55
Polk, on the other hand, ran for president on the shrewd platform of annexing bo
th Texas and
Oregon. Clay’s vacillation angered many ardent Free-Soilers, who found a purer can
didate in
James G. Birney and the fledgling Liberty Party. Birney siphoned off 62,300 vote
s, certainly almost
all at the Whigs’ expense, or enough to deprive Clay of the popular vote victory.
Since Clay lost the
electoral vote 170 to 105—with Polk taking such northern states as Michigan, New Y
ork, Illinois,
Indiana, and Pennsylvania—it is likely that the Liberty Party cost Clay the electi
on. New York
alone, where Birney took 6,000 votes from Clay to hand the state to Polk, would
have provided the
Kentuckian his margin of victory. By any account, the election was a referendum
on annexing
Texas and Oregon, which Polk had cleverly packaged together. Linking the Oregon
Territory took
the sting out of adding a new slave state. The election accelerated the trend in
which a handful of
states had started to gain enough electoral clout that they could, under the rig
ht circumstances, elect
a president without the slightest support or participation from the South.
Calling himself Young Hickory, Polk found that his predecessor had made much of
the
expansionist campaign rhetoric unnecessary. Viewing the results of the election
as a mandate to
annex Texas, in his last months in office Tyler gained a joint annexation resolu
tion (and arguably a
blatant violation of the Constitution) from Congress. This circumvented the need
for a two-thirds
Senate vote to acquire Texas by a treaty, and the resolution passed. Tyler signe
d the resolution in
March 1845, a month before Polk took office, and Texas was offered the option of
coming into the
Union as one state or later subdividing into as many as five. On December 29, 18
45, a unified
Texas joined the Union as a slave state, a move John Quincy Adams called “the heav
iest calamity
that ever befell myself or my country.”56 Mexico immediately broke off diplomatic
relations with
the United States—a sure prelude to war in that era—prompting Polk to tell the Ameri
can consul in
California, Thomas Larkin, that if a revolt broke out among the Californios agai
nst the Mexican
government, he should support it.
All along, Mexico suspected the United States of being behind an 1837 revolution
in New Mexico.
Then there remained the continuing issue of whether the Nueces River, and not th
e Rio Grande,
was the actual boundary. Despite his belligerent posturing, Polk sent Louisianan
James Slidell as a
special envoy to Mexico in January 1846 with instructions to try to purchase New
Mexico and
California with an offer so low that it implied war would follow if the Mexicans
did not accept it.
Anticipating the failure of Slidell’s mission, Polk also ordered troops into Louis
iana and alerted
Larkin that the U.S. Navy would capture California ports in the event of war. Sl
idell’s proposal
outraged Mexico, and he returned home empty-handed. Satisfied that he had done e
verything
possible to avoid war, Polk sent General Zachary Taylor, “Old Rough-and-Ready,” with
a large
force, ordering them to encamp in Texas with their cannons pointed directly acro
ss the Rio Grande.
Polk wanted a war, but he needed the Mexicans to start it. They obliged. General
Mariano Arista’s
troops skirmished with Polk’s men in May, at which point Polk could disingenuously
write
Congress asking for a war declaration while being technically correct: “Not withst
anding our
efforts to avoid it, war exists by the act of Mexico herself.”57 He did not mentio
n that in December
he had also sent John C. Frémont with a column west and dispatched the Pacific Fle
et to California,
ostensibly “in case” hostilities commenced, but in reality to have troops in place t
o take advantage
of a war.
Northern Whigs naturally balked, noting that despite promises about acquiring Or
egon, Polk’s
aggression was aimed in a decided southwesterly direction. A Whig congressman fr
om Illinois,
Abraham Lincoln, openly challenged the administration’s policy, demanding to know
the exact
location—the “spot”—on which American blood had been shed, and sixty-seven Whigs voted
against providing funds for the war. Lincoln’s “spot resolutions” failed to derail the
war effort, but
gained the gangly Whig political attention for the future. For the most part, Wh
igs did their duty,
including Generals Taylor and Winfield “Old Fuss and Feathers” Scott. The Democratic
South, of
course, joined the war effort with enthusiasm—Tennessee was dubbed the Volunteer S
tate because
its enlistments skyrocketed—and the Mexican War commenced.
Some observers, such as Horace Greeley, in the New York Tribune, predicted that
the United States
“can easily defeat the armies of Mexico, slaughter them by the thousands, and purs
ue them perhaps
to their capital.”58 But Mexico wanted the war as well, and both Mexican military
strategists and
European observers expressed a near universal opinion that Mexican troops would
triumphantly
march into Washington, D.C., in as little as six weeks! Critics of American fore
ign policy,
including many modern Mexican and Chicano nationalists, point to the vast territ
ory Mexico lost in
the war, and even Mexican historians of the day blamed the war on “the spirit of a
ggrandizement of
the United States…availing itself of its power to conquer us.”59 Yet few have consid
ered exactly
what a victorious Mexican government would have demanded in concessions from the
United
States. Certainly Texas would have been restored to Mexico. The fact is, Mexico
lusted for land as
much as the gringos did and fully expected to win.
Polk made clear in his diary the importance of holding “military possession of Cal
ifornia at the
time peace was made,” and he intended to acquire California, New Mexico, and “perhap
s some
others of the Northern Provinces of Mexico” whenever the war ended.60 Congress cal
led for
50,000 volunteers and appropriated $10 million. Taking part in the operation wer
e several
outstanding junior officers, including Ulysses Grant, George McClellan, Robert E
. Lee, Albert
Sidney Johnston, Braxton Bragg, Stonewall Jackson, George Pickett, James Longstr
eet, and
William Tecumseh Sherman.
At Palo Alto, in early May, the Americans engaged Arista’s forces, decimating 1,00
0 Mexican
lancers who attempted a foolish cavalry charge against the U.S. squares. It was
a brief, but bloody
draw in which Taylor lost 9 men to the Mexicans’ 250, but he was unable to follow
up because of
nightfall. At his council of war, Taylor asked for advice. An artillery captain
blurted out, “We
whipped ’em today and we can whip ’em tomorrow.” Indeed, on May ninth, the Americans w
on
another lopsided battle at Resaca de la Palma.61
While the military was winning early victories in the field, Polk engaged in a c
lever plan to bring
the exiled dictator who had massacred the defenders of the Alamo and Goliad back
from exile in
Cuba. On August 4, 1846, Polk negotiated a deal to not only bring Santa Anna bac
k, but to pay him
$2 million—ostensibly a bribe as an advance payment on the cession of California.
The former
dictator convinced Polk that if the United States could restore him to power, he
would agree to a
treaty favorable to the United States.
Two separate developments ended all hopes of a quick peace. First, Pennsylvania
congressman
David Wilmot attached a proviso to the $2 million payment that slavery be prohib
ited from any
lands taken in the war. Wilmot, a freshman Democrat from Pennsylvania, further e
roded the
moratorium on slavery debate, which had been introduced in December 1835 to stym
ie all
legislative discussion of slavery. Under the rule all antislavery petitions and
resolutions had to be
referred to a select committee, whose standing orders were to report back that C
ongress had no
power to interfere with slavery.62 This, in essence, tabled all petitions that i
n any way mentioned
slavery, and it became a standing rule of the House in 1840. But the gag rule ba
ckfired. “This rule
manufactures abolitionists and abolitionism,” one Southerner wrote, comparing the
rule to religious
freedom: “It is much easier to make the mass of the people understand that a given
prayer cannot be
granted than that they have no right to pray at all.”63 (Ironically, the gag rule
had applied to prayer
in Congress too.) After it fell into disuse in 1845, Speakers of the House kept
the slavery discussion
under wraps by only recognizing speakers who had the Democratic Party’s trust. The
chair
recognized Wilmot largely because he had proven his loyalty to Polk by voting wi
th the
administration on the tariff reduction when every other Democrat had crossed par
ty lines to vote
against it.64 But Wilmot hammered the president with his opening statements befo
re invoking the
language of the Northwest Ordinance to prohibit slavery from any newly acquired
territories.
Although the Wilmot Proviso never passed, a second obstacle to a quick treaty wi
th Santa Anna
was the Mexican president himself, who probably never had any intention of abidi
ng by his secret
agreement. No sooner had he walked ashore, slipped through the American blockade
by a British
steamer given a right-of-way by U.S. gunboats, than he had announced that he wou
ld fight “until
death, to the defense of the liberty and independence of the republic.”65 Conseque
ntly, a
Pennsylvania congressman and a former dictator unwittingly collaborated to exten
d the war neither
of them wanted, ensuring in the process that the United States would gain territ
ory neither of them
wanted it to have.
Meanwhile, in the field, the army struggled to maintain discipline among the hor
des of volunteers
arriving. New recruits “came in a steamboat flood down the Mississippi, out onto t
he Gulf and
across to Port Isabel and thence up the Rio Grande to Matamoros of Taylor’s advanc
ed
base…[When the “12-monthers” came into camp in August 1846], they murdered; they raped
,
robbed and rioted.”66 Mexican priests in the area called the undisciplined troops “v
andals” from
hell and a Texas colonel considered them “worse than Russian Cossacks.”67 Each unit
of
volunteers sported its own dress: the Kentucky volunteers had three-cornered hat
s and full beards,
whereas other groups had “uniforms” of every conceivable color and style. Once they
entered
Mexico, they were given another name, “gringos,” for the song they sang, “Green Grow t
he
Lilacs.” With difficulty Taylor finally formed this riffraff into an army, and by
September he had
about 6,000 troops who could fight. He marched on Monterrey, defended by 7,000 M
exicans and
40 cannons—a formidable objective.
Even at this early stage, it became clear that the United States would prevail,
and in the process
occupy large areas of territory previously held by Mexico. At Monterrey, in Sept
ember 1846,
Taylor defeated a force of slightly superior size to his own. The final rush was
led by Jefferson
Davis and his Mississippi volunteers. On the cusp of a major victory, Taylor hal
ted and accepted an
eight-week armistice, even allowing the Mexicans to withdraw their army. He did
so more out of
necessity than charity, since his depleted force desperately needed 5,000 reinfo
rcements, which
arrived the following January. American troops then resumed their advance.
Attack was the American modus operandi during the war. Despite taking the offens
ive, the United
States time and again suffered only minor losses, even when assaulting Mexicans
dug in behind
defenses. And every unit of Taylor’s army attacked—light dragoons, skirmishers, heav
y infantry.
The success of the Americans impressed experienced commanders (such as Henry Hal
leck, who
later wrote about the offensives in his book, Elements of Military Art and Scien
ce), who shook
their heads in wonder at the Yanks’ aggressiveness.68
Meanwhile, Taylor now had a reputation as a true hero. Suddenly it dawned on Pol
k that he had
created a viable political opponent for any Democratic candidate in 1848, and he
now scrambled to
swing the military glory to someone besides Old Rough-and-Ready. Ordering Taylor
to halt, Polk
instructed General Winfield Scott, the only other man truly qualified to command
an entire army, to
take a new expedition of 10,000 to Vera Cruz. Polk ironically found himself rely
ing on two Whig
generals, “whom he hated more than the Mexicans.”69 Scott had no intention of comman
ding a
disastrous invasion, telling his confidants that he intended to lose no more tha
n 100 men in the
nation’s first amphibious operation: “for every one over that number I shall regard
myself as a
murderer.”70 In fact, he did better, losing only 67 to a fortified city that had r
efused to surrender.
Other offensives against Mexican outposts in the southwest and in California occ
urred
simultaneous to the main Mexican invasion. Brigadier General Stephen Watts Kearn
y marched
from Leavenworth, Kansas, to Santa Fe, which he found unoccupied by enemy forces
, then set out
for California. Reinforced by an expedition under Commodore Robert Stockton and
by the
Mormon battalion en route from Iowa, Kearny’s united command reached San Diego, th
en swept
on to Los Angeles. By that time, the Mexicans had surrendered—not to Stockton or K
earny, but to
another American force under John C. Frémont. The Pathfinder, as Frémont was known,
had
received orders from Polk to advance to California on a “scientific” expedition in D
ecember 1845,
along with the Slidell Pacific Fleet orders. Thus, from the outset, Polk had ens
ured that sufficient
American force would rendezvous in California to “persuade” the local pro-American C
alifornios
to rise up. What ensued was the the Bear Flag Revolt (hence the bear on the flag
of the state of
California), and Polk’s ambition of gaining California became a reality.
In Mexico, in August, Scott renewed his advance inland toward Mexico City over t
he rugged
mountains and against stiff resistance. Scott had no intention of slogging throu
gh the marshes that
protected the eastern flank of Mexico City, but instead planned to attack by way
of Chapultepec in
the west. As he reached the outskirts of Chapultepec, he found the fortress defe
nded by 900 soldiers
and 100 young cadets at the military college. In a pitched battle where American
marines assaulted
positions defended by “los niños”—students from the elite military school—and fighting han
d to
hand, saber to saber, Scott’s forces opened the road to Mexico City. On September
14, 1847, in the
first-ever U.S. occupation of an enemy capital, American marines guarded the Nat
ional Palace, “the
Halls of Montezuma,” against vandals and thieves. Santa Anna was deposed and scurr
ied out of the
country yet again, but 1,721 American soldiers had died in action and another 11
,155 of disease.
Occupying both California and Texas, plus the southwestern part of North America
, and following
Scott’s capture of Mexico City, the United States was in a position to negotiate f
rom strength. Polk
instructed Nicholas Trist, a staunch Whig, to negotiate a settlement. Polk thoug
ht Trist, a clerk,
would be pliant. Instead, Trist aggressively negotiated. Whigs and some Democrat
s cast a wary eye
at occupied Mexico herself. The last thing antislavery forces wanted was a large
chunk of Mexico
annexed under the auspices of victory, then converted into slave territory. They
recoiled when the
editor of the New York Sun suggested that “if the Mexican people with one voice as
k to come into
the Union our boundary…may extend much further than the Rio Grande.”71 Poet Walt Whi
tman
agreed that Mexico “won’t need much coaxing to join the United States.”72
Such talk was pure fantasy from the perspective of majorities in both the United
States and Mexico.
White Americans had no intention of allowing in vast numbers of brown-skinned Me
xicans,
whereas Mexico, which may have detested Santa Anna, had no love for the gringos.
Trist and Mexican representatives convened their discussions in January 1848 at
the town of
Guadalupe Hidalgo, and a month later the two sides signed the Treaty of Guadalup
e Hidalgo. It
provided for a payment of $15 million to Mexico, and the United States gained Ca
lifornia, the
disputed Texas border to the Rio Grande, and a vast expanse of territory, includ
ing present-day
Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Nevada. Trist ignored Polk’s revised instructions t
o press for
acquisition of part of northern Mexico proper.
Polk was furious and recalled Trist, who then ignored the letter recalling him,
reasoning that Polk
wrote it without full knowledge of the situation. Trist refused to support Polk’s
designs on Mexico
City; and Scott, another Whig on-site, concurred with Trist’s position, thus const
ricting potential
slave territory above the Rio Grande. Polk had to conclude the matter, leaving h
im no choice but to
send the treaty to Congress, where it produced as many critics as proponents. Bu
t its opponents,
who had sufficient votes to defeat it from opposite sides of the slavery argumen
t, could never unite
to defeat it, and the Senate approved the treaty on March 10, 1848. As David Pot
ter aptly put it,
“By the acts of a dismissed emissary, a disappointed president, and a divided Sena
te, the United
States acquired California and the Southwest.”73
Victorious American troops withdrew from Mexico in July 1848. Polk’s successful an
nexation of
the North American Southwest constituted only half his strategy to maintain a ba
lance in the Union
and fulfill his 1844 campaign promise. He also had to obtain a favorable settlem
ent of the Oregon
question. This eventually culminated in the Packenham-Buchanan Treaty. A conflic
t arose over
American claims to Oregon territory up to Fort Simpson, on the 54-degree 40-minu
te parallel that
encompassed the Fraser River. Britain, however, insisted on a Columbia River bou
ndary—and
badly wanted Puget Sound. Polk offered a compromise demarcation line at the fort
y-ninth parallel,
just below Fort Victoria on Vancouver Island—which still gave Americans claim to m
ost of the
Oregon Territory—but the British minister Richard Packenham rejected Polk’s proposal
out of
hand. Americans aggressively invoked the phrase “Fifty-four forty or fight,” and the
British,
quickly reassessing the situation, negotiated with James Buchanan, secretary of
state, agreeing to
Polk’s compromise line. The Senate approved the final treaty on June 15, 1846.
Taken together, Mexico and Oregon formed bookends, a pair of the most spectacula
r foreign policy
achievements in American history. Moreover, by “settling” for Oregon well below the
54-degree
line, Polk checked John Quincy Adams and the Whigs’ dreams of a larger free-soil P
acific
Northwest. In four short years Polk filled out the present boundaries of the con
tinental United
States (leaving only a small southern slice of Arizona in 1853), literally enlar
ging the nation from
“sea to shining sea.”
At the same time, his policies doomed any chance he had at reelection, even shou
ld he have chosen
to renege on his campaign promise to serve only one term. Polk’s policies had left
him a divided
party. Free-soilers had found it impossible to support the Texas annexation, and
now a reduced
Oregon angered northern Democrats as a betrayal, signaling the first serious rif
t between the
northern and southern wings of the party. This breach opened wider over the tari
ff, where Polk’s
Treasury secretary, Robert J. Walker, pressed for reductions in rates. Northerne
rs again saw a
double cross.
When Polk returned to Tennessee, where he died a few months later, he had guided
the United
States through the high tide of manifest destiny. Unintentionally, he had also h
elped inflict serious
wounds on the Democratic Party’s uneasy sectional alliances, and, as he feared, ha
d raised a
popular general, Zachary Taylor, to the status of political opponent. The newly
opened lands called
out once again to restless Americans, who poured in.
Westward Again
Beneath the simmering political cauldron of pro-and antislavery strife, pioneers
continued to surge
west. Explorers and trappers were soon joined in the 1830s by a relatively new g
roup, religious
missionaries. Second Great Awakening enthusiasm propelled Methodists, led by the
Reverend
Jason Lee, to Oregon in 1832 to establish a mission to the Chinook Indians.74 El
ijah White, then
Marcus Whitman and his pregnant wife, Narcissa, followed later, bringing along s
ome thousand
migrants (and measles) to the region. White and Lee soon squabbled over methods;
eventually the
Methodist board concluded that it could not Christianize the Indians and dried u
p the funding for
the Methodist missions. The Whitmans were even more unfortunate. After measles s
pread among
the Cayuse Indians, they blamed the missionaries and murdered the Whitmans at th
eir Walla Walla
mission. Such brutality failed to stem the missionary zeal toward the new wester
n territories,
however, and a number of Jesuit priests, most notably Father Pierre De Smet, est
ablished six
successful missions in the northern Rocky Mountains of Montana, Idaho, and Washi
ngton.
Pioneer farmer immigrants followed the missionaries into Oregon, where the popul
ation rose from
fifty to more than six thousand whites between 1839 and 1846. They traveled the
Oregon Trail
from Independence, Missouri, along the southern bank of the Platte River, across
Wyoming and
southern Idaho, and finally to Fort Vancouver via the Columbia River. Oregon Tra
il pioneers
encountered hardships including rainstorms, snow and ice, treacherous rivers, st
eep mountain
passes, and wild animals. Another group of immigrants, the Mormons, trekked thei
r way to Utah
along the northern bank of the Platte River under the leadership of Brigham Youn
g. They arrived at
the Great Salt Lake just as the Mexican War broke out; tens of thousands of thei
r brethren joined
them during the following decades. The Mormon Trail, as it was called, attracted
many Californiabound
settlers and, very soon, gold miners.
Discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill near Sacramento in 1848 brought hordes of miner
s, prospectors,
and speculators, virtually all of them men, and many attracted to the seamier si
de of the social
order. Any number of famous Americans spent time in the California gold camps, i
ncluding Mark
Twain and Henry Dana, both of whom wrote notable essays on their experiences. Bu
t for every
Twain or Dana who made it to California, and left, and for every prospector who
actually
discovered gold, there were perhaps a hundred who went away broke, many of whom
had
abandoned their families and farms to seek the precious metal. Even after the go
ld played out, there
was no stopping the population increase as some discovered the natural beauty an
d freedom offered
by the West and stayed. San Francisco swelled from a thousand souls in 1856 to f
ifty thousand by
decade’s end, whereas in parts of Arizona and Colorado gold booms (and discoveries
of other
metals) could produce an overnight metropolis and just as quickly, a ghost town.
The Pacific Coast was largely sealed off from the rest of the country by the Gre
at Plains and Rocky
Mountains. Travel to California was best done by boat from ports along the Atlan
tic to Panama,
then overland, then on another boat up the coast. Crossing overland directly fro
m Missouri was a
dangerous and expensive proposition.
St. Joseph, Missouri, the jumping-off point for overland travel, provided plenty
of reputable stables
and outfitters, but it was also home to dens of thieves and speculators who prey
ed on unsuspecting
pioneers. Thousands of travelers poured into St. Joseph, then on across the over
land trail to Oregon
on a two-thousand-mile trek that could take six months. Up to 5,000 per year fol
lowed the trail in
the mid-1840s, of which some 2,700 continued on to California. By 1850, after th
e discovery of
gold, more than 55,000 pioneers crossed the desert in a year. Perhaps another th
ousand traders
frequented the Santa Fe Trail. Many Forty-niners preferred the water route. San
Francisco, the
supply depot for Sacramento, overnight became a thriving city. In seven years—from
1849 to
1856—the city’s population filled with merchants, artisans, shopkeepers, bankers, la
wyers, saloon
owners, and traders. Access to the Pacific Ocean facilitated trade from around t
he world, giving the
town an international and multiethnic character. Saloons and gambling dens dotte
d the cityscape,
enabling gangs and brigands to disrupt peaceful commerce.
With the addition and slow settlement of California, the Pacific Northwest, and
the relatively
unexplored American Southwest, Americans east of the Mississippi again turned th
eir attention
inward. After all, the objective of stretching the United States from sea to shi
ning sea had been met.
Only the most radical and unrealistic expansionists desired annexation of Mexico
, so further
movement southward was blocked. In the 1850s there would be talk of acquiring Cu
ba, but the
concept of manifest destiny had crested. Moreover, the elephant in the room coul
d no longer be
ignored. In the years that followed, from 1848 until 1860, slavery dominated alm
ost every aspect of
American politics in one form or another.
CHAPTER EIGHT
The House Dividing, 1848–60
The Falling Veil
A chilling wire service report from Harper’s Ferry, Virginia, reached major U.S. c
ities on October
18, 1859:
Harper’s Ferry: 6 a.m.—Preparations are making to storm the Armory…. Three rioters are
lying
dead in the street, and three more lying dead in the river…. Another rioter named
Lewis Leary, has
just died, and confessed to the particulars of the plot which he says was concoc
ted by Brown….
The rioters have just sent out a flag of truce. If they are not protected by the
soldiers…every one
captured will be hung.1
The “rioters” consisted of seventeen whites and five blacks (some former slaves) who
intended to
capture the federal armory in the city, use the arms contained therein to seize
the town, and then
wait for the “army” of radical abolitionists and rebel slaves that John Brown, the l
eader, believed
would materialize. Brown, a Kansas abolitionist guerrilla fighter who had worked
in the
Underground Railroad, thought that the slave South would collapse if he conquere
d Virginia.
Virginia militiamen hastily grabbed guns and ammunition and began assembling. Fa
rther away,
other towns, including Charlestown, Martinsburg, and Shepherdstown, awakened to
warnings from
their church bells, with citizens mobilizing quickly to quell a rumored slave re
bellion. The
telegraph alerted Washington, Baltimore, and New York, whose morning newspapers
reported
partial information. Many accounts referred to a “Negro Insurrection” or slave revol
t. Hoping to
avoid a full-scale rampage by the militias, as well as intending to suppress Bro
wn’s insurrection
quickly, the president, James Buchanan, ordered U.S. Marines under the command o
f Colonel
Robert E. Lee and his lieutenant, J.E.B. Stuart, to Harper’s Ferry. They arrived o
n October
seventeenth, by which time Brown, who had hoped he could avoid violence for at l
east a few days
to allow his forces to grow, was forced to act without any reinforcements. Lee’s t
roops surrounded
Brown’s motley band, then broke into the engine house at the train station near th
e armory where
the conspirators had holed up. In the ensuing gun battle, the soldiers killed te
n, including two of
Brown’s sons, and soldiers bayoneted Brown several times. He lived to stand trial,
but his
conviction was a foregone conclusion, and on December 2, 1859, John Brown was ha
nged in
Charlestown, Virginia.
Brown’s raid triggered a wave of paranoia in the South, which lived in utter terro
r of slave
rebellions, even though few had ever occurred and none succeeded. It also provok
ed Northern
abolitionist sympathizers to try to differentiate the man from the cause. “A squad
of fanatics whose
zeal is wonderfully disproportioned to their senses,” was how the Chicago Press an
d Tribune
referred to Brown.2 “His are the errors of a fanatic, not the crimes of a felon,” ar
gued editor Horace
Greeley in his New York Tribune. “There are fit and unfit modes of combating a gre
at evil.”3
Few doubted Brown was delusional at some level, especially since his plan involv
ed arming slaves
with several thousand pikes. Historian C. Vann Woodward warned historians lookin
g at Brown
“not to blink, as many of his biographers have done,” on the question of Brown’s looni
ness.
Woodward pointed to Brown’s history of insanity and his family tree, which was all
but planted in
the insane asylum arboretum: three aunts, two uncles, his only sister, her daugh
ter, and six first
cousins were all intermittently insane, periodically admitted to lunatic asylums
or permanently
confined.4 However, the fact that he suffered from delusions did not mean that B
rown did not have
a plan with logic and order to it, nor did it mean that he did not understand th
e objective for which
he fought.5
Such distinctions proved insufficient for those seeking a genuine martyr, howeve
r. Ralph Waldo
Emerson celebrated Brown’s execution, calling him a “new saint, a thousand times mor
e justified
when it is to save [slaves from] the auction-block.”6
Others, such as abolitionist Wendell Phillips, blamed Virginia, which he called “a
pirate ship,” and
he labeled the Commonwealth “a chronic insurrection.”7 “Who makes the Abolitionist?” ask
ed
Emerson. “The Slaveholder.” Yet Emerson’s and Phillips’s logic absolved both the aboliti
onist
lawbreakers and Jayhawkers (Kansas border ruffians), and their rationale gave li
cense to cutthroats
like William Quantrill and the James Gang just a few years later. Worse, it mock
ed the
Constitution, elevating Emerson, Phillips, Brown, and whoever else disagreed wit
h any part of it,
above the law.
One statesman, in particular—one might say, alone—realized that the abolition of sla
very had to
come, and could only come, through the law. Anything less destroyed the very doc
ument that
ensured the freedom that the slave craved and that the citizen enjoyed. Abraham
Lincoln owed his
political career and his presidential success to the concept that the Constituti
on had to remain above
emotion, free from the often heartbreaking injustices of the moment, if it was t
o be the source of
redress. By 1861, when few of his neighbors in the North would have fully unders
tood that
principle, and when virtually all of his countrymen in the South would have reje
cted it on a variety
of grounds, both sides nevertheless soon arrived at the point where they had to
test the validity of
Lincoln’s assertion that the nation could not remain a “house divided.”
Time Line
1848:
Zachary Taylor elected president
1850:
Compromise of 1850; California admitted as a free state; Fugitive Slave Law pass
ed; Taylor dies in
office; Millard Fillmore becomes president
1852:
Harriet Beecher Stowe publishes Uncle Tom’s Cabin; Franklin Pierce elected preside
nt
1853:
Gadsden Purchase
1854:
Kansas-Nebraska Act; formation of Anti-Nebraska Party (later called Republican P
arty)
1856:
James Buchanan elected president; John C. Fremont, Republican, comes within thre
e states of
carrying election with only northern votes.
1857:
Panic of 1857; Dred Scott decision
1858:
Senatorial election in Illinois pits Stephen Douglas against Abraham Lincoln; Li
ncoln-Douglas
debates; Douglas issues Freeport Doctrine
1859:
John Brown’s raid at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia
1860:
Abraham Lincoln, Republican, elected president without a single Southern elector
al vote; South
Carolina secedes
An Arsenic Empire?
Having added Texas, California, and the Southwest to the national map, and final
ized the
boundaries with England over Oregon, the nation in 1850 looked much the way it d
oes in 2004.
Within twenty years, Alaska and the Gadsden Purchase would complete all continen
tal territorial
expansion, with other additions to the Union (Hawaii, Guam, Puerto Rico) coming
from the
Caribbean or the Pacific. “Polk’s war” interrupted—only temporarily—the rapid growth of
American industry and business after the Panic of 1837 had receded.
The United States stood behind only Russia, China, and Australia as the largest
nation in the world,
whereas its economic power dwarfed those states. By European concepts of space a
nd distance,
America’s size was truly astonishing: it was as far from San Francisco to Boston a
s it was from
Madrid to Moscow; Texas alone was bigger than France, and the Arizona Territory
was larger than
all of Great Britain. The population, too, was growing; science, invention, and
the arts were
thriving; and a competitive balance had again reappeared in politics.
Throughout her entire history, however, the United States had repeatedly put off
dealing with the
issue of slavery—first through constitutional compromise, then through appeals to
bipartisan good
will, then through a political party system that sought to squelch discussion th
rough spoils, then
finally through compromises, all combined with threats and warnings about disuni
on. By the 1850s,
however, the structure built by the Founders revealed dangerous cracks in the fr
amework. Emerson
warned that acquisition of the Mexican cession territories, with its potential f
or sectional conflict,
would be akin to taking arsenic. How much longer could the nation ignore slavery
? And how much
longer would the perpetual-motion machine of growing government power, spawned b
y Van
Buren, spin before abolitionist voices were thrust to the fore? The answer to bo
th questions was,
not long.
The Dark, Nether Side
Opponents of capitalism—especially those who disparaged northern factories and big
cities—began
their attacks in earnest for the first time in American history. Certainly there
was much to lament
about the cities. Crime was rampant: New York City had as high a homicide rate i
n 1860 per one
hundred thousand people as it did in the year 2000 (based on the FBI’s uniform cri
me reports).
After falling in the 1830s, homicides in New York nearly tripled, to fifteen per
one hundred
thousand by 1860.
By far the worst sections of New York’s dark, nether side, as reformers of the day
called it,
included Hell’s Kitchen, which by the late 1850s had started to replace the Bowery
as the most
dangerous and notorious section of the city.8 Hell’s Kitchen received its name fro
m policemen, one
of whom complained that the place was worse than hell itself, to which the other
replied, “Hell’s a
mild climate. This is Hell’s Kitchen, no less.” According to one writer, the Bowery,
Hell’s Kitchen,
and other rough sections of town, such as Rag Picker’s Row, Mulligan Alley, Satan’s
Circus, and
Cockroach Row consisted of
…streets…ill paved, broken by carts and omnibuses into ruts and perilous gullies, ob
structed by
boxes and sign boards, impassable by reason of thronging vehicles, and filled wi
th filth and
garbage, which was left where it had been thrown to rot and send out its pestife
rous fumes,
breeding fever and cholera. [The writer] found hacks, carts, and omnibuses choki
ng the
thoroughfares, their Jehu drivers dashing through the crowd furiously, reckless
of life; women and
children were knocked down and trampled on…hackmen overcharged and were insolent t
o their
passengers; baggage-smashers haunted the docks…rowdyism seemed to rule the city; i
t was at risk
of your life that you walked the streets late at night; the club, the knife, the
slung-shot, the revolver
were in constant activity….9
Like other cities, New York had seen rapid population increases, leaping from 12
3,000 in 1820 to
515,000 in 1850, mostly because of immigrants, people Charles Loring Brace calle
d “the
Dangerous Classes.”10 Immigrants provided political clout, leapfrogging New York p
ast Boston,
Philadelphia, and Baltimore in size, but they also presented a growing problem,
especially when it
came to housing. The tenement population, which had reached half a million, incl
uded 18,000 who
lived in cellars in addition to 15,000 beggars and 30,000 unsupervised children
(apparently
orphans). When the state legislature investigated the tenements, it concluded th
at cattle lived better
than some New Yorkers.
Prostitution and begging were omnipresent, even in the presence of policemen, wh
o “lounged
about, gaped, gossiped, drank, and smoked, inactively useless upon street corner
s.”11 Some women
used babies as props, renting them and then entering saloons, inducing them to c
ry by pinching
them in order to solicit alms.12
Gangs were also seen everywhere in the slums, sporting names such as the Dead Ra
bbits, the
Gorillas, the East Side Dramatic and Pleasure Club, and the Limburger Roarers. P
oliticians like
Boss Tweed employed the gangs on election day—paid in cash and alcohol—to disrupt th
e polling
places of the opponent, intimidating and, if necessary, beating up anyone with a
n intention of
voting there. No wonder the English writer Rudyard Kipling, who visited New York
, thought its
streets were “first cousins to a Zanzibar foreshore or kin to the approaches of a
Zulu kraal,” a
“shiftless outcome of squalid barbarism and reckless extravagance.”13
Cast into this fetid urban setting were masses of immigrants. The United States
moved past the
50,000-per-year immigrant level in 1832, but by 1840 nearly fifteen times that m
any people would
arrive from Ireland alone. Overall immigration soared from 20,000 in 1820 to 2.2
million in 1850,
with Wisconsin, New York, California, and the Minnesota Territory receiving the
most newcomers.
In those states and Minnesota, immigrants made up 20 percent or more of the tota
l population. But
Ohio, Louisiana, Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Michigan, and Pennsylvania were not f
ar behind, since
immigrants made up between 10 to 20 percent of their populations.14
Steam-powered sailing vessels made the transatlantic crossing faster and easier,
and the United
States had generally open borders. Still, immigrants had to want to come to Amer
ica. After all, both
Canada and Mexico were approximately the same distance from Europe, yet they att
racted only a
handful of immigrants by comparison.
Lured by jobs, land, and low taxes, a small standing army (with no conscription)
, a relatively tiny
government, complete absence of mandatory state church tithes, no state press ce
nsorship, and no
czarist or emperor’s secret police, Europeans thronged to American shores. As earl
y as 1818, John
Doyle, an Irish immigrant to Philadelphia who had found work as a printer and a
map seller, wrote
home, “I am doing astonishingly well, thanks be to God, and was able on the 16th o
f this month to
make a deposit of 100 dollars in the Bank of the United States…. [Here] a man is a
llowed to thrive
and flourish without having a penny taken out of his pocket by government; no vi
sits from tax
gatherers, constables, or soldiers.”15
Following the potato famine in Ireland in the 1840s, when one third of the total
population of
Ireland disappeared, new waves of poor Irish arrived in Boston and New York City
, with an
estimated 20 percent of those who set sail dying en route.16 From 1841 to 1850,
780,000 Irish
arrived on American shores, and unlike other immigrants, they arrived as familie
s, not as single
males. Then, from 1851 to 1860, another 914,000 immigrated. Eventually, there we
re more Irish in
America than in Ireland, and more Irish in New York than in Dublin.17 Fresh from
decades of
political repression by the British, the Irish congregated in big coastal cities
and, seeing the
opportunity to belong to part of the power structure, they, more than any other
immigrant group,
moved into the police and fire departments. An 1869 list of New York City’s Irish
and German
officeholders (the only two immigrant groups even mentioned!) revealed the stunn
ing dominance
of the Irish:
GERMANS
IRISH
Mayor’s office
2
11
Aldermen
2
34
Street department
0
87
Comptroller
2
126
Sheriff
1
23
Police captains
0
3218
Hibernian primacy in New York City administration was so overwhelming that even
in the wake of
the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York City a century and a half later, the names
of the slain
firefighters and police were overwhelmingly Irish.
With the exception of some who moved south—especially the Presbyterian Scots-Irish—n
ew
immigrants from the Emerald Isle remained urban and northern. Some already saw t
his as a
problem. An editorial in 1855 from The Citizen, an Irish American newspaper, not
ed: “Westward
Ho! The great mistake that emigrants, particularly Irish emigrants, make, on arr
iving in this
country, is, that they remain in New York, and other Atlantic cities, till they
are ruined, instead of
proceeding at once to the Western country, where a virgin soil, teeming with ple
nty, invites them to
its bosom.”19
It was true that land was virtually free on the frontier, even if basic tools we
re not. Steven
Thernstrom found that if immigrants simply left New England, their chances for e
conomic success
dramatically improved, especially as they moved into the ranks of skilled labore
rs.20 More than the
Dutch or Germans, the Irish suffered tremendous discrimination. The work of a de
ranged Protestant
girl, Maria Monk, Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu in Montreal (1836), circul
ated in the United
States and fomented anti-Catholic bias that touched off the “nopopery” crusade that
afflicted the
predominantly Catholic Irish.21 Monk’s surreal work related incredibly fantastic t
ales of her “life”
in a convent in Montreal, where she claimed to have observed tunnels leading to
the burial grounds
for the babies produced by the illicit relations between priests and nuns, as we
ll as allegations of
seductions in confessionals. The Church launched a number of convent inspections
that completely
disproved these nonsensical claims, but the book had its effect. Protestant mobs
in Philadelphia,
reacting to the bishop’s request for tax money to fund parochial schools, stormed
the Irish sector of
town and set off dynamite in Catholic churches.
More than other older immigrant groups, the Irish gravitated to the Democratic P
arty in
overwhelming numbers, partly because of the antielite appeal of the Democrats (w
hich was largely
imaginary). Politically, the Irish advanced steadily by using the Democratic Par
ty machinery to
elect Irishmen as the mayors of Boston in the 1880s. But there was an underside
to this American
dream because the Irish “brought to America a settled tradition of regarding the f
ormal government
as illegitimate, and the informal one as bearing the true impress of popular sov
ereignty.”22 Political
corruption was ignored: “Stealing an election was rascally, not to be approved, bu
t neither quite to
be abhorred.”23 That translated into widespread graft, bribery, and vote fraud, wh
ich was made all
the easier by party politics that simply required that the parties “get out the vo
te,” not “get out the
legal vote.” These traits, and Irish willingness to vote as a block for the Democr
ats, made them
targets for the Know-Nothing Party and other nativist groups.24
The experiences of Germans, the other main immigrant group, differed sharply fro
m the Irish. First
recruited to come to Pennsylvania by William Penn, Germans came to the United St
ates in a wave
(951,000) in the 1850s following the failure of the 1848 democratic revolutions
in Germany. Early
Germans in Philadelphia were Mennonites, but other religious Germans followed, i
ncluding Amish
and Calvinists, originating the popular (but wrong) name, Pennsylvania Dutch, wh
ich was a
mispronunciation of Deutsch. Germans often brought more skills than the Irish, e
specially in the
steel, mechanical, musical instrument trades (including Rudolf Wurlitzer and, la
ter, Henry
Steinway), and brewing (with brewers such as Schlitz, Pabst, and Budweiser).25 B
ut they also had
more experience in land ownership, and had no shortage of good ideas, including
the Kentucky
long rifle and the Conestoga wagon. John Augustus Roebling invented the wire cab
le for the
suspension bridge to Brooklyn; John Bausch and Henry Lomb pioneered eyeglass len
s
manufacturing; and Henry Heinz built a powerful food company from the ground up.
Above all, the Germans were farmers, with their farming communities spreading th
roughout the
Appalachian valley. Berlins and Frankforts frequently appear on the map of mid-A
merican towns.
For many of them, America did not offer escape so much as opportunity to improve
. Unlike the
Irish, Germans immediately moved to open land, heading for the German-like north
ern tier of the
Midwest and populating some of the rapidly growing cities there, such as Cincinn
ati (which in
1860 had 161,000 people—nearly half of them foreign born), Milwaukee, St. Louis, a
nd even as far
southwest as Texas.26
One should take care not to emphasize the urban ethnic component of discord in A
merican life too
much. For every bar fight in Boston, there was at least one (if not ten) in salo
ons on the frontier. In
Alabama, for example, the local editor of the Cahaba paper editorialized in 1856
that “guns and
pistols…[were] fired in and from the alley ways and streets of the town” so frequent
ly that it was
“hardly safe to go from house to house.”27 A knife fight on the floor of the Arkansa
s House led to
the gutting of one state representative over the relatively innocuous issue of p
utting out a bounty on
wolf pelts, and a few years later, in 1847, one set of bank directors at the Far
mers and Merchants
Bank in Nashville engaged in a gun battle with other directors outside the court
room.28 Many of
these clashes were family feuds. Most lacked an ethnic component.
One ethnic group that has suffered great persecution in modern times came to Ame
rica virtually
unnoticed. The first Jews had come to New Amsterdam in 1654, establishing the fi
rst North
American synagogue a half century later. Over time, a thriving community emerged
in what
became New York (which, by 1914, had become home to half of all European Jews li
ving in the
United States). By 1850 there were perhaps thirty thousand Jews in the United St
ates, but within
the next thirty years the number would grow to more than half a million.29 After
the boom in
textiles in the early 1800s, the Jews emerged as the dominant force in New York’s
needle trade,
owning all but 17 of the 241 clothing firms in New York City in 1885.30
The largest influx of Jews took place long after the Civil War when Russian Jews
sought sanctuary
from czarist persecutions. Nevertheless, Jews achieved distinctions during the C
ivil War on both
the Union and Confederate sides. Best known, probably, was Judah P. Benjamin, a
Louisiana Whig
who was the first Jew elected to the U.S. Senate and who served as the Confedera
cy’s secretary of
war. But five Jews won the Medal of Honor for the Union; Edward Rosewater, Linco
ln’s
telegrapher, was Jewish; and the Cardozo family of New York produced important l
egal minds
both before and after the conflict, including a state supreme court justice (Jac
ob) and a United
States Supreme Court justice (Benjamin), who followed Louis Brandeis, yet anothe
r Jew, onto the
Supreme Court.
All the immigrant groups found niches, and all succeeded—admittedly at different r
ates. All except
one, that is. African Americans, most of whom came to the colonies as slaves, co
uld point to small
communities of “free men of color” in the north, and list numerous achievements. Yet
their
accomplishments only served to contrast their freedom with the bondage of millio
ns of blacks in
the same nation, in some cases only miles away.
Slavery, Still
Thirty years after the Missouri Compromise threatened to unravel the Union, the
issue of slavery
persevered as strongly as ever. Historians have remained puzzled by several anom
alies regarding
slavery. For example, even though by the 1850s there were higher profits in manu
facturing in the
South than in plantation farming, few planters gave up their gang-based labor sy
stems to open
factories.
Several facts about slavery must thus be acknowledged at the outset: (1) althoug
h slavery was
profitable, profits and property rights alone did not explain its perpetuation;
(2) the same free
market that allowed Africans to be bought and sold at the same time exerted powe
rful pressures to
liberate them; and (3) Southerners needed the force of government to maintain an
d expand slavery,
and without it, a combination of the market and slave revolts would have ultimat
ely ended the
institution. In sum, slavery embodied the worst aspects of unfettered capitalism
wedded to
uninhibited government power, all turning on the egregiously flawed definition o
f a human as
“property.”
Although the vast majority of Southern blacks were slaves prior to 1860, there w
ere, nonetheless, a
significant number of free African Americans living in what would become the Con
federacy. As
many as 262,000 free blacks lived in the South, with the ratio higher in the upp
er South than in the
lower. In Virginia, for example, census returns counted more than 58,000 free bl
acks out of a total
black population of 548,000, and the number of free blacks had actually increase
d by about 3,700
in the decade prior to the Civil War.31 A large majority of those free African A
mericans lived in
Alexandria, Fredericksburg, Norfolk, Lynchburg, and Petersburg. Virginia debated
expelling all
free blacks in 1832, but the measure, which was tied to a bill for gradual, comp
ensated
emancipation, failed. Free blacks could stay, but for how long?
It goes without saying that most blacks in the American South were slaves. Befor
e the international
slave trade was banned in 1808, approximately 661,000 slaves were brought into t
he United States,
or about 7 percent of all Africans transported across the Atlantic.32 America di
d not receive, by
any stretch of the imagination, even a small portion of slaves shipped from Afri
ca: Cuba topped the
list with 787,000. By 1860 the South had a slave population of 3.84 million, a f
igure that
represented 60 percent of all the “agricultural wealth” in Alabama, Georgia, Louisia
na, Mississippi,
and South Carolina.
Other indicators reveal how critical a position slavery held in the overall weal
th of the South.
Wealth estimates by the U.S. government based on the 1860 census showed that sla
ves accounted
for $3 billion in (mostly Southern) wealth, an amount exceeding the investments
in railroads and
manufacturing combined! To an extent—but only to an extent—the approaching conflict
was one
over the definition of property rights.33 It might therefore be said that whenev
er the historical
record says “states’ rights” in the context of sectional debates, the phrase “rights to
own slaves”
should more correctly be inserted.34 When Alabama’s Franklin W. Bowdon wrote about
the
property rights in slaves, “If any of these rights can be invaded, there is no sec
urity for the
remainder,” Northerners instinctively knew that the inverse was true: if one group
of people could
be condemned to slavery for their race, another could suffer the same fate for t
heir religious
convictions, or their political affiliations.35
This aspect of slavery gnawed at the many nonslaveholders who composed the South’s
majority.
Of all the Southerners who did own slaves, about 12 percent held most of the sla
ves, whereas some
36 percent of Southern farms in the most fertile valley regions had no slave lab
or at all; overall
nearly half the farms in the cotton belt were slaveless.36 Indeed, in some regio
ns free farmers
dominated the politics, particularly eastern Tennessee, western Virginia, northe
rwestern
Mississippi, and parts of Missouri. Even the small farmers who owned slaves stea
dily moved away
from the large cash-crop practice of growing cotton, entering small-scale manufa
cturing by 1860. If
one had little land, it made no sense economically to hold slaves. A field hand
in the 1850s could
cost $1,200, although prices fell with age and remaining productive years.
The stability and permanence of the system, however, arose from the large planta
tions, where a
division of labor and assignment of slave gangs under the whip could overcome an
y inefficiencies
associated with unfree labor. Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman, in their famous
Time on the
Cross (1974), found that farms with slaves “were 29 percent more productive than t
hose without
slaves,” and, more important, that the gains increased as farm size increased.37 W
hat is surprising
is that the profitability of slavery was doubted for as long as it was, but that
was largely because of
the biased comments of contemporaries like antislavery activist Frank Blair, who
wrote that “no
one from a slave state could pass through ‘the splendid farms of Sangamon and Morg
an, without
permitting an envious sigh to escape him at the evident superiority of free labo
r.’”38 Nathaniel
Banks argued in the 1850s before audiences in Boston and New York that slavery w
as “the foe of
all industrial progress and the highest material prosperity.”39 It was true that d
eep pockets of
poverty existed in the South, and that as a region it lagged behind United State
s per capita valueadded
average in 1860 by a substantial seven dollars, falling behind even the undevelo
ped
Midwest.40
Adding to the unprofitability myth was a generation of Southern historians that
included Ulrich
Bonnell Phillips and Charles Sydnor, who could not reconcile the immorality of s
lavery with the
obvious returns in the market system; they used flawed methodologies to conclude
plantations had
to be losing money.41 A final argument that slavery was unprofitable came from t
he
“backwardness” of the South (that is, its rural and nonindustrial character) that se
emed to confirm
that slavery caused the relative lack of industry compared to that in the North.
42
Conditions among slaves differed dramatically. Frederick Douglass pointed out th
at “a city slave is
almost a free citizen” who enjoyed “privileges altogether unknown to the whip-driven
slave on the
plantation.”43 A slave undertaker in Savannah hired other slaves, and made “payments”
to his
master at $250 a year. Artisans, mechanics, domestic servants, millers, ranchers
, and other
occupations were open to slaves. Simon Gray, a Mississippi slave, became a lumbe
r raft captain
whose crew included whites.44 Gray also invested in real estate, speculated in r
aw timber, and
owned several houses. Half of the workforce at the Richmond Tredegar Iron Works
was comprised
of slaves.
Even the most “benign” slavery, however, was always immoral and oppressive. Every fe
male slave
knew that ultimately if her master chose to make sexual advances, she had no aut
hority to refuse.
The system legitimized rape, even though benign masters never touched their fema
le slaves. Every
field hand was subject to the lash; some knew it more often than others. Much sl
avery in the South
was cruel and violent even by the standards of the defenders. Runaways, if caugh
t, were mutilated
or executed, sometimes tortured by being boiled in cauldrons; and slaves for any
reason—usually
“insubordination”—were whipped. Free-market advocates argue that it made no sense to d
estroy a
“fifteen-hundred-dollar investment,” but such contentions assume that the slave owne
rs always
acted as rational capitalists instead of (occasionally) racists involved in rein
forcement of social
power structures.
Often the two intermingled—the capitalist mentality and the racial oppression—to the
point that the
system made no sense when viewed solely in the context of either the market or r
ace relations. For
example, Fogel and Engerman’s antiseptic economic conclusion that slaves were whip
ped an
“average” of 0.7 times per year is put into perspective by pictures of slaves whose
backs were
scarred beyond recognition by the whip. Fogel and Engerman’s data were reconstruct
ed from a
single slave owner’s diary and are very questionable. Other evidence is that beati
ngs were so
frequent that they occurred more than once a week, and that fear of the lash per
meated the
plantations.45 Some states had laws against killing a slave, though the punishme
nts were relatively
minor compared to the act. But such laws wilted in light of the slaves’ actual tes
timony:
It’s too bad to belong to folks dat own you soul an’ body; dat can tie you up to a t
ree, wid yo’ face
to de tree an’ you’ arms fastened tight aroun’ it; who take a long curlin’ whip an’ cut de
blood ever’
lick. Folks a mile away could hear dem awful whippings. Dey was a terrible part
of livin’.46
Plantation slave diets were rich in calories, but it is doubtful the provisions
kept pace with the field
labor, since data show that slaves born between 1790 and 1800 tended to be short
er than the free
white population.47 In other respects, though, Fogel and Engerman were right: wh
ile many
historians have overemphasized the breakup of families under slavery—a point hamme
red home by
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s fictional Uncle Tom’s Cabin—fewer slaves were separated from t
heir
mates than is often portrayed in television or the movies. As the result of narr
atives from living
former slaves, collected during the New Deal by the Federal Writers Project, it
has been determined
that two thirds had lived in nuclear families.48 If, however, one third of all s
lave families were
destroyed by force in the form of sales on the auction block, that statistic alo
ne reiterates the
oppressive and inhumane nature of the institution. Nevertheless, the old saw tha
t crime doesn’t pay
does not always apply, as was the case with slavery.
Several economic historians have placed the returns on slavery at about 8.5 perc
ent, leaving no
doubt that it was not only profitable in the short term, but viable in the long
run because of the
constantly increasing value of slaves as a scarce resource.49 It would be equall
y mistaken,
however, to assume that slave-based plantation agriculture was so profitable as
to funnel the South
into slavery in an almost deterministic manner. Quite the contrary, studies of S
outhern
manufacturing have revealed that returns in fledgling Southern industries often
exceeded 22 percent
and in some instances reached as high as 45 percent—yet even those profits were no
t sufficient to
pry the plantation owners’ hands off their slaves.50
So what to make of a discrepancy of 45 percent returns in manufacturing compared
with 8 percent
in plantation agriculture? Why would Southerners pass up such gains in the indus
trial sector?
Economic culture explains some of the reluctance. Few Southerners knew or unders
tood the
industrial system. More important, however, there were psychic gains associated
with slave-based
agriculture—dominance and control—that one could never find in industry. Gains on th
e
plantations may have been lower, but they undergirded an entire way of life and
the privileged
position of the upper tiers of Southern society. The short answer to our questio
n, then, is that it was
about more than money. In the end, the persistence of slavery in the face of hig
h nonagricultural
returns testifies to aspects of its noneconomic character.
Ultimately slavery could exist only through the power of the state. It survived “b
ecause political
forces prevented the typical decay and destruction of slavery experienced elsewh
ere.”51 Laws
forcing free whites to join posses for runaway slaves, censoring mails, and forb
idding slaves to own
property all emanated from government, not the market. Slaveholders passed statu
tes prohibiting
the manumission of slaves throughout the South, banned the practice of slaves’s pu
rchasing their
own freedom, and used the criminal justice system to put teeth in the slave code
s. States enforced
laws against educating slaves and prohibiting slaves from testifying in court.52
Those laws existed
atop still other statutes that restricted the movement of even free blacks withi
n the South or the
disembarking of free black merchant sailors in Southern ports.53 In total, slave
holders benefited
from monumental reductions in the cost of slavery by, as economists would say, e
xternalizing the
costs to nonslaveowners. Moreover, the system insulated itself from market press
ures, for there was
no true free market as long as slavery was permitted anywhere; thus there could
be no market
discipline. Capitalism’s emancipating powers could work only where the government
served as a
neutral referee instead of a hired gun working for the slave owner.
In contrast to Latin American countries and Mexico, which had institutionalized
self-purchase, the
American South moved in the opposite direction. It all made for a system in whic
h, with each
passing year, despite the advantages enjoyed by urban servant-slaves and mechani
cs, slaves were
increasingly less likely to win their freedom and be treated as people. Combined
with the growing
perversion of Christian doctrines in the South that maintained that blacks were
permanent slaves, it
was inevitable that the South would grow more repressive, both toward blacks and
whites.
Lincoln hoped that the “natural limits” of slavery would prove its undoing—that cotton
production
would peter out and slavery would become untenable.54 In this Lincoln was in err
or. New uses for
slave labor could always be found, and several studies have identified growing s
lave employment
in cities and industry.55 Lincoln also failed to anticipate that slavery could e
asily be adapted to
mining and other large-scale agriculture, and he did not appreciate the signific
ance of the Southern
churches’ scriptural revisionism as it applied to blacks. In the long run, only th
e market, or a war
with the North, could have saved the South from its trajectory. When slaveholder
s foisted the costs
of the peculiar institution onto the Southern citizenry through the government,
no market correction
was possible. Ultimately, Southern slave owners rejected both morality and the m
arket, then went
about trying to justify themselves.
Defending the Indefensible
Driven by the Declaration’s inexorable logic that “all men are created equal,” pressur
e rose for
defenders of the slave system to explain their continued participation in the pe
culiar institution.
John C. Calhoun, in 1838, noted that the defense of slavery had changed:
This agitation [from abolitionists] has produced one happy effect; it has compel
led us…to look into
the nature and character of this great institution, and to correct many false im
pressions….
Many…once believed that [slavery] was a moral and political evil; that folly and d
elusion are gone;
we now see it in its true light…as the most safe and stable basis for free institu
tions in the world
[emphasis ours].56
Calhoun espoused the labor theory of value—the backbone of Marxist economic thinki
ng—and in
this he was joined by George Fitzhugh, Virginia’s leading proslavery intellectual
and proponent of
socialism. Fitzhugh exposed slavery as the nonmarket, anticapitalist construct t
hat it was by
arguing that not only should all blacks be slaves, but so should most whites. “We
are all cannibals,”
Fitzhugh intoned, “Cannibals all!” Slaves Without Masters, the subtitle of his book
Cannibals All!
(1854), offered a shockingly accurate exposé of the reality of socialism—or slavery,
for to Fitzhugh
they were one and the same.57
Slavery in the South, according to Fitzhugh, scarcely differed from factory labo
r in the North,
where the mills of Massachusetts placed their workers in a captivity as sure as
the fields of
Alabama. Yet African slaves, Fitzhugh maintained, probably lived better than fre
e white workers in
the North because they were liberated from decision making. A few slaves even bo
ught into
Fitzhugh’s nonsense: Harrison Berry, an Atlanta slave, published a pamphlet called
Slavery and
Abolitionism, as Viewed by a Georgia Slave, in which he warned slaves contemplat
ing escape to
the North that “subordination of the poor colored man [there], is greater than tha
t of the slave
South.”58 And, he added, “a Southern farm is the beau ideal of Communism; it is a jo
int concern,
in which the slave consumes more than the master…and is far happier, because altho
ugh the
concern may fail, he is always sure of support.”59
Where Fitzhugh’s argument differed from that of Berry and others was in advocating
slavery for
whites: “Liberty is an evil which government is intended to correct,” he maintained
in Sociology
for the South.60 Like many of his Northern utopian counterparts, Fitzhugh viewed
every
“relationship” as a form of bondage or oppression. Marriage, parenting, and property
ownership of
any kind merely constituted different forms of slavery. Here, strange as it may
seem, Fitzhugh had
come full circle to the radical abolitionists of the North. Stephen Pearl Andrew
s, William Lloyd
Garrison, and, earlier, Robert Owen had all contended that marriage constituted
an unequal,
oppressive relationship.61 Radical communitarian abolitionists, of course, endea
vored to minimize
or ignore these similarities to the South’s greatest intellectual defender of slav
ery.62 But the
distinctions between Owen’s subjection to the tyranny of the commune and Fitzhugh’s “b
lessings”
of “liberation” through the lash nearly touched, if they did not overlap, in theory.
Equally ironic was the way in which Fitzhugh stood the North’s free-labor argument
on its head.
Lincoln and other Northerners maintained that laborers must be free to contract
with anyone for
their work. Free labor meant the freedom to negotiate with any employer. Fitzhug
h, however,
arguing that all contract labor was essentially unfree, called factory work slav
e labor. In an
astounding inversion, he then maintained that since slaves were free from all de
cisions, they truly
were the free laborers. Thus, northern wage labor (in his view) was slave labor,
whereas actual
slave labor was free labor!
Aside from Fitzhugh’s more exotic defenses of slavery, religion and the law offere
d the two best
protections available to Southerners to perpetuate human bondage. Both the Prote
stant churches
and the Roman Catholic Church (which had a relatively minor influence in the Sou
th, except for
Missouri and Louisiana) permitted or enthusiastically embraced slavery as a mean
s to convert
“heathen” Africans, and in 1822 the South Carolina Baptist Association published the
first defenses
of slavery that saw it as a “positive good” by biblical standards. By the mid-1800s,
many Protestant
leaders had come to see slavery as the only hope of salvation for Africans, thus
creating the
“ultimate rationalization.”63 Dr. Samuel A. Cartwright of New Orleans reflected this
view when he
wrote in 1852 that it was impossible to “Christianize the negro without the interv
ention of
slavery.”64
Such a defense of slavery presented a massive dilemma, not only to the church, b
ut also to all
practicing Christians and, indeed, all Southerners: if slavery was for the purpo
se of Christianizing
the heathen, why were there so few efforts made to evangelize blacks and, more i
mportant, to
encourage them to read the Bible? Still more important, why were slaves who conv
erted not
automatically freed on the grounds that having become “new creatures” in Christ, the
y were now
equals? To say the least, these were uncomfortable questions that most clergy an
d lay alike in Dixie
avoided entirely.
Ironically, many of the antislavery societies got their start in the South, wher
e the first three
periodicals to challenge slavery appeared, although all three soon moved to free
states or
Maryland.65
Not surprisingly, after the Nat Turner rebellion in August 1831, which left fift
y-seven whites
brutally murdered, many Southern churches abandoned their view that slavery was
a necessary evil
and accepted the desirability of slavery as a means of social control. Turner’s wa
s not the first
active resistance to slavery. Colonial precedents included the Charleston Plot,
and in 1807 two
shiploads of slaves starved themselves to death rather than submit to the auctio
n block. In 1822 a
South Carolina court condemned Denmark Vesey to the gallows for, it claimed, lea
ding an
uprising. Vesey, a slave who had won a lottery and purchased his freedom with th
e winnings,
established an African Methodist Church in Charleston, which had three thousand
members.
Although it was taken as gospel for more than a century that Vesey actually led
a rebellion,
historian Michael Johnson, obtaining the original court records, has recently ca
st doubt on whether
any slave revolt occurred at all. Johnson argues that the court, using testimony
from a few slaves
obtained through torture or coercion, framed Vesey and many others. Ultimately,
he and thirty-five
“conspirators” were hanged, but the “rebellion” may well have been a creation of the cou
rt’s.66
In addition to the Vesey and Nat Turner uprisings, slave runaways were becoming
more common,
as demonstrated by the thousands who escaped and thousands more who were hunted
down and
maimed or killed. Nat Turner, however, threw a different scare into Southerners
because he
claimed as the inspiration for his actions the prompting of the Holy Spirit.67 A
“sign appearing in
the heavens,” he told Thomas Gray, would indicate the proper time to “fight against
the
Serpent.”68 The episode brought Virginia to a turning point—emancipation or complete
repression—and it chose the latter. All meetings of free blacks or mulattoes were
prohibited, even
“under the pretense or pretext of attending a religious meeting.”69 Anne Arundel Cou
nty,
Maryland, enacted a resolution requiring vigilante committees to visit the house
s of every free
black “regularly” for “prompt correction of misconduct,” or in other words, to intimidat
e them into
staying indoors.70 The message of the Vesey/Turner rebellions was also clear to
whites: blacks had
to be kept from Christianity, and Christianity from blacks, unless a new variant
of Christianity
could be concocted that explained black slavery in terms of the “curse of Ham” or so
me other
misreading of scripture.
If religion constituted one pillar of proslavery enforcement, the law constitute
d another. Historian
David Grimsted, examining riots in the antebellum period, found that by 1835 the
civic
disturbances had taken on a distinctly racial flavor. Nearly half of the riots i
n 1835 were slave or
racially related, but those in the South uniquely had overtones of mob violence
supported, or at the
very least, tolerated, by the legal authorities.71 Censorship of mails and newsp
apers from the
North, forced conscription of free Southern whites into slave patrols, and infri
ngements on free
speech all gradually laid the groundwork for the South to become a police state;
meanwhile,
controversies over free speech and the right of assembly gave the abolitionists
the issue with which
they ultimately went mainstream: the problem of white rights affected by the cul
ture and practice of
slave mastery.72
By addressing white rights to free speech, instead of black rights, abolitionist
s sanitized their views,
which in many cases lay so outside the accepted norms that to fully publicize th
em would risk
ridicule and dismissal. This had the effect of putting them on the right side of
history. The free-love
and communitarian movements’ association with antislavery was unfortunate and serv
ed to
discredit many of the genuine Christian reformers who had stood in the vanguard
of the abolition
movement.73
No person provided a better target for Southern polemicists than William Lloyd G
arrison. A
meddler in the truest sense of the word, Garrison badgered his colleagues who sm
oked, drank, or
indulged in any other habit of which he did not approve. Abandoned by his father
at age three,
Garrison had spent his early life in extreme poverty. Forced to sell molasses on
the street and
deliver wood, Garrison was steeped in insecurity. He received little education u
ntil he apprenticed
with a printer, before striking out on his own. That venture failed. Undeterred,
Garrison edited the
National Philanthropist, a “paper devoted to the suppression of intemperance and i
ts Kindred
vices.”74 Provided a soapbox, Garrison proceeded to attack gambling, lotteries, sa
bbath violations,
and war. Garrison suddenly saw himself as a celebrity, telling others his name w
ould be “known to
the world.”
In his paper Genius of Universal Emancipation, Garrison criticized a merchant in
volved in the
slave trade who had Garrison thrown into prison for libel. That fed his martyr c
omplex even more.
Once released, Garrison joined another abolitionist paper, The Liberator, where
he expressed his
hatred of slavery, and of the society that permitted it—even under the Constitutio
n—in a cascade of
violent language, calling Southern congressmen “thieves” and “robbers.”75
Abolitionism brought Garrison into contact with other reformers, including Susan
B. Anthony, the
Grimké sisters, Frederick Douglass, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Each had an agenda
, to be sure,
but all agreed on abolition as a starting point. Garrison and Douglass eventuall
y split over whether
the Constitution should be used as a tool to eliminate slavery: Douglass answere
d in the
affirmative, Garrison, having burned a copy of the Constitution, obviously answe
red in the
negative.
The Political Pendulum
From 1848 to 1860, the South rode a roller-coaster of euphoria followed by depre
ssion. Several
times solid guarantees for the continued protection of slavery appeared to be wi
thin the grasp of
Southerners, only to be suddenly snatched away by new and even more foreboding s
igns of
Northern abolitionist sentiment. This pendulum began with the election of Zachar
y Taylor,
continued with the California statehood question, accelerated its swing with the
admission of
Kansas, and finally spun out of control with the Dred Scott decision and its rep
ercussions.
The first swing of the pendulum came with the election of 1848. Van Buren’s assump
tions that
only a “northern man of southern principles” could hold the nation together as presi
dent continued
to direct the Democratic Party, which nominated Lewis Cass of Michigan. Cass ori
ginated a
concept later made famous by Illinois Senator Stephen Douglas, popular sovereign
ty. As Cass and
Douglas understood it, only the people of a territory, during the process by whi
ch they developed
their state constitution, could prohibit slavery. Congress, whether in its funct
ion as administrator of
the territories or in its national legislative function, had no role in legislat
ing slavery. It was a
convenient out, in that Cass and Douglas could claim they were personally oppose
d to slavery
without ever having to undertake action against it, thus protecting them from So
uthern criticism
over any new free-soil states that emerged from the process. In reality, popular
sovereignty ensured
exactly what transpired in Kansas: that both pro-and antislavery forces would se
ek to rig the state
constitutional convention through infusions of (often temporary) immigrants. Onc
e the deed was
done, and a proslavery constitution in place, the recent arrivals could leave if
they chose, but
slavery would remain.
Whigs, too, realized that the proslavery vote was strong, and the free-soil vote
not strong enough, to
run strictly on slavery or related economic issues. They needed a candidate who
would not
antagonize the South, and many prominent Whigs fell in behind Zachary “Old Rough-a
nd-Ready”
Taylor, the Mexican War general. Taylor, however, was a Louisiana slaveholder wh
o offended
free-soil Whigs, who distrusted him. Taylor’s ownership of slaves cost him within
the party: except
for “his negroes and cotton bales,” one congressman wrote, he would have won the nom
ination
without opposition.76 Opposing Taylor was Henry Clay, ready for yet a fifth run
at the presidency.
But when Clay delivered an important address in Lexington, Kentucky, disavowing
any acquisition
of new (slave) territories in the Mexican War, he lost Southern support. His Apr
il 1844 Raleigh
letter, in which he opposed annexation of Texas, did him irreparable damage.
Privately, Taylor was less Whiggish than he let on. He told intimates that the i
dea of a national
bank “is dead & will not be revived in my time” and promised to raise tariffs only f
or revenue.77
But Taylor benefited from a reviving economy, which made the election almost ent
irely about
personality, where he had the reputation and the edge. A third party, the new Fr
ee Soil Party,
siphoned off both Democrats and Whigs who opposed slavery. The Free-Soilers nomi
nated Martin
Van Buren, demonstrating the futility of Van Buren’s earlier efforts to exclude sl
avery from the
national politcal debate. Van Buren’s forces drew in abolitionists, Liberty Party
refugees, and
“conscience Whigs” who opposed slavery under the slogan, “Free Soil, Free Speech, Free
Labor,
and Free Men.”
Free-Soilers made a strong showing at the polls, raking in more than 10 percent
of the vote, but did
not change the outcome. Taylor won by an electoral vote margin of 163 to 137 and
by a 5 percent
margin in the popular vote. Virtually all of the Free-Soil ballots would have go
ne to the Whigs,
who, despite Taylor’s slave ownership, were viewed as the antislavery party. It is
probable that
Ohio would have gone to Taylor if not for the Free-Soilers.
The new president was nevertheless something of an odd duck. He had never voted
in an American
election. He relished his no-party affiliation. Most Americans learned what they
knew of him
through newspaper accounts of his remarkable military victories. Indeed, in a se
nse Taylor was the
first outsider ever to run for the presidency. Jackson, although different from
the elites who had
dominated the White House, nevertheless willingly employed party machinery for h
is victory.
Taylor, however, stressed his antiparty, almost renegade image much the way the
Populist
candidates of the 1880s and independents like H. Ross Perot did in the 1990s. Th
e outsider appeal
proved powerful because it gave people a sense that they could “vote for the man,” l
argely on
reputation or personality, without hashing out all the tough decisions demanded
by a party
platform. A Taylor supporter in Massachusetts claimed that enthusiasm for Taylor
“springs from
spontaneous combustion and will sweep all before it.”78 To assuage the concerns of
Northern
Whigs, Taylor accepted Millard Fillmore of Buffalo as his vice president.
In policy, Taylor surprised both parties. Although he sympathized with the South’s
need to protect
slavery, he wanted to keep it out of California and New Mexico. He announced tha
t in due course
California, Utah, and New Mexico would apply for statehood directly, without goi
ng through the
territorial stage. Under the circumstances, the states themselves, not Congress,
would determine
whether they allowed slaves. Taylor hoped to finesse the Southerners, reasoning
that since they had
already stated that they expected these territories to be free soil, there would
be no need for the
Wilmot Proviso. Nevertheless, he included a strong warning against the kind of d
isunion talk that
had circulated in the South. When an October 1849 convention laid plans for a me
eting of delegates
from all the slaveholding states in Nashville the following year, attendees issu
ed statements
favoring disunion by leaders such as Congressman Robert Toombs of Georgia. Incre
asingly, such
sentiments were invoked, and astute politicians of both sections took notice.
California presented an opportunity for Henry Clay to regain the initiative he h
ad lost in the
nominating process. He started machinery in motion to bring California into the
Union—a plan that
constituted nothing less than a final masterful stroke at compromise by the agin
g Kentuckian. Clay
introduced legislation to combine the eight major points of contention over slav
ery in the new
territories into four legislative headings. Then, his oratorical skills undimini
shed, Clay took the
national stage one last time.
His first resolution called for California’s admission as a free state; second, th
e status of the Utah
and New Mexico territories was to be determined by popular sovereignty. Third, h
e proposed to fix
the boundary of Texas where it then stood, leaving New Mexico intact. This provi
sion also
committed the federal government to assuming the debts of Texas, which was guara
nteed to garner
some support in the Lone Star State. Fourth, he sought to eliminate the slave tr
ade in the District of
Columbia and, finally, he offered a fugitive slave law that promised to deliver
escaped slaves from
one state to another.
Debate over Clay’s compromise bill brought John Calhoun from his sickbed (although
Senator
James Mason of Virginia read Calhoun’s speech), followed by stirring oratory from
Daniel
Webster. Both agreed that disunion was unthinkable. To the surprise of many, nei
ther attacked the
resolutions. Quite the contrary, Webster promised not to include Wilmot as a “taun
t or a reproach,”
thereby extending the olive branch to the South. The debates culminated with Tay
lor supporter
William H. Seward’s famous “higher law” remark, that “there is a higher law than the
Constitution,” meaning that if the Constitution permitted slavery, Seward felt mor
ally justified in
ignoring it in favor of a higher moral principle.79 Meanwhile, Clay thought that
, tactically, he had
guaranteed passage of the bill by tying the disparate parts together in a single
package.
While Clay and his allies worked to defuse the sectional crisis, Taylor became i
ll and died on the
Fourth of July. Millard Fillmore assumed the presidency amidst a rapidly unravel
ing controversy
over the Texas-New Mexico border. At the end of July, Clay’s compromise measures w
ere carved
away from the omnibus bill and were defeated individually. Only Utah’s territorial
status passed.
California statehood, the Texas boundary, the fugitive slave law, all went down
to stunning defeat.
The strain proved so great on the seventy-three-year-old Clay that he left for K
entucky to
recuperate. Jefferson Davis of Mississippi and Seward, archenemies of the compro
mise from
opposite ends of the spectrum, celebrated openly. Their victory dance, however,
did not last long.
Another rising force in American politics had stood patiently outside these cont
entious debates:
Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois. Born in Vermont, Douglas studied law before movi
ng to Ohio in
1833. There he contracted typhoid fever, recovered, and moved on to Illinois. A
natural politician,
Douglas had supported continuing the 36-degree 30-minute line and backed Polk on
the Mexican
War. In 1848 his new wife inherited more than one hundred slaves, which tarnishe
d his image in
Illinois; he nevertheless was elected senator by the Illinois legislature in 184
6, after which he
chaired the important committee on territories. From that position, Douglas coul
d advance popular
sovereignty in the territories.
When it came to the Compromise of 1850, Douglas saw the key to passage as exactl
y the opposite
of Clay’s strategy, namely, bringing up the various resolutions again independentl
y and attempting
to forge coalitions on each separately. Moreover, Fillmore announced his full su
pport of the
compromise and, after accepting the resignation of the Taylor cabinet, named Web
ster as his
secretary of state.80 Meanwhile, Douglas maneuvered the Texas boundary measure t
hrough
Congress. One explosive issue was settled, and Douglas quickly followed with ind
ividual bills that
admitted California, established New Mexico as a territory, and provided a fugit
ive slave law.
Utah’s territorial bill also passed. The final vote on the Fugitive Slave Law saw
many Northerners
abstaining, allowing the South to obtain federal enforcement. Douglas’s strategy w
as brilliant—and
doomed. Lawmakers drank all night after its passage and woke up with terrible ha
ngovers and a
sense of dread.
Moreover, whether it was truly a compromise is in doubt: few Southerners voted f
or any Northern
provision, and few Northerners ever voted for any of the pro-Southern resolution
s. All the
“compromise” came from a group of Ohio Valley representatives who voted for both mea
sures, on
opposing sides of the issue. The very states that would become the bloody battle
grounds if war
broke out—Maryland, Tennessee, Missouri, Kentucky—provided the entire compromise ele
ment.
For the North and South, however, the compromise was an agreement to maneuver fo
r still stronger
positions, with the North betting on congressional representation as its advanta
ge and the South
wagering on federal guarantees on runaway slaves.
Fillmore called the compromise “final and irrevocable,” not noticing that secessioni
sts had nearly
won control of four lower Southern state governments.81 By supporting the compro
mise, Fillmore
also ensured that the antislavery wing of the Whig party would block his nominat
ion in 1852 in
favor of Winfield Scott. (Scott’s enemies referred to him as Old Fuss and Feathers
while his
supporters called him by the more affectionate Old Chippewa or Old Chapultapec,
after his military
victories.) A Virginian, Scott hoped to reprise the “Whig southerner” success of Tay
lor four years
earlier. The Democrats, meanwhile, closed ranks around their candidate, Franklin
Pierce of New
Hampshire. Neither side took seriously the virulent secessionist talk bubbling f
orth from the lower
South.
The Pendulum Swings North
Most man-made laws have unintended consequences. Such is human nature that even
the wisest of
legislators can seldom foresee every response to the acts of congresses, parliam
ents, and dumas.
Few times, however, have legislators so misjudged the ramifications from their l
abor than with the
Fugitive Slave Law.
The law contained several provisions that Southerners saw as reasonable and nece
ssary, but which
were guaranteed to turn ambivalent Northerners into full-fledged abolitionists.
Runaway slaves
were denied any right to jury trial, including in the jurisdiction to which they
had escaped. Special
commissions, and not regular civil courts, handled the runaways’ cases. Commission
ers received
ten dollars for every runaway delivered to claimants, but only five dollars for
cases in which the
accused was set free, and the law empowered federal marshals to summon any free
citizen to assist
in the enforcement of the act. Not only did these provisions expose free blacks
to outright capture
under fraudulent circumstances, but now it also made free whites in the North ac
cessories to their
enslavement. When it came to the personal morality of Northerners, purchasing co
tton made by
slaves was one thing; actually helping to shackle and send a human back to the c
otton fields was
entirely different. The issue turned the tables on states’ rights proponents by ma
king fugitive slaves
now a federal responsilibility.
The law had the effect of both personalizing slavery to Northerners and inflamin
g their sense of
righteous indignation about being dragged into the entire process. And it did no
t take long until the
law was applied ex post facto to slaves who had run away in the past. In 1851, f
or example, an
Indiana black named Mitchum was abducted from his home under the auspices of the
act and
delivered to a claimant who alleged Mitchum had escaped from him nineteen years
earlier.82 The
trials were stacked against blacks: the closer one got to the South, the less li
kely commissioners
were to take the word of Negroes over whites, and any black could be identified
as a runaway.
Northerners responded, not with cooperation, but violence. The arrest of a Detro
it black man
produced a mass meeting that required military force to disperse; a Pennsylvania
mob of free
blacks killed a slave owner attempting to corral a fugitive; and in Syracuse and
Milwaukee crowds
broke into public buildings to rescue alleged fugitives.
Politicians and editors fed the fire, declaring that the law embodied every evil
that the radical
abolitionists had warned about. Webster described the law as “indescribably base a
nd wicked”;
Theodore Parker called it “a hateful statute of kidnappers”; and Emerson termed it “a
filthy law.”83
Whig papers urged citizens to “trample the law in the dust,” and the city council of
Chicago
adopted resolutions declaring Northern representatives who supported it “traitors” l
ike “Benedict
Arnold and Judas Iscariot.”84 Even moderates, such as Edward Everett, recommended
that
Northerners disobey the law by refusing to enforce it. Throughout Ohio, town mee
tings branded
any Northern officials who helped enforce the laws as “an enemy of the human race.”8
5
Even had this angry resistance not appeared, there remained many practical probl
ems with the law.
Enforcement was expensive; Boston spent five thousand dollars to apprehend and r
eturn one slave,
and after that it never enforced the law again. Part of the expense came from th
e unflagging efforts
of the Underground Railroad, a system of friendly shelters aiding slaves’ escape a
ttempts. Begun
sometime around 1842, the railroad involved (it was claimed) some three thousand
operators who
assisted more than fifty thousand fugitives out of slavery in the decade before
the Civil War. One
must be skeptical about the numbers ascribed to the Underground Railroad because
it was in the
interest of both sides—obviously for different reasons—to inflate the influence of t
he network.86
Census data, for example, does not support the large numbers of escaped slaves i
n the North, and
there is reason to think that much of the undocumented “success” of the Underground
Railroad was
fueled by a desire of radicals after the fact to have associated themselves with
such a heroic
undertaking.
Far more important than citizen revolts or daring liberation of slaves in Northe
rn jails was the
publication, beginning in 1851, of a serial work of fiction in the Washington-ba
sed National Era.
Harriet Beecher Stowe, the author, and the daughter of abolitionist preacher Hen
ry Ward Beecher,
saw her serial take hold of the popular imagination like nothing else in America
n literary history.
Compiled and published as Uncle Tom’s Cabin in 1852, the best seller sold 300,000
copies in only
a few months, eventually selling more than 3 million in America and 3.5 million
more abroad.87
Stowe never visited a plantation, and probably only glimpsed slaves in passing n
ear Kentucky or
Maryland, and her portrayal of slavery was designed to paint it in the harshest
light. Uncle Tom’s
Cabin dramatized the plight of a slave, Uncle Tom, and his family, who worked fo
r benign but
financially troubled Arthur Shelby. Shelby had to put the slaves up for sale, le
ading to the escape of
the slave maid, Eliza, who with her son, ultimately crossed the half-frozen Ohio
River as the
bloodhounds chased her. Uncle Tom, one of the lead characters, was “sold down the
river” to a
hard life in the fields, and was beaten to death by the evil slave driver, Simon
Legree. Even in
death, Tom, in Christ-like fashion, forgives Legree and his overseers.
The novel had every effect for which Stowe hoped, and probably more. As historia
n David Potter
aptly put it, “Men who had remained unmoved by real fugitives wept for Tom under t
he lash and
cheered for Eliza with the bloodhounds on her track.”88 Or as Jeffrey Hummel put t
he equation,
“For every four votes that [Franklin] Pierce received from free states in 1852, on
e copy of Uncle
Tom’s Cabin was sold.”89
Uncle Tom’s Cabin quickly made it to the theater, which gave it an even wider audi
ence, and by
the time the war came, Abraham Lincoln greeted Stowe with the famous line, “So you’r
e the little
woman who wrote the book that made this great war.”90 Compared to whatever tremors
the initial
resistance to the Fugitive Slave Law produced, Stowe’s book generated a seismic sh
ock. The
South, reveling in its apparent moral victory less than two years earlier, found
the pendulum
swinging against it again, with the new momentum coming from developments beyond
American
shores.
Franklin Pierce and Foreign Intrigue
Millard Fillmore’s brief presidency hobbled to its conclusion as the Democrats gai
ned massively in
the off-term elections of 1850. Ohio’s antislavery Whig Ben Wade, reminiscing abou
t John Tyler’s
virtual defection from Whig policies and then Fillmore’s inability to implement th
e Whig agenda,
exclaimed, “God save us from Whig Vice Presidents.”91 Democrats sensed their old pow
er
returning. Holding two thirds of the House, they hoped to recapture the White Ho
use in 1852,
which would be critical to the appointment of federal judges. They hewed to the
maxim of finding a
northern man of southern principles, specifically Franklin Pierce, a Vermont law
yer and ardent
expansionist.92
Having attained the rank of brigadier general in the Mexican War, Pierce could n
ot be successfully
flanked by another Whig soldier, such as the eventual nominee, Winfield Scott. H
is friendship with
his fellow Bowdoin alumnus, writer Nathaniel Hawthorne, paid dividends when Hawt
horne agreed
to ink Pierce’s campaign biography. Hawthorne, of course, omitted any mention of P
ierce’s
drinking problem, producing a thoroughly romanticized and unrealistic book.93
Pierce hardly needed Hawthorne’s assistance to defeat Scott, whose antislavery sta
nce was too
abrasive. Winning a commanding 254 electoral votes to Scott’s 42, with a 300,000-v
ote popular
victory, Pierce dominated the Southern balloting. Free-Soiler John Hale had tall
ied only half of Van
Buren’s total four years earlier, but still the direction of the popular vote cont
inued to work against
the Democrats. Soon a majority of Americans would be voting for other opposition
parties. The
1852 election essentially finished the Whigs, who had become little more than me
-too Democrats
on the central issue of the day.
Pierce inherited a swirling plot (some of it scarcely concealed) to acquire Cuba
for further slavery
expansion. Mississippi’s Senator Jefferson Davis brazenly announced, “Cuba must be o
urs.”94
Albert Brown, the other Mississippi senator, went further, urging the acquisitio
n of Central
American states: “Yes, I want these Countries for the spread of slavery. I would s
pread the
blessings of slavery, like a religion of our Divine Master,” and publicly even dec
lared that he would
extend slavery into the North, though adding, “I would not force it on them.”95 Brow
n’s words
terrified Northerners, suggesting the “slave power” had no intention of ceasing its
expansion, even
into free states.96
Pierce appointed Davis secretary of war and made Caleb Cushing, a Massachusetts
manifest
destiny man, attorney general. Far from distancing himself from expansionist fer
vor, Pierce fell in
behind it. Davis, seeking a Southern transcontinental railroad route that would
benefit the cotton
South, sought to acquire a strip of land in northwest Mexico along what is moder
n-day Arizona.
The forty-five thousand square miles ostensibly lay in territory governed by pop
ular sovereignty,
but the South was willing to trade a small strip of land that potentially could
be free soil for Davis’s
railroad. Senator James Gadsden, a Democrat from South Carolina, persuaded Mexic
an president
Santa Anna, back in office yet again, to sell the acreage for $10 million. Santa
Anna had already
spent nearly all the reparations given Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
five years
earlier—much of it on fancy uniforms for his military—and now needed more money to o
utfit his
army. As a result, the Gadsden Purchase became law in 1853.
Meanwhile, American ministers to a conference in Belgium nearly provoked an inte
rnational
incident over Cuba in 1854. For some time, American adventurers had been slippin
g onto the
island, plaguing the Spanish. Overtures to Spain by the U.S. government to purch
ase Cuba for $130
million were rejected, but Spain’s ability to control the island remained question
able. During a
meeting of ministers from England, France, Spain, and the United States in Osten
d, Belgium,
warnings were heard that a slave revolt might soon occur in Cuba, leading Americ
an ministers to
draft a confidential memorandum suggesting that if the island became too destabi
lized, the United
States should simply take Cuba from Spain. Word of this Ostend Manifesto reached
the public,
forcing Pierce to repudiate it. He also cracked down on plans by rogue politicia
ns like former
Mississippi governor John A. Quitman to finance and plan the insertion of Americ
an soldiers of
fortune into Cuba. (Quitman had been inspired by Tennessean William Walker’s faile
d 1855
takeover of Nicaragua.)97 Taken together, Pierce’s actions dealt the coup de grâce t
o manifest
destiny, and later expansionists would not even use the term.
Southern Triumph in Kansas
Despite smarting from the stiff resistance engendered by Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Southe
rners in 1854
could claim victory. Despite several near riots over the Fugitive Slave Act, it
remained the law of
the land, and Stowe’s book could not change that. Meanwhile, the South was about t
o receive a
major windfall. An innocuous proposal to build a transcontinental railroad comma
nded little
sectional interest. In fact, it promised to open vast new territory to slavery a
nd accelerate the
momentum toward war.
Since the 1840s, dreamers imagined railroads that would connect California with
states east of the
Mississippi. Asa Whitney, a New York merchant who produced one of the first of t
he
transcontinental plans in 1844, argued for a privately constructed railroad whos
e expenses were
offset by grants of public lands.98 By 1852 the idea had attracted Stephen Dougl
as, the Illinois
Democrat senator with presidential aspirations, who rightly saw that the transco
ntinental would
make Chicago the trade hub of the entire middle United States. With little contr
oversy the
congressional delegations from Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois introduced a bill to
organize a
Nebraska Territory, the northern part of the old Louisiana Purchase, and, once a
gain, illegally erase
Indian claims to lands there.99
Suddenly, the South woke up. Since the Northwest Ordinance and Missouri Compromi
se, the
understanding was that for every free state added to the Union, there would be a
new slave state.
Now a proposal was on the table that would soon add at least one new free state,
with no sectional
balance (the state would be free because the proposed Nebraska territory lay nor
th of the Missouri
Compromise 36-degree 30-minute line). In order to appease (and court) his concer
ned Southern
Democrat brethren, Douglas therefore recrafted the Nebraska bill. The new law, t
he infamous
Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, assuaged the South by revoking the thirty-three-yea
r-old 36/30
Missouri Compromise line and replacing its restriction of slavery with popular s
overeignty—a vote
on slavery by the people of the territory. In one stroke of the pen, Douglas abo
lished a thirty-year
covenant and opened the entire Lousiana Purchase to slavery!100
Although the idea seems outrageous today—and was inflammatory at the time—from Steph
en
Douglas’s narrow viewpoint it seemed like an astute political move. Douglas reason
ed that, when
all was said and done, the Great Plains territories would undoubtedly vote for f
ree soil (cotton
won’t grow in Nebraska). In the meantime, however, Douglas would have given the So
uth a fresh
chance at the Louisiana Territory, keeping it on his side for the upcoming presi
dential election. The
Kansas-Nebraska Act, Douglas naively believed, would win him more political frie
nds than
enemies and gain his home state a Chicago railroad empire in the process.
Douglas sooned learned he was horribly mistaken about the Kansas-Nebraska Act. A
fter its
passage, a contagion swept the country every bit as strong as the one sparked by
Uncle Tom’s
Cabin. Free-Soilers, now including many Northern Democrats, arose in furious pro
test. The
Democrats shattered over Kansas-Nebraska.
Meanwhile, the stunned Douglas, who had raised the whole territorial tar baby as
a means to obtain
a railroad and the presidency, succeeded only in fracturing his own party and st
arting a national
crisis.101
The pendulum appeared to have swung the South’s way again with the potential for n
ew slave
states in the territory of Louisiana Purchase, sans the Missouri Compromise line
. Instead, the South
soon found itself with yet another hollow victory. The ink had scarcely dried on
the Kansas-
Nebraska Act than Northern Democrats sustained massive defeats. Of ninety-one fr
ee-state House
seats held by the Democrats in 1852, only twenty-five were still in the party’s ha
nds at the end of
the elections, and none of the last sixty-six seats were ever recovered before t
he war.
Before the appointed Kansas territorial governor arrived, various self-defense a
ssociations and
vigilante groups had sprung up in Missouri—and as far away as New York—in a strategy
by both
sides to pack Kansas with voters who would advance the agenda of the group spons
oring them. The
Massachusetts Emigrant Aid Society, and others like it, was established to fund “s
ettlers” (armed
with new Sharp repeating rifles) as they moved to Kansas. Families soon followed
the men into the
territory, a prospect that hardly diminished suspicions of proslavery Kansans. I
mages of armies of
hirelings and riffraff, recruited from all over the North to “preach abolitionism,
and dig
underground Rail-roads,” consumed the Southern imagination.102 The Kansas-Nebraska
Act
allowed virtually any “resident” to vote, meaning that whichever side could insert e
nough voters
would control the state constitutional convention. Thousands of proslavery men,
known as Border
Ruffians or “pukes” (because of their affinity for hard liquor and its aftereffects)
crossed the border
from Missouri. The were led by one of the state’s senators, David Atchison, who vo
wed to “kill
every God-damned abolitionist in the district.” And they elected a proslavery majo
rity to the
convention.103 Most real settlers, in fact, were largely indifferent to slavery,
and were more
concerned with establishing legal title to their lands.
Missouri had a particularly acute interest in seeing that Kansas did not become
a free-soil state.
Starting about a hundred miles above St. Louis, a massive belt of slavery stretc
hed across the state,
producing a strip in which 15 percent of the population or more was made up of s
laves lying along
more than three-fourths of the border with Kansas. If Kansas became a free-soil
state, it would
create a free zone below a slave belt for the first time in American history.104
The proslavery legislature, meeting at Lecompton, enacted draconian laws, includ
ing making it a
felony to even question publicly the right to have slaves. Unwilling to accept w
hat they saw as a
fraudulent constitutional convention, free-soil forces held their own convention
at Topeka in the
fall of 1855, and they went so far as to prematurely name their own senators! No
w the tragic
absurdity of the “house divided” surely became apparent to even the most dedicated m
oderates, for
not only was the nation split in two, but Kansas, the first test of Douglas’s popu
lar sovereignty,
divided into two bitterly hostile and irreconcilable camps with two constitution
al conventions, two
capitals, and two sets of senators! Proslavery and free-soil forces took up arms
, each viewing the
government, constitution, and laws of the other as illegitimate and deceitfully
gained. And if there
were not already enough guns in Kansas, the Reverend Henry Ward Beecher’s congrega
tion
supplied rifles in boxes marked “Bibles,” gaining the sobriquet Beecher’s Bibles. Beec
her’s
followers were not alone: men and arms flowed into Kansas from North and South.
Bloodshed
could not be avoided; it began in the fall of 1855.
A great deal of mythology, perpetuated by pamphleteers from both sides, created
ominoussounding
phrases to describe actions that, in other times, might constitute little more t
han disturbing
the peace. For example, there was the “sack of Lawrence,” where in 1856 proslavery f
orces
overturned some printing presses and fired a few cannon balls—ineffectively—at the F
ree States
Hotel in Lawrence. Soon, however, enough, real violence ensued. Bleeding Kansas
became the
locus of gun battles, often involving out-of-state mercenaries, while local law
enforcement
officials—even when they honestly attempted to maintain order—stood by helplessly, l
acking
sufficient numbers to make arrests or keep the peace.
Half a continent away, another episode of violence occurred, but in a wholly dif
ferent—and
unexpected—context. The day before the “sack” occurred, Senator Charles Sumner deliver
ed a
major vitriolic speech entitled “The Crime Against Kansas.” His attacks ranged far b
eyond the
issues of slavery and Kansas, vilifying both Stephen Douglas and Senator Andrew
Butler of South
Carolina in highly personal and caustic terms. Employing strong sexual imagery,
Sumner referred
to the “rape” of “virgin territory,” a “depraved longing” for new slave territory, “the har
,
slavery,” which was the “mistress” of Senator Butler. No one stepped up to defend Doug
las, and,
given his recent reception among the southern Democrats, he probably did not exp
ect any
champions. Butler, on the other hand, was an old man with a speech impediment, a
nd the attacks
were unfair and downright mean.
Congressman Preston Brooks, a relative of Butler’s and a fellow South Carolinian,
thought the line
of honor had been crossed. Since Sumner would not consent to a duel, Brooks dete
rmined to teach
him a lesson. Marching up to the senator’s seat, Brooks spoke harshly to Sumner, t
hen proceeded to
use his large cane to bash the senator repeatedly, eventually breaking the cane
over Sumner’s head.
The attack left Sumner with such psychological damage that he could not function
for two years,
and according to Northern pamphleteers, Brooks had nearly killed the senator. Th
e South labeled
Brooks a hero, and “Brooks canes” suddenly came into vogue. The city of Charleston p
resented
him with a new walking stick inscribed hit him again! Northerners, on the other
hand, kept
Sumner’s seat vacant, but the real symbolism was all too well understood. If a pow
erful white man
could be caned on the Senate floor, what chance did a field slave have against m
ore cruel beatings?
It reinforced the abolitionists’ claim that in a society that tolerated slavery an
ywhere, no free
person’s rights were safe, regardless of color.
Meanwhile, back in Kansas, violence escalated further when John Brown, a member
of a free-soil
volunteer group in Kansas, led seven others (including four of his sons) on a vi
gilante-style
assassination of proslavery men. Using their broadswords, Brown’s avengers hunted
along
Pottawatomie Creek, killing and mutilating five men and boys in what was termed
the
Pottawatomie massacre.
Northern propagandists, who were usually more adept than their Southern colleagu
es, quickly
gained the high ground, going so far as to argue that Brown had not actually kil
led anyone. One
paper claimed the murders had been the work of Comanches.105 Taken together, the
sack of
Lawrence, the caning of Senator Butler, and the Pottawatomie massacre revealed t
he growing
power of the press to inflame, distort, and propagandize for ideological purpose
s. It was a final
irony that the institution of the partisan press, which the Jacksonians had inve
nted to ensure their
elections by gagging debate on slavery, now played a pivotal role in acceleratin
g the coming
conflict.
The Demise of the Whigs
Whatever remained of the southern Whigs withered away after the Kansas-Nebraska
Act. The
Whigs had always been a party tied to the American system but unwilling to take
a stand on the
major moral issue of the day, and that was its downfall. Yet in failing to addre
ss slavery, how did
the Whigs significantly differ from the Democrats? Major differences over the ta
riff, a national
bank, and land sales did not separate the two parties as much as has been assume
d in the past.
Those issues, although important on one level, were completely irrelevant on the
higher plane
where the national debate now moved.
As the Democrats grew stronger in the South, the Whigs, rather than growing stro
nger in the North,
slipped quietly into history. Scott’s 1852 campaign had shown some signs of a nort
hern dominance
by polling larger majorities in some northern states than Taylor had in 1848. Ye
t the Whigs
disintegrated. Two new parties dismembered them. One, the American Party, arose
out of negative
reaction to an influx of Irish and German Catholic immigrants. The American Part
y tapped into the
anti-immigrant perceptions that still burned within large segments of the countr
y. Based largely in
local lodges, where secrecy was the byword, the party became known as the Know-N
othings for
the members’ reply when asked about their organization, “I know nothing.” A strong ant
i-Masonic
element also infused the Know-Nothings.
Know-Nothings shocked the Democrats by scoring important successes in the 1854 e
lections,
sweeping virtually every office in Massachusetts with 63 percent of the vote. Kn
ow-Nothings also
harvested numerous votes in New York, and for a moment appeared to be the wave o
f the future.
Fillmore himself decided in 1854 to infiltrate the Know-Nothings, deeming the Wh
igs hopeless.
Like the Whigs, however, the Know-Nothings were stillborn. They failed to see th
at slavery
constituted a far greater threat to their constituents than did foreign “conspirac
ies.” The fatal
weakness of the Know-Nothing Party was that it alienated the very immigrants who
were staunchly
opposed to slavery, and thus, rather than creating a new alliance, fragmented al
ready collapsing
Whig coalitions. When their national convention met, the Know-Nothings split alo
ng sectional
lines, and that was that. Abraham Lincoln perceived that a fundamental differenc
e in principle
existed between antislavery and nativism, between the new Republican Party and t
he Know-
Nothings, asking “How can anyone who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor
of degrading
classes of white people?” He warned, “When the Know-Nothings get control, [the Decla
ration] will
read, ‘All men are created equal, except Negroes and foreigners and Catholics.’”106
A second party, however, picking up the old Liberty Party and Free-Soil banners,
sought to unite
people of all stripes who opposed slavery under a single standard. Originally ca
lled the Anti-
Nebraska Party, the new Republican Party bore in like a laser on the issue of sl
avery in the
territories. Horace Greeley said that the Kansas-Nebraska Act created more free-
soilers and
abolitionists in two months than Garrison had in twenty years, and the new party’s
rapid growth far
outstripped earlier variants like the Liberty Party. Foremost among the new lead
ers was Salmon P.
Chase of Ohio, a former Liberty Party man who won the gubernatorial election as
a Republican in
Ohio in 1855. Along with William H. Seward, Chase provided the intellectual foun
dation of the
new party.
Republicans recognized that every other issue in some way touched on slavery, an
d rather than
ignore it or straddle it—as both the Democrats and Whigs had done—they would attack
it head on,
elevating it to the top of their masthead. Although they adopted mainstays of th
e Whig Party,
including support for internal improvements, tariffs, and a national bank, the R
epublicans recast
these in light of the expansion of slavery into the territories. Railroads and i
nternal improvements?
That Whig issue now took on an unmistakable free-soil tinge, for if railroads we
re built, what crops
would they bring to market—slave cotton, or free wheat? Tariffs? If Southerners pa
id more for
their goods, were they not already profiting from an inhumane system? And should
not Northern
industry, which supported free labor, enjoy an advantage? Perhaps the national b
ank had no strong
sectional overtones, but no matter. Slavery dominated almost every debate. South
erners had even
raised the issue of reopening the slave trade.
At their convention in 1856, the Republicans ignored William H. Seward, who had
toiled for the
free-soil cause for years, in favor of John C. Frémont, the Mexican War personalit
y who had
attempted to foment a revolt in California. Frémont had married Thomas Hart Benton’s
daughter,
who helped hone his image as an explorer/adventurer and allied him with free-soi
l Democrats
through Benton’s progeny (Benton himself was a slave owner who never supported his
son-inlaw’s
candidacy, foreshadowing the types of universal family divisions that would occu
r after Fort
Sumter). Beyond that, Frémont condemned the “twin relics of barbarism,” slavery and po
lygamy—
a reference to the Mormon practice of multiple wives in Utah Territory. Slavery
and the territories
were again linked to immoral practices, with no small amount of emphasis on illi
cit sex in the
rhetoric.107 Frémont also had no ties to the Know-Nothings, making him, for all in
tents and
purposes, “pure.” He also offered voters moral clarity.
Southerners quickly recognized the dangers Frémont’s candidacy posed. “The election of
Fremont,” Robert Toombs wrote in July 1856, “would be the end of the Union.”108 The ev
entual
Democratic candidate, James Buchanan of Pennsylvania, chimed in: “Should Fremont b
e
elected…the outlawry proclaimed by the Black Republican convention at Philadelphia
against [the
South] will be ratified by the people of the North.” In such an eventuality, “the co
nsequences will
be immediate & inevitable.”109
Buchanan—a five-term congressman and then senator who also served as minister to R
ussia and
Great Britain, and was Polk’s secretary of state—possessed impressive political cred
entials. His
frequent absences abroad also somewhat insulated him from the domestic turmoil.
Still, he had
helped draft the Ostend Manifesto, and he hardly sought to distance himself from
slavery. Like
Douglas, Buchanan continued to see slavery as a sectional issue subject to polit
ical compromise
rather than, as the Republicans saw it, a moral issue over which compromise was
impossible. Then
there was Fillmore, whose own Whig Party had rejected him. Instead, he had moved
into the
American Party—the Know-Nothings—and hoped to win just enough electoral votes to thr
ow the
election into the House.
In the ensuing three-way contest, Buchanan battled Fillmore for Southern votes a
nd contended with
Frémont for the Northern vote. When the smoke cleared, the Pennsylvanian had won a
n ominous
victory. He had beaten Fillmore badly in the South, enough to offset Frémont’s shock
ing near
sweep of the North, becoming the first president to win an election without carr
ying a
preponderance of free states. Buchanan had just 45 percent of the popular vote t
o Frémont’s 33
percent. Frémont took all but five of the free states. Republicans immediately did
the math: in the
next election, if the Republican candidate just held the states Frémont carried an
d added
Pennsylvania and either Illinois or Indiana, he would win. By itself, the Republ
ican Party totaled
500,000 votes less than the Democrats, but if the American Party’s vote went Repub
lican, the total
would exceed the Democrats by 300,000.
Buchanan, the last president born in the eighteenth century and the only man who
never married to
hold the presidency, came from a modest but not poor background. Brief service i
n the War of
1812 exposed him to the military; then he made a fortune in the law, no easy fea
t in those days. His
one love affair, with the daughter of a wealthy Pennsylvania ironworks owner, wa
s sabotaged by
local rumormongers who spread class envy. The incident left his lover heartbroke
n, and she died a
few days after ending the engagement, possibly by suicide. For several years Buc
hanan orbited
outside the Jackson circles, managing to work his way back into the president’s gr
aces during
Jackson’s Pennsylvania campaigns, eventually becoming the minister to Russia. As a
senator, he
allowed antislavery petitions to be read before his committee, running contrary
to the Democratic
practice.
His first run at the presidency, in 1852, pitted him against Douglas, and the tw
o split the party vote
and handed the nomination to Pierce. After that, Buchanan had little use for the
Little Giant, as
Douglas was known, or so he thought. In 1856, Buchanan found that he needed Doug
las—or at
least needed him out of the way—so he persuaded the Illinois senator to support hi
m that year, for
which Buchanan would reciprocate in 1860 by supporting Douglas.
After the inauguration Buchanan surrounded himself with Southerners, including H
owell Cobb,
James Slidell, and his vice president, John Breckinridge. A strict constitutiona
list in the sense that
he thought slavery outside the authority of Congress or the president, he ran on
the issue of
retaining the Union. Yet his Southern supporters had voted for him almost exclus
ively on the issue
of slavery, understanding that he would not act to interfere with slavery in any
way. Buffeted by
Uncle Tom’s Cabin and the rise of the “Black Republican” Party, the South saw Buchanan’s
election as a minor victory. Soon the Supreme Court handed the South a major tri
umph—one that
seemed to forever settle the issue of slavery in the territories. Yet once again
, the South would find
its victory pyrrhic.
Dred Scott’s Judicial Earthquake
America had barely absorbed Buchanan’s inaugural when two days later the Supreme C
ourt of the
United States, on March 6, 1857, set off a judicial earthquake. Buchanan had bee
n made aware of
the forthcoming decision, which he supported, and he included references to it i
n his inaugural
address. The Dred Scott decision easily became one of the two or three most cont
roversial high
court cases in American history.
Dred Scott, the slave to a U.S. Army surgeon named John Emerson, moved with his
master to Rock
Island, Illinois, in 1834. Scott remained with Emerson for two years on the army
base, even though
Illinois, under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, prohibited slavery. In 1836, Em
erson was
assigned to Fort Snelling (in modern-day Minnesota), which was part of the Wisco
nsin Territory
above the Missouri Compromise line, again taking Scott with him. At the time of
Emerson’s death
in 1843, the estate, including Scott and his wife, Harriet, went to Emerson’s daug
hter. Meanwhile,
members of the family who had owned Scott previously, and who had by then befrie
nded Scott,
brought a suit on his behalf in St. Louis County (where he then resided), claimi
ng his freedom.
Scott’s suit argued that his residence in both Illinois and the Wisconsin Territor
y, where slavery
was prohibited (one by state law, one by both the Missouri Compromise and the pr
inciple of the
Northwest Ordinance) made him free. A Missouri jury agreed in 1850. Emerson appe
aled to the
Missouri Supreme Court, which in 1852 reversed the lower court ruling, arguing t
hat the lower
court had abused the principle of comity, by which one state agreed to observe t
he laws of another.
The Constitution guaranteed that the citizen of one state had equal protection i
n all states, hence the
rub: if Scott was a citizen by virtue of being free in one state, federal law fa
vored him; but if he was
property, federal law favored the Emersons. Refusing to rule on the constitution
al status of slaves
as either property or people, the Missouri court focused only on the comity issu
e.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Emerson remarried and moved to Massachusetts, where her husband,
Calvin
Chaffee, later would win election to Congress as an antislavery Know-Nothing. Em
erson left Scott
in St. Louis, still the property of her brother, John Sanford, who himself had m
oved to New York.
Scott, then having considerable freedom, initiated a new suit in his own name in
1853, bearing the
now-famous name, Scott v. Sandford (with Sanford misspelled in the official docu
ment). A circuit
court ruled against Scott once again, and his lawyers appealed to the United Sta
tes Supreme Court.
When the Court heard the case in 1856, it had to rule on whether Scott could eve
n bring the suit (as
a slave); the second point involved whether Scott’s residence in a free state or i
n a free federal
territory made him free. In theory, the Court had the option to duck the larger
issues altogether
merely by saying that Scott was a slave, and as such had no authority to even br
ing a suit. However,
the circuit court had already ruled that Scott could sue, and Scott, not Emerson
, had appealed on
different grounds.
If ever a Court was overcome by hubris, it was the Supreme Court of Roger B. Tan
ey, the chief
justice from Maryland who sided with his fellow Southerners’ views of slavery. Far
from dodging
the monumental constitutional issues, Taney’s nine justices all rendered separate
opinions whose
combined effect produced an antislavery backlash that dwarfed that associated wi
th the Fugitive
Slave Law. As far as the Court was concerned, the case began as a routine ruling—t
hat the laws of
Missouri were properly applied and thus the Court had no jurisdiction in the mat
ter—and it might
have washed through the pages of history like the tiniest piece of lint. Sometim
e in February 1857,
however, the justices had a change of heart, brought about when they decided to
write individual
opinions. As it turned out, the five Southern justices wanted to overturn the Mi
ssouri Compromise,
which they thought unconstitutional. In less than three weeks, the Court had shi
fted from treating
the Dred Scott case as a routine matter of state autonomy to an earth-shattering
restatement of the
constitutionality of slavery.
Taney’s decision included the position that freedmen were citizens of one state bu
t not the United
States. Nor could emancipated slaves or their progeny be free in all states beca
use a citizen had to
be born a citizen, and no slaves were. He also dismissed (despite considerable p
recedence at the
state level) any citizenship rights that states offered blacks. In other words,
even if free, Taney said
Scott could not bring the suit. Moving to free soil did not free Scott either, a
s slaveholders could
take their property into territories, and any act of Congress regarding slaves w
ould be an
impairment of property rights guaranteed in the Fifth Amendment. Scott’s presence
in Wisconsin
Territory did not emancipate him either because, in Taney’s view, the Missouri Com
promise, as
well as the Northwest Ordinance, was unconstitutional in that it violated the Fi
fth Amendment; and,
therefore, provisions of statute law over the territories were of no legal impor
t. Forced by the
weight of his own logic to admit that if a state so desired, it could grant citi
zenship to blacks, Taney
still maintained that did not make them citizens of all states. Taney considered
African Americans
“as a subordinate and inferior class of beings [who] had no rights which the white
man was bound
to respect.”110 Other members of the Court agreed that Scott was not a citizen, an
d after years of
begging by Congress to settle the territorial citizenship question, the Court ha
d indeed acted.
Doubtless Southerners, and perhaps Taney himself, expected intense condemnation
of the ruling. In
that, Taney was not disappointed: the Northern press referred to the “jesuitical d
ecision” as a
“willful perversion” and an “atrocious crime.” But no one foresaw the economic disaster
the Court
had perpetrated as, once again, the law of unintended consequences took effect.
Until the Kansas-Nebraska Act, the politics of slavery had little to do with the
expansion of the
railroads. However, in the immediate aftermath of the Dred Scott ruling, the nat
ion’s railroad
bonds, or at least a specific group of railroad bonds, tumbled badly. The Suprem
e Court ruling
triggered the Panic of 1857, but for generations historians have overlooked the
key relationship
between the Dred Scott case and the economic crisis, instead pinning the blame o
n changes in the
international wheat market and economic dislocations stemming from the Crimean W
ar.111 Had
all railroad securities collapsed, such an argument might ring true, except that
only certain railroad
bonds plunged—those roads primarily running east and west.112
Business hates uncertainty and, above all, dislikes wars, which tend to upset ma
rkets and kill
consumers. Prior to the Dred Scott case, railroad builders pushed westward confi
dent that either
proslavery or free-soil ideas would triumph. Whichever dominated, markets would
be stable
because of certainty. What the Court’s ruling did was to completely destabilize th
e markets.
Suddenly the prospect appeared of a Bleeding Kansas writ large, with the possibi
lity of John Brown
raids occurring in every new territory as it was opened. Investors easily saw th
is, and the bonds for
the east-west roads collapsed. As they fell, the collateral they represented for
large banks in New
York, Boston, and Philadelphia sank too. Banks immediately found themselves in a
n exposed and
weakened condition. A panic spread throughout the Northern banking community.
The South, however, because of its relatively light investment in railroads, suf
fered only minor
losses in the bond markets. Southern state banking systems, far more than their
Northern
counterparts, had adopted branch banking, making the transmission of information
easier and
insulating them from the panic.
The South learned the wrong lessons from the financial upheaval. Thinking that K
ing Cotton had
protected Dixie from international market fluctuations (which had almost nothing
to do with the
recession), Southern leaders proclaimed that their slave-based economy had not o
nly caught up
with the North but had also surpassed it. Who needed industry when you had King
Cotton?
A few voices challenged this view, appealing to nonslave-holding Southerners to
reclaim their
region. Hinton Rowan Helper, a North Carolina nonslaveholder, made a cogent and
powerful
argument that slavery crippled the South in his book The Impending Crisis of the
South (1857).
Helper touched a raw nerve as painful as that of slave insurrections. He spoke t
o poor whites, who
had not benefited at all from slavery, a ploy that threatened to turn white agai
nst white. Southern
polemicists immediately denounced Helper as an incendiary and produced entire bo
oks disputing
his statistics.
Most of the fire eaters in the South dismissed Helper, insisting that the peculi
ar institution had
proved its superiority to factories and furnaces. The few advocates of a modern
manufacturing
economy now found themselves drowned out by the mantra “Cotton is King.” Others, suc
h as
Jefferson Davis, deluded themselves into thinking that Southern economic backwar
dness was
entirely attributable to the North, an antebellum version of modern third-world
complaints. “You
free-soil agitators,” Davis said, “are not interested in slavery…not at all…. You want…to
promote
the industry of the North-East states, at the expense of the people of the South
and their
industry.”113 This conspiracy view was echoed by Thomas Kettell in Southern Wealth
and
Northern Profits (1860).
Another conspiracy view that increasingly took hold in the North was that a “slave
-power
conspiracy” had fixed the Dred Scott case with Buchanan’s blessing. No doubt the pre
sident had
improperly indicated to Taney that he wished a broad ruling in the case. Yet his
torians reject any
assertions that Taney and Buchanan had rigged the outcome, although Taney had in
formed the
president of the details of his pending decision. Lincoln probably doubted any r
eal conspiracy
existed, but as a Republican politician, he made hay out of the perception. Like
ning Douglas,
Pierce, Taney, and Buchanan to four home builders who brought to the work site “fr
amed timbers,”
whose pieces just happened to fit together perfectly, Lincoln said, “In such a cas
e we find it
impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and James all unde
rstood one
another from the beginning….”114
By the midterm elections of 1858, then, both sides had evolved convenient conspi
racy explanations
for the worsening sectional crisis. The slave power controlled the presidency an
d the courts, rigged
elections, prohibited open debate, and stacked the Kansas constitutional applica
tion according to
abolitionists. As Southerners saw it, radical abolitionists and Black Republican
s now dominated
Congress, used immigration to pack the territories, and connived to use popular
sovereignty as a
code phrase for free-soil and abolitionism. Attempting to legislate from the ben
ch, Taney’s Court
had only made matters worse by bringing the entire judiciary system under the su
spicion of the
conspiracy theorists.
Simmering Kansas Boils Over
The turmoil in Kansas reached new proportions. When the June 1857 Kansas electio
n took place,
only 2,200 out of 9,000 registered voters showed up to vote on the most controve
rsial and wellknown
legislation of the decade, so there could be no denying that the free-soil force
s sat out the
process. Fraud was rampant: in one county no election was held at all, and in an
other only 30 out of
1,060 people voted. In Johnson County, Kansas governor Robert J. Walker found th
at 1,500
“voters” were names directly copied from a Cincinnati directory.115 Free-soilers war
ned that the
proslavery forces controlled the counting and that their own ballots would be di
scarded or ignored.
As a result, Free-Soilers intended to boycott the election. An outcome ensuring
dominance by the
proslavery forces was thus ensured.
Meanwhile, Buchanan had sent Walker, a Mississippi Democrat and Polk cabinet off
icial, to serve
as the territorial governor of Kansas. Walker announced his intention to see tha
t the “majority of
the people of Kansas…fairly and freely decided [the slavery] question for themselv
es by a direct
vote on the adoption of the [state] Constitution, excluding all fraud or violenc
e.”116 By appointing
Walker, Buchanan hoped to accomplish two goals in one fell swoop—ending the Kansas
controversy and making the state another Democratic stronghold to offset Oregon
and Minnesota,
whose admission to the Union was imminent (and became official in 1859). On the
day Walker
departed for Lecompton, Kansas, however, the Democratic house newspaper fully en
dorsed the
Lecompton Constitution. Walker arrived too late to shape the Kansas constitution
al convention of
the radical proslavery delegates.
Douglas, his fidelity to popular sovereignty as strong as ever, condemned the Le
compton
Constitution and urged a free and fair vote. His appeals came as a shock to Demo
crats and a
blessing to Republicans, who internally discussed the possibility of making him
their presidential
candidate in 1860. Perceived as Buchanan’s man in the Senate, Douglas and Buchanan
engaged in
a fierce argument in December 1857, which culminated in Buchanan’s reminding the s
enator he
would be “crushed” if he “differed from the administration” the way Andrew Jackson had
excommunicated rebel Democrats in his day. Douglas, sensing the final rift had a
rrived, curtly told
Buchanan, “General Jackson is dead.”117
Buchanan knew he faced a dilemma.118 He had supported the territorial process in
Kansas as
legitimate and had defended the Lecompton Constitution. To suddenly repudiate it
would destroy
his Southern base: the large majority of his electoral vote. If he read the Sout
hern newspapers, he
knew he was already in trouble there. The Charleston Mercury had suggested that
Buchanan and
Walker go to hell together, and other publications were even less generous. An e
ven more ominous
editorial appeared in the New Orleans Picayune, warning that the states of Alaba
ma, Mississippi,
South Carolina and “perhaps others” would hold secession conventions if Congress did
not approve
the Lecompton Constitution.119 No matter how the advocates of the Lecompton Cons
titution
framed it, however, it still came down to a relative handful of proslavery deleg
ates determining that
Kansas could have a constitution with slavery, no matter what “choice” the voters on
the
referendum made. When the free-soil population boycotted the vote, Lecompton was
the
constitution.
The Kansas Territorial Legislature, on the other hand, was already dominated by
the free-soil
forces. It wasted no time calling for another referendum on Lecompton, and that
election, without
the fraud, produced a decisive vote against the proslavery constitution. Now Kan
sas had popular
sovereignty speaking against slavery from Topeka and the proslavery forces legit
imizing it from
Lecompton.
Buchanan sank further into the quicksand in which he had placed himself. Committ
ed to the
Lecompton Constitution, yet anxious to avoid deepening the rift, he worked stren
uously for the
free-state congressmen to accept the Lecompton Constitution. When the Senate and
House
deadlocked, Democrat William English of Indiana offered a settlement. As part of
the original
constitution proposal, Kansas was to receive 23 million acres of federal land, b
ut the antislavery
forces had whittled that down to 4 million. English sought to attach the reduced
land grant to a free
constitution, or bribe the Kansans with the 23 million for accepting Lecompton.
There was a stick
along with this carrot: if Kansas did not accept the proposal, it would have to
wait until its
population reached ninety thousand to apply for statehood again.
Kansas voters shocked Buchanan and the South by rejecting the English bill’s land
grant by a
seven-to-one margin and accepting as punishment territorial status until 1861. I
t was a crushing
defeat for the slavery forces. When the Kansas episode ended, the South could lo
ok back at a
decade and a half of political maneuvers, compromises, threats, intrigue, and br
ibes with the
sobering knowledge that it had not added a single inch of new slave territory to
its core of states
and in the process had alienated millions of Americans who previously were ambiv
alent about
slavery, literally creating thousands of abolitionists. Southern attempts to spr
ead slavery killed the
Whig Party, divided and weakened the Democrats, and sparked the rise of the Repu
blicans, whose
major objective was a halt to the spread of slavery in the territories. The only
thing the South had
not yet done was to create a demon that would unite the slave states in one fina
l, futile act. After
1858 the South had its demon.
A New Hope
For those who contend they want certain institutions—schools, government, and so o
n—free of
values or value neutral, the journey of Illinois Senator Stephen Douglas in the
1850s is instructive.
Douglas emerged as the South’s hero. His role in the Compromise of 1850 convinced
many
Southerners that he had what it took to be president, truly a “Northern man of Sou
thern principles.”
But “the Judge” (as Lincoln often called him) had his own principles, neither purely
Southern nor
Northern. Rather, in 1858, Douglas stood where he had in 1850: for popular sover
eignty. In
claiming that he was not “personally in favor” of slavery—that it ought to be up to th
e people of a
state to decide—Douglas held the ultimate value-neutral position. In fact such a p
osition has its
own value, just as Abraham Lincoln would show. Not to call evil, evil, is to cal
l it good.
Douglas’s stance derived from a Madisonian notion that local self-government best
resolved
difficult issues and epitomized democracy. He supported the free-soil majority i
n Kansas against
the Lecompton proslavery forces, and in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott
decision, he
attacked the bench’s abuse of power and infringement on popular sovereignty.120 Ye
t consistency
did not impress Southern slave owners if it came at the expense of slavery, for
which there could be
no middle ground. Seeking the presidency, though, also positioned Douglas to reg
ain control of the
Democratic Party for the North and to wrest it from the slave power.
Whatever Douglas’s aspirations for higher office or party dominance, he first had
to retain his
Illinois senate seat in the election of 1858. Illinois Republicans realized that
Douglas’s popular
sovereignty position might appear antislavery to Northern ears, and wisely concl
uded they had to
run a candidate who could differentiate Douglas’s value-free approach to slavery f
rom their own. In
that sense, Lincoln was the perfect antithesis to Douglas.
The details of Abraham Lincoln’s life are, or at least used to be, well known to A
merican
schoolchildren. Born on February 12, 1809, in a Kentucky log cabin, Lincoln’s fami
ly was poor,
even by the standards of the day. His father, Thomas, took the family to Indiana
, and shortly
thereafter Lincoln’s mother died. By that time he had learned to read and continue
d to educate
himself, reading Robinson Crusoe, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Franklin’s
Autobiography, and law books when he could get them. He memorized the Illinois S
tatutes. One
apocryphal story had it that Lincoln read while plowing, allowing the mules or o
xen to do the work
and turning the page at the end of each row. Lincoln took reading seriously, mak
ing mental notes of
the literary style, syncopation, and rhythm. Though often portrayed as a Deist,
Lincoln read the
Bible as studiously as he had the classics. His speeches resound with scriptural
metaphors and
biblical phrases, rightly applied, revealing he fully understood the context.
Put to work early by his father, Lincoln labored with his hands on a variety of
jobs, including
working on flatboats that took him down the Mississippi in 1828. The family move
d again, to
Illinois in 1830, where the young man worked as a mill manager near Springfield.
Tall (six feet
four inches) and lanky (he later belonged to a group of Whig legislators over si
x feet tall—the
“long nine”), Lincoln had great stamina and surprising strength, and just as he had
learned from
literature, he applied his work experiences to his political reasoning. As a you
ng man, he had
impressed others with his character, sincerity, and humor, despite a recurring b
out of what he called
the hypos, or hypochondria. Some suspect he was a manic depressive; he once wrot
e an essay on
suicide and quipped that when he was alone, his depression overcame him so badly
that “I never
dare carry a penknife.”121
Elected captain of a volunteer company in the Black Hawk War (where his only wou
nd came from
mosquitoes), Lincoln elicited a natural respect from those around him. While tea
ching himself the
law, he opened a small store that failed when a partner took off with all the ca
sh and left Lincoln
stuck with more than a thousand dollars in obligations. He made good on them all
, working odd
jobs, including his famous rail splitting. He was the town postmaster and then,
in 1834, was elected
to the state assembly, where he rose to prominence in the Whig Party.
Lincoln obtained his law license in 1836, whereupon he handled a number of bank
cases, as well as
work for railroads, insurance companies, and a gas-light business. Developing a
solid practice, he
(and the firm) benefited greatly from a partnership with William Herndon, who la
ter became his
biographer. The scope and variety of cases handled by this self-taught attorney
was impressive;
delving into admiralty law, corporate law, constitutional law, and criminal law,
Lincoln practiced
before every type of court in Illinois.
He also worked at politics as an active Whig, casting his first political vote f
or Clay. “My politics
can be briefly stated,” he said in the 1830s: “I am in favor of the internal improve
ment system, and
a high protective tariff.”122 Winning a seat in Congress in 1847, his entire campa
ign expenditure
was seventy-five cents for a single barrel of cider. Lincoln soon lost support w
ith his “Spot
Resolution,” but he campaigned for Taylor in 1848. He hoped to receive a patronage
position as
commissioner of the General Land Office, and when he did not, Lincoln retired to
his private law
practice, convinced his political career was over.
If Lincoln doubted himself, his wife, Mary Todd, never did. She announced to her
friends, “Mr.
Lincoln is to be president of the United States some day. If I had not thought s
o, I would not have
married him, for you can see he is not pretty.”123 Indeed, Abraham Lincoln was har
dly easy on the
eye, all angles and sharp edges. Yet observers—some of whom barely knew him—frequent
ly
remarked on his commanding presence. Despite a high, almost screechy voice, Linc
oln’s words
carried tremendous weight because they were always well considered before uttere
d. It is one of the
ironies of American history that, had Lincoln lived in the age of television, hi
s personal appearance
and speech would have doomed him in politics.
Lincoln was homely, but Mary Todd was downright sour looking, which perhaps cont
ributed to his
having left her, literally, standing at the altar one time. Lincoln claimed an i
llness; his partner
Willie Herndon believed that he did not love Mary, but had made a promise and ha
d to keep it.
Herndon, however, is hardly a credible witness. He strongly disliked Mary—and the
feeling was
mutual—and it was Herndon who fabricated the myth of Ann Rutledge as Lincoln’s only
true
love.124 What we do know is that when Lincoln finally did wed Mary, in 1842, he
called it a
“profound wonder.” Mary wrote in the loftiest terms of her mate, who exceeded her ex
pectations as
“lover—husband—father, all!”125 She prodded her husband’s ambitions, and not so gently. “Mr
Douglas,” she said, “is a very little, little giant compared to my tall Kentuckian,
and intellectually
my husband towers above Douglas as he does physically.”126 To the disorganized, ev
en chaotic
Lincoln, Mary brought order and direction. She also gave him four sons, only one
of whom lived to
maturity. Robert, the first son (known as the Prince of Rails), lived until 1926
; Eddie died in 1850;
Willie died in 1862; and Tad died in 1871 at age eighteen. The deaths of Eddie a
nd Willie fed
Lincoln’s depression; yet, interestingly, he framed the losses in religious terms.
God “called him
home,” he said of Willie. Mary saw things differently, having lived in constant te
rror of tragedy.
When Robert accidentally swallowed lime, she became hysterical, screaming, “Bobby
will die!
Bobby will die!”127 She usually took out her phobias in massive shopping sprees, r
eturning goods
that did not suit her, followed by periods of obsessive miserliness. If spending
money did not roust
her from the doldrums, Mary lapsed into real (or feigned) migraine headaches. Li
ncoln dutifully
cared for his “Molly” and even finally helped her recover from the migraines.
Perhaps no aspect of Abraham Lincoln’s character is less understood than his relig
ion. Like many
young men, he was a skeptic early in life. He viewed the “good old maxims of the B
ible” as little
different from the Farmer’s Almanac, admitting in the 1830s, “I’ve never been to churc
h yet, nor
probably shall not [sic] be soon.”128 An oft-misunderstood phrase Lincoln uttered—pu
rportedly
that he was a Deist—was, in fact, “Because I belonged to no church, [I] was suspecte
d of being a
deist,” an absurdity he put on the same plane as having “talked about fighting a due
l.”129 Quite the
contrary, to dispute an 1846 handbill that he was “an open scoffer at Christianity
,” Lincoln
produced his own handbill in which he admitted, “I am not a member of any Christia
n Church…but
I have never denied the truth of the Scriptures.”130 Some Lincoln biographers dism
iss this as
campaign propaganda, but Lincoln’s religious journey accelerated the closer he got
to greatness (or,
perhaps, impelled him to it).
A profound change in Lincoln’s faith occurred from 1858 to 1863. Mary had brought
home a Bible,
which Lincoln read, and after the death of Eddie at age four, he attended a Pres
byterian church
intermittently, paying rent for a pew for his wife. He never joined the church,
but by 1851 was
already preaching, in letters, to his own father: “Remember to call upon, and conf
ide in, our great,
and good, and merciful Maker…. He will not forget the dying man, who puts his trus
t in Him.”131
After 1860 Lincoln himself told associates of a “change,” a “true religious experience
,” a “change
of heart.” Toward what? Lincoln prayed every day and read his Bible regularly. He
followed Micah
6:8 to a tee, “…to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God.” Whe
n a lifelong
friend, Joshua Speed, commented that he remained skeptical of matters of faith,
Lincoln said, “You
are wrong, Speed; take all of this book [the Bible] upon reason you can, and the
balance on faith,
and you will live and die a happier and better man.”132
What kept Lincoln from formal church association was what he viewed as overly lo
ng and
complicated confessions of faith, or what might be called denominationalism. “When
any church
will inscribe over its altar the Saviour’s condensed statement of law and gospel, ‘T
hou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all they mind
, and love thy
neighbor as thyself,’ that church I will join with all my heart.”133 In fact, he tho
ught it beneficial
that numerous denominations and sects existed, telling a friend, “The more sects…the
better. They
are all getting somebody [into heaven] that others would not.”134 To Lincoln, an i
mportant
separation of politics and religion existed during the campaign: “I will not discu
ss the character and
religion of Jesus Christ on the stump! That is no place for it.”135 It was Gettysb
urg, however,
where Lincoln was born again. His own pastor, Phineas Gurley, noted the change a
fter Gettysburg:
With “tears in his eyes,” Gurley wrote, Lincoln “now believed his heart was changed an
d that he
loved the Saviour, and, if he was not deceived in himself, it was his intention
soon to make a
profession of religion.”136 Did he actually make such a profession? An Illinois cl
ergyman asked
Lincoln before his death, “Do you love Jesus?” to which Lincoln gave a straight answ
er:
When I left Springfield I asked the people to pray for me. I was not a Christian
. When I buried my
son, the severest trial of my life, I was not a Christian. But when I went to Ge
ttysburg and saw the
graves of thousands of our soldiers, I then and there consecrated myself to Chri
st. Yes, I love
Jesus.137
During the war Lincoln saw God’s hand in numerous events, although in 1862 he wrot
e, “The will
of God prevails. In great contests, each party claims to act in accordance with
the will of God. Both
may be, and one must be wrong. God can not be for, or against, the same thing at
the same
time.”138 Significantly, at Gettysburg, he again referred to God’s own purposes, not
ing that the
nation was “dedicated to the proposition” that “all men are created equal.” Would God va
lidate that
proposition? It remained, in Lincoln’s spirit, to be determined.139 He puzzled why
God allowed
the war to continue, which reflected his fatalistic side that discounted human w
ill in perpetuating
evil. Lincoln called numerous days of national prayer—an unusual step for a suppos
ed unbeliever.
The evidence that Lincoln was a spiritual, even devout, man, and toward the end
of his life a
committed Christian, is abundant.
That spiritual journey paralleled another road traveled by Lincoln. His path to
political prominence,
although perhaps cut in his early Whig partisan battles, was hewed and sanded by
his famous
contest with Stephen Douglas in 1858 for the Illinois Senate seat. Together the
two men made
almost two hundred speeches between July and November. The most famous, however,
came at
seven joint debates from August to October in each of the remaining seven congre
ssional districts
where the two had not yet spoken.
In sharp contrast to the content-free televised debates of the twentieth century
, where candidates
hope to merely avoid a fatal gaffe, political debates of the nineteenth century
were festive affairs
involving bands, food, and plenty of whiskey. Farmers, merchants, laborers, and
families came
from miles away to listen to the candidates. It was, after all, a form of entert
ainment: the men
would challenge each other, perhaps even insult each other, but usually in a goo
d-natured way that
left them shaking hands at the end of the day. Or, as David Morris Potter put it
, “The values which
united them as Americans were more important than those which divided them as ca
ndidates.”140
By agreeing to disagree, Lincoln and Douglas reflected a nineteenth-century view
of tolerance that
had no connection to the twentieth-century understanding of indifference to valu
es—quite the
contrary, the men had strong convictions that, they agreed, could only be solved
by the voters.
To prepare for his debates with Douglas, Lincoln honed his already sharp logic t
o a fine point.
Challenging notions that slavery was “good” for the blacks, Lincoln proposed sarcast
ically that the
beneficial institution should therefore be extended to whites as well. Then, at
the state convention
at Springfield, Lincoln gave what is generally agreed as one of the greatest pol
itical speeches in
American history:
We are now far into the fifth year since a policy was initiated with the avowed
object and confident
promise of putting an end to slavery agitation…. That agitation has not ceased but
has constantly
augmented. In my opinion, it will not cease until a crisis has been reached and
passed. “A house
divided against itself cannot stand.” I believe this government cannot endure perm
anently half slave
and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved—I do not expect the house
to fall—but I do
expect that it will cease to be divided.141
He continued to argue that the opponents of slavery would stop its spread, or th
at the proponents
would make it lawful in all states.
Sufficiently determined to make slavery the issue, Lincoln engaged Douglas in th
e pivotal debates,
where he boxed in the Little Giant over the issue of popular sovereignty on the
one hand and the
Dred Scott decision on the other. Douglas claimed to support both. How was that
possible, Lincoln
asked, if the Supreme Court said that neither the people nor Congress could excl
ude slavery, yet
Douglas hailed popular sovereignty as letting the people choose? Again, contrary
to mythology,
Lincoln had not raised an issue Douglas had never considered. As early as 1857,
Douglas, noting
the paradox, produced an answer: “These regulations…must necessarily depend entirely
upon the
will and wishes of the people of the territory, as they can only be prescribed b
y the local
legislatures.”142 What was novel was that Lincoln pounded the question in the deba
tes, forcing
Douglas to elaborate further than he already had: “Slavery cannot exist a day in t
he midst of an
unfriendly people with unfriendly laws.”143
Without realizing it—and even before this view was immortalized as the Freeport Do
ctrine—
Douglas had stepped into a viper’s pit, for he had raised the central fact that sl
avery was not a
cultural or economic institution, but that it was a power relationship. In its m
ost crystal form,
slavery was political oppression. Yet the question was asked, and answered, at t
he debate at
Freeport, where Lincoln maneuvered Douglas into a categorical statement: “It matte
rs not what
way the Supreme Court may…decide as to the abstract question of whether slavery ma
y or may not
go into a Territory…. The people have the lawful means to introduce it or exclude
it as they
please.”144
To fire eaters in the South, Douglas had just given the people of the territorie
s a legitimate rationale
for breaking the national law. He had cut the legs out from under the Dred Scott
decision, and all
but preached rebellion to nonslave owners in the South. Lincoln’s aim, however, wa
s not to shatter
Douglas’s Southern support, as it had no bearing whatsoever on the Senate race at
hand. Rather, he
had shifted the argument to a different philosophical plane, that of the moralit
y of slavery. Douglas
had gone on record as saying that it did not matter if slavery was right or wron
g, or even if the
Constitution (as interpreted by the Supreme Court) was right or wrong.
In short, the contest pitted republicanism against democracy in the purest sense
of the definition,
for Douglas advocated a majoritarian dictatorship in which those with the most v
otes won,
regardless of right or wrong. Lincoln, on the other hand, defended a democratic
republic, in which
majority rule was proscribed within the rule of law.145 Douglas’s defenders have a
rgued that he
advocated only local sovereignty, and he thought local majorities “would be less p
rone to arbitrary
action, executed without regard for local interests.”146 America’s federal system di
d emphasize
local control, but never at the expense of “these truths,” which the American Revolu
tionaries held
as “self-evident.”
“The real issue,” Lincoln said at the last debate, “is the sentiment on the part of on
e class that looks
upon the institution of slavery as a wrong…. The Republican Party,” he said, “look[s]
upon it as
being a moral, social and political wrong…and one of the methods of treating it as
a wrong is to
make provision that it shall grow no larger…. That is the real issue.”147 A “moral, a
social, and a
political wrong,” he called slavery at Quincy in the October debate.148 Lincoln we
nt further,
declaring that the black man was “entitled to all the natural rights enumerated in
the Declaration of
Independence, the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness…. In the ri
ght to eat the bread,
without leave of anybody else, which his own hand earns, he is my equal and the
equal of Judge
Douglas, and the equal of every living man.”149
What made Lincoln stand out and gain credibility with the voters was that he emb
raced the moral
and logical designation of slavery as an inherent evil, while distancing himself
from the oddball
notions of utopian perfectionists like the Grimké sisters or wild-eyed anti-Consti
tutionalists like
William Lloyd Garrison. He achieved this by refocusing the nation on slavery’s ass
ault on the
concept of law in the Republic.
Lincoln had already touched on this critical point of respect for the law in his
famous 1838 Lyceum
Address, in which he attacked both abolitionist rioters and proslavery supporter
s. After predicting
that America could never be conquered by a foreign power, Lincoln warned that th
e danger was
from mob law. His remedy for such a threat was simple: “Let every American, every
lover of
liberty…swear by the blood of the Revolution never to violate the least particular
laws of the
country, and never to tolerate their violation by others.”150 Then came the immort
al phrase,
Let reverence for the laws be breathed by every American mother to the lisping b
abe that prattles
on her lap; let it be taught in schools, in seminaries, and in colleges; let it
be written in primers,
spelling-books, and in almanacs; let it be preached from the pulpit, proclaimed
in the legislative
halls, and enforced in courts of justice. And, in short, let it become the polit
ical religion of the
nation.151
It was inevitable that he would soon see the South as a threat to the foundation
s of the Republic
through its blatant disregard for the law he held so precious.
Left-wing historians have attempted to portray Lincoln as a racist because he di
d not immediately
embrace full voting and civil rights for blacks. He had once said, in response t
o a typical “Black
Republican” comment from Stephen Douglas, that just because he did not want a blac
k woman for
a slave did not mean he wanted one for a wife. Such comments require considerati
on of not only
their time, but their setting—a political campaign. Applying twenty-first-century
values to earlier
times, a historical flaw known as presentism, makes understanding the context of
the day even
more difficult.
On racial issues, Lincoln led; he didn’t follow. With the exception of a few of th
e mid-nineteenthcentury
radicals who, it must be remembered, used antislavery as a means to destroy all
social and
family relationships of oppression—Lincoln marched far ahead of most of his fellow
men when it
came to race relations. By the end of the war, despite hostile opposition from h
is own advisers, he
had insisted on paying black soldiers as much as white soldiers. Black editor Fr
ederick Douglass,
who had supported a “pure” abolitionist candidate in the early part of the 1860 elec
tion, eventually
campaigned for Lincoln, and did so again in 1864. They met twice, and Douglass,
although never
fully satisfied, realized that Lincoln was a friend of his cause. Attending Linc
oln’s second
inaugural, Douglass was banned from the evening gala. When Lincoln heard about i
t, he issued
orders to admit the editor and greeted him warmly: “Here comes my friend Douglass,”
he said
proudly.
By the 1850s, slavery had managed to corrupt almost everything it touched, ultim
ately even giving
Abraham Lincoln pause—but only for a brief few years. He was, to his eternal credi
t, one politician
who refused to shirk his duty and to call evil, evil. Virtually alone, Lincoln r
efused to hide behind
obscure phrases, as Madison had, or to take high-minded public positions, as had
Jefferson, while
personally engaging in the sin.
Lincoln continually placed before the public a moral choice that it had to make.
Although he spoke
on tariffs, temperance, railroads, banks, and many other issues, Lincoln perceiv
ed that slavery alone
produced a giant contradiction that transcended all sectional issues: that it pu
t at risk both liberty
and equality for all races, not just equality as is often presumed. He perceived
politically that the
time soon approached when a Northern man of Northern principles would be elected
president, and
through his appointment power could name federal judges to positions in the Sout
h where they
would rule in favor of runaway slaves, uphold slaves’ rights to bring suits or to
marry, and
otherwise undermine the awful institution.
Lincoln, again nearly alone, understood that the central threat to the Republic
posed by slavery lay
in its corruption of the law. It is to that aspect of the impending crisis that
we now turn.
The Crisis of Law and Order
Questions such as those posed by Lincoln in the debates, or similar thoughts, we
ighed heavily on
the minds of an increasing number of Americans, North and South. In the short te
rm, Douglas and
the Buchanan Democrats in Illinois received enough votes to elect forty-six Demo
cratic legislators,
while the Republicans elected forty-one. Douglas retained his seat. In an ominou
s sign for the
Democrats, though, the Republicans won the popular vote.
Looking back from a vantage point of more than 140 years, it is easy to see that
Douglas’s victory
was costly and that Lincoln’s defeat merely set the stage for his presidential rac
e in 1860. At the
time, however, the biggest losers appeared to be James Buchanan, whose support o
f Lecompton
had been picked clean by Douglas’s Freeport Doctrine, and Abraham Lincoln, who now
had gone
ten years without holding an elected office. But the points made by Lincoln, and
his repeated
emphasis on slavery as a moral evil on the one hand, and the law as a moral good
on the other, soon
took hold of a growing share of public opinion. Equally important, Douglas had b
een forced into
undercutting Dred Scott—had swung the pendulum back away from the South yet again.
This
swing, destroying as it did the guts of the Supreme Court’s ruling, took on a more
ominous tone
with John Brown’s Harper’s Ferry raid in October 1859.
John Brown illustrated exactly what Lincoln meant about respect for the laws, an
d the likelihood
that violence would destroy the nation if Congress or the courts could not put s
lavery on a course to
extinction. Lincoln, who had returned to his legal work before the Urbana circui
t court, despised
Brown’s vigilantism.152 Mob riots in St. Louis had inspired his Lyceum Address, an
d although
Lincoln thought Brown courageous and thoughtful, he also thought him a criminal.
Brown’s raid,
Lincoln observed, represented a continuing breakdown in law and order spawned by
the degrading
of the law in the hands of the slave states. More disorder followed, but of a di
fferent type.
When the Thirty-fifth Congress met in December, only three days after Brown had
dangled at the
end of a rope, it split as sharply as the rest of the nation. The Capitol Buildi
ng in which the
legislators gathered, had nearly assumed its modern form after major constructio
n and remodeling
between 1851 and 1858. The physical edifice grew in strength and grandeur at the
same time that
the invisible organs and blood that gave it life—the political parties—seemed to cru
mble more each
day. Democrats held the Senate, but in the House the Republicans had 109 votes a
nd the Democrats
101. To confuse matters even more, more than 10 percent of the Democrats refused
to support any
proslavery Southerner. Then there were the 27 proslavery Whigs who could have he
ld the balance,
but wishing not to be cut out of any committees, treaded carefully. When the ele
ction for Speaker
of the House took place, it became clear how far down the path of disunion the n
ation had
wandered.
It took 119 votes to elect a Speaker, but once the procedures started, it became
obvious that the
Southern legislators did not want to elect a Speaker at all, but to shut down th
e federal government.
Acrimony characterized floor speeches, and Senator James Hammond quipped that “the
only
persons who do not have a revolver and a knife are those who have two revolvers.”1
53 Republicans
wanted John Sherman of Ohio, whereas the fragmented Democrats continued to self-
destruct,
splitting over John McClernand of Illinois and Thomas Bocock of Virginia. Ultima
tely, Sherman
withdrew in favor of a man who had recently converted from the Whig Party to the
Republican,
William Pennington of New Jersey, widely viewed as a weak, if not incompetent, S
peaker. He won
just enough votes for election, thanks to a few Southerners who supported him be
cause of his
strong stand in favor of the Fugitive Slave Law eight years earlier. It would no
t be long until
Congress either shut down entirely or operated with utterly maladroit, ineffectu
al, and politically
disabled men at the top.
At the very moment when, to save slavery, the South should have mended fences wi
th discordant
Northern Democrats, many Southerners searched frantically for a litmus test that
would force a
vote on some aspect of slavery. This mandatory allegiance marked the final inver
sion of Van
Buren’s grand scheme to keep slavery out of the national debate by creating a poli
tical party: now
some in the Democratic Party combed legislative options as a means to bring some
aspect of
slavery—any aspect—up for a vote in order to legitimize it once and for all. Their q
uest led them to
argue for reopening the African slave trade.154 Leading Southern thinkers analyz
ed the moral
problem of a ban on the slave trade. “If it was right to buy slaves in Virginia an
d carry them to New
Orleans, why is it not right to buy them in Africa and carry them here?” asked Wil
liam Yancey.155
Lincoln might have reversed the question: if it is wrong to enslave free people
in Africa and bring
them to Virginia, why is it acceptable to keep slaves in either Virginia or New
Orleans?
In fact, 90 percent of Southerners, according to Hammond’s estimate, disapproved o
f reopening the
slave trade. Reasoning that slaves already here were content, and that the black
s in Africa were
“cannibals,” according to one writer, provided a suitable psychological salve that p
revented
Southerners from dealing with the contradictions of their views.
Debates over reopening the slave trade intensified after the case of the Wandere
r, a 114-foot vessel
launched in 1857 from Long Island that had docked in Savannah, where it was purc
hased (through
a secret deal in New York) by Southern cotton trader Charles A. L. Lamar. The ne
w owner made
suspicious changes to the ship’s structure before sailing to Southern ports. From
Charleston, the
Wanderer headed for Africa, where the captain purchased six hundred slaves and a
gain turned back
to the South, specifically, a spot near Jekyll Island, Georgia. By that time, on
ly about three hundred
of the slaves had survived the voyage and disease, and when rumors of the arriva
ls of new slaves
circulated, a Savannah federal marshal started an investigation. Eventually, the
ship was seized, and
Lamar indicted and tried. During the court proceedings, it became clear how thic
k the cloud of
obfuscation and deceit was in Southern courts when it came to legal actions agai
nst slavery. Judges
stalled, no one went to trial, and even the grand jurors who had found the indic
tments in the first
place publicly recanted. And in the ultimate display of the corruption of the le
gal system in the
South, Lamar was the only bidder on the appropriated Wanderer when it was put up
for auction,
announcing that the episode had given him good experience in the slave trade tha
t he would apply
in the future.156
Federal officials realized from the case of the Wanderer and a few other similar
cases that no
Southern court would ever enforce any federal antislavery laws, and that no law
of the land would
carry any weight in the South if it in any way diminished slaveholding. Lamar ha
d lost most of his
investment—more than two thirds of the slaves died either en route or after arriva
l—but the
precedent of renewing the slave trade was significant. It was in this context th
at the Civil War
began. Two sections of the nation, one committed to the perpetual continuation o
f slavery, one
committed to its eventual extinction, could debate, compromise, legislate, and j
udge, but ultimately
they disagreed over an issue that had such moral weight that one view or the oth
er had to triumph.
Their inability to find an amicable solution gives lie to modern notions that al
l serious differences
can yield to better communication and diplomacy. But, of course, Lincoln had pre
dicted exactly
this result.
CHAPTER NINE
The Crisis of the Union, 1860–65
Lurching Toward War
Despite a remarkable, and often unimaginable, growth spurt in the first half of
the nineteenth
century, and despite advances in communication and transportation—all given as sol
utions to war
and conflict—the nation nevertheless lumbered almost inexorably toward a final def
initive split. No
amount of prosperity, and no level of communication could address, ameliorate, o
r cover up the
problem of slavery and the Republicans’ response to it. No impassioned appeals, no
impeccable
logic, and no patriotic invocations of union could overcome the fact that, by 18
60, more than half
of all Americans thought slavery morally wrong, and a large plurality thought it
so destructive that
it had to be ended at any cost. Nor could sound reasoning or invocations of divi
ne scripture
dissuade the South from the conviction that the election of any Republican meant
an instant attack
on the institution of slavery.
What made war irrepressible and impending in the minds of many was that the poli
tical structure
developed with the Second American Party system relied on the continuation of tw
o key factors
that were neither desirable nor possible to sustain. One was a small federal gov
ernment content to
leave the states to their own devices. On some matters, this was laudable, not t
o mention
constitutional. On others, however, it permitted the South to maintain and perpe
tuate slavery. Any
shift in power between the federal government and the states, therefore, specifi
cally threatened the
Southern slaveholders more than any other group, for it was their constitutional
right to property
that stood in conflict with the constitutional right of due process for all Amer
icans, not to mention
the Declaration’s promise that all men are created equal. The other factor, closel
y tied to the first,
was that the South, tossed amid the tempest and lacking electoral power, found i
tself lashed to the
presidential mast requiring a Northern man of Southern principles. That mast sna
pped in November
1860, and with it, the nation was drawn into a maelstrom.
Time Line
1860:
Lincoln elected president; South Carolina secedes
1861:
Lower South secedes and founds the Confederacy; Lincoln and Davis inaugurated; F
ort Sumter
surrenders to the Confederacy; Upper South secedes from the Union; Battle of Bul
l Run
1862:
Battles of Shiloh and Antietam; preliminary Emancipation Proclamation.
1863:
Emancipation Proclamation; battles of Vicksburg and Gettysburg
1864:
Fall of Atlanta and Sherman’s March to the Sea; Lincoln reelected
1865:
Lee surrenders to Grant at Appomattox; Lincoln assassinated; Johnson assumes pre
sidency
America’s Pivotal Election: 1860
The electoral college, and not a majority of voters, elected the president. For
the South, based on
the experience of 1848 and the near election of John Frémont in 1856, it was a goo
d thing. Since
1840 the numbers had been running against slavery. The choice of electors for th
e electoral college
was made by a general election, in which each state received electors equal to t
he number of its
congressional and senatorial delegations combined. Generally speaking, states ga
ve their electoral
total to whichever candidate won the general election in its state, even if only
by a plurality (a
concept called winner-take-all). As has been seen several times, this form of el
ection meant that a
candidate could win the popular vote nationally and still lose the electoral col
lege, or, because of
third parties, win a narrow plurality in the popular vote, yet carry a large maj
ority in the electoral
college.
By 1860 two critical changes had occurred in this process. First, the two major
parties, the
Democrats and Republicans, held national conventions to nominate their candidate
s. Because of the
absence of primaries (which are common today), the conventions truly did select
the candidate,
often brokering a winner from among several competing groups. After state legisl
atures ceased
choosing the individual electors, the impetus of this system virtually guarantee
d that presidential
contests would be two-party affairs, since a vote for a third-party candidate as
a protest was a
wasted vote and, from the perspective of the protester, ensured that the least d
esirable of the
candidates won. When several parties competed, as in 1856, the race still broke
down into separate
two-candidate races—Buchanan versus Frémont in the North, and Buchanan versus Fillmo
re in the
South.
Second, Van Buren’s party structure downplayed, and even ignored, ideology and ins
tead
attempted to enforce party discipline through the spoils system. That worked as
long as the party
leaders selected the candidates, conducted most of the campaigning, and did ever
ything except
mark the ballot for the voters. After thirty years, however, party discipline ha
d crumbled almost
entirely because of ideology, specifically the parties’ different views of slavery
. The Republicans,
with their antislavery positions, took advantage of that and reveled in their se
ctional appeal. But the
Democrats, given the smaller voting population in the South, still needed Northe
rn votes to win.
They could not afford to alienate either proslavery or free-soil advocates. In s
hort, any proslavery
nominee the Democrats put forward would not receive many (if any) Northern votes
, but any
Democratic free-soil candidate would be shunned in the South.
With this dynamic in mind, the Democrats met in April 1860 in Charleston, South
Carolina. It was
hot outside the meeting rooms, and hotter inside, given the friction of the pro-
and antislavery
delegates stuffed into the inadequately sized halls. Charleston, which would soo
n be ground zero
for the insurrection, was no place for conciliators. And, sensibly, the delegate
s agreed to adjourn
and meet six weeks later in Baltimore.
Stephen Douglas should have controlled the convention. He had a majority of the
votes, but the
party’s rules required a two-thirds majority to nominate. Southern delegates arriv
ed in Baltimore
with the intention of demanding that Congress pass a national slave code legitim
izing slavery and
overtly making Northerners partners in crime. Ominously, just before the convent
ion opened,
delegates from seven states announced that they would walk out if Douglas receiv
ed the
nomination. Northern Democrats needing a wake-up call to the intentions of the S
outh had only to
listen to the speech of William L. Yancey of Alabama, who berated Northerners fo
r accepting the
view that slavery was evil.1 On the surface, disagreements appeared to center on
the territories and
the protection of slavery there. Southerners wanted a clear statement that the f
ederal government
would protect property rights in slaves, whereas the Douglas wing wanted a loose
interpretation
allowing the courts and Congress authority over the territories. A vote on the m
ajority report
declaring a federal obligation to protect slavery failed, whereupon some Souther
n delegates, true to
their word, walked out. After Douglas’s forces attempted to have new pro-Douglas d
elegations
formed that would give him the nomination, other Southern delegations, from Virg
inia, North
Carolina, and Tennessee, also departed. Remaining delegates finally handed Dougl
as the
nomination, leaving him with a hollow victory in the knowledge that the South wo
uld hold its own
convention and find a candidate, John Breckinridge of Kentucky, to run against h
im, further
diluting his vote.
Where did sensible, moderate Southerners go? Many of them gravitated to the coma
tose Whigs,
who suddenly stirred. Seeing an opportunity to revive nationally as a middle way
, the Whigs
reorganized under the banner of the Union Party. But when it came to actually no
minating a person,
the choices were bleak, and the candidates universally old: Winfield Scott, seve
nty-four; Sam
Houston, sixty-seven; and John J. Crittenden, seventy-four. The Constitutional U
nion Party finally
nominated sixty-four-year-old John Bell, a Tennessee slaveholder who had voted a
gainst the
Kansas-Nebraska Act.
The Republicans, beaming with optimism, met in Chicago at a hall called the Wigw
am. They
needed only to hold what Frémont had won in 1856, and gain Pennsylvania and one ot
her Northern
state from among Illinois, Indiana, and New Jersey. William H. Seward, former go
vernor of New
York and one of that state’s U.S. senators, was their front-runner. Already famous
in antislavery
circles for his fiery “higher law” and “irrepressible conflict” speeches, Seward surpris
ed the
delegates with a Senate address calling for moderation and peaceful coexistence.
Seward’s
unexpected move toward the middle opened the door for Abraham Lincoln to stake o
ut the more
radical position.
Yet the Republicans retreated from their inflammatory language of 1856. There wa
s no reference to
the “twin relics of barbarism,” slavery and polygamy, which had characterized Frémont’s
campaign
in 1856. The delegates denounced the Harper’s Ferry raid, but the most frequently
used word at the
Republican convention, “solemn,” contrasted sharply with the Charleston convention’s r
epeated
use of “crisis.”2 Despite his recent moderation, Seward still had the “irrepressible c
onflict”
baggage tied around him, and doubts lingered as to whether he could carry any of
the key states
that Fremont had lost four years earlier. Lincoln, on the other hand, was from I
llinois, although he
went to the convention the darkest of dark horses. His name was not even listed
in a booklet
providing brief biographies of the major candidates for the nomination. He gaine
d the party’s nod
largely because of some brilliant backstage maneuvering by his managers and the
growing
realization by the delegates that he, not Seward, was likely to carry the battle
ground states.
When Abraham Lincoln emerged with the Republican nomination, he entered an unusu
al four-way
race against Douglas (Northern Democrat), Bell (Constitutional Union) and Brecki
nridge (Southern
Democrat). Of the four, only Lincoln stood squarely against slavery, and only Li
ncoln favored the
tariff (which may have swung the election in Pennsylvania) and the Homestead Act
(which
certainly helped carry parts of the Midwest).3 As in 1856, the race broke down i
nto sectional
contests, pitting Lincoln against Douglas in the North, and Bell against Breckin
ridge in the South.
Lincoln’s task was the most difficult of the four, in that he had to win ouright,
lacking the necessary
support in the House of Representatives.
The unusual alignments meant that “the United States was holding two elections sim
ultaneously on
November 6, 1860,” one between Lincoln and Douglas, and a second between Breckinri
dge and
Bell. On election day, Douglas learned from the telegraph that he had been crush
ed in New York
and Pennsylvania. More sobering was the editorial in the Atlanta Confederacy pre
dicting Lincoln’s
inauguration would result in the Potomac’s being “crimsoned in human gore,” sweeping “th
e last
vestige of liberty” from the American continent.4 When the votes were counted, Lin
coln had
carried all the Northern states except New Jersey (where he split the electoral
vote with Douglas) as
well as Oregon and California, for a total of 160 electoral votes. Douglas, desp
ite winning nearly
30 percent of the popular vote, took only Missouri and part of New Jersey; this
was a stunning
disappointment, even though he had known the Southern vote would abandon him. Br
eckinridge
carried the Deep South and Maryland. Only Virginia, Tennessee, and Kentucky went
to Bell,
whose 39 electoral votes exceeded those of Douglas. The popular vote could be in
terpreted many
ways. Lincoln received more than 1.86 million votes (almost 40 percent), followe
d by Douglas
with 1.38 million. Lincoln did not receive a single recorded vote in ten slave s
tates, but won every
free state except New Jersey.
If one adds Lincoln’s and Douglas’s popular vote totals together, applying the South’s
faulty logic
that Douglas was a free-soiler, almost 69 percent voted against slavery. And eve
n if one generously
(and inaccurately) lumps together the votes for Bell and Breckinridge, the best
case that the South
could make was that it had the support of no more than 31 percent of the voters.
The handwriting
was on the wall: slavery in America was on the road to extinction. The key was t
hat Lincoln did not
need the South. When this realization dawned on Southerners, it was a shocking c
omeuppance, for
since the founding of the nation, a Southern slaveholder had held the office of
president for fortynine
out of seventy-two years, or better than two thirds of the time. Twenty-four of
the thirty-six
Speakers of the House and twenty-five of the thirty-six presidents pro tem of th
e Senate had been
Southerners. Twenty of thirty-five Supreme Court justices had come from slave st
ates, giving them
a majority on the court at all times.5
After the election, Lincoln found his greatest ally in preserving the Union in h
is defeated foe,
Stephen Douglas. The Illinois senator threw the full force of his statesmanship
behind the cause of
the Union. His, and Lincoln’s, efforts were for naught, since the South marched he
adlong toward
secession. Southern states recognized that it would only be a matter of months u
ntil a “black
Republican” would have control over patronage, customs officials in Southern state
s, and federal
contracts. A black Republican attorney general would supervise federal marshals
in Mississippi and
Louisiana, while Republican postmasters would have authority over the mails that
streamed into
Alabama and Georgia—“black Republicans” with purposes “hostile to slavery,” the South Caro
lina
secession convention noted.
The Last Uneasy Months of Union
Democrat president James Buchanan presided over a nation rapidly unraveling, lea
ding him to
welcome emergency measures that would avoid a war. Lincoln agreed to a proposed
constitutional
amendment that would prohibit interference with slavery in states where it exist
ed. Congress now
attempted to do in a month what it had been unable to do in more than forty year
s: find a
compromise to the problem of slavery.
In mid-December, Kentuckian John J. Crittenden, a respected Senate leader, submi
tted an omnibus
set of proposals, which were supported by the Committee of Thirteen—politicians wh
o could have
averted war had they so chosen, including Jefferson Davis, Seward, Douglas, and
from the House a
rising star, Charles Francis Adams.
Crittenden’s resolutions proposed four compromise measures. First, they would rest
ore the
Missouri Compromise line; second, prohibit the abolition of slaveholding on fede
ral property in the
South; third, establish compensation for owners of runaways; and last, repeal “per
sonal liberty”
laws in the North. More important, the compromise would insert the word “slavery” in
the
Constitution, and then repackage the guarantees with a constitutional guarantee
that would make
the provisions inviolate to future change.
By that time, the North held the decision for war in its hands. Given that the S
outh was bent on
violating the Constitution no matter what, Northerners glumly realized that only
one of three
options remained: war, compromise, or allowing the Deep South to leave. Since no
compromise
would satisfy the South, Northerners soberly assessed the benefits of allowing t
he slaveholding
states to depart. The money markets already had plunged because of the turmoil,
adding to the
national anxiety. Northerners desperately wanted to avoid disunion, and had the
Crittenden
proposals been put to a national plebiscite, it is probable they would have pass
ed, according to
Horace Greeley, although the secessionists would have ignored them as well.6
But in Congress the measures died. Republicans never cast a single vote for the
provisions and,
more important, the South could not accede to any of the conditions. Now, truly,
the issue was on
the table: would slavery survive without the support of the people? Would a majo
rity of
Southerners long support the slaveholding elites if federal law opened up its ma
ils and harbors?
Answers came shortly, when a new government formed in the South.
The Confederate States of America
No sooner had the telegraphs stopped clattering with the 1860 electoral counts t
han Robert
Barnwell Rhett, William Yancey, T. R. Cobb, and other Southern fire eaters led a
movement to call
the state governments of the Deep South into session. South Carolina, Alabama, a
nd Mississippi
met first, the legislators in Columbia, South Carolina, ablaze with secessionist
rhetoric. American
flags were ripped down, replaced by new South Carolina “secesh” flags of a red star
on a white
background. The Palmetto State’s incendiary voices hardly surpassed those in Alaba
ma, where the
secession proposal had early widespread support.
Virginian Edmund Ruffin, one of the hottest fire eaters, had outlined a League o
f United
Southerners in 1858, and the commercial conventions in 1858 advanced the notion
still further. On
November 10, 1860, the South Carolina legislature announced a convention to occu
r a month later.
If necessary, South Carolina was ready to act unilaterally. Florida, Alabama, an
d Georgia
announced similar conventions. Every step of the way, South Carolina took the le
ad, issuing an
“Address to the People of South Carolina” that called the Constitution of the United
States a failed
“experiment.” Rhett proposed a conference in Montgomery with other Southern states t
o form a
government separate from the United States, and South Carolina officially secede
d on December
20, 1860.
Stephen Douglas lambasted the movement as “an enormous conspiracy…formed by the lead
ers of
the secession movement twelve months ago.” Fire eaters, he said, manipulated the e
lection in order
to “have caused a man to be elected by a sectional vote,” thereby proving that the U
nion was as
divided as they claimed.7 However, evidence paints a more complex picture. In ma
ny of the
Southern states, the vote on secession was quite close. In Mississippi, for exam
ple, the secessionists
defeated the “cooperationists” by fewer than 5,000 votes.8 January’s secession convent
ions in other
states produced even smaller prosecession margins. Secession carried in Georgia
by 3,500 ballots
and in Louisiana by 1,200. Nowhere in the South did the vote on secession approx
imate the
numbers who had gone to the polls for the presidential election. Only 70 percent
of the November
total turned out in Alabama, 75 percent in Louisiana, and only 60 percent in Mis
sissippi—making
the prosecession vote even less of a mandate. Nevertheless, Douglas’s conspiracy i
nterpretation did
not account for the fact that the secession forces won the elections, no matter
how narrowly and no
matter how light the vote, underscoring the old adage that all that is necessary
for evil to triumph is
for good men to do nothing, or in the case of an election, stay home. More impor
tant, the winnertake-
all system led to a unanimous agreement by the states of the lower South to send
delegates to a
February convention in Montgomery. As an Alabamian put it, “We are no longer one p
eople. A
paper parchment is all that holds us together, and the sooner that bond is sever
ed the better it will
be for both parties.”9
In fact, secession had been railroaded through even more forcefully than the fin
al state convention
votes suggested. There was no popular referendum anywhere in the South. Conventi
ons, made up
of delegates selected by the legislatures, elected 854 men, 157 of whom voted ag
ainst secession.
Put in the starkest terms, “some 697 men, mostly wealthy, decided the destiny of 9
million people,
mostly poor,” and one third enslaved.10 The circumstances of secession thus lend s
ome credence to
the position that when war finally came, many Southerners fought out of duty to
their state and
indeed many saw themselves as upholding constitutional principles. Few believed
they were
fighting to protect or perpetuate slavery per se. Given the conception of “citizen
ship” at the time—
in the North and South—wherein rights originated in the state, not the federal gov
ernment, most
Southerners normally would have sided with their state government in a fracas ag
ainst the national
government.
On February 7, 1861, the Montgomery delegates adopted a new constitution for the
Confederate
States of America, and two days later elected Jefferson Davis of Mississippi as
the CSA’s first
president. Davis looked much like Lincoln, and had he worn a beard, from certain
angles they
would have been indistinguishable. Like Lincoln, he had served in the Black Hawk
War, then saw
combat at both Monterrey and Buena Vista under Zachary Taylor. Like Lincoln, Dav
is knew
heartache: he had married Taylor’s daughter, who died of malaria. Davis differed f
rom his Northern
counterpart in many ways though. He lived on a small estate given to him by his
brother, but he
never achieved the wealthy planter lifestyle of other Confederate spokesmen. His
view of slavery
was based on how he, personally, treated his slaves, which was well. Thus, the a
bominations
perpetrated by other masters seemed pure fantasy to Davis, who did not travel ex
tensively. Debates
over issues became assaults on his personal honor, leading him to give short shr
ift to the advice of
moderates.
An advocate of industrialism and manufacturing, Davis shared with other Southern
commercial
messengers a blind spot for the dampening effects of slavery on investment and e
ntrepreneurship.
Quite simply, most entrepreneurs steered clear of a slave system that stifled fr
ee speech, oppressed
one third of its consumers, and co-opted the personal liberty of free men to enf
orce slavery.
Although Davis once criticized the “brainless intemperance” of those who wanted disu
nion, his
own secessionist utterances bordered on hysterical, earning him from the New Yor
k Herald the
nickname Mephistophiles of the South.11 When secession came, he had an office in
mind—general
in chief of the new army. He scarcely dreamed he would be president.
The new Confederate constitution over which Jefferson Davis presided prohibited
tariffs, subsidies
to businesses, and most taxation, and required that all appropriations bills be
passed by a two-thirds
majority. This seemed on the surface quite Jeffersonian. Other provisions were n
ot so Jeffersonian.
The CSA constitution granted de facto subsidies to slave owners through external
ized costs, passed
off on all nonslaveholders the enforcement expenses of slavery, such as paying p
osses and court
costs. And the constitution ensured that censorship would only get worse. Althou
gh there was a
provision for a supreme court, the Confederate congress never established one, a
nd the court
system that existed tended to support the centralized power of the Confederate g
overnment rather
than restrict it.12 Certainly there was no check on the Congress or the presiden
t from compliant
courts.13 As would become clear during the war, the absence of such checks in th
e Confederate
constitution gave Davis virtually unlimited power, including a line-item veto. T
he document
reflected, in many ways, a Southern abstraction of what differentiated the secti
ons of the Union.
Southern ideals of what secession entailed sprang from three main sources. First
, during the past
decade Southerners had come to hate free-soil concepts, finding them deeply offe
nsive not only to
the cotton economy to which they were committed but to the system of white super
iority ingrained
in the culture of the South. Second, a residual notion of states’ rights from the
days of the Anti-
Federalists, nurtured by such thinkers as George Mason and John Calhoun, had gai
ned popularity in
the 1850s. The sovereignty of the states over the Union had a mixed and contradi
ctory record of
support by leading Southerners, including Jefferson and Jackson. Under the Confe
deracy, the
principle of states’ rights emerged unfettered and triumphant. The third was the w
idespread view of
the propagandists of the South that “Cotton Is King!” and that a Southern republic w
ould not only
be freer, but economically superior to the North.
Demonizing Northerners followed in short order. New Englanders were “meddlers, jai
lbirds,
outlaws, and disturbers of the peace.”14 (There had to be some irony involved in t
he labeling of
former Puritans as jailbirds and outlaws by a region that prided itself on its f
rontier violence and, in
the case of Georgia, had had felons as its first settlers!) Outright lies about
Lincoln’s intentions
occurred with regularity in order to put the citizens of the new “republic” in the p
roper frame of
mind.
Indeed, Lincoln’s promise not to touch slavery where it already existed only irrit
ated the fire eaters
more, exposing as it did their ultimate fear: that without expansion, the South
would only become
darker. Being unable to transport slaves into the territories, as Senator Robert
Johnson of Arkansas
pointed out, would increase the population inequities, because of the “natural mul
tiplication of
colored people,” until blacks became equal in numbers to whites, then exceeded the
m. At that
point, a race war would ensue.15 Despite thirty years of philosophizing, denials
, obfuscation,
scriptural revision, and constitutional sophistries, it all came down to this: t
he South was terrified of
large numbers of blacks, slave or free. It is not an exaggeration to say that th
e Civil War was about
slavery and, in the long run, only about slavery.
If anyone doubted the relative importance of slavery versus states’ rights in the
Confederacy, the
new constitution made matters plain: “Our new Government is founded…upon the great t
ruth that
the negro is not the equal of the white man. That slavery—subordination to the sup
erior race, is his
natural and normal condition.”16 CSA Vice President Alexander H. Stephens of Georg
ia called
slavery “the proper status of the negro in our form of civilization.”17 In contradic
tion to libertarian
references to “states’ rights and liberty” made by many modern neo-Confederates, the R
ebel
leadership made clear its view that not only were blacks not people, but that ul
timately all blacks—
including then-free Negroes—should be enslaved. In his response to the Emancipatio
n
Proclamation, Jefferson Davis stated, “On and after Febrary 22, 1863, all free neg
roes within the
limits of the Southern Confederacy shall be placed on slave status, and be deeme
d to be chattels,
they and their issue forever.”18 Not only blacks “within the limits” of the Confederac
y, but “all
negroes who shall be taken in any of the States in which slavery does not now ex
ist, in the progress
of our arms, shall be adjudged to…occupy the slave status…[and ] all free negroes sh
all, ipso facto,
be reduced to the condition of helotism, so that…the white and black races may be
ultimately
placed on a permanent basis. [italics added]”19 That basis, Davis said after the w
ar started, was as
“an inferior race, peaceful and contented laborers in their sphere.”20
Fort Sumter
By the time Lincoln had actually taken the reins of the United States government
in March 1861,
the Deep South had seceded. Although Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkans
as, and others
still remained in the Union, their membership was tenuous. From November 1860 un
til March
1861, James Buchanan still hoped to avoid a crisis. But his own cabinet was divi
ded, and far from
appearing diplomatic, Buchanan seemed paralyzed. He privately spoke of a constit
utional
convention that might save the Union, hoping that anything that stalled for time
might defuse the
situation.
He was right in one thing: the crisis clock was ticking. Secessionists immediate
ly used state troops
to grab federal post offices, customs houses, arsenals, and even the New Orleans
mint, which netted
the CSA half a million dollars in gold and silver. Federal officials resigned or
switched sides. Only
a few forts, including Fort Moultrie and Fort Sumter, both in Charleston, posses
sed sufficient
troops to dissuade an immediate seizure by the Confederates, but their supplies
were limited.
Buchanan sent the unarmed Star of the West to reprovision Fort Sumter, only to h
ave South
Carolina’s shore batteries chase it off. Thus, even before the firing on Fort Sumt
er itself, the war
was on, and whatever effectiveness “little Buchanan” (as Teddy Roosevelt later calle
d him) might
have had had evaporated. The leading Republican in his cabinet, Lewis Cass, resi
gned in disgust,
and Northerners of all political stripes insisted on retaliation. Ignoring calls
from his own generals
to reinforce the Charleston forts, Buchanan hesitated. His subordinate, Major Ro
bert Anderson, did
not.
At Fort Sumter, Anderson and seventy Union soldiers faced South Carolina’s forces.
Fort Moultrie,
on Sullivan’s Island, and Fort Johnson, on James Island, straddled Sumter on each
side, which sat
in the middle of Charleston harbor. Fort Johnson was already in Southern hands,
but Moultrie held
out. Because Anderson could not defend both Moultrie and Sumter, he was forced t
o relocate his
troops to Fort Sumter, transferring them on the night of December twenty-sixth.
This bought
Buchanan time, for he thought keeping the remaining states in the Union held the
keys to success.
After February first, no other Southern state had bolted, indicating to Buchanan
that compromise
remained a possibility.
Upon assuming office, Lincoln wasted no time assessing the situation. After rece
iving mixed
advice from his new cabinet, the president opted to resupply the post—as he put it
, to “hold and
occupy” all federal property. He had actually at first thought to “reclaim” federal te
rritory in
Confederate hands, but at the urging of a friend struck the clause from his inau
gural address. He
further made clear to the Rebels that he would only resupply Anderson, not bring
in additional
forces. Nevertheless, the inaugural declared that both universal law and the Con
stitution made “the
Union of these States perpetual.” No state could simply leave; the articles of sec
ession were null
and void. He did hold out the olive branch one last time, offering to take under
advisement federal
appointees unacceptable to the South. Lincoln did not mince words when it came t
o any hostilities
that might arise: “You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressor
s.” “We are not
enemies,” he reminded them, but “friends…. The mystic chords of memory, stretching fro
m every
battlefield, and patriot grave, to every living heart and hearthstone, all over
this broad land, will yet
swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by th
e better angels of
our nature.”21
Lincoln’s cabinet opposed reprovisioning Sumter. Most of their opinions could be d
ismissed, but
not those of William Seward, the secretary of state. Still smarting from the Rep
ublican convention,
Seward connived almost immediately to undercut Lincoln and perhaps obtain by ste
alth what he
could not gain by ballot. He struck at a time in late March 1861, when Lincoln w
as absorbed by
war and suffering from powerful migraine headaches, leading to unusual eruptions
of temper in the
generally mild-mannered president.
At that point of weakness, Seward moved, presenting Lincoln with a memorandum au
daciously
recommending that he, Seward, take over, and, more absurdly, that the Union prov
oke a war with
Spain and France. Not only did the secretary criticize the new president for an
absence of policy
direction, but suggested that as soon as Lincoln surrendered power, Seward would
use the war he
drummed up with the Europeans as a pretext to dispatch agents to Canada, Mexico,
and Central
America to “rouse a vigorous continental spirit of independence” against the Confede
racy. The
president ignored this impertinence and quietly reminded Seward that he had spel
led out his
policies in the inaugural address and that Seward himself had supported the repr
ovisioning of Fort
Sumter. Then, he made a mental note to keep a sharp eye on his scheming secretar
y of state.
By April sixth, Lincoln had concluded that the government must make an effort to
hold Sumter. He
dispatched a messenger to the governor of South Carolina informing him that Sumt
er would be
reprovisioned with food and supplies only. Four days later, General P.G.T. Beaur
egard got orders
from Montgomery instructing him to demand that federal troops abandon the fort.
On April twelfth,
Edmund Ruffin, the South Carolina fire eater who had done as much to bring about
the war as
anyone, had the honor of firing the first shot of the Civil War. In the ensuing
brief artillery
exchange in which Beauregard outgunned Anderson, his former West Point superior,
four to one,
no one was killed. A day later, Anderson surrendered, leading Jefferson Davis to
quip
optimistically, “There has been no blood spilled more precious than that of a mule
.”22
Soon thereafter, the upper South joined the Confederacy, as did the Indian Terri
tory tribes,
including some of the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole. Lincoln
expected as
much. He knew, however, that victory resided not in the state houses of Richmond
or Little Rock,
but in Missouri, Maryland, Kentucky, and western Virginia. Each of these border
states or regions
had slaves, but also held strong pro-Union views. Kentucky’s critical position as
a jumping-off
point for a possible invasion of Ohio by Confederates and as a perfect staging g
round for a Union
invasion of Tennessee was so important that Lincoln once remarked, “I’d like to have
God on my
side, but I’ve got to have Kentucky.”
With long-standing commercial and political ties to the North, Kentucky neverthe
less remained a
hotbed of proslavery sentiment. Governor Beriah Magoffin initially refused calls
for troops from
both Lincoln and Davis and declared neutrality. But Yankee forces under Grant en
sured
Kentucky’s allegiance to the Union, although Kentucky Confederates simultaneously
organized
their own countergovernment. Militias of the Kentucky State Guard (Union) and Ke
ntucky Home
Guard (Confederate) squared off in warfare that quite literally pitted brother a
gainst brother.
Maryland was equally important because a Confederate Maryland would leave Washin
gton, D.C.,
surrounded by enemies. Lincoln prevented Maryland’s proslavery forces (approximate
ly one third
of the populace) from joining the Confederacy by sending in the army. The mere s
ight of Union
troops marching through Maryland to garrison Washington had its effect. Although
New York
regiments expected trouble—the governor of New York warned that the First Zouaves
would go
through Baltimore “like a dose of salts”—in fact, a wide belt of secure pro-Union terr
itory was
carved twenty miles across Maryland.23 Rioting and looting in Baltimore were met
by a
suspension of habeas corpus laws (allowing military governors to keep troublemak
ers incarcerated
indefinitely), and by the arrest of Maryland fire eaters, including nineteen sta
te legislators. When
General Benjamin “Beast” Butler marched 1,000 men to seize arms readied for the Conf
ederates
and to occupy Federal Hill overlooking Baltimore during a thunderstorm, Maryland’s
opportunity
for secession vanished.
One of those firebrands arrested under the suspension of habeus corpus, John Mer
ryman,
challenged his arrest. His case went to the U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice (an
d Marylander
Democrat) Roger Taney, who sat as a circuit judge. Taney, seeing his opportunity
to derail the
Union’s agenda, declared Lincoln’s actions unconstitutional. Imitating Jackson in 18
32, Lincoln
simply ignored the chief justice.
In western Virginia, the story was different. Large pockets of Union support exi
sted throughout the
southern Appalachian mountains. In Morgantown, the grievances that the westerner
s in Virginia
felt toward Richmond exceeded those suffered by the Tidewater planters who were
against the
Union. A certain degree of reality also set in: Wheeling was susceptible immedia
tely to a
bombardment from Ohio, and forces could converge from Pittsburgh and Cincinnati
to crush any
rebellion there. Wisely, then, on June 19, 1861, western Unionists voted in a sp
ecial convention
declaring theirs the only legitimate government of Virginia, and the following J
une, West Virginia
became a new Union state. “Let us save Virginia, and then save the Union,” proclaime
d the
delegates to the West Virginia statehood convention, and then, as if to undersco
re that it was the
“restored” government of Virginia, the new state adopted the seal of the Commonwealt
h of
Virginia with the phrase “Liberty and Union” added.24
West Virginia’s defection to the Union buffered Ohio and western Pennsylvania from
invasion the
same way that keeping Kentucky’s geographical location protected Ohio. In a few po
litically
masterful strokes, Lincoln had succeeded in retaining the border states he neede
d.25 The North had
secured the upper Chesapeake, the entire western section of Virginia; more impor
tant, it held
strategic inroads into Virginia through the Shenandoah Valley, into Mississippi
and Louisiana
through Kentucky and Missouri, and into Georgia through the exposed position of
the Confederates
in Tennessee.26 Moreover, the populations of the border states, though divided,
still favored the
Union, and “three times as many white Missourians would fight for the Union as for
the
Confederacy, twice as many Marylanders, and half again as many Kentuckians.”27
Missouri’s divided populace bred some of the most violent strife in the border reg
ions. Missourians
had literally been at war since 1856 on the Kansas border, and Confederates enjo
yed strong support
in the vast rural portions of the state. In St. Louis, however, thousands of Ger
man American
immigrants stood true to the Union. Samuel Langhorne Clemens (aka Mark Twain), w
ho served a
brief stint in a Missouri Confederate militia unit, remembered that in 1861 “our s
tate was invaded
by Union forces,” whereupon the secessionist governor, Caleb Jackson, “issued his pr
oclamation to
help repel the invader.”28 In fact, Missouri remained a hotbed of real and pseudor
ebel resistance,
with more than a few outlaw gangs pretending to be Confederates in order to plun
der and pillage.
William Quantrill’s raiders (including the infamous Frank and Jesse James) and oth
er criminals
used the Rebel cause as a smokescreen to commit crimes. They crisscrossed the Mi
ssouri-Kansas
borders, capturing the town of Independence, Missouri, in August 1862, and only
then were they
sworn into the Confederate Army. Quantrill’s terror campaign came to a peak a year
later with the
pillage of Lawrence, Kansas, where his cutthroats killed more than 150 men. Unio
nist Jayhawkers,
scarcely less criminal, organized to counter these Confederate raiders.
John C. Frémont, “the Pathfinder” of Mexican War fame, commanded the Union’s Western
Department. Responding to the Missouri violence, he imposed martial law in Augus
t 1861,
invoking the death penalty against any captured guerrillas. Frémont further decree
d arbitrarily that
any slaves captured from rebel forces were emancipated, providing the prosecessi
on forces in the
border states all the ammunition necessary to push them into the Confederacy. Th
is went too far for
Lincoln, who countermanded Frémont’s emancipation edict, while letting martial law s
tand.
The Combatants Square Off
One of the major questions about the American Civil War period is, “Why did it tak
e the North
four long and hard years to finally defeat the South?” On the surface, the Yankees
seemed to
possess most of the advantages: a huge population, a standing army and navy, the
vast bulk of
American industrial might, and a large and effective transportation system. They
also had the
powerful causes of union and free soil to inspire and propel their soldiers. Yet
the North faced a
grim and determined foe, whose lack of men and war matériel was balanced somewhat
by an
abundance of military leadership and combat expertise. Moreover, the war scenari
o gave an
advantage to the defense, not the offense.
The conflict sharply illustrated the predictable results when the Western way of
war met its exact
duplicate on the field of battle, with each side armed with long-range cannons,
new rifles, and even
newer breech-loading and repeating weapons.
Over the course of four years, more than 618,000 men would die—more than the combi
ned
military losses of the Revolution, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Spanish
-American War,
Korea, and the twentieth century’s two world wars combined. Gettysburg alone, in t
hree bloody
days, saw 50,000 killed, wounded, or missing. Sharpsburg—or Antietam—itself produced
more
casualties than the Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Mexican War put togethe
r. Worse, these
were Americans fighting Americans. Stories of brother fighting brother abound. M
ary Lincoln’s
three brothers all died fighting for the Confederacy, while Varina Davis (Jeffer
son Davis’s second
wife) had relatives in blue. John Crittenden’s sons each held the rank of colonel,
but in opposing
armies. David Farragut, the hero of Mobile Bay, had lived in Virginia, and Linco
ln himself was
born in Kentucky, a slave state. Robert E. Lee had a nephew commanding a Union s
quadron on the
James River. Union general George McClellan preferred letting the South go; Sam
Houston, the
governor of Texas, wanted the South to stay in the Union. As young boys, future
presidents
Theodore Roosevelt (New York) and Woodrow Wilson (Georgia) prayed for divine ble
ssings, but
Roosevelt prayed for the North and Wilson for the South.29
The forces of the Union seemed insurmountable. Northerners boasted a population
of more than 20
million, while the white population of the South, that is, those who were eligib
le to bear arms,
numbered under 6 million. Slaves were used in labor situations to supplement the
Confederate
Army in building bridges, digging trenches, and driving wagons, but the slaves o
ften constituted, at
best, a potentially hostile force that had to be guarded, further diminishing ac
tive frontline troops.
In all, the Union put 2.1 million men into the field: 46,000 draftees, 118,000 p
aid substitutes, and
the rest volunteers in the regular army or militia. Rebel forces totaled 800,000
, of which almost one
fourth were either draftees or substitutes. It is an irony, then, that today’s neo
-Confederates and
libertarians who berate the Union as oppressing the rights of free men ignore th
e fact that the
Confederacy forced more free whites under arms than the North.30 Union forces de
serted in higher
absolute numbers (200,000 to just more than half that number of Confederates), b
ut as a proportion
of the total wartime force, the Rebels saw almost 12.5 percent of their army des
ert, compared to
less than 10 percent of the Union forces.
Nevertheless, it would not take long before the Yankees realized the mettle of t
heir opponent. The
valor and tenacity of the Rebels, winning battle after battle with smaller force
s and holding off the
North for four years, is a testament to both their commitment to the Confederate
cause (as they saw
it) and, more important, to their nurturing as Americans, themselves steeped in
the Western way of
war. If only in the war’s duration, the élan and skill of the Confederate soldiers i
s noteworthy.
The commercial differences between the Union and Confederacy were even more stri
king. Much
has been made of the railroad mileage, although depending on how one measured th
e tracks laid in
the territories and the border states, some of the Northern advantage disappears
. The North had as
many as twenty thousand miles of track, whereas the South had perhaps ten thousa
nd. But even if
these numbers had been roughly equal, they would have been misleading. Southern
roads tended to
run east and west, which was an advantage as long as the Mississippi remained op
en and Texas’s
cattle and horses could be brought in through Louisiana. But after New Orleans f
ell and Vicksburg
was all but surrounded, all livestock the western Confederacy could supply were
undeliverable.
More important, Northern railroads often ran north-south, making for rapid deliv
ery to the front
lines of cannonballs, food, and clothing. Some Southern states actually built tr
acks that only
connected to rivers, with no connection to other railroads, and Alabama had laid
a shortcut railroad
that connected two Tennessee River points.
Dominance by the North over the South in other areas was even more pronounced: 3
2 to 1 in
firearms production, 14 to 1 in merchant shipping, 3 to 1 in farm acreage, 412 t
o 1 in wheat, and 2
to 1 in corn. Cotton might have been king, but Southerners soon found that their
monarch did not
make for good eating. And the North controlled 94 percent of manufactured cotton
cloth and 90
percent of America’s boot and shoe manufacturing. Pig-iron manufacturing was almos
t entirely
Northern, with all but a few of the nation’s 286 furnaces residing in the Union. T
hose facilities
churned out iron for 239 arms manufacturers, again overwhelmingly located north
of the Mason-
Dixon Line. One county in Connecticut, which was home to nine firearms factories
, manufactured
guns worth ten times the value of all firearms in the entire South in 1860. The
South had one
cannon foundry, at the Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond. From Cyrus McCormick’s rea
per
factory in Chicago to the Patterson, New Jersey, locomotive works, Northern manu
facturing was
poised to bury the South. In its navy alone, the North had an almost insurmounta
ble advantage, and
Lincoln perceived this, announcing an immediate blockade of the South by sea. Th
e blockade
underscored Lincoln’s definition of the war as an insurrection and rebellion. Had
the South had a
navy, its seagoing commerce with England and France might have been substantial
enough to
legitimate its claims of being a nation. Winners set the rules, and the winner a
t sea was the Union
Navy.
Yet even with these advantages, the Union still faced a daunting task. All the S
outh had to do to
succeed was to survive. The Confederates did not have to invade the North, and e
very year that
passed brought the reality of an independent Confederate nation ever closer. The
American
Revolution had taught that all an army of resistance need do is avoid destructio
n. And more in 1861
than in 1776, the technology favored the defender. Combinations of earthworks wi
th repeating or
breech-loading rifles, long-range cannons, and mass transportation with railroad
s and steam vessels
meant that defenders could resist many times their number, and receive timely re
inforcements or
perform critical withdrawals.
Moreover, the United States had only a small professional army by European stand
ards, and after
1861, that army was reduced by about half as Southerners resigned to fight for t
he CSA. As a
result, both sides relied heavily on militia troops. Militia units, as was learn
ed in the Revolution and
the War of 1812, had important strengths and failings. Village militia units, co
mprised of all men of
the ages fifteen through fifty, mustered once a year, trained and drilled irregu
larly, and provided
their own weapons. But militias lacked the critical discipline, professionalism,
and experience that
regular soldiers possessed, leading Samuel Clemens to refer to his militia compa
ny as a “cattle
herd,” in which an argument broke out between a corporal and sergeant—neither of who
m knew
who outranked the other!31 To overcome these weaknesses, state militias were ret
ained intact as
units, ensuring that Ohioans, Mainers, and New Yorkers fought together. This enh
anced unit
cohesion and loyalty, but also produced tragic results when the order of battle
hurled the manhood
of entire towns into enemy guns. As a result, some towns saw an entire generatio
n disappear in four
years of war.
The militia/regular army volunteer units became “largely a personal thing” in which “a
nyone who
wished could advertise to…‘raise a company’…and invite ‘all willing to join to come on a c
ertain
morning to some saloon, hotel, or public hall.’”32 Units that emerged predictably ha
d flashy names
and even glitzier uniforms, including the Buena Vista Guards, the New York Fire
Zouaves, the
Polish Legion, the St. Patrick’s Brigade, the Garibaldi Guards, and (again predict
ably) the Lincoln
Guards.33 Some, such as the Wisconsin Black Hats, also known as the Iron Brigade
, were famous
for their headgear, while New York Zouave units copied the French army’s baggy red
trousers.
Some of the extremely decorative uniforms soon gave way to more practical battle
field gear, but
the enthusiasm did not dim. The 6th Massachusetts, a regiment of 850 men, marche
d to
Washington only forty-eight hours after Lincoln’s call for volunteers, and between
the time the
president issued the call for 75,000 volunteers in April, and the time Congress
convened in July, the
Northern army had swollen by more than 215,000 over its pre-Sumter troop levels.
Indeed, Massachusetts outdid herself. A state of 1.25 million people marched six
regiments (or
roughly 72,000 men) to war by July, and promised eleven more, a total far exceed
ing the state’s
proportional commitment. Yet this enthusiasm itself came with a cost. Instead of
too few men, the
Union’s greatest problem at the outset of the conflict was too many. Secretary of
War Cameron
complained he was “receiving troops faster than [the government] can provide for t
hem.”34 When
the first weary soldiers marched into Washington to defend the Capitol, all that
awaited them was
salted red herring, soda crackers, and coffee made in rusty cauldrons. Those who
marched to the
front were more fortunate than others crammed into coastal vessels and steamed d
own from New
England port cities. Regardless of their mode of transportation, most of the you
ng men who donned
the uniform of either the North or South had never been more than twenty miles f
rom home, nor
had they ever ridden a steamboat. Many had never seen a large city.
Command in the Union Army was ravaged by the departure of a large number of the
U.S. Army’s
officer corps, both active and retired, who left for the Confederate cause. Inde
ed, from 1776 to
1861 (and even to the present), Southerners filled the ranks of America’s professi
onal fighting
forces in disproportionate numbers in relation to their population. Southern sol
diers outnumbered
Northerners significantly in the Mexican-American War, and West Point graduated
a higher rate of
Southern second lieutenants than Northern. Southern officers, such as Thomas J. “S
tonewall”
Jackson, Braxton Bragg, Albert Sidney Johnston, Joseph E. Johnston, and Robert E
. Lee reneged
on their oath to protect the United States from enemies “foreign and domestic” to fi
ght in gray. In
all, 313 U.S. Army officers resigned to join the Confederacy, whereas 767 regula
r army officers
stayed to form the new Union cadre. Lee was especially reluctant, having been of
fered the position
of commander in chief of the Union Army by Lincoln. Yet he could not persuade hi
mself to raise
his hand against Virginia, and reluctantly joined the Confederates. A more touch
ing departure
occurred with the resignation of Joseph E. Johnston of Virginia, who met Secreta
ry of War
Cameron in April 1861. He wept as he said, “I must go. Though I am resigning my po
sition, I trust
I may never draw my sword against the old flag.”35
More than manpower and brains left the Union cause. Confederates stormed armorie
s and arsenals.
They captured the valuable Norfolk docks and shipyards, taking nine warships int
o custody at the
Gosport Navy Yard. Although the New York and Pennsylvania went up in flames, the
Confederates
salvaged a third vessel, the Merrimac. Had the Union commander of the navy yard
given the order,
the steam-powered Merrimac could have escaped entirely, but he buckled to the pr
essure of the
Rebels, providing the hull for what would become one of the world’s first two iron
clads. In the
larger context, however, these losses were minimal, and paled beside the substan
tial advantages
that the North possessed.
For example, supplementing the militias and regular army enlistments, in 1862, t
he Union allowed
free blacks to join segregated infantry units. Thousands enlisted, at first rece
iving only $7 per
month as compared to $13 allowed for a white private. Two years later, with Linc
oln’s support,
Congress passed the Enrollment Act, authorizing equal pay for black soldiers. Ev
en for white
regulars, however, a military career was not exactly lucrative. Prior to the war
, a general made less
than $3,500 a year (compared to a senator’s $5,000), whereas a captain received $7
68 annually.36
Only the engineering corps seemed exempt from the low pay, attracting many of th
e best officers,
including Robert E. Lee, who directed port improvements along the Mississippi Ri
ver.
Like the North, the South hoped to avoid a draft, but reality set in. The Confed
erate congress
enacted a Conscription Act in 1862, even before the Union, establishing the firs
t military draft in
American history. All able-bodied males eighteen to thirty-five had to serve for
three years,
although wartime demands soon expanded the ages from seventeen to fifty. Exempti
ons were
granted postal employees, CSA officials, railroad workers, religious ministry, a
nd those employed
in manufacturing plants. Draftees could also hire substitutes, of which there we
re 70,000 in the
South (compared with 118,000 in the North). Given the higher rates of Northern r
egular
enlistments, however, it is apparent that Southerners purchased their way out of
combat, or avoided
going to war, at a higher overall rate than their counterparts in blue. Conscrip
tion, to many
Southerners, violated the principles they seemed to be fighting for, leading to
criticisms that the
Confederate draft itself constituted an act of despotism.
Attack and Die?
There were powerful cultural forces at work that shaped each side’s views of every
thing from what
to eat to how to fight.37 Historians Grady McWhiney and Perry Jamieson have prop
osed the
famous Celtic Thesis to explain Confederate tactics.38 Northerners tended to be
more Anglo-Saxon
and Teutonic, Southerners more Celtic. This had tremendous implications for the
way in which
each side fought, with the South consumed by “self-assertion and manly pride.”39
In their controversial book, Attack and Die, McWhiney and Jamieson claimed that
the Celtic
herding and agrarian culture that dominated the South propagated a military cult
ure based on attack
and, especially, full frontal charges. Jefferson Davis, the Confederate presiden
t, urged his troops to
go on the offensive and to “plant our banners on the banks of the Ohio.”40 (Historia
n Bernard De
Voto quipped that Davis had just enough success in war in Mexico to ensure the S
outh’s defeat.)41
Union colonel Benjamin Buell observed “an insane desire on the part of the Souther
n people, &
some of the Generals to assume the offensive.”42 The Confederate/Celtic code of of
ficer loyalty
demanded they lead their men into battle. Such tactics devastated the Confederat
e command
structure: 55 percent of the South’s generals were killed or wounded in battle, an
d many had
already been shot or wounded before they received their mortal wound. More telli
ng, Confederate
casualty rates (men wounded and killed to the number of soldiers in action) were
consistently
higher than the Union’s in almost every major battle, regardless of the size of fo
rces engaged,
generals in command, or outcome of the engagement. Only at Fredericksburg, with
Burnside’s
suicidal charges against Marye’s Heights, did Union casualty rates exceed those of
the supposedly
better-led rebels.
Lee, for all his purported military genius, suffered 20 percent in casualties wh
ile inflicting only 15
percent on his enemy; whereas Grant suffered 18 percent in casualties but inflic
ted 30 percent on
his foes. Overall, Lee only inflicted 13,000 more casualties on the federals tha
n he absorbed—a
ratio completely incompatible with a smaller population seeking to defeat a larg
er one. Grant, on
the other hand, inflicted 12 percent more casualties on enemy commanders he enco
untered.
Confederates attacked in eight of the first twelve big battles of the Civil War,
losing a staggering
97,000 men—20,000 more than the Union forces lost. In only one major engagement, w
here the
highest casualties occurred, Sharpsburg, did the Confederates substantially figh
t on the defensive.
At Gettysburg, the worst of the Rebels’ open-field charges, Lee lost more than 30
percent of his
entire command, with the majority of the losses coming in Pickett’s ill-fated char
ge.
Some of the propensity for taking the offensive must be blamed on the necessity
for Confederate
diplomatic breakthroughs. Until Gettysburg, the Confederacy pinned its dim hopes
on Britain’s or
France’s entering the fight on its side. But Europeans were unsure whether the Con
federacy’s
defensive strategy was of its own choosing or was forced on it by Northern might
. Thus, taking the
war to the North figured prominently in the efforts to convince Britain and Fran
ce that the CSA
was legitimate.43 Yet this strategy proved to be flawed.
The North, on the other hand, seriously misjudged the commitment and skill of it
s foe, but at least,
from the outset, appreciated the nature of its initial military objectives and i
ts economic advantages.
Nevertheless, neither Lincoln nor his generals fully understood how difficult th
e task would be in
1861. Ultimately, however, the difference between North and South came down to L
incoln’s being
“a great war president [whereas] Jefferson Davis was a mediocre one.”44 Where Davis
had
graduated from West Point and fought in the Mexican War, Lincoln did not know ho
w to write a
military order. But he learned: “By the power of his mind, [he] became a fine stra
tegist,” according
to T. Harry Williams and “was a better natural strategist than were most of the tr
ained soldiers.”45
He immediately perceived that the Union had to use its manpower and economic adv
antage, and it
had to take the offensive. Still, Lincoln had much to absorb, some of it from Un
ion General in
Chief Winfield Scott. Old Fuss and Feathers of Mexican War fame—by then seventy-fo
ur years old
and notorious for falling asleep at councils of war—engineered the initial strateg
y for the Union
Army, the Anaconda Plan.
Designed to take advantage of the Union’s naval power, Scott envisioned U.S. naval
vessels
blockading the ports on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts and the lower Mississippi R
iver. Gradually,
using gunboats and ground forces, the North would sever the western Confederacy
from the eastern
Confederacy by controlling the Mississippi. This would have the twofold effect o
f starving the
Confederates and denying them additional men and horses on the one hand, and pre
venting aid
from overseas from reaching the Rebels on the other. Lincoln’s advisers initially
put far too much
faith in the Anaconda Plan, hoping that it could strangle the enemy without the
need for crushing
all Rebel resistance. But the strategy of blockades and dividing the Confederacy
in two along the
Mississippi would prove vital when later combined with other strategic aims.
The blockade did have an effect. As early as July 1861, Jefferson Davis told Jam
es Chestnut in
Richmond, “We begin to cry out for more ammunition and already the blockade is beg
inning to
shut it all out.”46 But any fantasy that the North would simply cruise down the Mi
ssissippi River
unopposed soon faded as the western Union commanders noted the Confederate troop
buildups and
fortifications along the river systems in Tennessee and Mississippi.
Once again, though, the Confederacy played to the Union’s strength, this time thro
ugh its
shortsighted diplomatic decision to embargo the sale of cotton to Europe. Rebel
leaders mistakenly
believed that a cotton-starved Britain or France might enter the war in a few mo
nths, echoing the
old cotton-is-king mantra of the 1850s. In reality, the cotton embargo proved di
sastrous. The
British easily shifted to new sources of cotton, especially India and Egypt, so
as a consequence the
strategy simultaneously deprived the Confederacy of income from the only signifi
cant product that
could have brought in funds, while coalescing the planter elites around protecti
ng their cotton
investment. Planters kept their slave workforces growing cotton, when they could
have been
repairing railroads, building forts, or otherwise doing tasks that kept white so
ldiers from combat.47
Both the Anaconda Plan and cotton diplomacy clouded the real military picture. I
n 1861 few
thinkers in either army clearly saw that only a comprehensive, two-front war in
the west and
Virginia would produce victory. Neither side ever approached the “total war” level o
f mobilization
and destruction later seen in World War I, but the North gradually adopted what
historian James
MacPherson called hard war.48 “Hard war” meant two (and later, more) simultaneous fr
onts and
the destruction of cities without, if possible, the slaughter of the inhabitants
. It meant constant
assault. It meant mobilizing public opinion. Most of all, it meant attacking the
economic and
commercial pillar of slavery that propped up the Confederacy. Lincoln only came
to this
understanding after a year of bloody battlefield setbacks.
At the outset, Lincoln had no intention of making emancipation the war aim, nor
is it likely he
could have persuaded his troops to fight to free blacks. Northerners went to war
because the South
had broken the law in the most fundamental way. After “teachin’ Johnny Reb a lesson” t
he war
would be over. When it dragged on, a combination of other motivations set in, in
cluding
retribution, a perceived threat to the Constitution, and later, emancipation. So
uthern soldiers, on the
other hand, fought because they saw federal troops invading their home states. “Wh
y are you
fighting in this war?” Union troops asked a captured soldier. “Because you’re down her
e,” he
replied.49
Bull Run and Union Failure
forward to richmond blared a front-page headline from the New York Tribune in Ju
ne 1861.50
Already impatient with the Anaconda Plan, Northern voices called for a speedy vi
ctory to capture
the new Confederate capital of Richmond and end the conflict. Lincoln unwisely a
greed to an
immediate assault, realizing that every day the Confederacy remained independent
it gained in
legitimacy. He told the commanding General Irwin McDowell, who headed the Army o
f the
Potomac, “You are green, it is true, but they are green also; you are all green al
ike.”51 McDowell
developed a sound plan, marching 36,000 men out of Washington and into northern
Virginia on
July 16, 1861. There, Confederate General Pierre Beauregard, fresh from his triu
mph at Fort
Sumter, met him with a smaller force of 20,000 near a railroad crossing at Manas
sas, on the south
bank of the river called Bull Run.
Another rebel force of 12,000, under Joe Johnston, operated in the Shenandoah Va
lley; the aged
Union general Robert Patterson was instructed to keep Johnston from reinforcing
Beauregard.
Benefiting from the scouting of J.E.B. Stuart’s cavalry and from reliable spy repo
rts, Johnston
slipped away from Patterson and headed for Manassas. Thus, McDowell would find n
ot one, but
two Rebel armies when he finally arrived at Bull Run on Sunday, July twenty-firs
t.
Expecting an entertaining victory, hundreds of Washington civilians, including c
ongressmen and
tourists, arrived at the battlefield with picnic baskets in horse-drawn carriage
s. What they saw,
instead, was one of the worst routs of the Civil War. General Johnston arrived a
nd, aided by
General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, drove the Yankees from the field. Federal forces
fell back
across the river, where they encountered the gawking civilians, now scrambling t
o pick up their
lunches and climb into their carriages ahead of the retreating army. One congres
sman, who had
come out as a spectator, reported
There was never anything like it…for causeless, sheer, absolute, absurd cowardice,
or rather panic,
on this miserable earth…. Off they went, one and all; off down the highway, over a
cross fields,
towards the woods, anywhere they could escape…. To enable them better to run, they
threw away
their blankets, knapsacks, canteens, and finally muskets, cartridge-boxes, and e
verything else.52
An orderly retreat soon turned into a footrace back to Washington. A reporter fo
r the London
Times, W. H. Russell, who accompanied the reserves, had just started forward whe
n terrified
soldiers shot past him in the opposite direction. “What does this mean?” he asked a
fleeing officer,
who replied, “Why, it means that we are pretty badly whipped.”53 The road back to th
e capital was
strewn with muskets, backpacks, caps, and blankets as men, tripping and stumblin
g, grabbing
wagons or caissons, dashed for safety.
In the first of many missed opportunities on both sides, however, Johnston faile
d to pursue the
Union Army into Washington and possibly end the war. While the South had a stunn
ing victory, it
also had six hundred deaths (matched by the federal casualties), making it the m
ost costly battle
fought on American soil since 1815. Within months, each army would long for the
day when it
marked its casualty figures in the hundreds instead of the thousands. Despite th
e North’s shocking
defeat, Bull Run proved indecisive, producing “no serious military disadvantage fo
r the North, nor
gain, except in terms of pride…for the South.”54 The South did find a new hero—Stonewa
ll
Jackson—whose nickname derived from the moment in the battle when a South Carolina
general
pointed to him, saying, “There is Jackson, standing like a stone wall.”55 Aside from
that, the Rebel
army was a mess. Johnston lamented it was “more disorganized by victory than that
of the United
States by defeat.”56 The South learned few lessons from the clash, but did compreh
end the
tremendous advantage railroads provided. Had the Confederacy carefully assessed
the situation, it
would have avoided any battlefield situation that did not provide close interior
lines of support. The
South also decided it had to change uniforms: the U.S. Army wore blue, as did ma
ny Southern units
that had just recently resigned from the Union, leading entire units to come und
er friendly fire at
Bull Run. The Confederates soon adopted the gray uniforms of the Virginia Milita
ry Institute.
Meanwhile, as Lincoln and his advisers soberly assessed the situation, the setba
ck actually
stimulated their war preparations. Some Lincoln critics assail him for not calli
ng up a larger army
sooner, whereas others castigate him for being overly aggressive. In fact, prior
to the first musket
balls’ flying, Lincoln hoped to demonstrate his goodwill to the South by not mobil
izing for an
invasion. Bull Run obviously dashed such hopes, and Lincoln reconsidered the mil
itary situation.
The Union quickly fortified Washington, D.C., with a string of defenses. “Troops,
troops, tents, the
frequent thunder of guns practising, lines of heavy baggage wagons…all indications
of an immense
army,” noted one observer.57 Another, using his spyglass to take detailed notes, r
ecorded 34
regiments (more than 80,000 men) encamped, and on another day saw 150 army wagon
s on
Pennsylvania Avenue alone.58
A massive manpower buildup was only one sign, though, of the Union’s resolve. In J
uly 1861,
Congress passed the Crittenden-Johnson Resolutions, declaring support for a war “t
o defend and
maintain the supremacy of the Constitution, and to preserve the Union with all t
he dignity, equality,
and rights of the several states unimpaired.”59 Sponsored by Crittenden and Tennes
see Democrat
Andrew Johnson, the resolutions provided a broad-based warning from Northerners
and borderstate
politicians of both parties that, if not addressed and punished, secession would
lead to a
collapse of law and order everywhere. Between the lines, the resolutions warned
Lincoln that the
war could not appear to be a campaign against slavery itself.
Theoretically, this put Lincoln in a bind, though one of his own making. He had
held at the outset
that the Confederacy represented a rebellion by a handful of individuals, and th
at the Southern
states had never legally left the Union. That meant these states could be restor
ed with constitutional
protections intact, including slavery, if or when the Southern states returned.
Congress, however,
had already provided Lincoln a means of leveraging the war toward abolition at s
ome future point.
In May 1861, Union General Benjamin “Beast” Butler, having conquered Fortress Monroe
,
Virginia, announced his intention to retain slaves as “contrabands” of war, includin
g any fugitive
slaves who escaped behind his lines. Three months later, the Congress—with the Dem
ocrats in
almost unanimous opposition—passed the First Confiscation Act, which provided for
the seizure of
property the Rebels used to support their resistance, including all slaves who f
ought with the
Confederate Army or who worked directly for it.
Confiscation hurt Lincoln’s efforts to keep Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri in th
e Union. Not
long after Congress acted, General John Fremont in Missouri issued orders to con
fiscate any Rebel
slaves there, implying that the act amounted to a declaration of emancipation. F
remont’s impetuous
interpretation prompted a quick response from the president, who instructed Frem
ont to bring his
orders in line with the letter of the Confiscation Act. This edict probably kept
Kentucky in the
Union.
Meanwhile, Lincoln responded to the Bull Run debacle by shaking up the command s
tructure,
replacing McDowell with General George B. McClellan, who then was elevated to th
e position of
general in chief of the army after Scott’s retirement in November 1861. McClellan,
who likened
himself to Napoléon, was an organizational genius whose training of the Union Army
no doubt
played a critical role in preparing it for the long war. Intelligent and energet
ic, occasionally
arrogant, McClellan did indeed share some traits with Napoléon. But he completely
lacked
Napoléon’s acute sense of timing—where the enemies’ weaknesses were, where to strike, an
d
when. Not wishing to risk his popularity with the men, McClellan was reluctant t
o sacrifice them
when the need arose. Worse, he viewed his own abilities as far superior to those
of Lincoln, a man
he viewed as possessing “inferior antecedents and abilities.”60 A Douglas Democrat,
politics were
never far from George McClellan’s mind, although, ironically, no general did more
to educate
Lincoln in the academic elements of strategy and tactics. Lincoln’s wisdom in perc
eiving the
overarching picture in 1862 and 1863 owed much to the Union’s Napoléon.
McClellan’s weaknesses were not apparent in mid-1861, when, even before his first
big battle, he
was touted as a future president. But he lacked aggressiveness, a trait fostered
by his perfectionist
nature. The general constantly complained he lacked adequate troops (often asser
ting that he
needed an unreasonable ten-to-one advantage before he could attack), supplies, a
nd artillery, where,
in contrast, Napoléon had fought while outnumbered on numerous occasions, using th
e
overconfidence of the enemy to defeat him. Secretary of War Edwin Stanton dispar
agingly said of
McClellan, “We have ten generals there, every one afraid to fight…. If McClellan had
a million
men, he would swear the enemy had two million, and then he would sit down…and yell
for
three.”61
McClellan did have two traits that made him too popular to replace easily. He fe
d his army well
and displayed it on parade whenever possible. McClellan obtained good rations an
d established
new examination boards that produced better quality officers, raising his reputa
tion among the line
soldiers. His frequent parades and displays of discipline instilled a public aff
ection that would only
dissipate after his first major loss. Lincoln bore a considerable degree of resp
onsibility, however,
for the McClellan monster: the president’s unaffected manner of speaking, his penc
hant for
storytelling to make a point, and above all his lack of social refinement led Mc
Clellan to misjudge
him. The general wrote that Lincoln was “not a man of very strong character…certainl
y in no sense
a gentleman.”62 Lincoln’s deference finally reached its end. Unhappy with McClellan’s
dithering,
in January 1862, Lincoln issued the “President’s General War Order No. 1,” instructing
McClellan
to move forward by February. As he had throughout most of the previous few month
s, McClellan
outnumbered his Rebel opponents by about three-to-one. Yet he still advanced cau
tiously in what
has been labeled the Virginia Peninsula Campaign of 1862. Rather than approach R
ichmond
directly, McClellan advanced obliquely with an army of 112,000 along the peninsu
la between the
York and James rivers where the Union Navy could provide cover. As McClellan nea
red
Richmond, things fell apart. First, Lincoln unwisely reduced McClellan’s command b
y withholding
Irwin McDowell’s entire corps in a reorganization of the army, placing McDowell so
uth of
Washington to protect the capital. Second, McClellan wasted valuable time (a mon
th) capturing
Yorktown. Begging Lincoln for McDowell’s men, who finally headed south toward
Fredericksburg, McClellan reluctantly moved on Richmond.
By that time, Lee had become the commander of the Army of Northern Virginia and
McClellan’s
main foe. Lee’s second in command, Stonewall Jackson, set the table for Union fail
ure through a
series of bold raids on Yankee positions all over the Shenandoah Valley. Jackson’s
high theater
struck terror in the hearts of Washingtonians, who were convinced he was going t
o invade at any
moment, despite the fact that Jackson had only 16,000 men facing more than 45,00
0 Union troops.
He succeeded in distracting McClellan long enough that the opportunity to drive
into Richmond
vanished. Instead, the Union and Confederate armies fought a series of moving ba
ttles throughout
June and July of 1862, including the Battles of Seven Pines, Mechanicsville, Gai
nes’s Mill,
Frayser’s Farm, and others. At Malvern Hill, McClellan finally emerged with a vict
ory, though he
still had not taken Richmond. Murmurings in Washington had it that he could have
walked into the
Confederate capital, but the last straw (for now, at least) for Lincoln came wit
h a letter McClellan
wrote on July seventh in which the general strayed far from military issues and
dispensed political
advice well above his pay grade.
At that point, a rising group of Republicans, known as the Radicals, emerged. So
me of the Radicals
had been abolitionists before the war, and they tended to view the conflict as n
ot only about
emancipation, but also about cleansing from the body politic the disloyal and tr
easonous plantation
elites of the Democratic Party they saw as having brought on the war. Among the
most prominent
Radicals were Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania,
Joshua
Giddings of Ohio, and Union general Carl Schurz, all of whom wanted to severely
punish the South
as a region and the Democrats as a party for bringing on the war. When the Radic
als heard of
McClellan’s insubordination (not to mention, in their eyes, incompetence), they pr
essured Lincoln
to remove him, and he acceded to their demands, replacing America’s Bonaparte with
General John
Pope. Demoted as supreme commander, McClellan remained in charge of the Army of
the
Potomac.
John Pope was a braggart who told Congress that if he had been in charge from th
e beginning, his
forces would already be marching through New Orleans. Pope was soon humiliated m
ore than
McClellan. Despite victories over Pope, Lee had lost proportionately more stagge
ring numbers of
men. At the Seven Days’ Battles (Mechanicsville, Malvern Hill), for example, the S
outh lost 5,700
men (13 percent of the force committed) and at Second Manassas it lost more than
9,000 men
(more than 18 percent of the troops engaged). For the time being, however, Union
congressmen’s
anger at the outcome concealed from them the raw arithmetic of combat.
Water War
While conflict on land raged in the East, good news for the Union came from the
war at sea. In
September 1861, navy flotillas had captured the forts at Cape Hatteras, North Ca
rolina, establishing
a tiny beachhead in the South. Two months later, the U.S. Navy seized the South
Carolina Sea
Islands and Port Royal. The relatively easy conquest reflected both the North’s su
periority at sea
and, at the same time, the magnitude of the task that still remained. Jefferson
Davis admitted as
much. “At the inception of hostilities,” he pointed out, “we had no commercial marine,
while their
merchant vessels covered the ocean. We were without a navy, while they had power
ful fleets.”63
Nevertheless, the Union had to cover more than three thousand miles if one measu
red in a straight
line rather than calculated the space of every inlet and bay. Policing the entir
e coastline was
impossible, but grabbing key ports was not.
The blockade also posed the danger that an aggressive Union captain would fire o
n a foreign ship
or board a neutral vessel. At all costs, Lincoln needed to keep Britain and Fran
ce out of the conflict.
In May, Britain announced strict neutrality, allowing for the Confederates to fi
ght for their
independence, but also acknowledging the legality of the Union blockade. Thus th
e British could
simultaneously recognize the Confederate and Union war aims as legitimate. Reali
ty dictated that
John Bull might, therefore, fall on the Union side, since British ships would no
t cross the blockade
line. In November 1861, however, when Jefferson Davis dispatched John Slidell an
d James Mason
as permanent envoys to Britain and France aboard a British ship, the Trent, U.S.
Navy Captain
Charles Wilkes, aboard the USS San Jacinto, stopped the Trent by firing shots ac
ross her bow.
Boarding the vessel, Union sailors removed Mason and Slidell and transported the
m to New York
City, from where they were declared prisoners of war and remanded to Fort Warren
in Boston.
British outrage not only produced a stern letter from the foreign minister, but
was also followed by
deployment of 11,000 redcoats to Canada and vessels to the western Atlantic. Wil
kes’s
unauthorized (and unwise) act threatened to do what the Rebels themselves had be
en unable to
accomplish, namely, to bring in Britain as a Confederate ally. Seward, perhaps,
relished the
developments, having failed to provoke his multinational war of unification, but
Lincoln was not
amused. Scarcely a month after they were abducted, the two diplomats were releas
ed on Christmas
Day, 1861. Britain considered this an acceptable apology, and the matter ended.6
4
All that remained of the naval war was a last-gasp Confederate attempt to leapfr
og the North with
technology. Had the roles been reversed, the North, with its industrial and tech
nical superiority
under pressure, might have successfully found a solution to a blockade. But for
the already
deficient Confederacy (despite its superlative naval secretary, Stephen R. Mallo
ry), the gap
between the two combatants became obvious when the Rebels launched their “blockade
breaker,”
the CSS Virginia. Better known as the Merrimac, the vessel was the Union steam f
rigate the
Confederacy had confiscated when it took the Norfolk navy yard. Outfitted with f
our inches of iron
siding, the ship was impressive compared to wooden vessels, yet hardly a technol
ogical marvel.
(Britain had launched an ironclad—Warrior—in 1859.) The Virginia’s ten guns fired from
holes
cut in the iron siding, which could be closed off by hand. A single gun covered
the bow and stern.
Most of the superstructure was above water, including the smokestack, lifeboat,
and the entire gun
deck. In March 1862, the Virginia sortied out under the command of Captain Frank
lin Buchanan to
engage Union blockading vessels at Hampton Roads. The astonished Yankee sailors
watched as
their cannonballs bounced harmlessly off the sides of the monster, which quickly
sank the
Cumberland and then the Congress, two of the navy’s best frigates. The Union itsel
f had already
had contracts for several variants of its own ironclads, known by the name of th
e lead vessel, the
Monitor, whose design was the brainchild of a brilliant Swedish designer, John E
ricsson. It
surpassed the Virginia in almost every category. At 172 feet long, its hull bare
ly sat above the
waterline, leading to its description as “a crackerbox on a raft.” It boasted a revo
lving turret capable
of withstanding ten-inch shot at close range and brandished its own two eleven-i
nch Dahlgren
smoothbore cannons; it also had some fifty of Ericsson’s inventions aboard, includ
ing the first
flushing toilets on a naval vessel. Upon the Monitor’s arrival at Hampton Roads, i
t was charged
with protecting the larger Minnesota. On March 9, 1862, the Virginia sallied for
th, and “Ericsson’s
pigmy” engaged it.65 Blasting away at each other for hours, neither could gain an
advantage, but
the Monitor could position herself where the Virginia could not bring a single g
un to bear. Still,
neither could seriously damage the other, and the two ships withdrew, each for a
different reason
(the Monitor’s captain had been blinded by a shell, and the Virginia’s second in com
mand, having
replaced the wounded Buchanan, realized he could not outmaneuver or outshoot the
Monitor with
his current vessel). The Virginia’s draft was so deep that it continually ran agro
und, and efforts to
lighten the ship so that it could better maneuver only exposed its hull. Subsequ
ently, the Virginia
was run ashore and burned when its commander feared that other ships like the Mo
nitor were about
to capture her. Later, in December 1862, the USS Monitor sank in a gale off Cape
Hatteras, but
many of her sisters joined the federal navy in inland waterways and along the co
asts.
Confederate navy secretary Mallory, meanwhile, had funded other ironclads, and t
hirty-seven had
been completed or were under construction by the war’s end. He also approved an ex
periment
using a mine ram in an underwater vessel called the CSS Hunley, an unfortunate v
essel that
suffered several fatalities during its sea trials. Although not the world’s first
submarine, the handcranked
boat was the first to actually sink an enemy ship, the Housatonic—and itself—in Febr
uary
1864. Yet these efforts smacked of desperation. The Confederacy had neither the
resources nor a
sufficient critical mass of scientific and technical brainpower or institutions
to attempt to leapfrog
the North in technology.
War in the West
While coastal combat determined the future of the blockade and control of the ea
stern port cities,
and while the ground campaign in Virginia dragged on through a combination of Mc
Clellan’s
obsessive caution and Confederate defensive strategy, action shifted to the Miss
issippi River
region. Offensives in the West, where Confederates controlled Forts Donelson and
Henry on the
Tennessee and Cumberland rivers, held the key to securing avenues into Tennessee
and northern
Alabama. Implementing the Anaconda Plan down the Mississippi, then, depended on
wresting
those important outposts from the rebels.
General Ulysses Simpson Grant, an engineer from West Point who had fought in the
Mexican War,
emerged as the central figure in the West. This was surprising, given that only
a year earlier he had
failed in a series of professions, struggled with alcohol, and wallowed in debt.
Grant took his
Mexican War experience, where he compiled a solid understanding of logistics as
well as strategy,
and applied his moral outrage over slavery to it. His father-in-law owned slaves
, and James
Longstreet (Lee’s second in command at Gettysburg) was his wife’s cousin and an army
buddy.
But Grant’s own father had abolitionist tendencies, and he himself soon came to vi
ew slavery as a
clear evil. When the Civil War came, Grant saw it not only as an opportunity for
personal
resurrection, but also as the chastisement he thought the slave South had earned
. He was
commissioned a colonel in the Illinois volunteers, and worked his way up to brig
adier general in
short order.
Grant did not take long to make his mark on the Confederates. Swinging down from
Cairo, Illinois,
in a great semicircle, he captured Paducah, Kentucky; then, supported by a river
flotilla of
gunboats, he moved on the two Confederate river-mouth forts that guarded the ent
rance to the
western part of the Confederacy. On February 6, 1862, Grant’s joint land-and-river
force took Fort
Henry on the Tennessee River, and Fort Donelson, the guardian of the Cumberland
River, fell a
few days later. When the fort’s commander asked for terms, Grant responded grimly,
“Unconditional and immediate surrender.”66 Given the army’s penchant for nicknames, it
was
perhaps unavoidable that he soon became known as Unconditional Surrender Grant.
Donelson’s
capitulation genuinely reflected Grant’s approach to war. “Find out where your enemy
is,” he said,
then “get at him as soon as you can, and strike him as hard as you can, and keep m
oving on.”67
Grant’s success laid open both Nashville and Memphis.
Northern journalists, inordinately demoralized by Bull Run, swung unrealisticall
y in the opposite
direction after Grant’s successes. The Chicago Tribune declared, “Chicago reeled mad
with joy,”
and the New York Times predicted that “the monster is already clutched and in his
death
struggle.”68 Little did they know that the South was about to launch a major count
erattack at a
small church named Shiloh near Pittsburg Landing on the Tennessee River. Confede
rate General
Albert Sidney Johnston knew by then (if he had not beforehand) the difficulty of
the task
confronting him. He clung to a perimeter line almost three hundred miles long, l
argely bordered by
rivers, fighting an opponent who commanded the waterways, while he lacked suffic
ient railroads to
counter the rapid concentration of forces by the Union at vulnerable points alon
g the rivers. Now
the South’s reliance on river transportation, as opposed to railways, had come bac
k to haunt the war
effort.
Rather than dig in, Johnston (typically) attacked. Grant’s troops were spread out
while the general
was planning the next part of his offensive. He had no defensive works, nor did
he have any real
lines of communication or supply. His headquarters was nine miles away, on the o
ther side of the
Tennessee River. Although the troops at Shiloh and Pittsburg Landing were the mo
st raw of
recruits, they had the good fortune of being commanded by the able William Tecum
seh Sherman.
Early on the morning of April 6, 1862, Confederate forces quietly marched throug
h the fog, nearly
into the Yankee camp until warnings sounded and musket fire erupted. For the nex
t six hours, the
armies slammed into each other at hurricane force, with shocking casualties. In
the Peach Orchard,
both sides were blinded by a blossom snowstorm created by the din of rifle and c
annon shot. By all
accounts, the midday hours at Shiloh were the bloodiest of the war, with more Un
ion and Rebel
bodies falling per minute than in any other clash. Albert Sidney Johnston himsel
f became a
casualty, hit below and behind the knee by a musket ball. Aides could not locate
the wound, which
was hidden by his high riding boots, and the unconscious Johnston died in their
arms. Fighting at
Shiloh ended on the first day with a Confederate advantage, but not a decisive v
ictory. The Yanks
found themselves literally backed up to the banks of the Tennessee River. Genera
l Lew Wallace,
later famous for writing Ben-Hur, finally arrived after confusing orders that ha
d him futilely
marching across the Tennessee countryside; General Don Carlos Buell arrived afte
r steaming up
the Tennessee River with 25,000 men. Grant himself had come up from the rear ran
ks, and on the
second day, with the reinforcements in place, the counterattack drove the Rebels
from the field and
forced Johnston’s successor, P.G.T. Beauregard, to withdraw south to Corinth, Miss
issippi. It was a
joyless victory, given the carnage. Grant recalled that he could “walk across the
clearing in any
direction stepping on dead bodies without a foot touching the ground.”69
Tennessee was opened in 1862. Meanhile, Beauregard could not hope to hold Corint
h against the
combined forces of Pope, Grant, and Buell and therefore conducted a secret withd
rawal that opened
up northern Mississippi. Just two months earlier, in April 1862, Commander David
Farragut
captured New Orleans, and Memphis, too, had fallen. Now only Vicksburg stood bet
ween the
Union and complete control of the Mississippi. Vicksburg not only dominated the
river, but it also
linked the South to the western Confederacy by rail. There, the blockade had bee
n more porous,
allowing food and horses to resupply Rebel armies in the East.
The story in the West seemed grimly monotonous: the Confederates would mount an
offensive
(despite their supposedly defensive strategy), suffer proportionately greater lo
sses, retreat, then
escape as the Union commander dawdled. Union general William Rosecrans attacked
Mufreesboro,
Tennessee, in December 1862. Again the Confederates had to leave the field despi
te achieving a
draw. Slowly but surely, the Confederates, who took one step forward and two bac
k, yielded
ground. They were about to give up the plum of the West: Vicksburg.
From May to June, in 1862, the Union failed to capture Vicksburg, which sat on a
high bluff
commanding a hairpin curve in the Mississippi River. Vicksburg’s geography held th
e key to the
city’s nearly invulnerable position. The Mississippi River flowed to the city at a
45-degree
downward-sloping angle before abruptly turning due north, then sharply angled du
e south again.
Vicksburg sat on the eastern (Mississippi) side of the hairpin, while directly n
orth of the hairpin lay
the Chickasaw Bayou, wedged between the Mississippi River and the Yazoo River. T
his swamp
was all but impenetrable for an army, as Sherman found out, calling the approach
“hopeless.”70 A
main road and rail line connected Vicksburg with Jackson, Mississippi.
Throughout the remainder of 1862, Grant’s army tried a number of novel approaches
to defeat this
geography, including diverting the river itself by constructing a canal and brea
king a levee to create
a channel from the Yazoo. Nothing worked. Using Memphis as a base, however, Gran
t now
decided to take Vicksburg by preventing the two Rebel armies facing him (one und
er Joe Johnston,
and one in Vicksburg under John Pemberton) from uniting.
Grant discarded traditional tactics and trudged southward along the Louisiana si
de of the river,
through difficult bayous and lakes, to a point well below Vicksburg where he cou
ld recross into
Mississippi. To do so, he needed the Union Navy, under Admiral David Porter, to
make a critical
run from above Vicksburg, past the powerful guns in the city, to the junction be
low, from where it
could ferry Grant’s forces across. Porter sent dozens of supply boats past the cit
y on the night of
April 22, 1863. The Confederates had poured turpentine over bales of hay and set
them afire to
illuminate the river in order to bombard the passing vessels. Although most fede
ral ships sustained
damage, all but one survived the run. Grant’s army now crossed into Mississippi fr
om below
Vicksburg, inserting itself between Pemberton and Johnston. After he captured an
d torched
Jackson, Mississippi, and blocked the railroad line, Vicksburg was totally isola
ted.
Then, from late May until July, the Union Army bombarded and closed the noose ar
ound the city
from the east. Civilians living in Vicksburg, under constant fire, had run out o
f normal food. When
Grant sealed off the city, the residents took to caves and bombproof shelters. T
hey ate soup boiled
from mule and horse ears and tails before finally consuming the remaining parts
of the beasts.
When the horses and mules were gone, they ate rats. Sickness and disease swept t
he inhabitants as
well as the soldiers. At last, on the Fourth of July, 1863, Pemberton, unable to
link up with
Johnston outside the city, surrendered Vicksburg and its force of 30,000 starvin
g soldiers, as well
as 170 cannons, just one day after the crushing defeat of Lee’s army at Gettysburg
. Grant said,
“The fate of the Confederacy was sealed when Vicksburg fell.”71
Lincoln had, at last, found what he needed to defeat the Confederacy. With eerie
prescience,
Lincoln told his advisers just before news arrived from Vicksburg that if the ge
neral took the city,
“Grant is my man, and I am his for the rest of the war.”72
Growing Government(s)
No accusation against Abraham Lincoln has more merit than that he presided over
the most rapid
expansion of federal power in American history. Most of the expansion can be jus
tified by wartime
demands, but too much was little more than political pork barreling and fulfillm
ent of campaign
promises.
Shortly after the call had gone out for troops, the government possessed no prov
en method of
raising large sums of money quickly. Lincoln’s secretary of the treasury, Salmon P
. Chase, proved
to be the right man in the right office at the right time. Chase came from a New
Hampshire family,
where he learned politics from his state representative father. As a young man,
Chase had also
worked with his father at running a tavern and a glass factory, and when both fa
iled, he was
shipped off to an Ohio relative. After studying for the bar in Ohio, Chase pract
iced on behalf of the
Cincinnati branch of the Bank of the United States, achieving some degree of fin
ancial success.
Aloof, plodding, and occasionally without tact, Chase had been drawn to the anti
slavery cause
following rioting in Cincinnati against a local abolitionist paper run by James
G. Birney.
Politically, Chase moved from the Whig Party to the Liberty Party, then adopted
the label free
Democrat.73
He had won a Senate seat as a Democrat from Ohio, but continued to push the free
-soil cause
before running for governor in Ohio under a fusion Republican ticket in 1855. Wi
nning the
governor’s seat, Chase and the legislature attempted to expand the state’s free bank
ing laws,
providing a harbinger of his financial expertise as treasury secretary. Like Sew
ard, he was
disappointed to lose the Republican presidential nomination in 1860, and even th
ough he was
offered another U.S. Senate seat by the Ohio legislature, he never took it. Inst
ead, he reluctantly
accepted Lincoln’s offer of the Treasury post.
Chase confronted a daunting task. In 1850 the federal government’s budget averaged
2 percent of
gross national product (GNP) but by the end of the Civil War, it had soared to m
ore than 15
percent. Merely running the Treasury in such circumstances constituted a challen
ge: the number of
clerks in the department increased from 383 in 1861 to more than 2,000 in 1864.
To fill the
necessary positions, Chase unwisely appointed many party hacks who often could b
e relied upon
for little else but their partisan loyalty.
Raising the necessary funds to run the war demanded that Chase not only develop
systems for
generating lots of revenue, but also for bringing it into the Treasury fairly qu
ickly. At the same
time, he did not want to sacrifice long-term stability for short-term gains. Cop
ying Alexander
Hamilton, Chase examined a menu of options to serve both short-and long-term nee
ds. Taxes, for
example, had to be passed by Congress, then collected, meaning that it would be
1862 or later
before tax revenues provided much help to the cause. So while Chase immediately
asked Congress
for a new direct tax on incomes over $300, he simultaneously requested new tarif
fs and expanded
land sales that would generate quicker revenues. Even when the taxes came in, at
the end of 1863,
the $2 million they produced was inadequate to the Union’s needs, which by the end
of 1861 ran $2
million per day. Meanwhile, in addition to other shorter-term bond issues, Congr
ess authorized
Chase to raise $250 million through sales of twenty-year bonds paying 7 percent
interest.
Banks hesitated to buy bonds if they had to pay for them in gold, and in Decembe
r 1861 the
Northern banks suspended specie payments on all notes. (The Confederacy’s banks ha
d gone off
the gold standard almost immediately after Fort Sumter.) Concerned that soldiers
would go unpaid,
Chase advanced a paper money concept to Congress that would allow the Treasury t
o issue $100
million in notes that would circulate as “lawful money, and a legal tender of all
debts, public and
private.”74 Enacted as the Legal Tender Act of February 1862, the proposal authori
zed the issue of
more than Chase requested—$450 million of the new green-colored bills, called gree
nbacks.
The temporary money gave the nation a wartime circulating medium and also enable
d the
government to pay its bills. Congress also authorized Chase to borrow an additio
nal $500 million.
Nevertheless, the “five-twenty” bonds (redeemable after five years, maturing to full
value after
twenty-five, and paying 6 percent interest) did not sell as fast as Chase hoped.
He relied on a
personal friend, Philadelphia banker Jay Cooke, to sell the bonds through a spec
ial (though not
exclusive) contract. Cooke received a nice commission, but more important, he he
ld a virtual
monopoly on the bond sales. In the hands of other men, that might have been a pr
oblem, but not
with the motivated Cooke, who placed ads in newspapers and aggressively targeted
the middle
class as well as traditional silk-tie investors. Conceiving the first true “war bo
nd,” Cooke appealed
to Northerners’ patriotism, and oversubscribed every issue. He sold $400 million w
orth by the end
of 1863 alone, netting himself $1 million in commissions and making him the Civi
l War equivalent
of Robert Morris.75
Meanwhile, Chase came up with yet another menu option to accelerate the revenue
stream. Using
as a model the free-banking laws popular in the North prior to the war—wherein ban
ks would
purchase bonds that they would keep on deposit with the secretary of state as se
curity against
overissue of notes—in his December 1861 report to Congress, Chase argued for a nat
ional banking
system in which the banks would receive their charters after purchasing governme
nt bonds.
Congress passed the National Banking Act of February 1863, which provided for $3
00 million in
national banknotes to be issued by the new network of national banks (who would,
in turn,
themselves purchase bonds as their “entry permit” into the business). Nevertheless,
the law offered
no incentive for people to hold national banknotes over private banknotes. By De
cember 1863,
fewer than 150 national banks operated, and only in 1864 did Congress fix the lo
ophole by placing
a 10 percent tax on money issued by state banks.
Of all the Civil War legislation—aside, obviously, from emancipation—this act had th
e most farreaching
consequences, most of them bad. Although Congress increased the number of nation
al
banks in operation (1,650 by December 1865), the destruction of the competitive-
money/privatenote
issue system led to a string of financial upheavals, occurring like clockwork ev
ery twenty
years until 1913. Competition in money had not only given the United States the
most rapidly
growing economy in the world, but it had also produced numerous innovations at t
he state level, the
most important of which, branch banking, was prohibited for national banks. Thus
, not only did the
National Bank and Currency Acts establish a government monopoly over money, but
they also
excluded the most efficient and stable form of banking yet to emerge (although t
hat mistake would
be partially corrected in the 1920s). Critics of Lincoln’s big-government policies
are on firm
ground when they assail the banking policy of the Civil War.
In contrast, however, the North’s financial strategy far surpassed that of the Con
federacy under its
Treasury secretary, Christopher G. Memminger, a South Carolina lawyer. Memminger
, like Chase,
at one time was a hard-money man, and like Chase he also acceded to wartime requ
irements of
quick revenues. He embraced taxation, borrowing, and fiat money. Although the Co
nfederate
Constitution forbade tariffs, the CSA’s congress almost immediately imposed a rang
e of duties, and
with no supreme court to overrule it, the acts stuck. And in sharp contrast to t
he U.S. Constitution’s
prohibition against export tariffs, the CSA also imposed export taxes.76 By 1863
the Confederacy
had adopted a wide range of taxes, including direct income taxes and taxes on go
ld. Possessing a
smaller and less industrial economy on which to draw, the South found it more di
fficult to borrow
money through bond issues, raising one third of its wartime revenue needs throug
h borrowing,
compared to two thirds in the North.77 Worse, when the Confederate congress auth
orized a second
$100 million loan in August 1861, planters were allowed to pay for it in cotton,
not gold. The
Confederacy, thanks to its short-sighted embargo, was already drowning in cotton
, and now more
of it stacked up as “patriotic” planters subscribed to bonds with more of the worthl
ess fiber. A
small foreign loan of $14.5 million in France negotiated by Emile Erlanger broug
ht in only $8.5
million.78
Thus Memminger copied Chase, far surpassing him in the introduction of fiat mone
y when the
Confederate congress began issuing Confederate notes in 1861. Starting slowly wi
th only $1
million, wartime necessity soon drove the CSA to issue more than $1 billion in C
onfederate paper
money, or more than double the number of greenbacks issued to a much larger popu
lation in the
North. Before long, Confederate money attained a reputation for worthlessness pr
eviously seen
only in the Revolutionary-era continentals and not seen again until the Weimar R
epublic’s
disastrous hyperinflation in the 1920s.79 A Confederate dollar worth eighty-two
cents in gold or
silver in 1862 had plummeted to only $.017 in 1865.
Memminger never dreamed in 1862 that within a few years the Confederacy’s needs fo
r goods and
services would become so desperate that the government would resort to outright
confiscation—
theft of private property. Already, however, the warning signs had appeared, her
alding a type of
war socialism. While the North skimmed off the top of private enterprise, the So
uth, lacking an
entrepreneurial base to match, was forced to put the ownership and control of wa
r production in the
hands of government. The Confederacy reached levels of government involvement un
matched until
the totalitarian states of the twentieth century: seven eighths of all freight m
oved on the Virginia
Central Railroad was for the government’s account; government work done in Augusta
, Georgia,
by the main private company, the Augusta Textile Factory, accounted for 92 perce
nt of its total;
and the Confederate government created its own powder works, the second largest
in the world.80
By the end of the war, all pretense to a free market—which Southern plantation sla
very never
was—had disappeared as President Jefferson Davis confiscated all railroads, steam
vessels,
telegraph lines, and other operations, impressing their employees for government
or military work.
Swarms of Confederate officials soon resembled King George’s agents that Jefferson
had warned
about in the Declaration. As one North Carolinian recalled, government officials
were “thick as
locusts in Egypt,” and he “could not walk without being elbowed off the street by th
em.”81
Government bureaucrats not only confiscated food and other items, “paying” with the
worthless
money, but also forced both white and black workers onto construction projects f
or the
Confederacy.82 The Confederacy died of big government.”83
By 1863 the Confederacy was employing seventy thousand civilian bureaucrats as t
he government
itself ran ordinance bureaus, mills, clothing manufacturing, cotton gins, meat p
acking plants, salt
storage sheds, distilleries, vegetable packing facilities, all the while forcing
the industrialization of
a rural region and literally sucking out its sustenance. Alabama produced four t
imes as much iron in
1864 as any state had prior to the war; yet by 1864, Confederate soldiers were s
tarving in the field.
Stories of rebels bartering with Yankees, exchanging shoes or even powder for fo
od, were not
uncommon by the end of the war. Across the board—in everything from the treatment
of (white)
human rights, to freedom of speech and the press, to market freedoms—scholar Richa
rd Bensel
found that the North had a less centralized government and was a much more open
society than the
South. Six specific comparisons of private property rights between North and Sou
th, including
control of railroads, destruction of property, and confiscation, showed the Conf
ederacy to be far
more government centered and less market oriented. Analyzing dozens of specific
laws and points
of comparisons, with possibly the suspension of habeas corpus the main exception
, Bensel
concluded that the North’s commitment to liberty in all areas ensured its victory.
84
The Proclamation
The Seven Days’ Battles had provided an opportunity for McClellan to crush Lee, bu
t once again,
the Union forces let the Rebels off the hook. Lee’s strategy, however, was deeply
affected by the
near defeat. Increasingly, lacking foreign support, the South perceived that it
needed to deliver a
knockout punch. Lee decided to invade Maryland. Misled into thinking the Marylan
ders would
support the Confederate Army, Lee announced he was coming to liberate a “sister st
ate.” Swinging
far to the west, away from Washington, the Rebel army entered Maryland at, fitti
ngly, Leesburg on
September 5, 1862. Dispatching Jackson with 25,000 men to seize Harper’s Ferry, Le
e divided his
force in the face of superior odds.
McClellan, meanwhile, had by default regained overall command of the army in the
East. Given the
low quality of other commanders, he was Lincoln’s only real choice. His men loved
him. He was
plodding, but he had inflicted terrible damage on the Rebel army. At the Seven D
ays’ Battles, for
example, despite failing to capture Richmond, McClellan had licked Lee’s best forc
es. At that
point, a jewel fell into McClellan’s hands. A Union soldier picked up three cigars
off a fallen Rebel
officer, and found them wrapped in the actual orders Lee had given his company c
ommanders. All
the battle plans McClellan needed—the disposition of the Rebel army, its size, eve
rything—had
just dropped into his lap. He even enthusiastically announced to his staff, “Here
is a paper with
which if I cannot whip ‘Bobbie Lee’ I will be willing to go home.”85 Then McClellan pr
oceeded to
move cautiously.
Unaware McClellan had intercepted his battle orders, Lee nevertheless realized t
hat he had badly
divided his forces and that Union armies were converging on him like bats to fru
it. He planned to
stake out a defensive position at Sharpsburg, Maryland, along Antietam Creek. Th
ere the Potomac
River protected his left and rear, but if the Union overran his position, it als
o would have him in a
killing box. On September fifteenth, McClellan’s advance forces located the Confed
erates and
should have attacked immediately; instead, despite outnumbering the Rebels 87,00
0 to 35,000,
McClellan hesitated. Finally, two days later, the battle commenced. While all th
e fighting exceeded
human description in its savagery and desperation, the worst of the carnage occu
rred when Union
forces attacked across open ground against Confederates dug in behind a sunken r
oad. It was a
premonition of Gettysburg, but the Yankees soon quit and outflanked the road to
the south,
peppering the Southern ranks with fire from the front and two sides. On Septembe
r eighteenth, after
two bloody days, the Confederates withdrew, and, incredibly, McClellan did not p
ursue them.86
Lee could technically claim victory since McClellan had not driven him out, but
neither side could
take much heart in the combined numbing losses of 24,000 men killed or wounded.
It was the
single bloodiest day in American history—September 11, 2001, notwithstanding. Alth
ough the
numbers of men littering the battlefield in blue and gray uniforms were almost e
venly divided, the
Confederates again absorbed a disproportionate amount of punishment, losing well
over 22 percent
of their entire force. Yet McClellan inexplicably missed an opportunity to pursu
e Lee and use his
superiority to end the war. An aggressive follow-up attack might have finished L
ee off then and
there, and McClellan’s failure cemented his dismissal. Yet Lee’s withdrawl under fed
eral guns
gave Lincoln the window of opportunity he needed to inform his cabinet of one of
the most
important proposals in American history.
For several years Frederick Douglass, the former slave who used his newspaper as
a clarion for
abolitionist columns, had edged Lincoln toward the abolitionist camp. He express
ed his frustration
that Lincoln had not embraced abolition as the central war aim in 1861, and cont
inued to lament the
president’s unwillingness throughout 1862. After the Emancipation Proclamation, ho
wever,
Douglass observed of Lincoln, “From the genuine abolition view, Mr. Lincoln seemed
tardy, cold,
dull, and indifferent, but measuring him by the sentiment of his country—a sentime
nt he was bound
as a statesman to consult—he was swift, zealous, radical, and determined.” Lincoln h
ad inched
further toward emancipation since July 1862, when he had met with a group of bor
der-state
representatives in the White House with another proposal for gradual compensated
emancipation in
the border states. “The war has doomed slavery,” he told them, and if they rejected
compensation at
that time, they would not get a penny when it disappeared.87 He received a chill
y reception. Why
should they—loyal Unionists—free their slaves when there was a chance that the Rebel
s might still
come back into the Union and keep theirs? Lincoln could not disagree with their
reasoning. That
meeting impressed upon him that “if abolition was to come, it must commence in the
Rebel South,
and then be expanded into the loyal border states.”88
Truly, it was a “Damascus Road” experience for the president. The following day, in
a carriage ride
with William Seward and Navy Secretary Gideon Welles, Lincoln stunned the two ca
binet officials
by stating that given the resistance and persistence of the Confederates, it was
a necessity and a
duty to liberate the slaves. Before the flabbergasted secretaries could respond,
they saw a different
Lincoln—one who in an “urgent voice” informed them that the time had passed when the t
wo
sections could reach an amicable agreement. He intended to rip out the “heart of t
he rebellion,”
destroy the institution that had torn the nation asunder, and end the charade th
at the South could
reject the Constitution that created the Union on the one hand and invoke it to
protect slavery on the
other.89
Lincoln had firmed up in his own mind the issue that had nagged at him for years
. The war was not
about union, after all, because the Union as a constitutional entity was itself
the result of something
else. He put it best at Gettysburg when he said that it was “dedicated to the prop
osition that all men
are created equal.” A union not dedicated to that proposition was no union at all;
thus, he seemed to
realize, for years he had placed the cart ahead of the horse. For the United Sta
tes as a union of
states to have any moral force at all, it first had to stand for the proposition
of equality before the
law. The Rebels’ actions were despicable not only because they rent that legal fab
ric embodied in
the Constitution, but also because they rejected the underlying proposition of t
he Declaration.
So it is critical that an understanding of emancipation begin with Lincoln’s perce
ption that it first
and foremost was a moral and legal issue, not a military or political one. Howev
er, Lincoln also
understood the plexiform nature of emancipation as it involved the war effort: m
ilitarily, it would
threaten the South’s massive slave support system that took the place of civilian
or noncombatant
military personnel behind the lines; diplomatically, it struck at the heart of R
ebel efforts to gain
British and French support; and economically, it threatened to throw what was le
ft of the
Confederate financial system into chaos, depending as it did on slave valuations
as assets used by
planters to secure loans. The more Lincoln looked at emancipation, the more he l
iked it.
Congress had moved toward emancipation with its second confiscation act, which s
tated that if the
rebellion did not cease in sixty days, the executive would be empowered to confi
scate all property
of anyone who participated in, aided, or abetted the rebellion. Lincoln thought
such half measures
impractical. Therefore, he determined to brush slavery away in a giant stroke, t
aking the burden
upon himself. On July 22, 1862, he read the preliminary Emancipation Proclamatio
n to his cabinet,
making the abolition of slavery an objective of the Union war effort come Januar
y 1, 1863.
Despite the presence of many solid free-soilers and antislavery politicians in t
he cabinet, the
response was tepid at best. Chase ruminated about the financial impact, possibly
destabilizing the
fragile banking structure. Secretary of War Stanton and Postmaster General Montg
omery Blair,
though supportive, nevertheless expressed grave reservations. They argued that t
he nation “was not
ready” for such a step, whereas Seward feared that the Europeans would see the pro
clamation as a
sign of weakness—“our last shriek on the retreat.”90 For it to appear legitimate, they
argued,
emancipation must wait until the Union had a victory in the eastern theater. Gra
nt’s piecemeal
deconstruction of Rebel forces in the West was deadly efficient, but it did not
constitute a good old
“whippin” of “Bobby Lee.”
Lincoln found those arguments persuasive. He appreciated that emancipation would
produce some
violent responses in the North as well as the South. There would be race riots,
for example. So
Lincoln used the remainder of the summer of 1862 to soften up the opposition by
touting
colonization again—a subject that he trotted out more as a deflector shield than a
serious option. In
August 1862, he met with several black leaders in Washington, informing them of
a new
colonization plan in Central America. “You and we are different races,” he noted, an
d whites had
inflicted great wrong on blacks. Oppression would only continue in freedom, he p
redicted, and he
urged the leaders to consider colonization. Some supported it, but Frederick Dou
glass called
Lincoln a hypocrite, full of “pride of race and blood.”91 Lincoln, of course, was ne
ither—he was a
practical politician who realized that the highest ideals had already demanded p
henomenal
sacrifices and that even in emancipation, the job would just be beginning.
Douglass’s sincerely felt condemnations aside, Lincoln had moved steadily but inex
orably toward
emancipation and racial equality. A famous open letter in the Tribune to Horace
Greeley, who, like
Douglass, thought Lincoln too timid, contained the lines, “My paramount objective
in this struggle
is to save the Union, and is not either to save or destroy slavery. If I could s
ave the Union without
freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slave
s I would do it.”92
Missed in the debate about Lincoln’s opinion on race is the fact that he had taken
in this Tribune
letter another concrete step toward emancipation by claiming in public the autho
rity to free the
slaves—something neither he nor any other president had ever advanced. As with a p
lay-fake in
football, Lincoln allowed his own views of race to mesmerize proponents and oppo
nents of
abolition, absorbing both the attention and the punishment, while his actions mo
ved unflinchingly
toward freedom.
Then came the news from McClellan at Antietam. It was an incomplete victory, but
a victory
nonetheless. Lincoln had the moment he had waited for, and called his cabinet to
gether on
September 22, 1862, to read them the proclamation. For the border states, he wou
ld urge Congress
to pass compensated emancipation; for freed slaves who so desired, he would pres
s for
colonization. But for the states still in rebellion as of January 1, 1863, the p
resident on his own
authority would free “thence forward and forever” all slaves, and the military force
s of the United
States would protect their liberty. After entertaining criticisms—including the po
ssibility of a mass
slave uprising in the South—Lincoln went ahead to publish the decree the following
day.93
Much has been made of the fact that not a single slave was freed by the proclama
tion itself. After
all, those states still in rebellion were not under federal control, and thus no
slaves were freed in the
South. Since the proclamation said nothing about the border states, except that
Lincoln would urge
Congress to act there as well, no slaves were actually free there either. Thus,
the famous charge that
“where he could free the slaves, Lincoln would not, and where he would free the sl
aves, he could
not,” has a measure of truth to it. Nevertheless, word filtered South through a sl
ave grapevine like
wildfire, although slaves attempted to hide the fact that they had heard about t
he proclamation.
Southern whites had suspicions that blacks had kept up with news of the war. A L
ouisiana planter
complained that his slaves “know more about politics than most of the white men. T
hey know
everything that happens.”94
Odd as it may seem, changing the status of slaves constituted only one of three
critical goals of the
proclamation. The second objective, and the one most easily achieved, involved p
erceptions.
Lincoln needed to turn—in the eyes of Europe, particularly England and France—a set
of brave
Confederate revolutionaries into international pariahs. By shifting the war aims
from restoring the
Union (which evoked neither excitement nor sympathy abroad) to emancipation, Lin
coln tapped
into a strong current of Western thought. Both England and France had abolished
slavery in their
empires in the decades before the Civil War on strictly moral grounds. They coul
d hardly retreat on
that position now. As long as Jefferson Davis’s diplomats could maintain the prete
nse that the war
was a struggle for independence on the grounds of constitutional rights—not much d
ifferent than
the rights of Englishmen—then they could still hope for foreign support. Once Linc
oln ripped away
the facade of constitutionality and exposed the rebellion for what it was, an at
tempt by some to
legitimate their enslavement of others, neither Britain nor France could any lon
ger consider
offering aid.
Lincoln’s third objective, little commented upon because of its abstruse effects,
was in fact to yank
out the underpinnings from the entire Southern slave/plantation structure. In th
e twinkling of an
eye, Lincoln (in theory, at least) had transformed millions of dollars worth of
physical assets—no
different from wagons, cattle, or lumber—into people. For the purposes of banking,
the impact
could not have been more staggering. Slaves (property) showed up on Southern ban
k books as
assets along with the plantation land backing enormous planters’ debts, and now, i
n an instant, they
had (again, in theory) suddenly disappeared as mysteriously as the Roanoke colon
y! Slaves backed
millions of dollars in plantation assets, not just in their physical persons, bu
t also in the value that
they imposed on the land. Without the slaves, much of the plantation land was wo
rthless, and the
entire Southern banking structure—at one time as solid as a rock—turned to mush.
A fourth notion regarding the Emancipation Proclamation, however, must be addres
sed. Left-wing
revisionists have argued that Lincoln freed the slaves mainly because he needed
the black troops to
feed his war machine—that only with the addition of African American soldiers coul
d the North
have won. This wrongheaded view not only deliberately and obviously trivializes
Lincoln’s
genuine sentiments about emancipation, but also cynically and mistakenly discoun
ts the efforts of
white troops. It would soon be white Mainers and New Yorkers, not black troops,
who would
smash Lee at Gettysburg; and although black troops fought at Port Hudson and in
the Vicksburg
campaign, the bulk of the action was carried by white units from Indiana and Ill
inois and Ohio.
Predominantly Northern white troops would, a year after that, force the surrende
r of Atlanta and
Columbia and Mobile. But until the 1960s, historians had too long ignored or dim
inished the
contributions of the 179,000 African American soldiers (plus 18,000 sailors), mo
st of whom fought
in American uniforms for the first time ever. At Fort Wagner, black troops brave
ly but vainly
stormed beachfront Confederate citadels before being repulsed, with black and wh
ite alike leaving
thousands of casualties in the sand. Their courageous efforts late in the war—espe
cially (at their
own prodding) at Petersburg—undoubtedly contributed to the Union victory in import
ant ways. But
it is just as wrongheaded to overstate their significance out of political corre
ctness. By late 1864,
the doom of the Confederacy was sealed, no matter what color Grant’s forces were.9
5
Some states, such as Massachusetts, had urged the creation of black regiments si
nce 1861, but
Lincoln resisted, fearing a white backlash. (Massachusetts would eventually put
nearly 4,000 black
soldiers in the field, fourth only to the much larger states of Pennsylvania, Oh
io, and New York.) A
change had occurred, though, in the thinking of Lincoln about the use of newly f
reed slaves
between the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation and the January proclamation,
which was
demonstrated by the fact that the latter announced the intention of admitting fr
eedmen into military
service.96 Certainly the dwindling recruitment numbers produced an attitude shif
t of its own in the
North. Whites who previously had opposed arming blacks warmed to the idea of bla
ck soldiers in
Union ranks.
Large-scale black recruitment began in 1863. One sticking point was their unequa
l pay, mandated
by the Militia Act of 1862, of $10 per month, minus $3 for clothing, rather than
$13 per month,
plus clothing, given to white recruits. Governor John Andrew of Massachusetts of
fered state money
to offset the pay differential to the 54th and 55th Massachusetts regiments, but
the black troops
refused. Equality had to be acknowledged from Washington. Congress finally equal
ized black and
white pay in June 1864.
By that time, blacks had entered the Union Army in large numbers, yet often (tho
ugh not
exclusively) found themselves on guard duty or in physical labor battalions, not
combat. Lobbying
the War Department, blacks finally saw action at Fort Wagner, South Carolina (Ju
ly 1863), and
Port Hudson, Louisiana (May–July 1863). It was not until 1865, outside Richmond, h
owever, that
Grant used large numbers of blacks routinely alongside whites. While the gruelin
g reduction of the
Richmond defenses was bloody, the war had been decided months earlier, at Gettys
burg,
Vicksburg, and Atlanta.97
Thus, the fact that blacks soldiers did not by themselves tip the balance to the
Union makes the
Emancipation Proclamation all the more critical and, in context, brilliant. Even
if the Confederacy
somehow managed to string together several victories so as to make its military
position sound, the
financial chaos and instability caused by Lincoln’s lone declaration would have be
en difficult to
counteract.
Hard War, Unresolved War
Lincoln could call Antietam a victory, but the Army of Northern Virginia remaine
d as deadly as
ever. As if to underscore that fact, in October, Lee sent Jeb Stuart’s cavalry on
a raid of
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. Riding around McClellan, Stuart terrified Northerner
s and again
embarrassed Lincoln, who replaced the general for the last time. In McClellan’s st
ead came the
new commander of the Army of the Potomac, Ambrose Burnside, an honest and modest
man who
was an effective subordinate, but not the war chieftain Lincoln needed. Indeed,
Burnside had twice
refused earlier offers of command because he doubted his own ability.98
At the same time as he replaced McClellan in the East, Lincoln removed General D
on Carlos Buell
in the West, also for lack of aggressiveness. After a series of disastrous appoi
ntments and
counterappointments, Lincoln sent William S. Rosecrans to take command of the Ar
my of the
Cumberland. Fortunately, the musical chairs of commanders from the Ohio region h
ad little impact
on Grant and his vise around Vicksburg. Whatever the Union Army accomplished in
the West
seemed unimpressive to Washington politicians and war critics, if for no other r
eason than the press
and the politicians were in Washington, not Cincinnati. Thus, Burnside’s new offen
sive would be
closely watched. The new general drafted a plan to march to Fredericksburg, and
from there to
Richmond. Neither Lincoln nor his commander in chief, Henry Halleck, liked it, s
ince both
perceived that Burnside would have to move faster than any other Union commander
(save Grant)
had moved before. In mid-November 1862, Burnside’s forces arrived at Fredericksbur
g. The
Confederates had plenty of time to entrench on Marye’s Heights, overlooking the ci
ty and a
railroad line, with 78,000 men across the Rappahannock River waiting for Burnsid
e. Once the
Union Army had drawn up, with the hills in front and the river at its back, Lee
had a perfect field of
fire against an almost helpless foe. Burnside sent wave after wave of men up the
hills in fourteen
suicidal charges against the dug-in Confederates, who slaughtered them in every
attempt. When the
Yankees finally withdrew, with 12,700 Union troops killed, wounded, or missing,
Burnside had
earned the unwelcome distinction of suffering the worst defeat ever by the U.S.
Army.
To the general’s credit, he begged an audience with Lincoln to publicly accept bla
me for the
defeat—the first Union general to do so. On January twenty-sixth, Lincoln fired th
e general who
had known from the start he was in over his head, but he did so with great regre
t. Next in line was
Fighting Joe Hooker.
Hooker’s brief stint as commander exemplified all of the difficulties Lincoln had
in finding a
general. Whereas Burnside was incompetent but honest, Hooker was an intriguer an
d ladder
climber who had positioned himself for command in the East from the get-go. If B
urnside almost
desperately tried to avoid the mantle of command, Hooker lusted after it.
With a reinforced Army of the Potomac numbering 130,000 men, Hooker planned to d
istract Lee
with a movement at Fredericksburg, then march up the Rappahannock to attack his
flank near
Chancellorsville, where the Union would keep a huge reserve force. Lee ascertain
ed the federal
plan and disrupted it by sending Jeb Stuart’s cavalry to take control of the roads
around
Chancellorsville. That blinded Hooker, who delayed his planned attack. Lee then
divided his highly
outnumbered forces and sent Stonewall Jackson through a thicket known as the Wil
derness to the
federal flank, where he achieved numerical superiority at the point of attack. J
ackson’s march
would have been impossible for many units, but not Stonewall’s trained corps. On M
ay 2, 1863,
when the Rebels emerged from the dense brush, the stunned Union troops panicked.
Lee still
remained in front of them with (they thought) his entire army: who were these ne
w troops? The
Union army nearly fell apart, but it held together long enough to prevent a tota
l rout. Another
telegram reached Lincoln, who could only pace back and forth, his hands behind h
is back, asking in
despair, “My God, my God, what will the country say? What will the country say?”99 T
o Stanton,
Lincoln privately confided, “Our cause is lost! We are ruined…. This is more than I
canendure.”100
Although the Confederacy won another impressive victory, it suffered, again, hea
vy losses: 10,746
casualties (18.7 percent of Lee’s total forces) to the Union’s 11,116 (11.4 percent)
. By now, Lee
had lost an incredible one quarter of his field force. By itself, that ratio wou
ld lead to ultimate
Confederate defeat if Lee “won” eight to ten more such battles. An even more stagger
ing loss was
dealt to the Rebel army at Chancellorsville, and not by a Yankee. Stonewall Jack
son,
reconnoitering well past his lines with a few of his officers, was mistakenly sh
ot by Confederate
pickets. It took him more than a week to die, removing, as it were, Lee’s right ha
nd. Jackson’s
value to the Confederate cause cannot be overstated. After his death, the South
won only one other
major battle, at Chickamauga. Another Virginian, James “Pete” Longstreet, a competen
t general,
assumed Jackson’s command, but never replaced him.
Union defeat at Chancellorsville ensured the removal of the isolated Hooker, who
se female camp
followers, “hookers,” provided a linguistic legacy of a different sort. Lincoln was
back at square
one, still looking for a commanding general. In the meantime, the Confederates,
perhaps sensing
that their losses had started to pile up at rates they could not possibly sustai
n and knowing that
Vicksburg was in peril, mounted one more bold and perilous invasion of the North
, upon which,
conceivably, hung the fate of the war.
Gettysburg
Despite triumphs in Chancellorsville, Fredericksburg, and the Wilderness, nothin
g in the strategic
equation had changed for the Confederacy. Quite the contrary, the Rebels had ove
r the course of
four battles in the East—every one a victory—lost more than 36,000 men and come no c
loser to
independence than when they had opened fire on Fort Sumter. Given the trend in t
he West, the
Army of Northern Virginia could do only three things by May 1863 that might have
produced the
desired result of an independent CSA.
First, through an invasion Lee could capture Washington. That was a remote possi
bility at best.
Even if the federal troops around the city were as poorly led as the forces at F
redericksburg or Bull
Run, a series of forts surrounded Washington that would require a long siege. Ce
rtainly the armies
in the West would instantly rush reinforcements over. Second, Lee, if he could r
aise enough hell in
the North and agitate enough politicians, might make the war so politically unpa
latable that the
forces of democracy would demand Lincoln negotiate terms with the South. Perhaps
some in the
Confederate cabinet still clung to such fantasies, but Lee, who had seen the unw
elcome reception
his men received in “friendly” Maryland, knew better. The bastions of Unionism—Pennsyl
vania,
New York, and especially Massachusetts—would see an invasion as exactly that, and
civilians
would respond with a predictable level of hostility and guerrilla warfare. Only
the third alternative
really represented a realistic chance for the Confederacy: bring the Union army—th
e larger part of
it—into one big battle and defeat it.
Once Lee disengaged from Hooker, he turned northwest, using the Blue Ridge Mount
ains to cover
his northerly advance into Pennsylvania. He learned through newspapers that Linc
oln had sacked
Hooker in June and replaced him with a corps commander, George Gordon Meade, who
m the men
likened to an old snapping turtle. But Lee’s well-oiled machine began to slow down
. First, Jeb
Stuart, supposedly scouting for Lee in the Pennsylvania countryside, crossed int
o Maryland on May
fifteenth. One of his tasks involved confusing federal intelligence as to the di
sposition of Lee’s
main forces. But Stuart, a dandy who wore plumes in his hats and perfume on his
mustache,
enjoyed the adulation he received in the Southern press. On June ninth, Stuart,
with 10,000 of his
cavalry, considered nearly invincible, ran headlong into Union forces under Alfr
ed Pleasanton in
the largest cavalry engagement in American history. As 20,000 horsemen slashed a
t each other and
blasted away with pistols, the Union troopers were finally driven off. But in de
feat, the Union
cavalry knew that they had gone toe to toe with the finest the South had to offe
r, and under other
and better circumstances, could prevail.
Stuart disengaged and then headed straight for the Union supply lines. At Rockvi
lle, Maryland, the
Rebel cavalry surprised a massive wagon train and captured more than 125 wagons,
which slowed
down Stuart’s movement. He continued to ride around the federal army, into Pennsyl
vania, and was
out of touch with Lee for ten critical days.101
Seeking to intercept Lee’s army, Meade had marched west into Maryland along the Ta
neytown
Road. Already, though, advance units of both armies approached Gettysburg. Lee c
ame up from the
southwest and had ordered other divisions to swing down from the north and west.
Spies informed
him of the proximity of the federal army, which counted seven corps (roughly 80,
000 men). Lee
had approximately 75,000 men in three corps—Confederates always weighted their div
isions and
corps more than did the Union Army—including Stuart’s cavalry, which arrived on the
second day
of combat. General John Buford’s Union cavalry arrived on the scene to the southwe
st of
Gettysburg. Buford instantly perceived that the ground behind the city, along Ce
metery Ridge with
Culp’s Hill on the west and the Round Tops on the east, provided an incredibly adv
antageous
natural defensive position. Buford commanded only 1,200 men and had in his sight
20,000
Confederates, but by holding the Rebels up for hours, Buford and his men bought
critical hours for
Meade.
Lee had hoped to avoid closing with the enemy until he had his entire army drawn
up, but on July
first it was spread all over roads in a twenty-five-mile radius around southwest
ern Gettysburg. By
afternoon on July first, Confederate forces had driven back the Yankees. Lee’s sub
ordinates,
however, hesitated to take the strong Union positions on Culp’s Hill. The result w
as that at the end
of the first day at Gettysburg, the federals held the high ground along the ridg
e.
On July second, Lee’s forces, deployed more than a mile below Cemetery Ridge along
a tree line
called Seminary Ridge, faced Meade’s line. The Yankees were deployed in a giant fi
shhook, with
the barb curling around Culp’s Hill, then a long line arching along Cemetery Ridge
, culminating in
the hook at Big Round Top and Little Round Top. Upon learning that the two hills
that held the
loop of the fishhook constituting the Union position, Big and Little Round Tops,
were undefended,
Lee sent Longstreet’s division to capture the hills, then roll up the federal line
s.
In fact, Meade already had started to defend the Round Tops. John Bell Hood’s Texa
s division
climbed up the hill to overrun Union positions, opposed by the very end of the U
nion line. There,
another legend of the war was born in Maine’s fighting Colonel Joshua Chamberlain.
A Union
regiment, the 20th Maine commanded by Chamberlain, held the farthest point of th
e entire fishhook
and thereby the fate of the entire army. A quiet professor of rhetoric at Bowdoi
n College,
Chamberlain had volunteered with his Maine neighbors and his brother, who was hi
s adjutant. Six
months previously Chamberlain had charged up Marye’s Heights at Fredericksburg, wh
ere he and
what was left of his decimated troops were pinned down in the mud. All night, he
had listened to
the whiz of musket balls and the screams of the wounded, using a dead man’s coat t
o protect him
from the chilling wind.
From his position on the extreme left of the Union line, Chamberlain received wo
rd that the
Confederates were advancing through the thick woods. Ordering his men to pile up
brush, rocks,
and anything to give them cover, the regiment beat back one attack after another
by the determined
Rebel troops. Suddenly a cry went out that the Confederates had marched still fa
rther to the Union
left and that they intended to flank Chamberlain’s position. Whether at his order
or at the
suggestion of a subordinate, the 20th Maine “refused the line,” bending backward at
a 45-degree
angle to keep the Confederates in front of its fire. By that time, Chamberlain’s m
en were almost
entirely out of ammunition. Many had only two or three rounds left. Chamberlain
shouted
“Bayonet! Forward to the Right!” and the 20th Maine fixed bayonets.
From its refused position, the Yankees swept down on the exhausted Confederates.
The bold
maneuver, combined with the shock of men racing downhill in a bayonet assault on
weary
attackers, shattered the Confederate advance, routing the Rebels down the hill.
Although fighting
raged on for hours on both ends of the fishhook, Chamberlain’s men had saved the U
nion
Army.102 Chamberlain claimed he never felt fear in battle. “A soldier has somethin
g else to think
about,” he later explained. As a rule, “men stand up from one motive or another—simple
manhood,
force of discipline, pride, love, or bond of comradeship…. The instinct to seek sa
fety is overcome
by the instinct of honor.”103
Late in the evening of July second, however, the engagement hardly seemed decisi
ve. General
George Pickett’s division had just come up to join Lee, and Stuart had finally arr
ived. On the
evening of July second, ignoring the appeals from Longstreet to disengage and fi
nd better ground,
Lee risked everything on a massive attack the following day. Longstreet’s final at
tempt to dissuade
Lee was met with the stony retort that he was “tired of listening, tired of talkin
g.”104
After two days of vicious fighting, Lee was convinced that the federal flanks ha
d been reinforced
by taking men from the center, and that an all-out push in the middle would spli
t their line in two.
Pickett’s Charge, one of the most colorful and tragic of all American military enc
ounters, began on
July third when the South initiated a two-hour artillery barrage on the middle o
f the Union line at
Cemetery Ridge. Despite the massive artillery duel between Yankee and Rebel cann
ons, Lee did
not know that under the withering steel torrent coming from his artillery, only
about 200 Yankees
had been killed and only a handful of Union guns destroyed.
At one-thirty in the afternoon, Pickett’s entire division—15,000 men, at least—emerged
from the
orchards behind the artillery. In long and glorious well-ordered lines, a march
of just under a mile
began across open ground to attack the federal position. Longstreet vociferously
protested:
“General Lee, there never was a body of fifteen thousand men who could make that a
ttack
successfully.”105 At a thousand yards, the Union artillery opened up and at 100 ya
rds they changed
to canisters—tin cans filled with minié balls that flew in all directions upon impac
t. Row after row
of Rebels fell. Then the long lines of Yankee infantry, which had lain prone ben
eath the artillery
rounds sailing over their heads, stood or kneeled when the Rebels marched to wit
hin two hundred
yards to deliver a hailstorm of lead.
Amazingly, Virginians under General Lewis Armistead reached the stone wall from
which the
Yankees were hurling a withering fire into their midst. Armistead stuck his gene
ral’s hat on his
saber and screamed, “Give them the cold steel!” Scaling the wall with about 200 Virg
inians
following him, Armistead was killed. Known as the high-water mark of the Confede
racy, it was a
scene later recaptured in film and art, yet it lasted for only minutes as Union
reserves poured new
volleys into the exposed Confederates, then charged, reclaiming the stone wall.
The attack utterly
erased Pickett’s division, with only half the 15,000 men who began the attack stra
ggling back to
Rebel lines in the orchards. As they ran, a chant rose up from the Yankee infant
ry behind the stone
wall. “Fred-ricks-burg. Fred-ricks-burg.”106
Reports trickled in to Longstreet, then Lee, who, in despair, kept repeating, “It’s
all my fault.” The
final tally revealed that the Army of Northern Virginia had taken a terrible bea
ting at the hands of
Meade: the Confederates lost 22,638, the Union, 17,684. Yet the most important p
hase of
Gettysburg had just started. Defeated and nearly broken, could Lee escape? Would
Meade blink,
and prove to be another McClellan and Hooker?
Meade’s son, a captain on his father’s staff, wrote confidently on July seventh that
“Papa will end
the war,” a phrase the general himself made two days later in a missive to Washing
ton when he
said, “I think the decisive battle of the war will be fought in a few days.”107 Yet
Meade did not
follow up, even when it appeared that nature herself demanded the war end then a
nd there. Storms
had swollen the Potomac River, temporarily blocking Lee’s escape. An aggressive ge
neral could
have surrounded the demoralized Confederate Army and crushed it by July 15, 1863
. Instead, Lee’s
engineers hastily put up new pontoon bridges, and the Rebels began to slip away.
When he learned
the news, Lincoln wept.
Despite monumental failure, Meade also had achieved monumental success. He had d
one what no
other Union general had done—whipped Bobbie Lee in a head-to-head battle—and shatter
ed the
Army of Northern Virginia. That, in turn, meant that Lincoln had to be careful h
ow he dealt with
Meade in public. He could not, for example, fire him outright, but the president
continued his
search for a general who would fight ceaselessly. When, simultaneously with Mead
e’s victory,
Ulysses S. Grant resolutely took Vicksburg in his ingenious campaign, Lincoln fo
und his fighting
general.
From Chickamauga to Charleston
Gettysburg and Vicksburg marked a congruence of the war effort, a deadly double
blow to the
hopes of the Confederacy, capping a string of battlefield failures that met the
Confederates in 1863.
By that time, Ulysses Grant commanded all the military operations in the West, a
nd he promptly
sent Sherman to open up the road to Atlanta—and the Deep South. Then, on March 10,
1864,
Lincoln appointed Grant as supreme commander over all Union armies, and Grant, i
n turn, handed
control of the western war over to Sherman.
William Tecumseh Sherman resembled Grant in many ways, not the least of which wa
s in his utter
failure in civilian life, as a banker and lawyer. How much he owed his command t
o political
favoritism, especially the influence wielded by his powerful brother, John Sherm
an, the new
senator from Ohio, is not clear. Unlike Grant, however, Sherman was already a Re
publican and a
member of the Radical wing of the Republican Party that opposed slavery on moral
grounds. But
he was also a racist whose view of the inferiority of blacks—especially Negro troo
ps—would bring
him into constant friction with Lincoln, whom he despised. His unintended role i
n reelecting the
president in 1864 nearly led him to switch parties, just as Grant had switched f
rom Democrat to
Republican over almost the same issues. Sherman’s hatred of Lincoln, whom he label
ed a black
gorilla (echoing terms used by McClellan), was exceeded only by his animosity to
ward the
Confederates.108 Although he admitted that Lincoln was “honest & patient,” he also a
dded that
Lincoln lacked “dignity, order & energy,” many of the traits that McClellan also tho
ught missing in
the president.109
Born in Lancaster, Ohio, in 1820, Sherman had been unloaded on relatives by his
widowed mother.
His foster father, Thomas Ewing, proved supportive, sending Sherman to West Poin
t, and the
young red-haired soldier eventually married Ewing’s daughter. The Mexican War took
him to
California, where he later resigned and ran a bank—poorly. By the time the Civil W
ar broke out, he
had found some measure of success running the Louisiana State Seminary and Milit
ary Academy—
later known as Louisiana State University—but resigned to serve the Union after Lo
uisiana’s
announcement of secession. He wrote the secretary of war requesting a colonelcy
rather than a
general’s position, and wanted a three-year appointment, wishing to avoid the impr
ession he was a
“political general.”
In late 1861, facing Confederate troops in Kentucky, Sherman became delusional,
plummeting into
a deep clinical depression that left him pacing his residence all night long, mu
ttering to himself, and
drinking heavily. Thus the relationship between Lincoln and Sherman—both probably
manic
depressives—was even more complex than either man realized. It remains one of the
astounding
pieces of history that the Union was saved by two depressives and a partially re
-formed drunk!
After fighting effectively at Shiloh, Sherman received special praise from Grant
and earned
promotion after promotion. Grant named the red-haired Ohioan commander of all th
e armies in the
West in the spring of 1864, with instructions to “create havoc and destruction of
all resources that
would be beneficial to the enemy.”110 On May 4, 1864, with almost 100,000 men, She
rman stuck
a dagger into the heart of the South by attacking Atlanta. Joe Johnston’s defendin
g Confederate
armies won minor engagements, but the overwhelming Union advantage in men and su
pplies
allowed Sherman to keep up the pressure when Johnston had to resupply or rest. J
efferson Davis
blamed Johnston, removing him in July in favor of John Bell Hood, but the fact w
as that even a
mediocre general would have crushed Atlanta sooner or later. Sherman was no medi
ocre general.
With Yankee troops on the outskirts of Atlanta, Hood burned the railroads and wi
thdrew, and on
September 1, 1864, Union forces entered the city. Offering the Confederates the
opportunity to
remove all civilians, Sherman announced he would turn the city into a military b
ase. Hood, hoping
to draw the federal troops away from Atlanta, moved around him to the north, in
an effort to
destroy Sherman’s supply lines. Sherman scoffed that he would “supply him with ratio
ns” all the
way to Ohio if Hood would keep moving in that direction. Instead, Sherman headed
south,
preparing to live off the land and to destroy everything the Union Army did not
consume. “War is
hell,” he soberly noted.
Sherman’s great victory at Atlanta constituted one of a trio of critical victories
in late 1864, news of
which reached Washington—and the voters—just as Lincoln was under political assault.
One of
Lincoln’s detractors thus ensured his reelection.
Politics in the North
By early 1864, in retrospect, Union victory seemed inevitable. U.S. Navy ships b
lockaded Southern
ports, breached only occasionally (and ineffectively) by blockade runners. The M
ississippi now lay
open from Missouri to the Gulf, while Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana were surgic
ally isolated
from the rest of the Confederacy. In the far West, small important battles there
had ensured that
New Mexico, Utah, and California would remain in the Union and supply the federa
l effort with
horses, cattle, gold, silver, and other raw materials. Braxton Bragg’s northern de
fensive perimeter
had shrunk from the Kentucky border on the north to Atlanta. In Virginia, Lee’s ar
my remained a
viable, but critically damaged, fighting unit. Northern economic might had only
come fully into
play in 1863, and the disparities between the Union and Confederate abilities to
manufacture guns,
boots, clothes, ships, and, most important, to grow food, were shocking.
Given such a string of good news, Lincoln should have experienced stellar public
approval and
overwhelming political support. In fact, he clung to the presidency by his finge
rnails. Some of his
weakened position emanated from his strong support of the man he had named comma
nder of the
Union armies.
Ulysses Grant and Abraham Lincoln rarely corresponded, though Grant tended to se
nd numerous
messages to Halleck, who would, he knew, read them to Lincoln. A Douglas Democra
t in 1860,
Grant had nonetheless gravitated toward unequivocal emancipation, though he was
not a vocal
abolitionist. No one seems sure when he actually changed parties. Courted by the
Democrats as a
potential presidential nominee in 1864, Grant refused to be drawn into politics
at that time, and, in
reality, never liked politics, even after he became president himself. By the fa
ll of 1864, though,
Grant endorsed Lincoln indirectly in a widely published letter.
When Hooker descended to the low expectations many had of him, Grant recommended
Meade for
command of the Army of the Potomac. Even after Lincoln gave Grant overall comman
d of the
army, he and the president were not particularly friendly, despite their similar
ities. For one thing,
Mary Todd Lincoln, whose bitterness knew no bounds once it was directed at someo
ne, despised
Grant’s wife, Julia.111
Grant intended to grind down the Confederates with a steady series of battles, e
ven if none proved
individually decisive. Grant’s style caught the Rebels off guard. One Confederate
soldier wrote:
We had been accustomed to a programme which began with a Federal advance, culmin
ating in one
great battle, and ended in the retirement of the Union army, the substitution of
a new Federal
commander for the one beaten, and the institution of a more or less offensive ca
mpaign on our part.
This was the usual order of events, and this was what we confidently expected wh
en General Grant
crossed into the Wilderness. But here was a new Federal General, fresh from the
West, and so illinformed
as to the military customs in our part of the country that when the Battle of th
e
Wilderness was over, instead of retiring to the north bank of the river and awai
ting development of
Lee’s plans, he had the temerity to move by his left flank to a new position, ther
e to try conclusions
with us again. We were greatly disappointed with General Grant, and full of curi
osity to know how
long it was going to take him to perceive the impropriety of his course.112
The Rebels quickly realized that “the policy of pounding had begun, and would cont
inue until our
strength should be utterly worn away….”113
The low point for Grant’s reputation came in May 1864, when he launched a new offe
nsive through
the Wilderness again. Two days of bloody fighting at the Second Battle of the Wi
lderness ensued,
and more bodies piled up. On this occasion, however, Grant immediately attacked
again, and again.
At Spotsylvania Court House, Lee anticipated Grant’s attempt to flank him to get t
o Richmond, and
the combat lasted twelve days. Despite the fact that Grant’s armies failed to adva
nce toward
Richmond spatially, their ceaseless winnowing of the enemy continued to weaken C
onfederate
forces and morale. It was costly, with the Union suffering 60,000 casualties in
just over a month
after Grant took over, and this politically damaged Lincoln.
Continuing to try to flank Lee, Grant moved to Cold Harbor, where, on June first
, he sent his men
against entrenched positions. One Confederate watched with astonishment what he
called
“inexplicable and incredible butchery.”114 Yankee troops, recognizing the futility o
f their assaults,
pinned their names and addresses to their coats to make identification of their
bodies easier. One of
Lee’s generals saw the carnage and remarked, “This is not war, this is murder.”115 Gra
nt lost
13,000 men to the Confederates’ 2,000—the only battle in which the Army of Northern
Virginia
achieved any significant ratio of troops lost to the numbers engaged in the enti
re war.
Cold Harbor was the only action that Grant ever regretted, a grand mistake of ho
rrific human cost.
Callous as it seemed, however, Grant had, in more than a month, inflicted on the
Confederates
25,000 casualties, or more than Gettysburg and Antietam put together. Shifting u
nexpectedly to the
south, Grant struck at Petersburg, where he missed an opportunity to occupy the
nearly undefended
city. Instead, a long siege evolved in which “the spade took the place of the musk
et.”116
Searching for a way to break through Lee’s Petersburg fortifications, Grant receiv
ed a plan from
Colonel Henry Pleasants, a mining engineer in command of a regiment of Pennsylva
nia coal
miners, who proposed tunneling under the fortifications and planting massive exp
losives to blast a
hole in the Confederate defenses. On July twenty-seventh, the tunneling was comp
leted, and tons of
black powder were packed inside the tunnel. Troops prepared to follow up, includ
ing, at first, a
regiment of black soldiers who, at the last minute, were replaced on Burnside’s or
ders. When the
charge detonated on July thirtieth, a massive crater was blown in the Rebel line
s, but the advance
troops quickly stumbled into the hole, and Confederates along the edges fired do
wn on them. It was
another disaster, costing the Union 4,000 casualties and an opportunity to smash
through the
Petersburg defenses.
Since 1862 Lincoln had faced turmoil inside his cabinet and criticism from both
the Radical
Republicans and Democrats. Prior to 1863, antislavery men were angry with Lincol
n for not
pursuing emancipation more aggressively. At the same time, loyal “war Democrats” or “U
nionists”
who remained in Congress nipped at his heels for the army’s early failings, especi
ally the debacles
of McDowell, Burnside, and Hooker. Their favorite, McClellan, who scarcely had a
better record,
nevertheless was excused from criticism on the grounds that Lincoln had not prop
erly supported
him.
During the 1862 congressional election, criticism escalated, and the Republicans
barely hung on to
the House of Representatives, losing seats in five states where they had gained
in 1860. These, and
other Democratic gains, reversed a series of five-year gains for the Republicans
, with the cruelest
blow coming in Illinois, where the Democrats took nine seats to the Republicans’ f
ive and won the
state legislature. Without the border states, James G. Blaine recalled, the host
ile House might have
overthrown his emancipation initiative.117
If the House losses were troublesome, Salmon Chase posed a genuine threat to the
constitutional
order. His financing measures had proven remarkably efficient, even if he ignore
d better
alternatives. Yet his scheming against Seward, then Lincoln, was obvious to thos
e outside the
administration, who wrote of the Chase faction, “Their game was to drive all the c
abinet out—then
force…the [reappointment] of Mr. Chase as Premier, and form a cabinet of ultra men
around
him.”118 Seward, tired of the attacks, submitted his resignation without knowing t
he larger issues
that swirled around him. Lincoln convened a meeting with several of the senators
involved in the
Chase schemes. Holding Seward’s resignation in his hand, he demanded the resignati
on of all his
cabinet, which he promptly placed in his top desk drawer and threatened to use i
f he heard of
further intrigue. Lincoln’s shrewd maneuver did not end the machinations by the Ra
dicals, but it
severely dampened them for the rest of the war.
An equally destabilizing issue involved the draft. Liberal Democrats and influen
tial Republican
editors like Horace Greeley opposed conscription. After announcement of the firs
t New York
conscriptees under the 1863 Enrollment Act, some fifty thousand angry Irish, who
saw that they
were disproportionately represented on the lists, descended upon the East Side.
Mobs terrorized and
looted stores, targeting blacks in particular. Between twenty-five to a hundred
people died in the
riots, and the mobs did $1.5 million in damage, requiring units from the U.S. Ar
my to restore order.
The new Gatling guns—the world’s first machine gun, developed by American Richard Ga
tling—
were turned on the rioting Irish.119 The rioters were in the unfortunate circums
tance of confronting
troops direct from Gettysburg, who were in no mood to give them any quarter.
Another threat to the Union came from so-called Peace Democrats, known in the No
rth as
Copperheads for their treacherous, stealthy attacks. Forming secret societies, i
ncluding the Knights
of the Golden Circle, Copperheads forged links to the Confederacy. How far their
activities went
remains a matter of debate, but both Lincoln and Davis thought them significant.
Copperheads
propagandized Confederate success, recruited for the Rebel cause, and, in extrem
e situations, even
stole supplies, destroyed bridges, and carried correspondence from Southern lead
ers. Even when
arrested and convicted, Copperhead agitators often found sympathetic judges who
quietly
dismissed their cases and released them.
At the opposite end of the spectrum, but no less damaging to Lincoln, were the R
adical
Republicans. Congressional Republicans from 1861 onward clashed with the preside
nt over which
branch had authority to prosecute the war. In May 1864, Radicals held a meeting
in Cleveland to
announce their support of John C. Frémont as their presidential candidate in the f
all elections.
Rank-and-file Republicans, who eschewed any connection to the Radicals, held wha
t would have
been under other circumstances the “real” Republican convention in June, and renomin
ated
Lincoln. However, in an effort to cement the votes of “war” or “unionist” Democrats, Lin
coln
replaced Hannibal Hamlin, his vice president, with a new nominee, Democrat Andre
w Johnson, of
Tennessee.
The main source of Radical opposition to Lincoln targeted his view of reconstruc
ting the Union.
Radicals sought the utter prostration of the South. Many had looked forward to t
he opportunity to
rub the South’s nose in it, and Lincoln’s moderation was not what they had in mind.
Two of the
most outspoken Radicals, Benjamin F. Wade of Ohio and Henry W. Davis of Maryland
, authored a
bill to increase the number of persons required to sign loyalty oaths to 50 perc
ent, and to ensure
black civil rights. The Wade-Davis Bill flew in the face of Lincoln’s consistently
stated desire to
reunite the nation as quickly and peacefully as possible, and it would have prov
oked sufficient
Southern antipathy to lengthen the war through guerrilla warfare. Yet Lincoln fe
ared that Congress
might override a veto, so he exercised a special well-timed pocket veto, in whic
h he took no action
on the bill. Congress adjourned in the meantime, effectively killing the legisla
tion, which infuriated
the Radicals even more. Wade and Davis issued the Wade-Davis Manifesto, which in
dicted not
only Lincoln’s plan for reunification but also disparaged his war leadership.
All of these factors combined to produce a remarkable development in the late su
mmer and early
fall of 1864 in which some Republican Party members started to conduct a quiet s
earch for a
nominee other than Lincoln. At the Democratic convention in August, George B. Mc
Clellan
emerged as the nominee. He planned to run on a “restoration” of the Union with no ch
ange in the
Confederacy except that the Richmond government would dissolve. Adopting a “peace
plank,”
Democrats essentially declared that three years of war had been for naught—that no
principles had
been affirmed. Here was an astonishingly audacious and arrogant man: an incompet
ent and
arguably traitorous Democratic general running against his former commander in c
hief in time of
war and on a peace platform six months before the war was won! The peace plank p
roved so
embarrassing that even McClellan soon had to disavow it. Even so, facing McClell
an and the
“purer” Republican Frémont, Lincoln privately expected to be voted out.
At about that time, Lincoln received welcome news that Admiral David Farragut ha
d broken
through powerful forts to capture Mobile Bay on August 5,1864. Threatened by Con
federate
“torpedoes” (in reality, mines), Farragut exhorted his sailors with the famous phras
e, “Damn the
torpedoes. Full speed ahead.” Other important Confederate ports, most notably Char
leston and
Wilmington on the Atlantic, held out, but remained blockaded. With Mobile safely
in Union hands,
the major Gulf Coast Rebel cities had surrendered. Farragut’s telegrams constitute
d the first of
three highly positive pieces of war news that ensured Lincoln’s reelection. The se
cond was
Sherman’s early September report of the fall of Atlanta. Sherman recommended that
Grant order
him to march southward from Atlanta to “cut a swath through to the sea,” taking Sava
nnah.120 In
the process, he would inflict as much damage as possible, not only on the Rebel
army, but on the
Southern economy and war-making capacity. A third and final boost to Lincoln’s ree
lection came a
few weeks later from the Shenandoah Valley, where General Philip Sheridan was ra
ising havoc.
Between Stuart’s loss at Yellow Tavern and the destruction of the Shenandoah, Linc
oln’s prospects
brightened considerably.
Still, he took no chances, furloughing soldiers so they could vote Republican an
d seeing to it that
loyalists in Louisiana and Tennessee voted (even though only the Union states co
unted in the
electoral college). McClellan, who once seemed to ride a whirlwind of support, s
aw it dissipate by
October. Even Wade and Davis supported Lincoln, and Grant chimed in with his pra
ise for the
administration. Lincoln beat McClellan by 400,000 votes and crushed the Democrat
in the electoral
college, 212 to 21. McClellan’s checkered career as a soldier/politician had at la
st sputtered to an
end.
Total War and Unconditional Surrender
Fittingly, Sherman began his new offensive the day after the election. “I can make
Georgia howl,”
he prophesied.121 With Chattanooga and Atlanta both lost, the South lacked any m
ajor rail links to
the western part of the Confederacy, causing Lee to lose what little mobility ad
vantage he had
shown in previous campaigns. “My aim then,” Sherman later wrote, “was to whip the rebe
ls, to
humble their pride, to follow them to their inmost recesses, and make them fear
and dread us.”122
Graced by stunningly beautiful Dixie fall weather, Yankee troops burned cotton,
confiscated
livestock and food, destroyed warehouses and storage facilities, and ripped up r
ailroads throughout
Georgia. They made bonfires out of the wooden ties, then heated the iron rails o
ver the fires,
bending them around nearby telegraph poles to make “Sherman hairpins.” Singing hymns
as they
marched—“five thousand voices could be heard singing ‘Praise God from Whom All Blessin
gs
Flowed’”—the Yankee soldiers had even Sherman believing “God will take care of [these no
ble
fellows].”123 Sherman’s army had marched to Savannah by December 1864, living off th
e
land.124 Despite Confederate propaganda that Sherman was “retreating—simply retreati
ng,” his
western soldiers were supremely confident in their commander. “I’d rather fight unde
r him than
Grant and if he were Mahomet, we’d be devoted Mussulmen,” said one midwestern privat
e.125
Sherman’s success produced an uncomfortable relationship with Lincoln. The preside
nt wanted
him to aid federal recruiting agents in enlisting newly freed slaves into the ar
my. An insubordinate
Sherman, however, insisted on using blacks as laborers or “pioneer brigades” to dig,
build, and
haul, but not fight.126 “Soldiers,” Sherman insisted, “must do many things without ord
ers from
their own sense…. Negroes are not equal to this.”127 Lincoln, unable to punish the o
ne general
who seemed to advance without interruption, could only congratulate Sherman on h
is conquest.
On February seventeenth, Sherman entered Columbia, South Carolina, whereupon fir
es swept
through the city, delighting many Unionists who hoped for the total destruction
of this hotbed of
rebellion. Most evidence points to Sherman’s vengeful soldiers as the arsonists. T
he following day,
the Stars and Stripes was hoisted above Fort Sumter. Marching north, Sherman fur
ther compressed
the tiny operating area left to Lee and Johnston. This was perfectly in sync wit
h Grant’s broad
strategy of operating all the armies together on all fronts. Every army had orde
rs to engage, a
strategy to which Lincoln agreed: “Those not skinning can hold a leg.”128
As the end neared, in December 1864, President Davis and his wife attended a “star
vation party,”
which had no refreshments because of the food shortages. Already, Davis had sold
his horses and
slaves to raise money to make ends meet, and his wife had sold her carriage and
team. He and other
leaders knew the Confederacy did not have long to live. At that late date, Davis
again proposed
arming the slaves. In a sense, however, it might be said that Robert E. Lee’s army
was already
relying heavily upon them. At the Tredegar Iron Works, the main Southern iron ma
nufacturing
facility, more than 1,200 slaves hammered out cannon barrels and bayonets, and i
n other wartime
plants, free blacks in Alleghany, Botetourt, Henrico, and other counties shaped
nails, boilers,
locomotives, and a variety of instruments of war.129 Added to that, another few
thousand free
blacks actually served in the Confederate Army as cooks, teamsters, and diggers,
or in shoe repair
or wheelwright work. Little is known of their motivation, but it appears to have
been strictly
economic, since the Rebel military paid more ($16 per month in Virginia) than mo
st free blacks
could ever hope to get in the South’s impoverished private sector.130 Most were im
pressed under
state laws, including some 10,000 black Virginians immediately put to work after
Bull Run
throwing up breastworks in front of Confederate defensives positions. Ironically
, some 286 black
Virginia Confederate pensioners received benefits under Virginia law in 1926—the o
nly slaves
ever to receive any form of institutionalized compensation from their government
.
Still, resistance to the use of slave soldiers was deep-seated, suggesting that
Confederates well
knew the implications of such policies: an 1865 Confederate House minority repor
t stated, “The
doctrine of emancipation as a reward for the services of slaves employed in the
army, is
antagonistic to the spirit of our institutions.”131 A Mississippi newspaper claime
d that arming
slaves marked “a total abandonment of the chief object of this war, and if the ins
titution is already
irretrievably undermined, the rights of the States are buried with it.”132 This co
nstituted yet
another admission that to white Southerners, the war was, after all, about slave
ry and not states’
rights.
Of course, when possible, slaves aimed to escape to Northern lines. By 1863, Vir
ginia alone
counted nearly 38,000 fugitives out of a population of 346,000, despite the pres
ence of armed
troops all around them.133 Philosophically, the Confederacy placed more emphasis
on recovering a
black runaway than in apprehending a white deserter from the Army of Northern Vi
rginia.
Despite the presence of a handful of Afro-Confederate volunteers, the vast major
ity of slaves
openly celebrated their freedom once Union forces arrived. In Norfolk, Virginia,
for example, new
freedmen held a parade, marching through the city as they trampled and tore Conf
ederate battle
flags, finally gathering to hang Jefferson Davis in effigy.134 Upon receiving ne
ws of emancipation,
Williamsburg, Virginia, blacks literally packed up and left town. Blacks from Co
nfederate states
also joined the Union Army in large numbers. Louisiana provided 24,000, Tennesse
e accounted for
more than 20,000, and Mississippi blacks who enlisted totaled nearly 18,000.
Grant, meanwhile, continued his relentless pursuit of Lee’s army, suffocating Pete
rsburg through
siege and extending his lines around Richmond. Lee presented a desperation plan
to Davis to break
out of Petersburg and retreat to the southeast to link up with whatever forces r
emained under other
Confederate commanders. Petersburg fell on April second, and, following desperat
e maneuvers by
the Army of Northern Virginia, Grant caught up to Lee and Longstreet at Appomatt
ox Station on
April 8, 1865. Following a brief clash between the cavalry of General George Cus
ter and General
Fitzhugh Lee, the Confederates were surrounded. “I would rather die a thousand dea
ths,” Robert E.
Lee said of the action he then had to take.135
Opening a dialogue with Grant through letters delivered by courier, Lee met with
Grant at the home
of Wilmer McLean. The Confederate general dressed in a new formal gray uniform,
complete with
spurs, gauntlets, and epaulets, and arrived on his faithful Traveler, while Gran
t attended the
meeting in an unbuttoned overcoat and boots splattered with mud—no sword, no desig
nation of
rank. Grant hastily wrote out the conditions, then, noticing that Lee seemed for
lornly staring at the
sword hanging at his side, decided on the spot that requiring the officers to fo
rmally surrender their
swords was an undue humiliation. He wrote out, “This will not embrace the side-arm
s of the
officers, nor their private horses or baggage.”136 Lee wrote a brief acceptance, g
lumly walked out
the door and mounted Traveler, and as he began to ride off, Grant came out of th
e building and
saluted. All the Union officers did the same. Lee sadly raised his hat in respon
se, then rode off.
Grant had given the Confederates extremely generous terms in allowing all of the
men to keep
sidearms and horses, but they had to stack muskets and cannons. The men had to s
wear to obey the
laws of the land, which would exempt them from prosecution as traitors. Grant’s po
licy thus
became the model for the surrender of all the Rebels. Fighting continued sporadi
cally for weeks;
the last actual combat of the Civil War was on May twenty-sixth, near Brownsvill
e, Texas.
Davis had little time to ponder the cause of Confederate failure as he fled Rich
mond, completely
detached from reality. Having already packed off his wife, arming her with a pis
tol and fifty rounds
of ammunition, the Confederate president ran for his life. He issued a final mes
sage to the
Confederacy in which he called for a massive guerrilla resistance by Confederate
civilians.
Expecting thousands of people to take to the Appalachians, live off the land, an
d fight hit-and-run
style, Davis ignored the fact that not only were those sections of the South alr
eady the poorest
economically—thus unable to support such a resistance—but they were also the areas w
here the
greatest number of Union partisans and federal sentiment existed. Few read Davis’s
final desperate
message, for by that time the Confederacy had collapsed and virtually no newspap
ers printed the
news. Davis hid and used disguises, but to no avail. On May tenth he was capture
d at Irwinville,
Georgia, and jailed.137
The call for guerrilla war inflamed Northern attitudes against Davis even furthe
r. Many wanted to
hang him, and he remained in military custody at Fort Monroe, for a time in leg
irons. In 1867 he
was to be indicted for treason and was released to the control of a civilian cou
rt. After Horace
Greeley and Cornelius Vanderbilt posted his bail, Davis languished under the clo
ud of a trial until
December 1868, when the case was disposed of by President Andrew Johnson’s proclam
ation of
unconditional amnesty. By that time, Davis had become a political embarrassment
to the
administration, and his conviction—given the other amnesty provisions in place—unlik
ely anyway.
Lincoln’s Last Days
In the two years since the Emancipation Proclamation, Maryland and Missouri had
freed their
slaves, the Fugitive Slave Law was repealed, and Congress had passed the Thirtee
nth Amendment
to the Constitution, which provided that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitud
e, except as
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exi
st within the
United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”138 With that amendment
, Lincoln had
steered the nation from a house divided over slavery to one reunited without it.
Now he had two
overarching goals ahead of him: ensure that the South did not reinstitute slaver
y in some mutated
form, and at the same time, bring the former Rebels back into the Union as quick
ly and generously
as possible.
He laid the groundwork for this approach in his second inaugural when he said, “Wi
th malice
toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us t
o see the right, let us
strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care fo
r him who shall
have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan—to do all which may achie
ve and cherish
a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations.”139
The president intended for Reconstruction to follow his “10 percent plan.” By this d
efinition, he
recognized former Confederate states Tennessee, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Virgini
a as
reconstructed in late 1864, even as Lee held out in Richmond. However, Radicals
refused to seat
their delegations nor to allow those states to cast electoral votes in the Novem
ber 1864 election.
One thing is certain: Lincoln wanted a quick and magnanimous restoration of the
Union, not the
Radicals’ dream of a prostrate and subjugated South. When it came to traitorous Co
nfederate
leaders, Lincoln told his last cabinet secretaries, on the day he was killed, “Eno
ugh lives have been
sacrificed.” On matters of black economic opportunity, Lincoln was less clear. No
one knows what
measures Lincoln would have adopted, but his rhetoric was always several steps b
ehind his actions
in matters of race.
It is one of the tragedies of his death on April 15, 1865, that Abraham Lincoln
did not remain in
office to direct Reconstruction, for surely he would have been a towering improv
ement over
Andrew Johnson. Tragedy befell the nation doubly so, because his murder by an ar
ch-Confederate
actor named John Wilkes Booth doused feelings of compassion and the “charity for a
ll” that some,
if not most, Northerners had indeed considered extending to the South. The detai
ls of Lincoln’s
death have taken on mythic status, and rightly so, for aside from George Washing
ton, no other
president—not even Jefferson—had so changed the Union.
On April fourteenth, all but a few western Confederate armies had disarmed. Mary
Lincoln noticed
her normally morose husband in the cheeriest of moods.140 It was Good Friday, an
d Washington
buzzed with the excitement that for the first time in four years citizens could
celebrate an evening
without the apprehension of the next day’s casualty lists. Along with two guests,
Major Henry
Rathbone and Clara Harris, the Lincolns attended Our American Cousin at Ford’s The
ater. Lincoln
did not have his bodyguard/Secret Service agent, Allan Pinkerton, with him.
At seven o’clock in the evening, with the carriage already waiting, the president’s
bodyguard at the
White House, William Crook, was relieved three hours late by his replacement, Jo
hn Porter. As
always, Crook had said, “Good night, Mr. President.” But that night, Crook recalled,
Lincoln
replied, “Good-bye, Crook,” instead of the usual, “Good night, Crook.” The day before, h
e had told
Crook that he knew full well many people wanted him dead, and “if it is to be done
, it is impossible
to prevent it.”
After intermission, Porter left his post outside the president’s box and went next
door to a tavern for
a drink. When Act III started, John Wilkes Booth entered the unguarded anteroom
leading to the
president’s box, braced its door with a wooden plank, opened the door to Lincoln’s b
ox slightly,
and aimed the .44-caliber single-shot derringer at the back of the president’s hea
d, then fired. In the
ensuing struggle with Major Rathbone, Booth leaped over the railing, where one o
f his boots
snagged on the banner over the box. He fractured one of his legs as he hit the s
tage. “Sic semper
tyrannis,” he screamed at the stunned audience, “Thus be it ever to tyrants.” Hopping
out the door
to his waiting horse, Booth escaped. Lincoln, carried unconscious to a nearby ho
use, died nine
hours later on the same bed John Wilkes Booth had slept in just one month prior.
At one-thirty in
the morning, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton made a public statement in which he
said, “It is not
probable the president will live through the night.”141 “Now he belongs to the ages,”
said Stanton
on Lincoln’s death.
Booth, in one maniacal act of defiance, had done more to immortalize Lincoln tha
n all the speeches
he ever made or all the laws he signed. The man who only a half year earlier sto
od to lose the
nomination of his own party now rose, and rightfully so, to join the ranks of Wa
shington and
Jefferson in the American pavilion of political heroes. Booth worked with a grou
p of conspirators
who had hoped to knock out many more in the Washington Republican leadership, in
cluding
Andrew Johnson and William Seward, that night. Seward was stabbed but the wound
was not fatal.
The assassins fled to Port Royal, Virginia, where Booth was trapped in a barn th
at was set afire. He
shot himself to death. Other conspirators, quickly rounded up, were tried by a m
ilitary tribunal.
Three men and one woman were hanged; three others received life prison terms; an
d one went to
jail for six years.142 Davis, still free at the time, came under immediate suspi
cion for authorizing
the conspiracy, but he knew nothing of it.
At ten o’clock the following morning, Andrew Johnson was sworn in as president of
the United
States. Walt Whitman, who had worked in the Union’s hospital service, penned “O Capt
ain, My
Captain” in homage to Lincoln.143
Had Lincoln survived, perhaps the wounds inflicted by the war itself could have
healed in a less
bellicose Reconstruction. After all, only in America would a rebellion end with
most of the leaders
excused and the rebellious state emerging without being obliterated. Whatever da
mage the South
suffered—and it was severe—it pales in historical comparison to the fates of other f
ailed rebellions.
Indeed, modern history is littered with successful rebellions (Biafra, Banglades
h) whose human
cost and physical devastation exceeded that of the defeated Confederacy’s. With Li
ncoln’s death, a
stream of tolerance and mercy vanished, and the divisions that brought on the wa
r mutated into new
strains of sectional, political, and racial antagonisms that gave birth to the p
erverted legend of “the
Lost Cause.”
Marxist Revisionists, Lost Cause Neo-Confederates
In the decades following the Civil War, a truly remarkable thing happened. The r
ebellious South,
which had been utterly invaded, destroyed, and humiliated, concocted a dubious e
xplanation of its
past. This reconstruction of history reshaped every aspect of the Civil War deba
te, from causes
(slavery was not a sectional issue) to battlefield defeats (the South only lost
because of the
ineptness of some of its generals, most notably James Longstreet at Gettysburg)
to the legality and
constitutionality of secession to the absurd notion that the South, if left to i
ts own devices, would
have eventually given up slavery.144 The Lost Cause myth accelerated in the twen
tieth century
when pop historians and even a few trained scholars bought into the false premis
es.
It is useful to recount, as historian James McPherson does, the total defeat inf
licted on the South:
By 1865, the Union forces had…destroyed two-thirds of the assessed value of Southe
rn wealth,
two-fifths of the South’s livestock, and one quarter of her white men between the
ages of 20 and
40. More than half the farm machinery was ruined, and the damages to railroads a
nd industries
were incalculable…Southern wealth decreased by 60 percent.145
To that could be added the thorough destruction of the Southern banking system a
nd the
regionwide dissolution of the social structure based on slavery.146
Lost Cause theorists emphasized the irrelevancy of slavery as a cause of war, an
d sought to make
the conflict about economic issues such as the tariff and cultural differences b
etween the
“honorable South” and the immoral North. They emphasized constitutional values and s
tates’
rights, not the issue of human chattel. But the record was quite different. Jeff
erson Davis “had
frequently spoken to the United States Senate about the significance of slavery
to the South and had
threatened secession if what he perceived as Northern threats to the institution
continued.”147 In
1861 Confederate Vice President Alexander H. Stephens called the “great truth” of sl
avery the
“foundation” and “cornerstone” of the Confederacy.148 The Confederate constitution speci
fically
provided for protection of the “right of property in slaves.” Far from moving toward
emancipation
anywhere, the South, as Allan Nevins pointed out, was making slavery harsher and
more
permanent. New laws reinforced slavery, throttled abolitionist materials, and sp
read the net of
compliance to more and more nonslaveholding whites.149 Indeed, the best argument
against the
notion that the South would have voluntarily given up slavery is that there was
not the slightest
indication of movement toward emancipation in any Southern state prior to 1861.
Contrary to the perpetrators of the Lost Cause story, once the Southerners saw t
he war on their
doorstep, their defense of states’ rights and principles all but vanished as the C
onfederacy
increasingly toyed with the notion of emancipating its own slaves if they would
fight for the CSA.
The first such recommendations came in February 1861, but most officials dismiss
ed them. By
mid-1863, however, after Vicksburg fell, the Confederacy suddenly entertained ar
guments about
emancipation. “Cannot we who have been raised with our Negroes and know how to com
mand
them, make them more efficient than the Yankees can?” asked one proponent of armin
g the
slaves.150
The Lost Cause myth took root during Reconstruction, with pro-Southern writers e
mphasizing the
corruption of federal occupation and the helplessness of white citizens against
the power of the
federal government and the proportionately large numbers of blacks who went to t
he polls. Neo-
Confederate writers’ imaginative attempts to portray the antebellum South as a uto
pia were
outrageously distorted and ultimately destructive. They planted in a large numbe
r of Southerners
(though not the majority) the notion that the Confederacy had fought for importa
nt moral
principles, and they labored to move the argument away from slavery.
The modern-day voices of the Lost Cause who received new support (after the fall
of the Dixiecrats
in the 1960s) came from modern libertarians who, for the most part, viewed the U
nion government
as more oppressive than the Confederacy. Emphasizing the infractions against civ
il and economic
liberties by the Union government during and after the war, this view has mainta
ined a dedicated
but small group of adherents.151 To these Lost Cause proponents, Lincoln remains
the ultimate
monster, a tyrant whose thirst for power enabled him to provoke the South into f
iring on Fort
Sumter. Had he only let the lower Confederacy secede, their argument goes, the r
emaining United
States would have embarked on a golden age of liberty, and the South, eventually
, because of
market forces (claim the libertarians) or its own noble character (as the neo-Co
nfederates assert),
would have emancipated the slaves. These views are as deceptive as they are erro
neous. Virtually
no evidence exists to suggest that the South would have peacefully emancipated i
ts slaves. Indeed,
since slavery was supported with the power of a Confederate government fully beh
ind it, the
institution could have survived for decades, if not perpetually. Slavery existed
in some empires in
the world for centuries—and still exists in parts of the Arab world today. It was
seldom voluntarily
eradicated from within. Equally as destructive is the notion that states—or princi
palities—could
choose their own terms when it suited them to be in the Union.
Equally perverse is the neo-Marxist/New Left interpretation of the Civil War as
merely a war “to
retain the enormous national territory and market and resources” of the United Sta
tes.152 Reviving
the old Charles Beard interpretations of the triumph of capitalism over an agrar
ian society, leftist
critics find themselves in agreement with the more radical libertarian writers.
Whereas the neo-
Confederates harken back to an imaginary world of benign masters and happy slave
s, the leftist
critics complain that Lincoln was too conservative, and blocked genuinely radica
l (and, to them,
positive) redistribution of not only plantation owners’ wealth, but all wealth.
It is preposterous for Marxists to assert that capitalism enslaved free employee
s. Quite the contrary,
the only hope many Southern blacks had once the Yankee armies had left for good
in 1877 was the
free market, where the color of money could overcome and subdue black/white raci
sm. The
government, and not the market, perpetuated Jim Crow; the government, not the ma
rket, enforced
union minimum wage laws that excluded blacks from entry-level positions; and the
government,
not the market, passed and enforced separate-but-equal segregation laws. The mar
ket, freed from
interference by racist Southern state regulations, would have desegregated the S
outh decades before
Martin Luther King Jr., the freedom riders, Harry Truman, Earl Warren, and the C
ivil Rights acts.
America’s Civil War was ultimately and overwhelmingly about the idea of freedom: w
hether one
group of people could restrict the God-given liberty of others. That the Republi
cans, in their zeal to
free slaves, enacted numerous ill-advised taxes, railroad, and banking laws, is
regrettable but,
nevertheless, of minor consequence in the big picture. In that regard, the South
perverted classic
libertarianism—libertarianism did not pervert the South.
A remarkable fact of the war is that the United States divided almost evenly, fo
ught for four bloody
years, and never abandoned the concept of constitutional government. Quite the c
ontrary, if one
takes Southern rhetoric at face value, the war was over the definitions of that
constitutionalism. But
even if one rejects Southern arguments as rationalizations for slavery, the asto
unding fact is that the
Confederacy no sooner left the Union than it set up its own constitution, modele
d in most ways on
that of the United States from which it had seceded. In neither section, North o
r South, were
elections suspended or most normal workings of civilian government abandoned. In
neither section
was there a coup d’état. Indeed, both sides agreed that the founding ideas were wort
h preserving—
they just disagreed over the exact composition and priority of those ideas.
And, finally, rather than a contest about capitalism, the Civil War was a strugg
le over the definition
of union. No concept of union can survive any secession, any more than a body ca
n survive the
“secession” of its heart or lungs. The forging of the nation, undertaken in blood an
d faith in 1776
and culminating in the Constitution in 1787, brought the American people togethe
r as a single
nation, not a country club of members who could choose to leave at the slightest
sign of discomfort.
The Civil War finalized that contract and gave to “all men” the promises of the Decl
aration and the
purposes of the Constitution. And although thousands paid the ultimate price for
completing that
process, what emerged—truly “one nation, under God”—could never again be shattered from
within.
CHAPTER TEN
Ideals and Realities of Reconstruction, 1865–76
Hope and Despair
Less than two weeks after Lincoln’s assassination more than 2,100 Union soldiers b
oarded the
steamboat Sultana at Vicksburg to return to their homes via the Mississippi Rive
r. The vessel had a
capacity of 376, but on that day it carried soldiers literally packed like sardi
nes from stem to stern
when, eight miles north of Memphis, a boiler exploded, collapsing the superstruc
ture and engulfing
the rest of the Sultana in flames. As if the ravages of war and the death of a p
resident had not dealt
the nation enough of a blow, when the dead were accounted for, more than 1,547 p
eople had
perished, making the Sultana explosion the worst American water-related disaster
in history,
exceeding the number of Americans who died on the Lusitania in 1915 by some 1,40
0. Their loss
came as a cruel exclamation point to the end of a devastating war that had alrea
dy claimed 618,000
men.
Earlier that month, just before Lee surrendered, the Army of Northern Virginia h
ad marched out of
Richmond to the sound of Rebels blowing up their own gunboats on the James River
. One
Confederate, S. R. Mallory, recalled that the men were “light-hearted and cheerful…t
hough an
empire was passing away around them.” When they reached the Richmond suburbs, howe
ver, they
saw “dirty-looking women, who had evidently not been improved by four year’ military
association, [and] dirtier-looking (if possible) children.” Mallory noticed the cr
owds had not
gathered to watch the retreat, but to pillage the burning city, looting and burn
ing “while the
standards of an empire were being taken from its capitol, and the tramp of a vic
torious enemy could
be heard at its gates.”1
Armies of deserters and refugees thronged to Southern cities—what was left of them—o
nly to find
that even before Union troops arrived, Confederates had set fire to many of the
buildings. Union
cavalry entered Richmond first, surrounded by mobs of “Confederate stragglers, neg
roes, and
released convicts,” suffocating by the air thick with smoke from the fires that sw
ept the streets.2
Yankee troops, cheered on by former slaves, struggled to finally bring the fires
under control and to
stop the looting.” Northern reporters accompanying federal forces observed crowds
of African
Americans heading for the State House grounds, merely to walk on ground where, j
ust days earlier,
they had been prohibited from entering.3
Washington, meanwhile, witnessed one of the grandest illuminations ever recorded
, as the entire
population lit candles, flew flags, and burned lamps. The secretary of war order
ed a staggering
eight-hundred-gun salute—five hundred in honor of the surrender of Richmond and th
ree hundred
for Petersburg—which shook the earth as men embraced, women cheered, and, for a ma
gical
moment, old animosities evaporated in goodwill toward men. That did not last lon
g. When word
came that Richmond was aflame, cries of “Burn it! Burn it!” reverberated. Reporter N
oah Brooks
concluded that “a more liquorish crowd was never seen in Washington than on that n
ight.”4
Lincoln traveled to Petersburg to meet with the commander of the Army of the Pot
omac, General
Grant. Perhaps appropriately, the band followed “Hail Columbia,” with “We’ll All Drink S
tone
Blind.” The president congratulated the general, claiming to have had a “sneaking id
ea for some
days” that Grant neared victory, and proceeded to confer for an hour with Grant ov
er postwar
occupation policies. It concerned many that Lincoln had walked exposed and unesc
orted through
the streets of Petersburg, having arrived at an abandoned dock with no greeting
party, and then, on
April fourth, had ridden through Richmond itself, overcome by joy at seeing free
d slaves shouting,
“Glory to God! Glory! Glory!” Later, on the night of April fifth, aboard the Malvern
, Lincoln jotted
down his goals for reuniting the nation. He intended that all confiscated proper
ty, except slaves,
would be immediately returned to its owners after a state had ceased its support
of the rebellion.
Radicals in Congress who heard Lincoln’s April eleventh Reconstruction speech were
unimpressed.
Some considered the president shallow for failing to demand “an entire moral and s
ocial
transformation of the South,” as if such were in the hands of any president.5 Virt
ually all of
Lincoln’s cabinet, however, came away from his final meeting convinced he was more
cheerful and
happy than they had ever seen him. Lincoln had again insisted that while federal
authority must be
imposed and violence suppressed, private citizens in the South should be treated
with courtesy and
respect. Beyond that, we know little of Lincoln’s specific plans, for he met his f
ate at Ford’s
Theater on April fourteenth.
The process of readmitting former members of the Confederacy to the Union, rebui
lding the South,
and establishing a framework for the newly freed slaves to live and work in as f
ree men and women
in a hostile environment has been termed Reconstruction. The actual political ev
olution of
Reconstruction, however, involved three distinct phases. Under the first phase,
presidential
Reconstruction, Lincoln (briefly) and Andrew Johnson attempted to control the pr
ocess under two
broad precepts: the South should be readmitted to the Union as quickly as possib
le, with as little
punishment as necessary for former Confederates, and the freedmen should obtain
full
emancipation, free from legal barriers to employment or property ownership. Beyo
nd that,
presidential Reconstruction did not attempt to make freedmen citizens, nor did i
t seek to
compensate them for their years in bondage.
A second phase followed: in congressional Reconstruction the dominant Republican
faction, the
Radicals, sought full political equality for freedmen, pushed for economic compe
nsation through
the forty-acres-and-a-mule concept, and demanded more serious punishment for for
mer Rebels.
Naturally, the Radicals’ distinct positions put them in conflict with President An
drew Johnson, who
held to more Lincolnesque views. Congressional Reconstruction further involved a
program to
punish Southerners for their rebellion by denying them representation in Washing
ton or by
establishing tough requirements to regain the franchise.
In the struggle that followed, on one side stood Johnson, virtually alone, altho
ugh in a pinch some
Democrats and a core of so-called moderate Republicans backed him. Moderates of
1865 had
strong principles—just not those of the Radicals, who favored more or less full eq
uality of blacks.
Confronting and bedeviling Johnson were Radical leaders in Congress, most notabl
y Thaddeus
Stevens and Charles Sumner (who had finally returned to his seat after his canin
g at the hands of
Preston Brooks). They held together a shaky coalition of diverse-minded men, som
e of whom
favored suffrage for all freedmen; others who supported a limited franchise; and
still others who
advocated voting rights for blacks in the South, but not the North.6
The third and final phase of Reconstruction occurred when Radical Reconstruction
lost its steam
and public support faded. At that point, Southern Democrats known as Redeemers r
estored white
supremacy to the state governments, intimidated blacks with segregation (“Jim Crow”
laws), and
squeezed African Americans out of positions of power in the state governments. R
econstruction
ended officially with a Redeemer victory in the Compromise of 1877, in which the
final Union
troops were withdrawn from the South, leaving blacks unprotected and at the merc
y of Southern
Democratic governments.
It is worth noting that both Lincoln and Johnson sparred with Congress over cont
rol of
Reconstruction on several occasions, and thus some overlap between presidential
and congressional
Reconstruction occurred. Although Lincoln had enacted a few precedent-setting po
licies, the brunt
of the initial Reconstruction efforts fell on his successor, Andrew Johnson.
Time Line
1865:
Civil War ends; Lincoln assassinated; Andrew Johnson assumes presidency; Thirtee
nth
Amendment
1866:
Radical Republicans emerge in Congress; Ku Klux Klan founded
1867:
Military Reconstruction Act; purchase of Alaska
1868:
Johnson impeachment trial ends in acquittal; Fourteenth Amendment; Grant elected
president
1870:
Fifteenth Amendment
1872:
Crédit Mobilier Scandal
1873:
Crime of 1873; Panic of 1873
1876:
Disputed presidential election between Hayes and Tilden
1877:
Compromise of 1877; Hayes becomes president; Redeemers recapture Southern govern
ments;
Black Republicans in the South begin to decline
Andrew Johnson Takes the Helm
The president’s death plunged the nation into grief and chaos. No other chief exec
utive had died so
suddenly, without preparation for a transition; Harrison took a month to expire,
and Taylor five
days. Lincoln’s assassination left the nation emotionally and constitutionally unp
repared, and his
successor, Vice President Andrew Johnson, was detested in the North and distrust
ed in the South.
Having stumbled through a decade of mediocre leaders in the Oval Office, the nat
ion had risen on
the greatness of Lincoln, only to deflate under the Tennessean who now took his
place.
Not that Andrew Johnson was in any way dishonorable or unprincipled. Born in Nor
th Carolina in
1808, Johnson grew up in poverty not unlike that which Lincoln experienced, and,
like Lincoln, he
was largely self-educated. His parents worked for a local inn, although his fath
er had also worked
as a janitor at the state capitol. While a boy, Johnson was apprenticed as a tai
lor, but once he’d
learned enough of the trade, he ran away at age thirteen to open his own shop in
Greenville,
Tennessee, under the sign a. johnson, tailor. In 1827 he married Elizabeth McCar
dle, who helped
refine and educate her husband, reading to him while he worked and improving his
math and
writing skills, which gave him sufficient confidence to join a debating society
at a local academy.
After winning the mayorship of Greenville as a Democrat, Johnson successfully ra
n for seats in the
Tennessee House, then the Tennessee Senate, then, in 1843, he won a seat in the
United States
House of Representatives, where he supported fellow Tennessee Democrat James Pol
k and the
Mexican War. After four consecutive terms in the House, Johnson ran for the gove
rnorship of
Tennessee, winning that position twice before being elected to the U.S. Senate i
n 1857.
A Douglas Democrat, Johnson supported the Fugitive Slave Law, defended slavery,
and endorsed
the 1852 Homestead bill advanced by the Whigs. During his time as governor, he h
ad not hewed a
clear small-government line, increasing state spending on education and librarie
s. More important
in defining Johnson, however, was his strict adherence to the Constitution as th
e final arbiter
among the states and his repudiation of secessionist talk. Andrew Johnson was th
e only Southerner
from a Confederate state to remain in the Senate. This made him Lincoln’s obvious
choice for
military governor of Tennessee, once the federal troops had recaptured that stat
e, and he remained
there until 1864, when Lincoln tapped him to replace Hannibal Hamlin as vice pre
sident in order to
preserve what Lincoln anticipated would be a thin electoral margin by attracting
“war Democrats.”
When Johnson was sworn in early on the morning of April 15, 1865, he assumed an
office coveted
by virtually every other cabinet member present, none of whom thought him ideolo
gically or
politically pure enough to step into Lincoln’s shoes. To most Radicals, Lincoln hi
mself had not
been sufficiently vindictive, insisting only that blacks remain free and that th
e former Rebels’
citizenship be restored as quickly as was feasible. His last words about the Con
federates were that
no one should hang or kill them. Lincoln lamented the tendency of many unionists
to “Frighten
them out of the country, open the gates, let down the bars, scare them off…. I do
not share feelings
of that kind.”7
Lincoln, of course, was now gone, so at ten o’clock in the morning, at the Kirkwoo
d Hotel, then
Chief Justice Salmon Chase administered the oath of office to Johnson in the pre
sence of the entire
cabinet, save the wounded and bedridden William Seward. Each cabinet member shoo
k Johnson’s
hand and promised to serve him faithfully, then Johnson settled into what everyo
ne expected would
be a harmonious and efficient continuation of the dead president’s policies. It di
d not take long,
however, for Ben Wade and other congressional Radicals to presume they had the n
ew chief
executive’s ear, and to demand he form a new cabinet favorable to them. “Johnson,” Wad
e
exclaimed in one of history’s worst predictions, “we have faith in you. By the gods,
there will be no
trouble now in running the government.”8
Had the Radicals dominated the government as they’d wished, they would have slappe
d every
Confederate officer in leg irons and probably executed the Rebel political leade
rs for treason.
Instead, Lincoln’s sentiments prevailed with Johnson. Aside from Booth’s conspirator
s, only one
Confederate, Major Henry Wirz, who had presided over the hell of Andersonville P
rison, was
executed for war crimes. Even Davis’s two-year incarceration was relatively short
for a man who
had led a violent revolution against the United States government.
It is doubtful many Americans thought they could return to their lives as they h
ad been before Fort
Sumter. From an economic perspective alone, the Civil War’s cost had been massive.
The North
spent $2.2 billion to win, the South just over $1 billion in losing.9 Economists
calculated that in
addition to the destruction of $1.4 billion in capital, the South also lost $20
million in
“undercounted labor costs associated with the draft.” Estimating the lifetime earnin
gs from soldiers
had they lived an average life uninterrupted by war or wounds, economic historia
ns affixed a value
of $955 million to the Union dead, $365 million to Union wounded, and $947 milli
on for
Confederate dead and wounded. Accounting for all property, human life, decreased
productivity,
and other losses, the Civil War cost the nation $6.6 billion (in 1860 dollars).
Translating such
figures across 150 years is difficult, but in terms of that era, $6.6 billion wa
s enough to have
purchased, at average prices, every slave and provided each with a forty-acre fa
rm—and still have
had $3.5 billion left over.
Emancipation had become constitutional law with the Thirteenth Amendment, which
was ratified
by the states in December 1865. This amendment abolished slavery as a legal inst
itution, in direct
terminology, stating:
Section 1: Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for
crime whereof the
party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or a
ny place subject to
their jurisdiction. Section 2: Congress shall have power to enforce this article
by appropriate
legislation.
As part of Reconstruction, Southern states had to incorporate the Thirteenth Ame
ndment into their
state constitutions before they would be readmitted to the Union.
Other wartime costs were sure to grow as veterans began to draw their benefits.
Veterans lobbied
through a powerful new organization called the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR),
founded by
Dr. B. F. Stephenson in 1866. Organizing in “encampments,” in which prospective memb
ers
underwent a Masonic-type review process, the GAR constituted a huge block of vot
es, usually cast
for the Republican Party. GAR membership peaked at just over 490,000 by 1890, an
d for two
decades was the voice of Union veterans, who, unless wounded, made a relatively
seamless
transition into American society. One veteran lieutenant returned to his Illinoi
s farm and recalled
that the day after his arrival, “I doffed my uniform…put on some of my father’s old cl
othes, armed
myself with a corn knife, and proceeded to wage war on the standing corn.”10
War taught many enlisted men and officers important new skills. Building railroa
ds, bridges, and
other constructions turned many soldiers into engineers; the demands of communic
ations
introduced many others to Morse code and the telegraph; keeping the army supplie
d taught
thousands of men teamster skills; and so it went. One Chicago print shop, for ex
ample, employed
forty-seven former soldiers.11 Officers could capitalize on their postwar status
, especially in
politics, but also in a wide variety of commercial activities. Nothing enhanced
sales like spreading
the word that the proprietor was a veteran.
Although the Union demobilized much of the army, there still remained a largely
unrepentant
South to deal with, requiring about 60,000 troops to remain there. Some units we
re not withdrawn
from Florida and Louisiana until 1876. Moreover, as movement to the West revived
, a standing
military force was needed to deal with Indian hostilities. Nevertheless, by Augu
st 1865 a whopping
640,000 troops had been mustered out, followed by another 160,000 by November. R
eductions in
force continued through 1867, when the U.S. Army counted 56,815 officers and men
. The navy
slashed its 700 ships down to fewer than 250, essentially mothballing many “active”
vessels,
including several radically advanced ironclad designs already under construction
.
If the combatants who survived benefited at times from their service, the econom
y as a whole did
not. From 1860 to 1869, the U.S. economy grew at a sluggish 2 percent annual rat
e, contrasted with
a rate of 4.6 percent from 1840 to 1859 and 4.4 percent from 1870 to 1899. The s
tatistics give lie to
the left-wing notion that business likes wars. Quite the opposite, the manufactu
ring sector went into
a tailspin during the war years, falling from 7.8 percent annual growth in the t
wenty years prior to
the war to 2.3 percent from 1860 to 1869. The economy then regained steam after
1870, surging
back to 6 percent annual growth. In short, there is no evidence to support the p
osition forwarded by
Charles and Mary Beard that the Civil War was a turning point and an economic wa
tershed.12
A Devastated South
Where the war brought radical change was in the South. Union armies destroyed So
uthern
croplands and towns, wrecked fences, ripped up railroads, and emancipated the sl
ave labor force.
Carl Schurz, traveling through South Carolina, witnessed a “broad black streak of
ruin and
desolation—the fences all gone; lonesome smoke stacks, surrounded by dark heaps of
ashes and
cinders, marking the spots where human habitations had stood; the fields along t
he road wildly
overgrown by weeds, with here and there a sickly looking patch of cotton or corn
cultivated by
negro squatters.”13 Columbia, the capital of South Carolina, was little more than “a
thin fringe of
houses encircl[ing] a confused mass of charred ruins of dwellings and business b
uildings.”14 At the
“garden spot” of Louisiana, the Bayou Teche region, once-thriving sugar fields and n
eat
whitewashed cabins were replaced by burned fences, weeds, and bushes. Around Atl
anta, some
thirty-five thousand persons were dependent for their subsistence on the federal
government.
Discharged Confederate troops drew rations from their former Union captors. One
Southern soldier
expressed his surprise to see “a Government which was lately fighting us with fire
, and sword, and
shell, now generously feeding our poor and distressed.”15 Captain Charles Wilkes,
in North
Carolina, reported “whole families…coming in from South Carolina to seek food and ob
tain
employment.” “A more completely crushed country I have seldom witnessed,” he added.16
Large numbers of Rebels embraced the myth of the Lost Cause, no one more dramati
cally than
General Jubal Early, who left for Mexico before concocting an organization to pr
omote the
emigration of ex-Rebels to New Zealand. Scientist Matthew Maury also attempted a
n ex-
Confederate colonization of Mexico. Robert E. Lee urged reconciliation and accep
ted a position as
president of Washington College (later renamed Washington and Lee University); y
et Confederate
Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin, fearing he would be unfairly linked to the B
ooth conspiracy,
left for England, where he died. John Breckinridge also fled to Europe, where he
died in 1875.
Confederate colonel William H. Norris, a former U.S. senator from Alabama, organ
ized a group of
emigrant Alabama families to relocate to Brazil at the urging of Brazil’s Emperor
Dom Pedro II.
Confederates colonized the Brazilian cities of Para, Bahia, Espirito Santo, Rio
de Janeiro, and Santa
Catarina. Americana, founded by Norris, only removed the Confederate battle flag
from the crest of
the city in 1999. Few took the course of Edmund Ruffin, a fire eater, who commit
ted suicide. More
common were the views of Amanda Worthington, a wealthy Mississippi plantation mi
stress, who
complained, “We are no longer wealthy,…thanks to the yankees.”17 A bitter Virginia wom
an
scornfully said, “Every day, every hour, that I live increases my hatred and detes
tation, and
loathing of that race [Northerners].”18 Many pampered plantation women expressed d
isgust that
they had to comb their own hair and wash their own feet. “I was too delicately rai
sed for such hard
work,” lamented one.19
Border states also suffered terrible damage stemming from the guerrilla warfare
that pitted the
Kansas and Missouri Jayhawkers against Rebels, spawning criminal gangs like the
Quantrills and
the Daltons. During the war, gangs established support networks of Confederate o
r Union loyalists
when they could claim to be fighting for a cause, but that cloak of legitimacy f
ell away after 1865.
In both the Deep South and border states, the problem of maintaining law and ord
er was
compounded by the necessity to protect freedmen and deal with confiscated proper
ty. Authority
over the freedmen fell under the auspices of a War Department agency, the Bureau
of Refugees,
Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, established in March 1865. In addition to distrib
uting medicine,
food, and clothing to newly emancipated slaves, the Freedmen’s Bureau, as it was c
alled,
supervised captured Confederate lands. In one form or another most Southern prop
erty had
supported the rebellion—the Confederacy had seen to that by confiscating most of t
he cotton crop
for secessionist purposes in the last days of the war. After the war the Union t
ook what was left,
confiscating perhaps $100 million in total Rebel property and selling it; the U.
S. government
received only about $30 million. This reflected the lower real values of Confede
rate property, and it
also revealed the fantastic corruption at work in the post–Civil War agencies. All
Southern
agriculture had been devastated. Cotton, sugar, rice, and tobacco production did
not regain their
prewar harvest levels until the 1890s. Southern per capita income fell 39 percen
t in the 1860s, and
as late as 1880, per capita income stood at only 60 percent of the national aver
age. As late as the
Great Depression, the South had yet to fully recover parity in income. In fact,
the South had started
a sharp economic decline (relative to the Midwest) right after Lincoln’s first ele
ction.20 A
comparison of income trends in the South and Midwest from 1840 to 1880 reveals t
hat a slight but
steady decline in relative Southern income in the 1850s cascaded into a thorough
going collapse in
the year before Fort Sumter. These economic data, among other things, suggest th
e South was
losing ground in the 1850s, despite a much superior banking system in some state
s and a slave
labor system. Without the war, the South’s economy would have fallen further behin
d the North,
despite the profitability of slavery itself.
Work crews repaired much of the physical damage relatively quickly. By 1870 most
of the
Southern transportation network had been rebuilt to prewar capacity, and manufac
turing output
grew by about 5 percent. In short, the view that the “prostrate South’s” position coul
d be laid
entirely at the feet of Yankee pillage does not hold water.21
Presidential Reconstruction
Even before the term “Reconstruction” existed, the process began at the instant Unio
n troops
secured a Confederate state. Tennessee, the first to organize under Lincoln’s 10 p
ercent plan, had
operated under an ostensibly civil government (with tight military supervision)
since 1862. Johnson
had run the state as its wartime governor until 1864, then a few months later, a
state convention
claimed constituent powers and issued amendments to the state constitution to ab
olish slavery and
repudiate secession. W. G. “Parson” Brownlow was elected governor. Brownlow, whom th
e
Confederacy had jailed when he refused to sign a pledge to the CSA, had shared p
rison cells with
Baptist ministers who had committed “treason” against the Confederacy, one of them f
or shouting
“Huzzah!” when Union troops came into his town.
Parson Brownlow was the epitome of what a “good Southerner” should have been by the
Yankee
way of thinking. Yet his presence in the governor’s mansion did not mollify Radica
l Republicans or
convince them to treat newly elected Southern representatives to Congress with r
espect when they
arrived to take their seats in 1864. After the election that year, Radicals unce
remoniously refused to
admit Southern congressmen at all, although the Senate allowed the senators from
Tennessee
(including Andrew Johnson) to be seated. But after 1865 neither the House nor th
e Senate allowed
any Tennessee representatives (or those from any other former Rebel state) to ta
ke their seats,
denying Southerners any constitutional representation. West Virginia, which had
formed in 1862
after seceding from Virginia, was recognized only reluctantly.
Southerners were doing themselves no favors. They enthusiastically and foolishly
elected numerous
former Confederates to political office. Georgia’s legislature chose Alexander H.
Stephens, the
Confederacy’s vice president, as one of its U.S. senators; James Orr, South Caroli
na’s governor,
had been a senator in the CSA; General Benjamin Humphreys was elected governor o
f Mississippi.
Large majorities of the reconstituted state legislatures were ex-Confederates of
ficeholders or
military officers.
These actions outraged the Radicals, who threatened to turn parts of the South i
nto a “frog pond.”
In 1865–66, though, the Radicals were a disparate group with insufficient votes to
enact their
threats. Most Radicals shared the view that by virtue of their rebellion, Southe
rners had taken
themselves out from under the protection of the Constitution. The South, the Rad
icals argued, was a
“conquered province” (Sumner said they had engaged in “state suicide”). For nearly a yea
r
Johnson’s counterposition prevailed. Johnson hoped the hastily formed Unionist gov
ernments
would be recognized and that Southern states following their lead would return t
o normalcy in due
course. The reality was, however, that the vengeful congressional Radicals, led
by Charles Sumner
and Thaddeus Stevens—“first and foremost, good haters,” as Paul Johnson observed—not onl
y saw
the former Confederacy as a festering bed of traitorous vermin to be decontamina
ted or
extinguished, but also viewed the current occupant of the White House as complet
ely illegitimate.
A Democrat, Johnson had no leverage at all with the Republicans (least of all th
e Radical wing); a
Southerner, he had no goodwill upon which to draw from either section, each for
its own reasons
eyeing him with suspicion. His only hope lay in attempting to reorganize the Sou
th quickly, in the
Congressional recess, then proclaim it “done” before the lawmakers could return. Tha
t asked far
too much of the South, where the majority of the population was in no mood to ru
sh into a
confession of sin. It also placed the unfortunate Johnson athwart a political st
ructure that, for
success, required skills far beyond any he possessed.
Understanding the agenda of the Radical Republicans is critical. They wanted not
only to
incapacitate the South as a region, but also to emasculate the Democratic Party,
permanently
ensuring its minority status. Indeed, many Radicals hoped the Democrats would di
e off entirely,
like the Federalists had done decades earlier. There were two pawns in the strug
gle that emerged.
One was the freedmen, whose fate deeply concerned many idealistic reformers in t
he Republican
Party. At the same time, some Radicals cared not a whit about blacks, except ins
ofar as they
represented a mass bloc of voters guaranteed to loyally follow the party of eman
cipation. It was a
view that defined people as groups and voting blocs, not individuals. In this wa
y, first the
Republicans and then seventy years later the Democrats would make a mockery of t
he principles of
individual liberty for which Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, and Lincoln had fo
ught.
A second group of pawns were the majority of white Southerners, who felt no less
manipulated by
the parties. Many of them may have wished charity from the victorious Union, but
had no intention
of giving any in return, especially to the freedmen. Most had supported the Conf
ederacy and,
therefore, in the strictest sense were traitors. Lincoln’s merciful policy, howeve
r, had insisted they
be viewed as fellow citizens after they swore their loyalty to the Union. Sweari
ng an oath did not
change a lifetime of habits and prejudices, however. Few self-respecting Souther
ners could side
with the Republicans, and thus they shut out their political options as surely a
s the freedmen had
closed theirs. They marched in lockstep with the Southern Democrats, who were in
creasingly
dominated by the most radical ex-Confederates.
By the time the Thirty-ninth Congress met, the Radicals had decided that no furt
her cooperation
with Johnson was possible. In December 1865, they enlisted six senators and nine
representatives
to investigate conditions in the South. Known as the Joint Committee on Reconstr
uction, this group
was headed by Stevens and included congressmen John A. Bingham of Ohio, Roscoe C
onkling of
New York, and senators W. P. Fessenden of Maine and Reverdy Johnson of Maryland.
Only three
Democrats were on the committee, which planned its report for June 1866.
Meanwhile, Southern states’ readmittance constitutions outraged the Radicals. Sout
h Carolina, for
example, rather than declaring the ordinances of secession null and void, merely
repealed them,
essentially acting as though they had been legitimate when issued. In addition,
rather than abolish
slavery in the state constitution, the former Confederates merely noted that sla
very had already
been abolished by the United States government, and Texas and Mississippi refuse
d to ratify the
Thirteenth Amendment. In short, the South Carolinians were neither chastened nor
remorseful.
Radicals decided to take action—and to remove Johnson as an obstacle.
Four Postwar Questions
Four issues emerged in the postbellum struggle over Reconstruction: (1) What eco
nomic
compensation, if any, would be given to the freedmen? (2) What would their polit
ical status be? (3)
To what extent would federal laws governing either economics or politics in the
South be enforced
and prosecuted? And (4) Who would determine the pace and priorities of the proce
ss—the
president or Congress? Disagreement existed as to which of these four issues sho
uld take priority.
Although Thaddeus Stevens cautioned, “If we do not furnish [the freedmen] with hom
esteads, we
had better left them in bondage.” Frederick Douglass warned that it was the ballot
that was the
critical element. “Slavery is not abolished,” he noted, “until the black man has the b
allot.”22
The first issue—that of economic compensation—was thoroughly intertwined with the qu
estion of
amnesty for Confederates. Any widespread land distribution had to come from the
former
Confederates, yet to confiscate their property violated the Constitution if, aft
er they had pledged
their allegiance to the United States, they were once again declared citizens. F
ew, if any, freedmen
thought equality meant owning a plantation, but virtually all of them thought it
entitled them to the
right, as Lincoln said, to eat the bread of their own hand. Some thought land wo
uld accompany
Union occupation and emancipation. A caravan of freed blacks followed Sherman’s ar
my through
Georgia, and by the time he reached South Carolina, he actually sought to instit
ute such a fortyacres-
and-a-mule program with his Special Field Order No. 15. This set aside South Car
olina’s Sea
Islands for freedmen, giving each family forty acres and lending each an army mu
le. More than
forty thousand freedmen settled on “Sherman Land,” but the policy was ad hoc, and no
t approved
by Lincoln, who had the prospect of Reconstruction to consider.
Breaking up the plantations followed natural rights principles of recompense whe
n someone
profited from stolen property. As a Virginia freedman explained, “We has a right t
o the land where
we are located…didn’t we clear the land, and raise the crops?”23 But a Republic did no
t confiscate
property without due process, and the Constitution explicitly prohibited ex post
facto laws. For the
government to have proceeded to legally confiscate slave owners’ property, it woul
d have had to
charge slave owners with a crime—but what crime? Slavery had been legal and, indee
d, Lincoln
had been only a step away from a constitutional amendment giving it specific con
stitutional
sanction. To have retroactively defined slaveholding as a crime, for which prope
rty confiscation
was perhaps just punishment, would have opened a legal door to bedlam and, ultim
ately, terror.
What would prevent any majority in the future from defining an action in the pas
t as a crime for
which some appropriate punishment was then needed? And had Southern land been ha
nded over to
the freedmen, no doubt future generations of white descendants of the plantation
s would have
concocted their own proposals for reparations.
One option was to label all Confederates traitors, and then grant them condition
al amnesty, based
(in addition to the other requirements for regaining their citizenship status) o
n a partial proportional
penalty of land to each slave owned in 1861. In 1865, however, the reality was t
hat even the
towering genius of Lincoln did not foresee the legal implications of failing to
brand the Southerners
traitors. Nor was there any political support—except among the vengeful Sumner-Ste
vens cabal—
for such a policy. Sometimes there is no good solution to human problems. Certai
nly “reparations”
merely reapplies ex post facto reasoning to modern Americans, the vast majority
of whose
ancestors did not own slaves and many of whom arrived in the country long after
the Civil War.
Without a land policy, many freedmen soon fell into a series of contractual labo
r relationships with
former owners (though often not their own) known as sharecropping. Under the sha
recropping
system—in which two thirds of all Southern sharecroppers were white—black and white
laborers
entered into agreements with white plantation owners who possessed land and farm
implements,
but lacked workers. Typical contracts gave the landowner 50 percent of the crop
and the laborers
50 percent, although drafting a typical sharecropper contract proved daunting. E
ach contract was
individually negotiated, including length, share, the nature of supervision, and
so on. In some cases,
“share” tenants provided their own tools, seed, and everything except the land, wher
eas in others,
some freedmen worked purely as wage laborers.
Sharecropping has received rough treatment from historians, but less so from eco
nomists for a
number of reasons. First, given the strengths and weaknesses of the former slave
owners and
freedmen, it represented a logical market solution, providing land and capital f
or laborers who
lacked both, and a labor system for landowners without laborers. Second, the con
tracts were far
more flexible and competitive than once was thought. They were not lifetime agre
ements, but
temporary arrangements. Third, both parties had to work together to adjust to we
ather and market
changes. Finally, given the lack of education among the freedmen, sharecropping
minimized
transaction costs while at the same time extended new levels of freedom and resp
onsibility to the
ex-slaves.24
Still, criticisms of sharecropping are warranted because it suffered from many d
eficiencies. Neither
landowner nor laborer had an incentive to significantly upgrade land or implemen
ts. Rather, both
had an incentive to farm the land into barrenness or to refrain from engaging in
technological or
management innovations that would improve productivity. Opportunities to gouge t
he
sharecroppers (black and white) also abounded. In some regions, freedmen found i
t difficult to
move about to take advantage of better contract terms. Data on the movement of s
harecroppers
suggests, however, that their movements correlated strongly with higher-paying c
ontracts, so the
implication is that sharecroppers knew where there were better conditions, and t
herefore monopoly
situations occurred less frequently than some economic historians claimed.25
On average, though, sharecropping proved an excellent temporary market mechanism
. Many
freedmen did not stay in that situation, but moved on. Blacks acquired property
and wealth more
rapidly than whites (a somewhat misleading statistic, in that they began with no
thing), and across
the South they owned perhaps 9 percent of all land by 1880. In certain pockets,
however, they
achieved ownership much more slowly (in Georgia blacks only owned 2 percent of t
he acreage in
the state by 1880) and in others, more rapidly.26 Robert Kenzer’s study of North C
arolina showed
that in five counties black ownership of town lots rose from 11 percent in 1875
to almost 19 percent
by 1890, despite legal codes and racism.27 Black income levels also grew more ra
pidly than white
levels (again, in part because they began with virtually no income as it is tech
nically defined).
It bears repeating: racism and discrimination certainly existed and unquestionab
ly took an
economic and human toll on the freedmen. But to ignore their hard-won genuine ga
ins, or to
minimize them as mere exceptions, trivializes their contributions and achievemen
ts. Moreover, it
does a disservice to the freedmen to automatically view them as laborers instead
of potential
entrepreneurs. Historians have tended to bury stories of black entrepreneurship
after the Civil War.
Yet many former slaves contributed important inventions and founded useful profi
table companies
in the postbellum period. Alabamian Nate Shaw, an illiterate tenant farmer, move
d from farm to
farm, expanding his share of the crop and renting out his mules to haul lumber o
r do other odd jobs.
Despite competition from an influx of poor whites, struggles with unscrupulous l
andlords who tried
to defraud him of his crops, and merchants reluctant to extend him credit, Shaw
persevered until he
became self-sufficient and headed the Sharecroppers Union, where as an older man
he led protests
against land seizures by sheriffs’ deputies in the 1930s.28
Fellow Alabamian Andrew Jackson Beard, born a slave in Jefferson County, found i
t too expensive
to haul apples from his farm to Montgomery, whereupon he quit farming and constr
ucted a flour
mill in Hardwicks, Alabama. Experimenting with plow designs, he patented a plow
in 1881, sold
the patent three years later for four thousand dollars—a large sum at the time—and r
eturned to
inventing. By the 1890s, he had accumulated thirty thousand dollars and entered
the real estate
market, although he continued to invent, creating a rotary steam engine in 1892.
He had worked
previously on railroads, and he knew the dangers of joining railroad cars togeth
er—a process done
entirely by hand, in which a worker would place a large metal pin in the couplin
g devices at exactly
the right instant. Misjudgment cost railroaders their hands and fingers, and Bea
rd himself suffered
the loss of a leg crushed in a coupler accident. As a solution, in 1897 Beard ca
me up with the
famous Jenny coupler, reverse metal “hands” that fold backward on contact, then latc
h like hands
shaking. Variants of the Jenny remain in use on railroads today, and over the ye
ars Beard’s
invention has saved untold thousands of railroad employees from severe personal
injury.29
The credit records for Virginia of R. G. Dun and Co., for example, reveal that o
f the 1,000
enterprises about which the company kept information between 1865 and 1879, more
than 220
were black owned and operated.30 Although black businesses were usually located
in areas of town
with higher black populations, the advertising indicates that African American e
ntrepreneurs
appealed to white customers too. Almost 80 percent of the firms were single-owne
r operations, and
these entrepreneurs quickly gained experience in the workplace. After 1869 the r
atio of new to
failed firms dropped, and even some of those that closed did so because the prop
rietor had died. In
fact, the Virginia records showed virtually no difference in failure rates betwe
en black merchants
and white merchants from 1870 to 1875, despite the presence of racism and prejud
ice.31
Attitudes of freedmen toward former masters spanned the spectrum. Some former sl
aves actually
expressed anger at Union troops for killing and maiming their “young massas.” One So
uth Carolina
slave, seeing one of the master’s four sons return home from battle, “He jaw split a
nd he teeth all
shine through the cheek,” was “so mad I could have kilt all de Yankees.” Other slaves
secretly
celebrated when tragic news came to the plantation’s mistress: “It made us glad to s
ee dem cry,”
said one slave. “Dey made us cry so much.” News that a local leader of slave patrols
had been
killed touched off joyous shouting in slave quarters.32 On occasion, wartime har
dships turned
once-lenient masters and mistresses into monsters: one mistress, hearing of her
son’s death,
whipped the slaves until she collapsed of exhaustion. A Virginia slave observed
that treatment of
blacks grew harsher as the Yankee armies came closer.
Facing blacks now as tenants and sharecroppers, more than a few whites viewed th
eir former
chattel with suspicion: “The tenants act pretty well towards us,” wrote a Virginia w
oman, “but that
doesn’t prevent our being pretty certain of their intention to stampede when they
get a good
chance…. They are nothing but an ungrateful, discontented lot & I don’t care how soo
n I get rid of
mine.”33 Another owner in Texas—a “pretty good boss” as slaveowners went—made a huge
mistake when informing his slaves of their emancipation, “You can jes’ work on if yo
u want to,
and I’ll treat you jes’ like I always did.” All but one family, “like birds…jes’ flew.”34
The Freedmen’s Bureau attempted to serve as a clearinghouse for economic and famil
y
information, but its technology was too primitive and the task too Herculean. So
mewhat more
successful were the efforts by Northern teachers, missionaries, and administrato
rs to assist slaves in
military and contraband camps by writing letters for freedmen trying to reach re
latives. After black
newspapers were established in the 1870s, advertisements frequently sought infor
mation on family
members separated during slavery.
The influence of black educators like Booker T. Washington was still more than a
decade away.
Washington, the son of a slave, had just started his teaching career in 1875, as
Reconstruction
wound down. Founding the Tuskegee Institute, Washington hired faculty, establish
ed productive
relationships with local whites, raised money, recruited students, and set about
to teach printing,
carpentry, botany, cabinetmaking, farming, cooking, and other skills that would
assist freedmen
and their children in gaining employment quickly. He obtained benefactions from
Andrew
Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and George Eastman, and suffered insults in order
to advance his
view of black success. Without ignoring racial discrimination and hatred, Washin
gton nevertheless
focused on encouraging African Americans to acquire property, get education, and
to live with
impeccable character. In time, he believed, relations would improve. At the Atla
nta Cotton States
and International Exposition in September 1895, Washington delivered a speech la
ter noted for its
ambiguity and elasticity. He seemed to accept the separate-but-equal Jim Crow do
ctrine of the day;
yet he reminded whites that blacks were not going away, and that ultimately they
had to work
together.35
Freedmen and Politics in the South
The second major question involving the freedmen—their political status—was almost i
mmediately
put to the test when, at the end of the war, blacks began to move about the Sout
h freely for the first
time. This churning of human movement struck every observer, including Northern
army officers
who witnessed train depots and country roads crammed with people. Hungry, sick,
and barely clad
freedmen clogged the roads between Vicksburg and Jackson. More than 125,000 slav
es had been
removed to Texas when the war started, and by late 1865 they were heading home u
p the San
Antonio Road to North Carolina and Georgia. Although much of the wandering refle
cted a desire to
express the freedom of movement suddenly given to the former slaves, more of the
travel had the
purpose of searching for family members or better work.
Regardless of the motivation, any movement by free blacks terrified whites and l
ed to the first real
clash between the federal and state governments over political rights in Reconst
ruction policies. As
the new Southern governments, created by Johnson’s generous Reconstruction policie
s, started to
function, they passed laws designed to place restraints on blacks in negotiating
contracts, travel,
and weapons and property ownership. Mississippi, after what Governor B. G. Humph
reys called
“six months of [the] administration of this black incubus,” passed the South’s first b
lack codes in
January 1866.36 The legislation required annual employment contracts, prohibited
movement
between counties without permission, and allowed local officials to arrest any b
lack youth on
charges of vagrancy if he did not appear to have a job.
The Mississippi black code was not entirely punitive. It recognized black marria
ges (something not
done in slavery), legitimized the Negro’s right to sue in civil court, confirmed h
is right to property,
and required that all contracts with freedmen of periods longer than a month be
in writing. Some of
the “guarantees” were meaningless. To freedmen, most of whom were illiterate and had
never had
any contact with the legal system or the courts, the right to sue was hollow. Th
e provisions that
stirred up the most revulsion among blacks, and which provoked the North to star
t down the road of
congressional Reconstruction, involved the vagrancy provisions. Vagrants were to
be fined up to a
hundred dollars and imprisoned.37 Worse, if a freedman was unable to pay the fin
e, he could be
hired out as an “apprentice” until his fine and court costs were covered.
Another set of laws, ingeniously devised by individual states, placed huge licen
se fees on recruiters
who came in from other states to lure freedmen to work for better wages. The onl
y purpose of the
statutes was to limit blacks’ freedom of movement and infringe upon their free rig
ht to contract.
White state governments also received support from plumbers, barbers’ unions, and
medical
groups—all dominated by whites—who established a variety of tests to keep blacks out
of their
ranks. The U.S. Supreme Court, in the so-called Slaughterhouse Cases, finally ru
led that if
economic regulations did not explicitly discriminate, they were valid, and not u
ntil 1905, with the
decision in the case of Lochner v. New York, did the Court reverse itself and ba
r certain types of
discriminatory state, union, guild, and business regulation. It was a hollow vic
tory for the
freedmen, thirty years too late to do them any good.38
Black codes alone, however—even without the supporting labor regulations—sufficientl
y alarmed
Northerners, threatening no less than a backdoor reenslavement of black men, and
General O. O.
Howard ordered his Freedmen’s Bureau to disregard the state laws. Northern newspap
ers
editorialized against the codes, but their complaints did not stop South Carolin
a and Louisiana from
enacting similar, though milder, versions of the black codes, and the towns of O
pelousas and
Franklin passed still more stringent measures. Florida, however, topped them all
. By 1866,
Florida’s population was nearly half black, and its white legislature teetered on
the brink of
paranoia. Florida laws required the death penalty for burglary, insurrection (ex
cept when the
insurrection was by ex-Confederates!), and, of course, rape of (only) white wome
n. Freedmen were
allowed to have schools—but not at state expense. Blacks were denied the right to
bear arms or
assemble after dark, clearly violating the provisions of the United States Const
itution. At the other
end of the spectrum were the lenient codes of Tennessee and Virginia. But the bl
ack codes created
a major backlash in the North. Some states repealed their black codes, but it wa
s too late. By then,
congressional Radicals were arguing that the codes were further evidence the Sou
th would never
reform itself.
Associated with the imposition of the black codes was the birth and growth of th
e Ku Klux Klan. A
Pulaski, Tennessee, white-supremacy group founded in 1866, the Klan held a regio
nal meeting a
year later in Nashville, where former Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest
became its first
Grand Wizard. Wearing white sheets and hoods—not only to conceal their identities,
but, they
thought, to play on the “superstitious” nature of blacks—Klansmen spread a reign of te
rror across
the South, lynching blacks and any whites who might support them. The Klan also
expressed its
hatred of Catholics, Jews, and immigrants, often leaving its calling card—a burnin
g cross—at a
terror scene. Eventually the Klan spread nationally through the establishment of
“klaverns” (local
organizations), but it had its greatest nineteenth-century influence in Tennesse
e, North Carolina,
Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi. Other copycat white-supremacy groups followed
: the White
Brotherhood, the Men of Justice, the Constitutional Union Guards, and the Knight
s of the White
Camelia. Mayhem and violence spread. Albion Tourgee, a Northern carpetbagger who
became a
North Carolina judge, “counted twelve murders, nine rapes, fourteen cases of arson
, and over seven
hundred beatings in his political district alone.”39 Tourgee’s novel, A Fool’s Errand,
exposed in
fiction some of the harsh realities of Klan terror in the South.
One of the bloodiest incidents occurred in 1873 at the Colfax, Louisiana, courth
ouse, where a white
mob attacked armed blacks, killing more than one hundred and mutilating their bo
dies. The federal
government, after indicting ninety-eight whites, convicted only three, and even
those convictions
were later thrown out by the Supreme Court in the Cruikshank decision, which sai
d that the
Reconstruction amendments only applied to governments, not the actions of indivi
duals. Not only
had the federal government failed to give the freedmen land, but it also failed
to facilitate their selfdefense
.
If any agency could have addressed some of the needs of the freedmen, it was the
Freedmen’s
Bureau. Yet the history of the bureau shows it was not capable of dealing with t
he likes of the Ku
Klux Klan or the black codes. Nevertheless, the Freedmen’s Bureau provides an obje
ct lesson in
the limits of both good intentions and government power.
O. O. Howard and the Freedmen’s Bureau
In March 1865, Congress created the Freedmen’s Bureau to help former slaves in the
ir transition to
freedom. Run by General Oliver Otis “O. O.” Howard, the bureau lay for months at the
center of a
struggle between the Treasury and War departments over which would handle the fr
eedmen after
the war. Stanton’s War Department won, as it would ultimately have to enforce any
edicts, and
Stanton trusted Howard as an honest and effective leader.40 Although an executiv
e branch agency,
the Freedmen’s Bureau was viewed by Congress as a wedge with which it could gain c
ontrol of
Reconstruction.
O. O. Howard was hardly physically intimidating. Possessing a slight build, “fidge
ty gestures and a
shrill voice,” the general was nonetheless a morally imposing figure, “proud that he
was known in
the nation as the ‘Christian Soldier’.”41 A devout believer who insisted that his subo
rdinates attend
prayer meetings and enforced temperance among his troops, he had long opposed sl
avery, though
he did not have the abolitionist credentials of his brother, Rowland. O.O. had s
tudied at West Point
where, before the war, criticism of slavery was prohibited. His studies, however
, marked him for
success. He graduated fourth, behind Robert E. Lee’s son, Custis. After Fort Sumte
r, Howard
served in several field commands in the East, then in occupation forces; he reve
led in giving
Christian inspirational talks to the freedmen’s children at the schools establishe
d in the Sea Islands.
Howard asked the central question facing the government: “What shall we do with th
e Negro?” He
answered by emphasizing education and Christianity. The bureau would unleash “a gr
eat
commission of compassionate Americans—teachers, ministers, farmers, superintendent
s—who
would…aid and elevate the freedmen.”42
Biblical charity, however, always came with strict stipulations: “He who will not
work shall not
eat,” for example, and the numerous provisions in Proverbs against sloth. Howard d
id not see that
the do-gooder instinct would unleash a monster that would spread in three separa
te directions. First,
although the bureau definitely aided the freedmen—more than any other agency or gr
oup—it
inevitably fostered dependence on government. Second, social work of this type o
ften, if not
always, tends to puff up the provider, whose role as the source of blessings inf
lates his own sense
of worth, not to mention ego. It is not surprising, therefore, that Northerners
who came South with
good intentions ended up branded as “carpetbaggers,” seen only as leeches sucking of
f Southern
vitality. Third, the bureau itself, like all government institutions, was bound
to be corrupted by the
flow of money and the religious zeal of the participants. When nothing short of
heaven on earth is
at stake, the disappearance or unauthorized use of funds and equipment cannot st
and in the way of
progress.
As an executive office carrying out policies philosophically more in tune with t
hose of the
congressional Radicals, the Freedmen’s Bureau was itself bound to become a source
of
controversy. For example, Howard supported key legislation during presidential R
econstruction
that brought the forty-acres-and-a-mule dispute to a head. A March 3, 1865, act
of Congress gave
commissioners of the bureau authority to “select and set apart such confiscated an
d abandoned
lands and property as may be deemed necessary for the immediate use of the Refug
ees.” Howard
then affixed his own Circular Order No. 13 in July saying that the Amnesty Procl
amation “will not
be understood to extend to the surrender of abandoned or confiscated property.”43
This amounted
to nothing less than Howard’s attempting to hijack Johnson’s policy to meet his own
(Radical)
ends, and Johnson rebuked him. Undeterred, Howard instituted quiet yet forceful
opposition to
Johnson’s policies, constituting an act of insubordination on behalf of blacks no
different from
Sherman’s defiance of Lincoln.
With the rescinding of Circular Order No. 13, any hope for a reasonably quick ma
rch toward selfsufficiency
for the freedmen vanished. Most turned their expectations from land ownership to
wage
labor. “The Yankees preach nothing but cotton, cotton,” complained a Sea Islands fre
edman.44 It
was equally unrealistic, however, to expect former slaves, who had worked for no
thing all their
lives, to suddenly display as a group the traits of capitalist entrepreneurs who
had scrimped, saved,
and suffered in their own way to accumulate wealth. Entrepreneurship and capital
-formation skills
did not come to any group instantly or easily. The bureau did what it could, att
empting to police the
work contracts, but often was viewed as little more than the “planter’s guards, and
nothing else.”45
Nor was the bureau an early form of Great Society welfarism. Certainly it increa
sed the size and
scope of federal government operations—for example, it supervised more than three
thousand
schools serving 150,000 Southern students, demanding a massive amount of oversig
ht. And
without argument the bureau wasted money and in some cases encouraged indolence.
Yet in the
short term, the Freedmen’s Bureau was indispensable. More than 90 percent of stude
nts in
Reconstruction schools were black, and they were provided with education they wo
uld never have
received in elite Southern private schools. Keeping them in school, however, pro
ved difficult. One
estimate of black student attendance between 1865 and 1870 was 5 percent, and fo
r whites it was
only 20 percent of the enrollment. Reformers had an answer for that too, pushing
, as they did in the
North, for mandatory attendance laws, again expanding the scope of the governmen
t power.
The most enduring contribution of the Freedman’s Bureau was its commitment to Afri
can
Americans’ self-sufficiency, if not equality, and Southerners knew it. “The black ba
ll is in motion,”
lamented Mary Chestnut, and once rolling, racist whites could only slow it down,
not stop it.46
Some whites hoped that by teaching blacks to support themselves, white Southerne
rs would quickly
return to their “rightful” place atop the social lader. Johnson’s Amnesty Proclamation
seemed to
confirm black fears when former Confederates learned that when their citizenship
rights were
restored, their confiscated property would be returned as well. Or, in language
plain to the
freedmen, no plantations would be broken up for forty acres and a mule.
Left-wing historians often leap to make the land issue solely about race. Two ot
her important
considerations, however, guided Johnson as he came to his amnesty (sans confisca
tion) decision.
First, simply put, there were more whites than blacks in the South. At minimum,
there were two
potential white troublemakers for every disgruntled black. In meting out justice
, however unfair,
sheer numbers are always a calculation. Second, whites were voters (or in the So
uth, potential
voters) whereas blacks were not (at least, realistically, not in large numbers u
nless escorted by
troops). No policy could survive long if Southern whites and those Northerners w
ho feared black
social equality formed a political alliance to oust Johnson and the Radicals, ev
en if somehow they
formed an unlikely united front. These were not minor considerations. To accuse
Johnson of
abandoning the Negro, though in essence true, nevertheless obscures the politica
l realities
confronting him. Moreover, Johnson’s own preferences were to elevate poor whites,
not create
black competitors for them.
The Freedman’s Bureau provided a qualified answer to the third Reconstruction ques
tion. The
South, in an extremely limited way, could be made to comply with some of the Nor
thern
Reconstruction agenda through clear direction and, above all, heavy application
of force. But in the
broadest sense of racial harmony, genuine political equality, and diffuse econom
ic growth,
Reconstruction could not change either human nature or historical prejudices. At
any rate, the
conflict between Johnson and Howard spotlighted the last Reconstruction question
: who would
direct Reconstruction for the remainder of its life, the legislative or the exec
utive branch?
A War on Four Fronts
Congress, disenchanted with Johnson’s slow pace, had already started to gain contr
ol of the
direction of Reconstruction. Four concurrent conflicts took place from late 1865
to 1876, and each
had the potential to dramatically reshape American life.
The first battle pitted Congress against the presidency for policy dominance. La
ments about
Lincoln’s untimely death obscure the fact that had the great man lived, it would h
ave made little
difference to Radicals in Congress who, although they may have despised the Tenn
essee tailor,
were hardly cowed by Lincoln. A second clash involved Northerners seeking to cem
ent their
commercial and political superiority over the South into a permanent hierarchy.
Third, the
Republican Party intended to emasculate—if not destroy—the opposition Democratic Par
ty. And
fourth, a tension between whites and blacks over social, political, and economic
equality had only
started to play out in both sections, but mostly below the Mason-Dixon Line.
In this last dimension, the Radicals had, for the most part, been open and strai
ghtforward in their
goals. They had argued for abolition from the beginning of the war, and they wer
e, “if anything,
somewhat less opportunistic in their purposes and a little more candid in their
public utterances
than the average American politician.”47 George W. Julian of Indiana, for example,
lectured fellow
Republicans, saying, “The real trouble is that we hate the negro. It is not his ig
norance that offends
us, but his color…. [Let] one rule be adopted for white and black [alike].”48 Other
Radicals warned
Northerners that the rights of black and white laborers were synonymous, and, ab
ove all, they
maintained a fever pitch of moral frenzy begun during the war. “Absolute right mus
t prevail,” said
a Chicago Radical, while editor E. L. Godkin predicted that accepting the doctri
ne that the United
States was subject to only “white man’s government” would make the name of American
democracy a “hissing and a byword” among the people of the earth.49 Sentiments such
as these
refute the notion that the egalitarianism of Radical Reconstruction was merely a
facade for
Northern economic dominance.
As the new Congress considered Johnson’s Reconstruction program, it became increas
ingly clear to
Radicals that although blacks in the South could not vote, they nevertheless cou
nted 100 percent
(instead of 60 percent) toward representation in the House, giving the Southern
Democrats even
more seats in the House of Representatives than they had had before the war. As
this incredible
reality sank in, the Republican-dominated Congress reacted by refusing to seat t
he representatives
of any of the Southern governments. “I am not very anxious,” wrote Thaddeus Stevens
in a moment
of great candor, “to see [Southern] votes cast along with others to control the ne
xt election.”50 This
played a crucial role in the shaping of the subsequent Fourteenth Amendment, in
which the
Radicals proportionately reduced representation in the House to any state denyin
g voting rights to
the freedmen.
Johnson and his Northern Democratic allies, along with the leaders of the recons
tructed (neo-
Confederate) governments, accepted at the outset that blacks were incapable of e
xercising
citizenship rights. The chasm “between the two races in physical, mental, and mora
l
characteristics,” Johnson wrote in his third annual message to Congress, “will preve
nt an
amalgamation or fusion of them together in one homogeneous mass.” Blacks were “infer
ior,” and if
they gained political power, it would result in “tyranny such as this continent ha
s never yet
witnessed.”51 In February 1866, Johnson won his last victory over Congress when he
vetoed an
extension of the Freedmen’s Bureau on the grounds that until the eleven Southern s
tates were
restored to the Union, Congress had no authority to pass such legislation. Congr
ess sustained his
veto, but the Radicals stepped up their campaign against him. Sumner described J
ohnson as an
“insolent, drunken brute,” and Stevens called him “an alien enemy of a foreign state.”52
Here was
Johnson, who seldom drank, and whose loyalty to the Union was such that he was t
he only senator
from a secessionist state to stay in office during the war, accused of drunkenne
ss and treason.
Arrayed against Johnson and his dwindling alliance, the Radicals saw their influ
ence grow.
Thaddeus Stevens best expressed their position when he rejected the notion held
by Southerners
that the government of the United States was a “white man’s government.” “This is man’s
Government; the Government of all men alike,” he countered.53 He therefore advocat
ed full
political equality, though not social equality, calling it a “matter of taste” as to
whether people
shared their seats at their dinner table with blacks.
Between the Radicals on one side and the former Confederates on the other stood
the so-called
moderates. Moderates hated the black codes and wanted Republican dominance of th
e South, but
they rejected full political equality for blacks. They agreed with the Radicals,
though, that
something had to be done about the laws passed by the restored—yet still rebelliou
s—governments
in the South, and together the two groups passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866, d
efining blacks as
U.S. citizens and promising them “full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedin
gs for the
security of person and property, as is enjoyed by white citizens.”54 This law made
it a federal
crime to deprive someone of his civil rights and, in conjunction with a new Free
dmen’s Bureau
law, established army tribunals to enforce civil rights cases.
Johnson promptly vetoed the bill, citing a number of objections. He disliked the
absence of a period
of “adjustment” to citizenship that normally occurred with alien immigrants. Social
discrimination
in areas such as interracial marriage, he thought, also was necessary. His main
concerns, though,
were over upsetting the balance of power between states and the federal governme
nt. Johnson
argued that the Civil Rights Act violated the Tenth Amendment. Congress narrowly
passed the
Civil Rights Act over his veto, thanks to the illness of one pro-Johnson voter w
ho stayed home and
the defection of a New York Democrat.55 Aside from Gideon Welles, all of Johnson’s
own cabinet
opposed him.
It was increasingly clear that Andrew Johnson would not support any law that in
any way
significantly improved the status of African Americans. During the debate over t
he Fourteenth
Amendment, Johnson’s views would become even more transparent.
Aware that Southerners would immediately bring a court challenge to the Civil Ri
ghts Act,
Republican legislators moved to make it permanent through the Fourteenth Amendme
nt, stating,
“All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdic
tion thereof, are
citizens of the United States and the State wherein they reside.” This made citize
nship national
rather than subject to state authority, marking a sea change in the understandin
g of the source of
rights in the United States. No state could “abridge the privileges or immunities
of citizens of the
United States” or “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due proc
ess of law.” Nor
could any state “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection o
f the laws.”
Subsequently, all state legislation regarding infringements on the Bill of Right
s would be subjected
to federal review. It was a sweeping accomplishment in defining the rights of al
l American citizens
as equal. Some, however, were more equal than others: while granting citizenship
to the freedmen,
the Fourteenth Amendment simultaneously denied citizenship to high Confederate o
fficeholders.
Meanwhile, from March to June 1866, the Joint Committee on Reconstruction held i
ts hearings,
substantially biased against the South. Calling seventy-seven Northerners living
in the South, fiftyseven
Southerners, and a handful of freedmen, the committee listened to hours of criti
cal testimony,
quickly dismissing hostile witnesses. Northern newspapers carried the testimony,
which convinced
Northern voters of Southern mistreatment of blacks. When the committee delivered
its report, it
convinced most objective observers that despite the lopsided way in which the co
mmittee gathered
evidence, serious abuses of the freedmen continued. Worse, the committee conclud
ed that a “state
of rebellion” still existed in the South, and recommended Confederate states be de
nied
representation in the Congress. With this report, Congress reasserted its author
ity over that of the
executive to direct Reconstruction. Johnson remained set in his objections that
no ratification
process for the Fourteenth Amendment could occur until the Southern states were
reinstated. He
encouraged the Southern governments to reject the amendment, which they did: onl
y Tennessee
ratified it. Otherwise, the South held out for the midterm 1866 elections, which
it hoped would oust
the hated Radicals.
Johnson’s response to the Fourteenth Amendment, combined with a maladroit campaign
tour in late
August, helped swing the election further to the Radicals. His obstinacy confirm
ed his Southern
loyalties in the minds of many Northerners, and late summer race riots in New Or
leans and
Memphis seemed to expose the the failure of the president’s program. In the fall c
ampaign Radicals
linked support of the reconstructed governments to the treason of the hated wart
ime Copperheads.
Voters agreed, and sent a two-thirds Republican majority to each house, with mor
e Radicals than
ever filling their number. Congress had finally gained ascendancy over Reconstru
ction policy.
With Johnson essentially neutered, Congress proceeded to act on the joint commit
tee’s
recommendations by passing the Military Reconstruction Act. Under this law gover
nments formed
under presidential Reconstruction were swept away as illegitimate, and instead,
the South was
divided into five military districts, each commanded by a loyal Republican gener
al. Johnson vetoed
the act of March 2, 1867, and Congress overrode his veto. Under the First Recons
truction Act (its
very title implying that Johnson had not presided over any legitimate reconstruc
tion), Southern
states now had to hold new constitutional conventions. Instead of the 10 percent
rule that guided
the earlier conventions, these new conventions were to be selected by universal
manhood suffrage.
Readmission to the Union required that the new state constitutions recognize the
Fourteenth
Amendment and guarantee blacks the right to vote. Congress would sit as the sole
judge of whether
a state had complied.
The military commanders, à la the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibited high Confederat
e
officeholders from voting or holding office, and had authority to determine what
constituted a legal
election. The process ensured that more blacks voted and fewer whites did. Comma
nders registered
voters in large numbers—703,000 blacks and 627,000 whites—and in five states blacks
were the
majority of all voters. Military tribunals investigated a person’s loyalty, and so
me estimates suggest
as many as half a million whites were disqualified.
Thus emerged the hated triumvirate of scalawags, carpetbaggers, and black Republ
icans to put the
Radical Southern governments in power. Scalawags, or Southerners who chose to al
ly with the
Republicans, acted out of a variety of motivations. (The term “scalawag” was a folk
expression for
“mean, lousy cattle.”) Many scalawags were prewar Whigs never comfortable within the
Democratic Party. Some, such as Confederate General James Longstreet, saw the Re
publicans as
the only hope for Southerners to regain control of their states. Others included
Joe Brown, the
governor of Georgia (who switched parties only temporarily for financial gain),
and the “Grey
Ghost,” Virginia Colonel John Singleton Mosby. The term “carpetbaggers” referred to No
rtherners
who came south to impose their views on Dixie. They traveled with their suitcase
s, or carpetbags,
and were scorned by Southerners as do-gooders. Some, if not most, were well-inte
ntioned teachers,
missionaries, doctors, and administrators who all flocked to the South to assist
both freedmen and
the devastated white communities. But more than a few were arrogant and impulsiv
e, caring little
for the traditions they crushed or the delicate social tensions that remained. T
he third leg of the
Reconstruction tripod, the black Republicans, were also hated by all but a few p
rogressive
Southerners. At best, Southerners saw free blacks as pawns of the Republicans an
d at worst, a
threat to their social order.
Nevertheless, for the first time, under these Reconstruction governments, Africa
n Americans won
seats in the U.S. government. Black Reconstruction, as Southerners called it, pu
t a number of
freedmen in positions of power. Between 1869 and 1901, there were two black U.S.
senators and
sixteen congressmen elected. Like many of his colleagues, Blanche Kelso Bruce (1
841–98), the
U.S. senator from Mississippi, was highly qualified. Born into slavery in Virgin
ia, Bruce was
tutored by his master’s son and worked as a printer’s apprentice. When the Civil War
started, he
escaped north, and after the Union Army rejected his attempt to enlist, he taugh
t school, attended
Oberlin College, and worked as a steamboat porter. After the war Bruce moved to
Mississippi,
where he became a prosperous landowner and served in low-level elected offices.
Serving as sheriff
of Bolivar County, he gained the favor of the Republicans at Jackson, and after
a few high-profile
appointments, was elected to the Senate by the Mississippi legislature in 1874.
Bruce fought against
the Chinese Exclusion Act, spoke in favor of Indian rights, and became the first
African American
to chair a Senate committee. Once the Redeemer Democrats regained power, they ou
sted him, but
Bruce had so impressed the national Republicans that he received a handful of vo
tes for vice
president in 1880.56
Another black U.S. senator, Hiram Revels, was a free man in North Carolina befor
e attending
school in the North. Ordained a minister by the African Methodist Church, Revels
headed
congregations in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri, and Kan
sas before
moving to Maryland. After April 1861 he worked for the Union cause in Maryland b
y organizing
black regiments and then recruited African Americans to serve in Missouri. Like
Bruce, he settled
in Mississippi after the war and held local alderman positions, then state senat
or positions in Adams
County before the Mississippi legislature named him to fill Jefferson Davis’s seat
. His appointment
actually preceded Bruce’s, though it was much shorter, lasting only until the end
of 1871, when he
returned to assume the presidency of Alcorn College, Mississippi’s first black uni
versity.
Bruce, Revels, and other African Americans elected during Black Reconstruction,
regardless of
their qualifications, only stayed in office by the good graces of the Republican
governments. More
precisely, they could only hold office as long as the military allowed them to.
The presence of
black elected officials exaggerated the perception that the Radical governments
ruled only through
force. Increasingly, there was also a real awareness that some were horribly cor
rupt. Their
legislatures issued bonds for any project, no matter how financially unstable. V
irtually all the
governors accepted bribes to grant charters or franchises: Governor Henry Warmot
h in Louisiana,
for example, reputedly stashed away a cool $100,000 from public works contracts.
57 Alabama
printed $18 to $20 million worth of railroad bonds, and the overall debt of the
eleven former
Confederate states was estimated to exceed $132 million by 1872, yet with no tan
gible results for
the expenditures.58 Printing costs mysteriously soared: in South Carolina, the c
ost of state printing
from 1868 to 1876 surpassed the total printing expenses from the entire period f
rom 1789 to 1868!
Legislators put in requests for “supplies” such as perfume, hams, ladies’ bonnets, and
champagne—
all (obviously) essential to passing good laws.59
Reconstruction governments thus featured a disturbing mix of Northern reformers,
Southern
opportunists, and a sea of inexperienced blacks with practically no capital and
little economic clout.
Had all the motives of the actors been pure, the task of running the governments
efficiently and
without corruption would have been difficult. And without doubt, many in the Rec
onstruction
governments sincerely wanted to improve the lives of all. They introduced the fi
rst public schools
in the nation, enacted prison and asylum reforms, and enforced the Fourteenth Am
endment rights
of the freedmen. Without the support of Southern whites, absent their own econom
ic base, and
lacking any political experience, the governments did what governments often do:
they threw
money at the problems. No transportation? Issue railroad bonds that would never
be paid. No
education? Throw up a school and assume educated blacks would somehow be respect
ed by their
former masters.
It would be a mistake to assume that the Radicals lacked Democratic support for
these measures.
Even in the South, most of the railroad bond measures were bipartisan and remain
ed so until the
Panic of 1873.60 Only after a new group of Bourbon (Redeemer) Democrats had appe
ared—those
interested in repudiating the debts and rejecting state aid to railroad projects—d
id support for the
measures dry up. Moreover, concern over graft and government excess grew to the
point that when
the Bourbons took the scene after 1870, they found voters receptive to reducing
the size of
government and lowering taxes.
As these trends unfolded in the South, Republicans in Washington had a veto-proo
f majority,
although Johnson still had enforcement powers. As commander in chief of the army—t
he only
institution capable of actually putting Reconstruction policies into practice—John
son could still
control the pace of change. He also found a surprising ally in the Supreme Court
, which in the Ex
parte Milligan case (1866) unanimously ruled against imposition of martial law i
n cases where civil
administration still functioned. This cut the legal legs out from under the mili
tary governance in the
South, and the Court proceeded to rule against loyalty oaths and allowed civil s
uits against military
governors for damages. Congress, sensing where the Court was headed, used its di
scretionary
powers granted in Article III of the Constitution to state that the Court had no
jurisdiction in cases
of habeas corpus, the issue that had been spawned by Milligan. Congress succeede
d in evading the
Constitution’s stipulation that only wartime suspension of civil government was le
gal—the war was
over—but the Court had no way to enforce its ruling. Checkmated, the Court withdre
w from
accepting most other Reconstruction-related decisions.
Now only Johnson stood between Congress and its vision of a prostrate South. Con
cerned the
president might outmaneuver them by using his constitutional power as head of th
e executive
branch to go directly through the officer corps in the Union Army, in February 1
867 the Radicals
passed the Tenure of office Act, a measure that prohibited Johnson from removing
federal office
holders without Senate approval. This act violated a seventy-eight-year preceden
t and in essence
handcuffed the president from removing incompetent or even dangerous officials i
f they had allies
in the Senate. Johnson, as expected, vetoed the measure, and Congress, as expect
ed, overrode the
veto. At the same time, Congress passed the Command of the Army Act, requiring p
residential
orders or orders from the secretary of war (Radical sympathizer Stanton) to go t
hrough the general
of the army (in that case, Ulysses S. Grant). Moreover, it stipulated Grant coul
d not be assigned to
duty in any area other than Washington (anticipating that Johnson might send him
on a “factfinding”
mission to, say, China!).
In fact, Grant wanted to maintain a low profile. Although he seldom agreed with
Johnson, Grant
appreciated the separation of powers and understood the necessity for keeping th
e executive branch
an independent powerful check on Congress. Although his sympathies in matters of
Reconstruction
favored the Republicans, he nevertheless supported Johnson’s orders and attempted
to execute
them.
Johnson, convinced many of these congressional acts were unconstitutional, decid
ed to challenge
the Tenure of Office Act. He removed Stanton in August while Congress was adjour
ned, replacing
him with Grant as secretary of war. He sent the Senate an explanation of his rea
sons in a December
communication, but it was too late. The Senate rejected Johnson’s statement for re
moving Stanton
by a whopping 35 to 6 vote, and on January 14, 1868, it was time for Grant to pi
ck up his things
and vacate the War Department office. Scarcely a month later, in February 1868,
Johnson
dismissed Stanton a second time, and replaced him with Lorenzo Thomas.
Modern readers must note that in the nineteenth century context of separation of
powers, the
Congress had no constitutional right of review for executive appointment officer
s. In firing and
hiring cabinet members, Johnson was not only fully within his constitutional rig
hts, but he was in
keeping with the actions of virtually every chief executive before him. Realisti
cally, however, the
Radicals saw Johnson as an obstacle to their programs, and neither the law nor t
he Constitution
could be allowed to stand in the way.
At any rate, with the Thomas appointment, a truly extraordinary scene unfolded.
Stanton refused to
vacate his office and had a warrant issued for Thomas’s arrest; whereas Johnson se
nt Thomas’s
name—the second in a few months—to the Senate for approval. This time, there was no
doubt
among the House Judiciary Committee members, who recommended eleven articles of
impeachment for “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Nine articles specifically related t
o Stanton’s
(illegal, in the eyes of the House) dismissal; one involved Johnson’s speeches; an
d the eleventh
catch-all article lumped together every charge the Radicals could find. It was T
haddeus Stevens’s
moment of triumph: so ill that he had to have the clerk read his speech inaugura
ting the
impeachment committee, he was nevertheless so obsessed by enmity toward Johnson
that he lashed
out, “Unfortunate, unhappy man, behold your doom.”61 So spiteful was Stevens’s speech
that the
Northern press stood back aghast. The New York Herald wrote that Stevens had “the
bitterness and
hatred of Marat, and the unscrupulousness of Robespierre.”62
Although many historians condemn the impeachment process as rash, reckless, and
unwarranted, it
is significant that the full House vote was a substantial 126 to 47. This was a
ratio far higher than
the House impeachment vote against Bill Clinton a century later (228 to 206 on t
he key article of
perjury following a sexual harassment suit brought against him). A Senate trial
of Johnson soon
followed.
Although modern Americans are slightly more familiar with the processes of impea
chment because
of the Clinton case, the mechanics are nevertheless worth restating. After a ful
l House vote in favor
of articles of impeachment, the president is officially impeached, but then must
stand trial before
the Senate. The prosecutors of the case are House managers who present the evide
nce for removing
the chief executive. According to the Constitution, the House, and only the Hous
e, determines
whether the offenses constitute “high crimes and misdemeanors”—in other words, once th
e House
has turned out articles of impeachment, the Senate’s only constitutional function
is to determine
guilt or innocence. Senators cannot (at least, according to the Constitution) de
termine that a
president is guilty, yet conclude that removal is too great a penalty. Rather, t
he House has already
found that if the president committed the acts of which he was accused, the pena
lty is automatic.
This structure, however, produced an unfortunate flaw in practice; namely that s
ince the Senate
would always be the second and final body to judge a president, its members coul
d ignore the
requirement that they rule on guilt or innocence only and instead reargue the qu
estion of whether
the behavior fits the high-crimes-and-misdemeanors bar. Both American impeachmen
t trials
resulted in the Senates’ of the respective day ignoring their constitutional charg
e and insinuating
themselves into the powers and prerogatives of the House.
When the House managers prepared their case, John A. Bingham of Ohio headed the
prosecution.
Formerly opposed to impeachment, Bingham had finally concluded that Johnson had
to go.
Radicals dominated the prosecution team and took the most extreme positions, att
empting to paint
Johnson as a wild-eyed dictator bent on overthrowing the government. In a remark
able display,
Senator Benjamin Butler “waved a nightshirt allegedly stained with the blood of an
Ohio
carpetbagger, who had been flogged by Mississippi ruffians” to show the lawlessnes
s of the
South.63 From that point, in every election, Republicans would “wave the bloody sh
irt,” and the
tactic proved effective until the mid-1880s. It was less useful for Bingham, how
ever.
Johnson’s defense attorneys made eloquent speeches on the president’s behalf. More i
mportant, no
one could produce evidence of treason or truly criminal intent by Johnson, who h
ad sought only to
challenge a constitutional question. All this made the moderates uneasy about th
e precedent of
unseating a sitting president. When the Senate voted on the catch-all Article 11
, the total was 35 to
convict and 19 not guilty, providing Johnson with a single-vote margin needed to
keep him in
office. The Senate had voted to keep an unpopular president in office on the bas
is that his crimes
were not sufficient to warrant his removal.
Other acquittals for Johnson quickly followed, and the trial ended. Some assumed
that merely the
impeachment and the trial would chastise and restrain Johnson, but the stubborn
Tennessean dug in
his heels even more. The trial did chasten the Radicals, who realized they had p
ushed too hard, and
they reluctantly concluded that the nation was not yet in agreement with their v
ision of absolute
black equality or Northern domination of the South. They concluded that winning
the White House
again in 1868 would require someone not obviously associated with their faction
and someone the
public trusted. The Republican national convention in Chicago took only one ball
ot to choose
Ulysses S. Grant as the party’s nominee.
Johnson vainly attempted to form a Lincoln-type coalition, but he could not win
the nomination of
his own party. Instead, the Democrats turned to Horatio Seymour, New York’s wartim
e governor
who had castigated Lincoln as a dictator and despot and called the Irish draft r
ioters “my friends.”
Republicans had no trouble painting Seymour as a Copperhead, nor was he helped b
y a new wave
of Klan racial violence in the South. Seymour’s running mate, Frank P. Blair Jr. o
f Missouri, made
matters worse by referring to the “corrupt military despotism” that still governed t
he South.64
Statements such as Blair’s terrified Northerners. Edward Pierrepont, a Democrat fr
om New York
City, wrote, “I cannot conceive how any intelligent man, who does not wish the Reb
els returned to
power…and the ‘Lost Cause’ restored, can vote against Grant.”65
Grant hewed to the traditional Republican agenda: high tariffs, internal improve
ments, and, above
all, stability and moderation toward Reconstruction affairs. A gold standard sup
porter, Grant
nevertheless supported the Pendleton Plan for paying off federal bonds with gree
nbacks unless
specifically stated that they be paid in gold. Paying for the war debt in greenb
acks represented a
commitment to slight inflation. For most voters, though, Grant, not the platform
, was the deciding
factor: his campaign slogan, “Let us have peace,” appealed to people of both section
s.
In the election, despite the absence of three still-unreconstructed states, 78 p
ercent of eligible voters
cast ballots. Grant received 53 percent of the popular vote, despite the fact th
at Seymour got almost
200,000 votes from Kentucky and Louisiana alone; Grant smashed Seymour in the el
ectoral college
214 to 80. Some 500,000 blacks, voting for the first time, thus decided the elec
tion. Seymour took
the highest electoral state (his home state of New York), but Grant took most of
the North and
swept the Midwest and all of the West except Oregon.
Grant and the “Era of Good Stealings”
A reluctant politician, Ulysses S. Grant was as unimpressive in person as was Jo
hnson. Sad eyed, of
average height, and possessing a low musical and penetrating voice, Grant punctu
ated his speech
by frequently stroking his slight beard with his left hand. Courteous and capabl
e of effusive
laughter, Grant in portraits nevertheless looks as if he were attending a bullfi
ght or a funeral. Full
of personal contradictions, he puzzled even his best friends, including cartooni
st Thomas Nast, who
contributed mightily to the 1868 campaign. “Two things elected me,” Grant later said
, “the sword
of Sheridan and the pencil of Thomas Nast.” Early in his life Grant and Longstreet
had been close,
and after Fort Sumter, he came to rely heavily on Sherman. Unlike Lincoln, who n
ever lacked
confidence around men of better education or status, Grant, according to Hamilto
n Fish, later his
secretary of state, was uncomfortable in the presence of highly literate or well
-traveled men.66
Possessed of a detailed and organized memory, Grant could tell spellbinding stor
ies, and later wrote
a military memoir considered the finest since Caesar’s.67
When Grant claimed to be a simple soldier, he meant it. Once he put his trust in
someone, he clung
to them ferociously, and his loyalty led him to associate with self-interested l
eeches who had no
compunction about betraying his faith in them. He viewed the presidency from the
old Whig
tradition, where the legislature made the laws, and the president merely served
as a check. To that
extent, Grant had failed to absorb the massive changes in federal, and president
ial, power that had
occurred during the Civil War.68
Congress was all too happy to continue to direct Reconstruction, but the Republi
cans’ first concern
involved a diagnosis of the last election, which revealed that a great deal of D
emocratic strength
still remained in the country. Had blacks not voted in the numbers they had, or
had most of the
former Confederates who were legally allowed to vote not boycotted the election,
the Republicans
could have suffered severe setbacks. Ensuring that blacks maintained the franchi
se therefore
emerged as the top priority for the Radicals, who sought to make black voting ri
ghts permanent.
Grant had not even taken office when Congress passed the Fifteenth Amendment (Fe
bruary 1869)
that forbade any state from depriving a citizen of his vote because of race, col
or, or previous
condition of servitude.
The recalcitrant Southern states—Texas, Virginia, and Mississippi—that had not yet r
atified the
Fourteenth Amendment, finally gave in, ratifying both the Fourteenth and Fifteen
th, and all three
had rejoined the Union by 1870. Obedience in any of these states, however, still
largely rested on
the bayonets of Yankee troops. Georgia proved that in 1868, when, after federal
military forces
withdrew, the state legislature expelled all black legislators until the return
of federal troops again
imposed Northern order. Probably many Southerners otherwise harbored humane and
reasonable
intentions toward the freedmen, but equality enforced at bayonet point hardened
their antipathy
against the North even more. To most white Southerners, all of Reconstruction wa
s a facade, a ruse
to conceal the Northerners and the Republicans’ true objective of crushing the Sou
th politically,
economically, and culturally.
Grant had scarcely taken office, and certainly had not yet started to grapple wi
th Reconstruction,
when his unfortunate associations plunged his administration into a scandal. On
September 24,
1869, in Wall Street’s “Gold Room,” two of the most infamous speculators in the countr
y, Jim Fisk
and Jay Gould, attempted to corner the market on gold.69 What ensued was Black F
riday, where
gold prices skyrocketed, thanks to their backroom manipulations. Fisk and Gould
had involved
Grant’s brother-in-law, Abel Corbin, who acquired insider information from Grant o
ver dinner.
Corbin relayed to the speculators that in the event of a run on gold, the federa
l government would
not sell its gold, and thus the price would rise.
Fisk and Gould had a long history of attempting to manipulate markets. Along wit
h Daniel Drew,
they had fought Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt over the Harlem Railroad in 1864.
Now, five
years later, Fisk and Gould were attempting another speculation. Armed with fore
knowledge that
the federal government would not sell any new gold, the conspirators started to
buy all they could
get at $135 an ounce. Once they had cornered the supply of gold and driven the p
rice up to $160,
they would dump gold and take the profits. For a while it appeared they would su
cceed. But Grant,
informed of the situation by his secretary of the Treasury, ordered the Treasury
to sell gold and
stabilize the price. Gould escaped with several million dollars in profits, far
below his expectations.
Grant had in no way acted improperly, but the Fisk/Gould connection with Corbin
tarnished his
administration at an early stage.
A second scandal, Crédit Mobilier, tainted many congressmen and reached into Grant’s
administration, but did not involve him personally. The Crédit Mobilier scandal wa
s the logical
result of using massive public funding for the transcontinental railroads, speci
fically the Union
Pacific and the Central Pacific. To that extent, the trail to Crédit Mobilier must
first go through
Promontory Point, Utah, where the transcontinentals met in May 1869.
Funding for the transcontinental railroads originated with a grant of 44 million
acres of land and
$61 million in federal loans, reflecting the urgency Congress placed on construc
tion. Railroads
could sell the land, and use the proceeds for construction. The Pacific Railroad
Act of 1862 enabled
the Union Pacific to lay rails westward from Omaha, while the Central Pacific st
arted in
Sacramento and headed east.70 Congress put ridiculous incentives into the legisl
ation: benefits
given to the railroads that right-thinking legislators should have known would b
reed corruption on a
massive scale. For example, the railroads received twenty alternating sections o
f federal land and,
in addition, received a staggered series of cash loans for each mile of track co
nstructed ($16,000 for
flat land, $32,000 for hilly terrain, and $48,000 in mountains). Naturally, the
railroads had a stake
in laying as much track, on as much difficult terrain, as was humanly possible.
Historian Burton Folsom Jr. summarized how Congress’s misincentives shaped the rai
lroad
companies’ strategy: “They sometimes built winding, circuitous roads to collect for
more
mileage…. They used cheap and light wrought iron rails, soon to be outmoded by Bes
semer
rails.”71 The Union Pacific’s vice president, Thomas Durant, complained to his staff
members,
“You are doing too much masonry…. [Substitute] wooden culverts for masonry whenever
youcan.”72 They used fragile cottonwood trees because they were handy, stealing fa
rmers’ timber
with the reasoning that it was public land anyway. With government dollars backi
ng the railroads’
every move, who could argue otherwise? Moreover, the railroads also meandered in
search of
mineral rights, leading the Northern Pacific through the Black Hills of South Da
kota and fomenting
the Sioux wars.
Union Pacific’s chief engineer, Granville Dodge, laid track on ice, and the whole
line had to be
rebuilt in the spring. Crossing unsettled land invited Indian attacks, requiring
that half the workers
at any site stand guard while the other half worked. Climaxing the wasteful affa
ir, when the Union
Pacific and Central Pacific came within the vicinity of each other, work crews b
egan gang fights
and built parallel lines as long as Congress tolerated it. Finally, even the fed
eral government had
enough, and lawmakers demanded that the two lines link up. The subsidized transc
ontinentals
linked the nation only after phenomenal waste—a task James J. Hill did without fed
eral aid.73
Even as the golden spike was being driven, both railroads were already planning
to rebuild and
even relocate the track to cover the shoddy construction. It was 1874 before the
Union Pacific
finished fixing the “new” track it laid five years before.
The Crédit Mobilier scandal had its roots in this perfidious use of government mon
ey. The
corruption was brought into the open because the company was formed in 1864 sole
ly as a means
to prop up the sinking Union Pacific stock. The congressional charter required t
he railroad to sell
its stock for cash at $100 par value, but the price sank almost immediately upon
issue as investors
questioned whether the railroad could even be built. Thomas Durant came up with
the concept of
forming a new credit arm, Crédit Mobilier, whose stockholders were identical to th
e Union
Pacific’s. Under the scheme, the railroad would give construction contracts to Crédi
t Mobilier,
which then would balloon the costs of construction to double the genuine expense
s. Union Pacific
paid Crédit Mobilier with its own checks, which the directors of the credit compan
y promptly used
to purchase railroad stock at the par value of $100 per share. Looked at another
way, Durant had
managed to get the railroad to buy its own stock. He then had Crédit Mobilier sell
the stock on the
open market far below par.
The scam, while convoluted, nevertheless boiled down to Durant’s giving stockholde
rs “profits”
from sales of Union Pacific stock on the open market, which had been sanitized u
p to par value by
washing it through the Crédit Mobilier laundry. In the process, the directors and
stockholders of
Crédit Mobilier had made outrageous profits from the overbilling of the railroad—all
funded by
Uncle Sam’s land grants and loans—and had also made profits from the resale of the w
atered stock.
As if those gains were not enough, a number of congressmen (James A. Garfield of
Ohio and James
Brooks of New York), senators (James Patterson of New Jersey), and Grant adminis
tration
officials, including the vice president (Schuyler Colfax), were given generous C
rédit Mobilier
holdings to ensure they did not turn off the money spigot. Scholars estimate tha
t the corrupt
directors and congressmen skimmed between $13 million and $23 million from the U
nion Pacific
through Crédit Mobilier, which was finally exposed by the reporting of Charles Dan
a’s New York
Sun in 1872. Once again, Grant was not directly implicated, but could not escape
guilt by
inference.74
Other scandals quickly followed, including the Whiskey Ring, the Veteran’s Adminis
tration
scandal, and the exposure of Secretary of War William W. Belknap for accepting b
ribes in return
for the sale of Indian trading posts. Grant’s reputation suffered further blows.
Missing in the moralizing of both the pundits of the day and subsequent historia
ns is the key issue:
such corruption tracked precisely with the vast expansion of the federal bureauc
racy. People acted
no better, or worse, in the 1870s than they had in George Washington’s day. What h
ad changed,
however, was that the opportunity for graft combined with the incredible profits
to be gained from
corruption, causing one historian to label this the “era of good stealings.”75 This
malignancy owed
much of its existence to the growth of government.
Scandals in the Grant era turn the liberal critique of the Gilded Age on its hea
d. Far from laissezfaire
capitalism necessitating government regulation, it was government intervention t
hat caused
the corruption and fed it. The best reform Americans could have enacted in the d
ecade after Grant
would have been to roll back to antebellum levels the subsidies, benefits, tarif
fs, and favorable land
grants to railroads and other bonuses given to special interests. Yet the reform
ers learned precisely
the wrong lessons from these events.
Reelection and Reform
The demise of the Democratic Party’s Tweed Ring in New York City convinced many po
liticians
in each party that not only should something be done about political corruption,
but that reform
measures could also be successful. The accelerating calls for political reform c
ame as a reaction
against the Radicals, and they were led by another faction of Republicans, the L
iberals. These
Liberals included Carl Schurz, Horace Greeley, Gideon Welles, Charles Francis Ad
ams, and editor
E. L. Godkin, who favored free trade, redeeming greenbacks in gold, a stable cur
rency, restoring
the former Confederates their rights, and civil service reform. Schurz won a Sen
ate seat in 1872,
demonstrating that the Liberals had some electoral clout and leading them to tes
t their might in
1872, when they held a separate convention. Their emergence says something about
the difficulty
of applying labels in historical settings: the Liberals, like the conservative S
outhern Democrats,
opposed further Reconstruction measures, and both were opposed by the Radical Re
publicans.
However, the Radicals, like most Democrats, favored a continuation of the spoils
system, which the
Liberals wanted to end. Former conservative hard-money Democrats, after the Civi
l War, slowly
embraced inflation and spoke favorably of greenbacks, a tool the Union governmen
t had used to
win the war. Finally, Liberal Republicans and conservative Democrats both suppor
ted free trade
and ending tariffs, but Radicals did not! Judging from these issues alone, any a
ttempt to
consistently apply twentieth-and twenty-first-century name tags to nineteenth-ce
ntury politics is an
exercise in futility.
But while the Liberals relished their name, they overestimated their importance.
At their 1872
Cincinnati convention they nominated Horace Greeley (1811–72), editor of the New Y
ork Tribune.
Greeley’s true passion was reform. He embraced every reform idea that came down th
e pike, and,
not surprisingly, employed Karl Marx as his European correspondent. In the 1840s
Greeley
championed socialistic Fourierism, but finding that a political dead end, he tur
ned to patronage and
spoils—always an intelligent choice for a publisher. Alcohol, tobacco, prostitutio
n, and gambling
all earned the scornful ink of Greeley’s pen. During the Mexican War he had urged,
“Sign
anything, ratify anything, pay anything…. There was never a good war or a bad peac
e.” He seemed
to have changed his view twenty years later: “On to Richmond! Crush the Rebels in
blood and
fire!” In 1865 the mutable Greeley contributed to the bail of Confederate presiden
t Jefferson Davis.
Still, the opportunities for Democrats to ally with Liberal Republicans forced t
hem to hand their
nomination to Greeley, who was the only person of either party they thought migh
t unseat Grant.
Had nothing unusual occurred, Greeley still would have lost the election convinc
ingly. As it was,
his wife’s health deteriorated, and he judged her mentally insane. She died in the
last moments of
the election, essentially taking Horace with her. He had a mental or emotional b
reakdown and
expired in an asylum three weeks after her demise. Meanwhile, the attacks on him
by the Grant
forces had been so relentlessly effective that even Greeley quipped he did not k
now if he was
running for the presidency or the penitentiary. Portrayed as a crank and a disun
ionist, and
connected by Thomas Nast to the Tweed Ring, Greeley actually accomplished someth
ing of a
miracle by garnering 44 percent of the vote and 60 electoral votes. Grant smashe
d him with almost
300 electoral votes and beat him by three quarters of a million in the popular v
ote. Still, the
campaign planted an important seed: Liberals started to redefine the Republican
Party as the party
of free trade, less government, low taxes, sound money, and the necessity for ch
aracter in
government. Within fifty years, a Republican presidential candidate (Warren Hard
ing) stood for
less government, lower taxes, and sound money, and in another half century Ronal
d Reagan
embraced every one of the 1870s Liberal positions.
Meanwhile, the Radical Reconstruction program was unraveling rapidly. Democrats
had not only
driven out most of their number who might work for black rights, but they had al
so embraced
former Confederates with open arms. “Virginia for the Virginians” was the campaign s
logan of
former Confederate general and Gettysburg veteran James L. Kemper in 1873, emplo
ying a phrase
that clearly implied African Americans were not Virginians. “To save the state,” sai
d one of his
lieutenants, “we must make the issue White and Black race against race and the can
vass red hot.
[italics added]”76 To be sure, not all Southerners tolerated race-baiting, and man
y of the leading
Southern newspapers sharply criticized establishing a color line in elections. B
ut these were
pragmatic responses by editors fearful that playing the race card would only lea
d to more
Republican victories, and seldom reflected any genuine concern for blacks or the
ir rights.
The revival of such attitudes emboldened the Klan, whose activities increased in
number and
viciousness. Violence by the Klan and other terror organizations prompted a resp
onse from
Congress, which Grant wholeheartedly supported. In May 1870, under the authority
of the Fifteenth
Amendment, Congress passed the first Force Act. (Since the object of the legisla
tion was to end
intimidation by the Klan, this and similar acts were also called the Ku Klux Act
s.) The Force Act
provided heavy fines and imprisonment for anyone attempting to hinder citizens f
rom voting.
Congress reinforced the act in 1871, and then, in 1872, passed legislation even
more specific in its
language aimed at the Klan. Threatening or injuring witnesses, interfering with
federal officers, or
even going about in disguises were all prohibited. The Klansmen and their terror
ist allies did not go
quietly. They staged massive torchlight parades, shot at Republican offices, lyn
ched blacks, and
bullied African Americans into staying home on election day. A few blacks tried
to form rifle
companies to counteract the Klan, but they had little training with firearms and
few weapons. Grant
managed to effectively drive the Klan underground for almost a generation, but t
hey skulked in the
background, awaiting an administration in Washington less committed to black rig
hts.
Meanwhile, by 1870, the fusion/loyalist Democrats were strongly opposed by Redee
mers or
Bourbons. These politicians were planters and former Confederates, like Kemper,
who were
determined to end Black Reconstruction. Although they also had genuine concerns
for the
economic collapse of their states under the Radical governments, their three mai
n issues were race,
race, and race. Redeemers found a wide audience for disenfranchising blacks. “Give
us a
convention,” intoned Robert Toombs, “and I will fix it so that the people shall rule
, and the negro
shall never be heard from.”77 Opposition to the state debts, government support fo
r business, and
other Whiggish programs also played a crucial role in the Redeemers’ success. Inde
ed, when the
Bourbons got control, they did not merely reduce the debts and pay them off over
time—they
repudiated them.
Whether the Redeemers fully realized they were helping to condemn the South to d
ecades more of
poverty is unclear, but that certainly was the result of their policies. Repudia
ting debts was a sure
way to guarantee no one lent Southern governments money again, and guilt by asso
ciation meant
that any Southern-originated bonds by even private companies would be viewed wit
h suspicion. Or
as Reconstruction historian Michael Perman observed, “Because it was fiscally untr
ustworthy and
financially dependent, the South had, in effect, surrendered control over its fu
ture economic
development.”78 Whereas the state-subsidized model of railroad and corporate suppo
rt often
advanced by the Whigs and Republicans proved disadvantageous (if not disastrous)
to
transportation and industrial progress, the Democrats’ punitive redistributionist
policies—little
more than financial bulimia and anorexia—were equally dim-witted. The South, alrea
dy bereft of
railroads, banks, and manufacturing, turned to the Redeemers, who offered the re
gion “a politics of
balance, inertia, and drift.”79
The Panic of 1873 provided the final electoral issue allowing the Democratic Red
eemers to win
back control of most Southern state houses in the 1874 election, and, amazingly,
for the first time
since 1858, Democrats won the U.S. House of Representatives. Empowered at last,
Redeemers had
no intention of enforcing federal civil rights laws. Just the opposite, they sup
ported segregation
statutes known as Jim Crow laws.
Interestingly, by the 1870s the free market had already made some inroads toward
ending
segregation when streetcars were integrated. It was government, not business (wh
ich wanted the
profits from black ridership) that insisted on segregating streetcars and other
public facilities.80
With the combination of a waning federal will to enforce civil rights legislatio
n, the return of the
Redeemers, and the revival of the Klan, freedmen saw much of what they had gaine
d in the decade
after the Civil War slip away.
Diversions
Americans, especially Northern Americans, had grown increasingly weary of defend
ing black
rights and their own corrupt Reconstruction governments in the South. Less than
a decade after
armies marched singing, “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord,” N
ortherners
wanted to know when the Lord would show up and release them from the burden of p
olicing their
white Southern neighbors.
When the Republicans lost the midterm election in 1874, it indicated support for
Reconstruction
was waning. Political realities of the 1870s combined to push Republicans furthe
r away from their
Radical Reconstruction goals of union, emancipation, and equality, until by 1876
three of these had
been reduced to two: union and emancipation. Equality had been discarded.
Events in the frontier West distracted Americans as well. The Indian wars comman
ded tremendous
political and humanitarian energy, once solely reserved for the Negro. Reformers
, having
“finished” their work in the South, brushed themselves off and turned their attentio
n to another
“helpless” group, Native Americans. Indians had suffered a constant string of broken
treaties, as
discussed in the next chapter. Few episodes, however, shook the nation as much a
s the news of
June 1876, when an alliance of Sioux and Cheyenne—once hated enemies—produced the wo
rst
military disaster on the western plains, the destruction of a large portion of C
olonel George
Custer’s Seventh U.S. Cavalry. If troops were needed in the West, they had to come
from the
South, weakening enforcement of open polls and control over the Klan.
Economic disruption also drew attention from the South. The failure of Jay Cooke’s
banking house
in 1873, brought about in part by his reliance on Union Pacific railroad bonds,
touched off the
Panic of 1873. That same year the government announced it would redeem the green
backs in gold
beginning in 1879—a policy that was in no way connected with Cooke’s failure—and, at t
he same
time, Washington announced that it would not monetize silver. Consistent with th
e Liberals’
position of sound money, the government had refused to inflate the currency, ins
tigating yet
another howl of protest from western farmers, miners, and others who were caught
in the postwar
deflation, itself of international origins.
With each Union Army regiment redeployed to the West, Republican voters in the S
outh lost a
little more security. Blacks and whites alike feared for their lives as they wen
t to the polls, which
they did with less and less frequency. As a Mississippi carpetbagger governor wr
ote to his wife,
“The Republicans are paralyzed through fear and will not act. Why should I fight a
hopeless
battle…when no possible good to the Negro or anybody else would result?”81 A Norther
n
Republican echoed the frustration: “The truth is our people are tired out with the
worn out cry of
‘Southern outrages’!! Hard times and heavy taxes make them wish the ‘ever lasting nigg
er’ were in
hell or Africa.”82 Democrats and Southerners had learned an important lesson about
the press: no
matter how grievous the charge, deny it; then commit another wanton act, and the
first behavior
will be forgotten in the storm over the new one. Northern newspapers unwittingly
assisted in the
unraveling of Reconstruction, portraying black legislators as hopelessly corrupt
. “Thieves,”
“orgies,” “plunder”—words like these characterized reporting about the Reconstruction
governments.
The first signs of surrender appeared in May 1872, when Congress passed the Amne
sty Act,
allowing Confederate leaders to vote and hold public office. When Southern Repub
licans, already
disenchanted with the potential for full social equality of blacks, began to des
ert the party, the
Reconstruction government truly became ruled by a foreign power. Democrats, havi
ng inflated
Confederate currency into worthlessness and acquiesced in a government that esse
ntially imposed a
100 percent tax on its citizens, now skillfully and disingenuously accused the B
lack Republicans of
excessive spending and overtaxation.
As a last-gasp attempt to show its commitment, Congress passed the Civil Rights
Act of 1875, a
final bill pushed through the Republican-controlled lame-duck Congress guarantee
ing “full and
equal treatment” to all persons of every race, and decreeing access to all public
facilities, such as
hotels, theaters, and railroads. As usual, enforcement relied on troops, and the
troops had been
pulled out of every Southern state except Louisiana, Florida, and South Carolina
. Elsewhere,
Redeemer governments had crept back in, one at a time, beginning with Tennessee
in 1869, West
Virginia, Missouri, and North Carolina in 1870, Georgia in 1871, Alabama, Texas,
and Arkansas in
1874, and Mississippi in 1875.
What the North did, for understandable reasons, was to abandon what it started.
What the South
did, also for understandable reasons, was to attempt to return to its antebellum
social and economic
structure sans the legal institution of slavery. For Reconstruction to have work
ed as many had
hoped, it would have required a view of government exactly opposite of the large
, central behemoth
that had undermined the Confederacy. It needed small, morally impeccable, and ut
terly efficient
state governments. It needed low taxes at the state level, and abolition of thos
e state or local
regulations that gave any group advantages over another. It also required a mass
ive infusion of
banking capital, which the National Bank acts had failed to provide. Finally, it
probably would
have required another leader with the genius and compassion of Lincoln to pull i
t off. Yet even in
the greatest Republic on earth, a Lincoln only comes around once a generation at
best. Instead of a
great leader like Lincoln, the nation’s next president was a good, honest, and com
petent leader
named Rutherford B. Hayes.
Rutherford B. Hayes: Soldier and Politician
Like his predecessor, Ulysses Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes knew combat well. Durin
g the Civil War
he had been wounded five times and had four horses shot out from under him. He n
arrowly missed
being kidnapped by Confederate raiders who absconded with Union Generals George
Crook and
Benjamin Franklin Kelley, then spearheaded the effort to get them back. William
McKinley said of
Hayes that “his whole nature seemed to change when in battle. [He went from] sunny
, agreeable,
the kind, generous, the gentle gentleman [to] intense and ferocious.”83 Hayes’s firs
t cousin was
utopian John Humphrey Noyes, but Hayes shared none of his eccentric brand of soc
ialism,
preferring instead traditional marriage and sound capitalism. When the war ended
, he had second
thoughts about politics, but was, after all, a veteran and a good speaker, so mu
ch so that by the end
of October 1866 he could leave his own congressional political campaigning and w
ork to secure the
election of John Sherman as an Ohio Senator.
An ardent champion of securing the rights of the freedmen, Congressman Hayes rea
lized that only
the federal government—and, with Andrew Johnson in the White House at the time, on
ly
Congress—protected the new citizens. He wrote to his wife, Lucy, about a parade ce
lebrating the
end of the war in April 1866 in which “the colored procession” marched in Washington
with flags
and bands. “Their cheering for the House and Senate as they passed the east front
[of the Capitol]
was peculiarly enthusiastic.”84 After his short stint in Congress, Hayes, waving t
he bloody shirt,
won the gubernatorial seat in Ohio in 1867, only to find that many issues that o
nce were the domain
of state governments had been taken over by Washington. Hayes intended to emphas
ize black
voting rights, but otherwise hoped the legislature would pass few laws. Winning
a second term in
1870, Hayes especially worked to curb local taxes, which had risen five times fa
ster in Ohio than
state taxes, and sought to further reduce state indebtedness. The legislature st
ill spent more than he
requested, but Hayes managed to reduce the rate of growth, at the same time supp
orting increased
spending on the state orphans’ home, education, and penal reform.
In 1872, thinking he had retired from politics, Hayes moved back to Cincinnati,
where he actively
criticized Republican corruption. Called out of retirement to unite a deeply div
ided party, Hayes
won the governorship again in mid-1876, despite a bad economy that worked agains
t the party in
power, the Republicans. No sooner had Hayes won, however, than Senator John Sher
man and
General Philip Sheridan both urged him to run for the presidency. Sheridan wrote
Hayes endorsing
his own preference for a ticket of “Hayes and Wheeler,” to which Hayes remarked to h
is wife, “I
am ashamed to say, but who is Wheeler?”85 Wheeler was Congressman William A. Wheel
er of
New York, and the Republican convention, as fortune would have it, took place in
Cincinnati,
where many of the Hayes men had already infiltrated the party apparatus. Even wi
thout such inside
activity, however, Hayes won support because his opponents, including Roscoe “Boss”
Conkling of
New York and James G. Blaine of Maine, all had significant flaws. In the general
election, GOP
nominee Hayes squared off against New York Democratic governor Samuel J. Tilden,
who had
gained a reputation by crushing the infamous Tweed Ring.
After seeing early returns showing Tilden carrying Indiana and New York, Hayes w
ent to bed and
slept soundly, convinced he had lost the election. But the far West, including O
regon, California,
and Nevada, was late to report, and all went for Hayes. In addition, there were
troubling results in
three Southern states: Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida. If Hayes carried
all of them, he
would win by one electoral vote, even though the final popular vote showed him l
osing by almost a
quarter million votes—a whopping 3 percent Tilden victory in ballots cast. Yet loc
al voting boards
retained the authority to determine which ballots were valid and which were frau
dulent. Although
he was convinced the Democrats had engaged in massive vote manipulation, Hayes n
evertheless
hesitated to contest the election. What sealed the matter for him was the percep
tion that virtually all
of the fraud had been perpetrated against African Americans, whose rights Hayes
had fought for
(almost to the exclusion of anything else) his entire political career.
As with Al Gore and George W. Bush under similar circumstances more than a centu
ry later,
Tilden and Hayes engaged in the game of attempting to look presidential while th
eir subordinates
hotly contested the results. Like Gore and Bush, both men were convinced that a
legitimate canvass
would favor their chances. Hayes appeared to have carried South Carolina by 1,00
0 votes, despite
the rulings from local boards there, but he had also lost Louisiana by six times
that many ballots,
constituting a significant challenge to his contest claim. In Florida, repeaters
, ballot stuffers, and
other tricksters—including those who had printed Democratic ballots with the Repub
lican symbol
on them to deceive illiterate voters—made it all but impossible to determine the t
rue winner. Hayes
probably won South Carolina and Florida, but Tilden carried Louisiana, where Rep
ublican vote
tampering was probably quite high, and that was all he needed. Hayes insisted th
at “we are not to
allow our friends to defeat one outrage and fraud by another,” and demanded, “There
must be
nothing crooked on our part.”86 Matters had already spun out of his control, howev
er.
The returning board in Louisiana, which was all Republican and under the supervi
sion of J.
Madison Wells, who was clearly engaged in postelection scheming for patronage, t
ossed out 15,000
total ballots, of which 13,000 were Democratic, giving Hayes the state by 3,000
votes. Florida’s
board included a Democrat, but the result was the same: Hayes won the state by 9
00 votes. Hayes
also took the disputed South Carolina votes, giving him ostensibly 185 electoral
votes to Tilden’s
184 and, in turn, giving him the election.
The affair dragged on into the new year, and as provided for by the Constitution
, Congress had to
clean up the matter. In the interim, Hayes’s forces received feelers from some Sou
thern
congressmen who floated the trial balloon of receiving “consideration” in return for
their support of
Hayes, meaning federal subsidies for the Texas and Pacific Railroad, an end to m
ilitary occupation,
and plenty of patronage. Congress settled on a fifteen-member commission made up
of five
senators, five congressmen, and five Supreme Court justices. Each party would ha
ve seven
members, plus, ostensibly, one independent, Justice David Davis. Everyone recogn
ized that barring
a miracle, Davis would determine the election, but it was the only practical sol
ution, and both
Hayes and Tilden reluctantly approved of the commission. Then, surprising everyo
ne, Davis
refused to serve on the commission. He thought he smelled a bribe, and withdrew.
By prior
agreement, another Supreme Court justice had to serve, and it fell to Justice Jo
seph P. Bradley, a
Republican, to take his place.
As with the disputed election of 2000, there was controversy over whether to acc
ept the official
returns certified by the governor and the state secretary of state or to accept
other unsanctioned
returns. The Democrats claimed Florida had been stolen through Republican fraud,
but historian
James MacPherson challenges such a contention. Voting on party lines, the commis
sion accepted
the official certified returns, and Florida went to Hayes. Similar 8-to-7 votes
soon yielded to Hayes
the Louisiana and South Carolina electors.
While these maneuvers were occurring, representatives from Hayes and Tilden met
at
Washington’s Wormley Hotel to settle the election. This backstage bargain, which m
any historians
view as having produced the Compromise of 1877, was overblown. Hayes had already
made it
clear he would ensure the retention of the Democratic governor of Louisiana in r
eturn for a pledge
on freedmen’s rights; withdraw the remaining federal troops from Louisiana, Florid
a, and South
Carolina; and put Southerners in the cabinet. Even without a bargain, the deal w
as sealed, and
Hayes mollified Democrats and Southerners enough to avert violence. Nevertheless
, historians tout
the agreement at the Wormley Hotel on February 26, 1877, as the last great secti
onal compromise.
On March 4, 1877—four months after the election—the nation had its new president. Ha
yes upheld
his promise, naming a Democrat, David Key of Tennessee, as postmaster general (w
hich remained,
it should be noted, a prize political plum). The circumstances of his victory di
ctated that Hayes
faced almost insurmountable odds against achieving much. He had not only a divid
ed country, but
also a divided party and a divided Congress. Although the Senate remained in Rep
ublican hands,
the House had gone back to the Democrats in 1874 as a response to the Panic of 1
873. His
administration had a late start, thanks to the Tilden challenge, making it midsu
mmer before the
government even began to fill its primary positions. But most damaging, Hayes ha
d stated that he
would not run for a second term. Only through his insistence on a unified cabine
t and an
unwillingness to be bullied by the House did Hayes achieve as much as he did.
Protection of blacks by the bayonet in the South had run its course, and with In
dian troubles on the
frontier, the army was stretched too thin to keep large numbers of troops in the
South as civil-rights
enforcers. Withdrawal of federal troops commenced within a month, driven in part
by pragmatism
and in part by hope—hope that the Southerners would understand that they had enter
ed a new era.
Instead, the close election and the subsequent compromise meant that the South n
ow acted as if it
had defeated the North’s legislation, if not her armies.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Lighting Out for the Territories, 1861–90
Civilizing a Wilderness
Young Samuel Clemens (alias Mark Twain) gave up his brief career as a Mississipp
i steamboat
pilot in 1861, setting out for the Nevada Territory aboard a stagecoach. Having
tried his hand at
gold and silver mining, he turned to newspaper work and a promising career as a
writer. Clemens,
in fact, moved west to escape the Civil War, a conflict in which he had served b
riefly and without
distinction as a Confederate militiaman. He had no appetite for the kind of viol
ence and devastation
that consumed his fellow Missourians. Like his later literary character, Huckleb
erry Finn, Sam
Clemens “lit out for the Territories.”1
Many had gone before him, and many more followed. The period of manifest destiny
, followed
quickly by the Mormon exodus and the California Gold Rush of 1849, set the stage
for a half
century of migration by eastern Americans onto and across the Great Plains. Clem
ens was preceded
by tens of thousands of anonymous fur trappers, cowboys, prostitutes, loggers, f
ishermen, farmers,
miners, teachers, entertainers, soldiers, government officials, and business ent
repreneurs, in
addition to Mormons, Jesuits, Methodists, and other missionaries. In the 1860s,
while the Civil War
raged “back east,” Clemens and a new generation headed west.2
In 1893 historian Frederick Jackson Turner wrote that this generation had succee
ded so well that
the American frontier had at last come to an end. In his brilliant essay, “The Sig
nificance of the
Frontier in American History,” Turner traced the course of the westward movement f
rom
Revolutionary times across the Appalachians and the Mississippi River. He pointe
d to the 1890
census report stating matter-of-factly that western America had achieved a densi
ty of population
that rendered the term “frontier” inapplicable.3 Turner undoubtedly portrayed Americ
a’s western
experience as unique—but how? Was Turner’s thesis right?
Turner used the 1890 census report as a watershed to assess the impact of the fr
ontier experience on
the American people. He rejected the idea that Europeans had molded American cul
ture and argued
that it was the American frontier experience that had created a unique American
civilization,
providing a safety valve for the release of societal pressures. He ascribed to t
he West and
westerners specific character traits, most of them positive, but some unsavory.
Arguing that the
West made Americans democratic, egalitarian, nationalistic, pragmatic, and adapt
ive, Turner also
contended that frontier life made them coarse, violent, anti-intellectual, and w
asteful of natural
resources. Yet even as he wrote, lumbermen like Frederick Weyerhaeuser, railroad
ers like James J.
Hill, and meat packers like Gustavus Swift had begun taking extraordinary measur
es to preserve
the environment. And where Turner saw a violent, often barbaric West, the so-cal
led Wild West
may have been less violent in many respects than modern society.
Most western men were neither John Wayne types looking for a fight nor helpless
citizens waiting
for a frontier hero to rescue them. In regions where judges rode a circuit and c
ame to town, with
any luck, once a month, there naturally existed a tendency to take law into one’s
own hands. Where
every animal had its claw, horn, tooth, or sting—many of them potentially fatal—and
where every
human had an incentive to jump a claim, steal livestock, or become offended at t
he slightest insult,
a necessary violence literally went with the territory. Nor was the West a Marxi
st model of class
struggle: for every saloon brawl that started over “class interests,” fifty began ov
er simple insults or
alcohol.
On the other hand, frontier individualism was not ubiquitous, and westerners cou
ld cooperate when
necessary. Towns first united to bring the cattlemen in, then passed laws to kee
p them out; then
cattlemen joined the townspeople to keep the sheepmen out; then ranchers and far
mers of all types
sought to keep heavy industry out. Nor were these patterns unique: a century lat
er it was the same
story: heavy industry sought to keep computers and electronics out. Those who se
ttled the West for
better and, occasionally, for worse, tamed a wild frontier. They left a legacy o
f romantic
accomplishment that even to the present contains important messages and images f
or Americans.
Time Line
1843:
First large Oregon Trail wagon train
1846–47:
Mormon exodus to Utah
1848:
Mexican War ends; New Mexico Territory, California ceded to United States
1849:
Gold discovered at Sutter’s Mill, California Gold Rush begins
1850:
Compromise of 1850 admits California as a state
1853:
Gadsden Purchase completes map of lower continental United States
1857:
Butterfield Overland Stage provides passenger and mail route to California
1859:
Comstock Lode discovered
1860:
Pony Express begins operations
1861:
Civil War begins
1862:
Homestead Act; Morrill Act; Plains Indian wars begin
1864:
Sand Creek massacre
1865–85:
Cattle Kingdom reaches its apex
1866:
Fetterman massacre
1867:
Grange movement begins
1869:
Transcontinental railroads join at Promontory, Utah
1876:
Custer massacre
1882:
Edmunds Act
1885:
Chief Joseph and Nez Percé surrender
1887:
Dawes Severalty Act
1890:
Wounded Knee massacre
1893:
Frederick Jackson Turner declares frontier closed
1896:
Alaskan gold rush
Wagon Trains, Stagecoaches, and Steamboats
Before the completion of North America’s first transcontinental railroad in 1869,
westbound
pioneers continued to use varied means of transport.4 Thousands drove wagons ove
r well-worn,
often muddy trails and helped break in some new ones. An era of private road bui
lding in the early
eastern frontier areas gave way to a willingness to use the state and national g
overnment to improve
transportation.5 Pony Express riders and horsemen traversed these trails, and tr
avelers booked
passage on stagecoaches. Members of the famed Mormon handcart brigades literally
walked the
trail west, pushing their belongings in front of them. Meanwhile, sailboats and
steam-powered
ocean vessels brought immigrants to the West via the coast of South America and
hard-working
steamboats navigated rivers. Decades after the coming of the railroad, nearly al
l of the above routes
and means of transport endured in one form or another.
Although the settlers of the 1830s still used muskets, increasingly the Kentucky
long rifle had come
into use, extending range and accuracy. After the Civil War, breech-loading Shar
ps, Spencer,
Winchester, and Remington rifles (with repeating action) were available. The fir
st repeaters had
appeared in the Civil War, and with minimal practice a man or woman could squeez
e off a dozen
shots in less than thirty seconds. Many men carried sidearms—usually a Colt revolv
er—and knives,
or tomahawks, or other weapons were always handy in case of snakes or predators.
6 When
combined with circled wagons for defense, settlers had a good chance of warding
off Indian attacks
with such weapons.7
The route north of the North Platte River became the Mormon Trail, blazed by the
Mormon exodus
to Utah (1846–47). Army engineers built or improved upon additional trails through
out the West,
such as the Bozeman Trail, a supply route stretching north from Fort Laramie in
present-day
Wyoming to the Montana country. In Washington Territory the army built the 624-m
ile Mullan
Road (named for its surveyor, Lieutenant John Mullan) between 1859 and 1862. Con
necting Fort
Benton, the head of Missouri River steamboat navigation, to Fort Walla Walla, ne
ar the navigable
lower Columbia River, the Mullan Road was cut by the army in order to transport
troops and
supplies. Soon, however, hundreds of miners, missionaries, entrepreneurs, and fa
rmer immigrants
cluttered the trail, turning it into a vital route for 1860s gold seekers bound
for mines in the presentday
states of Washington, Idaho, and Montana.
Stagecoaches were vital common carriers—commercial transporters of mail, freight,
and
passengers. Like many western businesses, stagecoach companies began small and t
hen earned
enough capital to become larger firms. Eastern coach companies begun by Henry We
lls (who ran a
string of speech therapy schools in New York), John Butterfield, and William Far
go became the
basis of the famous modern firms American Express and Wells Fargo. The Butterfie
ld line opened
its southern route running through Texas to California in 1857.8 In 1860 the Cal
ifornia Stage
Company ran the seven-hundred-mile route between Portland, Oregon, and Sacrament
o, California,
in an impressive six days. Beginning in 1852, Wells, Fargo & Company, California
Stage’s famed
competitor, offered service out of San Francisco to most of the West’s mining dist
ricts. In 1862,
Ben Holladay, the “Stagecoach King,” briefly challenged Wells and Fargo before selli
ng out to
them in 1866, and then founded the Oregon Central Railroad. For a brief moment,
between the
stagecoaches and the telegraph, the Pony Express filled the gap for rapid delive
ry of mail.
Steamboats ran the upper Missouri, Sacramento, lower Columbia, and other western
rivers
throughout the years before the Civil War. From 1850 to 1860 a dozen small compe
titors vied to
haul miners and supplies along the Columbia and Snake rivers to Lewiston, in pre
sent-day Idaho.
Their tough low-draft steamers symbolized a rough and ready era of independent r
ivermen who
navigated around rocks, shoals, and numerous dangerous drift logs in swift curre
nts, rapids, and
falls. In 1860 the Oregon Steam Navigation Company bought them all out, controll
ing the trade
(with twenty-six steamers) until 1880.9 During this time the company built the N
orthwest’s first
railroad track, a mere six miles, to facilitate transshipment of steamboat cargo
es around the Celilo
Falls of the Columbia River. This little stretch of track marked the tender begi
nning of the western
stretch of what would become the Northern Pacific Railroad.
The Iron Horse Races West
American railroads had already started to undercut prices in river traffic by th
e Civil War.
Railroads stretched into Missouri and Wisconsin, and construction continued west
ward after the
war. Most students of history are familiar with the subsidized transcontinental
railroads that
received millions of acres of federal land to support their construction. The ot
her side of the story,
however, is that hundreds of local train lines and two transcontinentals—the Great
Northern and the
Milwaukee Railroad—were funded and built purely with private capital. So, when the
Union
Pacific and Northern Pacific Railroads lobbied Congress after the Civil War, con
tending that only
government could help them complete their transcontinentals, they were wrong. Ja
mes J. Hill soon
built a more efficient competing line without government aid, and so too did the
owners of the
Milwaukee Railroad. Private roads not only survived panics when subsidized roads
failed, but the
owners of unsubsidized lines also spent their own funds to relocate farmers (fut
ure customers)
along their routes, to invest in agricultural research and livestock breeding, a
nd to ensure that the
lines, once completed, would remain healthy. And, it is worth noting, the privat
e companies—on
their own—arrived at a national railroad track width standard without any involvem
ent of
government, universally agreeing to the 4-foot-8.5-inch standard by 1886.10
Transcontinentals provided countless benefits, ending the isolation of many west
erners and
providing them with “metropolitan corridors.” Life was better with easier travel for
visiting friends
and relatives, and leisure destinations as well as for conducting business. In t
housands of western
towns, the railroad station became the hub of community life, where locals eager
ly awaited the
daily arrival of freight and passengers, and the railroad’s telegraph office becam
e a vital link to the
outside. Before radio, westerners gathered around railroad telegraphers to learn
presidential
election results, international news, and even the scores of football and World
Series games.
Railroads also contributed to the rise of America’s national parks as America’s firs
t generation of
ecotourists booked passage aboard special spur lines created by the Great Northe
rn, Northern
Pacific, and Southern Pacific railroads to tour Glacier, Yellowstone, and Grand
Canyon National
Parks. Railroad entrepreneurs like Henry Villard, in fact, plotted the routes of
their lines to
showcase the West’s majesty, and when buffalo became a major attraction at Yellows
tone Park,
park officials attempted to ensure that passengers could see the buffalo herds f
rom the train.11
The Natural Resources Frontier
Trends seen in the evolution of natural resource extraction industries—fur, fish,
ore, timber,
ranching, and agriculture—actually parallel several of the patterns of the stageco
ach, steamboat,
and transcontinental railroad industries. Entrepreneurs tended to start out smal
l, but larger concerns
soon came to dominate, largely because technology and capital were necessary to
efficiently
harvest natural resources. An important result of this efficiency, however, was
a tendency to
overharvest in the short term—a failure to conserve natural resources—which quickly
produced
higher prices and efforts to moderate extraction in the longer term.
Although historians have been quick to blame this environmental waste and destru
ction on the
forces of free-market capitalism, once again the picture is not so clear.12 In o
pposition to laissezfaire
principles, the federal government often played a major role in leasing or givin
g federal land
to miners, loggers, farmers, ranchers, and fishermen, distorting incentives by m
aking resources
cheap that, had the market had its way, would have come at a much higher cost.13
Then, as today,
federal and state governments, not market forces, regulated many natural resourc
e extraction
industries and often did so poorly, actually undercutting market forces that wou
ld have adjusted
prices and, therefore, supply. Contrary to the “capitalist menace” view of the envir
onment and
extraction-related industries, it was the existence of so much public land—the abs
ence of private
property—that was the main detriment to responsible stewardship of western natural
resources.14
As we have seen, fur trappers were the first to overharvest public lands. The Am
erican Fur
Company, which flourished under the often heavy-handed direction of John Jacob A
stor, began
diversifying into emerging industries.15 Before the British retreated to the for
ty-ninth parallel in
1846, the Hudson’s Bay Company was harvesting, drying, and pickling western salmon
for export
to Europe. Following the Civil War, American entrepreneurs cashed in on the revo
lutionary
changes brought by the invention of the canning process. Canned fish, especially
salmon, reaped
spectacular profits for large concerns like Hapgood, Hume and Company, which emp
loyed
thousands of Scandinavian immigrant fishermen and Chinese cannery workers. Like
the fur
trappers, fishermen overharvested the public waterways; as early as 1877, trap a
nd net fishing had
interrupted and stifled salmon spawning. At the mouth of some western rivers, th
e armada of
fishing boats was so thick during the salmon spawning season that fishermen coul
d literally walk
from deck to deck over the hundreds of fishing boats; industry technology was so
efficient that it
threatened its own long-term survival.
In the case of fur and fish, the early American legal system had not yet develop
ed appropriate ways
to privatize property rights so that those responsible for using the resources b
ore the full cost.16
Often, industrial polluters would dump waste in streams and rivers without ownin
g any more than a
small section of waterfront land. Other industrialists, however, displayed much
better stewardship:
Frederick Weyerhaeuser and Gustavus Swift, for example, voluntarily monitored re
placement of
resources and pollution as commonsense responses to wise land management. It was
simply good
business to ensure a constant supply of one’s raw materials, whether trees or catt
le.
The rush to mine the West’s rich veins of gold, silver, and copper ore also brough
t technology,
capitalization, and environmental waste. While the Civil War raged back east, mi
ners fanned out to
seek gold in the present-day states of California, Nevada (site of the famed Com
stock Lode),
Washington, Idaho, and Montana. Afterward they tried their luck in Colorado, in
the Black Hills of
the Dakotas, and near the turn of the century, in the newly acquired Alaska. Can
adian gold rushes
in the Fraser River Valley of British Columbia and the Yukon Territory, saw simi
lar patterns and
usually drew the same multinational work force.
In the early stages, mining rushes were peopled by individualistic entrepreneurs—t
he fabled
sourdoughs equipped with only a pick and shovel, a gold pan, a few months’ grubsta
ke, and a mule
to carry it all to El Dorado. Very few struck it rich, and most prospectors soon
gave up and moved
on to better pickings. Some took advantage of collaborative efforts to strike it
rich. Groups of
miners replaced single panning with rockers, sluice boxes, and Long Toms, with w
hich they
channeled fast-moving river water to strain dirt and more efficiently search for
gold. The crude
sluices, however, soon gave way to hydraulic mining—the use of powerful pumps and
water hoses
to wash down and cull entire hillsides in search of ore. Hydraulics of this magn
itude required
capital and expertise, which brought large companies and professional management
and mining
engineers. This evolution was completed with lode mining—the use of dynamite and r
ock crushers
to separate veins of gold, silver, and copper ore from hard rock buried deep wit
hin mountainsides.
By the time lode mining had begun, the sourdoughs and their sluices had long dep
arted, and many
of those who had come west to strike it rich found themselves working for a payc
heck in company
towns like Butte, Montana, or Globe, Arizona.
While gold fever was claiming one sort of western immigrant, the thick forests,
rich with spruce,
cedar, pine, and Douglas fir trees, were beckoning another type, the logger. Alt
hough the Hudson’s
Bay Company had built a major logging and saw-milling operation in and around Fo
rt Vancouver
in 1827, smaller entrepreneurs also soon flocked to the West, drawn by the sheer
abundance of
natural resources. Western loggers followed water routes, floating timber down n
avigable rivers
leading to sawmills like those at the mouth of the Columbia and Sacramento River
s, and on Puget
Sound (Port Blakely and Port Ludlow), Grays Harbor, Washington, and Coos Bay, Or
egon. The
railroads’ need for hundreds of thousands of railroad ties provided an important e
arly market.
This small-scale decentralized logging business was revolutionized in the 1880s
with the
introduction of the narrow-gauge railroad, which made it possible to cut forests
far away from
navigable rivers. Innovations such as crosscut saws, donkey engines, steam loade
rs, and steampowered
band saws, which could increase mill output tenfold, dramatically changed and im
proved
the ways loggers felled, loaded, and processed timber.
This was all capital-intensive technology, which meant that small entrepreneurs
soon gave way to
larger better-financed firms like the St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber Company and the
Weyerhaeuser
Company, which themselves had started small. Weyerhaeuser himself went broke in
1857 but soon
tried again.17 His genius lay in his ability to see the final product and to und
erstand the business
concept of vertical integration, whereby the company owned all the various parts
of the production
process, from raw material to transportation to sales. By 1885 his Beef Sough Co
mpany processed
some 500 million board feet of lumber. At that point he still tended to use the
forests as if they were
infinite, but in 1900, having purchased nearly a million acres from the Great No
rthern Railroad,
Weyerhaeuser’s inspectors found that the lands were not nearly as rich in timber a
s he had thought.
That discovery forced him—as market forces do—to focus on reforestation, preventing
soil
erosion, and on fire prevention. Then, as today, more forest lands are destroyed
by fires (most
caused by lightning) than are lost by harvesting. (The historian of fire in Amer
ica, Stephen Pyne,
found that from 1940 to 1965, when fire prevention techniques were far more adva
nced than in
Weyerhaeuser’s time, lightning started some 228,000 fires in the United States, bu
rning up to a
million acres in a single forest!)18 Weyerhaeuser and, soon, other paper giants
like International
Paper and Kimberly-Clark began massive reforestation programs in which the compa
nies planted,
on average, about five times more than they consumed.19 Kimberly-Clark, in 1902,
became the
first producer of paper products to embark on a long-term woodlands management p
rogram,
employing hundreds of professional foresters before the U.S. government entered
the arena of
forest conservation.20
Whenever possible, of course, companies sought to use federal funds and federal
lands while
leasing and harvesting as many state and federal tracts as could be acquired. In
terestingly, the
Weyerhaeuser Company’s ultimate dominance of northwestern logging (the company own
ed 26
percent and 20 percent, respectively, of all Washington and Oregon timber stands
) was an indirect
result of federal largesse. Frederick Weyerhaeuser bought his Northwest empire a
t six dollars per
acre from his St. Paul, Minnesota, neighbor James J. Hill; Hill had obtained it
when he bought the
extensive federal land grants of Henry Villard’s bankrupt Northern Pacific. Weyerh
aeuser
proceeded to build the world’s largest sawmill in Everett, Washington, in 1914.21
A much different industry developed on the plains where, from 1865 to 1885, the
West witnessed
the rise and fall of the Cattle Kingdom. Prior to the Civil War, when thousands
of cattle populated
the Texas plains, with ranches stretching into Oregon and California, ranchers h
ad shipped cattle to
New Orleans. A special breed of cow, the Texas longhorn—derisively referred to in
the East as
“eight pounds of hamburger on eight hundred pounds of bone and horn”—could thrive on r
ange
grasses without additional feeding, and those cattle proved especially resistant
to the ticks that
carried Texas fever.22 Ironically, however, the resistance to the fever made the
Longhorn a
dangerous presence in the East where the ticks fell off and soon infected other
nonresistant breeds,
leading to an almost-uniform quarantining of Texas Longhorns prior to the mid-18
60s. Then, by
accident, drovers found that freezing temperatures killed the ticks: if a herd w
as held over on a
northern range during a frost, it could be tick free. Joseph G. McCoy, the found
er of the town of
Abilene, Kansas, was among the first to appreciate the benefits of both Abilene’s
cold weather and
its location. He encouraged ranchers to send their herds to the Kansas Pacific R
ailroad’s railhead in
his town, which offered transportation to eastern markets.23 Jesse Chisholm (not
to be confused
with another cattle trailblazer, John Chisum) cut a trail from Texas to Abilene
in 1867 (the
Chisholm Trail), with his cowboys driving some 35,000 head north in the first ye
ar alone. More
than 2 million cattle came up the Chisholm Trail during the next twenty years.24
Cattle barons like
Charles Good-night and Oliver Loving established their own well-worn trails for
getting herds to
the railheads. Boom towns sprang up to accommodate the cattle drovers as the rai
lroad lines
extended westward.25
From 1865 to the 1880s, the cattle frontier was in its prime.26 Ranches such as
the King Ranch and
the XIT Ranch covered thousands of acres, and tens of thousands of cattle arrive
d in Dodge City
every year during its heyday, in the process creating one of the most thoroughly
American figures
in history—the cowboy.
There was something special about the American cowboy. Everything from his cloth
ing to his
entertainments to the dangers he faced seemed to represent both the best and wor
st of young
America. Typical drives lasted weeks. During that time, upward of a dozen or mor
e cowboys spent
every day on horseback and every night on hard sod with only a saddle for a pill
ow. Meals came
from the ever-present chuck wagon that accompanied the drives, and they usually
consisted of
beans, bacon, hardtack, potatoes, onions, and whatever game might be killed alon
g the way without
spooking the herd. The wagon master drove the chuck wagon, cooked, handled all s
ewing and
repair chores for the cowboys, set up and broke down camp, and when necessary wa
s doctor or vet.
Any cattle spotted along the way that had no visible brand were immediately rope
d, branded, and
inventoried into the herd. Cattle required water at regular intervals, and the t
rail boss had to make
sure he did not misread a map and cause an entire herd to die of thirst. Indians
or white squatters
frequently had control of strategic watering holes, for whose use which they ext
racted a hefty
tribute from the desperate cowboys.27
Once the herd reached the railhead, the cattle went into stockyards to await tra
ins to the Chicago
slaughterhouses while the dusty and thirsty cowboys took their pay and visited t
he bars and
bordellos. That was what made the cattle towns so violent—a combination of liquor,
guns, and men
nearly crazy from the boredom of the drive. Yet outside these railhead towns, an
d excluding a few
of the episodes of gang-type violence, the numbers of capital crimes in the West
appear to be well
below current violent crime rates, so the Wild West was only moderately more vio
lent than the rest
of society.28
Historian Roger McGrath studied the Sierra Nevada mining towns of Aurora and Bod
ie, which had
more potential for violence than other western towns. There he found that homici
de rates were
high, especially among the “bad men” who hung out at the saloons, although the homic
ide rate was
about the same as in modern-day Washington, D.C. Yet he also discovered that vir
tually all other
crime was nonexistent, certainly due in part to the presence of an armed populac
e. Robberies in
Aurora and Bodie were 7 percent of modern-day New York City’s levels; burglary was
1 percent;
and rape was unheard of.29
Another study, by Robert Dykstra, of five cattle towns with a reputation for vio
lence—Abilene,
Ellsworth, Wichita, Dodge City, and Caldwell—discovered that the total cumulative
number of
homicides was less than two per year. Again, rape and robbery—except for trains an
d
stagecoaches—was largely unknown. Still another researcher, examining Texas fronti
er towns from
1875 to 1900, found murder to be rare—not counting “fair fights” staged by gunslingers
. Burglary
and theft were so absent that people routinely did not lock their doors. Even in
the California gold
fields, with all its greed, researchers found little record of violence.30
For a brief time it seemed as if the cattle frontier and the ubiquitous cowboys
would never
disappear. During the 1880s the price of beef skyrocketed, and large European in
vestment firms
entered the market; in 1883, for example, Wyoming alone hosted twelve cattle fir
ms with $12
million in assets. But because none of these cattlemen owned the land on which t
heir cattle
grazed—the public domain—none had much interest in taking care of it. By 1885 there
were far
too many cattle overharvesting the grass of the public lands of the Great Plains
. Tragically, the
weather turned at the same time the cattle were short of feed. In the winter of
1886–87,
temperatures plummeted to lows of minus 68 degrees Fahrenheit. Hundreds of thous
ands of cattle
died of starvation, unable to graze the barren Plains.
The cowboy was usually the last in a line of characters to reach a town before c
ivilization set in.
Following the trappers, miners, soldiers, and missionaries, the cowboys inevitab
ly gave way to the
next wave of settlers, the farmers. The Homestead Act made available land in the
form of 160-acre
grants to 400,000 individuals and families from 1862 to 1890.31 Total improved a
creage in the
United States rose from 189 million to 414 million acres, and although the Homes
tead grants were
marked by fraud, the westward migration of legitimate farm families, and the eco
nomic and
environmental impact of that migration, brought a staggering change to the demog
raphy and
environment of the American West.
In true frontier fashion, new western farmers adapted to the semiarid conditions
that awaited most
of them. New steel-bladed John Deere plows sliced through prairie soil that had
lain dormant for
centuries; and barbed wire, developed by John Warne Gates, became a standard fen
cing material on
the treeless Plains.32 Windmills pumped ground water, and pioneers learned Mormo
n techniques
for dryland farming and irrigation. Corn, wheat, and oat crops were complemented
by alfalfa for
winter feed for cattle and sheep herds; then, later, fruit, vegetables, potatoes
, and sugar beets
emerged as important crops in California, the Great Basin of Utah, and on the Co
lumbia Plain.33
Yet frontier farmers found themselves pushed out by an emergent, highly industri
alized
agribusiness sector. For example, the typical farm size of 160 acres, a figure d
etermined by
unrealistic politicians in the lush eastern United States, was woefully inadequa
te to support Plains
agriculture. Drought, harsh winters, and competition from agribusiness combined
to hurt small
producers. Only capitalized firms could afford the equipment—steam-powered tractor
s, combines,
harvesters, and irrigation technology—that characterized successful farming west o
f the
Mississippi. The small farm in America truly died more than a hundred years ago
of its own
inefficiency, when two thirds of all homesteaders failed. Even when farming prov
ed profitable, life
on the frontier beat down the sodbusters (who got their name from breaking groun
d with their
plows) and their families with periods of mind-numbing boredom mixed with near-d
eath situations.
Wild animals, poisonous reptiles, deadly diseases, drought, subzero cold, and bl
azing heat all
combined to make prairie living exceedingly hard. Sodbusters had to ward off clo
uds of locusts,
track down stray horses, keep their wells safe, and watch out for strangers or I
ndians. Their nearest
neighbor might be miles away, and the closest town often a day or two’s ride. Gene
rally, a prairie
family would purchase supplies for a month and might not see other humans for we
eks.34 No one
in a farm family had much leisure time: farm life involved backbreaking work fro
m well before
sunrise until after sunset. Farmers often ate five hearty meals a day. They rose
before sunup, ate an
early dawn breakfast, took a mid-morning break for another small meal, returned
at lunch, had a
late afternoon snack, and then ate a full-scale dinner after sundown. That meant
that wives spent
virtually their entire lives cooking, cleaning up from one meal, then starting a
nother. And cleaning
in a house made of sod—dirt!—itself constituted a monumental task. Despite low pay,
sodbusters
tried to hang on because of the independence farm life offered and the opportuni
ty they had to own
land. Nevertheless, most went broke, and those fortunate farmers who eventually
did acquire their
property after paying off the mortgage still faced problems: seldom did crop pri
ces increase enough
for them to expand operations.
But there had to be something to it: from 1860 to 1910, the number of farms in A
merica tripled.
This dynamic placed some 50 million people in an agricultural setting, cultivati
ng “500 million
acres, an area as large as western Europe.”35 Such farm-sector expansion was accel
erated by
something as small as a sharp piece of wire sticking out from a twisted wire at
regular intervals—
barbed wire. Joseph F. Glidden and Jacob Haish, two Illinois farmers, patented b
arbed wire in the
mid-1870s, and by decade’s end production had soared to more than 80 million pound
s, costing
less than $2 per 100 pounds. The appearance of barbed wire carried profound sign
ificance for the
Plains, where little wood existed, and it benefited from the sales pitch of John
Warne “Bet-a-
Million” Gates, who trained a herd of docile steers and used them in his demonstra
tions. In fact, the
wire worked as advertised.36 Wire did what innumerable judges, sheriffs, and eve
n vigilantes could
not: it secured the property rights of the small farmer against the cattle baron
s. And it took little to
lay new wire if a farmer was fortunate enough to expand his holdings. In the sho
rt run, this forced
the constant westward migration of the cattle drovers; in the long run it probab
ly secured the
viability of large agricultural operations.
Farming, milling, lumbering, mining, ranching, and harvesting of natural resourc
es in the American
West thus exhibited striking consistency. Small producers and entrepreneurs bega
n the process,
only to be superseded by large capitalized firms that could afford the technolog
y necessary to
efficiently harvest fur, fish, timber, ore, cattle, and foodstuffs. In so doing,
they produced riches
that benefited millions of Americans. The evidence shows that those who enjoyed
government
favors and subsidies abused the resources the most; whereas those who had to pay
their own way
proved the best conservators of our natural heritage.
Ultimately, the story of the harvesting of natural resources in the West is far
from a tragic one.
Rather, it is a story of transition and adjustment. The settlement and expansion
of the trans-
Mississippi West exactly paralleled the rise of the Industrial Revolution and th
e subsequent decline
of small producers and farmsteads in America toward the end of the nineteenth ce
ntury and
reflected a growth in manufacturing.
Without question, some of the generation that migrated west following the Civil
War paid a hard
price for modernity. Most never found their dream of a western Eden. Yet in the
long run, a great
many of them found a level of independence and prosperity unheard of in Europe.
Those who did
adjust, and their children after them, reaped the many benefits the Industrial R
evolution and
modernity brought in increased standards of living and life expectancy. Only one
group was largely
left out of either the rising prosperity or the expanding political freedom in t
he West—the original
inhabitants.
The Indians’ Next-to-the-Last Stand
Since colonial times, interactions between whites and Indians had followed a rem
arkably similar
pattern, regardless of the region in which those interactions took place. Upon f
irst contact Indians
and non-Indians were often peaceful toward one another and made many important c
ross-cultural
exchanges—food, language, religion, medicine, military techniques, and material cu
lture (tools,
weapons, clothing, and so forth). However, this initial peace was always followe
d by conflict over
land, which would lead to a land treaty and then more misunderstanding and anger
, and eventually
a war, which always ended in Indian defeat. This, in turn, resulted in either th
e extermination or
expulsion (farther West) of native Indian peoples. By the time of the Civil War,
nearly all Indians
east of the Mississippi were either dead, buttoned up on small reservations, or
pushed westward,
where this same cycle of relations had started anew.
Indians of the trans-Mississippi West were diverse regional groups inhabiting th
e Plains, Rocky
Mountains, and the Pacific coast. Relocated tribes—eastern Indians such as the Che
rokee, Creek,
Delaware, Shawnee, and Miami—occupied tracts of land directly west of the Mississi
ppi or in the
Oklahoma Indian Territory. Along the Pacific shore, from Alaska to northern Cali
fornia, coastal
Indians (Puyallup, Makah, Tlingit, Nisqualli, Chinook, and so on) lived in abund
ance and created
sophisticated art, architecture, religion, and material culture. In the southwes
tern mountains, Hopi
and Navajo herded livestock and farmed corn; neighboring Apache hunted and gathe
red on
horseback like the vast majority of Columbia Plateau (Yakama, Spokane, and Nez P
ercé) and Great
Plains Indians. The Great Plains Indians—located in between the relocated Indians
and West Coast,
Plateau, and mountain tribes—constituted the most formidable barrier to white sett
lement.
At one time, Plains Indians had been farmers. Introduction of the horse by Europ
eans literally
transformed the world of the Plains tribes. Once they had the horse, hunting buf
falo became much
easier, turning the Indians into nomads who roamed the prairie in search of the
herds.37 These
herds, by any assessment, were vast at the time the first whites encountered the
m. Colonel Richard
Dodge wrote in 1871 that “the whole country appeared one mass of buffalo,” an observ
ation similar
to that by Thomas Farnham in 1839 on the Santa Fe Trail, when he watched a singl
e herd cross his
line of sight for three days.38 To say that the animals covered the interior of
America is not much
of an exaggeration. They did not last long, however.
Even before the introduction of the horse, Indians had hunted bison, though not
nearly as
effectively. They tracked herds on foot, often setting fire to the grasslands in
a massive box,
surrounding a herd, except for a small opening through which the panicked animal
s ran—and were
slaughtered by the hundreds.
Frequently, though not universally, Indians destroyed entire herds, using fire o
r running them off
cliffs. One Indian spiritual belief held that if a single animal escaped, it wou
ld warn all other
animals in the region; and other Indian concepts of animals viewed the animal po
pulation as
essentially infinite, supplied by the gods.39 Ecohistorians agree that although
hunting by the Plains
Indians alone did not threaten the bison with extinction, when combined with oth
er natural factors,
including fire and predators, Indian hunting may have put the buffalo on the roa
d to extinction over
time, regardless of the subsequent devastating impact of white hunters.40
The fatal weakness of the Plains nomads regarding the buffalo was expressed by t
raveler John
McDougall when he wrote of the Blackfeet in 1865, “Without the buffalo they would
be helpless,
and yet the whole nation did not own one.”41 The crucial point is that the Indians
did not herd and
breed the very animal they depended on. No system of surplus accumulation existe
d. Since the
entire source of wealth could rot and degrade, none could exist for long. Moreov
er, the nomadic
life made it impossible to haul much baggage, and therefore personal property co
uld not be
accumulated. This led fur trader Edwin Denig to conclude that this deficiency pr
evented the Plains
nomads from storing provisions and made them utterly dependent on European trade
goods.42
A great ecomyth has appeared, however, about the Indians and their relationship
with the buffalo,
wherein Indians were portrayed as the first true ecologists and environmentalist
s. Nothing could be
further from the truth. Traveler after traveler reported seeing herds of rotting
carcasses in the sun,
often with only a hump or tongue gone. While the bison was, as Tom McHugh claime
d, “a tribal
department store,” with horns used for arrows, intestines for containers, skins an
d hides for teepee
coverings and shields, and muscle for ropes, it is misleading to suggest that In
dians did not
wantonly slaughter buffalo at times.43 Father Pierre De Smet observed an Assinib
oin hunt in which
two thousand to three thousand Indians surrounded an entire herd of six hundred
bison and killed
every one. Aside from their own deprivation—which they could only notice when it w
as too late to
prevent—the Indians had no way of estimating or tracking the size and health of th
e herds, and
even if they could, nomadic lifestyle “made it difficult to enforce the mandates a
gainst waste.”44
It is also meaningless to employ terms like ecological imperialism to describe t
he interaction of the
Europeans and the Indians. People of different races and ethnic backgrounds had
come into contact
with each other globally for centuries, from the Chinese in Southeast Asia to th
e Mongols in
Europe to the Arabs in Africa. Seeds, germs, animals, viruses—all have interacted
incessantly
around the world for eons. (Even the European honeybee had settled as far west a
s St. Louis by the
early 1700s.) To invoke such language is an attempt to reattach blame to Columbu
s and capitalism
after anthropologists and historians have discovered that North American Indians
had choices in
how their world was shaped, and made no greater share of right—or wrong—choices than
the new
arrivals from Europe.45
Still, it is unarguable that once a market for buffalo hides, bones, and other p
arts developed, it paid
white hunters to shoot every buffalo in sight, which they tended to do. By 1900
fewer than a couple
of thousand buffalo remained, at which point the government sought to protect th
em on federal
lands, such as Yellowstone National Park, one of the first main refuges.
Whatever the numbers, the elimination of the buffalo not only nearly exterminate
d a species, but it
also further diminished the Plains Indians’ ability to sustain themselves and push
ed them into a
lifestyle that made them much more likely to come into conflict with whites. Hav
ing become
nomads following the herds—as opposed to landowners working farms—whatever concepts
of
property rights they had held vanished. So too disappeared any need for them to
respect white
property rights, no matter how questionably gained. After the nomadic culture ov
ertook Plains
Indian life, a new culture of hunting with an emphasis on weapons naturally infu
sed their society.
Ironically, the nomadic lifestyle at the same time protected the Plains tribes f
rom diseases that
ravaged more stationary eastern Indian tribes, although a few, such as the Assin
iboin, picked up
smallpox and other diseases in neighboring villages and carried them home. It to
ok several
encounters with European diseases before the Indians discovered that humans tran
smitted them.
But by about 1800, the “village” Indians had been decimated by diseases, whereas the
nomadic
tribes were relatively untouched. Thus, not only had the transformation of India
n society by bison
hunting actually saved many of the Indians from an early death, but some of the
techniques they
practiced on the buffalo—riding and shooting, maneuvering, teamwork—also proved valu
able in a
challenge of a different sort: their wars against the American soldiers.
In battle, these Plains Indians could be fierce warriors. They fought while gall
oping at full speed,
dropping and rising at will and using their horses as shields. This combination
of phenomenal
horsemanship and skilled marksmanship (with bow, spear, and repeating carbine ri
fle) proved
deadly. Ultimately, the U.S. government would expend incredible resources—$1 milli
on and 25
U.S. soldiers—for each one of these fierce, courageous people killed, merely expos
ing the complex
and often contradictory problems inherent in federal Indian policy.46
Philosophically, American policy makers were divided into camps of preservationi
sts,
exterminationists, and assimilationists, with the latter two dominating policy d
ebates.
Preservationists such as Helen Hunt Jackson, author of Century of Dishonor (1885
), were idealists
who proposed simply leaving the Indians alone and free to roam the Plains and co
ntinue their
hunting and gathering lifestyle.47 Such romantics, of course, ignored violent In
dian conquest and
the documented expansion of such empires as the Lakota Sioux, who brutally smash
ed all
opposition on the Great Plains.48
Equally unrealistic and less humane, intolerant exterminationists argued that pr
eservation and
assimilation were both impossible. Indians could never adjust to modernity, said
exterminationists;
they had to stand aside for progress because their day was done. According to th
is essentially racist
view, any Indians who violently resisted reservation confinement should be kille
d, a sentiment that
supposedly originated with General Philip Sheridan, who had allegedly said, “The o
nly good
Indians I ever saw were dead.” In fact, Sheridan, as commander of the Division of
the Missouri,
supervised many reservations, and thought it important to the protection of the
Indians to keep them
on the agency lands, lest the whites kill them.49 Reality was that the closer on
e got to the frontier,
the more likely one was to see such sentiments expressed. Cleanse the Plains, ro
ared the Nebraska
City Press, and “exterminate the whole fraternity of redskins,” whereas the Montana
Post called
notions of “civilizing” the Indians “sickly sentimentalism [that] should be consigned
to novel
writers….”50 If the hostiles did not end their barbarities immediately, “wipe them out
,” the paper
intoned.
Like his predecessor at the Division of the Missouri, General William Tecumseh S
herman,
Sheridan had no qualms about ruthlessly punishing Indians who strayed off the re
servation to
commit atrocities, and he renewed efforts to enforce confinement of tribes on re
servations.51
Certainly many soldiers, who had lost comrades in battles with the Sioux or Chey
enne, had no
mercy for the Indian: “They must be hunted like wolves,” Brigadier General Patrick C
onner told
Major General Grenville Dodge.52
The third group, the assimilationists, however, had a realistic view that indust
rialization and
progress made the preservationist ideal impossible, but any effort to exterminat
e the natives was
not only uncivilized and un-Christian, but also unconstitutional. Assimilationis
ts argued that
Indians must be put on reservations and cured of their nomadic ways for their ow
n protection. The
tribes had to learn English, embrace Christianity, and adopt the farming and ran
ching techniques of
whites in the hope that they or their children might one day become working men
and women in
mainstream American civilization. This reservation system was the only “alternativ
e to extinction,”
but it destroyed Indian culture as effectively as any military campaign, as crit
ics rightly charged.53
A glaring weakness in the assimilationist position lay in the fact that many of
the so-called civilized
tribes had already been forced off their lands anyway, regardless of their level
of civilization.
While the assimilationist views finally prevailed, exterminationist voices remai
ned loud in the halls
of Congress, and at times federal strategy for dealing with the Indians incorpor
ated all three
viewpoints. Almost everyone, Indian and white alike, would have agreed that the
approach to the
Indians was confusing and contradictory. “Our whole Indian policy,” wrote the editor
of The
Nation magazine in 1865, “is a system of mismanagement, and in many parts one of g
igantic
abuse.”54 In many ways, that policy only reflected the irreconcilable differences
among these three
strategies for dealing with the Native Americans. And although the task of movin
g nomadic,
warlike Indian people onto reservations without incident was, in retrospect, nea
rly impossible, the
government nevertheless commited avoidable errors.
At the root of the problems with establishing any coherent Indian policy lay a c
onflict of interest
between the two federal agencies authorized to deal with the tribes—the Bureau of
Indian Affairs
(BIA) and the U.S. Army. The BIA reported to Congress, drafted Indian policy, an
d staffed the
Indian reservation bureaucracy; the BIA planned for, governed, fed, clothed, med
icated, and
educated the nomads of the Plains. Created in 1824 as the Indian Bureau of the D
epartment of War,
Congress moved the agency to the newly created Interior Department in 1849. Civi
lian
departments, which relied far less on merit than the military, by their nature s
pawned a
thoroughgoing corruption. Christian denominations administered some agencies und
er the Grant
Administration (and certainly they were not free from corruption either), but ma
ny other
reservations landed in the hands of political hacks with get-rich-quick schemes
to defraud the
natives. The illegal sale of supplies, blankets, and food designated for the Ind
ians not only deprived
the tribes of necessities, but also provoked them to aggression that otherwise m
ight have been
prevented.
The other federal agency—the U.S. Army—was charged with rounding up the Indians, rel
ocating
them to their respective reservations, and keeping them there if they tried to l
eave.55 Thus the army
emerged as the enforcement arm of BIA policy, which was a bad arrangement under
any
circumstance. Frontier military forces were heavy on cavalry and infantry, and l
ight on artillery, as
dictated by the fighting style of their enemy. Other nontraditional elements soo
n characterized the
frontier military, including scout units of Crow and other Indians, often dresse
d in uniform,
assigned to every command. Then there were the Buffalo Soldiers, companies of Af
rican American
troops whom the Indians thought had hair like bison. Stationed with the Tenth Ca
valry and other
regiments, the black soldiers greatly troubled the Indians, although the most in
terrogators could
learn from Native American captives was that “Buffalo soldier no good, heap bad me
dicine.”56
Despite its differences from previous armies, the U.S. Army on the frontier stil
l had a simple
mission: to engage and destroy any enemies of the United States. Fighting agains
t the Western way
of war, the natives could not win. The Native American style of war resembled th
e failed traditions
of the Muslims at Tours or the Egyptians at the Battle of the Pyramids. It featu
red hit-and-run
tactics, individual melee combat, personal courage in order to attain battlefiel
d honor (as opposed
to unit cohesion), and largely unsynchronized attacks.
Since most army commanders were in the exterminationist camp and most of the BIA
officers
espoused assimilation, there was bound to be confusion and violence. Sherman des
cribed the
disconcerting tension exacted on the Indians by the policies as a “double process
of peace within
their reservation and war without.”57 Even before the conclusion of the Civil War,
this “double
process” began to take shape on the Great Plains, and it would conclude with some
of the most
shocking U.S. Cavalry defeats in the entire frontier period.
Sand Creek and Yellow Hair
Four major Indian wars ended once and for all the cycle of death that had charac
terized white-
Indian contact for more than 250 years. The first, from 1864 to 1865, occurred w
hen Cheyenne and
Arapaho warriors fiercely battled U.S. troops in Colorado. During the summer of
1864, Cheyenne
Chief Black Kettle led assaults on white miners, farm settlers, and travelers, b
ut, weary of fighting,
he surrendered in November. Black Kettle accepted a tribal land outside Pueblo,
Colorado, and
raised an American flag outside his tent, only to see his men, women, and childr
en massacred by
drunken Colorado militiamen (not U.S. regulars) in a sneak attack on November tw
enty-eighth at
Sand Creek. One witness later testified that in this infamous Sand Creek massacr
e, Indians “were
scalped…their brains knocked out; the men used their knives, ripped open women, cl
ubbed little
children, knocked them in the head with their guns [and] mutilated their bodies
in every sense of
the word.”58 Fighting resumed until the fall of 1865, when again the Cheyenne agre
ed to go to a
permanent reservation.
Farther north the mighty Lakota Sioux also resisted white incursions. Their stru
ggle began in 1862–
63 in Minnesota, a theater of the war that ended when U.S. Army General John Pop
e achieved
victory and hanged 38 Sioux warriors as punishment. Farther west, in 1866, Lieut
enant Colonel
William J. Fetterman, who had once boasted that he could “ride through the whole S
ioux nation
with 80 men,” was leading a detachment of 80 men (ironically) to the relief of a w
ood-gathering
train when a party of Oglala Sioux led by Red Cloud, and including a young warri
or named Crazy
Horse, annihilated his command in a precursor to the Custer massacre.59 To anyon
e paying
attention, the signs at the Fetterman debacle were ominous: tribes that had scar
cely gotten along in
the past and that controlled different regions of the Plains—Sioux, Cheyenne, and
Arapaho—had
simultaneously begun to resist, and to do so over vast expanses of territory. Ye
t during the twentyminute
Fetterman slaughter, two civilians wielding 16-shot Henry repeaters accounted fo
r dozens
of Sioux casualties. Had the Sioux appreciated the lethality of rapid-fire weapo
ns, they would have
known that even a moderate advantage in numbers would not be sufficient against
similarly armed
well-disciplined bluecoats.
Two years after the destruction of the Fetterman party, Sioux attacked engineers
constructing a
road to Fort Bozeman, in Montana. Red Cloud, by then a leading Sioux warrior, ha
d led the
incursions, but army counterattacks and subsequent promises to cease constructio
n of the road
persuaded him to retire to a Sioux reservation in the Dakotas. Following further
incidents of
corruption at the reservation agency, where delay in the delivery of food and su
pplies further
antagonized the Sioux, they again bolted the reservation and renewed hostilities
. By that time, a
more or less constant state of war existed on the Plains, with one tribe or anot
her constantly
menacing, or being menaced by, the army. From 1868 to 1874 in the Southwest, Kio
wa,
Commanche, Arapaho, and Cheyenne all engaged in a series of battles against mili
tary units.
Despite the number of engagements, Indians still had failed to act in concert on
a large scale,
allowing the army to achieve tactical superiority and feeding its overconfidence
.
All this changed in June 1875. Northern Cheyenne and Sioux were once again drive
n to warfare by
fresh white encroachments on their land. A gold rush in the Black Hills of South
Dakota combined
with the arrival there of the Northern Pacific Railroad to spark renewed warfare
. Making matters
worse in this case, the Sioux viewed the Dakota Black Hills as sacred ground, an
d they considered
any white intrusion an act of sacrilegious trespass. Sioux leaders Sitting Bull,
the diplomat father
figure, and Crazy Horse, the cunning, eccentric tactician, assembled a substanti
al and impressive
collection of tribes who reluctantly left the reservation to once again fight Am
erican soldiers.
Acting as commander in chief, Sitting Bull planned the strategy.60 Crazy Horse,
whose bravery
none questioned, was one of the few Indians to perceive that the Western way of
war had
powerful—even insurmountable—advantages: he was the only Indian observed by soldiers
to
dismount in order to fire his rifle, and while still a young man he had forsaken
scalping.
The army knew the tribes had gathered at a general location below the Yellowston
e River and its
Bighorn River tributary in what is southeastern Montana. Commanding General Sher
idan devised a
plan to pincer the Indians south of the Yellowstone between a three-pronged Amer
ican force. From
the south, General George Crook would move from Wyoming Territory; from western
Montana,
Colonel John Gibbon would march with his men eastward along the Yellowstone Rive
r; and a third
force under General Alfred Terry, supported by the entire Seventh Cavalry, would
attack from the
Dakotas. Since no one knew exactly where the Indians were encamped in June of 18
76, the army’s
elaborate plan immediately began to unravel when Indians attempted to engage eac
h wing
separately. Crook was beaten in mid-June and returned to base. In late June, to
find the Sioux,
Terry dispatched Colonel George Custer and nearly 700 cavalry.61 Custer, who as
a Civil War hero
had once held the wartime rank of brigadier general, wanted to reclaim both his
former rank and
glory. Attired in his famous buckskin coat with his golden locks flowing, the co
lonel cut a dashing
figure. His wife, Elizabeth Bacon, assumed the role of his official publicist, s
ubtly massaging the
record of events in Custer’s career to present him as the gallant hero at all time
s. Indians knew him
as Son of the Morning Star or Yellow Hair, and he had impressed them in previous
battles as
fearless. Regular army commanders had a different opinion, considering him reckl
ess and
undisciplined. One time he rode alone into an Indian encampment to free two whit
e female
hostages; another time he’d been court-martialed for leaving his post and abusing
his troops in
order to return home to see his Libby.
For all his experience on the Plains, Custer grossly underestimated the size, ca
pabilities, and
leadership of the combined Sioux-Cheyenne forces arrayed against him. Against al
l established
military doctrine, he divided his cavalry regiment into four parts—three roughly e
qual units
commanded by himself, Major Marcus Reno, and Captain Frederick Benteen, and a sm
all pack
train—and personally led five troops of 265 men to their doom on June 25, 1876.
Despite Hollywood’s subsequent depictions, the engagement had little drama: most a
ccounts
(including recent archeological mapping of cartridges and body placement) sugges
t the shooting
from Custer’s Ridge was over in less than twenty minutes. Reno’s men, farther behind
the main
column, survived only by fleeing to a hill and digging in. There they were reinf
orced by the third
detachment of troops and the pack train.62 The Sioux had apparently done what no
other Native
Americans ever had by beating the regular U.S. Army in a head-to-head contest. B
ut when the
excited chiefs told Sitting Bull of their overwhelming victory, he reportedly no
ted that the white
man was as numerous as the leaves on the trees, and he commanded the village to
pack up and
withdraw before Terry’s main body arrived.
The old adage about winning the battle but losing the war is most applicable in
the case of Custer’s
last battle. Word of Little Bighorn arrived in Washington just as the nation was
preparing to
celebrate the hundred-year anniversary of the American Revolution. Despite his m
any personal and
professional flaws, Americans immediately embraced George Armstrong Custer as a
martyr for the
cause of American manifest destiny and sought to avenge his slaying. A mere four
months after the
Battle of the Little Bighorn, Sioux and Northern Cheyenne stood defeated, and th
ey surrendered
once and for all. On October 31, 1876, a new treaty sent the Sioux back to their
Dakota reservation,
ending the Plains Indian wars.
One more tragic, and perversely paradoxical, saga was to unfold. By 1890 the Sio
ux had been
thoroughly demoralized. In this state of mind, they turned to spiritualism in th
e form of the cult of
the Ghost Dance, performed in the desperate belief that dancing would banish the
white men, return
Indian lands, and make Indians invulnerable to bullets and cannons. Military gov
ernors, alarmed at
the wild mysticism of the Ghost Dancers, ordered them to stop, and ominously sen
t in the Seventh
Cavalry to make them desist. Two weeks earlier the Indian Agency had attempted t
o arrest Sitting
Bull for supporting the Ghost Dancers, and in the process a gun battle broke out
and the chief was
killed, along with a dozen of his bodyguards and police.63 On December 29, 1890,
troops bungled
their attempt to disarm the Sioux at Wounded Knee, site of the Sioux Reservation
in South Dakota.
In subzero temperatures shooting broke out, although both white and Indian witne
sses disagreed
over who started the firing. Popularly viewed as a cold-blooded massacre—some 200
Sioux men,
women, and children lay dead in the snow—the army lost 25 killed and 39 wounded.64
But it is
certain that the Indians did not deliberately provoke a fight, since they could
see they were
surrounded by troops and artillery. Although Wounded Knee marked another dark ep
isode in
Indian-white relations, the government had already concluded that the reservatio
n system was not
working, leading to yet another direction in American Indian policy.
The Final Stages of Assimilation
The assimilation movement had gained momentum three years before Wounded Knee, w
ith
passage of the Dawes Severalty Act (1887), wherein Indian reservations (with som
e exceptions)
were divided into approximately 160-acre plots for male family heads, with lesse
r amounts to
individuals. Indians had four years to select their land, after which the select
ion was made for them
by the agent. Supported strongly by President Grover Cleveland, who saw the gove
rnment as a
guardian to the wards of the state, the Dawes Act reflected Cleveland’s personal v
iews of the
Indians, which swung from “lazy, vicious and stupid” to “industrious, peaceful, and in
telligent.”65
Along with other reformers who saw the Indians as needing guidance, but who also
agreed that
“barbarism and civilization cannot live together,” Cleveland preferred a process of
civic and
cultural instruction in which the Native Americans would learn English in govern
ment schools and
gradually attain all the formal conventions of citizenship.66
In the Dawes Act, Congress also sought to move Native Americans away from the tr
ibal system
and fully into the market economy by making them landowners, but as with most de
alings with the
Indians, there were also ulterior, less noble, motives. Any unclaimed lands went
on the open land
market, which whites snapped up. But the purpose of Dawes was not to steal land—al
though that
certainly happened—but to change the tribal organization and habits of the Indians
. Supporters
called it the Emancipation Proclamation for the Indian, and the Friends of the I
ndian (eastern
religious leaders and humanitarians) also embraced the legislation. The gap betw
een where the
Indians were and where they needed to be in order to fully function in a market
economy, however,
was too great. Over the next decades, generations of Plains Indians born to rese
rvation life fared
little better than those who had openly fought U.S. soldiers. Alcoholism, high i
nfant mortality, and
poverty characterized the generation of Indians who struggled to make the transi
tion from nomadic
life to modernity. Congress finally gave up on the Dawes Act in the 1930s, by wh
ich time many
Indians had lost their land, although others had doggedly survived and, in some
cases, managed to
flourish.
Change came painfully slowly: not until the middle of the twentieth century did
the lives of a
significant number of Indians improve. Grandchildren and great-grandchildren of
the brave Plains
warriors fought with distinction as American soldiers, sailors, airmen, and mari
nes in World Wars I
and II, the Korean War, Vietnam, and the Gulf and Iraq wars. (Perhaps the most f
amous was one of
the flag raisers on Iwo Jima’s Mount Suribachi, Ira Hayes.) Indians learned to spe
ak English,
embraced both Protestant and Catholic Christianity, and slowly began to assimila
te into mainstream
culture. Problems persisted, but by the late twentieth century, individual Ameri
can Indians enjoyed
success on almost every social, political, and economic front.
By that time, after three centuries of depopulation, Indians finally began to se
e their numbers
increase. Alcoholism abated somewhat, and with that so too did infant mortality
rates and fetal
alcohol syndrome. Tribal elementary and secondary schools ultimately spawned tri
bal colleges;
many Indians left to attend state and private colleges and universities. Native
American politicians
entered government, rising as high as the vice presidency of the United States (
Republican Charles
Curtis of Kansas) and the United States Senate (Republican Ben Nighthorse Campbe
ll of
Colorado). Some Indians earned law degrees and returned home to file suit and wi
n enforcement of
Indian treaty rights (including fishing) in state and federal courts. Others for
med tribal corporations
and harvested their reservations’ natural resources—timber, ore, oil, agriculture, a
nd fish—to vastly
increase their per capita income and standard of living. Others hunted in the mo
st fertile new
grounds, the tourism market, building hunting lodges, museums, and gambling casi
nos to mine an
increasing number of non-Indians who yearned to visit and experience “Indian Count
ry.”
Success, however, remains a relative term when describing efforts to move Native
Americans into
the market economy (many reservations have unemployment rates of over 40 percent
). In light of
these challenges, perhaps the greatest story of Native American assimilation and
achievement has
been that of the Mississippi Choctaw under the leadership of Chief Philip Martin
. In 1975, Martin
determined that the tribe’s future lay in attracting private enterprise, and he co
nvinced the tribal
council to give him nearly absolute power to negotiate contracts, to enforce wor
k rules, and to
make the Choctaw reservation as competitive as any place in the private sector.6
7 Using
government guarantees and a couple of small federal grants, Martin constructed t
he infrastructure
for a business park—roads, sewage, water, and other facilities. Then the tribe sen
t out 150
advertising packages to companies. General Motors responded, contracting the Cho
ctaw to
assemble wire harnesses for electrical parts, requiring Martin’s agreement that th
e Indians perform
as well as any white company. He dealt with employees firmly and even ruthlessly
: no tardiness, no
sloppy dress, and above all, perfect workmanship.
Soon a greeting card company, then Ford, then other companies began moving into
Choctaw land,
and Martin’s positions were vindicated. Ford gave the tribe a quality performance
award, and
unemployment, which had reached 75 percent before Chief Martin took control, dip
ped to under 20
percent, a level high by white standards, but amazingly low for an Indian reserv
ation. By 1993 the
Choctaw Indian tribe was the tenth largest employer in the state of Mississippi.
68
The Choctaw notwithstanding, it would be unwise to declare a happy ending to a f
our-hundred-year
history of warfare, abuse, theft, and treachery by whites, and of suffering by I
ndians. Yet it is
absolutely correct to say that the end result of Indian-white cross-acculturatio
n has been a certain
level of assimilation, an aim that had once seemed hopeless. Modern Indians are
proud Americans
who simultaneously embrace their Indian ethnicity and folk traditions, Christian
ity, western legal
traditions, capitalism, and all facets of mainstream American civilization. But
getting there has
been a difficult, bloody, and tragic struggle.
Territorial Government and Statehood
The legal status of western territories and the means by which they were to beco
me states in the
Union is not even mentioned in the Federal Constitution. Beginning with the Nort
hwest Ordinance
of 1787, a series of Organic Acts, as they were called, set down the rules where
by frontiersmen
could gain equal citizenship in the United States of America. Westerners often g
rew disgruntled
under the rule of federally appointed territorial officials and what they saw as
inordinately long
territorial periods. A variety of factors weighted the length of time it took a
territory to become a
state: American domestic politics, foreign policy, and even social mores and rel
igion played a role.
Although most of the western states had joined the Union by 1912, it was not unt
il 1958 and 1959
that Alaska and Hawaii at last completed their journeys through the territorial
process.
Territories west of the Mississippi slowly became states in the Union before the
Civil War because
of the politics of slavery. Louisiana (1803), Texas (1845), and California (1850
) entered under
special agreements tied to American foreign policy; the remaining territories (l
ike Oregon and
Nevada, which became states in 1859 and 1864, respectively) fell under Organic A
cts resembling
the Northwest and Southwest Ordinances of 1787 and 1789. By the late nineteenth
century, nearly
all of the western territories had reached the requisite population necessary fo
r admission to the
Union. But, as before, political complications characterized their attempts to a
chieve statehood.
Washington Territory provides a good case study of the territorial process. Carv
ed out of the huge
Oregon Territory six years before Oregon proper became a state, Congress divided
Washington
Territory twice again during the nearly four decades its citizens awaited stateh
ood. Today’s Idaho,
Montana, and parts of Wyoming all, at one time or another, composed the Washingt
on Territory.
Like that of other territories, the early history of Washington was dominated by
political bickering
between Whigs (and Republicans) and Democrats and a strong territorial governor,
Isaac Ingalls
Stevens. A lifelong Democrat and West Point engineering graduate, Stevens repres
ented the best
and worst of the territorial system. He was intelligent, efficient, and tireless
, and he left an indelible
legacy of strong territorial government, a railroad, and a vast Indian reservati
on complex in the
Pacific Northwest. But he ruled with an iron hand. Stevens’s authoritarianism is e
xemplified by the
fact that, during his 1853–57 term of duty, he served simultaneously as territoria
l governor, federal
Indian superintendent, federal Indian treaty negotiator, and U.S. Army surveyor
for the northern
transcontinental railroad!
With this kind of authority, and conflicts of interests, Stevens engaged in an a
ggressive Indian
policy to make way for what he sincerely viewed as God-ordained white progressio
n onto Indian
lands. Unable to resist Stevens’s persuasion and intimidation, between 1854 and 18
56 northwestern
coastal and plateau Indians surrendered 64 million acres in return for fishing r
ights, a few gifts, and
reservations. Yet these treaties immediately led to warfare between Stevens’s troo
ps and Indians
angered by what they perceived as his duplicity and heavy-handedness. Meanwhile,
Whig political
opposition to Stevens resulted in a bitter court fight over his suspension of ha
beas corpus and
declaration of martial law during the Indian war, unconstitutional actions for w
hich Stevens was
later convicted and fined fifty dollars.
When Stevens left Washington to serve as its territorial congressman in the othe
r Washington in
1857, he had cut a wide swath across the territorial history of the Pacific Nort
hwest. In 1861 he
rejoined the army as a general. In characteristic fashion, Isaac Stevens died in
a blaze of glory,
carrying his Union detachment’s colors in the 1862 Civil War battle of Chantilly,
Virginia.69
Nearly four decades passed between Stevens’s governorship and the final admission
of Washington
to the Union in 1889, even though the territory had sufficient population and co
uld have produced
an acceptable constitution by the 1870s. Why did it remain a federal territory?
Most of the reasons
for delay were political. First, the Civil War intervened. At war’s end, as Democr
ats were
reintegrated into national political life, Washington found its solid Republican
leanings a distinct
disadvantage. After 1877, Democratic congressmen mustered enough votes to thwart
Washington’s
admission. Then too, the territory’s image, true or not, as a hotbed of anti-Chine
se violence,
advocacy of woman suffrage, and home for socialist labor groups, definitely made
federal
politicians look askance.
Finally, when the Republicans won both the presidency and Congress in 1888, lame
-duck
Democrats decided they had antagonized westerners long enough, and in one of his
last acts as
president, in 1889, Cleveland signed the famed Omnibus Bill, another in the seri
es of Organic Acts.
This bill simultaneously admitted Washington, Montana, and North Dakota and Sout
h Dakota as
full-fledged states in the Union. Idaho and Wyoming followed in 1890.
Unlike Washingtonians and Idahoans, Mormon Utahans usually voted as Democrats in
the
nineteenth century. Yet this affiliation did not win them any friends in Congres
s, where their
religious beliefs were unacceptable to nearly all non-Mormon (Gentile) Americans
. The main
stumbling block was the Mormon practice of polygamy, and the Mormons’ detractors v
owed that
Utah would remain a territory and that Mormons would be denied citizenship as lo
ng as they
continued to practice this belief.70
Initially, Mormons had sought to entirely escape the laws of the United States b
y establishing
independence in Mexican territory. When Americans won Utah in the Mexican-Americ
an War, the
newly arrived Mormons ignored and resisted territorial government in favor of th
eir own theocracy
led by Brigham Young. In 1857, President Buchanan sent General Albert Sidney Joh
nston and
2,500 Army cavalry troops to enforce U.S. sovereignty in the famed (and bloodles
s) Mormon War.
In 1858, through a negotiator, Young reached an agreement with Buchanan in which
the church
would recognize the United States as sovereign in all temporal matters, whereas
the Mormon
Church would have spiritual authority over its members. This amounted to little
more than the old
arrangements under which the popes and kings in Europe had operated for hundreds
of years. Soon
thereafter, the Mormons accepted Buchanan’s territorial governor, Alfred Cumming.
Matters were not fully resolved, however. In 1862, Congress passed the Morrill A
nti-Bigamy Act,
abolishing plural marriage and disallowing Mormon church assets over $50,000. Th
e Morrill law
raised constitutional issues that Mormons fought out all the way to the U.S. Sup
reme Court. Losing
in court, some Mormons (a small percentage actually) continued to practice polyg
amy in direct
defiance of federal authority.71
Finally, the Edmunds Act of 1882 denied the vote and other constitutional rights
to all polygamists.
Moreover, it declared any children born into polygamous families after 1883 to b
e illegitimate,
without the legal right of inheritance, which would have obliterated the Mormons’
coveted family
structure and stripped Mormons of all their assets. They challenged the Edmunds
Act in the
Supreme Court case of Romney vs. United States (1889) but lost again, at which p
oint the
Mormons at last surrendered and officially renounced plural marriage. Soon there
after, in 1896,
Congress admitted Utah as the forty-sixth state. New Mexico and Arizona, whose p
opulations had
lagged far behind Utah and the other western states, followed in 1912. Thus, by
the early twentieth
century, all of the territories in the contiguous portions of America had achiev
ed statehood.72
Yet westward expansion (and the territorial and statehood systems) also included
Alaska and
Hawaii. Alaska became a U.S. possession (though not a territory) in 1867, when W
illiam Seward,
the secretary of state, negotiated to purchase all Russian claims north of 54 de
grees latitude for a
mere $7.2 million. This figure seems cheap today, but at that time Seward’s foes l
abeled the
purchase of this icy acreage an act of lunacy.
Hawaii followed in 1893, when American settlers overthrew Queen Liliuokalani and
established a
provisional government, which the United States recognized.73 In fact, Congress
had coveted the
Hawaiian Islands for several years, and the islands had been populated and influ
enced by a large
number of Americans, but business, specifically the North American sugar industr
y, which feared
the competition, opposed annexation. However, the new president, William McKinle
y, supported
expansion, and an annexation resolution passed Congress in 1898.74 Two years lat
er, Congress
created the Hawaii Territory, mainly with an eye for use as a coaling station fo
r the new blue-water
navy that the nation had started to construct. Although virtually no one saw the
Far East as being of
much importance in American security issues, the Spanish-American War had left t
he United States
in control of Guam and the Philippines, creating a vast operating space for wars
hips attempting to
operate out of West Coast bases. In keeping with the naval doctrines of Alfred T
hayer Mahan, the
projection of seaborne forces at long distances was crucial, and, therefore so w
as their refueling and
supply. Hawaii, with its wonderful natural harbor, fit the bill.
Alaska’s legal limbo from 1867 to 1912—being neither territory nor state—only exacerba
ted the
natural animosity colonial Americans had always felt toward the federal governme
nt. Gold rushes
in the Klondike and Nome from 1896 to 1900 brought more people north—twenty thousa
nd in the
new city of Nome alone by 1900—who established some fifty new mining camp/cities i
n a ten-year
stretch. Even though the growing population led to territorial status, Alaska’s ge
ographic isolation
and low European-American population made its wait for statehood the longest of
any American
territory. The Alaska Railroad was built by 1923, in the process leading to the
founding of
Anchorage, the largest city in Alaska. Such enterprises helped, but World War II
proved to be the
turning point. The Japanese invasion of the Aleutian Islands prompted a strong U
.S. military
presence in Alaska, which in turn resulted in the long-awaited completion of the
Alaska Highway.
The Alcan, as it was called, connected the continental United States and Alaska
year round via a
road spanning the Canadian province of British Columbia and the Yukon Territory.
Meanwhile,
Japan’s 1941 surprise attack on Pearl Harbor brought a huge military force to the
Hawaiian Islands,
and simultaneously propelled that territory’s efforts to achieve statehood. Congre
ss made Alaska
the forty-ninth state in 1958, and Hawaii followed in 1959.
Alaskan and Hawaiian statehood temporarily ended the territorial story, but not
for long. Debates
over the territorial system continue today in Puerto Rico and other Caribbean an
d Pacific regions
annexed by Americans during their nineteenth-century expansion under manifest de
stiny. And
periodically the issue of statehood for the District of Columbia surfaces. Long
before Alaska and
Hawaii completed the final jigsaw that is the map of the modern United States, h
owever, the West,
as a concept, had come to an end. Barbed wire, railroads, and, eventually, the i
nvisible strands of
American civilization made the West America, and America, the West.
Prairie Populism and National Radicalism
Despite abundant opportunities on the frontier, the fact was that life in the We
st, especially on the
Plains, was hard. For every miner who hit paydirt, ten abandoned their claims an
d found other
work. For every farmer who managed a successful homestead, several gave up and r
eturned east.
And for every cattle rancher who nurtured his herds into large holdings, dozens
sold out and gave
up. There was nothing new about this, except the setting, the West. Yet for the
first time, significant
numbers of westerners found allies in other sections of the country—people who sha
red their
frustrations with the same economic trends.
Miners, farmers, and laborers alike grew discontented in the late nineteenth cen
tury, often for
different reasons. In mining, fishing, logging, and sawmill towns, capitalism’s cr
eative destruction
process caused tumultuous change, with economic panics causing unemployment rate
s to twice rise
as high as 30 percent. Wage earners complained of low salaries and dangerous wor
king conditions,
which led to the formation of labor unions, not a few of which were steeped in v
iolence and
socialism. But even in the countryside, western farmers were growing angry over
low crop prices,
high railroad rates, and competition from agribusiness, expressing the sentiment
s of producers
everywhere who found that they simply did not produce enough value for their fel
low man. This
realization, whether in the English spinning industry of the 1830s or the Americ
an auto industry of
the 1980s, is difficult, especially for those falling behind. It did not, howeve
r, change the reality of
the situation: with the availability of Homestead lands and the opening of the n
ew territories, the
number of farms exploded. There were simply too many farmers in America.
They too protested, but used the ballot not the bullet. A set of laws known as t
he Granger Laws,
named for the farm network the Grangers (or the Patrons of Husbandry), began to
take effect in the
1870s. Attempting to control railroad and grain elevator prices, maintain compet
ition, and forestall
consolidation, the Grangers achieved their greatest victory in 1876 with Munn v.
Illinois, a case
involving a grain elevator operator’s fees. The U.S. Supreme Court laid down an al
arming doctrine
that private property in which the public has an interest must submit to public
controls.75 Under
such reasoning, virtually any enterprise ever open to the public became the busi
ness of the
government, a legal rendering that to a large degree stood the Constitution’s prop
erty clause on its
head. Fortunately, capitalism succeeded in spite of these “reforms,” producing so mu
ch wealth that
most working people prospered and industry expanded no matter what stifling regu
latory barriers
the growing federal and state bureaucracies threw up.
In western towns, as in the countryside, there was discontent. As in all emergin
g capitalist
economies, the first generation of industrial laborers bore the brunt of rapid c
hange. They worked,
on average, sixty hours per week, with skilled laborers earning twenty cents an
hour while
unskilled earned half that, although these numbers could vary widely depending o
n industry and
region.76 Dangerous work in industries like logging, mining, and fishing offered
no job security,
unemployment compensation, medical insurance, or retirement pensions, nor, frequ
ently, did even
minimal safety standards exist. Moreover, laborers were not free to bargain with
business owners
over wages and work conditions because government stacked the deck against them.
Federal and
state politicians outlawed union membership, issued court injunctions to halt st
rikes and cripple
labor activism, and sent in federal and state government troops to protect the i
nterests of powerful
businessmen.
Those who tried to improve their status by forming labor unions, often in violat
ion of local
antiunion laws, found that America’s prosperity worked against them by attracting
nonunion
immigrants who leaped at the opportunity to receive wages considered too low by
union members.
An early response to the issue of low wages came from the Knights of Labor, an o
rganization
originally formed in Philadelphia in 1869, which moved west in the 1880s. The Kn
ights sought
equity in the workplace, but only for white workers; they were noted for their o
pposition to Chinese
and African American workers. Chinese worked for wages below those Knights of La
bor
demanded and so the Knights, shouting, “The Chinese Must Go!” violently expelled the
entire
Chinese population (seven hundred) of Tacoma, Washington, in November of 1885. L
ater, when
African American coal miners crossed the Knights’ picket lines in Roslyn, Washingt
on, the
Knights again resorted to violence. In the end, however, the black strikebreaker
s (and the coal
company) won the day, but it was a typical union response toward minorities that
held sway well
into the 1960s.
More radical than the Knights of Labor were the Western Federation of Miners (WF
M) and the
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW, the “Wobblies”). These groups took labor viole
nce to new
heights, in the process severely damaging the collective bargaining cause. Under
the leadership of
Ed Boyce in Kellogg, Idaho, the WFM stole a train, loaded it with dynamite, and
blew up a million
dollars worth of the mine owners’ infrastructure. Wobblies, on the other hand, sta
rted out
peacefully. Led by Big Bill Haywood, they published pamphlets, made speeches, an
d filled the
Spokane, Washington, jail in peaceful acts of civil disobedience. Ultimately, ho
wever, the
Wobblies gained fame (or infamy, depending on one’s view) in violent imbroglios kn
own as the
Everett and Centralia massacres of the World War I era.
But both those unions were exceptions that proved the rule. In the main, western
laborers and their
unions had legitimate grievances they tried to address through the existing poli
tical system.
Although saddled with unfair governmental restraints, they worked with western g
overnors, judges,
and legislators for peaceful change. Political activism, combined with the prosp
erity of the
capitalist system, eventually brought them the improved wealth and lifestyle the
y sought, in the
process undercutting their very reason for existence. It presented a dilemma for
leaders of the union
movements, just as similar circumstances would present a difficult problem for c
ivil-rights and
union leaders in the 1980s and 1990s: what do you do when, to a large degree, yo
u have achieved
your ends? The leader must either find or create new problems that need to be re
solved, or admit
there is no longer a purpose for him or the organization.
Meanwhile, republican political institutions addressed the complaints of the far
mers and laborers,
with limited success, through Populist and Progressive political movements, both
of which aimed at
harnessing capitalism to protect working people from its perceived dangers. What
ever gains they
achieved in the courts were illusory: there is no way to mandate higher pay or g
reater wealth for
any group. Like the mine workers, many western farmers perceived that they were
on the outside
looking in at the prosperity of the Industrial Revolution. Just as the small art
isans and weavers of
the 1820s had been overtaken by the large spinning mills and manufacturers, farm
ers often could
not compete without large-scale, mass-production equipment like steam tractors,
mechanical
reapers, spreaders, and harrowers that only well-capitalized agribusiness could
afford. It was the
classic tale of efficiency gains forcing out the less productive members of a pr
ofession.
Farmers, of course, perceived it differently. Small landholders blamed nearly al
l of their problems
on federal policies favoring big business: the gold standard, the tariff, and su
bsidization of
railroads. Like all debtors, farmers wanted inflation and pursued it through any
of several measures.
One strategy involved reviving the greenback, which was the Civil War currency n
ot directly
backed by gold. But this flew in the face of the system of gold-backed national
bank notes
established to print and circulate paper money, the network of nationally charte
red banks that had
operated since 1863.
Another more popular option, which appealed to miners as well as farmers, called
for inflation by
expanding the money supply through the augmentation of the existing gold coins w
ith silver coins.
Coinage would occur at a ratio of sixteen to one (sixteen ounces of silver for a
n ounce of gold, or
roughly sixteen silver dollars to a gold dollar), which was problematic, since s
ilver at the time was
only worth seventeen to one (that is, it would take seventeen silver dollars to
exchange for one gold
dollar). The “silverites” therefore wanted to force the government to purchase silve
r at artificially
high prices—at taxpayer expense. Silverite objectives suffered a setback when, in
1873, Congress
refused to monetize silver, an action that caused the prosilver factions to expl
ode, calling it the
Crime of ’73.77
Alongside monetary policy reforms, farmers sought to create a federal regulatory
agency to set
railroad rates (again, more specifically, “to set them artificially low”). They righ
tly complained that
federally subsidized railroad owners of the Union Pacific and Northern Pacific r
ailroads gave lower
rates to high-production agribusinessmen. Lost in the debate was the issue of wh
ether those
railroads should have been subsidized by the government in the first place; but
once funded, the
railroads, to some degree, owed their existence to Washington.78
Populism was born from this stiff opposition to gold and railroads, evolving fro
m organizations
such as the Grange (1867) and the Greenbacker Party (1876), then launched as a n
ational political
campaign in the 1890s. Both a southern and western agrarian political crusade, P
opulism gained
special strength west of the Mississippi River. The Populist Party formed around
a nucleus of
southern and western farmers, but also enjoyed the support of ranchers, miners (
especially silver
miners), and townspeople and businessmen whose livelihoods were connected to agr
iculture.
Although Populists courted the urban workingman voters, they never succeeded in
stretching
beyond their rural base. Socialists in the WFM and IWW thought Populists far too
moderate (and
religious) to create lasting change and, at root, hated the private enterprise s
ystem that the Populists
merely sought to reform.
In the 1892 presidential election, Populist candidate James K. Weaver garnered 1
million popular
votes, 22 electoral votes, and helped elect 12 Populist congressmen and three go
vernors. On this
base, Populists soon successfully infiltrated the Democrat Party.79 With “Free Sil
ver” as their
rallying cry, in 1896, Populists and Democrats united to nominate William Jennin
gs Bryan, a fiery,
thirty-six-year-old Nebraska congressman, for president. Bryan roused the Populi
st movement to
new heights when he angrily proclaimed:
You come and tell us that the great cities are in favor of the gold standard; we
reply that the great
cities rest upon the broad and fertile prairies. Burn down your cities and leave
our farms, and your
cities will spring up again, as if by magic. But destroy our farms and the grass
will grow in the
streets of every city in the country…. Having behind us the producing masses of th
e nation and the
world…the laboring interests and the toilers everywhere, we will answer their dema
nd for a gold
standard by saying to them: “You shall not press upon the brow of labor this crown
of thorns; you
shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold!80
Yet stirring oratory never reversed a major American demographic and political s
hift, and the
Populists simply failed to grasp the fact that in the course of the last half of
the nineteenth century,
political power had markedly moved from the farm to the city. This dynamic, with
the farmers
steadily losing clout at the polls and the marketplace, produced an angst that e
xaggerated the plight
of the agrarians, a phenomena called psychic insecurity by historian Richard Hof
stadter.81
Although Bryan carried nearly every state in the agricultural South and the West
, William
McKinley still defeated him handily, 271 electoral votes to 176. The frontier ha
d, indeed, come to
an end.
Despite defeat, the Populists bequeathed a disturbing legacy to American politic
s and economics.
Their late nineteenth-century cry for governmental regulation of the economy and
monetary
inflation did not vanish, but translated into a more urban-based reform movement
of the early
twentieth century—Progressivism.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Sinews of Democracy, 1876–96
Life After Reconstruction
With reconstruction essentially over, the nation shifted its attention from the
plight of the freedmen
toward other issues: settling the West, the rise of large-scale enterprise, poli
tical corruption, and the
growth of large cities.
Chief among the new concerns was the corrupt spoils system. Newspapers loved gra
ft and
corruption because these topics are easy to write about, and they provided repor
ters with clear
villains and strong morality plays. Patronage also dominated public discourse be
cause of an
aggressive wing of the Republican Party dedicated to overthrowing what it saw as
vestiges of
Jacksonianism. Moreover, the spoils issue and political corruption spilled over
into almost all other
aspects of American life: it affected the transcontinental railroads through the
Crédit Mobilier
scandal; it had reached into city administration in the reign of Boss Tweed; and
it plagued the
Bureau of Indian Affairs and its network of dishonest agencies. Large-scale busi
nesses became
targets of reformers because, in part, through their political influence they we
re seen as buying
legislation. Rutherford B. Hayes inherited this continuing debate over spoils, a
nd when he left the
presidency, the issue had not been resolved.
Time Line
1877:
Munn v. Illinois case; Great Railway Strike
1878:
Bland-Allison Act; Knights of Labor formed
1880:
James A. Garfield elected president
1881:
Garfield assassinated; Chester A. Arthur becomes president
1882:
Chinese Exclusion Act
1883:
Pendleton Civil Service Act
1884:
Mugwumps split from the Republican Party; Grover Cleveland elected president
1886:
American Federation of Labor formed; Haymarket Riot
1887:
Veto of the seed corn bill; Congress passes the Dependent Pension Act; Interstat
e Commerce Act
1888:
Benjamin Harrison defeats Cleveland for the presidency
1890:
Sherman Silver Purchase Act and Sherman Antitrust Act passed; McKinley tariff pa
ssed
1892:
Cleveland defeats Harrison for the presidency; strong showing by the Populist Pa
rty
1893:
Panic of 1893 sets in; Sherman Silver Purchase Act repealed; Coxey’s Army marches
on
Washington
1894:
Pullman strike
1895:
J. P. Morgan lends U.S. government gold to stave off federal bankruptcy
President Hayes
Having survived the closest election in American history, Rutherford Hayes—“His Frau
dulency,”
his opponents labeled him—may not have had Reconstruction to deal with, but other
issues soon
consumed him. Hayes knew that federal intervention had reached its limits in the
South, and other
means would be required to change both its attitudes and reality. The nature of
his own election
meant that he was compromised, and he hoped that business revitalization and eco
nomic recovery
might do for the freedmen what the government could not.
Hayes and his wife, Lemonade Lucy (as she was referred to by reporters because o
f her
nonalcoholic table habits), interested the press far more than his actual polici
es. Lucy Hayes, an
attractive woman, captured public fancy and her religious stamp on the White Hou
se gave it a
much different tone from that the Grants had set.1 Soon, however, attention turn
ed to Hayes’s
actions as president. He immediately summoned South Carolina Republican governor
Daniel
Chamberlain to a Washington meeting, where he reiterated his intention that the
federal troops
withdraw. Chamberlain, realizing the situation, agreed.
When Hayes addressed reform of civil service, he was certain to anger many in hi
s own party as
well as in the Democratic House. Still, he set to it almost immediately, writing
in April 1877, “Now
for civil service reform. We must limit and narrow the area of patronage.”2 Throug
h an executive
order, Hayes prohibited federal officeholders from taking part “in the management
of political
organizations, caucuses, conventions, or election campaigns.”3 This seemed to defy
logic. After all,
many of the best practitioners of spoils asked, what other reason for winning of
fice was there?
Starting with an investigation of the New York customhouse and its excesses unde
r Chester A.
Arthur (whom Hayes removed in July 1878), Hayes sought to bring the patronage mo
nster to heel.
Both Arthur and a naval officer whom Hayes had also removed, Alonzo Cornell, wer
e pets of New
York’s Roscoe “Boss” Conkling, and the actions sparked a revolt among the spoilsmen in
Congress
against the president. Conkling held up confirmation of Hayes’s replacements in th
e Senate, one of
whom (for Arthur’s spot) was Theodore Roosevelt Sr., but Hayes prevailed. The pres
ident
attempted to institute a “new tone” when it came to spoils, instructing his fellow R
epublicans, “Let
no man be put out because he is Mr. Arthur’s Friend, and no man be put in merely b
ecause he is
our friend,” but the words rolled right over many in the party.4
Still, on a variety of issues the Democratic-controlled House began to challenge
or ignore the
president outright, passing the Bland-Allison Act of 1878 (purchasing large quan
tities of silver)
over his veto. At the same time, an indictment of two members of the Louisiana e
lection board that
had certified Hayes as the winner gave the Democrats the opening they needed to
try to unseat him
through the courts. A new spate of investigations into the 1876 fraudulent retur
ns, sponsored by
Democrats, backfired, unifying the deeply divided Republicans behind the preside
nt, who vowed to
fight “rather than submit to removal by any means of the Constitutional process of
impeachment.”5
He got little favorable treatment from the press, of which he disparagingly rema
rked that only two
of God’s creatures could employ the term “We”: newspaper editors and men with tapeworm
s.6
No sooner had Hayes reviewed the reports of his subordinates on civil service re
form than the
country was racked by a series of railroad strikes over pay cuts enacted by the
B&O Railroad. From
Baltimore to Pittsburgh, bloodshed ensued when strikers fought strikebreakers an
d state militia
forces, and soon clashes occurred in Ohio and New York. Honing to a strictly leg
alistic line, Hayes
instructed federal troops to protect U.S. property, but otherwise not to interfe
re on either side. By
midsummer 1877, the strikes had subsided. A bill to restrict Chinese laborers pa
ssed Congress, but
Hayes vetoed it, further angering the labor movement. Labor unrest, coupled with
the Bland-
Allison veto and Republican disunity, gave the Democrats both the House and the
Senate in 1878.
Still, by continually forcing Hayes to use the veto, recalcitrant Republicans an
d disaffected
Democrats gave the president more power than he would have had otherwise, since
he gained both
notoriety and popularity from his veto pen. His patience and decorum restored so
me degree of
respect to the presidency. Best of all (in the eyes of voters) Hayes had avoided
“Grantism.” Hayes
demilitarized the South, and introduced civil service reform—all remarkable achiev
ements from a
man who was a lame duck from the get-go!7
Controlling the Spoils Beast
The Hayes tenure ended with a string of vetoes. At the Republican convention, Ha
yes, like others,
was surprised to see a dark horse, James A. Garfield, emerge with the nomination
. Old spoilsmen,
known as the Stalwarts, had hoped to get Grant a third term, whereas reformers,
known as the Half
Breeds, supported James G. Blaine, Maine’s perpetual-motion machine. Blaine was a
big-picture
thinker, uninterested in the details or tactics of process. Other than his commi
tment to reform
(which was constantly under press suspicion because of his lavish lifestyle—well a
bove his
means—and his mountains of debt), Blaine had little to recommend him to the presid
ency. He had,
for example, an empty legislative record. Hayes’s favorite, John Sherman of Ohio,
also sliced away
votes from the front-runners. But Sherman had no chance at the presidency either
: his personality
was dull; his voting record was consistent for his district, but lacked vision f
or the nation; and his
rhetoric was uninspiring. Thus Garfield emerged from the pack as the natural com
promise
candidate. To offset the reformers and placate the Conkling/Stalwart wing, Chest
er A. Arthur
received the vice presidential nomination—a personal affront to Hayes, who had dis
missed him.
Like Hayes, Garfield came from Ohio, where he had served as the president of Hir
am College
before being elected to the House of Representatives. Literate in several langua
ges, Garfield had
come from near poverty, and was the last president born in a log cabin. His fath
er had abandoned
the family while James was a toddler, so he began working at a young age, drivin
g oxen and mule
teams on Ohio’s canals. He had fought in the Civil War, advancing through the offi
cer ranks to
brigadier general, but Lincoln persuaded him to resign to run for Congress. In 1
880, Garfield was
elected to the Senate and worked to secure the presidential nomination for Sherm
an, but before he
could even take his seat, he agreed to be the Republican nominee, winning after
36 ballots.
The Democrats offered their own war hero, Winfield Scott Hancock, who had receiv
ed wounds
while fearlessly commanding Union troops from horseback on Cemetery Ridge. He la
cked
significant political experience, and during the campaign the Republicans publis
hed an elegantly
bound large book called Record of the Statesmanship and Achievements of General
Winfield Scott
Hancock. It was filled with blank pages. The ex-soldier Hancock also managed to
shoot himself in
the foot by uttering words that all but sealed his doom, “The tariff question is a
local question.”8
Despite a close popular vote, Garfield won a decisive electoral college victory,
214 to 155.
Arthur may have been Garfield’s sop to the Stalwarts, but Senator Conkling expecte
d far more for
his support, which had handed to Garfield the critical electoral votes of New Yo
rk.9 He made clear
that he expected the new president to meekly accept any nominations he put forwa
rd. Garfield had
a reputation as a conciliator; he had no intention of allowing Boss Conkling to
dictate federal
patronage. After a power play in which Conkling resigned, New Yorkers had had en
ough, and the
legislature retired him.
Garfield’s nominations sailed through, including Lincoln’s eldest son, Robert, whom
Garfield
appointed secretary of war.10 No one knows what Garfield’s tenure might have accom
plished,
since on July 2, 1881, he was shot in a Washington train station by a disgruntle
d office seeker,
Charles Guiteau, who shouted the infamous phrase, “I am a Stalwart and Arthur is p
resident now.”
Guiteau had spent time in John Humphrey Noyes’s Oneida community, where he enthusi
astically
welcomed the doctrine of free love, although, apparently, no one reciprocated, f
or his nickname
was Charles Gitout. Broke and mentally unstable, Guiteau had demanded the consul
ship to Vienna
in return for voting for Garfield.11 The assassin’s bullet did not immediately kil
l the president,
though. Garfield lingered for weeks as doctors searched fruitlessly for the bull
et; he died on
September 19, 1881.
That, indeed, as Guiteau had stated, made Arthur president, even though he had b
een the de facto
president for several months. No one was more stunned at the administration of t
he new president
than the Stalwarts, who had insisted on his vice presidency and who now paid a h
eavy price in the
press. Editors blamed Stalwarts for creating the climate of animosity that could
produce a Guiteau,
and several Stalwarts observed that they could be instantly hanged in certain ci
ties. Meanwhile, the
man associated with corruption and patronage in New York ironically proved a par
agon of
character as president. He vetoed a rivers and harbors bill that was nothing mor
e than political pork
barreling; he prosecuted fraud; and in 1883 he signed what most considered the d
eathblow to
spoils, the Pendleton Civil Service Act.12 “Elegant Arthur” was the son of a Baptist
preacher from
Vermont. His patronage positions had made him more a master of the actual detail
s of government
than either Hayes or Garfield. Moreover, Arthur had never personally participate
d in the graft, and
had endeavored to make the New York custom house free of graft. But he also view
ed patronage as
the legitimate prerogative of elected officials and the lubricant of politics, a
nd he wielded the
appointment powers at his customs position liberally, if within the letter of th
e law. Thus, the
charges of corruption against him technically never contained any basis in fact,
but often gave
Arthur the appearance of impropriety.
What surprised Republicans as much as Arthur’s position on patronage was his rapid
action to
reduce the tariff in 1883, arguably making him the first in a long (though not u
ninterrupted) line of
Republican tax cutters. He gained labor’s favor by backing the Chinese Exclusion A
ct (1882). After
learning he had Bright’s disease, which, at the time, was inevitably debilitating
and fatal, he made
clear that he would not run for reelection, thereby diminishing his political cl
out.
Material Abundance, Social “Reform”
While the nation struggled with Reconstruction, patronage, and Indian policy, th
e pace of industrial
production and business enterprise had rapidly accelerated. Growing industries,
increasing
immigration, and the gradual replacement of the family farm with the new factory
system as the
chief form of economic organization brought new stresses. Perhaps because the fa
ctories were
located generally in the North where the intellectuals were; perhaps because the
“Negro problem”
had proven more difficult to solve; and perhaps because Reconstruction itself in
many ways
reflected the political corruption that had characterized the Tweed Ring, easter
n intellectuals, upper
class philanthropists, and middle-class women all gradually abandoned the quest
for equality of
black Americans in order to focus on goals they could more easily achieve. Empha
sizing legislation
that regulated large businesses (the hated trusts), these activists pursued wide
spread social and
economic changes under the umbrella of “reform.” They also embarked on a crusade to
end private
vices—mostly exhibited by the lower classes, particularly immigrants—including prost
itution,
pornography, drugs, and hard liquor.
Another group who saw itself as victims of industry and powerful interests also
clamored for
change, largely through the direct intervention of the federal government. Agrar
ians, especially in
the West and South, detected what they thought was a deliberate campaign to keep
them living on
the margin. Convinced that railroads, banks, and grain elevator owners were all
conspiring to steal
their earnings, reinforced by a government policy of subsidies and deflation, th
ey, too, clamored for
reform.
The two groups—the intellectual reformers and the agrarians—had little in common, sa
ve that they
both saw Uncle Sam as a combination moral evangelist and playground monitor. Whe
reas upperclass
reformers sneered at the rural hicks who wanted to force the railroads to lower
prices, they
nevertheless saw the necessity to temporarily ally with them. It would be a long
road to the ultimate
fusion of the two groups in the Prohibition movement, and for the better part of
the late nineteenth
century they ran on roughly parallel rails without touching.
Part of the affinity for government action had come from experience in the citie
s, where individuals
could not repair their own streets or clear their own harbors. Cities had become
exactly what
Jefferson feared, pits of political patronage built largely on immigrants and ma
intained by graft and
spoils. Political reform, however, had proved difficult to come by. In the first
place, both parties
played the spoils game. Second, individuals did benefit from the political large
sse, and constituents
could, to some degree, be bought off. To the reformers of the late 1800s, this c
ircumstance was
eminently correctable, mainly through the expansion of the franchise and through
more open and
frequent use of the machinery of democracy. Efforts to allow people to bring up
their own
legislation (with sufficient signatures on a petition), known as an initiative—whi
ch originated in
rural, Populist circles but which quickly spread to the cities—or to vote on an ac
t of the state
legislature, known as a referendum, or even to remove a problem judge or a long-
term elected
official (a recall) were all discussed frequently.
An equally important issue—and one the reformers thought easier to attain because
they controlled
the terms of the debate—involved public health. Public health, of course, is ultim
ately personal and
not public at all, and, as the reformers found, addressing public health issues
meant imposing one
group’s standards of hygiene and behavior upon others with, or without, their cons
ent. But the
offensive began inoffensively enough, with threats taken seriously by all: safe
water and prevention
of fire.
Two of the most serious enemies of safe cities in the 1800s, fire and disease, c
ould be fought by the
same weapon—water. At the end of the American Revolution, observers were struck by
the cities’
“almost incredible absence of the most elementary sanitary provisions.”13 At that ti
me in New
York, columns of slaves belonging to the wealthiest families each evening carrie
d tubs filled with
feces and urine to the banks of the Hudson. Most people simply “disposed of excrem
ent by flipping
it through the handiest window.”14 Piles of feces remained where they landed until
either Tuesday
or Friday, when a city ordinance required they be pushed or swept into the stree
ts. In winter,
however, “it lay where it landed,” where it received the local appellation “corporate
pudding.”15
Locals sank wells in the middle of streets, whereupon seepage drained into the d
rinking supply.
Other sources of water included New York City’s Tea Water pump, fed by the seepage
from
Collect Pond, which by 1783 was filled with dead dogs, cats, rodents, and furthe
r seasoned with the
laundry drippings of all the shantytown residents who lived on its banks.
The United States trailed France and England in this respect. Paris had fourteen
miles of sewers in
1808, and London began a massive sewer system that was substantially completed b
y 1865, yet
Philadelphia still depended heavily on its eighty-two thousand cesspools in 1877
. Nevertheless,
citywide water systems spread steadily, if slowly, during the century. The resul
ting improved
sanitation was instantly reflected in plunging death rates. By midcentury, typho
id deaths had fallen
in Boston and New York, and plummeted in New Orleans and Brooklyn.16 Digestive i
llness also
dropped steadily. Where cholera once struck fear in the hearts of Jacksonian cit
y dwellers, by the
time of the Great Depression it had essentially been eliminated as a major publi
c health threat. Such
progress depended heavily on safe water systems.
As late as the 1830s, most citywide water systems were privately constructed: in
1800 only 5.9
percent of waterworks were publicly financed, and in 1830 a full 80 percent of t
he existing water
systems remained in private hands, although this percentage had fallen to only 5
0 percent by the
1880s.17 Chicago adopted a modified public system in which an owner of property
had to show
proof that he owned a lot before he could vote on any levy related to water asse
ssments.18
Brooklyn (1857), Chicago (1859), Providence (1869), New Haven (1872), Boston (18
76),
Cincinnati (1870), and Indianapolis (1870) all had citywide planned water system
s, and
Worchester, Massachusetts (1890), had the country’s first modern sewage disposal p
lant that
employed chemicals to eliminate waste. By that time, nearly six hundred waterwor
ks served more
than 14.1 million urban residents. These systems, which used steam pumps, had be
come fairly
sophisticated. Along with cast-iron pipes, these pumps provided effective protec
tion against fire,
especially when used in connection with hydrants, which were installed in New Yo
rk in the early
1800s. By the middle of the century, major cities like Boston and Philadelphia h
ad thousands of
hydrants.19
Still, large-scale fires swept through Chicago (1871), New York (1876), Colorado
Springs (1878),
and in San Francisco on multiple dates, some resulting from earthquakes. Chicago
suffered more
than $200 million in damage—a staggering loss in the nineteenth century—in its 1871
blaze,
which, according to legend, was started when Mrs. O’Leary’s cow kicked over a lanter
n. Flames
leaped thirty to forty feet into the air, spreading throughout the West Side’s dow
ntrodden shacks,
then leaping the Chicago River to set most of the city afire. Even the wealthy N
orth Side
combusted when the winds carried aloft a burning board that set the district’s mai
n fire station
afire. Ultimately, thousands of people sought shelter in the frigid October wate
r of Lake Michigan.
These fires occurred in no small part because many cities still used natural gas
lighting, which
proved susceptible to explosions; fire could then spread easily because wood was
the most common
construction material in all but the largest buildings. The growing number of ci
tywide water
systems and fire departments offered a hope of reducing the number, and spread,
of fires. Generally
speaking, by 1900 most of the apocalyptic fires that eradicated entire towns occ
urred on the
grasslands, where in a two-year period the Dakota towns of Leola, Jamestown, Syk
eston, and Mt.
Vernon were “virtually incinerated by fires rising out of the prairies.”20
Even with fire prevention measures, plenty of water, and urban fire departments
(often volunteer),
fire-related disasters still plagued America well into the twentieth century. Ba
ltimore suffered a
two-day fire in 1904, and the San Francisco quakes set off fires that paved the
way for a binge of
looting by inhabitants of the notorious Barbary Coast section of town. Soldiers
had to be called in,
and authorities issued orders to shoot looters on sight.21
The introduction of electricity, more than the appearance of water systems, dimi
nished the threat of
fires in American cities. Before electricity, urban areas had relied on gas ligh
ting, and a leak could
turn city blocks into smoking ruins. When electric dynamos began to provide ener
gy for lighting in
the major cities, gas-originated fires naturally became less frequent. The intro
duction of electricity
to business, however, could only ensue after several corporate giants strode ont
o the national stage.
Titans of Industry
In 1870 steelmaker Andrew Carnegie ordered construction of his Lucy blast furnac
e, completing
the transition of his company into a vertical combination that controlled every
aspect of product
development, from raw materials to manufacturing to sales. With the Lucy furnace
, Carnegie would
become a supplier of pig iron to his Union Mills, and when it was completed two
years later, the
Lucy furnace set world records, turning out 642 tons of steel per week (the aver
age was 350).
Completion of the furnace ensured Carnegie a steady supply of raw materials for
his Keystone
Bridge Company, allowing him to concentrate exclusively on reducing costs. Lucy
provided the
springboard that Carnegie would need to become the nation’s leading steelmaker and
one of the
wealthiest men in America—a remarkable accomplishment considering he had arrived i
n America
penniless.
Carnegie (born 1835) had come to America from Scotland at the age of thirteen, a
rriving in
Pittsburgh, where his mother had relatives.22 First employed to change bobbins f
or $1.20 a week,
Carnegie improved his skills with each new job he took. He learned to operate a
telegraph and to
write messages down directly without the intermediate step of translating from M
orse code. His
skills impressed the district superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Thoma
s Scott, enough
that when the Pennsy opened service from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, Scott hired
Carnegie as his
personal telegraph operator. The Scotsman soaked up the railroad business from S
cott, learning all
aspects of business management and placing him in contact with other entrepreneu
rs. At age
twenty-four, when Scott was promoted, Carnegie took over his district supervisor
job.
Seeing the railroads firsthand convinced Carnegie that the next boom would occur
in the industry
that supplied their bridges, leading him to found the Keystone Bridge Company (1
865); he then
took the next logical step of supplying iron to the bridge company through a sma
ll ironworks. In the
1860s, British iron works had turned out 6 million tons. That was b.c.—before Carn
egie. After he
had applied his managerial skill and innovation to his integrated steel process,
the United States
surged ahead of British producers as Lucy and other similar furnaces produced 2
million tons of pig
iron. Hiring the best managers by offering them a share of the partnership, Carn
egie brought in
steel men who were innovators in their own right, including Julian Kennedy, who
claimed patents
on 160 inventions, half of which were in operation at the Carnegie mills during
Kennedy’s employ.
Carnegie viewed depressions as mere buying opportunities—a time to acquire at a ba
rgain what
others, because of circumstance, had to sell. But he ran against the grain in ma
ny other ways.
Dismissing the old advice against putting all your eggs in one basket, Carnegie
said, “Put all your
eggs in one basket and watch that basket!” He eagerly embraced new, and foreign, t
echnologies.
When his own mills became obsolete, even if built only a few years earlier, he e
ngaged in “creative
destruction,” whereby he leveled them to build new state-of-the-art facilities.23
He obtained his
own source of raw materials whenever possible: the company’s demand for coal and c
oke had
originally led Carnegie into his association with Henry Clay Frick, a titan Carn
egie called “a
positive genius” who operated 1,200 coke ovens before the age of thirty-five.24
Inexpensive steel, obtained by driving costs down through greater efficiencies i
n production,
provided the foundation for America’s rapid economic surge, but the obsession with
low costs was
hardly Carnegie’s alone. (John D. Rockefeller had the same attitude toward kerosen
e when he said,
“We are refining oil for the poor man and he must have it cheap and good.”)25 Carneg
ie put it
slightly differently: two pounds of iron shipped to Pittsburgh, two pounds of co
al (turned into a
quarter pound of coke), a half a pound of limestone from the Alleghenies, and a
small amount of
Virginia manganese ore yielded one pound of steel that sold for a cent. “That’s all
that need be said
about the steel business,” Carnegie adroitly noted.26
Carnegie ran the company as a close partnership, rather than a modern corporatio
n. He never fit the
modern working definition of “big business,” which requires that ownership be separa
ted from
management, usually because ownership consists of thousands of stockholders who
elect a board of
directors who in turn hire a president to run the company. As large as Carnegie
Steel was, though,
the Scotsman essentially managed the company himself, sometimes consulting his b
rother or a few
close confidants. Thus, the Carnegie management style meant that Carnegie Steel
had more in
common with the corner drugstore than it did with Rockefeller’s equally imposing S
tandard Oil.
Yet it was this structure that gave Carnegie his flexibility and provided the dy
namism that kept the
company efficient and constantly pushing down prices.
With falling prices came greater sales. Carnegie Steel saw its capital rise from
$20 million to $45
million from 1888 to 1898, when production tripled to 6,000 tons of steel a day.
“The 4,000 men at
Carnegie’s Homestead works,” noted Paul Johnson, “made three times as much steel in an
y year as
the 15,000 men at the great Krupps works in Essen, supposedly the most modern in
Europe.”27
Carnegie slashed the price of steel from $160 a ton for rails in 1875 to $17 a t
on by 1898. To
Carnegie, it all came down to finding good employees, excellent managers, and th
en streamlining
the process.
That frequently antagonized labor unions, for whom Carnegie had little patience.
It was not that he
was against labor. Quite the contrary, Carnegie appreciated the value of hard wo
rk, but based on his
own experience, he expected that workers would do their own negotiating and pay
would be highly
individualized. He wanted, for example, a sliding scale that would reward greate
r productivity.
Such an approach was fiercely resisted by unions, which, by nature, catered to t
he least productive
workers. Even though he was out of the country when the famous Homestead Strike
(1892)
occurred—Frick dealt with it—the Scotsman did not disagree with Frick’s basic principl
es, only his
tactics. Homestead was a labor-relations blunder of significant proportions, but
it tarnished
Carnegie’s image only slightly. Even Frick, who had tried to sneak in Pinkerton st
rikebreakers at
night to reopen the company and break the strike, became a sympathetic figure in
the aftermath
when an anarchist named Alexander Berkman burst into his office and shot him twi
ce. After the
maniac was subdued, Frick gritted his teeth and insisted that the company physic
ian remove both
bullets without anesthesia. The imperturbable Frick then wrote his mother a lett
er in which he
scarcely mentioned the incident: “Was shot twice today, though not seriously.”28
Frick had only come into the presidency of Carnegie Steel because, by that time,
Carnegie was
more interested in giving away his fortune and traveling in Europe than in runni
ng the company.
He epitomized the captains of industry who single-handedly transformed industry
after industry.
His empire brought him into contact with John D. Rockefeller, who had purchased
control of the
rich Mesabi iron range in Minnesota, making Carnegie dependent on Rockefeller’s ir
on ore. When
Carnegie finally decided to sell his business, he sold it to the premier banker
in America, J. P.
Morgan, at which point Carnegie’s second in command, Charles Schwab, negotiated th
e deal.
Schwab then went on to become a powerful steel magnate in his own right. The sal
e of Carnegie
Steel to Morgan for $450 million constituted the biggest business transaction in
history, and made
Carnegie, as Morgan told him, “the richest man in the world.” The Scotsman proceeded
to give
most of it away, distributing more than $300 million to philanthropies, art muse
ums, community
libraries, universities, and other endowments that continue to this day.
It is difficult to say which of the nineteenth-century captains of industry was
most important,
though certainly Carnegie is in the top three. The other two, however, would hav
e to be both John
D. Rockefeller and J. P. Morgan, each a business wizard in his own right. Rockef
eller probably
came in for the most scorn of the three, even described as a “brooding, cautious,
secretive man”
who founded the “meanest monopoly known to history.”29 When Rockefeller died, anothe
r said,
“Hell must be half full.”30 One can scarcely imagine that these comments were made a
bout a
devout Baptist, a lifelong tither, and a man who did more to provide cheap energ
y for the masses
(and, in the process, probably saved the whales from extinction) than any other
person who ever
walked the earth.
Rockefeller’s father had been a peddler in New York before the family moved to Cle
veland, where
John went to school. He worked as an assistant bookkeeper, earning fifty cents p
er day. In that job
he developed an eye for the detail of enterprise, although it was in church wher
e he learned of a
new venture in oil from a member who became one of his partners in building a re
finery. In 1867,
Rockefeller, along with Samuel Andrews and Henry Flagler, formed a partnership t
o drill for oil,
but Rockefeller quickly saw that the real profits lay in oil refining. He set ou
t to reduce the waste of
the refining process by using his own timber, building his own kilns and manufac
turing his own
wagons to haul the kerosene, and saving money in other ways. From 1865 to 1870,
Rockefeller’s
prices dropped by half, and the company remained profitable even as competitors
failed in droves.
Reorganized as the Standard Oil Company, the firm produced kerosene at such low
costs that the
previous source of interior lighting, whale oil, became exorbitantly expensive,
and whaling
immediately began to diminish as a viable energy industry. Cheap kerosene also k
ept electricity at
bay for a brief time, though bringing with it other dangers. Standard Oil’s chemis
ts, who were
charged by Rockefeller to come up with different uses for the by-products, event
ually made some
three hundred different products from a single barrel of oil.
After an attempt to fix prices through a pool, which brought nothing but public
outrage, Rockefeller
developed a new concept in which he would purchase competitors using stock in St
andard Oil
Company, bringing dozens of refiners into his network. By the 1880s, Standard co
ntrolled 80
percent of the kerosene market. Since Standard shipped far more oil than anyone
else, the company
obtained discounts from railroads known as rebates. It is common practice in sma
ll businesses
today for a frequent customer, after so many purchases, to receive a free item o
r a discount. Yet in
the 1800s, the rebate became the symbol of unfairness and monopoly control. Most
, if not all, of
the complaints came from competitors unable to meet Rockefeller’s efficiencies—with
or without
the rebates—never from consumers, whose costs plunged. When Standard obtained 90 p
ercent of
the market, kerosene prices had fallen from twenty-six cents to eight cents a ga
llon. By 1897, at the
pinnacle of Standard’s control, prices for refined oil reached “their lowest levels
in the history of
the petroleum industry.”31 Most customers of energy—then and now—would beg for control
of
that nature.
Yet Rockefeller was under no illusions that he could eliminate competition: “Compe
titors we must
have, we must have,” he said. “If we absorb them, be sure it will bring up another.”32
Citing
predatory price cutting as a tool to drive out competitors, Rockefeller’s critics,
such as Ida Tarbell,
bemoaned Standard Oil’s efficiency. But when John S. McGee, a legal scholar, inves
tigated the
testimony of the competitors who claimed to have been harmed by the price cuttin
g, he found “no
evidence” to support any claims of predatory price cutting.33
Like Carnegie, Rockefeller excelled at philanthropy. His church tithes increased
from $100,000 per
year at age forty-five to $1 million per year at fifty-three, a truly staggering
amount considering
that many modern churches have annual budgets of less than $1 million. At eighty
years of age,
Rockefeller gave away $138 million, and his lifetime philanthropy was more than
$540 million,
exceeding that of the Scotsman. Where Carnegie had funded secular arts and educa
tion, however,
Rockefeller gave most of his money to the preaching of the Gospel, although his
money helped
found the University of Chicago.
John Pierpont (“J.P.”) Morgan, while not personally as wealthy as either Rockefeller
or Carnegie,
nevertheless changed the structure of business more profoundly. A contemporary o
f both men
(Morgan was born in 1837, Rockefeller in 1839, and Carnegie in 1835), Morgan sta
rted with more
advantages than either. Raised in a home as luxurious as Carnegie’s was bleak and
schooled in
Switzerland, Morgan had nevertheless worked hard at learning the details of busi
ness. As a young
man, he was strong and tall, although he later suffered from skin disorders that
left his prominent
nose pockmarked and red. He studied every aspect of the banking and accounting b
usiness,
apprenticing at Duncan, Sherman and Company, then worked at his father’s investmen
t banking
office in London. Morgan then joined several partnerships, one with Anthony Drex
el that placed
him at the center of many railroad reorganizations. His first real railroad deal
, which consisted of a
mortgage bond issue of $6.5 million for the Kansas Pacific Railroad, taught him
that he needed to
take a personal role in supervising any railroad to which he lent money. Within
years, he was
merging, disassembling, and reorganizing railroads he financed as though they we
re so many toy
train sets.
After the Panic of 1873, the failures of several railroads led to a wave of bank
bailouts by
investment consortia. Most of those roads had received massive government subsid
ies and land
grants, and were not only thoroughly inefficient, but were also laced with corru
ption. Only Hill’s
Great Northern, financed almost entirely by private funding, survived the purge.
As Morgan and his
partners rescued railroad after railroad, they assumed control to restore them t
o profitability. This
was accomplished by making railroads, in essence, look much like banks. Imposing
such a
structure on many of the railroads improved their operations and brought them in
to the managerial
revolution by introducing them to modern accounting methods and line-and-staff m
anagerial
structures, and pushing them toward vertical combinations.
On one occasion, during the Panic of 1893, Morgan essentially rescued the federa
l government
with a massive bailout, delivering 3.5 million ounces of gold to the U.S. Treasu
ry to stave off
national bankruptcy. Again, during the Panic of 1907, Morgan and his network of
investment
bankers helped save the banking structure, although by then he recognized that t
he American
commercial banking system had grown too large for him to save again. By then, hi
s completely
rotund shape; stern, almost scowling, expression; and bulbous irritated nose lef
t him a target for
merciless caricatures of the “evil capitalist.” Although he hardly matched the priva
te philanthropy
of Rockefeller or Carnegie, the Atlas-like Morgan had hoisted Wall Street and th
e entire U.S.
financial world on his back several times and held it aloft until it stabilized.
If Morgan, Rockefeller, and Carnegie had been the only three prominent American
business leaders
to emerge in the post–Civil War era, they alone would have composed a remarkable s
tory of
industrial growth. The entrepreneurial explosion that occurred in the 1830s, how
ever, only
accelerated in the postbellum era, unleashing an army of inventors and corporate
founders who
enabled the United States to leapfrog past Britain and France in productivity, p
rofitability, and
innovation. From 1870 to 1900, the U. S. Patent Office granted more than four hu
ndred thousand
patents—ten times what was granted in the previous eighty years. The inventors who
sparked this
remarkable surge owed much to entrepreneurs who had generated a climate of risk
taking unknown
to the rest of the world (including capitalist Europe and England). Much of the
growth derived from
the new emphasis on efficiency that came with the appearance of the managerial h
ierarchies. The
goal was to make products without waste, either in labor or in raw materials, an
d to sell the goods
as efficiently as possible.34
James B. Duke, who founded the American Tobacco Company, used the Bonsack rollin
g machine
to turn out 120,000 cigarettes per day. Charles Pillsbury, a New Hampshire bread
maker, invented
the purifier that made bread flour uniform in quality. In 1872 he installed a co
ntinuous rolling
process similar to Duke’s that mass-produced flour. By 1889 his mills were grindin
g 10,000 barrels
of flour a day, drawing wheat from the Dakotas, processing it, then selling it i
n the East.35
Henry J. Heinz’s pickle empire, Joseph Campbell’s soup business, and Gustavus Swift’s
meatpacking
plants all used mass-processing techniques, combined with innovative advertising
and
packaging to create household brands of food items. Heinz added a flair for adve
rtising by giving
away free pickle samples at the 1892–93 Columbian Exposition in Chicago.36 Campbel
l’s soups
and Pillsbury’s bread, along with Isaac Singer’s sewing machine, saved women huge bl
ocks of
time.
So did other home products, such as soap, which now could be purchased instead o
f made at home,
thanks to British-born soap maker William C. Procter and his brother-in-law, Jam
es Gamble.
Procter and Gamble processed and sold candles and soap to the Union army, mixing
and crushing
products used for bar soap. By 1880, P&G, as the firm was known, was turning out
daily two
hundred thousand cakes of its Ivory soap. The soap, by a fluke in which an emplo
yee had left a
mixing machine on for too long, was so puffed up with air that it floated. Gambl
e had the
advertising hook he needed: “It Floats!” announced his ads, and later, when an analy
sis of the
composition of the soap showed that it had only .56 percent impurities, the comp
any proudly
announced that its product was “99-44/100% Pure.”37
Greed and Jealousy in the Gilded Age
Not every lumberman held to Frederick Weyerhaeuser’s appreciation for replenishing
the forests,
and not every oilman believed as Rockefeller did that kerosene ought to be cheap
and widely
available for the consumer. So perhaps it was inevitable that even as wages star
ted a sharp upward
rise in the late 1800s and, more important, real purchasing power of industrial
employees grew at
dramatic rates, a widespread dissatisfaction with the system surfaced.
Although entrepreneurs abounded, with more appearing every day, the fact of life
is that not
everyone can be an entrepreneur. Most people—other than farmers—worked for someone e
lse and
often labored in a factory or a mine, usually under difficult and occasionally d
angerous conditions.
Workers in the late 1800s often faced tedious, repetitive, and dreary jobs. Plum
bers made $3.37 a
day; stonemasons, $2.58 a day; and farm laborers, $1.25 a day, usually for a fif
ty-four-to-sixty-hour
work week.38
In terms of that era’s cost of living, these wages were sufficient, though certain
ly not generous.
Eleven pounds of coffee went for $1.00, a box of chocolate bonbons sold for $0.6
0, a shirt might
cost $1.50 or a pair of boots $0.60, and a cigar (naturally) $0.05.39 A typical
city family in Atlanta
would pay, on average, about $120 per year for food, and all other expenses, inc
luding medical
care, books, vacations, or entertainments, would cost perhaps $85.
Consider a Scots-Irish family in Atlanta in 1890 with one child—the McGloins—whose m
ain
source of income came from the father’s job in a textile mill, supplemented by his
wife’s sewing
and rent from a boarder. The husband’s textile job brought in $312 a year; the wif
e’s sewing added
$40 and the boarder’s rents another $10. In a typical year, though, the family spe
nt nearly $400,
paying for the extra expenses out of credit at the mill store. The McGloins heat
ed their home with
wood, used oil lamps for indoor lighting, gave to their church (but only 1 perce
nt), spent no more
than $40 per year for clothes, and dealt frequently with roundworm and, in the c
ase of the child,
croup.40
The life of the McGloins contrasted sharply with the top end of the income scale
, a fact that lay at
the root of some of the bitterness and anxiety prevalent in the late nineteenth
century. Greed and
jealousy worked from opposite ends to create strife. Greed on the part of owners
and industrialists
could be seen in the lavish and (to most people) outrageous expenditures that se
emed obscene.
Certainly nothing seemed more ostentatious than the mansions erected at Newport,
Rhode Island,
where the on-site cleaning staff lived in houses larger than those owned by most
Americans.
Newport’s “froth of castles,” as one critic described it, often had more rooms than la
rge hotels. Yet
the Newport crowd, in truth, did not seek to impress the proletariat as much as
each other: they
threw extravagant parties replete with party favors consisting of diamond neckla
ces. Attendees lit
cigars with hundred-dollar bills while hosts showered gifts on children, friends
, and even pets (one
owner had a dinner for the family dog, giving the pooch a necklace worth fifteen
thousand dollars).
One “castle” had Champagne flowing from its faucets, and one millionaire had his tee
th drilled and
filled with diamonds so that he literally flashed a million-dollar-smile!41
America’s wealthiest people held between three hundred and four hundred times the
capital of
ordinary line workers, creating perhaps the greatest wealth gap between the rich
and middle class
that the nation has ever witnessed. The good news was that there were more of th
e wealthy: from
1865 to 1892, the number of millionaires in the nation rose from a handful to mo
re than four
thousand. That type of upward mobility seemed inconceivable to farmers who faced
foreclosure or
to factory workers who, despite the fact they actually had more purchasing power
, saw their
paychecks stagnating. It nevertheless meant that more than ever America was the
land of rags to
riches.
Still, frustration and jealousy boiled over in the form of calls for specific re
medial legislation for
what many considered business excesses. Railroads, for example, were excoriated
by farmers for
the rates they charged, often under the allegation that they enjoyed “monopoly con
trol.”
Farmers also suffered more than any other group when falling prices gripped the
economy. Farm
owners held mortgages whose rates did not change when they were getting less for
their crops.
Others argued, they could not even get mortgages because of the lack of competit
ion, since banks
and lending agencies were (in theory) so scarce in the West. Unquestionably, ind
ividuals suffered
in some circumstances. But setting anecdotes aside, our measure of the condition
of farmers and
shippers must be judged by the overall statistics and, when possible, applicatio
n of microlevel
studies. Given those criteria, the charges of widespread distress in the late 18
00s must be attributed
to perception more than reality. For example, numerous studies exist on the mort
gage market that
demonstrate that mortgages, which only ran for five years in that period, were r
eadjusted in current
dollars with each renewal and that statistics of foreclosures show that “the risk
of individual
foreclosure was quite small,” as low as 0.61 percent in Illinois in 1880 and 1.55
percent in
Minnesota in 1891.42 Other statistics suggest that large numbers of farmers fail
ed, although many
may have owned their land free and clear at the time of bankruptcy. Most, howeve
r, should not
have been farming. Again, government subsidies in the form of absurdly cheap (an
d free) land
through the Homestead Acts encouraged westward migration and farming by millions
of
Americans who, truth be told, were not good farmers. The Homestead Act was in ke
eping with
Jefferson’s ideals, but realistically it was going to be accompanied by large numb
ers of failures.
What about factory laborers? What was their real status and condition? Because a
necdotal evidence
is unreliable, we have to depend on more sterile statistical analysis, such as t
hat of economic
historian Stanley Lebergott. He traced the real earnings of the era, based on tw
o series of statistics.
It is clear that regardless which series is used, “With a brief downturn between 1
870 and 1880, real
nonfarm earnings rose more than 60 percent from 1870 to 1900,” and rose more rapid
ly after the
Civil War than ever before.43 A similar study by Kenneth Sokoloff and Georgia Vi
llafor concluded
that real wages during the period 1865 to 1900 rose about 1.4 percent per year—whi
ch may seem
inconsequential until it is remembered that this was a period of deflation, and
all other prices were
falling. Still other investigations of wages, by Clarence D. Long and Paul Dougl
as, showed real
wages hitting a trough in 1867, then rising almost unbroken until the Panic of 1
893—from $1.00 to
$1.90.44 Thus, the average laborer gained consistently and substantially during
the postbellum
period.45 Moreover, Joseph Schumpeter noted that “creative destruction” of capitalis
m often
produces benefits to second-generation wage laborers, while the first generation
suffered. Averages
conceal the angst and poverty that genuinely afflicted many wage laborers, but s
uch is the case in
all societies at all times. The issue ultimately comes down to defining the aver
age worker, and the
evidence is conclusive that American laborers were well paid and their standard
of living getting
better by the decade.
Even with the cost of higher wages, unprecedented breakthroughs in machinery mad
e businessmen
as a class 112 times more productive than the class of lowest-paid laborers. Muc
h of the gain came
from the relentless absorption of smaller firms by larger corporations. More, pe
rhaps, came from
the application of new technology. Unfortunately, many social critics contended
that the ownership
of land and factories alone had given the rich their wealth, despite the fact th
at the sons of the
wealthy rarely equaled the success of their fathers and soon saw their fortunes
fade.46 Henry
George, for example, in his Progress and Poverty (1879) originated the phrase “une
arned income”
to describe profits from land. Less than a decade later, Edward Bellamy’s Looking
Backward
(1888) romanticized about a man who fell asleep in 1887 and woke up a hundred ye
ars later to a
socialist utopia. One of the most famous children’s books of all time, The Wonderf
ul Wizard of Oz,
by Frank Baum embraced the themes of downtrodden labor and insufficient money. H
enry Lloyd’s
Wealth Against Commonwealth (1894) claimed that large consolidations constituted
an
antidemocratic force that should be smashed by the federal government.47
Whether or not the historical statistics support the assertions of farm and labo
r groups, their
perceptions shaped their worldview, and their perception was that the rich were
getting richer. In
1899, differences in social strata inspired Thorstein Veblen, an immigrant socia
l scientist, to
publish his Theory of the Leisure Class, in which he claimed that the rich had a
compulsion toward
“conspicuous consumption,” or the need to consume ostentatiously in order to, in pop
ular
vernacular, rub it in. Although social critics juxtapose the most wealthy with t
he most desperate, at
every level someone had more—or less—than someone else. Such was, after all, the nat
ure of
America and capitalism. The urban slum dweller saw the couple living in a duplex
as phenomenally
blessed; they, in turn, looked at those in the penthouses; and they, in turn, en
vied the ultrarich in
their country manors.
Undoubtedly the reports of Mrs. Vanderbilt’s bedroom, which was a replica of Louis
XV’s wife’s
room, or the du Pont house, with its electric water-sprinkling systems, its cent
ral heating system,
and its self-contained drink-bottling plant, stunned many and disgusted others.
But there were more
than a few who ascribed it to the natural order of things, and still more who sa
w it as evidence that
in America, anything was possible.48
Regardless of why the rich behaved the way they did, or whether disparities were
as great as some
claimed, it is a fact that by the 1880s, farmers and factory laborers increasing
ly felt a sense of
alienation and anxiety and searched for new forms of political expression. The m
ost prominent of
these political outlets were in the form of unions and new political organizatio
ns.
“Your Masters Sent Out Their Bloodhounds”
Unions had been declared by several courts to be illegal conspiracies until 1842
, when the
Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled in Commonwealth v. Hunt that unions could lega
lly operate.
Even then, however, state conspiracy laws kept unions essentially illegal. After
1890, the Sherman
Act was wielded against labor. Employer resistance, pride in the independence of
individual
workers, and the unfamiliarity with mass movements tended to limit the spread of
unionism in the
United States prior to 1900, when only 3 percent of the industrial workforce was
unionized. High
wages also diminished the appeal of organized labor. As might be expected, the e
xpansion of mass
production after the Civil War, combined with the discontent over money and nomi
nal, that is,
face-value as opposed to real or actual decline in wages, led to a renewed inter
est in labor
organizations.
One of the most successful was Ulrich S. Stephens and Terence V. Powderly’s previo
usly
mentioned Knights of Labor, founded in 1869. An “essentially secret society” almost
like the
Freemasons (although it became more open over time), its mysterious origins and
secretive
overtones derived in part from the earlier suppression of unions.49 Although the
Knights of Labor
was not the first national labor organization, it claimed the title and grew the
most rapidly.
Powderly’s strategy involved enlisting everyone—skilled, unskilled, farmers—in order t
o make the
union as large as possible. By 1886, the Knights numbered more than seven hundre
d thousand, and
they successfully struck the Denver Union Pacific railroads and achieved their g
reatest victory with
a strike against Jay Gould’s Missouri, Kansas, Texas, and Wabash Railroads, as wel
l as the related
Missouri-Pacific. In the face of such disciplined opposition, Gould had to resto
re the pay cuts he
had made earlier.
A more disastrous incident occurred at Chicago’s Haymarket Square in 1886, where t
he Knights
protested at the McCormick Reaper Works for an eight-hour day. On May third, two
hundred
policemen were watching an angry, but still orderly crowd of six thousand when t
he work day
ended and strikebreakers left the plant. As the strikers converged on them, the
police assumed the
worst and began clubbing and shooting the strikers. Calling for a new mass meeti
ng on May fourth,
radical editors like August Spies set the table for more violence: “Revenge! Worki
ngmen, to arms!
Your masters sent out their bloodhounds!”50 At the meeting the next day, a bomb ex
ploded, killing
seven policemen and leaving more than sixty wounded, and the city was placed und
er martial law
for what became known as the Haymarket Riot. Subsequent trials produced evidence
that anarchists
only loosely associated with the Knights had been involved, but a jury neverthel
ess convicted eight
Knights of murder. Governor John Peter Altgeld, in 1893, pardoned three of the m
en.
The affair marked the end of the Knights as a force in organized labor (as well
as the anarchist
threat in America), but they appeared to have peaked anyway: Powderly’s strategy o
f admitting
anyone could not succeed in sustaining strikes by the highly skilled workers for
the unskilled, and
farmers never had a clear role in the organization.
A more powerful and effective union movement came out of the efforts of a former
Knight, Samuel
Gompers, who in 1886 founded a rival union, the American Federation of Labor (AF
L). Like
Carnegie, he had started his career at age thirteen, moving to New York from Lon
don, where he
had been born into a family of Dutch Jews. (Karl Marx, another Jewish refugee, a
rrived in London
the year before Gompers was born.)51 While still a boy in England, Gompers had w
atched his
father work as a cigar maker, and he became enamored of the union organization,
seeing it as the
locus of social interaction and security. Indeed, even before he left for Americ
a, Samuel Gompers
treated the union as a creed or a religion. Unlike many laborers, though, Gomper
s acquired a broad
education, learning the rudiments of several languages, the basics of geography
and politics, and
even dabbling in logic and ethical philosophy. He arrived in New York City in th
e middle of the
Civil War, disembarking only a few weeks after the draft riots there.
Working his way through the Cigar Makers Union, Gompers came to reject the radic
al ideologies
of the socialists. On one occasion he grew so agitated by a socialist diatribe t
hat he grabbed the
speaker by the throat with the intent to kill him, only to be dragged off by oth
er patrons.52
Gompers rejected socialism, often voicing his anger at agitators who he knew had
never set foot on
a shop floor. For Gompers, pragmatism had become the objective: “We are fighting o
nly for
immediate objects,” he told the U.S. Senate, by which he meant his staples of wage
s and hours.53
By 1877, when he took over as president of the New York local, he was a stocky m
an with a thick
handlebar mustache. Already he had surpassed Powderly as a strategist on a numbe
r of levels. He
could drink with his fellow workers on the shop floor one moment, and negotiate
boundaries
between rival shops the next. He understood that the strength of the unions lay
in the skilled labor
and craft unions, not in the unskilled masses. Above all, he kept his eye on the
ball: wages and
hours.
Gompers also kept American unions (in theory, at least) apolitical. This was com
mon sense, given
the small percentage of trade unionists in the country, who by 1880 accounted fo
r less than 2.3
percent of the nonfarm labor force. For employees to have power, he believed, th
ey had to be
organized, strike infrequently (and only for the most significant of objectives)
, and maintain perfect
discipline. Work stoppages in opposition to the introduction of new machinery no
t only were
ineffective, but they also ran against the tide of history and human progress. I
n addition,
uncoordinated strikes—especially when the unions had not properly prepared a war c
hest to see the
members through the lean times—were worse than ineffective, posing the threat of d
estroying the
union altogether. Gompers knew hardship first hand. In the 1877 strike, Gompers,
with six
children, pawned everything he had except his wife’s wedding ring, and the family “h
ad nothing to
eat but a soup of flour, water, salt, and pepper.”54 Even though that strike faile
d, it convinced
Gompers more than ever that a unified and prepared union could succeed. Equally
important,
Gompers had accidentally hit upon the confederation structure, which allowed emp
loyees of new
and evolving industries to join the organization essentially with equality to th
e established trades,
thus allowing continued growth and development rather than a calcification aroun
d aging and soonto-
be obsolete enterprises.
What Gompers and his unions did not endorse were third-party movements, since he
appreciated
the winner-take-all/single-member-district structure of American politics. Speci
fically, for
Gompers, that meant avoiding the new Populist movement, despite its appeals and
the Populist
leaders’ efforts at recruiting among the unions.
Raising Less Corn, and More Hell
Farm organization efforts began as early as 1867 with the founding of the Patron
s of Husbandry,
more popularly known as the Grangers. Grange chapters spread rapidly, gaining mo
mentum until
the Grange had a membership of 1.5 million by 1874. Originally seen as a means t
o promote farm
cooperatives—facilitating the purchase and sales of other farmers’ products at lower
prices—the
Grange soon engaged in political lobbying on behalf of various regulations aimed
at railroads and
grain elevators. The Grangers managed to pass laws in five states that were chal
lenged by the
railroad and elevator owners, including the partners in a Chicago warehouse firm
, Ira Y. Munn and
George Scott, in the Munn v. Illinois case, where the Illinois Supreme Court hel
d that the state
legislature had broad powers to fix prices on everything from cab fares to bread
prices.55 Munn
and Scott were found guilty by an Illinois court of fixing prices, and Munn appe
aled, arguing that
any arbitrary definition by the state about what constituted a maximum price vio
lated the
Constitution’s takings clause and the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.56 The Supre
me Court
held that states could regulate property for the public good under the police po
wers provisions if it
could be shown that the enterprise in question benefited from its public context
. Unfortunately, the
court did not consider the state’s “evidence” that grain elevators had constituted a m
onopoly, and it
ruled exclusively on the appeal of state authority to regulate.
The Grangers had already moved into a political activism that peaked with the el
ection of 1880,
and they soon faded, replaced by the Farmers’ Alliances. This movement emphasized
similar
cooperative efforts but also stressed mainstream political participation and org
anization. Led by a
host of colorful characters, including Mary Elizabeth Lease, a Kansas schoolteac
her and lawyer
famous for her recommendation that farmers should “raise less corn, and more hell,”
the Alliance
sought to appeal to blacks to widen its base.57 White Southerners, however, neve
r supported the
Colored Farmers’ Alliance, and it disappeared within a few years. Meanwhile, every
move to
expand the appeal of the agrarians to one group, such as the freedmen, alienated
other races or
ethnic groups.
Despite the flamboyance of characters like Lease and Sockless Jerry Simpson, it
was Charles W.
Macune, the Alliance president, who formulated a genuine political plan of actio
n.58 Macune
advocated government loans monetized by the issue of new greenbacks or other typ
es of
government legal-tender notes, thus inflating the currency. The idea of inflatio
n, either by the
monetization of silver or through creation of new fiat money issued by the gover
nment, took on a
life of its own as the end all of agrarian unrest. Farmers, sharecroppers, and a
ny of the southern or
western poor, for that matter, had become indoctrinated by pamphlets and incessa
nt speeches that
the solution to their problems was merely more money, with little instruction ab
out the
ramifications of money creation at the government level. William “Coin” Harvey, for
example, in
his popular book Coin’s Financial School (1894), offered a conspiratorial worldvie
w of a money
system controlled by sinister (often Jewish) bankers who, like the octopus (a fa
vorite conspiracy
symbol) had their tentacles throughout the international banking system.59 Other
conspiracyoriented
books included Seven Financial Conspiracies Which Have Enslaved the American Peo
ple,
by Sarah E. V. Emery (1887), and Mary Lease’s The Problem of Civilization Solved (
1895), which
raised the specter of both international banking cartels and racial pollution as
the cause of
American farmers’ plight.60 In these scenarios, the Rothschilds and other Jews of
Europe,
operating through a nebulous network in London (sometimes with the aid of the Ba
nk of England
and Wall Street), conspired to contract the money supply to benefit the lending
classes.61
The developments surrounding the silver and money issue in the late nineteenth c
entury originated
with an international deflation that set in during the 1870s, but were in no way
the work of the
Rothschilds or other allegedly nefarious groups. These international forces were
largely hidden
from domestic critics and inflationists, who thought that increasing wage levels
allowed them to
pay back fixed debts with increasingly cheap dollars. (They ignored the fact tha
t all other prices
rise, and that although mortgages may stay constant, the price of seed, tools, f
arm implements,
clothing, and fuel increases, eating up whatever savings are “gained” through the te
mporary
artificial advantage in the mortgage payments.) Nevertheless, at the time, the p
ostbellum policies of
the U.S. government appeared to cause agrarian and labor distress.
It began with Congress’s 1873 decision not to monetize silver but to resume redemp
tion of the
Civil War–era greenbacks in 1879, putting the country on a de facto gold standard.
This followed a
decade’s worth of increased silver production, originating with the Comstock Lode
in 1859, that
had changed the ratio of exchange between silver and gold. Gold became more expe
nsive, but the
cheaper, more abundant silver was more widely available. This seemed to offer an
opportunity for
government action: if the government could be forced to purchase silver at fixed
prices (higher than
the market price) and coin it, silver miners would receive artificial price incr
eases, and new silver
coins would flood the West and South, providing a solution (it was thought) to t
he money question.
When Congress rejected this scenario, silverites labeled the action the crime of
’73.
Meanwhile, the Treasury, under John Sherman, had carefully accumulated enough go
ld that the
resumption occurred smoothly. Prior to the resumption, pressures from westerners
and southerners
to counteract the slow deflation that had gripped the economy led to calls for n
ew issues of
greenbacks. Alliance-related greenbackers even succeeded in electing forty-four
congressmen
sympathetic to the movement and four pro-Alliance governors in the years precedi
ng 1892. The
farmers increasingly found their calls for regulation and control of business dr
owned out by a larger
new coalition of westerners and southerners who wanted the monetization of silve
r as the cure to all
agrarian ills.
Since the early 1870s, worldwide deflationary pressures had forced prices down.
Farm prices fell
more than others, or so it seemed. Actually, it depended entirely on the crop as
to whether prices
genuinely dropped or stayed relatively even with other products. Despite the rou
ndly criticized
“crime,” the U.S. government had little impact on the price level, except when it ca
me to bank
notes. Since the Civil War, national banks had been the sole sources of note iss
ue in the United
States. That meant that notes tended to be more plentiful where there were many
national banks,
and less so where there were fewer. Both the South and the West were at a disadv
antage in that
case, the South because the comptroller of the currency was unlikely to give a b
ank charter to either
former Confederates or freedmen, and the West because of the sparse population.
Each region
clamored for more money.
When the western silver mines proved richer than even the original prospectors h
ad dreamed, both
regions saw silver as a means to address the shortfall. In 1878, Richard “Silver D
ick” Bland of
Missouri and William Allison of Iowa introduced a measure for “free and unlimited
coinage of
silver” at a ratio of sixteen silver ounces for one gold ounce. Fearing a veto fro
m President Hayes,
Allison introduced amendments that limited the total silver purchased to $4 mill
ion per month at
market prices. Allison’s amendments essentially took the teeth from the bill by ro
bbing it of its
artificial advantages for the holders of silver. Nevertheless, it reflected the
new West/South
coalition around “free silver,” meaning the purchase of all the western silver that
could be mined,
and its coinage at the inflated rate of sixteen ounces of silver to every ounce
of gold. This was
stated in the parlance of the day as sixteen to one, when the real relationship
between silver and
gold was seventeen to one. Put another way, silverites would be subsidized at ta
xpayers’ expense.
By Cleveland’s time, the federal mints had coined 215 million silver dollars, with
more than three
quarters of them in government vaults and only $50 million in actual circulation
. Meanwhile, as
miners hauled more silver in to exchange for gold, the government saw its gold s
upply dwindle
steadily. Had the government circulated all the silver coins, it would not have
produced prosperity,
but inflation. Prices on existing goods would have gone up, but there would have
been no new
incentive to produce new goods. Instead, a different problem arose: the governme
nt had to pay gold
to its creditors (mostly foreign) but had to accept the less valuable silver fro
m its debtors. Congress
formed into two camps, one around free silver, intending to increase the silver
purchases and push
for full bimetallism, and another around the gold standard. Cleveland was in the
latter group. With
a hostile president, and enough goldbugs in the House and Senate to prevent veto
overrides, the
silver issue stalled throughout the remainder of Cleveland’s term, but it would re
surface with a
vengeance under Harrison.
Shame of the Cities
While farmers agitated over silver, another large group of people—immigrants—flooded
into the
seaport cities in search of a new life. Occasionally, they were fleeced or organ
ized by local
politicians when they arrived. Often they melted into the American pot by starti
ng businesses,
shaping the culture, and transforming urban areas. In the process the cities los
t their antebellum
identities, becoming true centers of commerce, arts, and the economy, as well as
hotbeds of crime,
corruption and degeneracy—“a serious menace to our civilization,” warned the Reverend
Josiah
Strong in 1885.62 The cities, he intoned, were “where the forces of evil are masse
d,” and they were
under attack by “the demoralizing and pauperizing power of the saloons and their d
ebauching
influence in politics,” not to mention the population, whose character was “so large
ly foreign, [and
where] Romanism finds its chief strength.”63 The clergyman probably underestimated
the decay:
in 1873, within three miles of New York’s city hall, one survey counted more than
four hundred
brothels housing ten times that number of prostitutes.64 Such illicit behavior c
oincided with the
highest alcohol consumption levels since the turn of the century, or a quart of
whiskey a week for
every adult American.
Some level of social and political pathology was inevitable in any population, b
ut it was
exacerbated by the gigantic size of the cities. By the 1850s, the more partisan
of the cities,
especially New York and Boston, achieved growth in spite of the graft of the mac
hines and the
hooliganism. New York (the largest American city after 1820), Chicago, Philadelp
hia, and Boston
emerged as commercial hubs, with a second tier of cities, including New Orleans,
Cincinnati,
Providence, Atlanta, Richmond, Pittsburgh, and Cleveland developing strong urban
areas of their
own. But New York, Boston, Chicago, and New Orleans, especially, also benefited
from being
regional money centers, further accelerating their influence by bringing to the
cities herds of
accountants, bankers, lawyers, and related professionals.
By the mid-1800s, multistory buildings were commonplace, predating the pure skys
craper
conceived by Louis Sullivan in 1890. Even before then, by mid-century two-story
developments
and multiuse buildings done in the London style had proliferated. These warehous
es and factories
soon yielded to larger structures made of brick (such as the Montauk buildings o
f Chicago in 1882)
or combinations of masonry hung on a metal structure. Then, after Andrew Carnegi
e managed to
produce good cheap steel, buildings were constructed out of that metal. More tha
n a few stories,
however, required another invention, the electric safety-brake-equipped elevator
conceived by
Elisha Otis. After Otis demonstrated his safety brake in 1887, tall buildings wi
th convenient access
proliferated, including the Burnham & Root, Adler & Sullivan, and Holabird & Roc
he buildings in
Chicago, all of which featured steel frames. Large buildings not only housed bus
inesses, but also
entertainments: the Chicago Auditorium (1890) was ten stories high and included
a hotel. After
1893 the Chicago city government prohibited buildings of more than ten stories,
a prohibition that
lasted for several decades.
If the cities of the late 1800s fulfilled Jefferson’s worst nightmares, they might
have been worse
had the crime and graft not been constrained by a new religious awakening.
Intellectuals, Reform, and the Foundations of Progressivism
The “age of reform,” as historian Richard Hofstadter put it, bloomed at the turn of
the century, but
it owed its heritage to the intellectuals of the 1880s reform movements. These r
eformers embodied
a worldview that saw man as inherently perfectible. Only his environment, especi
ally the roles cast
on him by society, prevented him (or her) from obtaining that perfect state.65 W
hereas many of the
intellectuals of the late nineteenth century came from mainstream Christian reli
gions, few—if
any—traced their roots to the more fundamentalist doctrines of the Baptists or tra
ditional
Methodists. Instead, they were the intellectual heirs of Emerson and Unitarianis
m, but with a
decidedly secular bent. Reformer Jane Addams, for example, had a Quaker backgrou
nd, but
absorbed little Christianity. “Christ don’t help me in the least…,” she claimed.66 After
her father
died and she fell into a horrendous depression, Addams gained no support from Ch
ristianity:
“When I am needing something more, I find myself approaching a crisis, & look rath
er wistfully to
my friends for help.”67 Henry Demarest Lloyd, whose series of Atlantic Monthly art
icles in 1881
made him the original muckraker, was born to a Dutch Reformed minister-turned-bo
okseller. Lloyd
himself was religious, though well educated (at Columbia). Like most of the earl
y reformers, he
had received a first-class education.
Indeed, the reformers almost always came from families of wealthy means, and wer
e people who
seldom experienced hardship firsthand. Mabel Dodge Luhan, the daughter of a Buff
alo banker,
attended all the best schools before coming to the conclusion that she could not
trust her thoughts,
only her senses. Lincoln Steffens’s father was an affluent merchant who could affo
rd to send his
son to universities in Europe, where he “acquired a taste for expensive clothes” and
“dabbled in
philosophy and aesthetics.”68 Upton Sinclair and Jack London proved exceptions to
this rule.
Sinclair’s family came from wealth on his mother’s side, but Sinclair’s father, a ruin
ed former
Southern aristocrat, had descended into alcoholism and supported the family by s
elling liquor, then
hats. Unlike most of the other reformer intellectuals, Sinclair actually worked,
selling dime novels
to put himself through Columbia University before turning out the muckraker’s call
to arms, The
Jungle. London, a socialist, adventurer, sailor, gold seeker, and famous novelis
t whose Call of the
Wild became a classic, had grown up poor, and had as a youth worked a wide range
of jobs. More
typical than either of these writers was Ida Tarbell, considered the original mu
ckraker, whose
father, Franklin, had a thriving oil tank-building business, providing her with
a first-class education
at the Sorbonne.
Another aspect of the social gospelers is worth mentioning here: with some two t
o three million
fathers absent from the home during the Civil War and hundreds of thousands of f
athers dead,
literally millions of young boys were raised in households of women. Rather than
learning
masculine behaviors, they had “been raised by mothers who taught nurturing and car
ing,” in the
process turning “to the ways of their mothers and took Christianity out of the hom
e to save the
world.”69 It is not a stretch to suggest that the casualty lists of Gettysburg and
Chancellorsville
produced a feminized, Progressive worldview among the emerging generation of ref
ormers.
Best known for his association with the phrase “social Darwinism,” Sumner’s views were
slightly
more complicated. Writing in the Independent in 1887, Sumner identified the cent
ral threat to the
nation as “plutocracy,” which was controlled by the wealthy who had the bourgeois ta
stes of the
middle class. Embracing Malthusian views of overpopulation, Sumner expressed con
cern for the
negative impact of charity and government policy, arguing in his “Forgotten Man” cha
racter
introduced in his 1884 book, What the Social Classes Owe to Each Other. The dang
er, was as
follows:
The type and formula of most schemes of philanthropy or humanitarianism is this:
A and B put
their heads together to decide what C shall be made to do for D. The radical vic
e of all these
schemes, from a sociological point of view, is that C is not allowed a voice in
the matter, and his
position, character, and interests, as well as the ultimate effects on society t
hrough C’s interests, are
entirely overlooked. I call C the Forgotten Man.70
Benevolence, he argued, stole resources from those who would actually use funds
to improve the
lot of all in society. “Every bit of capital,” he argued, “which is given to a shiftle
ss and inefficient
member of society, who makes no return for it, is diverted from a reproductive u
se; but if it was put
into reproductive use, it would have to be granted in wages to an efficient and
productive
laborer.”71 What the social classes “owed to each other” was to not create new impedim
ents to the
natural laws and laissez-faire capitalism that already functioned well.
Critics latched on to Sumner’s phrases, such as the “competition for life” and “struggle”
to apply
the natural science ideas of natural selection advanced by Charles Darwin. Yet S
umner had
specifically warned against plutocracy and acquisition for its own sake. To Sumn
er, social classes
best helped each other by performing their tasks with efficiency, honed by compe
tition. That did
not stop Sinclair from claiming that Sumner took “ghoulish delight” in “glorifying
commercialism,” or prevent historian Richard Hofstadter from calling Sumner a “Socia
l Darwinist”
in his 1944 book, Social Darwinism in American Thought.72 Like other intellectua
ls and
academics, Sumner ultimately relied on a scientific view of human behavior to ex
plain (and
defend) policy. And, like other intellectuals and academics, who at one time had
as their central
purpose the search for truth, Sumner had (at least in part) taken on the new voc
ation of social
moralist.73 The emergence of this class was a phenomenon made possible only by t
he fantastic
productive capabilities of capitalism, which provided the time and goods to allo
w people,
essentially, to think for a living.
Grover Cleveland, Presidential Giant
Perhaps because his terms were separated by the administration of the opposing p
arty under
Benjamin Harrison, or perhaps because he simply refrained from the massive types
of executive
intervention that so attract modern big-government-oriented scholars, Grover Cle
veland has been
pushed well down the list of greatness in American presidents as measured by mos
t modern
surveys (although in older polls of historians he routinely ranked in the top te
n). Republicans have
ignored him because he was a Democrat; Democrats downplayed his administration b
ecause he
governed like a modern Republican. Uncle Jumbo, as his nephews called him, had s
erved as mayor
of Buffalo, New York, in 1881, and the following year won election as governor o
f the state.
Cleveland’s rise to prominence was nothing short of meteoric: he claimed the mayor
ship of
Buffalo, the governorship of New York, and the presidency within a four-year per
iod.
Cleveland’s image has enjoyed a revival in the late twentieth century because of n
ew interest by
conservative and libertarian scholars who see in him one of the few presidents w
hose every action
seemed to be genuinely dictated by Constitutional principle. He was the last pre
sident to answer the
White House door himself or to write the checks to pay the White House bills. Di
splaying a
willingness to completely disregard either public opinion or Congressional influ
ence to do what he
thought morally and Constitutionally right, Cleveland supported the Dawes Severa
lty Act—which
turned out to be disastrous—and alienated many in his own party through his loyalt
y to the gold
standard. A man whose personal character, like that of his friendly New York riv
al, Theodore
Roosevelt, stood above all other considerations, Cleveland repeatedly squelched
attempts by
outsiders to influence his policies for political favors.
Above all, Cleveland saw himself as the guardian of the people’s money. He fought
to reduce the
tariff and to whittle down the pension system that had bloated government balanc
e sheets.
Cultivating a reputation in New York as “the veto governor,” Cleveland peppered ever
y veto,
whether to the legislators in Albany or, later, to their counterparts in Washing
ton, with principled
reasons for not acting based on a Beardian class-based reading of the Constituti
on. It must be
remembered, however, that the federal government of Cleveland’s era, leaving aside
the pensioners
and the Post Office, was tiny by modern comparisons. Congress did not have even
a single clerk in
1856, and fifteen years later Grant operated the executive branch of government
with a staff of
three assistants. The total federal bureaucracy, even including the Post Office
and customs
inspectors, numbered only about fifty thousand.74
In the election of 1884, Cleveland won a narrow victory over Republican James G.
Blaine of Maine
(219 to 182 electoral votes and 4.875 million to 4.852 million in the popular vo
te). A mere 600
votes in crucial New York would have given the election to Blaine. The campaign
had been one of
the dirtiest in American history: Blaine supporters accused Cleveland of coming
from the party of
“Rum, Romanism and Rebellion” (referring to the perceived affinity between immigrant
s and
alcohol, the Catholicism of many Democratic voters, and the Confederacy). The ch
arges backfired
on the Republicans by propelling Irish and Italians to the polls in large number
s. Blaine’s troops
also sought to tar Cleveland with the charge that he had fathered an illegitimat
e child, generating
the slogan, “Ma, Ma, Where’s my pa?” This related to a child named Oscar born to Maria
Halpin,
who she said belonged to Cleveland. The governor had never denied possibly fathe
ring the child,
but the woman’s record of promiscuity allowed for any of several men to be the fat
her. At any rate,
Cleveland agreed to provide for the boy, and eventually arranged for the child’s a
doption after the
mother drifted into drunkenness and insanity. He never maintained contact with t
he boy, or even
met him again after the adoption. In any event, the charges had failed to gain t
raction with the
voters.
Blaine, a notorious spoilsman, “wallowed in spoils like a rhinoceros at a pool,” com
plained New
York Evening Post editor Lawrence Godkin.75 In contrast, when a man approached t
he Cleveland
camp about purchasing documents that proved Blaine had had an affair, Cleveland
bought the
documents—then promptly destroyed them in front of the man, who nevertheless tried
to peddle
the story to the papers. Cleveland was not perfect. Like Rockefeller, he had pur
chased a substitute
during the Civil War, making him the first draft-dodger president, no matter the
legality of the
purchase. Nevertheless, draft evasion never seemed to damage Cleveland.
Once in office, Cleveland announced he would enforce the Pendleton Act scrupulou
sly, finding
allies in the new reform wing of the Republican Party. If anyone appreciated Hen
ry Adams’s
criticisms of legislators—“You can’t use tact with a Congressman! A Congressman is a h
og! You
must take a stick and hit him on the snout!”—it was Cleveland.76 When he assumed off
ice, he
found a system corrupt to the core. Temporary employees were shifted from job to
job within the
administration in what was called rotation, rather than eliminate unneeded posit
ions. (This put a
completely new twist on the Jacksonian concept of rotation in office!) Customs c
ollectors, postal
officials, and other federal bureaucrats recycled thousands of people through th
e system in this
manner: when one clerk making $1,800 was released, three more temporary employee
s making
$600 each were hired, while the original employee went into a queue to be rehire
d.
What made his reforms stick was the fact that Cleveland imposed the same standar
ds on his own
party as on the Republicans, who had just been kicked out of office. Only once d
id a delegation of
Democrats approach Cleveland about tossing a capable Republican from a position
in order to fill it
with a member of their own party, and the president dismissed them.
No battle demonstrated more clearly Cleveland’s determination to combat corruption
in
government than the fight over pensions, in which he took on a key part of the R
epublican voting
bloc, the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR). Founded by B. F. Stephenson in 1866,
this veterans’
organization had quickly become the most powerful special interest lobbying grou
p in the United
States. Membership was limited to those who had served during the Civil War, and
although the
GAR had built soldiers’ homes and managed to have Memorial Day declared a national
holiday,
the organization’s main raison d’être consisted of increasing the value of pensions an
d expanding
the number of those eligible for Civil War pensions.77 Although eligibility for
the pensions was
supposedly restricted to those suffering from disabilities in military service,
congressmen
encouraged fraud by introducing private pension bills for constituents.
Presidents, not wishing to alienate voters, simply signed off on the legislation—u
ntil Cleveland,
who not only inspected the claims but also rejected three out of four. One claim
ant had broken his
leg picking dandelions, yet wanted a government pension; another had a heart pro
blem fourteen
years after the war’s end; and another wanted recompense for injuries received twe
nty-three years
before the war from the explosion of a Fourth of July cannon. Still others had d
eserted or mustered
out with no evidence of disability until long after the war, when Congress opene
d the federal
Treasury.
By confronting the pension question head on, Cleveland addressed an outrageous s
candal, but one
cloaked in the rhetoric of the war. In 1866 just over 125,000 veterans received
pensions accounting
for an annual total of $13.5 million from the Treasury. But seven years later th
e numbers had risen
to 238,411, despite the fact that many of the pensioners were getting older and
should have been
dying off!78 Supported by—indeed, agitated by—the GAR, pensioners lobbied Congress f
or everwidening
definitions of who was a veteran, and to make provisions for widows, orphans, an
d
ultimately even Confederate veterans. When the pension numbers finally began to
decline (which
should have occurred in the 1870s), Congress introduced the Arrears of Pensions
Act, which
allowed claimants to discover wounds or diseases, then file retroactively for pe
nsion benefits that
had been granted when they served. “Men who suffered an attack of fever while on a
ctive duty
became ‘convinced’ the fever was in fact the root cause of every ill they suffered s
ince separation
from the service,” observed Cleveland’s biographer.79 New claims shot up from 19,000
per year to
19,000 per month.
Cleveland would have none of it. He had no reluctance to give legitimate pension
ers what was due
them, but he considered most of the claims an outrage. Congress had learned to e
nact special
pension bills late on Friday nights—on one night alone the Senate enacted four hun
dred special
pension grants. Worse, each “bill” required that Cleveland sign or veto it personall
y. This absorbed
monumental amounts of the president’s time and energy. Cleveland had enough and ve
toed as
many as he could, finally delivering the death blow to the bogus pension system
in 1887. His veto
of the so-called Blair bill, which represented a massive expansion of federal be
nefits, was
sustained. After that, a chastened Congress submitted no more pension legislatio
n.
In 1888 the Republicans nominated Benjamin Harrison, the grandson of William Hen
ry Harrison
and the second of four pairs of family presidents (the Adamses, the Harrisons, t
he Roosevelts, and
the Bushes). “Little Ben” stood five feet six inches tall, was strong yet chubby, an
d grew up on a
farm. He attended Miami University in Ohio, the “Yale of the West,” then settled wit
h his wife,
Carrie, in Indianapolis. There he practiced law and worked a second job as a cou
rt crier that paid
$2.50 a day. The couple had a son and daughter (a third child died in infancy),
and Harrison made
important political connections. When the Civil War came, Harrison was a colonel
in the infantry,
fighting at Atlanta and Nashville and earning a promotion to brigadier general.
Returning as a war
hero, Harrison nevertheless lost a race for the governorship of Indiana in 1876,
but four years later
he was elected by the state legislature to the U.S. Senate.
Garfield offered him a cabinet spot, but he declined because he had just taken h
is seat as a senator.
From the floor of the upper house, he impressed the Republican hierarchy with hi
s stinging
criticisms of Cleveland. When James G. Blaine refused to be the Republican candi
date in 1888,
Harrison’s name came forward as having the prerequisite military and political exp
erience.
Republican Interlude
Whereas Grover Cleveland had antagonized many Democrats in his first term, Harri
son ran a
remarkably error-free campaign. Running from his front porch in Indianapolis, wh
ere he granted
interviews and spoke to the more than 300,000 people who came to see him, Harris
on emphasized
the tariff. As had been the case four years earlier, the margin of victory in 18
88 was remarkably
slim. For example, Harrison received only 2,300 more votes in his home state tha
n had Cleveland,
who lost Connecticut by 336 votes. In the end Cleveland learned the hard way tha
t America is a
republic, not a democracy: he won the popular vote, but Harrison became presiden
t with a majority
in the electoral college (this also happened in 1824, 1876, and 2000).
The electoral situation in America was quite simple: the two parties geographica
lly split the nation
east of the Mississippi. Whereas Republicans could count on the votes of freedme
n—a shrinking
vote because of intimidation, literacy tests, and poll taxes in the South—the Demo
crats in the North
drew support from city immigrants, debtor groups angry at hard money, and from l
abor. Cleveland
had offended the second group of Democratic voters with his monetary policies, t
hrowing a wild
card into the deck. With this sectional division, from 1876 to 1896, the West, i
ncluding parts of the
Old Northwest as well as the new plains areas and Pacific states, became the ful
crum on which
elections swung. Historian Paul Kleppner has pinned down the swing areas to spec
ific counties
within some of these states, and further identified the source of change as esse
ntially religious,
between Catholics and two variants of Lutherans.80 No doubt these ethnocultural
factors existed,
but probably they shaped, and were shaped by, other important views. The fact wa
s, white
Southerners wanted nothing to do with the party of emancipation, and freedmen an
d veterans of the
Union Army would never vote for the Democrats. That put each election into the h
ands of farmers
and immigrants who saw much to applaud and condemn in each party. Republicans st
ill stood for
the tariff and the gold standard, which seemed oppressive to low-income groups.
Democrats
wanted cheap money, which frightened eastern businessmen. Each party contained a
dvocates of
patronage reform. Thus, the elections were close, contested, and often came down
to which
candidate had the best party machine in key states on election day.
Harrison, therefore, entered the presidency as had many of his immediate predece
ssors—without a
clear mandate. In 1889 the Republicans had a ten-seat advantage in the Senate an
d a bare twelveseat
majority in the House. Harrison’s cabinet—entirely Presbyterian, with four Missouria
ns and
several war heroes—was politically obscure. Worse, he had ignored the party bosses
, touching off
an immediate battle between Congress and the president over spoils. When conside
ring John Hay,
Lincoln’s private secretary, for an appointment, Harrison observed, “This would be a
fine
appointment,…but there isn’t any politics in it.”81 Seeking to sustain the patronage r
eforms,
Harrison placed Theodore Roosevelt on the Civil Service Commission, whereupon th
e New Yorker
promptly irritated and aggravated his fellow members with his energetic but abra
sive style. As
president, Harrison hoped to restrain the growth of government. But his administ
ration overall
constituted a remarkable inversion of the parties’ positions. He signed the inflat
ionary Sherman
Silver Purchase Act and enthusiastically supported the Sherman Antitrust Act (bo
th signed in July
1890). This was ironic, in that Grover Cleveland, Harrison’s Democratic opponent,
essentially
supported the gold standard and was more favorable toward business than Harrison
. Yet neither
bill’s passage came as a surprise.
Sherman’s antitrust legislation had overwhelming support (52 to 1 in the Senate, a
nd passed
without dissent in the House). The bill lacked specifics, which was common in st
ate antitrust law
and corporate regulation, but it played to the public’s demand that government “do s
omething”
about unfair business practices. Yet backers of the Sherman Act, with language p
rohibiting
combinations “in restraint of trade” and its focus on the trust as a business organi
zation, unwittingly
placed more power than ever in the hands of big business. Since the railroad age
, businesses had
grown by attracting capital through sales of stocks. Multiplying the number of s
tockholder-owners,
in turn, required that professional managers take over the operations of the com
panies. Obsessed
with efficiency and cost control (which then meant profits), the managers looked
for ways to
essentially guarantee prices. They tried a number of unsuccessful forms, includi
ng pools, whereby
competitors would jointly contribute to a member who agreed to maintain a higher
price, but who
lost money doing so, and territorial enforcement of markets, in which members wo
uld agree not to
compete past certain geographic boundaries. Then there was the famous horizontal
combination,
which is the form of business most people associate with monopoly control. Under
a horizontal
combination a competitor seeks to eliminate all other firms in the field. Rockef
eller’s Standard Oil
was accused of acquiring competing refineries to achieve such a monopoly.
Unfortunately for the monopolists—but luckily for the public—none of these arrangeme
nts ever
achieved anything but the most temporary gains. At the time that Rockefeller’s Sta
ndard Oil
controlled upward of 90 percent of the refining capacity, oil prices were steadi
ly falling. If there
was a theoretical monopoly price to be gained, no company in the late 1800s had
successfully
demonstrated it in practice, and certainly none had capitalized on one through h
igher prices.82
Indeed, the best evidence that none of these arrangements worked is that firms h
ad to constantly
keep coming up with other gimmicks. One of the most hated was the trust company,
the brainchild
of Standard Oil attorney S.C.T. Dodd, who suggested using a standard legal fiduc
iary device to
manage the property of another to trade stock in a voting trust. In a trust arra
ngement, a company
creates a new business organization that exchanges shares of its trust certifica
tes for shares in the
stock of the acquired companies. Essentially, smaller businesses give 100 percen
t control of their
company to a trust in return for trust certificates of equal value. The owners o
f any new firms the
trust company acquires do not lose money, but do lose control. Standard Oil form
ed its trust in
Ohio in 1879, and within three years forty companies had exchanged their stock f
or Standard Oil
trust shares. It was all quite reasonable to Rockefeller. Soon, large-scale trus
ts existed in almost
every manufacturing industry, including sugar, whiskey, paint, lead, and petrole
um.
To legislators this apparatus seemed dishonest and shifty—a mere paper creation to
hide control by
“wealthy monopolists.”83 Congress thus felt compelled to pass the Sherman Act to con
strain these
entities, at which time corporations merely turned to another form of organizati
on called a holding
company, which acquired special chartering legislation from the state government
(that many trusts
lacked) allowing one company to hold stock in another. New Jersey liberalized it
s general
incorporation laws in 1889 permitting companies to “hold” other companies, even if t
he “held”
companies were located in other states. Within a decade, several companies estab
lished themselves
in New Jersey, including the newly recapitalized Standard Oil.
Long before that, however, professional managers had already started to abandon
the horizontal
combination and the trust in favor of yet another, far more efficient and profit
able structure, the
vertical combination.84 Rather than concerning themselves with competitors, the
vertical
combinations focused exclusively on achieving efficiencies in their own products
by acquiring
sources of raw materials, transportation, warehousing, and sales. Standard Oil,
for example, not
only had its own oil in the ground, but also made its own barrels, refined the o
il itself, had its own
railroad cars and ships, and literally controlled the oil from the ground to its
final form as refined
kerosene. Similarly, Gustavus Swift, the meatpacker, owned his own cattle ranche
s, transportation
networks, slaughterhouses, refrigerated railroad cars, and even wholesale meat d
istributors.85
Managers could take advantage of the top-to-bottom control to reduce costs and,
above all, plan for
the acquisition of new raw materials and factories.
In the 1890s, the Sherman Act was only marginally employed against corporations,
but as it came
into use, it drove firms out of the inefficient trusts and into the more efficie
nt vertical combinations.
With trusts prohibited, even those firms not inclined to adopt vertical combinat
ions abandoned
other forms of organization. Sherman, paradoxically, forced American business in
to an
organizational structure that made it larger and more powerful than it otherwise
would have been,
funneling the corporation into the most efficient form it could possibly take, m
aking the average
industrial firm several times larger than if it had adopted either a horizontal
combination or a trust
structure. Thanks to Sherman, American industry embarked on the first great merg
er wave toward
truly giant-sized companies. The most famous of these was Morgan’s reorganization
of Carnegie
Steel, which, when merged with John Warne Gates’s American Wire Company and other
smaller
businesses, became U.S. Steel, the world’s first billion-dollar corporation. Most
of the mergers took
place under the administration of McKinley, but it was the Sherman Act that had
slammed shut
alternative paths.86
Meanwhile, Sherman’s other bill, the Silver Purchase Act, was nearly fatal to the
nation’s economy
in Harrison’s tenure. Sherman authorized the government to purchase 4.5 million ou
nces of silver a
month at the stipulated price of 161?2 to 1—not enough to ensure the inflation the
silverites
wanted, but just enough to turn the arbitragers loose. Over the subsequent three
years the
government purchased $147 million worth of silver, often paying for it in gold,
bringing into play
Gresham’s Law, which postulated that “bad money drives out good.” Prosilver forces set
into
motion a dynamic of arbitrage that would encourage speculators to exchange cheap
silver for
undervalued gold. Harrison would escape blame for the brunt of the damage—which oc
curred
under the unfortunate Cleveland’s second term—but he had set those forces loose.
One of Harrison’s most successful programs involved his rebuilding of U.S. naval p
ower. When
Harrison took office, a series of modern steel cruisers had been authorized (in
1885) by Congress—
the so-called A, B, C, D ships (Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, and Dolphin)—to suppleme
nt five
medium-sized cruisers, two large cruisers, and two battleships. But at the time
Harrison assumed
office, only the Atlanta and Boston were seaworthy, and soon the nation was stun
ned by a major
storm that devastated three ships, or 10 percent of the active fleet, including
the Trenton, the navy’s
newest vessel aside from the A, B, C, D ships. Brigadier General Benjamin Frankl
in Tracy, the
secretary of the navy, took the initiative to reinvigorate the navy, beginning w
ith support for the
Naval War College and naming Alfred Thayer Mahan as its president. As soon as th
e Chicago
became operational, Tracy had its squadron perform in several displays designed
to raise public
awareness and generate congressional support. Even so, the United States, with t
he new cruisers,
would be, at best, the twelfth-ranked naval power in the world, behind “powerhouse
s” like Chile
and Turkey!
Independent of the Department of the Navy, a commission called the Naval Policy
Board had come
to similar conclusions, advocating a navy that would rank second only to Great B
ritain’s. The result
was the Naval Act of 1890, which authorized the Indiana, Massachusetts, and Oreg
on, all 10,000-
ton battleships, supplemented with other large cruisers. To meet the new demand,
the navy
negotiated a contract with Carnegie Steel for armor plating. Although Congress d
id not fund every
ship, by 1899, Harrison had jumped the U.S. Navy up to the sixth position in the
world, behind the
traditional European powers of Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, and Germany
. Within just a few
more years, new construction programs would lift the American fleet up to the se
cond spot—just
behind Britain.
Seed Corn and Cleveland’s Return
Harrison might have won reelection if he’d had only the sour economy to contend wi
th. Other
factors worked in favor of Cleveland, who squared off against him again. The sum
mer of 1892
brought several bloody strikes, including the Coeur d’Alene violence in Idaho and
the Homestead
strike. Despite Harrison’s prosilver attitudes, the cheap-money forces were not as
suaged. The
McKinley Tariff alienated southerners and westerners; the Sherman Act had laid t
he groundwork
for upheaval in the economy.
The Populist Party nominated James B. Weaver of Iowa, who received 1 million vot
es. In an
election decided by 380,000 votes out of 10.6 million, the Populists split the s
ilver vote enough to
ensure Cleveland’s election. In the electoral college, Cleveland’s victory was more
pronounced.
Harrison spent his final months unsuccessfully attempting to annex Hawaii. As th
e last Civil War
general to hold office, Harrison had pushed the United States onto the world sta
ge—a position it
would grab enthusiastically in 1898.
In office for the second time, Cleveland again proved a model of character and f
irmness on issues.
His seed corn veto—a prime act of political courage in that he had everything to g
ain by signing it
and nothing to lose—blocked the provision of millions of dollars in loans for midw
estern farmers
to buy seed; Cleveland said that no such federal power was sanctioned by the Con
stitution. Private
charity should take care of the farmers, he argued, and it did. Private organiza
tions raised many
times the amount that the feds would have provided.
Cleveland nonetheless failed to contain the bloating federal bureaucracy. By the
time William
McKinley entered the White House, Cleveland’s administration had seen the number o
f Civil
Service jobs doubled. Whether or not the new professional civil servants were mo
re qualified, the
Pendleton Act had dramatically increased their ranks.
Of more immediate concern to Cleveland was the massive gold drain and collapse i
n railroad
stocks, which sent the economy into a full-fledged panic in 1893. In a month one
fourth of the
nation’s railroads had met with financial disaster, dissipating $2.5 billion in ca
pital and sending
waves through the economy that culminated in more than 2 million unemployed. Mor
e than six
hundred banks failed, along with mines, factories, and brokerage houses. At the
peak of the
depression, Jacob Coxey, an Ohio reformer, set out from Massillon, Ohio, with tw
enty thousand
marchers for Washington, although some came from as far away as the West Coast.
They planned
to stage a protest at the nation’s capital. The hungry “soldiers” in “Coxey’s Army” descend
d on
Washington and attempted to force their way into the Capitol, whereupon police c
harged and
scattered the marchers.
To continue paying artificially high prices for silver threatened to bankrupt th
e U.S. Treasury.
Cleveland therefore called a special session of Congress for the purpose of repe
aling the Sherman
Silver Purchase Act. Silver interests demonized Cleveland. Pitchfork Ben Tillman
, a fellow
Democrat campaigning for the Senate, called Cleveland “an old bag of beef,” who was
acting
worse than “when Judas betrayed Christ.”87 Only later was Cleveland praised by the p
ress for
standing firm on gold. Although the silver act was repealed, outstanding silver
notes continued to
be presented for redemption in gold. In 1892 the U.S. gold reserve was $84 milli
on, but by 1894 it
had fallen to $69 million.
It appeared the economy might stagger to a recovery when, in 1895, a new panic s
wept through the
banking community. More than $20 million in gold had flowed out of the Treasury
in just over a
week. To the rescue rode Morgan. He had spoken by telephone to Cleveland about a
massive loan
to the government when the president mentioned that there was only $9 million le
ft in the New
York subtreasury. Morgan, through his sources, “was aware of a large [$10 million]
draft about to
be presented for payment,” which essentially would have put the U.S. government in
default.88 A
default would have triggered a nationwide panic and, essentially, bankrupted the
government.
Morgan recommended immediately forming a syndicate with European bankers to buy
3.5 million
ounces of gold for $65 million in long-term bonds. For literally saving the nati
onal economy,
Morgan and Cleveland were both heaped with abuse—Morgan for the profits he made
(approximately $7 million) and Cleveland for having cut a deal with the gold dev
il. Lost in the
debate was the fact that Morgan was already wealthy, and the collapse of the U.S
. government
would have only inconvenienced him. He could have sailed for England or France w
ith his
remaining fortune. Instead, he acted in concert with a sensible president to sav
e the country from
the silverites’ idiocy.
The economy and the silver issue dominated the national parties’ conventions in 18
96. Silver
Democrats continued to heap scorn on Cleveland, with Tillman taking the Senate f
loor to call him a
“besotted tyrant.”89 Whatever hopes Cleveland had of running for a third term were d
ashed at the
Democratic convention in Chicago, where the Cleveland supporters saw the streets
lined with
crowds sporting silver badges and waving silver banners. A new star now took the
political stage,
Congressman William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska. Bryan had run for the U.S. Senat
e in 1894 and
been defeated, but he had used his time out of politics to reach wide audiences
on the Chautauqua
speaking circuit. A devout Christian and stirring orator, Bryan captivated the 1
896 Democratic
convention with his famous “Cross of Gold” speech in which he used the metaphor of C
hrist’s
crucifixion to describe Americans’ enslavement to hard money. The convention voted
two to one
for a plank calling for taking the country off the gold standard. It sickened Cl
eveland, who years
later still referred to “Bryanism”: “I do not regard it as Democracy,” he told a reporte
r.90
Cleveland’s departure from American politics ensured a string of defeats for the D
emocrats, and he
was the last small-government candidate the Democrats would ever run.
Inching Toward a Modern America
Harrison and Cleveland saw innumerable changes in the nation in their combined t
welve-year
tenure. By the time of Cleveland’s second term, telephones were widely available,
although the
president still functioned without a full-time operator, instead relying on a te
legrapher assigned to
the chief executive. Most of the daily executive office work was carried out by
three clerks, a pair
of doormen, and a handful of military aides and attachés. Harrison met with his ca
binet twice a
week, but the days when a president could run the government single-handedly fro
m the White
House were all but gone.
Something else had passed too. The Civil War generation had largely disappeared
during
Harrison’s term. In 1893 alone, Jefferson Davis, David Porter, William T. Sherman,
Lincoln’s
former vice president Hannibal Hamlin, Supreme Court Justice Lucius Q. C. Lamar,
James Blaine,
and Rutherford Hayes all died. In their place came a new generation of politicia
ns, including Teddy
Roosevelt, William Jennings Bryan, and Woodrow Wilson, and industrialists like H
enry Ford,
Henry Leland, and Billy Durant, all born during or after the Civil War and too y
oung to remember
it. For this generation, “waving the bloody shirt” would not only prove ineffective
(at least in the
North), but it would also appear to many Americans as anachronistic.
William McKinley was perhaps the first president ever to even obliquely apprecia
te the staggering
changes that had occurred. He captured the direction of the new reality with his
pithy campaign
slogan, “A Full Dinner Pail.” Far from the end of the Van Buren-originated spoils sy
stem, the post-
Pendleton era in American politics marked a malignant mutation of the concept of
patronage,
pushing it down one level further, directly to the voters themselves.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
“Building Best, Building Greatly,” 1896–1912
Average Americans at the Turn of the Century
A popular 1901 magazine, Current Literature, collated available census data abou
t American males
at the turn of the century. It reported that the typical American man was Britis
h by ancestry, with
traces of German; was five feet nine inches tall (or about two inches taller tha
n average European
males); and had three living children and one who had died in infancy. A Protest
ant, the average
American male was a Republican, subscribed to a newspaper, and lived in a two-st
ory, seven-room
house. His estate was valued at about $5,000, of which $750 was in a bank accoun
t or other
equities. He drank more than seven gallons of liquor a year, consumed seventy-fi
ve gallons of beer,
and smoked twenty pounds of tobacco. City males earned about $750 a year, farmer
s about $550,
and they paid only 3 percent of their income in taxes. Compared to their Europea
n counterparts,
Americans were vastly better off, leading the world with a per capita income of
$227 as opposed to
the British male’s $181 and a Frenchman’s $161—partially because of lower taxes (Briti
sh men
paid 9 percent of their income, and the French, 12 percent).1
Standard income for industrial workers averaged $559 per year; gas and electrici
ty workers earned
$543 per year; and even lower-skilled labor was receiving $484 a year.2 Of cours
e, people in
unusual or exceptional jobs could make a lot more money. Actress Sarah Bernhardt
in 1906 earned
$1 million for her movies, and heavyweight boxer Jack Johnson took home a purse
of $5,000 when
he won the Heavyweight Boxing Championship of 1908. Even more “normal” (yet still sp
ecialized)
jobs brought high earnings. The manager of a farm-implement department could com
mand $2,000
per year in 1905 or an actuary familiar with western insurance could make up to
$12,000 annually,
according to ads in the New York Times.3
What did that buy? An American in 1900 spent $30 a year on clothes, $82 for food
, $4 for doctors
and dentists, and gave $9 to religion and welfare. A statistic that might horrif
y modern readers,
however, shows that tobacco expenditures averaged more than $6, or more than per
sonal care and
furniture put together! A quart of milk went for 6 cents, a pound of pork for ne
arly 17 cents, and a
pound of rice for 8 cents; for entertainment, a good wrestling match in South Ca
rolina cost 25
cents, and a New York opera ticket to Die Meistersinger cost $1.50.
A working woman earned about $365 a year, and she spent $55 on clothes, $78 on f
ood, and $208
on room and board.4 Consider the example of Mary Kennealy, an unmarried Irish Am
erican clerk
in Boston, who made $7 a week (plus commissions) and shared a bedroom with one o
f the children
in the family she boarded with. (The family of seven, headed by a loom repairman
, earned just over
$1,000 a year, and had a five-room house with no electricity or running water.)
At work Kennealy
was not permitted to sit; she put in twelve to sixteen hours a day during a holi
day season. Although
more than 80 percent of the clerks were women, they were managed by men, who tru
sted them
implicitly. One executive said, “We never had but four dishonest girls, and we’ve ha
d to discharge
over 40 boys in the same time.” “Boys smoke and lose at cards,” the manager dourly not
ed.5
Time Line
1896:
McKinley elected
1898:
Spanish-American War; Hawaii annexed; Open Door Note
1900:
McKinley reelected
1901:
McKinley assassinated; Theodore Roosevelt becomes president
1902:
Northern Securities suit; Newlands Reclamation Act
1903:
Acquisition of Panama Canal Zone; Roosevelt Corollary delivered
1904:
Roosevelt elected president
1908:
Taft elected president
1909–11:
Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy
1911:
Standard Oil Supreme Court Decision
1912:
Roosevelt forms Bull Moose/Progressive Party; Wilson elected president
Until 1900, employees like Kennealy usually took electric trolleys to work, alth
ough Boston
opened the first subway in the United States in 1898, and low-paid workers could
enjoy the many
public parks—Boston was among the nation’s leaders in playground and park space. Bic
ycles,
though available, remained expensive (about a hundred dollars, or more than a qu
arter of a year’s
wage for someone like Kennealy), and thus most people still depended on either c
ity transportation
or their own feet to get them to work.
Nevertheless, the economic progress was astonishing. Here were working-class wom
en whose
wages and lifestyle exceeded that of most European men by the end of Teddy Roose
velt’s second
term. The improvement in the living conditions of average Americans was so overw
helming that
even one of the godfathers of communism, Leon Trotsky, who lived in New York Cit
y just a few
years later, in 1917, recalled:
We rented an apartment in a workers’ district, and furnished it on the installment
plan. That
apartment, at $18 a month, was equipped with all sorts of conveniences that we E
uropeans were
quite unused to: electric lights, gas cooking-range, bath, telephone, automatic
service-elevator, and
even a chute for the garbage.6
This prosperity baffled socialists like the German August Bebel, who predicted i
n 1907,
“Americans will be the first to usher in a Socialist republic.”7 Yet by the year 200
0, two historians
of socialism in America concluded, “No socialist candidate has ever become a vehic
le for major
protest in the United States.”8
The prosperity that short-circuited the socialists and dumbfounded the communist
s was the end
product of a thirty-year spurt, marred only by the two panics. During that burst
, American steel
producers climbed atop world markets. National wealth doubled in the 1890s, and
in 1892 the
United States attained a favorable balance of trade. By 1908, American investmen
ts overseas
reached $2.5 billion, and would soar to $3.5 billion in less than a decade. The
president of the
American Bankers’ Association boasted in 1898, “We hold…three of the winning cards in
the
game of commercial greatness, to wit—iron, steel, and coal.”9
The excesses of the Gilded Age, both outrageous and mesmerizing, concealed, as m
ost people
knew, a widespread prosperity generated by the most amazing engine of growth eve
r seen. The
number of patents, which passed the one-million mark in 1911, rewarded invention
and innovation.
Brilliant engineers like Carnegie’s Julian Kennedy had more than half of his hundr
ed patents in
actual operation in Carnegie’s steel mills during his lifetime. American innovatio
n enabled factory
workers to maintain rising real wages, enabled agriculture to consistently expan
d production, and
generated enough wealth that waves of immigrants came in, and kept on coming. It
was something
Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle could not explain: if things were so bad, why did peop
le so desperately
try to get here?
“Professionalism” and “scientific” became the buzzwords of the day. To many, science had
become
the new god, and the theories of Darwin, Freud, and Marx convinced people that o
nly those things
one could prove through experimentation were valid—despite the fact that Darwin, M
arx, or Freud
had never proven anything scientifically. Even Roosevelt, usually levelheaded if
somewhat
impulsive, called for “scientific management” of the tariff. Although Frederick W. T
aylor did not
introduce his concepts of labor effectiveness until 1915, when he wrote Principl
es of Scientific
Management, the bible of productivity studies, he had already perfected his prac
tices at Midvale
Steel Company. Everywhere, however, science and professionalism were mated to th
e reform
impulse to convince the public that a solution existed to all problems.
Two of the most prominent writers of the day, Walter Lippmann and William James,
contributed to
the broadening consensus that man was in control. Lippmann, publishing Drift and
Mastery in
1914, celebrated the introduction of scientific discipline into human affairs. A
s his title implied, all
previous human history had been “drift,” until saved by the planners. James, who wro
te Principles
of Psychology (1890) and The Will to Believe (1897), introduced the philosophy o
f pragmatism in
which man controlled his own fate. “Truth happens to an idea,” James argued in Pragm
atism
(1907): “It becomes true, is made true by events.”10 It was deliciously ironic: by h
is own
definition, James “invented” the “truth” of pragmatism!
James shared with Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson the Progressive view tha
t
government should reside in the hands of “true men” and trusted reformers who could
focus their
“battle-instinct” on the social issues of the day.11 Like Roosevelt’s, James’s father ha
d come from
wealth, providing the time and leisure to denounce Americans’ worship of “the bitch-
goddess
SUCCESS,” even though he obsessively pursued money himself.12
William James absorbed his father’s writings (Henry James worked for Brook Farm fo
under
George Ripley). He also was exposed to the ideas of European intellectuals he me
t on trips to the
Continent. After settling on psychology as a field, the young man expressed an i
nterest in studying
“ghosts, second sight, spiritualism, & all sorts of hobgoblins.”13 Yet despite his t
hirst for God and
his fascination with the supernatural, he steadily moved further away from spiri
tuality, seeking to
satisfy the “urgent demand of common sense.”14 The result was his Principles of Psyc
hology,
which addressed issues of personal consciousness, the expression of one’s self to
others, and of the
necessity for action causing experiences “in the direction of habits you aspire to
gain.”15 James’s
famous Pragmatism (1907) was the culmination of his attempt to link human action
to eternal
dispositions. Beliefs, he maintained, were really “rules for action,” which often le
d him to support
social reform and to oppose the war in the Philippines.16
On the other end of the spectrum of religious/spiritual thought in the late 1800
s came a new wave
of cults that spread through the nation under the auspices of Christianity—all wel
l outside the
mainstream of traditional Biblical teachings. Mary Baker Eddy’s Christian Science
thrived during
this era, as did other mind cure/New Thought doctrines that incorporated pseudow
itchcraft
practices like Eddy’s “Malicious Animal Magnetism,” whereby a follower could inflict o
ccult harm
on others at a distance.17 Theosophy, with overtones of Hinduism and Asian mysti
cism, also
surged at this time. Perhaps the most rapidly growing sect, started by Charles T
aze Russell, was the
Watch Tower Bible Society, otherwise known as the Jehovah’s Witnesses. Russell had
come out of
Adventist influences, but diverted sharply from the teachings of Ellen White to
claim that God had
two sons, Jesus and Lucifer.
A virtual who’s who of mystical and religious figures were born between 1874 and 1
890, including
Harry Houdini, Aleister Crowley, Edgar Cayce, Father Divine, Aimee Semple McPher
son, and H.
P. Lovecraft. They reflected a continued trend away from the intellectual and ac
ademic search for
God posed by thinkers like James. Yet the nature of their ideas necessarily tend
ed to cut them off
from mainstream social action through government. Indeed, rather than attracting
the emotional,
esoteric followers who gravitated to Father Divine and Mary Baker Eddy, the Prog
ressives found a
legion of willing allies in a different camp, journalists. After all, journalism
had once been the
home of religious newspapers, and a few of the sect newspapers not only survived
but flourished,
including the Christian Science Monitor.
In general, journalism had secularized at a shocking rate by the late 1800s. The
separation of fact
from partisanship had imposed on newspapers a little-understood requirement that
they also cleave
fact from values. So journalism returned to the notions of science, planning, an
d human control
already prevailing in government and business. Typical of the new journalistic P
rogressives was
Walter Lippmann. A former socialist—indeed, the founder of the Harvard Socialist C
lub—
Lippmann served as Lincoln Steffens’s secretary. By the early 1900s, however, he h
ad abandoned
his socialism in favor of more moderate Progressivism, supporting Teddy Roosevel
t in 1912.
Despite many similarities in their views, Lippmann and James came from different
eras.
Lippmann’s generation came on the tail end of the mystic boom, and included Babe R
uth (born
1895), Sinclair Lewis (born 1885), Irving Berlin (born 1888), Al Capone (born 18
99), and F. Scott
Fitzgerald (born 1896). A generation straddled by wars, it differed significantl
y from William
James’s, whose earlier generation included William McKinley, Woodrow Wilson, Frede
rick
Taylor, and Booker T. Washington. Lippmann and James did share a certain relativ
istic belief that
no value could exist for long. Whatever proved effective today would still be su
bject to time and
place, and therefore not valid as eternal truth.
Intellectuals may have bought the new pragmatism and secular scientific approach
to life’s
challenges, but middle America had not. Jean Pierre Godet, a Belgian immigrant i
n Cedar Falls,
Iowa, reflected the turn-of-the-century faith that still gripped most Americans
with this simple
prayer:
Dear God, thanks for Cedar Falls and all 391 residents [and for] this good piece
of farmland two
miles outside of town. From there I can watch the rest of the people with a litt
le perspective. I’d
like to learn to be like the best of them and avoid the bad habits of the worst
of them. I’d like to pay
off my bank mortgage as fast as I can and still have time to sit down with my ne
ighbors…. And if
You don’t mind, I think I’ll keep the mortgage in the family Bible…[to] let You remind
me that I
have some debts to pay…while I remember that honesty is the never-ending rehearsal
of those who
want to be the friends of God and the 391 people in the good little section of t
he Kingdom where
we live.18
Citizens in Godet’s “little section” of Cedar Falls exulted in sharing their freedom w
ith others. Life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness could never be impositions or values foist
ed on unwilling
recipients. Quite the contrary, they were the embodiment of Americanism. “I have f
allen in love
with American names,” Stephen Vincent Benét once wrote. “The sharp names that never ge
t fat,
the Snakeskin titles of mining claims, the Plumed War-bonnet of Medicine Hat, Tu
cson and
Deadwood and Lost Mule Flat.”19 The words of immigrants like Godet, “I love America
for giving
so many of us the right to dream a new dream,” were as lost on the muckrakers as t
hey were on
many modern historians obsessed by class, race, and gender oppression.20 Yet the
y have never
been lost on those who would lead: “An American,” John F. Kennedy said decades later
, “by nature
is an optimist. He is experimental, an inventor and builder, who builds best whe
n called upon to
build greatly.”21
Operating under such assumptions, overseas expansion—whether in Hawaii, Panama, or
Cuba—
could prove only beneficial to whatever people were assimilated. Consequently, t
he era of
American imperialism could just as easily be relabeled the era of optimism. Emer
ging from the
lingering effects of a depression, still healing from the ravages of the Civil W
ar, and divided over a
broad spectrum of issues, Americans nevertheless remained a people of vision and
unselfishness.
The liberties they enjoyed belonged by right, they thought, to everyone. If mani
fest destiny itself
was dead, the concept of an American presence in the world, of Americans who “buil
d greatly,”
had only just started.
Major McKinley
Save Cleveland, few American politicians have so consistently upheld high standa
rds of personal
character, and yet at the same time so consistently been on the wrong side of im
portant issues, as
William McKinley. Born in Niles, Ohio (1843), and raised in Poland, Ohio, McKinl
ey absorbed a
sense of spiritual design for his life from his Methodist mother. In this he res
embled Lincoln,
convinced that God had important plans for his life, and he professed his Christ
ian faith at age
sixteen. He also inherited from his mother a strong abolitionist sentiment and a
commitment to the
Union. When the Civil War came, McKinley was working in his hometown, but he qui
ckly joined
the Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiment under the-then major Rutherford B. Hayes, w
hom he greatly
admired. “Application, not brilliance, carried him,” remarked his biographer, and ce
rtainly
McKinley displayed an appreciation for doing the little things right.22 When opp
ortunity came, he
literally grabbed it by the reins.
Assigned to commissary duty, at the Battle of Antietam, McKinley grew concerned
about his
regiment, which had left at daybreak, when he saw stragglers returning to camp.
Reasoning that his
comrades were probably under fire and without supplies, he organized a group of
wagons, one of
which he drove himself, to carry food, coffee, and other supplies to the front.
Racing the horses
through the blizzard of musket and cannon fire, McKinley provided welcome ration
s to his
regiment, earning him a battlefield promotion to lieutenant. Before the end of t
he war, he was
further promoted to captain, then major. Hence he remained, from that time on, M
ajor McKinley to
his friends and admirers.
Returning to Ohio after the war, McKinley met his wife, Ida—like Lemonade Lucy Hay
es, an
ardent prohibitionist—further instilling in him another Progressive notion that ha
d started to
influence many of the intellectuals and politicians of the day. Self-effacing, g
enuinely unaffected
by money and its lures, and deeply committed to his sickly wife, McKinley went i
nto law in
Canton, where his penchant for taking cases from groups other lawyers often igno
red, like the
Masons and Catholics, attracted the attention of the Republican Party. He won a
seat in the U.S.
House of Representatives in 1876, joining such future political notables as Joe
Cannon and James
Garfield alongside a Senate class that featured James G. Blaine, Roscoe Conkling
, and Lucius
Quincy Lamar. In the House, McKinley fought tenaciously for the protective tarif
f, opposing the
“tariff for revenue only” crowd. The Major was convinced that tariffs protected labo
rers, and
brought prosperity for all. Only after he had won the presidency, and had to dea
l with the
reciprocity of trade with Canada, did McKinley begin to appreciate the value of
free and open
trade. He was equally committed to sound money, although he entertained argument
s for
bimetallism as long as silver’s value remained fixed to gold.
His friendship with his old military superior, Rutherford Hayes, grew while Haye
s was in the White
House, and the McKinleys were frequent dinner guests. McKinley and fellow Ohioan
John
Sherman (with whom he disagreed sharply over silver) escorted Chester Arthur to
his
Congressional address following the assassination of Garfield. By 1890, after gu
iding a new
protective tariff—the McKinley Tariff—through the House, the Major had arrived on th
e national
stage. Nevertheless, local district politics led to his defeat that year for the
House, after which he
promptly was elected governor of Ohio. In sum, McKinley paid his dues and grease
d his own skids.
Although a McKinley presidential boomlet had occurred in 1892, it was not yet hi
s time. In 1896,
however, he was ready for a full run at the White House, aided by Marcus A. Hann
ah, his political
mentor.23 Mounting a “front porch” campaign, in which people literally traveled to h
is house to
hear his ideas, McKinley spoke to 750,000 people from thirty states. His denuded
yard, tramped
over by so many feet, became a sea of mud in the rain. But his work was effectiv
e, and the lag
between William Jennings Bryan’s burst of energy following the “Cross of Gold” speech
and the
election provided just enough cushion for the Republican to win. The closeness o
f the electoral
vote, 271 to 176, and the popular vote, 7.1 million to 6.5 million, between two
candidates with such
strikingly opposite views, reflected the sharp divisions within the country over
the money question,
the tariff, and, most recently, the depression and its cures. McKinley did not g
et a single electoral
vote south of the Mason-Dixon Line, and only won California, North Dakota, Iowa,
and Oregon
out of the entire West.
Nevertheless, political scientists have long considered the election of 1896 a c
ritical realignment, in
that pro-Republican voters remained a solid bloc for the next twenty-six years.
This bloc would
elect one Republican president after another—interrupted only by the 1912 election
, in which two
Republicans split the vote and allowed Woodrow Wilson to win. Not only would Min
nesota, Iowa,
and Oregon generally remain in the Republican column, but in 1900, McKinley woul
d add South
Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Wyoming, Utah, and Washington after the realignment. F
our years
later, in 1904, Republicans added Idaho, Nevada, and Colorado, giving them not o
nly the solid
North, but also the entire West, except for the former Confederate state of Texa
s. Only when Teddy
Roosevelt stepped down did the Democrats again recover momentum in the West.
At first, however, such a massive shift was not obvious in the conduct of the ne
w administration.
McKinley impressed no one after naming his cabinet (“a fine old hospital,” Henry Ada
ms
remarked).24 The last president to write his own speeches or, at least, dictate
them, McKinley won
no accolades for inspirational rhetoric. And as a committed husband to an ailing
wife, McKinley
hardly fed the social appetites of the Washington elites. Ida McKinley spent her
days secluded in
her room, entirely miserable. When in public, she was prone to seizures and fain
ting, perhaps an
undiagnosed narcolepsy; a platoon of doctors—legitimate and quacks—never managed to
control
her condition. Yet the Major could continue a conversation right through one of
Ida’s seizures as
though nothing had happened.
Foreign affairs crept into the spotlight during McKinley’s term, particularly Amer
ican dealings
with Hawaii and Cuba. Harrison and Cleveland had left the Hawaiian problem unset
tled. Located
two thousand miles west of California, the Hawaiian Islands (also called the San
dwich Islands) had
played host to American sailors, traders, and missionaries in the 1800s. Rich in
sugar, fruit, and
other products, the United States had extended tariff favors to Hawaii, and Amer
ican business
interests soon controlled important sugar plantations, often dominating the isla
nds’ economies. In
1893, with tacit U.S. support, republican forces on the islands staged a rebelli
on against Queen
Liliuokalani, who had gained the throne two years earlier when David Kalakaua, h
er brother, died.
Liliuokalana inherited charges of corruption, including special favors to sugar
magnate Claus
Spreckels. Her brother had also repealed laws prohibiting sales of liquor and op
ium to Hawaiians.
An antimonarchy movement, spearheaded by the Reform Party, forced Kalakaua to si
gn the
“Bayonet constitution” in 1887—so named because it was signed under threat of an armed
uprising. The constitution gave foreigners the right to vote. When Liliuokalani
ascended to the
throne, ostensibly to maintain and protect the constitution, she immediately sou
ght to overthrow it.
Thus the rebellion of 1893, while certainly supported by whites, was a response
to the queen’s poor
judgment as much as it was an American plot.
The new government sent a treaty of annexation to Washington, but the lame duck
Harrison
forwarded it to the Senate. When the antiexpansionist Cleveland came into office
, he dispatched a
team to Hawaii to determine if the revolution was genuine or an American-contriv
ed plot. Based on
its findings, Cleveland concluded that the latter was the case. He determined th
at although
Liliuokalani had indeed planned to elevate herself again above the constitution,
a group of eighteen
Hawaiians, including some sugar farmers, with the aid of U.S. Marines, had overt
hrown her and
named themselves as a provisional government.
What is often missed is at least one earlier attempt by Hawaii to become a part
of the United States:
in 1851, King Kamehameha III had secretly asked the United States to annex Hawai
i, but Secretary
of State Daniel Webster declined, saying, “No power ought to take possession of th
e islands as a
conquest…or colonization.” Webster, preoccupied by slavery, was unwilling to set a p
recedent that
might allow more slave territory into the Union.
By the time the issue reached McKinley’s desk, another concern complicated the Haw
aiian
question: Japan. The Empire of Japan had started to assert itself in the Pacific
and, seeing Hawaii as
a threat to her sphere of interest, sent warships to Hawaii and encouraged emigr
ation there. This
greatly troubled Theodore Roosevelt, among others, who energetically warned Amer
icans that they
could not allow Japan to claim the islands. McKinley, in private, agreed with Ro
osevelt, though he
was coy when it came to stating so publicly. Before he assumed office, McKinley
had told
representatives from Hawaii, “Of course I have my ideas about Hawaii, but consider
that it best at
the present time not to make known what my policy is.”25 Nevertheless, once in off
ice he pointed
out that if nothing was done, “there will be before long another Revolution, and J
apan will get
control.”26 “We cannot let those islands go to Japan,” McKinley bluntly told Senator G
eorge
Hoar.27
Indeed, it was Hawaii herself that, in June 1897, refused to admit a new conting
ent of Japanese
laborers, prompting a visit from Imperial warships. And it was not big business
that supported
Hawaiian annexation—quite the contrary, the western sugar beet interests opposed t
he infusion of
Hawaiian cane sugar. At the same time, McKinley knew that an annexation treaty l
ikely lacked the
two-thirds Senate majority to pass, since most of the Southern Democrats dislike
d the notion of
bringing in as citizens more Asians and brown-skinned Hawaiians. Therefore, to a
void dealing with
the insufficient Senate majority, the Republicans introduced a joint resolution
to annex Hawaii,
apart from the original (withdrawn) treaty. On July 7, 1898, McKinley signed the
joint resolution of
Congress annexing the Hawaiian islands.
Cuba Libre!
A far more difficult problem that McKinley had inherited was a growing tension w
ith Spain over
Cuba. A Spanish possession, Cuba lay only ninety miles off the coast of Florida.
At one time it had
been both gatekeeper and customhouse for Spain’s New World empire, but, like Spain
herself,
Cuba had lost influence. The Cubans desired freedom and autonomy, as illustrated
by revolts that
erupted in 1868, 1878, and 1895, all suppressed by the 160,000 Spanish soldiers
on the island.
General Valeriano Weyler, who governed the island, had a reputation for unusual
cruelty, leading
to his nickname the Butcher. For forty years the United States had entertained n
otions of
purchasing Cuba, but Spain had no intention of selling, and the installation of
Weyler sounded a
requiem for negotiations to acquire the Pearl of the Antilles.
American concerns were threefold. First, there was the political component, in w
hich Americans
sympathized with the Cubans’ yearning for independence. Second, businessmen had im
portant
interests on the island, cultivated over several decades. Sugar, railroads, ship
ping, and other
enterprises gave the United States an undeniable economic interest in Cuba, whil
e at the same time
putting Americans in a potential crossfire. Third, there was the moral issue of
Weyler’s treatment
of the Cubans, which appealed to American humanitarianism.
It might have ended at that—with Americans expressing their support for the rebels
from afar—if
not for the efforts of two newspapermen, Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph He
arst. Pulitzer, an
Austro-Hungarian immigrant, had worked as a mule driver before being recruited b
y Carl Schurz to
write for a German-language daily. A Radical Missouri Republican, Pulitzer had p
urchased the St.
Louis Post and Dispatch newspapers, using them as a base for the reformist agend
a that included
issues of prohibition, tax fraud, and gambling. His most important acquisition,
however, the New
York World, emphasized sensation, scandal, and human interest stories. For all o
f its innovation
and success, the New York World remains best known for a color supplement it sta
rted to run in
1896 on cheap yellow paper featuring a cartoon character known as The Yellow Kid
, which led to
the phrase, “yellow press.”28
Hearst, born to California millionaire rancher George Hearst, obtained the San F
rancisco Examiner
to satisfy a gambling debt. He admired Pulitzer and tailored the Examiner to res
emble Pulitzer’s
paper. Emphasizing investigative reporting combined with reformism and sensation
alism, Hearst
employed the best writers he could find, including Ambrose Bierce, Stephen Crane
, Mark Twain,
and Jack London. Purchasing the New York Journal in 1895, Hearst became Pulitzer’s
competitor.
The two men had much in common, though. Both saw the chaos and tragedy of Cuba p
urely in
terms of expanded circulation. Cuban suffering advanced sales, but a war would b
e even better.
Hearst assigned the brilliant artist Frederic Remington to Cuba to provide battl
e sketches, well
before any hostilities were announced. When Remington arrived in Cuba, he cabled
back to Hearst
that there was no war to illustrate. “You furnish the pictures,” Hearst wired. “I’ll fur
nish the
war.”29
Each publisher sought to outdo the other with Spanish horror stories, giving Wey
ler his nickname
and referring to Cuba as a prison. (Ironically, eighty years later, when Castro’s
Cuba genuinely
became such a prison, no national newspaper dared call it as much.)
Nevertheless, the influence of the press in fomenting war has been overemphasize
d. Cuban
expatriates had already circulated in major U.S. cities attempting to raise awar
eness and money.
Moreover, mainstream papers, such as the New York Times, supported McKinley’s caut
ion. The
role of business in beating the drums for war has also been exaggerated, since a
s many businesses
opposed any support for the revolution as supported it. Prosperity had only rece
ntly returned to the
nation, and industrialists wished to avoid any disruption of markets that war mi
ght bring. Certainly
an intellectual case for war, embraced by Alfred Thayer Mahan, John Hay, and Roo
sevelt, needed
no support from the yellow press. Their arguments combined the need for humanita
rian relief for
the suffering Cubans with the necessity for naval bases and eviction of Old Worl
d powers from the
Caribbean, as well as good old-fashioned expansionism.
If the yellow press needed any help in “furnishing” the war, Spanish minister to Was
hington Dupuy
de Lome provided it with a letter he wrote in February 1897. De Lome’s letter ende
d up on a desk
at the New York Journal, thanks to the Cuban rebels and their contacts in New Yo
rk, and of course
the paper gleefully printed its contents with the headline worst insult to the u
nited states in its
history. The minister called McKinley “weak and a bidder for the admiration of the
crowd” who
played both sides of the war issue.30 He further announced his intention to prop
agandize among
American senators and “others in opposition to the junta.”31 McKinley demanded a for
mal
apology, and even though Spain generally agreed with American conditions, the Sp
anish delay in
issuing the apology made them look belligerent. Nevertheless, it appeared relati
ons might be
restored, and as part of the reconciliation, McKinley dispatched the battleship
USS Maine to make
a courtesy call to Havana.
At anchor in Havana, the Maine’s presence seemed uncontroversial. Sailors routinel
y walked the
streets, fraternizing with sailors of the Spanish navy and purchasing Cuban good
s to take home. On
the evening of February 15, 1898, however, a massive explosion rocked the vessel
, which slowly
sank, killing 260 crewmen. News reached McKinley at three o’clock in the morning.
Coming on
the heels of the de Lome letter—which had actually been written many months earlie
r—McKinley
assumed that the two were linked, but he hoped to avoid a rush to war. He ordere
d an investigation
of the explosion, knowing that a conclusion showing the blast had originated fro
m the outside
would tend to implicate Spain (although certainly the rebels had a stake in tryi
ng to involve the
United States). Americans, however, already seemed convinced of Spain’s complicity
, and
increasingly McKinley was viewed as blocking a necessary war.
Although no proof was offered of Spain’s culpability (and not until 1910 did an of
ficial inquiry on
the remains of the ship seem to confirm that the explosion was caused by a mine)
, on April 20,
1898, Congress handed McKinley a war resolution, along with the Teller Amendment
to liberate
Cuba within five years of occupation. For those historians who claimed the Unite
d States desired an
empire, American behavior was odd: what other empires legally bind themselves to
abandoning
conquered lands the instant they acquire them? Spain’s sudden conciliatory attitud
e
notwithstanding, the pieces fit too conveniently for many Americans to arrive at
any other
conclusion than that the Spanish were responsible for the sinking of the Maine.
From Spain it was
much too little, too late, and for the United States it was another opportunity
to teach the pompous
European state a lesson. On April twenty-first, the Spanish severed diplomatic t
ies. Four days later,
Congress declared war.
Just as the world powers had fully expected Mexico to easily defeat the United S
tates in the
Mexican War, Europeans again overestimated the decrepit Spanish empire’s strengths
and virtually
ignored American technology and resolve. The U.S. Army was small and largely unt
rained. Many
units were volunteers; those who had fighting experience came from the frontier,
where the Sioux
and the Apache presented much different challenges than the more conventional Sp
anish foe.
McKinley made plans to gather the forces at Tampa and other Florida ports, then
land at several
points in Cuba. He called for 200,000 volunteers to expand the small 28,000-man
army, and by the
end of November 1898, 223,000 volunteers had swelled the ranks. These volunteers
included the
famous Theodore Roosevelt (who had resigned his position as assistant secretary
of the navy) and
his Rough Riders, an assortment of Indians and scouts, miners and marauders, and
even the famous
Prescott, Arizona, lawman Bucky O’Neill. But the regiment also included James Robb
Church, a
star football player at Princeton; New York socialite Hamilton Fish; and the cre
am of Harvard and
Yale. Everyone wanted to join, including the creator of the famous Tarzan series
, Edgar Rice
Burroughs, whom Roosevelt rejected.32
Equipping and transporting this army of volunteers was a difficult matter. A new
Krag .308 rifle
that fired smokeless shells was available, but few units had it; troops called t
he poor food they
received “embalmed beef”; and the atrocious state of medical facilities contributed
to the deaths of
2,565 men from disease—more than seven times the 345 men who died in combat.33 The
Rough
Riders found they could not even take their horses to Cuba. For good or ill, tho
ugh, one thing was
certain: the press would cover this war. Hearst had seen to that. In addition to
Remington with his
sketchbooks, author Stephen Crane, whose Civil War tale, The Red Badge of Courag
e (1895), had
already become a classic, traveled with the troops to Cuba.
America may have trailed Spain in rifle quality and even the training of her gro
und forces, but the
United States had a decided advantage at sea. There the white cruisers Olympia,
Boston, Raleigh,
Concord, and Baltimore outranged and outgunned all of the Spanish vessels. Deplo
ying the fleet to
Hong Kong, however, was entirely Roosevelt’s doing; he had given the order when th
e secretary of
the navy had gone out of the office for a doctor’s appointment. European observers
, as always,
underestimated Yankee capabilities. Commodore George Dewey, who headed the U.S.
Asiatic
squadron, reported strong betting at the Hong Kong Club against the Americans, e
ven at
considerable odds.
The American battle plan was sound, however. First, Roosevelt ordered Dewey’s squa
dron to Hong
Kong even before a declaration of war, in case hostilities broke out. In April,
Dewey headed to sea,
where he prepared for battle. Spain had seven vessels to Dewey’s six in Manila Bay
, but they were
inferior, and their commander, Rear Admiral Patricio Passaron, knew it. Lined up
in Manila Bay,
Passaron, in a state of gloom, resigned himself to going down with guns blazing.
After the
declaration of war, Dewey had sailed for Manila Bay. Spanish guns fired first, p
rompting shouts of
“Remember the Maine” from the American decks, but Dewey uttered his classic line, re
peated
afterward in countless cartoons, when he told the Olympia’s captain, “You may fire w
hen ready,
Gridley.” At a range of more than five thousand yards—outside the Spaniards’ range—U.S.
guns
shattered the helpless Spanish ships.34 Dewey did not lose a single man.35
A two-pronged assault on Cuba was the second piece of the U.S. strategy, and it
was aimed at
forcing the Spanish Caribbean fleet to exit its port while American troops advan
ced overland to
Havana. The grand assault was led by the three-hundred-pound General William Sha
fter, whose
forces landed on June twenty-second at Daquiri, unopposed and unscathed. The onl
y U.S.
casualties were five drowned horses.
Ex-Rebel General Joseph Wheeler, in his first encounter with Spanish troops, sho
uted, “We’ve got
the damned Yankees on the run!”36 But his men knew what he meant, and they proceed
ed to link
up with Shafter’s forces. By that time, Shafter had fallen ill, to the point where
he was unable to
ride. After driving the Spaniards out of several positions, American troops conv
erged on the main
target, San Juan Heights.
Faced with two hills, San Juan and Kettle, Leonard Wood’s regiments—including the Ro
ugh
Riders (whose horses were still back in Tampa) and Lieutenant John J. Pershing’s 1
0th Cavalry
buffalo soldiers—crossed the river in front of Kettle Hill. Organizing both the re
giments, Teddy
Roosevelt, a mounted sitting target, spurred his horse Little Texas in front of
his men charging on
foot. The units storming Kettle Hill raised a cheer from the American forces sti
ll pinned under fire
below San Juan Heights.
Spanish positions on San Juan Heights still proved impenetrable until a courageo
us captain, G. S.
Grimes, drove three batteries of Gatling guns to within six hundred yards of the
Spanish lines and
poured fire at them. (Remington captured the moment in a memorable painting). Th
at was enough
to spark the actual “charge up San Juan Hill.” Roosevelt had already led his men up
Kettle Hill and
was not among those advancing on San Juan’s positions, and the “charge” was an orderly
, steady
advance into heavy fire.
At the same time, Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, pouring machine gun fire into the Span
ish flank,
charged down the mild slope of Kettle Hill directly into the Spanish positions.
Spanish resistance
disintegrated. Later, Pershing wrote his recollections of the attack: “White regim
ents, black
regiments, regulars and Rough Riders, representing the young manhood of the Nort
h and the South,
fought shoulder to shoulder, unmindful of race or color, unmindful of whether co
mmanded by ex-
Confederate or not, and mindful of only their common duty as Americans.”37 The Spa
nish general
Joaquin Vara del Rey had the gross misfortune of being shot through both legs; t
hen, as his men
carried him on a stretcher to safety, he was hit again, through the head. Roosev
elt, recommended
for a Medal of Honor for his actions by both commanding officers, Shafter and Wo
od, was denied
the recognition by political enemies until January 2001, when Congress finally a
warded it to him
posthumously.
Shafter, still battling gout and heat, now surrounded Santiago and squeezed Admi
ral Pascual
Cervera’s fleet out of the harbor, where it had to run the gauntlet of Admiral Wil
liam Sampson’s
American vessels. On July 3, 1898, Cervera’s fleet sailed out, much to the surpris
e of Sampson.
The Spanish knew what awaited them. “Poor Spain,” said a captain aboard the Theresa
to Admiral
Cervera. The sound of the ship bugles meant that Spain had become “a nation of the
fourth
class.”38 After a brief running battle with the far superior American ships, in wh
ich the U.S. Navy
badly damaged all of Cervera’s vessels, the Spanish fleet hauled down its colors. “T
he fleet under
my command,” telegraphed Admiral Sampson to Washington, “offers the nation, as a Fou
rth of
July present, the whole of Cervera’s fleet.”39 Spain quickly capitulated. Despite th
e loss of only
400 men in combat, the Spanish-American War had proven costly. The government ha
d mobilized
thousands of soldiers who never saw action, but who ultimately would draw pensio
ns valued at $5
billion. At the end of sixty years, the pensions from the Spanish-American War s
till cost the United
States $160 million annually.
Final negotiations left the United States in control of the Philippines, Cuba, a
nd Puerto Rico. The
Senate had insisted that Cuba be free and not a U.S. possession, but the United
States paid $20
million for Guam, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico. The disposition of these oth
er territories,
however, was not so clear. Two other nations, in addition to the Filipinos thems
elves, had an
interest in the Philippines. Filipino freedom fighters, led by Emilio Aguinaldo,
had been brought by
Dewey from Hong Kong to help liberate the Philippines. Aguinaldo’s ten thousand in
surgents had
helped to capture Manila. Under other circumstances, it is highly likely the Uni
ted States would
have washed its hands of the Philippines and hastily departed.
By 1898, however, there were other considerations. Roosevelt, Alfred Thayer Maha
n, and others
had already started to push the United States onto the world stage, and as a wor
ld power the nation
needed overseas coaling stations. With the annexation of Hawaii in July, the Phi
lippines suddenly
became a logical extension of American naval bases.
Combined with the presence of British and German fleets, the fate of the Philipp
ines as an
American protectorate was sealed. Britain and Germany both had fleets in the reg
ion. Germany, in
particular, thought little of the United States, saying, “God favored drunkards, f
ools, and the United
States of America.” Either nation could have controlled the Philippines the moment
the American
fleet left, although whether they would have fought each other is conjecture. At
any rate, McKinley
explained his reasoning as follows:
…one night it came to me this way…(1) we could not give them [the Philippines] back
to Spain—
that would be cowardly and dishonorable;(2) that we could not turn them over to
France or
Germany—our commercial rivals in the Orient—that would be bad business and discredit
able; (3)
that we could not leave them to themselves—they were unfit for self-government—and t
hey would
soon have anarchy and misrule over there worse than Spain’s was; and (4) that ther
e was nothing
left for us to do but to take them all, and to educate the Filipinos, and uplift
and civilize and
Christianize them.40
The last point, although it played a minor part in the president’s decision, had b
een on the minds of
Protestant Americans, whose missionary societies had sent many evangelists to th
e islands.
Methodists, in particular, wrote of saving the “little brown brother.”41 Some histor
ians dismiss
these expressions of concern for the Filipinos as insincere excuses for national
economic
expansion, but, as usual, they ignore the genuine doctrinal commitment of most C
hristian groups to
evangelize.
McKinley realized that the choice he faced was not whether to liberate the islan
ds, but which of
three nations—the United States, Germany, or Britain—would control them. Predictably
, when the
Stars and Stripes went up in Manila, sending the European fleets packing, it ens
ured a response
from the eighty thousand Filipinos under Aguinaldo, who felt betrayed. An insurr
ection ensued,
and for a year and a half, a guerrilla war of brutal proportions witnessed both
sides engaging in
torture and atrocities. McKinley, aware that the occupation required the support
of the Filipino
people, persuaded William Howard Taft to lead a fiveman commission to Manila in
April 1900.
Taft, who liked the Filipinos, earned their respect and soon produced reasonable
, concrete steps to
reduce opposition.
McKinley’s policy opened the door to anti-imperialists, such as William Jennings B
ryan, the
Populists, and the Anti-Imperialist League. League members handed out leaflets t
o soldiers in the
Philippines, urging them not to reenlist. Some of the more extreme members of th
e League
compared McKinley to a mass murderer and issued wild predictions that eight thou
sand Americans
would die trying to hold the islands. The insurgents quoted Bryan and fellow ant
i-imperialist
Edward Atkinson, thus inspiring the rebels and, possibly, prolonging the conflic
t, thereby
contributing to the deaths of U.S. soldiers.
Aguinaldo himself remained elusive, despite unceasing American attempts to locat
e and capture
him. Finally, with the assistance of an anti-insurrectionist Filipino group call
ed the Maccabees,
Aguinaldo was captured, and in April 1901 he swore an oath of allegiance to the
United States.
Three months later the military government ended, replaced by a provincial gover
nment under Taft.
The islands remained U.S. possessions until World War II, although in 1916, the
Jones Act
announced American intentions to grant Philippine independence as soon as practi
cable. In 1934,
the Tydings-McDuffie Act provided a tutelage period of ten more years, setting t
he date for
independence as 1944, and providing an election in which Manuel Quezon became th
e first
president of the Philippines. Although Japanese occupation of the islands delaye
d independence
beyond the 1944 target, in 1946 the United States granted independence to the Ph
ilippines on the
Fourth of July, once again proving wrong the critics of America who saw imperial
interests as the
reason for overseas expansion. Never before in history had a nation so willingly
and, in general, so
peacefully rescinded control over so much territory and so many conquered people
as in the case of
the possessions taken in the Spanish-American War.
The “Full Dinner Pail” and Assassination
Not long after the war ended, Vice President Garret A. Hobart died in office. Mc
Kinley and the
Republicans knew they might have a popular replacement in Teddy Roosevelt, who h
ad recently
been elected governor of New York. McKinley had met Roosevelt when he went to Mo
ntauk to
congratulate General Shafter and his troops; when the president saw Roosevelt, h
e stopped the
carriage and extended his hand. The ebullient Roosevelt struggled to pull his gl
ove off, finally
grabbing it in his teeth before pumping McKinley’s hand. Thus, with Hobart out, th
e Republicans
approached Roosevelt—who really wanted no job save the president’s—to replace the dece
ased
vice president.
Political realities, however, created an inexorable momentum toward the vice pre
sidential
nomination. As Boss Platt quipped, “Roosevelt might as well stand under Niagara Fa
lls and try to
spit water back as to stop his nomination by this convention.”42 With Teddy on the
ballot, a good
economy, and the conclusion of a successful war, McKinley was unbeatable. His sl
ogan, a “full
dinner pail,” spoke to the economic well-being of millions without committing the
government to
engage in specific action. McKinley beat the Democrat, William Jennings Bryan, w
orse than he
had in 1896, winning the popular vote 7.2 million to 6.3 million, and taking the
electoral vote, 292
to 155. While McKinley looked forward to serving as “President of the whole people
,” Roosevelt
committed himself to being a “dignified nonentity for four years.”43
The president had undertaken few new programs (aside from turning the Northern S
ecurity Trust
issue over to Roosevelt to handle) when he made a trip to the Pan American Expos
ition in Buffalo
on September 6, 1901. Just as a premonition of disaster had gripped many around
Lincoln in his
final days, so too did McKinley’s staff grow increasingly uneasy as he headed to B
uffalo. Several
crank letters threatening assassination had arrived during the campaign, but McK
inley dismissed
them. The threats, however, alarmed his private secretary, George Cortelyou, who
on his own
started a screening process for visitors. In addition, a private investigator do
gged the president’s
steps, and Buffalo police were on alert. McKinley refused to allow his aides to
seal him off from
the public, thus agreeing to a long reception line at one of the exposition buil
dings, the Music
Temple. While a line of well-wishers streamed in to a Bach organ sonata, Leon Cz
olgosz, the
anarchist assassin, joined them, concealing a pistol in his bandaged right hand.
As McKinley shook
the man’s left hand, Czolgosz shot the president twice. The stricken Major slumped
backward to a
chair, urging Cortelyou to “be careful” how he informed Mrs. McKinley her husband wa
s dead.44
In fact, he remained alive, unconscious. A bullet had gone through his stomach a
nd into his back;
efforts to locate it failed, despite the presence at the exposition of a new X-r
ay machine, which was
not used. Doctors cleansed and closed the wound without extracting the bullet. O
ver the next few
days, McKinley regained consciousness, giving everyone around him hope, but he d
rifted away a
week after the attack. New York City papers, which had earlier published editori
als calling for
McKinley’s removal—Hearst had even said, “assassination can be a good thing”—engaged in
finger-pointing as to whether the press should share blame in the president’s deat
h.45
McKinley became the third president in thirty-five years to be killed by an assa
ssin, and for the first
time, both a president and a vice president from the same administration (1896–190
0) died in
office. His killer, who wanted to cause all government to collapse, only succeed
ed in replacing a
successful president with a legendary one.
A Brilliant Madman, Born a Century Too Soon
By 1907, Theodore Roosevelt—he hated the sobriquet Teddy, and although resigned to
it, allowed
none to call him that in person—stood five feet eight inches tall and weighed two
hundred pounds,
mostly muscle. His heavyweight sparring partner described him as a “strong, tough
man; hard to
hurt and harder to stop.”46 It was a remarkable transformation for the skinny kid
who had entered
Harvard in the mid-1870s. Yet for such a powerful man, he was small boned, with
delicate feet and
hands that contrasted with the heavy girth and jowls. His famous teeth, not as p
rominent as the
caricatures, lent a distinctiveness to his speech, which was clipped, raspy, and
likened to a man
“biting tenpenny nails.”47 Roosevelt’s pronunciation added another distinguishing tone
to his
speech, wherein he pronounced “I” as “Aieee” and punctuated his sentences with his favor
ite word,
“deeeee-lighted.” Albany legislators had made legend his habit of running up to the
podium waving
a finger and shouting, “Mister Spee-kar.” Asthmatic and bespectacled with his famous
pince-nez,
Roosevelt was a swirl of energy. He burst into rooms, descending on friends and
foes like a
thunderstorm, leading English writer John Morely to call Niagara Falls and Theod
ore Roosevelt
“great works of nature.”48 Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula, once meeting Roosevel
t, noted in
his diary, “Must be President some day. A man you can’t cajole, can’t frighten, can’t bu
y.”49
Long before he became president, Roosevelt impressed people with his sharp mind
and his ability
to discuss intelligently almost any subject—his entrance exams at Harvard testify
to his mental
capacities. Obsessed with reading (he referred to it as a disease with him), Roo
sevelt had consumed
such mammoth tomes as David Livingstone’s Missionary Travels. Well traveled in Eur
ope, Africa,
and America, Roosevelt marveled at the written word as much as at the visual ima
ge.
A frail child, Roosevelt spent summers working out and boxing as a means to buil
d his body. He
boxed during his Harvard years, but just as often he fought outside the ring, of
ten decking political
rivals who made fun of him. The intellectual Roosevelt, however, could penetrate
to the heart of
intricate legislative matters, often offending everyone in the process of doing
the right thing. He
spearheaded several municipal reform bills, nearly pulling off an investigation
of New York
corruption before witnesses developed “memory loss.” New York assemblyman Newton Cur
tis
called him a “brilliant madman, born a century too soon.”50
Having overcome asthma, poor eyesight, and his own impetuous moods, Roosevelt wa
s struck by
sudden and nearly unbearable grief in February 1884, when his wife died after gi
ving birth only a
few hours after Roosevelt’s mother, who had been in the same house, expired of typ
hoid fever.
“There is a curse on this house,” his brother Elliott had told him, and Roosevelt be
gan to believe it.
That curse would claim the alcoholic Elliott in 1891, when he had to be committe
d to an asylum.
To drown his grief after his wife’s death, the hyper Roosevelt left politics for h
is cattle ranch in
Elkhorn, North Dakota, where he served as a deputy sheriff and helped track down
a trio of horse
thieves. Then, in 1889, after he was appointed by President Harrison to the Civi
l Service
Commission, he returned to New York, where he developed a feud with the-then New
York
Governor Grover Cleveland. As in the case of the bitter antagonism between Adams
and Jefferson,
Jefferson and Hamilton, and Sherman and Lincoln, the Cleveland-Roosevelt feud (l
opsided in
Cleveland’s favor as it was) was regrettable. Here was another example of two figu
res of towering
character and, in many instances, clear vision, disagreeing over the proper impl
ementation of their
ideals. Yet such debates refined American democracy, and were of no small import
.
Even before his appointment to the Civil Service Commission, Roosevelt had start
ed to develop a
national name with his authorship of books on the West, including Hunting Trips
(1885) and The
Winning of the West (1889), as well as ten other works. While far from an inexor
able march to the
presidency, Roosevelt’s steps seem measured by a certain sense of relentlessness o
r Providence. He
entered New York City politics as police commissioner, a position that called fo
r him to walk the
slums and meet with future muckraker Lincoln Steffens and a police reporter name
d Jacob Riis.
Roosevelt fit right in with the two men. (Riis soon gravitated from his job with
the New York
Tribune to work on housing reform, which was the basis for his popular book How
the Other Half
Lives [1890]. Steffens, whose wealthy father had instructed him to “stay in New Yo
rk and hustle,”
instead also became a reporter, but with the New York Evening Post.)51 Roosevelt
took Steffens
seriously enough to initiate legislation based on his writings, although Rooseve
lt was dead by the
time Steffens visited the Soviet Union, in 1921, and uttered the preposterous co
mment, “I have seen
the future, and it works.”
Even as a young state assemblyman in the 1880s, Roosevelt was consumed by reform
in his public
career. His progressivism embraced an activist government to alleviate social il
ls.
For many reformers, words like “ethics” and phrases about “uplifting the masses” were on
ly so
much window dressing for their real agenda of social architecture. Not Roosevelt
. He genuinely
believed that “no people were ever benefited by riches if their prosperity corrupt
ed their virtue. It
is,” he added, “more important that we should show ourselves honest, brave, truthful
, and
intelligent than we should own all the railways and grain elevators in the world
.”52 Roosevelt came
from “old money,” and despite such sentiment, he never entirely lost his patrician b
iases.
This in part explains his antipathy toward corporations, most of whose founders
came from “new”
money. Rockefeller and Carnegie were self-made men who had built their fortunes
the hard way.
Roosevelt could never be accused of being afraid to dirty his hands, but his ani
mosity toward
businessmen like Edward H. Harriman suggested that in some ways he envied the co
rporate
captains who had worked their way up from the bottom. To have never had the oppo
rtunity to
succeed in business troubled Roosevelt. It was all the more paradoxical coming f
rom the man
whose classic “Man in the Arena” speech still retains its wisdom and dignity:
It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man s
tumbles or where
the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is a
ctually in the
arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly,
who errs and
comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shor
tcoming, but who
knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worth
y cause; who, at
the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the wo
rst, if he fails, at
least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those
cold and timid souls
who knew neither victory nor defeat.53
Roosevelt had succeeded at everything he ever attempted—improving his physical str
ength and
athletic prowess, courting and winning his wife, leading men in combat, and runn
ing for office.
By the time he became president then, Theodore Roosevelt had prepared himself fo
r the office in
every aspect necessary to the job, save one: understanding capitalism, private e
nterprise, and the
industrial nature of modern America. For someone steeped in the romantic images
of the West,
Roosevelt should have favored the “rugged individualism” of a Carnegie, but his refo
rm impulse
possessed him. As a result, he became the most activist president since Andrew J
ackson, doing
more to impede business than any president since Old Hickory.
Trust-busting, Business Bashing
An indication of where Roosevelt planned to go with his agenda of corporate regu
lation could be
gleaned from his brief stint as New York governor, where he pushed through a mea
sure taxing
corporations. A social Darwinist, Roosevelt liked the notion that there existed
an intellectual
hierarchy among men, and that only the “best and the brightest” should lead. This sa
me Roosevelt
fancied himself the friend of the oppressed and thought farmers, mechanics, and
small business
owners were his “natural allies.”54 But in Roosevelt’s mind, if the brilliant individu
al or the
visionary man knew best how to reform society, he should do so with whatever too
ls he had at his
disposal, including government. Consequently, it surprised no one who knew him t
hat Roosevelt
favored an activist federal presence. William Howard Taft said that he never met
a man “more
strongly in favor of strong government” than Roosevelt.55
In his first inaugural, Roosevelt spoke favorably of great corporations and endo
rsed the idea of
expanding markets. To this he added that trusts had gone beyond the capacity of
existing laws to
deal with them, and that old laws and traditions could not sufficiently contain
concentrations of
wealth and power. Congress sensed the change, passing the Elkins Act in 1903, wh
ich prohibited
railroads from giving rebates—essentially volume discounts—to large corporations. Th
e notion that
businesses were different from individual behavior, or needed to be penalized fo
r success beyond
what was “reasonable,” was a Progressive principle that soon emerged in many regulat
ions.
Epitomizing the direction of Roosevelt’s new policies was the Northern Securities
suit of 1902.
This followed a legal ruling in the E. C. Knight sugar refiner case of 1895, whe
re the Supreme
Court declared the regulation of manufacturing a state responsibility; since the
manufacturing was
within a state’s boundaries, any successful suit had to involve interstate commerc
e. Since Northern
Securities involved railroads crossing state lines, it met the requirements. Roo
sevelt thought he had
an opening, and instructed the attorney general, Philander C. Knox, to file a Sh
erman antitrust suit
against Northern Securities, a holding company for the Northern Pacific, Great N
orthern, and
Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy railroads. J. P. Morgan, James J. Hill, E. H. Ha
rriman, and
representatives of Standard Oil Company had combined the northwestern railroad l
ines into
Northern Securities, a single holding company worth $400 million. What made the
Northern
Securities suit different was that although the government claimed that Northern
Securities sought
to create a monopoly, no higher rates had actually emerged, only the “threat” of “rest
raint of trade.”
For the first time, then, the federal government acted against commerce only on
a potential threat,
not genuine behavior, thus debunking the myth that corporations are “like individu
als,” whom the
law treats as “innocent until proven guilty.”56
Thanks largely to the Northern Securities case, Roosevelt—whose nickname Teddy had
been
popularized after a toy manufacturer named a stuffed bear for him—now earned the m
oniker
“Trustbuster.” He followed up the victory with an assault on Rockefeller’s Standard Oi
l, although it
was the administration of TR’s successor, William Howard Taft, that eventually wit
nessed the final
disposition of that case—the breakup of the oil giant into several smaller compani
es. Already,
however, the inconsistencies and contradictions of the Sherman Act had become ap
parent to even
some reformers. Research by George Bitlingmayer found that far from helping the
little guy,
antitrust actions tended to hurt small businesses by driving down profits in the
entire sector,
presumably those businesses most helped by reducing “monopolistic” competition.57
Roosevelt got away with his assault on corporations by balancing it with rhetori
c about the need to
control labor radicalism. Only the presidency was exempted from Roosevelt’s concer
n about the
abuse of power. Congress, all too willing to contain the “excesses” of corporations,
passed the
Expedition Act of 1903, requiring courts to put antitrust cases on a fast track,
then created a new
department, Commerce and Labor, within which was established a Bureau of Corpora
tions to
investigate violations of interstate commerce. All of this legislation came on t
op of the
aforementioned Elkins Act, and represented an attempt by Congress to appear to b
e doing
something. Roosevelt, however, grabbed the headlines, invoking the Sherman Act t
wenty-five
times during his administration.
When it came to action, though, Roosevelt sided substantially with labor. In 190
2 he intervened in
a strike by Pennsylvania coal miners, who wanted recognition of their union as w
ell as the expected
higher wages and lower work hours. Publicly, Roosevelt expressed sympathy for th
e miners, and
then he invited both United Mine Worker (UMW) leaders and mine owners to the Whi
te House in
order to avert a coal shortage. Mine owners, led by George F. Baer of the Readin
g Railroad,
alienated both the miners and the president, who grew so irritated that he wante
d to grab Baer “by
the seat of the breeches” and “chuck him out [a window].”58 The owners were “wooden-head
ed,”
whose “arrogant stupidity” made arbitration more difficult.59 He warned that he woul
d send
10,000 federal troops to take over coal production in the mines if the two sides
did not reach an
arrangement, a move of “dubious legality,” which prompted Roosevelt to snap, “To hell
with the
Constitution when the people want coal!”60 TR’s bluster finally produced concessions
, with both
sides agreeing to an arbitration commission named by the president, and led to h
igher wages (below
what the strikers wanted), fewer work hours (though above what the strikers soug
ht), and no UMW
recognition. It was enough for Roosevelt to claim that he had brokered a “square d
eal,” which later
provided a popular campaign phrase for the president.
Most presidential clout, though, was reserved for corporations, not labor. “We don’t
wish to destroy
corporations,” he generously noted, “but we do wish to make them subserve the public
good.”61
Implied in Roosevelt’s comment was the astonishing view that corporations do not s
erve the public
good on their own—that they must be made to—and that furnishing jobs, paying taxes,
and
creating new wealth did not constitute a sufficient public benefit. It was a pos
ition even more
astonishing coming from the so-called “party of big business.” TR despised what he c
alled “the
tyranny of mere wealth.”62 Yet like other presidents who inherited wealth—his cousin
, Franklin
Roosevelt, and John F. Kennedy—Teddy never appreciated what it took to meet a payr
oll or to
balance a firm’s books. Roosevelt knew that in the 1904 election he might lose the
support of key
Republican constituencies, and therefore he spent the last months mending fences
, corresponding
with Morgan and other business leaders, and supporting the GOP’s probusiness platf
orm. It served
him well. Already a popular leader, Roosevelt knew that the Democrats had allied
themselves with
radical elements of labor and the farm sectors.
Democrats knew it too, and they beat a hasty retreat from William Jennings Bryan’s
more
explosive rhetoric, endorsing the gold standard and selecting as their nominee a
conservative New
York judge, Alton B. Parker. With a socialist candidate, Eugene V. Debs, siphoni
ng off 400,000
votes, the Democrats did not stand a chance of unseating the popular Teddy. Roos
evelt crushed
Parker and, more impressively, carried every single state except the South and M
aryland,
solidifying the western base brought in by McKinley.
The day before his inauguration, Roosevelt said, “Tomorrow I shall come into the o
ffice in my own
right. Then watch out for me.”63 Safely reelected, Roosevelt again turned on the b
usiness
community, especially the railroads. He supported the Hepburn Act, called “a landm
ark in the
evolution of federal control of private industry.”64 It allowed the Interstate Com
merce Act to set
railroad rates. As part of the compromise to obtain passage of Hepburn, Roosevel
t agreed to delay
tariff reform, which became the central issue of his successor’s administration. I
n 1905, at his
urging, Congress passed the Pure Food and Drug Act, prohibiting companies from s
elling
adulterated foods, or foods or medicines that contained ingredients the FDA deem
ed harmful. Like
most laws, the Food and Drug Act originated out of noble intentions. Americans h
ad already been
sufficiently alarmed about the dangers of cocaine, which had forced Coca-Cola to
change its secret
formula, and, after Sinclair’s horrifying novel, an even greater public outcry ove
r tainted meat led
to the Meat Inspection Act.
Summer Camps and Saving the Bison
At the turn of the century, a movement for conserving America’s natural resources
sprang up. The
first conservation legislation, in 1891, authorized President Harrison to design
ate public lands as
forest reserves, allowing Harrison and Cleveland to reserve 35 million acres. Po
pular tastes had
increasingly embraced a wilderness infatuation, especially among elite eastern g
roups. Writers had
romanticized the wilderness since the Revolution’s Hector St. John and the early n
ational era
writings of James Fenimore Cooper and Henry David Thoreau. Interest accelerated
with the
summer camp movement of the 1890s. Roosevelt institutionalized the conservation
movement,
creating the U.S. Forest Service in 1905 and appointing Yale University’s first pr
ofessional
forester, Gifford Pinchot, to head the agency.
Roosevelt’s action marked the culmination of the efforts of naturalists, artists,
and anthropologists
who had argued for application of Progressive management techniques to natural r
esources. That
movement also had its origins in the efforts of John Muir, an Indianapolis carri
age worker who was
nearly blinded in a factory accident. When his sight returned, Muir resolved to
turn his gaze to
America’s natural wonders. In the late 1860s, a trip to Yosemite and the Sierra Ne
vada mountains
led him to produce a series of articles called “Studies in the Sierra,” before explo
ring Alaska and
Glacier Bay. It was in his series of articles appearing in Century magazine that
Muir drew attention
to the devastation of mountain meadows and forests by sheep and cattle. Robert U
nderwood
Johnson, the editor of Century, joined with Muir to form the Sierra Club in 1892
to protect natural
resources and public parks.65
Important differences separated Roosevelt and Muir, even though the two were fri
ends and even
camped together in Yosemite in 1903. Muir was a preservationist who envisioned m
aintenance of a
pristine, sacred natural world in which any development was prohibited. He was a
lso proven wrong
in some of his more apocalyptic prophecies, such as his claim that the damming o
f the river in the
Hetch Hetchy Valley would doom Yosemite.
Needless to say, Roosevelt did not share the view that water for people’s cities w
as the practical
equivalent of water for trees. It would be the same mentality that a century lat
er would consign
hundreds of Klamath, Oregon, farmers to poverty and financial ruin when an endan
gered fish was
discovered in the basin, causing the federal government to shut off all water us
e.
The first most practical effect of the new conservation movement came in 1901, w
hen thirty
western senators and congressmen from seventeen western states agreed to a plan
by Senator
Francis Newlands of Wyoming to apply a portion of public lands receipts to recla
mation, dam
construction, and other water projects. Roosevelt jumped on the Newlands bandwag
on and secured
passage of the bill, which, without question, taxed some western farmers who liv
ed in areas with
heavier rainfall for others who did not. Roosevelt rejected the pristine view, s
igning the National
Reclamation Act of 1902, which made possible the settlement and managed use of a
vast, mostly
barren, landscape.
As conservationists, Roosevelt and Pinchot saw the use of nature by people as th
e primary reason
for preserving nature. In 1910, Pinchot—in sharp contrast to Muir—wrote that the fir
st principle of
conservation was “development, the use of natural resources now existing on this c
ontinent for the
benefit of people who live here now [emphasis added].”66
Roosevelt, however, soon went too far, setting aside 200 million acres of public
land (more than
one third of it in Alaska) as national forests or other reserved sites. After be
ing confronted by angry
western legislators, Roosevelt backed down and rescinded the set-aside program—but
not before
tacking on another 16 million acres to the public lands map. Roosevelt overthrew
the Jeffersonian
principle that the land belonged in the hands of the people individually rather
than the people as a
whole. Only the public sector, he thought, could regulate the political entrepre
neurs and their
harvesting of ore and timber by enclosing public lands. This was Roosevelt’s elite
, Progressive side
taking over. His own experiences as a wealthy hunter won out over the principle
that individuals
should own, and work, their own land.
One of the most hidden facts of the conservation movement—perhaps deliberately bur
ied by
modern environmental extremists—involved the fate of the buffalo. When we last exa
mined the
Plains buffalo, white hunters had nearly exterminated the herds. Ranchers, notic
ing fewer buffalo,
concluded that ownership of a scarce resource would produce profits. A handful o
f western
American and Canadian ranchers, therefore, began to round up, care for, and bree
d the remaining
buffalo. The federal government’s Yellowstone National Park purchased these bison
in 1902, and
other government parks were also soon established, including the Oklahoma Wichit
a Mountains
Park, Montana’s National Bison Range, and Nebraska’s National Wildlife Refuge.67
Yet public control of natural resources contrasted with the fact that in many ar
eas, TR had
abandoned antibusiness inclinations in his second term. For example, he had slow
ly gravitated
more toward free trade when it came to the tariff. During McKinley’s short second
term, the Major
had drifted toward an appreciation for lower tariff duties, speaking in favor of
reciprocity, whereby
the United States would reduce rates on certain imported goods if foreign countr
ies would do the
same on American imports. Roosevelt saw the logic in lower tariffs, especially a
fter the 1902
Dingley Tariff provoked foreign responses in the form of higher rates on all Ame
rican goods. One
industry at a time, former advocates of high duties saw the light and swung behi
nd lower tariffs.
Iron, steel, foodstuffs, manufactured items—all were represented by important lobb
ies that
gradually started to argue on behalf of lower duties.
As president, Roosevelt, who had in the past fought for lower duties, suddenly b
ecame cautious. He
decided to do nothing on broad-based tariff reform. With his war on the trusts,
the new emphasis on
conservation of the resources, and the growing need for a water route linking th
e oceans through
Central America, Roosevelt had a full plate, and he left the tariff issue to be
taken up by his
successor.
“Speak Softly…”
Most Americans are familiar with Roosevelt’s comment on international relations, “Sp
eak softly
and carry a big stick.” As a Progressive, Roosevelt believed in the principle of h
uman advance,
morally and ethically, which translated into a foreign policy of aggressive inte
rvention. He kept a
wary eye on England and her ability to maintain a balance of power, but knew tha
t the United
States had to step in if Britain faltered. Roosevelt appreciated the value of sh
ips and the power they
could project. During his first administration, he pressed Congress for new expe
nditures, resulting
in a near doubling of the navy by the end of his second term.
Both the strength and weakness of America, and the navy in particular, lay in th
e fact that two
massive oceans protected the United States. Any blue-water fleet had to be capab
le of conducting
operations in both the Atlantic and Pacific nearly simultaneously. That was befo
re a short-cut route
connecting the two oceans was conceived. For several decades, transit across Pan
ama, a territory of
Colombia, had required a stop on one side, unloading and transporting people and
goods by rail to
the other side, then reloading them to continue the journey. Warships had to sai
l all the way around
South America to get from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and vice versa. The conce
pt of a canal was
obvious, and despite the presence of powerful American interests, a French compa
ny had acquired
rights to build a canal across the Isthmus of Panama in 1879. After ten years an
d $400 million, the
French gave up, leaving the canal only partially finished. Desperately in debt,
the French attempted
to sell the assets, including the concession, to the United States for $109 mill
ion, but the United
States balked at the steep price. An alternate route, through Nicaragua, offered
the less difficult
construction chore of merely linking several large lakes together, taking advant
age of nature’s own
“canal.” But Nicaragua had its own problems, including earthquakes, so the French, e
ager for any
return on the investment, lowered the price to $40 million.
Congress liked that price, as did Roosevelt, who dispatched the new secretary of
state John Hay to
negotiate the final agreement with Tomás Herrán, Colombia’s representative, wherein th
e United
States received a ninety-nine-year lease on the Canal Zone for $10 million down
and $250,000 per
year. The ensuing events brought out Roosevelt’s darker side, part of which he had
revealed years
earlier in his Winning of the West. “The most righteous of all wars,” he wrote, “is a
war with
savages, though it is apt to be also the most terrible and inhuman. The rude, fi
erce settler who
drives the savage from the land lays all civilized mankind under debt to him.”68
When Colombia heard of the new Hay agreement, the government rejected it, offeri
ng several
possible replacements. One had Colombia receiving $20 million from the United St
ates and $10
million from the French company. Roosevelt had no intention of renegotiating a d
eal he thought
was his. By October 1903, his rhetoric had left no doubt where he stood on the P
anama issue,
calling the Colombian representatives “homicidal corruptionists” and “greedy little ar
thropoids.”69
The president saw Colombians as blackmailers. Although he had not been pressed t
o somehow
intervene in Panama, “so as to secure the Panama route,” neither did he silence his
friends,
including The Outlook, which editorialized about the desirability of an internal
revolution in
Panama that might result in secession from Colombia.70 Although Roosevelt planne
d in his annual
message to Congress to recommend that the United States take the Isthmus of Pana
ma, he never
sent it, nor was it needed: a November revolution in Panama, headed by a New Yor
ker named
Philippe Bunau-Varilla, overthrew the Colombian government there and declared an
independent
state of Panama.
As soon as Bunau-Varilla and his associates ousted the Colombian authorities in
Panama, the USS
Nashville arrived to intimidate reinforcements from Columbia, since the United S
tates had
recognized Bunau-Varilla’s group as Panama’s official government. Bunau-Varilla, an
agent of the
French Canal Company, had lobbied Congress for the Panama route after the French
enterprise ran
out of money, and he helped insert a clause in the new treaty that gave the Unit
ed States the tenmilewide
Canal Zone for $40 million, protection against any recovery of money owed to Col
ombia.
Some suggested that part of the deal was an under-the-table cash payoff of the F
rench as well.
Roosevelt denied any wrongdoing, but ultimately admitted, “I took the Canal Zone.”71
Yet his
logic was commendable: “I…left [it to] Congress, not to debate the Canal, but to deb
ate me.”72
Construction across the fifty miles of the isthmus is one of the miracles of hum
an engineering. It
completed the work begun in 1878 by Ferdinand de Lesseps, the French engineer wh
o had
constructed the Suez Canal. Once the Canal treaty was finalized, Roosevelt autho
rized U.S. Army
engineers to start digging. John. F. Wallace supervised most of the work. He spe
nt two years
assembling supplies and creating the massive infrastructure the project needed.
He oversaw the
construction of entire towns with plank walkways, hospitals, mess halls, and gen
eral stores—all
dug out of the Panamanian mud. When it came down to the Canal, though, he could
not drum up
any enthusiasm: “To me,” he told Roosevelt, “the canal is only a big ditch.”73 By 1907 h
e realized
that a sea-level canal would be too difficult, and instead proposed a series of
locks to raise vessels
from the Atlantic about thirty yards above sea level to Gatún Lake, then to the fa
mous eight-milelong
Calebra Cut—one of the most daunting engineering feats in modern history. Roosevel
t then
brought in Colonel George Goethals, who by then also had the benefit of Colonel
William Gorgas’s
medical research on malaria, to direct the project.
Goethals infused the effort with new energy, even as he confronted the Calebra C
ut, using more
than 2,500 men to dynamite mountain walls, excavating more than 200 million yard
s of dirt and
rock, which was hauled away by 4,000 wagons. Despite the use of 19 million pound
s of explosives,
only eight men perished in accidents. In 1913 the final part of the Calebra Cut
was completed, and
on the other side lay the locks at Pedro Miguel, which lower ships to the Pacifi
c’s level. When the
Canal finally opened, on August 15, 1914, Roosevelt was out of politics, but he
could claim
substantial responsibility for the greatest engineering feat in history.
The acquisition of the Canal Zone and the construction of the Panama Canal typif
ied Roosevelt’s
“big stick” attitude toward foreign policy. He was determined to keep Europeans out
of the New
World, largely in order to preserve some of it, particularly the Caribbean, for
American expansion.
When Germany tried to strong-arm Venezuela in December 1902 into repaying debts
by
threatening to blockade Venezuelan ports, Roosevelt stepped in. Eyeing the Germa
ns suspiciously,
Roosevelt decided that the United States could not allow them or any other Europ
ean power to
intervene in Latin America.
The resulting Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, delivered when Elihu R
oot read a letter
from Roosevelt at the Cuban independence anniversary dinner in 1904, promised no
interference
with a country conducting itself “with decency” in matters of trade and politics. Bu
t the United
States would not tolerate “brutal wrongdoing,” or behavior that “results in a general
loosening of
the ties of civilized society.” Such activity would require “intervention by some ci
vilized nation,
and in the Western Hemisphere the United States cannot ignore this duty.”74 This s
entiment
formed the basis of a worldview that saw any unrest in the Western Hemisphere as
a potential
threat to U.S. interests. Roosevelt’s foreign policy blended Progressive reformism
, a lingering sense
of manifest destiny, and a refereshing unwillingness to tolerate thugs and briga
nds just because
they happened to be outside American borders. In truth, his role as hemispheric
policeman differed
little from his approach to businesses and corporations. He demanded that they a
ct morally (as he
and his fellow Progressives defined “morality”) and viewed their refusal as endanger
ing the
American people when they did not.
Black and White in Progressive America
Shortly after he had succeeded McKinley, Roosevelt invited black leader Booker T
. Washington to
a personal, formal dinner at the White House. The affair shocked many Americans,
some of whom
treated it like a scandal, and Roosevelt, though he maintained that Washington r
emained an adviser,
never asked him to return. Still, the event showed both how far America had come
, and how far it
had to go.
Washington’s dinner invitation seemed trivial next to the Brownsville, Texas, shoo
ting spree of
August 1906, in which black soldiers, angered by their treatment at the hands of
Brownsville
citizens, started shooting up the town, killing a civilian, then managing to ret
urn to the base
unobserved. None of the 160 members of the black units would provide a name to i
nvestigators,
and after three months, Roosevelt discharged all 160 men, including six Medal of
Honor winners.
All the dishonorably discharged men would be disqualified from receiving their p
ensions (they
were reinstated and all military honors restored by Congress in 1972). Northerne
rs came to the
defense of the soldiers, although the South was outraged at their behavior.
Since the end of Reconstruction, the South had degenerated into a two-tiered seg
regated society of
Jim Crow laws ensuring the separation of blacks and whites in virtually every as
pect of social life.
Even in the North, however, Progressives used IQ tests to segregate education an
d keep the races
apart.75 The federal government contributed to this with the 1896 Supreme Court
decision, Plessy
v. Ferguson, in which the Court ruled that the establishment of “separate but equa
l” facilities,
including schools, was legal and acceptable. A case originating in Louisiana whe
n a black man,
Homer Plessy, rode home in a “whites only” railroad car (thus violating state law),
Plessy v.
Ferguson held of the intent of the Fourteenth Amendment that:
it could not have been intended to abolish distinctions based on color, or to en
force social, as
distinguished from political equality, or a commingling of the two races upon te
rms unsatisfactory
to either. Laws permitting, and even requiring, that separation in places where
they are liable to be
brought into contact do not necessarily imply the inferiority of either race to
the other, and have
been generally, if not universally, recognized as within the competency of the s
tate legislatures in
the exercise of their police power.76
A split in black leadership occurred, with some arguing for the community to app
ly its limited
resources to ensuring political rights rather than, for the time being, guarante
eing full access to
other aspects of society. In 1910, alongside white Progressives, a group of blac
ks known as the
Black Niagara Movement combined to found the National Association for the Advanc
ement of
Colored People (NAACP). Using the court system, NAACP lawyers waged a long strug
gle to
eliminate state voting laws designed to prohibit blacks from voting, winning an
important victory in
the Guinn v. United States case in Oklahoma (1915), although it failed to obtain
an antilynching
law until the 1930s.77 In 1917 the Buchanan v. Worley decision stated that Louis
ville, Kentucky,
laws requiring that blacks and whites live in separate communities were unconsti
tutional.
Without resorting directly to the law, white property owners in New York’s Harlem
area, under
John C. Taylor, organized to keep blacks from settling in their neighborhoods fr
om Seventh
Avenue to Fifth Avenue (although parts extended to the Harlem River) and from 13
9th Street to
130th Street. Taylor’s Harlem Property Owners’ Improvement Corporation attempted to
force
blacks to “colonize” on land outside the city (much like an Indian reservation) and
encouraged
residents to erect twenty-four-foot-tall fences to seal off white zones. On the
other side of the issue
stood a black Southern real estate developer named Phil Payton, who formed the A
fro-American
Realty Corporation in 1904 with the purpose of acquiring five-year leases on whi
te properties and
renting them to blacks. Payton’s company folded after four years, but he broke the
race barrier, and
opened the door to black residency.
Blacks began to settle in Harlem in 1902, and over the next two decades, Harlem
got both blacker
and poorer. Other disconcerting trends had appeared as well: W.E.B. Du Bois note
d that in 1901
there were twice as many black women as men in New York, and that the rate of il
legitimacy was
high.78 Corruption, graft, and prostitution were rampant. One neighborhood, call
ed by the
preachers the Terrible Tenderloin—because the bribes paid to police to ignore the
prostitution were
so great that a captain could live on tenderloin steaks for a year—housed one of t
he worst red-light
districts in the nation. The Reverend Adam Clayton Powell Sr., of the Abyssinian
Baptist Church,
recalled that prostitutes lived “over me and all around me” and he shelled “pimps, pro
stitutes, and
keepers of dives” with “gospel bombardments.”79 The audacity of the harlots and the su
sceptibility
of the Johns, knew no bounds: Powell observed that they stood across the street
from his church on
Sunday evenings, shirts unbuttoned, soliciting male churchgoers on their way out
of the service! It
seemed surreal that only eleven years earlier there had been a Harlem Yacht Club
, a Philharmonic
Society, and a Harlem Literary Society.
More than 90 percent of blacks in New York worked in menial services. Many of th
e higher-paid
black businesses had been replaced by foreign-born whites, especially in caterin
g, where blacks had
gained a solid reputation in the city.
As the black population of New York City rose from just under 92,000 in 1910 to
more than
150,000 by 1920, virtually all of it in Harlem, it grew more dense. The city’s whi
te population fell
by 18 percent, whereas the black population soared by 106 percent, with blacks c
omprising 12
percent of Manhattan’s population, despite being just under 5 percent of the city’s
population. By
1930, eleven of the twelve blocks from Park Avenue and West 126th Street to West
153rd Street on
the River were 90 percent black. Nor were all the new arrivals in Harlem African
Americans. Many
came from Jamaica, Barbados, and other parts of the West Indies—more than 40,000 o
f them—
joined in the 1920s by 45,000 Puerto Ricans in what was called the Harlem ghetto
.
The crush of people, most of them with few assets, made for one of the highest-d
ensity areas in
America: by 1930, 72 percent of all blacks in New York City lived in Harlem (164
,566).80 That
gave Harlem a population density of 336 people to an acre, contrasted with Phila
delphia (ranking
second in black population in the United States) at 111 per acre, or Chicago, wi
th 67 per acre.81
Predictably, with such densities—including two of the most crowded city streets in
the entire
world—black sections of New York were among the sickest in the nation, with death
rates 42
percent higher than the city’s average. In a harbinger of the late twentieth centu
ry, black-on-black
violence rose 60 percent between 1900 and 1925.82
Outside of the largest cities, blacks found that although the law was infrequent
ly an effective
weapon for addressing racial injustice, the wallet worked somewhat better. Afric
an Americans
realized that their buying power gave them important leverage against white busi
nesses, such as
when they staged boycotts against transportation companies in Georgia, foreshado
wing the
Montgomery bus boycott of the 1950s. African Americans set up their own insuranc
e and banking
companies, developed important networks, and formed their own all-black labor un
ions when
barred by white unions. They had their greatest success in the South, where Geor
gia blacks built
1,544 schools that educated more than eleven thousand students, despite resistan
ce from local cities
and towns against building black schools. Long segregated from white Protestant
churches, blacks
had established the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) in 1816, and by the
end of the
Progressive era, it had grown dramatically.
Blacks created all-black universities, such as Howard (1867), Spelman(1881), Fis
k (1866),
Tuskegee (1881), Morehouse (1867), Lincoln (1854), Atlanta (1865), and Hampton (
1868)—the
so-called black Ivy League or the elite eight—to overcome the reluctance of white
universities to
admit and educate black students. Plessy v. Ferguson spawned and bolstered sever
al black public
colleges, such as Alcorn State, North Carolina A&T, Tennessee State, Grambling,
Delaware State,
Southern University, Florida A&M, and Prairie View. These schools, while grossly
underfunded,
stood in the gap until mainstream white universities desegregated.83
Blacks held varied philosophies on how best to attain equality, and some even qu
estioned whether
equality with whites was a goal worth pursuing. Generally, the divisions broke d
own into three
groups. Booker T. Washington, a former slave, preached a message of slow, steady
economic
progress. Blacks and whites would accommodate each other, gradually wearing thei
r chafing
conflict into comfortable communities. Yet Washington was no sellout—nor, in the m
odern
(wrongly referenced) term, an Uncle Tom. He was under no illusions of white good
ness, and his
accomodationist message carried a quid pro quo: in return for black cooperation,
whites would
eliminate lynching and end segregation. Nevertheless, many African Americans fou
nd his tactics
insufficient and his pace too slow. W.E.B. Du Bois (1868–1963), a Boston-born, Har
vard-educated
black who had studied under William James, adopted the social-science methodolog
y that had
gripped so many of his generation. One of the founders of the NAACP, Du Bois tau
ght at Atlanta
University, where he emerged as an accomodationist. Du Bois rejected Washington’s
approach,
instead urging blacks to advance their economic and political power through what
he called the
Talented Tenth—a black intellectual and economic elite (with members like himself)
who could lift
the 90 percent to a position of full citizenship. His ideas foundered, partly be
cause there were few
blacks or whites as well educated as Du Bois, and partly because blacks were not
only a small
minority nationally, but were also disproportionately clustered in the Deep Sout
h, where the full
weight of the political structures and economic trends were against them.
Younger than either Washington or Du Bois, Marcus Garvey offered a third road to
black
empowerment. A Jamaican, once inspired by Washington’s Up From Slavery, Garvey fou
nded the
Universal Negro Improvement Association in 1914, but he soon parted with Washing
ton’s
moderate approach. Instead of living with whites, he maintained, blacks needed t
o reclaim their
home continent, Africa, and establish themselves internationally through achieve
ments that
emanated solely from a black culture. A complex man, Garvey spoke with derision
of Africans who
lived on the Continent, arguing that American blacks could return to Africa and
lift up the natives.
Advocating a black nationalism in which American blacks separated to succeed, Ga
rvey frequently
appeared in a Napoleonic-type military uniform while attaching to himself a vari
ety of quasireligious
titles, including reverend. He blended Jamaican Rastafarianism, New England refo
rmist
Unitarianism, and popular one-world notions, but with little consistency. His mo
vement swelled
rapidly, then declined just as rapidly after Garvey was finally imprisoned on ch
arges of mail fraud.
Unlike Washington, Garvey argued that the former status of slavery itself prohib
ited the two races
from living together harmoniously: there was no example in history, he maintaine
d, of a “slave
race” ever rising to political equality with its masters, and thus American blacks
had to leave—to
reclaim Africa before they could prosper.
Theodore Roosevelt’s single dinner with Washington and his slighting of the role o
f the Tenth
Cavalry regiment in his memoirs of Cuba hardly qualified him as a champion of ra
ce relations. In
his racial attitudes, Roosevelt differed little from the vast majority of Americ
ans at the turn of the
century. The fact that the “slave race” had founded its own universities and busines
ses and had
developed a sophisticated debate over the nature of a full and equal place for A
frican Americans in
society said just as much about the progress of blacks as Jim Crow, Plessy v. Fe
rguson, and the
often two-tiered society said about the lack of progress in racial matters.
Despite the continued struggles of blacks, it was nevertheless the case that Ame
rica by 1910 had
successfully blended more—and more radically different—people than any other society
in human
history, and had spread over the lot of them a broad blanket of public protectio
ns, civil rights,
educational support, and, equally important, civic expectations. In World War I,
the willingness of
German-Americans to fight against Germany, for example, convinced many of their
complete
Americanization. In addition, the fact that a Catholic could run for the preside
ncy just a decade
after that further underscored the melting-pot principle. Unfortunately, African
Americans
remained largely excluded from the “pot” for several decades, despite pandering by t
he
administration of Teddy Roosevelt’s cousin Franklin. Well into the twentieth centu
ry, blacks
remained divided over which of the three paths to follow—Washington’s, Du Bois’s, or G
arvey’s.
Ballinger and Pinchot
A largely prosperous economy had insulated Roosevelt’s economic policies and corpo
rate attacks
for several years, but that threatened to change in 1907. The economy weakened i
n March of that
year, the real blow coming in October, when the Knickerbocker Trust Company in N
ew York
closed. New York bankers shifted funds from bank to bank, staving off runs, unti
l J. P. Morgan
could step in. The panic dissipated, but in the process Roosevelt labeled busine
ssmen “malefactors
of great wealth.”84 By 1908 more than a few Republicans had concluded that Rooseve
lt’s
antibusiness views had contributed to the effects of the downturn and damaged Am
erican
enterprise.
At the same time, Roosevelt either ignored or contributed to (depending on the h
istorical source) a
deepening rift with Congress. A conservative majority felt betrayed by many of h
is actions,
whereas the Progressive minority had grown increasingly restless at its inabilit
y to change policy
fast enough. Riding his own personal popularity, Roosevelt assumed that he could
bully his foes or,
at worst, sidestep them. But the chaos he left ensured that anyone following Roo
sevelt was in for a
tough term. That is, if Roosevelt did not run again…
The most critical indicator that he would not was his 1904 promise not to seek a
nother term. Above
all, Roosevelt stood for integrity, and despite his occasional theatrics, he und
erstood checks and
balances too. Having “used every ounce of power there was in office,” Roosevelt want
ed to make
that influence permanent by stepping down.85 To have run again would have tainte
d his integrity
and, though he did not admit it, diminished his well-crafted image, making him l
ittle more than the
power-grubbing pols he supposedly towered above. Therefore, Roosevelt decided to
select his own
successor, his secretary of war, William Howard Taft of Ohio.
The president had already placed considerable patronage selection in Taft’s hands.
Aside from
Elihu Root, who was too old, and Charles Evans Hughes, who was insufficiently al
igned with the
Progressive agenda, Taft had no real internal opposition. Known as a competent j
urist from a
Republican political family, Taft had worked his way up the party through a seri
es of judicial
appointments. Under Harrison, he had served as solicitor general. Under McKinley
, Taft had his
finest hour when he had served as civil administrator of the Philippines, where
he improved the
country’s roads, schools, and medical facilities, helping to extinguish the insurr
eccións there. This
was made possible in part by Taft’s utter lack of prejudice, and willingness to in
corporate the
Filipinos into the islands’ government.
Then came Roosevelt’s “investiture” of Taft, placing the good-humored giant in a diffi
cult position.
He had already told his wife he did not want to be president, but his wife and f
amily insisted.
Actually, Taft had a longing for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court, and Roosevelt
offered him the
position on three occasions, but each time Helen Taft pushed him away from it, l
argely because she
wanted to inhabit the executive mansion. Somewhat unenthusiastically, then, Taft
ran for the
presidency. His opponent, the twice-beaten William Jennings Bryan, elicited only
a tepid fraction
of the enthusiasm he had had in 1896. Taft easily beat Bryan, even as the Republ
icans lost several
congressional seats and governorships.
Upon assuming the presidency, Taft promptly packed his cabinet with as many lawy
ers as he could
find, selecting them almost entirely without party input. Although a relatively
obscure group, the
cabinet members proved reasonably effective, possibly because they lacked outsid
e obligations. He
set to law the Roosevelt legacy and was every bit the Progressive TR was.
Taft found that Roosevelt had left him plenty of problems to clean up, not the l
east of which was
the tariff. Tied up with the tariff came the thorny personality of Joe Cannon, t
he Republican
Speaker of the House. A high-tariff man, Cannon wielded the rules of the House l
ike no one since
Henry Clay a century earlier, stalling legislation here, speeding it along there
, depending on his
fancy. Taft called him “dirty and vulgar,” welcoming the news that many House Republ
icans
would not vote for him as Speaker.86 Openly siding with the “insurgents,” as the ant
i-Cannon
forces were called, was dangerous. Roosevelt cautioned against it, but Taft plun
ged into the melee,
convinced Cannon had betrayed the party’s lower-tariff platform. The insurgents he
ld just enough
of a margin to swing the vote away from Cannon on a critical procedural issue. A
gain, Taft
shortsightedly offered them his support.
But Cannon had not achieved his position of power by meekly acceding to the wish
es of others. He
let it be known that if the president did not side with him, the tariff bill wou
ld be held hostage by
his allies. Taft had no choice but to retreat, abandoning the insurgents and acq
uiescing to Cannon’s
reelection as Speaker. This placed Taft in the unpleasant position of supporting
a Speaker who
despised him while alienating the insurgents, who now distrusted him.
Whether Roosevelt would have handled the insurgent question differently is debat
able, but there is
little doubt that he would have surmised Cannon would double-cross him at the fi
rst opportunity.
The naïve Taft did not. Worse, when the House committee assignments came out, the
thirty
insurgents found themselves stripped of all committee power, and the Republican
Party announced
that it would support “loyal” candidates in the forthcoming primaries against any in
surgents. Taft’s
political ineptness had cut the rebel faction off at the knees.
Meanwhile, three defining elements of Taft’s administration took shape. The first
was the tariff
revision. A topic that is decidedly unexciting to modern Americans, the tariff r
emained a political
hot potato. Even many former supporters had come to see that it had outlived wha
tever economic
usefulness it ever had (and many argued that it had never achieved the gains att
ributed to it). But
getting rid of it was a different matter. For one thing, since Roosevelt had sta
rted to set aside large
chunks of federal land, government revenues from land sales had dwindled. They w
ere already
shrinking, since all but Arizona and New Mexico had achieved statehood and most
of the West had
been settled by 1910. Ending the tariff meant replacing it with some form of rev
enue system that
had not yet generated much enthusiasm—direct taxation, probably in the form of inc
ome taxes
(which had been declared unconstitutional).
Nevertheless, the Payne bill was introduced into the House of Representatives in
April 1909,
passing easily, despite resistance from the insurgents. A Senate version, the Al
drich bill, featured
some eight hundred revisions of the low House rates, raising almost all rates. M
any Progressive
senators, including Robert LaFollette of Wisconsin and William Borah of Idaho, r
esisted the higher
rates. These Progressives were remarkably homogeneous: most came to the Senate i
n 1906; none
had attended an eastern university; and they all came from primarily agricultura
l Midwestern states.
Together they “took the floor of the Senate to launch perhaps the most destructive
criticism of high
tariffs that had been made by the elected representatives of the Republican part
y.”87 The Senate
rebels put Taft in a box just as had the House insurgents, forcing him to choose
between the lower
tariffs, which he believed in, or supporting the Senate organization under Nelso
n Aldrich.
Ultimately, the Payne-Aldrich bill passed, reducing rates somewhat, but leaving
Taft weaker than
ever. Taft had to some degree staked his presidency on the tariff—that, and trust-
busting.
Nevertheless, in the jumble of rates, the new tariff probably favored the large
eastern industrialists
at the expense of western raw materials producers.
A second emphasis of the Taft administration, a continuation of trust-busting, a
ctually saw Taft
outdo his predecessor. Having bumped Roosevelt’s attorney general, Philander Knox,
up to
secretary of state, Taft appointed George Wicker-sham as his new chief law enfor
cement officer
charged with prosecuting antitrust violations. Wickersham concluded Roosevelt’s ca
mpaign against
Standard Oil, finally succeeding in 1911, in getting the Supreme Court to break
up the oil giant into
several smaller companies. “A bad trust,” Roosevelt had called it, distinguishing fr
om a “good
trust.” That statement alone indicated the futility of government determining when
a business was
succeeding too much. Under subsequent antitrust laws, such as Clayton (1914) and
others, a
company could be hauled into court for cutting prices too low (predatory pricing
), raising prices too
high (monopolistic pricing), or having prices the same as all other competitors
(collusion)!
Undeterred, Taft more than tripled the number of antitrust cases compared to Roo
sevelt’s.
Now Taft stumbled into the position of attacking the popular Roosevelt when he p
ursued the U.S.
Steel antitrust case, unaware Roosevelt had approved the combination. In the pro
cess, TR was
summoned before a House committee to explain himself. The matter embarrassed Roo
sevelt, who
had to admit he was aware of the monopolistic tendencies inherent in the acquisi
tion. Teddy had
remained subdued in his criticisms until the congressional testimony. Now his re
marks about Taft
became positively toxic. A third issue, the Ballinger-Pinchot controversy, seale
d the breach with
Roosevelt.
As head of the Forestry Service, Gifford Pinchot, Roosevelt’s friend and eastern-b
orn soul mate,
shared his attitudes toward conservation policy. Indeed, he probably exceeded Ro
osevelt’s zealous
approach to preserving the environment. “Sir Galahad of the woodlands,” Harold Ickes
later called
him.88 In stark contrast stood Richard Ballinger, a westerner from Seattle, who
had replaced James
Garfield as secretary of the interior. Ballinger brought a different attitude to
the Roosevelt/Pinchot
“pristine” approach, preferring development and use of government lands.
Ballinger thought setting aside the lands was illegal, reopening the lands to pu
blic entry, whereupon
Pinchot branded him an enemy of conservation. A further allegation against Balli
nger came from
an Interior Department employee, Louis Glavis, who asserted that Ballinger had g
iven rights to
Alaskan coal lands to Seattle business interests, including some he had done leg
al work for in the
past. Pinchot urged Glavis to take the matter to Taft. The president examined th
e charges,
concluded that Ballinger had acted properly, and fired Glavis as much for disloy
alty as any other
reason. Afterward, Glavis attempted to destroy Ballinger and Taft, writing an ex
posé of the
land/coal deal in Collier’s (1909). Up to that point, Taft had attempted to keep P
inchot out of the
controversy, writing a letter to the Forestry chief urging him to stay clear of
the Glavis affair.
Instead, Pinchot supplied the material for Glavis’s articles from his own office,
then, seeking a
martyrdom for conservation, he gave Congress evidence that he had been the leake
r. Taft had no
choice but to sack Pinchot as well.
At no time did Taft want matters to come to that. With Roosevelt out of the coun
try, Pinchot was
the face of the administration’s conservation movement. Subsequent investigations
proved
Ballinger innocent of all charges. He was, in the truest sense, a genuine conser
vationist seeking to
conserve and use public lands and to put as much real estate as possible in the
hands of the public.
Tremendous damage had been done to Taft, though, especially in the Midwest, acce
lerating Taft’s
“almost unerring penchant for creating powerful enemies.”89 By that time, Ballinger
had become
such a political liability to Taft that he resigned in March 1911, giving the Pi
nchot forces a lateinning
victory.
Taft’s political ineptness, combined with the Ballinger-Pinchot controversy and hi
s decision to
oppose the insurgents left him weakened. Democrats captured the House in 1910, d
ealing him yet
another defeat, and the Senate, although technically controlled by the Republica
ns, was in the
hands of an axis of Republican insurgents and Democrats. By 1912, Republican gov
ernors were
actively calling for Roosevelt to come out of retirement. Feigning a lack of ent
husiasm, Roosevelt
nevertheless jumped at the chance to regain the presidency, and entered the prim
aries. To oppose
Taft, TR had to move left, abandoning the conservative elements of his own presi
dency.90 His
entrance into the race doomed Taft, and opened the door to Democrat Woodrow Wils
on in the
general election. Yet Wilson had more in common with the two Republicans he woul
d succeed than
he did with many Democrats of the past, including the thrice-beaten Bryan, just
as Roosevelt and
Taft had more in common with him than they did with either McKinley or Harrison.
The
Progressive movement had reached its apex, temporarily eclipsing even party ideo
logy and
producing both domestic and international upheavals of mammoth proportions.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
War, Wilson, and Internationalism, 1912–20
The Dawn of Dreams
At the turn of the century, the United States had joined much of the industriali
zed world in
expecting that the fantastic progress and wondrous advances in science and techn
ology would
produce not only more affluence, but peace and brotherhood. That, after all, had
been the dream of
the Progressive movement and its myriad reforms under Theodore Roosevelt and Wil
liam Howard
Taft. Unions continued to press for government support against business, women m
aintained
pressure for the franchise, and blacks examined ways to reclaim the rights guara
nteed by the
Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth amendments that had been suppressed after
1877. The slow
realization of some of these dreams offered a strong lesson to those willing to
learn: human nature
changes slowly, if at all.
Such was the case in Europe. The euphoria of goodwill brought about by internati
onal scientific
exchanges in the 1890s, combined with the absence of a European land war involvi
ng the major
powers since 1871, provided the illusion that conflict had somehow disappeared o
nce and for all.
Was peace at hand? Many Europeans thought so, and the ever-optimistic Americans
wanted to
accept the judgment of their Continental friends in this matter. British writer
Norman Angell, in his
1909 book Europe’s Optical Illusion—better known by its 1910 reissued title, The Gre
at Illusion—
contended that the industrialized nations were losing the “psychological impulse t
o war.”1 One
diplomat involved in a commission settling a conflict in the Balkans thought the
resulting 1913
peace treaty represented the end of warfare. Increased communications, fear of s
ocialist
revolutions, resistance of taxpayers, and international market competition all f
orced the Great
Powers to the point where they were manifestly unwilling to make war.2
A young Winston Churchill, then a member of Parliament, rose for his first speec
h and agreed with
this assessment. “In former days,” he intoned, “when wars arose from individual causes
, from the
policy of a Minister or the passion of a King, when they were fought by small re
gular armies…it
was possible to limit the liabilities of the combatants. But now, when mighty po
pulations are
impelled on each other…when the resources of science and civilization sweep away e
verything that
might mitigate their fury, a European war can only end in the ruin of the vanqui
shed and
the…commercial dislocation and exhaustion of the conquerors.”3 Churchill, who had se
en combat
at Omdurman as a lieutenant in the 24th Lancers, witnessed firsthand the lethali
ty of modern rapidfire
rifles, Maxim machine guns, and long-range artillery.
Other military experts chimed in, including Ivan S. Bloch, who, even before the
Boer War had
concluded, predicted that the combination of automatic weapons and trenches woul
d give a decided
edge to the defense, so as to increase the bloodshed in a subsequent war to unfa
thomable levels.4 Is
War Impossible? asked the subtitle of Bloch’s book. Many thought so. Americans kne
w from the
losses in the Spanish-American War that the slightest technological advantage, s
uch as smokeless
powder, could translate into massive combat losses.
Two factors obscured the horrendous reality of conflicts. First, although combat
that pitted one
European power against another, or Americans against each other, resulted in mas
sive
bloodletting—more Americans were killed on the third day of Gettysburg than in all
the frontier
wars put together—all too often American and European papers carried lopsided news
of the
carnage in the colonies when western forces crushed native armies. Britain, igno
ring severe losses
in the Boer War, instead pointed to the overwhelming victories at Ulundi (1879)
or Omdurman
(1898). Americans discounted the losses to Spanish bullets and overemphasized th
e success at
smashing Apache, Nez Percé, and the Sioux.
The idealistic notion that war itself had been banished from human society was e
ven dangerous.
Teddy Roosevelt’s success at bringing the Russians and Japanese together with the
Portsmouth
Treaty, combined with the unprecedented affluence of the United States, fooled m
any into thinking
that a new age had indeed dawned. A certain faith in technology and affluence bu
ttressed these
notions. Americans certainly should have realized, and rejected, the pattern: th
e very same
principles—that if only there is enough wealth spread around, people will refuse t
o fight over
ideological or cultural differences—had failed to prevent the Civil War. Or put in
the crass terms of
Jacksonianism, as long as wallets are fat and bellies are full, ideas do not mat
ter.
At almost the same moment that Europe’s Optical Illusion reached the publisher, a
former German
chief of staff, Count Alfred von Schlieffen, wrote an article with a vastly diff
erent conclusion,
suggesting that in the near future four powers—France, Russia, Italy, and Britain—wo
uld combine
for a “concentrated attack” on Germany. Schlieffen had already prepared a detailed b
attle plan for
such an eventuality, calling for the rapid swing of German troops through neutra
l Belgium to defeat
the alliance before it could coordinate against the empire of Germany. Thus, whe
reas some in
England and America prophesied peace, others were already sharpening the swords
of war.
Time Line
1912:
Woodrow Wilson elected president
1913:
Federal Reserve Act passed; Sixteenth Amendment (income tax) passed; Seventeenth
Amendment
(direct election of U.S. senators) passed
1914:
World War I breaks out in Europe; revolution in Mexico leads to landing of U.S.
troops at Vera
Cruz; Clayton Act passed
1915:
Sinking of the Lusitania prompts sharp response from United States to Germany
1916:
Woodrow Wilson reelected; U.S. forces under General John Pershing chase Pancho V
illa in
Mexico
1917:
Zimmerman telegram; United States declares war on Germany and the Central Powers
;
Noncommunist revolution in Russia (March) followed by a communist revolution in
Russia
(October)
1918:
American forces in key battles at Belleau Wood, the Ardennes; Armistice (Novembe
r eleventh)
1919:
Versailles peace conference; Wilson offers Fourteen Points; Versailles Treaty; L
odge reservations
to treaty introduced in the Senate; Eighteenth Amendment (Prohibition) ratified
1920:
Wilson suffers stroke; Nineteenth Amendment (Woman suffrage) ratified; U.S. econ
omy enters
recession
Marvels in the Earth and Skies
The technology that made killing so easy from 1914 to 1918 had offered only hope
and promise a
few years earlier. Many of the new gizmos and gadgets had come from American inv
entors. The
United States blew past the established European industrial giants largely becau
se of the openness
of the system and the innovation that had come from generations of farmers and m
echanics who
translated their constant tinkering into immense technological breakthroughs. Au
to wizard Henry
Ford was such a man.5
An electrical mechanic with Edison Electric in Michigan in the 1890s, Henry Ford
spent his nights
reading manuals about a new internal combustion engine, and by 1896 he had imagi
ned ways to
mate it to a carriage. In fact, many others had already done so. At the Chicago
Exposition of 1893,
no fewer than a half dozen horseless carriages were on display; and four years l
ater Charles Duryea
demonstrated the feasibility of cross-country travel when he drove a “car” from Clev
eland to New
York. Now Ford welded a larger four-cycle engine to a carriage frame and called
it a quadricycle. It
was scarcely bigger than a child’s red wagon, with a single seat with barely enoug
h room for two
adults. Even at that, it was too large to get through the door in the shed where
Ford constructed it,
and he had to take an ax to the walls to free his creation.
Henry Ford lacked any formal education. He adapted his ideas through trial and e
rror and recruited
the best help, combining ideas and developing his own engine and wheels. His clo
sest associates
always noted that Ford seemed to have an idea when the experts did not. After te
sting the car for
three years, Ford finally decided he was ready to mass-produce automobiles.
Like other visionaries, Ford looked well beyond the horseless carriage to a mobi
le society with
millions of people using automobiles. Scoffers had their own opinions. Woodrow W
ilson called the
car the “new symbol of wealth’s arrogance,” and when Ford asked for a loan in 1903 to
build his
contraption, the president of the Michigan Savings Bank told Ford’s lawyer that “the
horse is here
to stay, but the automobile is only a novelty—a fad.”6 Like countless other successf
ul
entrepreneurs, Ford opened his first car company only to have it fail in 1900; t
hen he opened
another, and it, too, collapsed; on the third try, in 1903, the Ford Motor Compa
ny finally opened for
good.
Unable to read blueprints himself, Ford nevertheless contributed all the major i
deas to the
automobile, including the use of vanadium steel, the design of the transmission’s
planetary gears,
and the decision to use a detachable head for the block, even though no one knew
how to build a
head gasket strong enough to withstand the pressure.7 His plants mass-produced e
ight different
models of cars, but lost money on several, leading Ford to conclude that he shou
ld focus on a single
variant, the Model T. All other models were eliminated from the Ford production
lines. This
allowed Ford to emphasize lower cost over speed, which was not needed anyway (De
troit had a
speed limit of eight miles an hour and fines of $100—two months’ wages—for a single vi
olation!).
“I will build a motor car for the great multitude,” he announced. “It will be so low i
n price that no
man making a good salary will be unable to own one.”8 As the price fell to $850, F
ord sold twelve
thousand Model Ts in twelve months, continually pressing the prices downward. By
the 1920s, he
estimated that for every dollar he chopped off the price he sold another thousan
d cars.9
Ford’s great twist to Eli Whitney’s mass-production techniques came when he applied
electric
power at his Highland Park facility to move the car from one station to another,
reducing work time
and wasted effort. Ford also understood that economy was obtained through simpli
city, another of
Whitney’s lessons. He therefore concentrated entirely on the T, or the Tin Lizzy,
as some called it,
and made it as simple as possible. It had no starter, no heater, no side windows
, and was available
only in black. But it was cheap. Ford’s own line workers could purchase one with s
avings from the
remarkably high wages Ford paid. Partly to prevent unionization and partly to at
tract the best
workforce in Michigan, Ford introduced the $5-a-day wage in 1914. This was nearl
y double what
his most generous competitors paid, and it cut the legs out from under the union
. Yet even at these
wages, Ford drove down the price to $345 in 1916.
The automaker’s personal life was more complex than the design of the Tin Lizzy, h
owever.
Famous for saying, “History is bunk,” Ford actually spent millions of dollars collec
ting and
preserving historical artifacts. And he could be a master of the gaffe. While ma
king a speech at
Sing Sing prison in New York, Ford opened by saying, “Boys, I’m glad to see you here
.”10 But as
an internationalist/utopian in the mold of Alfred Nobel, Ford put his money wher
e his mouth was,
financing a “peace ship” in 1915 to haul himself and other peace activists to German
y to instruct
Kaiser Wilhelm to call off the war. His anti-Semitism was well known, and to his
great discredit he
financed an anti-Jewish newspaper in Detroit, to which he frequently contributed
. After Adolf
Hitler came to power in Germany, Ford expressed admiration for der Führer, who sup
posedly had a
picture of the American on his wall.
At the same time Henry Ford struggled with the automobile, another fantastic mac
hine appeared on
the scene when two bicycle manufacturers from Dayton, Ohio, Wilbur and Orville W
right, sought
to use the laws of aerodynamics to produce machine-powered, human-controlled fli
ght at Kitty
Hawk, North Carolina. Although the Wright Brothers’ maiden voyage on December 17,
1903,
lasted just twelve seconds and covered only 120 feet—“you could have thrown a ball f
arther”—it
displayed the possibility of conquering air itself to the world.11 The flight pr
oved highly
embarrassing to the U.S. government, which through the army had given seed money
to a similar
program under the direction of Samuel P. Langley. But Langley’s government-funded
aircraft
crashed ignominiously, and after the Wright Brothers’ success, he stood to lose hi
s funding. He
therefore claimed that the Wright Brothers’ flight had not been “powered flight” at al
l, but gliding.
The Wrights contributed to the suspicion with their secrecy about the designs, f
earing patent
infringements of the type that had afflicted Whitney. Already, Glenn Curtiss and
others had taken
elements of the Wright flyer and applied them to their own craft. Thus the Wrigh
ts hesitated to
publicly display the aircraft and, for several years, to conduct highly visible
trials. President
Roosevelt intervened to settle the issue, insisting on a carefully monitored tes
t in which Langley
was proven wrong and the Wright Brothers, right.
In a 1908 summer flight at Le Mans, France, Wilbur flew an airplane for an hour
and a half,
covering more than forty miles. Le Figaro, France’s premier newspaper, gushed that
it had
witnessed “Wilbur Wright and his great white bird, the beautiful mechanical bird…the
re is no
doubt! Wilbur and Orville Wright have well and truly flown.”12 Convinced, in 1909
the army gave
the Wright Brothers a contract for $30,000 per machine.
The auto and the airplane were still in their infancy, and only the most eccentr
ic dreamers could
envision an America crisscrossed by thousands of miles of asphalt and dotted by
hundreds of
airports. Dreamers of another sort remained hard at work, though, in the realm o
f social
engineering.
Progressive Reformers
While the Wright Brothers aspired to reach the heavens, quite literally, through
technology, another
movement sought the kingdom of heaven through more spiritual means. Revivals, of
course, had
played a prominent role in the First and Second Great Awakenings of the colonial
era and
Jacksonian periods. Following in the paths blazed by evangelists such as Charles
G. Finney and
Holiness leader Charles Parnham, evangelists routinely hit the dusty trails to r
ouse the morally
sleeping masses for the Lord. In the late 1800s, many Americans had adopted eith
er a more formal
liturgical stance aligned with the major traditional churches or had joined the
growing sea of
secularists. But in 1905 spiritual shock waves hit Los Angeles, spread from a re
vival in Wales. The
Welsh revival was so powerful that the number of drunkenness arrests fell over a
three-year period,
and the miners cleaned up their language so much that their horses reportedly co
uld no longer
understand the commands. The revival reached the United States through traveling
ministers to the
American Holiness churches, where a number of prophecies foretold a massive revi
val that would
descend on California.13
A year later, in April 1906, at a church on Azusa Street in Los Angeles, as Elde
r William Seymour
began praying with local church members, the Azusa Christians began to speak in
other tongues
(technically called glossolalia). This was a biblical phenomenon that occurred a
t Pentecost, when
the Holy Spirit filled the believers, and at that time they spoke in other tongu
es—that is, they spoke
in languages they did not know. Crowds packed the area around the house, growing
so large that
the foundation of the front porch collapsed. Eventually the prayer services—which,
by now, were
going on for twenty-four hours a day—had to be moved to an old African Methodist E
piscopal
(AME) church nearby. As word of the Azusa Street revival spread, it became clear
that this was an
interracial event, often with women conducting important parts of the services o
r prayers.
Inevitably, divisions and schisms appeared, and some of the early members left o
r otherwise lost
their influence, until finally, between 1909 and 1913 (depending on whether one
counts a second
revival that occurred at the same location), the revival ended. The Azusa Street
revival gave birth to
the modern charismatic/ Pentecostal movement in America, setting the spiritual s
tage for dozens of
charismatic denominations in the United States.
An even larger movement, that of the Social Gospel, sprang from mainstream Prote
stant ministers
who emphasized social justice over perfecting the inner man, and the relationshi
p of Christians to
others in society. Social Gospel advocates included Washington Gladden, an Ohio
Congregational
minister; Walter Rauschenbusch, a New York Baptist preacher; and Kansan Charles
Sheldon,
whose In His Steps sold 23 million copies and was a precursor to the twenty-firs
t-century WWJD
(What Would Jesus Do?) movement. Most Social Gospelers endorsed minimum wage and
child
labor laws, favored a redistribution of wealth, and generally embraced state reg
ulation of
business.14 To do so usually involved significant revisions of the Bible, and ma
ny (though not all)
Social Gospelers abandoned any claims about scripture’s literal accuracy. Instead,
the Social
Gospelers viewed the Bible as a moral guidebook—but no more than that. These moder
nists also
“abandoned theological dogmatism for greater tolerance of other faiths.”15
Secularist reformers continued the quest for perfectionism with something like a
religious zeal.
They wielded great influence in the first decade of the new century. By 1912, Pr
ogressives found
adherents in both political parties and had substantial support from women, who
supported health
and safety laws and prohibition and temperance legislation. In turn, woman suffr
age became a
centerpiece of all Progressive reform. Theodore Roosevelt had done much to dull
the campaign
issues of food and drug reform and trust-busting. Individual states initiated ma
ny Progressive ideas
for direct election of judges, popular initiative for legislation that the state
assembly did not wish to
bring up, public referenda on unpopular bills advanced by the legislatures, and
recall of public
officials. (Indeed, Arizona’s statehood had been held up until 1912 because its co
nstitution had all
these features.)
Reform impulse sprang up as much in the West as in the big cities of the East. A
rizona, California,
Nevada, Oregon, Washington, New Mexico, Texas, Kansas, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, I
daho,
Oklahoma, and South Dakota all had enacted woman suffrage by 1919. Progressive i
deas were in
the air everywhere: from Virginia to Wisconsin, professional city managers repla
ced city councils,
and new campaigns to reform government swept from South Dakota to Texas. There w
as a certain
illogic to the whole reform mentality. Full-time career politicians were venal,
and thus needed to be
replaced with professional managers. But professional managers were also untrust
worthy because
they wanted the job in the first place! Jefferson and Madison’s dream of part-time
citizen
legislators, who would convene at the capital, do their business, and then go ho
me to their
constituents, under assault since the Jacksonian party system, now yielded furth
er to demands for
the professionalization of politics. This professionalization hardly eliminated
corruption. Rather, it
changed the names of those controlling the graft.
Under ordinary circumstances, immigrants were the object of considerable panderi
ng, but election
days brought even more extreme treatment for those who had newly arrived on Amer
ican shores.
Bosses trucked the immigrants to polls and paid them to vote for the machine. Wh
en possible, party
loyalists voted multiple times, honoring Tweed’s maxim to “vote early and often.” Supp
orters
stuffed ballot boxes with the names of dead voters, wrote in fictitious resident
s, or, conversely,
helped lose ballot boxes from areas where the opposing party might do well. Secr
et ballots, of
course, undercut this power by hampering vote buying and also by preventing illi
terate citizens
from voting, since they could no longer take a colored card that indicated party
preference, but had
to actually read a ballot.
All the while a climate of violence and larceny—and, not surprisingly, organized c
rime—hovered
around the perimeter of political machines, occasionally swooping in to grab a c
ontract or
blackmail an official. Every ethnic group in a large city had its own mob. The I
talian Mafia was
merely the most notorious of these; the Irish, Jews, and, in subsequent decades,
blacks, Puerto
Ricans, Chinese, and Jamaicans had gangs, and every gang battled every other, of
ten in bloody
shootouts. Corruption filtered down into police departments, where being on the
take was viewed
as a legitimate bonus as long as it did not interfere with prosecuting real crim
inals. Law
enforcement officials routinely winked at brothels, gambling rooms, even opium d
ens—as long as
the users remained blissfully pacific—in return for payola envelopes that appeared
in the officers’
coat pockets during their daily rounds.
In 1911 the Chicago Metropolitan Vice Commission conducted a thorough study of p
rostitution,
which shocked the investigators. At least five thousand full-time prostitutes wo
rked the city—one
for every two hundred women in Chicago—although that number, the commission estima
ted, might
have represented a conservative guess that did not include so-called clandestine
prostitutes, such as
married women making part-time money. Equally stunning, the prostitution busines
s (when
counting procurers, pimps, tavern owners, thugs, and crime lords who ran the dis
tricts) probably
generated upward of $15 million in annual revenues.16
Had the money stayed only with the criminals, it would have been easier to deal
with. But as the
commission reported, the graft was so widespread that prostitution income found
its way into the
hands not only of the owners of the bordellos, but also of the police, judges ha
ndling the cases, and
politicians appointing the judges.
Progressive-era reformers tried to remedy such social ills and vices through edu
cation, their most
valued weapon. Public education in such areas as hygiene, they contended, would
solve the
problems of venereal disease and alcoholism. Only a few groups, such as the Cath
olic Church,
pointed out that a wide gap existed between education and morality, or that secu
lar knowledge did
not equate with spiritual wisdom. Reformers silenced those voices with ridicule
and
embarrassment.
Reformers such as Jane Addams firmly believed all urban dwellers should conform
to certain
Progressive ideals regarding living spaces (“clean” and not too crowded), personal b
ehavior
(eschewing hard liquor, prostitution, gambling, and other vices), and civic equa
lity (women should
vote and be educated). The fact that they were imposing what were, in reality, u
pper-class values
on people who did not have the means to maintain them did not stop the reformers
.17
Social activists found that they needed more than good intentions to gain the up
per ground in the
reform debates—they needed an aura of expertise. Consequently, intellectuals and a
cademics
appropriated the concept of professionalism and special insight based on science
and numbers, and
now they applied a strange twist. To claim superior understanding of urban issue
s, reformers could
not rely on established fields of learning, so they created entirely new subject
s in which they could
claim mastery. These social sciences by their very name asserted scientific expl
anations for human
behavior. The new social scientists found that if, in addition to numbers, they
could invoke esoteric
and virtually indecipherable theories, their claims to special insight became ev
en more believable.
Many Americans would dismiss them immediately as cranks, while some (especially
the elites and
other intellectuals) would find them to be on the cutting edge and revolutionary
and would feed
their ideas back into the system. Thorsten Veblen was one of the first sociologi
sts to emerge from
the new disciplines. Writing A Theory of the Leisure Class (1899), a predictably
antibusiness book,
Veblen proposed a new economic system in which power would reside in the hands o
f highly
trained engineers, including, one suspects, himself.18 Famous (or, perhaps, noto
rious) for his
theory of conspicuous consumption, Veblen viewed the economic world as a zero-su
m scenario in
which one person’s consumption decreased the amount of goods available to someone
else. In that
sense, he reinforced the positions of Progressive social scientists, who sought
to use science to
bolster their antivice crusades. Social scientists managed to exert great influe
nce on lower levels of
society by inserting Progressive views of morality and behavior into the public
education system
through the social hygiene movement. Who, after all, could oppose cleanliness an
d good health?
And whom better to target than children?
Cleaning up individual morality still took a backseat to the central task of eli
minating corruption of
the city and state governments. Obsessed with perfecting the political system at
all levels,
Progressives were responsible for the bookends that touched on each end of refor
m. The first, the
income tax, represented a continued irrational antipathy toward wealthy American
s. Hostility
toward the rich had characterized the Populists’ platforms, and had never complete
ly disappeared
after the 1890s. The interesting twist now was that guilty Progressive elites so
ught to take wealth
from other non-Progressive elites by appealing to still other strata in society.
Concerns over
inequities in wealth distribution and banking reform were the central features o
f the Progressives’
agenda. The second, temperance, which had receded temporarily as an issue after
the Civil War,
found renewed interest in the early twentieth century.
In the 1960s former Alabama governor George Wallace, running as a third-party ca
ndidate,
complained that there wasn’t a dime’s worth of difference between the Republicans an
d the
Democrats. He would have been right in 1912, when not one, and not two, but all
three of the major
candidates to one degree or another embraced the agenda of Progressivism. The in
cumbent William
Howard Taft, the Democratic challenger Woodrow Wilson, and the former president
Theodore
Roosevelt, now an insurgent seeking to unseat Taft, all professed their belief i
n strong antitrust
actions, tariff reform, direct taxation, and more equitable wealth distribution.
Of the three, Wilson
(perhaps) was the most idealistic, but given the nature of Progressivism itself,
all three suffered
from a skepticism of free markets and an affinity for government intervention in
public health.
Roosevelt held the key to the election. No successor would have satisfied him. “Th
eodore Rex,” as
one recent biographer called him, had an ego that precluded yielding the spotlig
ht.19 Few leaders
inherently combined such raw frontier aggressiveness with an upper-class Progres
sive reform
mentality. Roosevelt was a fusion of human diversity as opposite as Arnold Schwa
rzenegger is
from Ralph Nader. Certainly Taft, despite his intention to continue TR’s Progressi
ve agenda, could
not measure up. Roosevelt was at his best when campaigning against something, or
someone, even
if it was his own successor.
He selected Taft as his heir, then ran off to Africa on a safari, only to be hun
ted down himself by
Pinchot and other malcontents who disliked the new president. Within two years o
f anointing Taft,
Roosevelt had second thoughts. The president had a poor public image, despite an
activist agenda
that would have made even Roosevelt blanch. He had brought eighty antitrust suit
s (compared to
TR’s twenty-five) and declared more lands for public use (that is, yanking them fr
om the private
sector) than Roosevelt. Many Republicans, however, disliked Taft, partly out of
his sour relations
with Congress, partly out of a concern for his weak public image, but most of al
l because he was
not Roosevelt. Consequently, a group of Republican leaders contacted Roosevelt a
bout running in
the 1912 election, which the former president greeted with his characteristic to
othy smile.
Roosevelt planned to enter the primaries, gaining enough convention delegates to
wrest the
nomination from the incumbent Taft.
Party hierarchies, though, do not embrace change any more readily than the profe
ssional business
managers on whom they pattern themselves. Unpopular incumbents, whether Taft in
1912, Hoover
in 1932, or Ford in 1976, generally maintain sufficient control over the machine
ry of the party to
prevent a coup, no matter how attractive the alternative candidate. Roosevelt sh
ould have recalled
his own dominance of the procedures in 1904, when he had quashed an insurgent mo
vement to
replace him at the top of the ticket. Taft’s men knew the same tricks. TR needed o
nly 100 votes to
win the nomination, but it may as well have been a thousand. The Taft forces con
trolled the
procedures, and the president emerged as the party’s nominee. Unwilling to bow out
gracefully,
Roosevelt declared war on Taft, forming his own new party, the Progressive Party
(which had as its
logo the Bull Moose). Roosevelt invoked thoroughly Progressive positions, moving
to the left of
Taft by advocating an income tax and further regulation of business. This not on
ly stole votes that
normally would have gone to Taft, but it also allowed Democrat Woodrow Wilson to
appear more
sensible and moderate.20
Roosevelt won 4.1 million votes and 88 electoral college votes, compared to 3.4
million for Taft
(and 8 electoral votes). This gave Wilson an electoral victory despite taking on
ly 6.2 million
popular votes (45 percent of the total), a number lower than any other victoriou
s president since
Lincoln had won with less than half the country in 1860. TR effectively denied t
he White House to
Taft, allowing the second Democrat since Reconstruction to be elected president.
An ominous note was sounded by the candidacy of the avowed socialist Eugene V. D
ebs, who
received nearly a million votes. Uniting the anarchists, Populists, Grangers, an
d Single Taxers, the
Socialist Party had witnessed a rapid growth, from 10,000 in 1901 to 58,000 in 1
908 to its peak of
just under 1 million votes, or 6 percent of the total vote cast, in the 1912 ele
ction. Debs, whom
fellow socialist Margaret Sanger once dubbed a silly silk-hat radical, was the g
lue that held together
the disparate groups.21 Despite their meteoric rise, however, the socialists fla
ttened out against the
hard demands of industry in World War I.
One could not miss the contrast of the American election, where the winner had o
nly a plurality and
where there was no challenge whatsoever to the legitimacy of the election, with
the events in Spain
the same year, where not one but two prime ministers in succession were assassin
ated; or in
Paraguay, where two successive presidents were overthrown in coups (one hunted d
own and
killed); or in neighboring Mexico, where Francisco Madero overthrew President Po
rfirio Díaz, but
who lasted only a few months himself before being overthrown by Victoriano Huert
a. In short,
America’s remarkable stability and willingness to peacefully abide by the lawful r
esults of
elections was a glaring exception to the pattern seen in most of the world.
Woodrow Wilson was a throwback in many ways to the old Van Buren ideal, or rathe
r, the reverse
of it—a Southern man of Northern principles. Born in 1856, Wilson grew up in Georg
ia, where he
saw the Civil War firsthand as a boy. His Presbyterian minister father sent Wood
row to Princeton,
then to the University of Virginia Law School, then to Johns Hopkins, where he e
arned a doctorate.
Throwing himself into academia, Wilson became a political science professor at P
rinceton, then, in
1902, its president. His 1889 book, The State, adopted a strangely Darwinian vie
w of government.
He called for regulation of trade and industry, regulation of labor, care of the
poor and incapable,
sumptuary laws, as well as prohibition laws.22 With great pride, Wilson observed
that government
did whatever experience permits or the times demand, and he advocated a “middle gr
ound”
between individuals and socialism. Wilson argued that “all combination [emphasis a
dded] which
leads to monopoly” must be under the direct or indirect control of society.
Both Wilson’s Progressive positions and his prominent place at Princeton made him
a prime
prospect for the New Jersey governorship, which he won in 1910 on a platform of
ending
corruption in state government. By the time he ran for president in 1912, Wilson
could claim roots
in both the South and North, blending the two under the banner of Progressive id
ealism.
Wilsonian Progressivism
Timing is a large part of any presidency. Presidents receive credit for programs
long under way
before their arrival, or pay the penalty for circumstances they inherit. As a Pr
ogressive president,
Wilson benefited from ideas already percolating through the system, including th
e income tax and
reform of the national banking system. This one-two punch, it could be argued, d
id more to
fundamentally reorder American economic life than any other package of legislati
on passed
anytime thereafter, including the New Deal and Great Society programs. Both rece
ived the
enthusiastic support of Wilson’s secretary of the treasury, William Gibbs McAdoo,
who helped
craft the banking reform, which he called a “blow in the solar-plexus of the money
monopoly.”23
A Georgia Populist/Progressive lawyer, McAdoo stood firmly on the side of reform
, whether it was
food and product safety, taxes, or banking, and as a Southerner, he bridged the
old Confederacy gap
by invoking the name of Lincoln favorably while touting Wilson as a Southerner.
However, he
abandoned states’ rights entirely by hastening the transfer of financial power fro
m New York to
Washington through both taxation and banking policies.24
America’s banking system had suffered criticism since the Civil War. It was too el
astic. It was not
elastic enough. It was too centralized in New York. It was not centralized enoug
h in New York. For
twenty years, it had seemed that the colossus J. P. Morgan alone might carry the
nation’s banking
community on his shoulders like Atlas. He did so in 1893, then again in 1907, at
which time he
announced that even with support from other syndicate members, including some fo
reign bankers,
the next panic would sink him and the country. Consequently, by the turn of the
century most of the
so-called bank reformers—including numerous bankers from the Midwest who feared fo
r their own
smaller institutions if large East Coast banks got into trouble—agreed on three ma
in principles for
shoring up the system.
First, genuine bank reform needed (in their view) to fill the void left by the o
ld BUS as a central
bank. Never mind that the BUS had never fulfilled that function. Collective memo
ry inaccurately
said that the Bank had restrained the inflationary impulses of the state banks,
and thus provided a
crucial check on the system in times of stress. The new central bank above all s
hould be a lender of
last resort, that is, it should provide cash (liquidity) when there were isolate
d bank runs.
Second, bank reformers concluded that an elastic money supply was needed in whic
h credit and
cash could expand in good times and contract in bad. This was a main complaint a
bout the money
supply under the National Bank Act—that the national banks lacked the ability to r
apidly issue new
banknotes or any mechanism for withdrawing them from circulation. Of course, any
elastic powers
would centralize even further the money supply in the hands of one source, as op
posed to the many
national banks who each issued their own notes, providing some tiny measure of c
ompetition.
Third, all but a few of the most conservative East Coast bankers wanted to reduc
e the power of
New York’s financial community. A certain element of anti-Semitism accompanied thi
s because
the phrase “New York bankers” was really code for “New York Jewish bankers.” It regurgit
ated the
old fears of the Rothschilds and their “world money power,” but even well-meaning mi
dwestern
bankers looked suspiciously at the influence eastern banking houses had over aff
airs in Kansas or
Colorado. It seemed unfair to them that an East Coast panic could close banks in
Littletown or
Salina.
Critics noted another problem, namely, that national banks could not just print
money willy-nilly.
To expand the number of notes they issued, the national banks had to purchase ad
ditional U.S.
government bonds, a process that could take several months. Certainly the struct
ure did not
enhance elasticity. On the other hand, states permitted branch banking (which en
hanced stability
and solvency), whereas national banks were denied branching privileges.25
The entire banking structure still relied on gold as a reserve. For gold to effe
ctively police
international transactions, all nations had to abide by the rules of the game. I
f one nation had a trade
deficit with another, it would make up the difference in gold. But this meant a
decrease in that
nation’s gold reserve, in turn decreasing the amount of money issued by that natio
n’s central bank,
causing a recession. As prices fell, the terms of trade would then swing back in
that country’s favor,
whereupon gold would flow in, and the cycle would reverse.
The difficulty with the gold standard was not financial, but political: a nation
in recession always
had an incentive to go off the gold standard. However, from 1900 to 1912 most na
tions faithfully
submitted to the discipline of gold in a time of prosperity. Such false optimism
cloaked the fact that
when the pressure of national recessions began, the temptation would be for each
country to leave
the gold standard before another. In the meantime, however, it reinforced the de
sire on the part of
American reformers to create a financial system with a central bank along the li
nes of the European
model.
Following the many plans and proposals drawn up by bankers’ organizations over the
previous
thirty years, in November 1910 five men met in secrecy on Jekyll Island, Georgia
, to design a new
financial system for the nation. Frank Van-derlip (president of National City Ba
nk), Paul Warburg
(a powerful partner in Kuhn, Loeb and Company), Henry Davison (a partner in the
Morgan bank),
Harvard professor A. Piatt Andrew, and Senator Nelson Aldrich of Rhode Island ou
tlined the plan
that became the Federal Reserve System. They presented their completed plan to C
ongress, where
it stagnated. Many viewed it as too centralized, and others complained that it d
id not deal with the
“money power” of New York’s banks.
Meanwhile, the House held hearings in 1912 that dragged J. P. Morgan and other p
rominent
bankers before the Banking and Currency Committee. Morgan was accused of “consolid
ation” and
stifling competition. In fact, Morgan and his contemporaries had strengthened th
e system and
protected depositors by establishing combinations and utilizing clearinghouses,
which were private
organizations that reduced the likelihood of panics and provided a setting for e
ffective information
exchange. House members pontificated about the evils of consolidation—an incredibl
e irony given
that in the 1930s, after the Great Depression, another set of congressional inve
stigators would
complain that the competitiveness within the securities industry helped cause th
e stock market
crash. Thus, bankers were criticized for competing and criticized for combining!
26
Congressional interest in the Jekyll Island proposal revived, but with emphasis
on decentralizing
the system and in reducing the influence of New York’s banks. The result was the F
ederal Reserve
Act, passed by Congress in 1913. Under the act, twelve Federal Reserve banks wou
ld be
established across the country, diminishing New York’s financial clout. Atlanta, B
oston, Dallas,
San Francisco, Minneapolis, Chicago, Cleveland, Philadelphia, and Richmond all r
eceived Federal
Reserve Banks, and Missouri got two—St. Louis and Kansas City. Each bank was a cor
poration
owned by the commercial banks in its region and funded by their required deposit
s. In return, the
member banks could borrow from the Reserve bank in their region. A separate boar
d of governors,
housed in Washington, D.C., consisting of representatives from each bank, was to
set policy, but in
reality, each bank tended to go its own way. These characteristics allowed the F
ederal Reserve
System to appear to be independent of the government and nonpartisan.
While decentralizing the financial system answered one critical need demanded by
the reformers,
the Fed (as it became known) also met another in that it served as the lender of
last resort. The
district banks were to step in during emergencies to rescue failing private bank
s, but if the crisis
grew too severe, one Federal Reserve bank could obtain help from the Reserve ban
k in another
region (or all regions, if necessary). Few really imagined that even under the n
ew system, there
might exist an emergency so broad that every Federal Reserve District would come
under siege at
the same time. But the reformers had ignored the single most important correctiv
e: introducing
interstate branch banking.27 This disadvantage kept large branch-bank systems fr
om becoming
member banks, especially A. P. Giannini’s powerful Bank of America and Joseph Sart
ori’s First
Security Bank and Trust, both in California. To rectify this problem, Congress p
assed the
McFadden Act in 1927, which permitted national banks to have branches in states
where the state
laws permitted branching, thus allowing both Giannini and Sartori to join the Fe
deral Reserve
System as members. But Giannini’s dream of nationwide interstate banking was never
reached,
contributing to the collapse of the banking system during the Great Depression.
Contrary to all intentions, the New York Federal Reserve Bank quickly emerged as
the most
powerful influence in the new Fed system. The creation of the Fed also marked th
e end of any form
of competition in money, since the new Federal Reserve notes eventually replaced
money
specifically (and legally) backed by gold or silver.
Another pillar of Progressivism came to fruition on Wilson’s watch. The idea of an
income tax had
long been cherished by socialists, and it was one of the ten planks desired by t
he Communist Party
in Karl Marx’s Communist Manifesto. During the Civil War, the Republicans had impo
sed a 3
percent tax on all incomes over $800, then raised it twice thereafter. Several u
topian socialists
called for income taxes in the postwar years, and both the Populists and the Dem
ocrats advocated
an income tax in the 1890s. But not until 1894 did Congress pass a 2 percent tax
on all incomes
above $4,000. Within a year, the Supreme Court struck down the measure as uncons
titutional—
which it clearly was.28
For several decades, the tariff (and land sales) had provided most of the revenu
e for running the
operations of the government, which was adequate as long as the government remai
ned small.
However, tariffs carried tremendous political baggage. They pitted one group of
Americans against
another, usually by section. Northern manufacturers, who obtained a tariff on ma
nufactured
imports, received artificially higher prices for their goods at the expense of a
ll other Americans;
southern sugar planters, who obtained a tariff on sugar, could raise prices for
all sugar consumers;
and so on. While some argued that the tariff burdens balanced out—that in one way
or another
everyone was hurt, and everyone benefited—each tariff bill focused the debate on s
pecific groups
who gained and lost. In this regard, the substitution of income taxes for tariff
s “efficiently
conserved legislative energies: Life became simpler for Congress [because] the b
attle against tariffs
had always involved direct, urgent, and threatening lobbies.”29 The proposed incom
e tax, on the
other hand, only affected a small group of the wealthy.
Proponents also designed the first proposed tax with two features that would red
uce resistance to it.
The tax rates would be extremely low, even for wealthy groups, and the filing pr
ocess would be
absurdly simple—only a few pages were required for the first income tax. Since peo
ple had become
convinced that equal taxes meant proportional taxes—which was surely untrue—then the
income
tax promised to “equalize tax burdens borne by the various classes…and to ensure it
was paid by
the wealthiest classes.”30 To underscore this fact, the income tax had “little to do
with revenue and
everything to do with reform.”31
There was one small hurdle—the Constitution. Since income taxes were unconstitutio
nal, imposing
the new tax demanded the Sixteenth Amendment, which was ratified in 1913. Reform
ers gained
support using three major strategies: (1) they emphasized the extremely low natu
re of the tax and
the fact that many Americans would pay no tax at all; (2) they stressed its simp
licity; and (3) they
pointed to the problems and controversies surrounding tariffs. The original tax
exempted anyone
earning less than $3,000 per year or married couples earning less than $4,000 pe
r year; whereas
those earning between $20,000 and $50,000 paid only 2 percent. For the richest o
f the rich, those
earning over $500,000, the top rate was 7 percent. Contrasted with taxes in the
twenty-first century,
the state tax rates alone in many states exceeds the top rates exacted by the fe
deral government in
1913. Although some liberal historians claimed that the income tax was a “conserva
tive measure
designed to placate the lower classes with a form of pretend punishment of the r
ich,” it certainly did
not help the workingman by any stretch of the imagination. By the year 2000 the
average American
worked until May of every year to pay just his federal taxes; whereas that same
American worked
only nineteen days to purchase all the food he would eat in a year!32
Income taxes introduced a significant danger to American life, especially throug
h the hidden
growth of the federal government. Minor rate changes in the tax would be enacted
without any
public reaction; then, after World War II, they were deducted directly from work
ers’ paychecks so
that they never saw the damage. Moreover, during an emergency, rate increases be
came substantial,
and even if lowered later, never returned to the preemergency levels. Economist
Robert Higgs
described this as a “ratchet effect” in which government power grew with each crisis
.33 At the end
of World War I, the top tax rate would rise by a factor of ten, illustrating the
grave danger inherent
in the structure.
Wilson’s reduction of tariff rates was inconsequential and irrelevant after passag
e of the income
tax. He was a big-government Progressive, and his inclinations were on display i
n numerous other
policies, especially the creation of the Federal Trade Commission, a group appoi
nted by the
president to review and investigate business practices. Ostensibly, the FTC was
to prevent the
formation of monopolistic combinations, using its cease-and-desist orders, augme
nted by the 1914
Clayton Antitrust Act. A follow-up to the Sherman Antitrust Act, it prohibited i
nterlocking
directorates and tying clauses, whereby a producer could tie the sale of a desir
ed product it made to
another product the buyer did not particularly want.
Both the FTC and Clayton, in the truest style of Teddy Roosevelt, targeted big b
usiness and trusts.
Unfortunately, like taxes, the burden of regulations fell on unintended groups,
whereas those
usually targeted by the regulations and taxes escaped. Such was the case with th
e Clayton Act. A
study of antitrust laws and their effect on overall business activity revealed t
hat the antitrust actions
against large firms coincided with business downturns, suggesting that the downt
urns resulted from
the attacks on a few large firms.34 (These results were repeated in the 1990s wh
en an antitrust suit
against Microsoft sparked a massive sell-off in tech stocks, adding support to t
he argument that
antitrust law had done little to encourage competition and had inflicted substan
tial damage to the
U.S. economy for more than a century.)35 While creation of the Fed and the passa
ge of the income
tax amendment characterized Progressivism at home, events in Mexico gave a brief
glimpse of
Wilson’s vision for Progressivism abroad.
South of the Border
Even before Wilson assumed office, in 1910, Mexico had entered a period of const
ant chaos. That
year the Mexican dictator of thirty-three years, Porfirio Díaz, was overthrown in
a coup led by
Francisco Madero, ostensibly a democrat. Within three years, however, Madero was
in turn
unseated by General Victoriano Huerta, who promised a favorable climate for Amer
ican businesses
operating in Mexico. Huerta received support from the U.S. ambassador, Henry Lan
e Wilson.
Aside from the protection of American firms’ operations and personnel, the United
States really
had little interest in the internal affairs of Mexico.
Taft had expressed a willingness to recognize Huerta, but Huerta’s forces killed M
adero just before
Wilson took over, whereupon the president stated that he would not recognize “a go
vernment of
butchers.”36 Wilson’s idealism took over as he openly supported Venustiano Carranza
and
Francisco (Pancho) Villa, two rebel generals who opposed Huerta. In April 1914 a
Mexican officer
in Tampico arrested American sailors from the USS Dolphin, when they disturbed t
he public peace
on shore leave. When the American naval officers protested, the Mexicans immedia
tely released
the sailors, but did not apologize sufficiently to please the admiral.
Wilson saw an opportunity to intervene against Huerta. He dispatched a fleet to
Vera Cruz,
purportedly to intercept a German vessel delivering munitions to Huerta’s army. Ev
ents spun out of
control, and American warships shelled the city. Carranza soaked all this in and
recognized that an
overt alliance with Wilson would taint his regime in the eyes of the Mexican peo
ple. From that
point on, he continued to buy arms from the U.S. government, but he otherwise ke
pt his distance.
When the fighting at Vera Cruz weakened Huerta, Carranza took over in August, th
en promptly
gave the cold shoulder to Wilson’s overtures to assist in forming the new Mexican
administration.
Having failed to woo Carranza, Wilson turned to the other revolutionary general,
Villa, whose
army held much of northern Mexico. By that time, Villa was something of a celebr
ity in America,
gaining notoriety among journalists and filmmakers as the personification of the
“new democrat” in
Mexico. He was also now Carranza’s enemy, and government troops defeated Villa in
April 1915,
whereupon the rebel leader lost much of his luster. This victory forced Wilson t
o reconsider
Carranza’s legitimacy. In frustration, he recognized Carranza as the de facto lead
er of Mexico
without offering official recognition, which, in turn, outraged the jilted Villa
. Seeing his hopes of
running Mexico melt away, Villa launched a series of revenge raids directed at A
mericans across
northern Mexico. He killed eighteen Americans on a train and then crossed the bo
rder in 1916 at
Columbus, New Mexico, murdering another seventeen U.S. citizens.
The president of Mexico lacked the resources (as well as the will) to pursue Vil
la in his own
territory. Wilson did not. He sent American troops under General John “Black Jack” P
ershing on a
punitive expedition into Mexico to capture Villa. Entering Mexico in the spring
of 1916 with more
than 15,000 men, armored cars (one commanded by a young cavalry officer named Ge
orge Patton),
and reconnaissance aircraft, Pershing hunted Villa across more than three hundre
d miles of
Mexican desert. Although Patton’s lead units engaged some of the Villistas, Pershi
ng never truly
came close to the main body of Villa’s troops, and he finally informed Wilson that
the best course
of action would be to occupy all of northern Mexico.
The Pershing invasion revived fears of the “Colossus of the North” again marching on
Mexican
soil, causing Villa’s forces to grow and turning the bloodthirsty killer into a cu
lt hero in parts of
Mexico. And while Carranza certainly wanted Villa dead, he did not intend to let
the Yankees
simply walk into sovereign Mexican territory. In June 1916, Carranza’s and Pershin
g’s forces
clashed, bringing the two nations to the precipice of war. The president conside
red Pershing’s
recommendation for an American occupation of parts of Mexico, and even drafted a
message to
Congress outlining the proposed occupation, but then scrapped it.
With the public’s attention increasingly focused on Europe, few people wanted a wa
r with Mexico,
especially under such confused circumstances (in which Villa could in no way be
viewed as a
legitimate agent of the official Mexican government). Given his own culpability
in destabilizing the
Mexican regime under the guise of promoting democracy, Wilson looked for a grace
ful exit,
agreeing to an international commission to negotiate a settlement. The troops ca
me home from the
Mexican desert, just in time to board steamers for France.
The episode was rife with foreign policy and military lessons for those willing
to learn. First,
American troops had been committed with no reasonable assurance of achieving the
ir mission, nor
was there much public support. Second, Wilson had not exhausted—or really even tri
ed—other
methods to secure the U.S. border against Villa’s incursions. Third, by arbitraril
y and hastily
invading Mexico, twice, Wilson turned a natural ally into a wary neighbor. Last,
Wilson’s
insistence on American-style democracy in a primitive country—without concurrent s
upervision
through occupation, as in post–World War II Japan or Iraq—was fraught with peril. Me
xico did not
have fully developed property rights or other essential concepts of government.
Wilson did learn
some of the lessons. The next time he had to send American forces into foreign l
ands, it would be
for unimpeachable reasons.
He Kept Us Out of War
On September 29, 1913, Turkey, Greece, and Bulgaria signed a Treaty of Peace tha
t many saw as
an omen for world amity. Yet over the next year, Europe’s diplomats and clear thin
kers sank,
buried beneath a wave of war mobilizations over which they seemingly had no cont
rol.
The June 1914 assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand launched these
forces on their
course. A Serbian nationalist has been blamed for the assassination, although co
ntroversy exists as
to whether he was a member of the terrorist Black Hand group. Regardless, Austri
a, with the full
support of Germany, immediately moved to retaliate. Serbia invoked a secret agre
ement with
Russia, mobilizing the Russian army, which in turn prompted a reaction from Germ
any, then a
counterreaction from France, who in turn brought in the British. Within a matter
of weeks, the
armies of Europe were fully mobilized on enemy borders, trigger fingers itchy, a
nd without any
comprehension of why they were going to fight.
Germany’s Schlieffen Plan, however, demanded that Germany not wait for a full-scal
e Russian
mobilization before striking the Allies. On August 3, 1914, German forces crosse
d the Belgian
border, thereby touching off the Great War. Britain, France, and Russia (called
the Triple Entente
or Allies) soon declared war on Germany and Austria-Hungary (soon known as the C
entral
Powers). Before long a host of second-tier states had been sucked into the war a
s well, essentially
pulling the entire world into the conflict in one form or another—all except the U
nited States.
When German guns opened their barrage against Belgium, Wilson warned Americans a
gainst that
“deepest, most subtle, most essential breach of neutrality which may spring out of
partisanship, out
of passionately taking sides.”37 Roosevelt immediately broke with him, arguing tha
t the nation
should take the position of a “just man armed,” and he wrote angrily of Wilson’s reluc
tance to
stand up for the wrongs Belgium had suffered. Wilson, instead, implored the nati
on to be “neutral
in fact as well as name.” Already, in January 1915, the Central Powers had launche
d the world’s
first zeppelin attacks against England and had finalized plans to cut off Britai
n’s lifeline at sea to
the United States.
As is often the case, experts on both sides mistakenly foresaw a quick end to th
e war. British
forward observers at Neuve-Chapelle were dumbfounded when their initial probing
assault, led by
1,000 men, was entirely obliterated. They had another surprise when, in April 19
15, the Germans
used poison gas for the first time, choking French African troops who could only
cough and point
to their throats. The British had barely absorbed the threats posed by gas when,
in July, the
Germans introduced another horror—the flamethrower.
The news got worse. Seeking an end run to link up with the Russians and come at
the Central
Powers from the Black Sea, Britain attempted to break through the Dardanelles St
rait. Even the
powerful Royal Navy could not punch through the defenses of Germany’s allies, the
Ottoman
Turks. Underestimating the enemy and the geography, the Allies staged a massive
invasion of the
narrow beaches at Gallipoli at the foot of the Dardanelles. British, Australian,
and New Zealand
troops were staggered when, rather than running, the Turks stood their ground to
repulse attack
after attack up bloody hills. Over a nine-month period, British, French, Austral
ians, and New
Zealanders lost 48,000 men yet gained nothing. Only then did it begin to dawn on
the military
minds that the machine gun, combined with trench warfare, barbed wire, and long-
range artillery,
had made the massed infantry charges of the day utterly useless.
This was a lesson it had taken the Americans in both the Union Army (Fredericksb
urg) and
Confederate Army (Gettysburg) thousands of battlefield deaths to learn, but fina
lly the message had
sunk in. Battles in Europe soon claimed a half million dead and wounded in a sin
gle day, then three
quarters of a million, then a million casualties in battles that lasted weeks ov
er a few acres of
ground. British units lost 60 percent of their officers in a single day’s combat.
At the Somme, in
June 1916, despite the fact that the British fired a quarter million shells at t
he German trenches—
sixty artillery shells every second—20,000 men and 1,000 officers died in a few ho
urs. Entire
companies literally vanished in unending sprays of bullets and shells.
The Germans misjudged their enemies even worse than the Allies, predicting that
the colonies
would rise up, that Ireland would rebel, or that the British population would de
mand peace at any
price. None of that materialized. Next, the Germans expected the Americans to su
ffer indignity
after indignity and gambled that they could kill U.S. citizens, incite Mexico to
go to war with the
United States, and flagrantly disregard Wilson’s repeated warnings. They were wron
g about
England, and they were wrong about America.
Still, after a full year of watching the carnage from afar, Americans shook thei
r heads in wonder.
Until May 1915, many still held out hope their nation could avoid taking sides.
Wilson even offered
to mediate. But forces were already in motion to ensure American entry sooner or
later. Germany
doubted her High Seas Fleet could compete with England for control of the oceans
and early on had
employed U-boats (submarines) to intercept and destroy trade bound for England.
U-boat warfare
proved phenomenally effective, if mistake prone. U-boat captains had difficulty
establishing the
colors of vessels at sea through their periscopes, and, to make matters worse, t
he British
fraudulently flew neutral flags on their own merchantmen, which violated the ver
y essence of
neutrality. Before any real enmity could appear between the United States and En
gland over the
neutral flag issue, the Germans blundered by sinking the passenger liner Lusitan
ia in May 1915,
killing 1,198, including 128 Americans.
Between its zeppelin and U-boat attacks, the German government helped shift Amer
ican public
opinion to the Allies, prompting leading newspapers such as the New York Herald
to refer to the
sinking of the Lusitania as “wholesale murder” and the New York Times to compare the
Germans
to “savages drunk with blood.”
Wilson already had justification for joining the Allies at that point, and had t
he United States done
so, it might have shortened the war and short-circuited Russian communism. Certa
inly Vladimir
Ilich Ulyanov Lenin, exiled in Switzerland when the war started, would have rema
ined an
insignificant figure in human history, not the mass murderer who directed the Re
d October
Revolution in Russia. Instead, Wilson opted for the safe, and cheap, response. H
e demanded and
secured German assurances that “such atrocities would never be repeated,” although w
ithin a few
months the Reichstag would formalize the policy of unrestricted submarine warfar
e, dooming the
Sussex, a Channel ferry, to torpedoing and the loss of another fifty passengers,
including two more
Americans.
Wilson again issued strong protests, to which the Germans again responded by pro
mising to
behave. In truth, Erich Ludendorff, the industrial supremo who directed the U-bo
at campaign, had
no intention of curtailing his effective submarine war, even less so after May 1
916, when the
outnumbered High Seas Fleet failed to break the blockade at Jutland. In a gigant
ic battle that pitted
more than 100 German warships against more than 150 British vessels, some 6,000
British sailors
were killed and 2,500 German seamen went down. The German High Seas Fleet had en
gaged a
force significantly larger than its own, inflicted more than twice as many casua
lties, and yet after
the battle, German Admiral Reinhard Scheer informed the kaiser that the surface
fleet could not
defeat the English. Only U-boats could shut down transatlantic trade. They conti
nued to ignore
previous promises made to Wilson.
Wilson used his (so far) successful efforts at neutrality as a campaign motif in
1916. With the
slogan “He kept us out of war,” Wilson squeaked out an electoral victory in the Nove
mber
elections against the Republican Charles Evans Hughes, a former governor of New
York who had
the support of Teddy Roosevelt. In the electoral college, Wilson won 277 to 254,
although he
enjoyed a wider popular vote margin of about half a million. Americans wanted to
give him the
benefit of the doubt. Certainly he received support from the peace movement, whi
ch was largely,
though not entirely, sponsored by the Socialist Party, from whom Wilson drew lar
ge numbers of
votes. Antiwar groups appeared—the American Union Against Militarism and the Women’s
Peace
Party, for example—and some 1,500 women marched down Fifth Avenue in New York in A
ugust
1914 to protest against intervention. House Democrats broke away from the White
House to block
even modest preparations for war, and celebrities such as Jane Addams and Henry
Ford publicly
announced their opposition to involvement in “Europe’s fight.”
There was one small problem: the Germans would not cooperate. In October 1916, K
aiser Wilhelm
celebrated the U-boats’ feat of sinking a million tons of Allied shipping, and a w
eek later five
Allied ships were torpedoed within sight of Nantucket Island.38 Only a few days
before the
election, a U-boat sank the British liner Marina (six Americans died) and then,
in an act of
astounding recklessness, the Germans sank the Lanao, a U.S.-chartered vessel, of
f Portugal.
Victories on the ground further bolstered the German outlook on the war, despite
the fact that on
the Western Front alone men were dying at the rate of 3,000 per day (including,
since 1914,
800,000 Germans). By late 1916, German or German-backed Austro-Hungarian forces
controlled
Serbia, Montenegro, and Galicia; had dismantled Romania, soundly thrashed the Fr
ench army at
Verdun, and turned back Allied offensives at the Somme; and occupied much of the
western
section of Russia. Moreover, the Austrians had dealt defeat after defeat to the
Italians (who had
come in on the side of the Allies). Under such circumstances, a little risk of o
ffending the United
States seemed harmless, especially since Wilson had not demonstrated that he was
a man of action
when it came to Germany.
In December 1916, Wilson made yet another effort to mediate, issuing a Peace Not
e to the
belligerents that first raised the prospect of a league of nations that might “pre
serve peace
throughout the world.” He also offended and irritated both sides by claiming that
the United States
“was too proud to fight.”39 For their part, the Germans had no intention of giving u
p territory they
already held under any Wilsonian-brokered agreement. And Germany rightly perceiv
ed that Russia
was coming apart. It probably would not remain in the war much longer, in which
case a France
that was already bled white would, the Germans thought, offer little final resis
tance.
Here again, Wilson’s potential impact on the calculations of the warring parties w
as critical. Had
Germany in 1915 or even 1916 seriously thought that several million American tro
ops would
replenish the French, the Germans might have come to the negotiating table soone
r. Wilson’s
reluctance to fight over the just cause of the sinking of several American ships
hardened, rather
than softened, the foe. Sensing they could turn the war, the German leaders made
two critical errors
in January 1917.
The first involved a resumption of the de facto policy of unrestricted submarine
warfare. Now the
Germans admitted publicly that U-boats would attack anything and everything at s
ea—belligerents,
civilian vessels, neutrals. All shipping was fair game. Even if that brought the
United States into the
war, they reasoned, it would be over before American armies could mobilize and a
rrive in Europe.
Perhaps the second error was an even greater blunder in that it directly (if wea
kly) threatened
Americans in the homeland.
Noting that Pershing’s expedition against Pancho Villa had soured relations betwee
n the United
States and Mexico, the German foreign minister, Alfred von Zimmerman, sent a cod
ed radio
message to Carranza’s government, essentially urging Mexico to declare war on Amer
ica. In return,
Germany would recognize Mexico’s reconquest of Arizona, New Mexico, and other part
s of the
Southwest. American agents in London deciphered the code, showed it to an Americ
an diplomat,
then forwarded it to the White House. Washington made the message public, genera
ting the
expected indignation. Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts knew immediately that t
he Zimmerman
note would arouse the country more than any other event.40
Sensing that the public mood had shifted, Wilson issued an order authorizing the
arming of
merchant ships for self-protection—a symbolic act with no substance. After seven m
ore
merchantmen went down, and following massive prowar demonstrations in the nation’s
major
cities, Wilson spoke to a special session of Congress on April second. He asked
for a declaration of
war, laying out the unlawful attacks on American persons and property. That woul
d have been
enough: Congress would have given him the declaration, and matters would have be
en simple. Ever
the idealist, however, Wilson drifted into grandiloquent terms, seeing the strug
gle as about making
the world safe for democracy. It was of the utmost convenience that only a few w
eeks earlier a
revolution in Russia had dethroned the czar, for Wilson would have placed himsel
f in the difficult
position of explaining why, if America was fighting for democracy, the nation wa
s allied with a
near-feudal monarchy. Fortunately, the Russians had (temporarily, as it turned o
ut) established a
constitutional democracy under Alexander Kerensky, giving Wilson the cover of ph
ilosophical
consistency.
The war fanned the righteous indignation of an aroused public even more through
an intense
propaganda campaign. American strategy, like Grant’s fifty years earlier, involved
wearing down
the enemy with superior numbers and quality of arms. And finally, the war effort
ensured that the
world’s dominant economy was sufficiently mobilized on the one hand, yet not too c
entralized on
the other. Committing to a European land war, nevertheless, was not easy. The ve
ry nature of
civilian control of the U.S. military, its demobilized force structure, and the
American optimistic
willingness to see negotiation and compromise as possible in the most impossible
circumstances all
inhibited the quick and capricious use of armies and navies. Once Americans beco
me convinced
that force is the only option, however, they have proven that they can turn 180
degrees and
implement it with wicked effectiveness.
Flexing Democracy’s Muscles
In spite of the nation’s original neutral position—Wilson’s strict neutrality “in though
t and deed”—
the administration now suddenly had to convince Americans that in fact one side
was brutal and
ruthless. Citizens who only a year earlier had been cautioned to curtail their a
nti-German feelings
were now encouraged, openly and often, to indulge them. The government launched
an all-out
propaganda offensive, depicting the Germans in posters as the Hun—apelike, fanged
creatures
wearing spiked German helmets and carrying off women. A culture sanitization occ
urred in which
products or foods with Germanic-or Teutonic-sounding names were replaced by Amer
ican phrases:
hamburgers became liberty sandwiches, and sauerkraut was called liberty cabbage.
Any
identification with German culture was proscribed: Berlin, Iowa, became Lincoln;
Kaiser Street
became Maine Way; Germantown, Nebraska, was renamed Garland; Hamburg Avenue in B
rooklyn
was changed to Wilson Avenue; and even the famous German shepherd dog received a
new name,
the Alsatian shepherd.
Scholars often deride such efforts as “brainwashing,” failing to understand that in
democracies,
citizens view war as a last resort, something abnormal. Contrary to how propagan
da is portrayed—
manipulating the public to do something against its collective will—wartime propag
anda is often
obviously accepted and enthusiastically received as a means of preparing a repub
lic for the grim
task ahead.
George Creel, a Denver journalist, supported this effort with his Committee on P
ublic Information,
which provided posters and distributed war literature. The committee encouraged
citizens to report
anyone engaging in antiwar behavior to the Justice Department. Creel used his co
ntacts in
journalism to encourage fellow reporters to monitor their coverage of the war.
Of course abuses occurred. Germans in the United States became the objects of su
spicion and,
occasionally, violence. One German immigrant was lynched in St. Louis. Ultimatel
y, the distrust
spread to all immigrants, as seen in the Immigration Restriction Act of 1917, wh
ich refused
admission to any adult immigrant who could not pass a basic reading test. (Prohi
bition, in part,
reflected the anti-immigrant attitudes fanned by the war because of a belief tha
t Germans and
others brought a “drinking culture” to the United States.) And the most significant
piece of
legislation, the Espionage, Sabotage, and Sedition Acts of 1917 and 1918, extend
ed the bounds of
what was considered sabotage or espionage to include slandering the Constitution
or the military.
The postmaster general blocked mailings of Socialist Party materials. But even i
f somewhat
censored, the press continued to report, Congress continued to meet and pass law
s (in fact, Wilson
vetoed the Immigration Act), and people still experienced a level of freedom uns
een in most of the
world during peacetime.
With the public support of combat sufficiently ratcheted up, the administration
turned to financing
and supply. The Federal Reserve facilitated bond sales and helped prevent wartim
e profiteering,
and income tax rates skyrocketed to provide further cash (and only later was it
discovered that the
revenues collected from the rich plummeted with each rate increase).
Much of the credit for organizing the finance and supply effort at home went to
the secretary of the
treasury, William McAdoo, who organized the War Finance Corporation (WFC). The i
dea was to
facilitate the conversion of civilian production—such as Ford’s motor plants—into fact
ories turning
out war matériel. At first, however, even with McAdoo’s genius, the WFC’s effort was h
elterskelter
. Companies made too many of the same parts; there were no priorities establishe
d; and the
government lacked an overall strategy concerning which items to buy, and in what
order. To be
sure, this fostered some profiteering (the infamous “merchants of death”), but in mo
st cases the
lack of direction caused redundancies and inefficiency. It took almost a year be
fore McAdoo
figured it out, handing the job over, in March 1918, to a new organization, the
War Industries
Board (WIB), under the direction of South Carolina millionaire and Wall Street t
ycoon, Bernard
Baruch.
The new boss, who had come from the business sector and was not a lifetime burea
ucrat,
immediately perceived that besides priorities, what the government lacked was a
business approach
to procurement. He also knew that business leaders needed to take control of the
production if it
was to have any chance of succeeding. Reviving the successful productive practic
es of the Civil
War, when government encouraged private enterprise to provide the weapons of war
, Baruch
“permitted industrialists to charge high prices for their products,” a feature that
would be repeated
yet again with equally stunning success in the next world war.41 He persuaded Wi
lson’s Justice
Department to call off the antitrust dogs, exempting many businesses from invest
igation as
monopolies, while at the same time chastising any companies that did not comply
with WIB
requests.
Baruch also persuaded successful corporate leaders to head up important procurem
ent agencies and
boards for a token fee of a dollar a year—hence their name, the Dollar-a-Year Men.
The approach
worked. In short order the businessmen had the war industry churning out supplie
s and machines,
all according to a master plan Baruch and McAdoo had mapped out with Wilson and
the War
Department.
Raising a legitimate ground force capable of going toe to toe with the Germans p
resented a equally
daunting challenge. The U.S. Army, except for the Civil War, had never been part
icularly large and
had atrophied since the Spanish-American War. Total numbers, including reserves,
reached perhaps
200,000. For perspective, one should consider that at the Somme offensive in 191
6, the British lost
more than 95,000 dead (including 20,000 on the first day); the French, 50,000; a
nd the Germans,
160,000. Put another way, in just under four months the combatants had lost more
men than even
existed in the entire U.S. Army of 1917.
Not only was the army small, it was inexperienced, although many troops had foug
ht in Cuba and
the Filipino rebellion. But only a few commanders had had wartime experience in
Cuba, the
Philippines, or the Mexico expedition, most notably George Catlett Marshall, Dou
glas MacArthur,
and Black Jack Pershing. Another Pancho Villa chaser who joined Pershing’s America
n
Expeditionary Force was cavalry officer George S. Patton, already training in th
e revolutionary war
vehicle known as the tank. Roosevelt, as he had in the Spanish-American War, off
ered to raise
another regiment of troops, but Wilson politely refused.42
To meet the need for men, Wilson and Secretary of War Newton Baker pushed throug
h Congress
the Selective Service Act, or a draft. Three million men came into the army thro
ugh the draft, and
two million more volunteered for service. More than 240,000 black troops entered
the armed
services, with most of them serving in France. Blacks had a greater chance of be
ing drafted, but a
far smaller likelihood than whites of seeing combat. Nevertheless, one of the mo
st famous black
combat outfits—the 369th Infantry—was in the trenches for almost two hundred days, a
nd the
entire regiment received the Croix de Guerre for heroism from the French governm
ent. In addition,
171 individual soldiers and officers were cited for their courage under fire.
Other ethnic groups served in disproportionate numbers, especially German-Americ
ans, and
overall, 20 percent of the draftees were born in another country. A typical draf
tee was a second-or
third-generation immigrant like Jean Pierre Godet, who enlisted in the army in N
ovember 1917. At
the time of Godet’s enlistment, the young man’s unnamed father wrote to his sister t
he conflicting
emotions that gripped every soldier’s parent at that moment:
Today is November 3…and Jean Pierre was sworn into the infantry…. I cannot tell you
the mixed
sense of joy and pain I have felt upon his leaving for the war. I cannot withhol
d Jean Pierre and
forbid him to take part in the army, for the importance of this war is hard to e
stimate. I feel a
strange contradiction between my love for Jean Pierre and my love for America. I
t is difficult to
surrender my son that my country may be free. On the other hand, without the wil
lingness of all
Americans to make these kinds of sacrifices neither the country nor the world wo
uld long remain
free.43
Thousands more did not fight but served in, or worked to advance, the Red Cross,
including Lewis
Douglas, future budget director under Franklin Roosevelt; advertising executive
Bruce Barton; and
a budding artist named Walt Disney. Indeed, two of the men most responsible for
the symbolic
view of America that evolved by the 1960s, Disney and McDonald’s founder Ray Kroc,
crossed
each other’s path in the Red Cross in France.44 Still thousands more “Plowed to the
fence for
national defense” on their farms and raised beef and sheep on their ranches.
Britain and France had few doubts that the doughboys would arrive and weigh heav
ily on the scale
of battle. Their concern, however, was that the war at sea would be lost before
the Americans ever
set foot in France. America’s Rear Admiral William S. Sims, after meeting with Sir
John Jellicoe in
London regarding the shipping situation, admitted that the German U-boat campaig
n was
succeeding. At the-then-current rates of losses, by fall of 1917 the U-boats wou
ld be sinking more
vessels than could be built. Sims then helped design the convoy system (akin to
the frontier wagon
trains), making it easier to protect merchant ships.
The convoy system worked like a charm because it turned the chief strength of th
e U-boats—their
stealth—into a weakness by forcing them to reveal themselves in an attack.45 Once
they struck, Uboats
could not escape the escort vessels easily. This turn of events and the addition
of American
ships had a decided effect, drastically reducing losses from submarines. In Apri
l 1917 alone, before
the United States joined the war, the Allies lost nine hundred thousand tons of
shipping, but by
December the convoy system had cut that monthly number to four hundred thousand.
Thus, even
before American soldiers could make a difference on the ground, the U.S. Navy ha
d ensured
Germany could not win at sea.
With the seas under Allied control, American troops departed for Europe. In July
1917 the U.S.
First Infantry Division left for France, where it was greeted by Pershing himsel
f. Pershing, lacking
oratory skill, sent Colonel Charles Stanton to meet the men, and it was he who u
ttered the famous
phrase, “Lafayette, we are here.” Black Jack did not need flowery or emotional speec
hes. He had
gained his fame in the Spanish-American War, charging San Juan Hill next to Roos
evelt’s Rough
Riders. Pershing kept himself in almost robotlike control, and even his voice wa
s monotone. But he
was as fine a commander as any nation put in the field. Above all, the general u
nderstood that he
could not allow the French to incorporate small untrained American units into Fr
ench forces as
mere reinforcements. He certainly did not intend for them to be chewed up in fro
ntal assaults as the
best of European manhood had been in the previous three years. Nor would a singl
e division tilt the
scales much. Pershing intended to deploy 3 million American troops in France by
May 1918, but
until then, the American Expeditionary Force had to resist sending brigade-sized
replacements to
the British or French. After 100,000 Yanks had arrived, they took up positions n
ear the Swiss
border, and on October 23, 1917, Alex Arch, an artillery sergeant, fired the fir
st American shots at
the Germans, and a few nights later the United States took her first war casualt
ies.
By that time, virtually every aspect of the war was working against Germany. The
U-boat war had
failed and would never reach the level of effectiveness it had had in the spring
of 1917. At the same
time, the British blockade was starving Germany. In late 1917 the British unleas
hed a massive
attack spearheaded by three hundred of the new wonder weapons, the tanks, gainin
g more ground
in a single day than in months of fighting in previous battles. Although the Ger
mans regrouped, the
carefully deployed and supported tank units doomed trench warfare once and for a
ll. This made the
Germans increasingly desperate, accounting for their offensive in early 1918.
Pershing appreciated the delicate situation in which either Germany or France co
uld collapse.
Writing Wilson’s adviser, Colonel Edward House, he stated, “The Allies are done for,
and the only
thing that will hold them (especially France) in the war will be the assurance t
hat we have enough
forces to assume the initiative.”46 By midsummer 1918, French officers rejoiced at
the sight of
American armies: “Life was coming in floods to re-animate the dying body of France
.”47 Indeed,
that May, with the additional U.S. troops, the Allies now had about 3 million me
n on the Western
Front facing 3.5 million Germans.
The German advance of 42 divisions in mid-1918 swept away British troops and cam
e within
eighty miles of Paris, which began a general evacuation until American marines a
ppeared on the
roads. They were thrown into a gap at Château-Thierry and Belleau Wood, and when t
he marines
took up their positions, they dug no trenches for fallback positions. “The Marines
will hold where
they stand,” said Brigadier General James Harbord, and they did, although the pres
s misidentified
the men as army doughboys, starting a friendly rivalry between regular army and
marines, each
seeking to outdo the other in military glory. American troops counterattacked on
June twenty-sixth,
driving the Germans out of the areas near Paris and stunning the German general
staff, which had
to reconsider its offensive. General Erich Ludendorff, in charge of war producti
on, ordered aircraft
production doubled to offset the Yankee units.
More desperate German offensives followed. Douglas MacArthur, an American office
r facing the
June-July attacks, witnessed one of the final German assaults on the Western Fro
nt. Despite a
barrage of more than half a million gas shells, the Germans could not break thro
ugh. German forces
slammed into unbroken barbed-wire barriers defended by U.S. doughboys blazing aw
ay with
machine guns. MacArthur, who would be criticized for his seeming absence of comp
assion in the
Bonus Army charge, later recalled that he was “haunted by the vision of those writ
hing bodies
hanging from the barbed wire.” When the Allied forces counterattacked, MacArthur f
ound the
enemy “exhausted, uncoordinated, and shattered.”48 Across the lines, one of those ex
hausted and
shattered soldiers, Corporal Adolf Hitler, was awarded an Iron Cross Second Clas
s for personal
bravery by a Jew, Captain Hugo Gutmann. And at the time Gutmann decorated Adolf
Hitler, the
American assistant secretary of the navy, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, visited the
battle zone and
fired an artillery piece in Hitler’s direction. A few hours later Roosevelt watche
d 200 tired and
wounded American soldiers moving to the rear—all that remained of a regiment of 1,
000 that had
advanced merely two days before.49
In Shermanesque fashion the American troops continued to advance, not giving the
German army a
chance to regroup. In early September, at Saint-Mihiel, American forces slammed
into retreating
German units and probably could have taken Metz. But Field Marshal Foch, the com
mander in
chief of the Allied troops, had another strategy that shifted the American First
Army west to the
Meuse-Argonne forest along a massive, and broad, front. It was here that the gre
atest tale of
American heroism from the Great War emerged. Sergeant Alvin York was a Tennessee
turkeyshooting
champion and conscientious objector when the war began, but he was persuaded by
his
pastor to join the war effort. Part of the 82nd Division, York’s platoon became se
parated from the
main body, and fighting his way back with only a handful of men, York killed 25
enemy soldiers,
took out thirty-five German machine guns, and took 132 prisoners. Germans’ heads,
the
Tennessean noted, were “so much bigger than turkeys’ heads.”50 Even York’s heroism paled
beside that of Dan Edwards, whose arm was pinned beneath a tree by artillery fir
e. When he saw
eight Germans advancing toward him, he shot four with his revolver and took the
other four
prisoner—his arm still pinned. Using his bayonet to cut off his crushed arm, he ap
plied a tourniquet
and, using one hand, herded the Germans back to his lines. When yet another expl
osion broke his
leg, he ordered the Germans to carry him!
The offensive had broken the back of the German army, and Ludendorff knew it. On
ly months
earlier French troops had mutinied, but now riots occurred in German shipyards a
nd cities. In
August the Austrian foreign minister informed the Germans that his nation would
seek a separate
peace negotiation. German troops were ordered to evacuate forward positions rath
er than face
encirclement and death. As the kaiser’s inner circle grew more desperate for an ar
mistice, they told
the insecure Wilhelm that peace feelers they had sent to Wilson had been squelch
ed by the demand
that the kaiser step down as a precondition to an armistice. A shaken Wilhelm, w
hose cousin Czar
Nicholas II had recently been executed by Lenin’s Bolsheviks, agreed to change the
German
constitution to allow for a parliamentary government. On November 9, 1918, a new
republic was
established in Berlin, and the kaiser boarded an imperial train for neutral Holl
and. Pershing warned
that the fighting needed to continue until the Allies obtained an unconditional
surrender, not a
cease-fire. “What I dread is that Germany doesn’t know that she is licked. Had they
given us
another week, we’d have taught them.”51 But it was out of his hands. At 11:00 a.m. o
n November
11, 1918, a silence fell over the bloody battlefields of Europe, ending the cost
liest war in human
history.
The cease-fire was announced around five o’ clock in the morning Paris time, indic
ating eleven
o’clock as the appointed Armistice hour. Harry Truman, commanding a battery of the
129th Field
Artillery, fired his last shell just a few minutes before the set time, having r
eceived orders to keep
fighting until the actual Armistice hour. Ironically, Truman, at least indirectl
y, may have fired the
last shots of both world wars—one at his artillery station in France and another t
hrough his order to
drop the second atomic bomb on Nagasaki, in Japan.
When the shooting stopped, the United States was fortunate that its casualty lis
ts were considerably
shorter than those of the other participants. The numbers of dead were mind-numb
ing: 1.8 million
Germans, 1.7 million Russians, 1.4 million French, 1.3 million Austrians, and 94
7,000 British or
Commonwealth troops. American losses were staggeringly light by comparison. The
nation soberly
absorbed the actual battle deaths for the American Expeditionary Force, which st
ood at 48,909,
although a total of 112,432 soldiers and sailors had died in all theaters of all
causes in a conflict not
of their own making.
Wilson, meanwhile, had already outlined a proposal for ensuring (in his mind) th
at another such
war would never occur. He had labeled his program the Fourteen Points, yet even
before the
Armistice had taken effect, eleven German cities were flying the communist red f
lag of revolution.
Germany had deteriorated into chaos before Wilson even boarded the vessel sailin
g to France for
the peace conference. Germany was not the only European power whose collapse inv
olved the
United States. To the east, Russia had disintegrated in the face of antiwar prot
ests and the skillful
maneuvering of the diabolical V. I. Lenin, Russia’s “Red Son,” who would spawn the fir
st
communist state of the twentieth century.”
Red Son Rising
Amid the sea of blood and America’s entry into the Great War, Russia’s second revolu
tion went
almost unnoticed. But not for long. In October 1917, Vladimir Lenin and a tiny c
ore of radically
committed Bolshevik communists, took the Russian government by force, grabbing t
he key centers
of communication and controlling the legislature. Estimates put the number of lo
yal Leninist
supporters in Russia at no more than twenty thousand—in a nation of 160 million—but
with
zealous fervor and unshakable focus, the Bolsheviks seized near-total power in a
few months.
Lenin’s puppet legislature announced an immediate end to hostilities with Germany,
freeing
millions of Germany’s Eastern Front troops for service against the newly arrived Y
ankee forces.
During the civil war that followed between Communist forces (Reds) and nonCommun
ists
(Whites), the United States and the Allies sought to ensure supply lines. Anglo-
American troops
landed to secure objectives imperative to the Allies’ war effort. When the Bolshev
iks finally won,
and had pulled Russia out of the war with the Treaty of Brest Litovsk (1918), th
ese actions later
aided the Soviet propaganda line that the United States and other capitalist nat
ions had arrayed
themselves against Communism in its infancy.
Few Euopeans or Americans—Churchill excepted—saw the menace posed by a Communist
government in such a large resource-rich nation. Quite the contrary, many Americ
an intellectuals
welcomed the Communist movement in Russia as a harbinger of what “should” happen nex
t in
America. It did not matter that Joseph Stalin’s minister Vyacheslav Molotov “could s
ign the death
sentences of 3,187 people in just one night and then watch Western movies with S
talin with a pure
conscience.”52 When Stalin later claimed his show trials were fair, the New Republ
ic accepted his
explanations at face value. Owen Lattimore commented that “the executions of dissi
dents sounds
like democracy to me.”53 (Lattimore would be revealed in the 1950s as a Soviet acc
omplice, if not
outright agent.) Harry Ward, a professor of Christian ethics at Union Theologica
l Seminary in New
York, compared the Soviet system with the teachings of Jesus. From 1919 on, larg
e numbers of the
intelligentsia in the United States ignored or downplayed Lenin’s and Stalin’s atroc
ities, hiding
behind the lack of firsthand evidence about the actual brutality of the regime.
At home, however, the Communist movement could not cover up its activities. In A
pril 1919, New
York City postal clerks found twenty package bombs addressed to public officials
and caught all
but two of the saboteurs. The undetected bombs exploded at the attorney general’s
house, blowing
a deliveryman to pieces, and another exploded at a U.S. senator’s house, shatterin
g the arm of a
maid. Outraged citizens supported immediate action, which, with Senate approval,
the Justice
Department took by launching a series of raids on suspected communists. Authoriz
ed by Attorney
General Mitchell Palmer, the raids, directed by Palmer’s assistant J. Edgar Hoover
, smashed the
Communist movement in the United States. A team of lawyers claiming that the gov
ernment’s
attacks endangered civil liberties for all citizens resisted the raids and event
ually forced Palmer’s
resignation but not before he had reduced membership in the American Communist p
arty and its
allies by 80 percent.
The remaining Communists might have remained underground and harmless after the
war, but for a
sensational murder trial of two anarchists, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti
, who were
convicted of a Braintree, Massachusetts, robbery and murder in 1921. Both suppor
ters and
opponents misidentified the pair as Communists (when in fact they were anarchist
s), and both sides
saw the case as a test of the government’s position on radicals. The two were exec
uted on solid
evidence, and attempts to portray the trial as rigged have not stood up. In any
event, the prosperity
of the 1920s soon combined with the concerns about anarchism to blunt any furthe
r spread of
communism in the United States. “Sacco and Vanzetti forged an important bond betwe
en
Communists and their liberal sympathizers,” a bond that resurfaced during the Grea
t Depression
and the rise of fascism in the 1930s.54
Versailles and the Fourteen Points
As events in Bolshevik Russia unfolded, they had a direct impact on Wilson’s philo
sophy of
foreign policy. Lenin had already (in December 1917) issued a declaration of his
government’s war
aims, which was in many ways a formality: he intended to get out of the war as q
uickly as possible.
Partly in response to the Soviet proposals, in January 1918 Wilson offered his o
wn program, known
as the Fourteen Points, which in some ways mirrored Lenin’s suggestions. Although
the president
hoped Russia could be persuaded to stay in the war, he soon “realized that Lenin w
as now a
competitor in the effort to lead the postwar order.”55
In 1918, Wilson the social scientist had convened a panel of 150 academic expert
s to craft a peace
plan under the direction of his close adviser, Colonel Edward House. Some observ
ers, including
British diplomatic historian Harold Nicolson, were impressed by this illustrious
group, asserting it
had produced one of the “wisest documents in history.”56 Others remained skeptical o
f foreign
policy drafted by an academic elite. Attracted to numbers and categories, Wilson
outlined five
points that related to international relations, including “open covenants” (a conces
sion to Lenin,
who had already made public all the treaties Russia had secretly made prior to t
he revolution),
freedom of the seas, free trade, arms reductions, and review of colonial policie
s with an eye toward
justice for the colonized peoples. Then Wilson added eight more points addressin
g territorial claims
after the war, including the return of Alsace-Lorraine to France, recovery of Ru
ssian and Italian
territory from the Central Powers, establishment of a new Polish nation, and mod
ifications in the
Ottoman Empire to separate ethnic minorities into their own countries under the
rubric of the
Wilsonian phrase, “national self-determination.” That made thirteen points, with the
fourteenth
consisting of a call for an international congress to discuss and deliberate, ev
en to act as an
international policeman to prevent future wars.
Before anyone in the international community could absorb even a few of the Four
teen Points,
Wilson inundated them with still more. In February, the Four Principles followed
, then in
September 1918, the Five Particulars. All of this relentless drafting, pontifica
ting, and, above all,
numbering came during the bloody final months of the war, when some 9 million Ge
rmans still
faced the Allied-American armies now without regard to the Eastern Front. The co
nstant stream of
points and principles and particulars gave the Germans the impression that the b
asis of an armistice
was constantly in flux and negotiable. Consequently, in early October 1918, Germ
an and Austrian
diplomats agreed to what they thought Wilson had offered—the Fourteen Points.
More accurately, the Fourteen Points should have been called the American Fourte
en Points.
Certainly the British and the French did not sign off on them, and no sooner had
the Central Powers
agreed to the stipulations than a secret meeting occurred between House and Angl
o-French leaders
where they introduced numerous caveats. The Allies changed or amended many of th
e most
important passages. This “Anglo-French Commentary,” as it was called, left the Allie
s everything
and the Central Powers virtually nothing. It created a “Polish Corridor” that divide
d Prussia; it
broke up the Austro-Hungarian Empire and stripped Germany of overseas colonies;
it changed
Wilson’s word “compensation” to a more harsh-sounding “reparations,” opening the door for
the
hated war-guilt clause.
Perhaps the worst feature of the Fourteen Points (besides deceiving Germany afte
r a deal had been
offered and accepted) was that it proffered a phony explanation of the war itsel
f with the Central
Powers the sole villains. It excused Britain and France from their own desire fo
r territory and
dominance. To be sure, Germany had struck first; the Germans had engaged in unre
stricted
submarine warfare, which had already been demonized as “inhuman”; Germany had used z
eppelins
to bomb London civilians, and had introduced the flamethrower; and Germany had s
mugly thought
she could launch a last-minute offensive and smash France as late as 1918. But i
t would be
unrealistic to ignore the British and French (not to mention Russian and Serbian
) culpability in
starting the war. Indeed, when comparing the relatively mild treatment post-Napo
leonic France had
received after Waterloo by the Congress of Vienna—which followed a period of const
ant war that
lasted three times longer than World War I—Germany was unfairly punished in 1919.
Wilson set the stage for such international malfeasance by his make-the-world-sa
fe-for-democracy
comments in the original war message, indicating he would not be satisfied until
he had reshaped
the world in the image of America. The Central Powers should have listened then.
Instead, having
accepted the Fourteen Points as the grounds for the November 1918 Armistice, the
y now found
themselves excluded from the treaty process entirely, to be handed a Carthaginia
n peace.
Nevertheless, when Wilson sailed for the peace conference in Paris on December 4
, 1918, it is safe
to say that he took the hopes of much of the world with him. His arrival in Euro
pe was messianic in
tone, the cheers of the people echoing a desperate longing that this American le
ader might end
centuries of Continental conflict. The “stiff-necked, humorless, self-righteous, a
nd puritan” Wilson
lapped up the adulation.57 European leaders may have privately scoffed at the pr
esident—the
French Premier Georges Clemenceau dourly said, “The Fourteen Points bore me…God Almi
ghty
has only ten!”—but the masses embraced him.58 Wilson’s reception, in part, involved a
natural
euphoria over the termination of the war, akin to the brief Era of Good Feelings
that had surfaced
between the North and South in the weeks following Appomattox.
Personally attending the conference, while good for Wilson’s ego, proved a fatal p
olitical mistake.
Other representatives, by nature of their parliamentary systems, already had the
support of their
legislatures. The Constitution, however, required the president to obtain Senate
ratification of
treaties. By participating personally, Wilson lost some of the aura of a deity f
rom a distance that
had won him the adoration of the French.
Unfortunately, Wilson’s lofty phrases did not easily translate into genuine policy
with teeth. For
example, national self-determination, while apparently sensible, was an idea fra
ught with danger.
Carving a new Poland out of parts of Germany and Russia failed to take into acco
unt the many
decades when an aggressive Poland had waged war to expand her boundaries in the
past. Nor did
the Ottoman Empire get off easily: Palestine, Mesopotamia (later Iraq), and Syri
a were sliced off
and handed to the League of Nations as trust territories, as was Armenia, though
too late to save the
half million Armenian civilians slaughtered by the Turkish government. Wilson di
d not originally
insist on establishing completely new states of Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro—on
ly
“autonomy” within empires—but by October 16, 1918, while the guns still blazed, Wilson
had
upped the ante to require statehood status. Perversely, the Allies now lobbied f
or entire Slavic and
Slovakian states that would themselves subordinate Serbs, Croats, Slovenians, Al
banians, and other
groups trapped within the new nationalities. Wilson had moved in less than four
years from neutral
in thought and deed to outright hostility toward Germany and Austria-Hungary.
Other punitive clauses reduced the army to a rump, eliminated Germany’s navy as we
ll as stripped
her rich industrial territories, and imposed massive reparations. These included
not only direct gold
payments, but also the construction of ships and railroad cars that the Germans
had to offer to the
British and French free of charge. All of these constituted massive (and foolish
) economic
dislocations that helped send Europe into a depression within a few years.
Where the treaty was not self-contradictory, it was mean, vindictive, and, at th
e same time,
ambiguous. The phrases avoided specifics, falling back on the reformist language
of freedom,
respect, and observing the rights of nations. Which were? Wilson could not, or a
t least did not, say.
Nations had to be respected, except for Germany, which had to be taught a lesson
. In that regard,
the French were much more pragmatic, seeking a mutual security pact with the Uni
ted States and
Britain. Instead, Wilson pressed for universal participation in the League of Na
tions, which, the
French knew, would soon include France’s enemies. More damaging (at least in the e
yes of U.S.
Senate critics of the treaty), the League threatened to draw the United States i
nto colonial conflicts
to maintain the Europeans’ grip in Africa and Asia—a concept fundamentally at odds w
ith
America’s heritage of revolution and independence.
Satisfied they had emasculated the Central Powers and at the same time made the
world safe for
democracy, Great Britain, France, the United States, Italy, and other participan
ts signed the Treaty
of Versailles in June 1919. Within ten years, its provisions would accelerate Ge
rman economic
chaos, European unemployment, and at least indirectly, the rise of Adolf Hitler
and Benito
Mussolini.
Returning to the United States with the treaty in hand, Wilson faced a skeptical
Senate—now in the
hands of the Republicans, who had won both houses in the 1918 off-year elections
(despite
Wilson’s claim that a Republican election would embarrass the nation). Opposition
to the treaty in
the Senate was led by Henry Cabot Lodge (Massachusetts) and William Borah (Idaho
). Lodge,
chairman of the Senate Armed Forces Committee, disagreed less with the intent of
the treaty or its
likelihood to involve the nation in foreign conflicts than he did with the impre
cision of its wording,
which was, in his opinion, too open ended. The public agreed with the general pr
emise of a
worldwide peacekeeping body, but needed to be convinced that the League would be
feasible and
effective. Attempting to add specificity, Lodge introduced his own reservations
to the treaty. Other
opponents, however, including the Progressive wing of the party led by Robert La
Follette, Hiram
Johnson, and Borah, had voted against going to war in the first place, and conti
nued to reject any
postwar European involvement.
Many Democrats, including Bryan and Colonel House, as well as members of Wilson’s
own
cabinet, such as Herbert Hoover, echoed the reservations. Some argued that the L
eague of Nations
committed American boys to dying for nebulous and ill-defined international caus
es. This in itself
violated the Constitution, and no American sailor, soldier, or marine had ever t
aken a vow to
defend the League of Nations. Since virtually none of the opponents had been pre
sent at Versailles
when Wilson had negotiated the final points, they didn’t realize that he had alrea
dy traded away the
substance of any legitimate leverage the United States might have had in return
for the shadow of a
peace enforced by international means.
Lodge rightly recognized that the notion that every separate ethnic group should
have its own
nation was hopelessly naïve. Was French Quebec to declare independence from Englis
h Canada?
Should the Mexican-dominated American Southwest attempt to create Aztlan? Brande
d an
obstructionist, Lodge in fact controlled only 49 votes, some of which could have
been swung by
reasonable negotiations by Wilson. Instead, the stubborn president sought to go
over the heads of
the senators, making a whistle-stop tour touting the treaty. Speaking on behalf
of the treaty, Wilson
covered a remarkable eight thousand miles in three weeks, often from the back of
his train at thirtyseven
different locations. Occasionally he spoke four times a day, sometimes an hour a
t a time. Yet
even in our age of instantaneous mass communication, such a strategy would invol
ve great risk:
presidents are important, but not supreme. Wilson could count on reaching only a
small handful of
the population, and certainly not with the effect needed to shift entire blocs o
f votes in the Senate.
Wilson was already in poor health, having suffered a stroke in April 1919 while
still in Paris, and
concealing it from the public. In September he had another stroke, then, on Octo
ber second, yet
another. After the final stroke, Wilson remained debilitated and bedridden, out
of touch with the
American voter. Mrs. Edith Wilson thus became, in a manner of speaking, the firs
t female president
of the United States, though her role, again, was unknown to the general public.
For more than a
year she determined who Wilson saw, what he said, and what he wanted through not
es that she
crafted in a clumsy hand. When he was lucid, Edith arranged for Wilson to meet w
ith staff and
members of Congress, but most of the time he looked distant and dull. His speech
was slurred, and
he remained partly paralyzed, especially on his left side. Whether the stroke ac
counted for his
unwillingness to negotiate any of the Lodge criticisms is uncertain, but whateve
r the cause, his
cadre of supporters in the Senate failed to persuade a single vote to switch, se
nding the treaty down
to defeat. And because Wilson would not entertain any of the Lodge reservations,
indeed had
ordered his loyal senators to vote against the Lodge version, in March 1920 the
amended treaty also
failed to pass. The defeated treaty symbolized the high water mark of internatio
nal Progressivism.
Although it would take several years, a new, more realistic foreign policy would
set in at the end of
the Coolidge administration. If the Progressives had failed in foreign policy, t
hey were just getting
started in areas of social reform, especially when it came to public health and
women’s suffrage.
Progressive Fervor and the Real Thing
America’s war against alcohol began, oddly enough, with an attack on Coca-Cola. On
e of the first
products challenged under the 1906 Food and Drug Act, Coke had eliminated even t
he minute
portions of cocaine it had once used in the cooking process years before.59 The
drink had
originated with an Atlanta pharmacist, Dr. John Pemberton, and his Yankee advert
iser, Frank
Robinson, from a desire to create a cold drink that could be served over ice in
the South to compete
with hot coffee and tea. Pemberton had concocted the mixture from kola nuts, sug
ar, caffeine,
caramel, citric acid, and a fluid extract of cocaine for a little euphoria. Afte
r Pemberton fell ill—
one biographer claims of a cocaine addiction—Asa Griggs Candler, another pharmacis
t who
suffered from frequent headaches, took over after discovering that Coke alleviat
ed his pain. By that
time, pharmaceutical tests had showed that Coca-Cola contained about one thirtie
th of a grain of
cocaine, or so little that even the most sensitive person would not feel any eff
ects short of a half
dozen drinks. Candler thought it unethical to advertise a product as Coca-Cola w
ithout any cocaine
in the contents, but he realized that the growing public clamor for drug regulat
ion could destroy the
company. He therefore arrived at a secret formula that began with a tiny portion
of cocaine that
through the process of cooking and distilling was ultimately removed.
Since the late 1890s, Coke had been the subject of attacks by health activists a
nd temperance
advocates. Many Progressives, especially Dr. Harvey Wiley, the leader of the gov
ernment’s case
brought by the Food and Drug Administration in 1909–10, recklessly endorsed some p
roducts and
condemned others. Wiley sought to expand his domain as much as possible and init
iated a highly
publicized case against Coke that culminated in a 1911 Chattanooga trial. By tha
t time, there were
no trace elements of cocaine in the drink at all, and the government’s own tests h
ad proved it.60
This prompted Wiley to switch strategies by claiming that Coke’s advertising was f
raudulent
because Coca-Cola did not contain cocaine!
The effort to prosecute Coke went flat, but convinced Progressive reformers that
government could
successfully litigate against products with “proven” health risks. Wiley’s effort to g
et Coke was a
test run for the Eighteenth Amendment, or the “noble experiment” of Prohibition, whi
ch involved
the direct intervention of government against both social mores and market force
s and, more than
any other movement, epitomized the reform tradition.61
Temperance had a long history in American politics. Maine passed the first state
law banning the
sale of alcohol in 1851, based on the studies of Neal Dow, a Portland businessma
n who claimed to
have found a link between booze and family violence, crime, and poverty.62 Abrah
am Lincoln had
run on a platform of temperance. For a while, eliminating alcohol seemed a neces
sary component
of the women’s movement as a means to rescue wives from drunken abuse and to keep
the family
wages from the saloon keeper. Alcohol, by way of the saloons, was linked to pros
titution, and
prostitution to the epidemic of venereal disease. “Today,” declared Dr. Prince Morro
w, a specialist
on sexually transmitted diseases, “we recognize [gonorrhea] not only as the most w
idespread but
also one of the most serious of infective diseases; it has risen to the dignity
of a public peril.”63
Convinced that unfaithful husbands were bringing home syphilis, doctors warned o
f the “syphilis of
the innocent”—infected wives and children. Then there was the alcohol-related proble
m of white
slavery, brought before the public eye in the 1913 play Damaged.64 At that point
a public clamor
arose, and Congress reacted by passing the Mann Act of 1910, which prohibited th
e transport of
women across state lines for the purpose of prostitution.
When Prince Morrow died, groups such as the American Social Hygiene Association
persuaded
John D. Rockefeller Jr. and Grace Dodge to take over the leadership of the movem
ent. Rockefeller,
who had given thousands of dollars for studies and provided much of the annual b
udget, had served
on special grand juries in New York investigating the white-slave trade. Althoug
h the juries found
no evidence of a syndicate, the experience convinced Rockefeller that there were
responsible
concerns about the damage done to society by venereal disease. He thus joined th
e thousands of
other moral crusaders of the day, further cementing the relationship between pla
nning,
professionalism, and social reform. As one press release aptly put it, “The name R
ockefeller stands
for a type of efficiency and thoroughness of work.”65
All of these streams of reform and the application of science and professional s
olutions came to a
confluence over alcohol, particularly because the saloon was perceived as the ho
tbed of
prostitution. Even the direct democracy movement played a significant role in el
iminating booze.
At the elementary school level, thanks to Massachusetts housewife Mary Hunt, a m
ovement called
Scientific Temperance Instruction swept the nation in the 1880s, providing a for
erunner to Nancy
Reagan’s “Just Say No” antidrug campaign a century later.66 Enlisting antialcohol crus
aders from
Connecticut to California, Scientific Temperance Instruction in classrooms intro
duced scientific
experts to support its Prohibition position, leading a popular democratic moveme
nt to influence
curricula. The Anti-Saloon League, founded in the 1890s, joined with the Women’s C
hristian
Temperance Union to use local laws to excise saloons within city boundaries, iso
lating them in wet
areas. More than 40 percent of the population lived in dry communities by 1906,
thanks to such
local legislation, and within three years the dry movement had spread to a dozen
states, again
through grassroots activism.67
Prohibition puts modern liberal historians in a quandry: on the one hand, they h
ave approved of its
use of federal power for social engineering for a purpose they deem desirable; b
ut on the other
hand, it ran counter to their unwillingness to pursue any policies based on mora
ls or values.
Consequently, historians have mischaracterized Prohibition as “cultural and class
legislation,”
wherein Progressive upper classes and Anglo-Saxons “imposed their Puritanical will
on benign but
besotted immigrants to mold an America that reflected their values,” as one text d
escribed the
Progressives’ efforts.68 Historian Richard Hofstadter called Prohibition a “parochia
l substitute for
genuine reform, carried about America by the rural-evangelical virus.”69 Such a vi
ew erred by
lumping together two substantially different groups, the Progressives and the ru
ral Populists. A
stronger correlation existed with women and Prohibition, leading dry counties to
also permit
universal suffrage. Only after Prohibition failed was there a deliberate effort
to reinterpret the
essentially Progressive flavor of Prohibition as the work of wild-eyed Christian
evangelists and
Populists or, as H. L. Mencken sneeringly put it, “ignorant bumpkins of the cow st
ates.”70 The
amendment gained broad supermajority support from a wide range of groups, as was
obvious by
the fact that it was an amendment and not a statutory law. As Prohibition histor
ian Norman Clark
wrote, “A majority of the people in a majority of the states wanted this truly nat
ional effort to
influence national morality.”71 Doctors, teachers, upper-class reformers, rural pr
eachers, labor
leaders, and businessmen of all sorts supported Prohibition.
Under the amendment, the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating li
quors (consisting of
any beverage with more than .5 percent alcohol) was prohibited. Unlike later law
s against drug use,
actually consuming alcohol was not a crime, and had enforcement been even remote
ly possible,
Prohibition may not have passed. Although a large majority of Americans (for a v
ariety of
motivations) supported the concept, it was not clear how many wished to provide
the government
with the means and the license to ensure compliance.72
A revealing look at the Janus-faced nature of Progressive policy can be gleaned
from the approach
to enforcement of the antialcohol campaign. The Volstead Act, passed in 1919 ove
r Wilson’s veto,
provided an enforcement mechanism, but instead of placing the Prohibition Bureau
inside the
Justice Department, where it belonged, Volstead made it a part of the Treasury D
epartment.
“Revenooers” broke up illegal stills, and agents crashed into speakeasies; and when
the government
had no other evidence, it charged mobsters with income tax evasion, which was wh
at finally put Al
Capone behind bars.
Reform zeal during this time led to the formation of an antituberculosis league
in 1897, the
American Conference for the Prevention of Infant Mortality in 1909, the National
Mental Hygiene
Committee that same year, the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness i
n 1915, and a half
dozen more.73 The founding of the American Eugenics Society in 1923 by biologist
Charles
Davenport, Alexander Graham Bell, and Luther Burbank was more chilling.74 Indian
a and
California mandated sterilization of confirmed “criminals, idiots, rapists, and im
beciles” whose
condition was viewed as “incurable” based on the recommendation of three physicians.
75 All of
these organizations and movements captured the Progressive view that disease and
imperfection of
any kind could be “reformed” through human action.
As with most other reform movements in America, Prohibition started among upper-
class females,
and, as was often the case, the targets ultimately were lower-class men. Accordi
ng to the pietistic
conscience, the lower classes were naturally the morally weaker classes, but pre
dictably it was
pietist women who after 1870 rushed toward political and social protest to save
the family.76 And
who could be numbered among these “morally weaker classes”? None other than immigran
ts, Irish,
Italians, and Poles. In the eyes of Progressive reformers, the drinking habits o
f the foreigners
reinforced the political corruption where fat, cigar-smoking backroom pols mobil
ized armies of
drunken immigrants to pad their machine’s vote.
Whether temperance itself was ever the sole objective of the women’s groups who pa
rticipated in
the Prohibition movement invites skepticism. Many feminist leaders latched on to
Prohibition only
as an organizational tool that would permit them to mobilize for the “real” effort,
women’s
suffrage.
Suffering for Suffrage
Voting rights for women, another Progressive plank, had a long history. Since th
e Seneca Falls
Convention in 1848, calls for the Declaration of Independence to be applied to a
ll people, not just
all men, had increased in frequency and intensity. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who h
ad organized the
Seneca Women’s Rights Convention, labeled it the “duty of women…to secure…their sacred r
ight
to the elective franchise.”77 Shortly after the Civil War, Stanton had formed the
National Woman
Suffrage Association, which wanted a constitutional amendment for female suffrag
e. That
association soon pressed for other objectives, including birth control and easie
r divorce laws, and
alienated some women who merely wanted the vote, and who in turn formed the Amer
ican Woman
Suffrage Association. The two merged in 1890 as the National American Woman Suff
rage
Association, largely made up of middle-and upper-class reform-minded people of b
oth sexes.
The Wyoming Territory had granted voting rights to women in 1869, and when Wyomi
ng
petitioned to enter the Union twenty years later, Congress allowed the women’s vot
e clause to stand
in the new state constitution. In 1916, Wyoming’s neighbor, Montana, elected Jeann
ette Pickering
Rankin as the first woman to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives. Colorad
o voters changed
their state’s law in 1893 to permit female suffrage, and were soon joined by their
neighbors in
Utah, which became a state in 1896 with women’s suffrage. The trend seemed inevita
ble, and in
1919, Congress introduced the Nineteenth Amendment to enfranchise adult women. T
he states
ratified the amendment in 1920. Over the years, one of the most significant impa
cts of female
voting rights has been a corollary increase in the size of government.78
Voting rights for women might have come sooner had the issue been restricted to
the franchise
alone. But activists such as Margaret Sanger from New York City had associated f
eminism with
such controversial practices as birth control and eugenics. Sanger, one of eleve
n children, was
deeply affected by the death of her tubercular mother. Instead of blaming the di
sease, Sanger
blamed the rigors of childbirth for her mother’s death. The difficult delivery of
her own baby
convinced her of the dangers of the birth process and the problems of poverty sh
e associated with
large families.
Sanger quickly fell in with New York radicals and met all the important socialis
ts, including Debs,
“Big Bill” Haywood, John Reed, Clarence Darrow, Will Durant, and Upton Sinclair. She
seemed
“supremely unimpressed” by her fellow travelers: in addition to her disparaging rema
rks about
Haywood and her “silk hat radical” reference to Debs, she called Alexander Beckman,
a labor
organizer, “a hack, armchair socialist—full of hot air but likely little else.”79 Sang
er bitterly
attacked any fellow travelers, characterizing members of the Socialist Party as “l
osers, complainers,
and perpetual victims—unwilling or unable to do for themselves, much less society
at large.”80
What kept her in the good graces of the radical community was her libertine atti
tude and, above all,
her willingness to link socialism to sexual liberation.
After a failed attempt to open an abortion clinic, Sanger published a paper call
ed The Woman
Rebel that denounced marriage as a “degenerate institution,” openly advocated aborti
on, and
endorsed political assassinations.81 Her writings clearly violated the Comstock
Laws, enacted in
1873 to prohibit the transmission of pornography or other obscene materials thro
ugh the mail, and
she was indicted. Rather than submit to jail, Sanger fled to England, where she
absorbed the
already discredited overpopulation ideas of Malthus. Suddenly she found a way to
package birth
control in the less offensive wrapping of concern for population pressures. Alth
ough relabeling her
program as family planning, in reality Sanger associated birth control with popu
lation control,
particularly among the unfit. The most merciful thing a large family could do to
a new baby, she
suggested, was to kill it.82 She attacked charity as enabling the dregs of socie
ty to escape natural
selection: “My criticism…is not directed at the failure of philanthropy, but rather
at its success. The
dangers inherent in the very idea of humanitarianism and altruism…have today produ
ced their full
harvest of human waste.”83 Benevolence encouraged the “perpetuation of defectives, d
elinquents,
and dependents.”84 Birth control and sterilization could be used to weed out the p
oor (and, she
noted, blacks and Chinese, whom she likened to a “plague”). She viewed birth control
as a means
of “weeding out the unfit,” aiming at the “creation of a superman.”85
Founding the Birth Control Review in 1917, Sanger published a number of proeugen
ics articles:
“Some Moral Aspects of Eugenics” (June 1920), “The Eugenic Conscience” (February 1921), “T
he
Purpose of Eugenics” (December 1924), “Birth Control and Positive Eugenics” (July 1925
), and
“Birth Control: The True Eugenics” (August 1928). One of her regular contributors, N
orman Hines,
repeatedly claimed that Catholic stock (that is, people from predominantly Catho
lic nations) was
inferior to Protestant stock. Perhaps the most outrageous article published in B
irth Control Review
was a favorable book review of Lothrop Stoddard’s The Rising Tide of Color Against
White World
Supremacy (1923)—a book that became a model for fascist eugenics in Europe. Claimi
ng that
black children were “destined to be a burden to themselves, to their family, and u
ltimately to the
nation,” Sanger revealed herself as a full-fledged racist.86
Mainstream feminists recognized the dangers posed by any association with the eu
genics
movement, and distanced themselves from her views sufficiently enough to ensure
passage of the
Nineteenth Amendment. Only later would they revive Sanger’s positions under the be
nignsounding
name Planned Parenthood.
The Dark Bargain
By 1920 the United States looked vastly different than it had at the turn of the
century. Technology
had changed life in dramatic ways; Progressive reforms had affected almost every
aspect of daily
life; and the large-scale economic reorganization that had started in the 1860s
had reached maturity.
Although the end of the war brought a large-scale depression in the agricultural
sector, the nation
nevertheless was perched to spread its wings. However, flight would require a dr
astic withdrawal
from Progressive wartime assumptions and structures in every area of life. Candi
date Warren G.
Harding would call it a return to normalcy, but regardless of the term, exorbita
nt tax rates, large
government debt, and price fixing would need to go.
Wilson’s exit marked the last gasp of Progressivism until, arguably, 1933. That wo
uld have
surprised many, especially since the polestar of Progressive policy, Prohibition
, had just been
enacted. Yet the contradictions of Progressivism were precisely what had doomed
it as a viable
American political theory. Progressives had made a dark bargain with the voters.
On the one hand,
they sought women’s rights, which liberated women (often) to act as men; on the ot
her hand, they
sought to constrain liberties across a wide range of economic, social, and behav
ioral issues. Women
could vote, but now they could not drink. They could start businesses, but could
not expand those
companies lest they fall prey to antitrust fervor. Likewise, men found that Prog
ressive policies had
freed them from the dominance of the state legislators when it came to electing
their senators, but
then they learned that the states lacked the power to insulate them from arbitra
ry action by the
federal government. Voters could recall their judges, but at the cost of allowin
g them to make
tough, unpopular decisions. They could initiate legislation, swamping ballots wi
th scores of legalsounding
and unfathomable proposals. And the income tax, hailed as the measure to redistr
ibute
wealth, succeeded only in taking more wealth than ever from those least able to
pay it. Small
wonder that in 1920 Americans, for the most part, were ready to ditch Progressiv
ism.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
The Roaring Twenties and the Great Crash, 1920–32
The Twenties Myth
Many recent histories—including textbooks—have developed a mythology about the Roari
ng
Twenties and the Great Crash of 1929. Although it is tempting to call this mytho
logy the Liberal
Legend, it would be inaccurate because elements of it have been echoed by conser
vative historians,
most recently Paul Johnson, and to some extent, by libertarian economists like M
urray Rothbard.
By and large, however, the essentials of this story are the same.1
During the 1920s, the story goes, the wild speculation in the stock market led t
o a maladjustment of
wealth on the one hand and too much investment on the other. Average Americans c
ould not buy
enough durable goods—autos, radios, and other big ticket items—and as a consequence,
sales in
automobiles and other manufactured items tailed off. The Federal Reserve Board,
in thrall to the
Republican probusiness clique, did not curtail bank lending to securities affili
ates, as the banks’
securities arms were called, until it was too late. Instead, throughout much of
the 1920s the Fed
actually expanded the money supply, allowing stock prices to soar in a wild orgy
of speculation.
At this point in the mythology, Herbert Hoover enters the picture, thoroughly ba
mboozled by the
developments and too uninventive to correct the problems. Lacking the vision of
Franklin
Roosevelt, Hoover simply allowed things to deteriorate, and he deserved the emba
rrassment from
appellations like “Hoovervilles” (given to tent cities) and “Hoover hankies” (given to e
mpty
pockets turned inside out). Unwilling to use the power of the federal government
to “fix” the
economy, the befuddled Hoover deservedly lost the 1932 election to Franklin Roos
evelt, at which
point everything improved. Roosevelt’s vision and courage, through the creation of
the New Deal,
led America out of the Depression.
Little of this mythology is true. Consider the notion that the stock market was
one gigantic
speculative bubble: there is virtually no evidence for that in numerous studies
by economic
historians. The most any economists come up with is a tiny layer of speculation
at the top, one
incapable of affecting either stock prices or attitudes toward buying securities
.2 If anything, the
market accurately reflected the fantastic growth in American industry. The most
rapidly rising
stocks in the 1920s had been electric utilities, radios, and autos. Since 1899 i
ndustrial use of
electricity had zoomed upward by nearly 300 percent. Little else needs to be sai
d about the impact
of autos on America’s culture and economy. Certainly the auto industry was not ind
icative of
speculation.
In fact, several elements would have had to be present to make a case for specul
ation. First, people
would have had to invest with little or no information about the securities they
were purchasing.
That has not been demonstrated. Quite the opposite, studies have shown that most
investors were
well informed, especially about foreign bonds that supposedly had dragged down t
he large banks.
As just one example, Charles E. Merrill, the securities genius who perceived tha
t the markets of the
future would lie with the vast middle class, constructed his firm’s reputation on
accurate and honest
appraisals of securities.3 Second, to make the case for speculation, as John Ken
neth Galbraith
attempted to do, it has to be shown that the maldistribution of wealth resulted
in most of the
trading’s being conducted by the wealthy. Yet analyses of bond issues of the day s
howed that a
broad cross section of Americans snapped up the latest bonds, with the most prom
inent occupations
of the purchasers being schoolteachers, cabbies, and maids.
But even the notion that the stock market crash caused the Depression itself is
egregiously wrong.
Although the market may have temporarily reflected a downturn in the economy, th
e Depression
was a confluence of several dramatic shocks (especially the Smoot-Hawley Tariff
Act), which were
made worse by foolish Federal Reserve Board policies and then rapidly accelerate
d into the abyss
by government attempts to “solve” the problems. We begin to correct the host of thor
oughly
confused writings about the nation’s worst economic episode with an accurate appra
isal of the
1920s.
Time Line
1920:
Warren Harding elected president
1922:
Washington Conference
1923:
Harding dies in office; Calvin Coolidge assumes presidency
1923–24:
Upheaval in Germany; near collapse of Weimar Republic
1924:
Coolidge reelected
1926:
Locarno Pact
1928:
Kellogg-Briand Treaty; Herbert Hoover elected president
1929:
Stock market crash
1930:
Smoot-Hawley Tariff passes Congress; Reconstruction Finance Corporation started
1930–32:
Bank collapse; money supply contracts by one third
1932:
Franklin Roosevelt elected president
Return to Normalcy
Anyone looking at the American economy from 1919 to 1921 might have been complet
ely misled
about the future. The end of World War I brought the return of millions of soldi
ers and sailors to
farms and factories in the United States and Europe, and the destruction wreaked
by several years
of combat had disrupted normal economic activities, fattened the U.S. government
, and glutted the
job markets. Farmers were especially devastated, with farm prices plummeting aft
er the European
farmers—who had been holding rifles instead of hoes just months earlier—abruptly ret
urned to the
land. In the United States, the weakening of the agricultural sector, although n
ot in itself
debilitating, had severe but largely hidden repercussions.
After 1921, however, the nation made a sharp U-turn. First came a new administra
tion when
Warren G. Harding defeated Woodrow Wilson’s handpicked successor, James M. Cox. Co
x, a
Dayton, Ohio, newspaper publisher and governor of Ohio, saw economic activity in
a static
bureaucratic way. In his view, the high national debt needed for the war had to
be paid off by high
taxes. He could not have been more wrong. Andrew Mellon, Harding’s secretary of th
e treasury,
commissioned a study of why the wealthier classes had paid less and less in taxe
s as the
government raised the tax rate on them repeatedly. He found that high tax rates
actually drove
money underground. The rich tended to invest abroad rather than build new factor
ies and mills in
the United States and then suffer from the 73 percent tax on any income from tho
se investments. At
any rate, Cox’s misfortune to be with the incumbent party during a recession was n
ot aided in any
way by his view that a correction required more of the same. Wilson’s League of Na
tions had
proven equally unpopular, and the infirm president could not campaign for his wo
uld-be successor.
Oddly enough, Warren Harding (1865–1923), the winner in the 1920 election, would d
ie before the
ailing Wilson, whose series of strokes had left him little more than a figurehea
d during his final
months in office. (Wilson hung on until 1924.) Harding had defeated Cox by the l
argest plurality up
to that time in history, 16.1 million to 9.1 million (the electoral college vote
was 404 to 127). The
election was also notable for the showing of socialist Eugene V. Debs, who, whil
e in jail, had still
pulled almost 1 million votes, as he had in 1912 and 1916.
Debs had “run” for office from the hoosegow while Senator Harding essentially campai
gned from
his home in Marion, Ohio. A self-made man, Harding, like Cox, created a successf
ul newspaper
(The Marion Star). After his nomination by the Republicans, Harding copied Harri
son,
campaigning from his Marion front porch and greeting the more than six hundred t
housand people
who had made the pilgrimage. He invited many reporters to join him in a chew of
tobacco or a shot
of whiskey. When Harding finally hit the campaign trail, he told a Boston crowd
that America
needed “not nostrums but normalcy,” thus coining the phrase that became his unintend
ed theme.
His association with Madison Avenue marketing whiz Albert Lasker led him to intr
oduce state-ofthe-
art advertising.4
Without a doubt, Harding’s most astute appointment was Andrew Mellon at Treasury.
Mellon,
whose Pittsburgh family had generated a fortune from oil and banking, understood
business better
than any Treasury secretary since Hamilton. After his study of falling tax reven
ues revealed that the
amont of money gleaned from the upper classes had declined with each new rate in
crease, Mellon
concluded that lowering the rates on everyone, especially the wealthiest classes
, would actually
result in their paying more taxes. From 1921 to 1926, Congress reduced rates fro
m 73 percent on
the top income earners and 4 percent on the lowest taxpayers to 25 percent and 1
.5 percent,
respectively, then down even further in 1929. Unexpectedly, to everyone except M
ellon, the tax
take from the wealthy almost tripled, but the poorer classes saw their share of
taxes fall
substantially. The nation as a whole benefited as the national debt fell by one
third (from $24
billion to $18 billion) in five years.
Mellon’s tax policies set the stage for the most amazing growth yet seen in Americ
a’s already
impressive economy. Had Harding appointed a dozen Mellons, he would have been re
membered as
a great president, but he did not, of course, and many of his appointees were of
less than stellar
character.
A Scandal for Every Occasion
Self-discipline and trustworthiness proved to be lacking in Harry Daugherty, the
attorney general;
Charles Forbes of the Veterans Bureau; and Albert Fall, the interior secretary—all
of whom either
directly or indirectly fleeced the government. Forbes resigned after a scandal i
n which he sold U.S.
veterans hospital supplies to his friends; Fall resigned after the infamous Teap
ot Dome scandal,
during which he granted favorable leases for government oil fields in Elk Hills,
California, and
Teapot Dome, Wyoming, in return for kickbacks totaling $400,000. Teapot Dome wou
ld join
Crédit Mobilier as among the worst scandals in American history. It had its origin
s in a fight over
the environment between “developmentalists” and “conservationists.”5 Had the conservatio
nist
wing of the Republican Party not become aware of the leases, which it opposed, a
nd thus made a
public issue of them, it is unlikely that the newspapers would have picked up on
the issue or that
the public would have exhibited such outrage. It would not be the last time that
environmental
issues would color the political debate over economic development.
Any one of the three scandals alone might not have damaged Harding. Taken togeth
er, however,
the impact tainted his entire administration. Worse, swirling amid those scandal
s were the suicides
of Charles Cramer, the counsel for the Veterans Bureau, and Jess Smith, an assoc
iate of
Daugherty’s. An odor of corruption started to cling to Harding, who, Grant-like, h
ad a knack for
appointing crooks and bunglers. Harding commented after the unwelcome publicity
that followed
one suicide, “I can take care of my enemies all right. But my damned friends…they’re t
he ones
who keep me walking the floor nights.”
In 1923, before any image restoration could occur, Harding died of a heart attac
k. His successor,
Calvin Coolidge, although eminently capable, had altogether the wrong personalit
y for using the
public relations machinery of the White House to rebuild his predecessor’s image.
On the other
hand, as historian Robert Maddox concludes, “‘Silent Cal’ was in fact the only public
figure to
come away from the mess with his reputation enhanced.”6
As part of the twenties myth, Coolidge has been ridiculed as lazy, with one text
even claiming that
he “spent only about four hours daily on his executive duties,” and another offering
without
qualification that “Coolidge hardly worked at all: he napped in the mornings befor
e lunch, dozed a
bit after eating, [and then he] lay down for a few minutes prior to dinner.”7 Yet
his work habits
reflected the view of government’s role in American life, and he also refused to p
lay the public
relations game that most politicians practiced. Coolidge had a remarkable abilit
y to refrain from
small talk. Known as Silent Cal, Coolidge was once the subject of a bet by two d
inner guests: one
woman bet another she could get Coolidge to say three words in succession. After
several
unsuccessful tries, she explained the bet to Coolidge, who said, “You lose.” Coolidg
e may not have
been a friend of the elites, and he probably was not the quotable, boisterous ty
pe the public had
become accustomed to with Roosevelt, but he was thoroughly American.
Literally born on the Fourth of July in 1872, Coolidge grew up on a Vermont farm
. A redheaded
youngster prone to allergies, Coolidge experienced a constant loneliness that st
emmed first from
punishments at the hands of his grandmother, then later, in 1890, from the death
of his sister Abbie
from appendicitis. These and other events contributed to Coolidge’s famous shyness
and
standoffish nature.
Young Coolidge moved off the farm, studied law, and advanced up the ranks in the
Massachusetts
Republican Party. He became governor of Massachusetts, where he demonstrated his
approach to
limited government. Explaining that public institutions could never take the pla
ce of the private
sector and hard work, Coolidge saw self-government as meaning self-support. As H
arding’s vice
president, Coolidge avoided the scandals that had enveloped other members of the
administration
and remained clean. Appropriately enough, he was asleep at his father’s farmhouse
the night that a
postal messenger arrived with the telegram informing Coolidge that Harding had d
ied, and he
needed to take the oath of office immediately. The Coolidge home did not have a
telephone, but it
did have a notary public (Calvin’s father) to administer the oath of office by ker
osene lamp. Silent
Cal pulled off a silent coup within the GOP itself, effectively overthrowing the
old guard in that
party that had stood with Harding. In his inaugural address—an astoundingly brief
102 words—
Coolidge warned Americans not to expect to build up the weak by pulling down the
strong, and not
to be in a hurry to legislate. When a business or union endangered the public, h
owever, Coolidge
acted with decisiveness and skill. During the 1919 Boston Police strike, the the
n-governor Coolidge
had given the strikers enough rope to hang themselves when public opinion ultima
tely turned
against them. At that point he summoned the National Guard, stating that there w
as no right to
strike “against the public safety at any time.”8 That perspective remained with Pres
ident Coolidge,
and it sent a message to business and consumers that he would protect private pr
operty from
government confiscation.
Government expenditures plummeted under the Republicans, falling almost to 1916
levels. Outlays
remained low under both Harding and Coolidge (though they soared under Herbert H
oover), and
even after defense expenditures were factored in, real per capita federal expend
itures dropped from
$170 per year in 1920 to a low of $70 in 1924, and remained well below $100 unti
l 1930, when
they reached $101.9
Coolidge’s reluctance to involve the government in labor disputes combined with ge
neral
prosperity to drive down union membership. Unemployment reached the unheard-of l
ow mark of
less than 2 percent under Coolidge, and workers, overall, had little to complain
about. The AFL’s
membership dropped by 4 million during the decade, and overall union membership
shrank slightly
faster. Union leaders shook their heads and complained that affluence and luxury
produced by the
economy had made unions seem irrelevant. But business had contributed to the wea
kening of
unions as well through a strategy called welfare capitalism, preemptively provid
ing employees with
a wide range of benefits without pressure from unions. Government refused to sup
port strikers, and
when the Railway Brotherhoods rejected the Railway Labor Board’s 12 percent reduct
ion in wages
for shop men, the subsequent labor stoppage was met with an injunction from Atto
rney General
Harry Daugherty.
Government’s shifting attitude toward workers, which had been increasingly favorab
le prior to the
1920s, reflected the difficulty of having Washington involved at all in such mat
ters as setting
private sector wages. Many such episodes of the government’s refusing to act clear
ly illustrated the
central belief during the Harding-Coolidge years that the government should butt
out. The Supreme
Court largely agreed, ruling on a number of issues related to government interfe
rence: whether to
impose taxes on “undesirable” products (those manufactured by children), Bailey v. D
rexel
Furniture Company (1922), or to require that companies pay minimum wages, Adkins
v. Children’s
Hospital (1923). In so doing, the Court reflected the culture of the day in whic
h children often
assumed adult roles in their early teens, and although adolescents were victimiz
ed in some
instances, the workplace often remained the only path to upward mobility for tho
se who lacked the
opportunity to attend college. In addition, the refusal to allow government to s
et minimum wages
for women, far from aiming at depriving women of better-paying jobs, was designe
d to strengthen
the role of the husbands who were primary breadwinners in families.
An Economic (and Cultural) Goliath
Harding’s scandals and untimely death did nothing to impede the steadily expanding
economy.
Both Harding and Coolidge proved to be good friends to business if only because
they moved the
federal government out of the way of economic growth. The main fact was this: un
leashed, and
with government playing only a small role in people’s everyday affairs, American e
ntrepreneurs
produced the most vibrant eight-year burst of manufacturing and innovation in th
e nation’s history.
It was a period that easily compared with any other eight-year period at any tim
e, anywhere,
including during the Industrial Revolution.
American businesses did more than simply turn out more goods, as is implied by c
ritics of the
Roaring Twenties. They fostered an environment that enabled the invention of bre
akthrough
devices and products that fundamentally changed the structure of society, perhap
s more than the
Industrial Revolution itself. Consider the automobile. Prior to the widespread a
vailability of cars—
made possible in large part by Henry Ford’s moving assembly line and his keen unde
rstanding that
what people needed was an affordable automobile—people either walked, took trains,
or sailed on
ships and riverboats. Auto registration rose from just over 9 million in 1921 to
23 million by 1929,
whereas automobile production soared 225 percent during the decade. Ford, of cou
rse, had already
seen demand for his own product peak prior to the war, when the price of a Ford
Model T stood at
$345, allowing Ford to sell 734,000 units.
Ford’s company already was being eclipsed by a new giant, General Motors (GM), a m
erger of
Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Buick, Cadillac, Fisher Body, Delco, and other firms. Bet
ween 1918 and
1920, William Durant, GM’s founder, created a company that could satisfy all taste
s (whereas with
Ford’s Model T, “You could have any color you wanted as long as it was black”). Durant
, however,
was unable to manage the monster he had created, yielding control to Alfred P. S
loan Jr., who led
GM’s surge past Ford during the decade. Whether a Ford or a Chevrolet, however, it
was irrelevant
which auto Americans drove. What was important was that they were driving more t
han ever
before, generating an unprecedented demand for a wide variety of related materia
ls—metal,
lumber, steel, cotton, leather, paint, rubber, glass, and, of course, gasoline.
Production of a vast
legion of auxiliary items sparked expansion in those businesses as well as in al
l the firms needed to
supply them. Cement plants, housing construction, gasoline, and spare parts firm
s grew at a
dramatic rate. Moreover, the demand for autos led to a related clamoring on the
part of drivers that
cities and states build roads. State highway road construction soared tenfold be
tween 1918 and
1930. As politicians moved to meet the public need for roads, often through bond
financing, states
and municipalities often turned to Wall Street either to supply the capital dire
ctly or to place the
bond issues.
In ways less visible, though, the auto also encouraged opportunity and occupatio
nal freedom never
before seen in American history. People were no longer tied to inner-city jobs o
r to sharecropper
farms. Instead, they had hope that good jobs awaited just down the road or in Ca
lifornia, which
itself became a success story during the decade.
Another new technology, the radio, had also leaped onto the scene. The Radio Cor
poration of
America (RCA) had been formed in 1919 to take over the assets of the American Ma
rconi
Company. The new radio medium utilized broadcasting in which the transmitter sen
t signals out
over the airwaves for whoever wanted to pick them up, as opposed to the two-way
wireless
communication associated with a walkie-talkie. RCA expected that it could make m
oney by
providing the broadcasting free and selling the radio sets. In 1920, Westinghous
e, one of the RCA
partners, applied for the first radio station license, in Pittsburgh, and on Nov
ember second of that
year some five hundred listeners tuned in to coverage of Harding’s presidential vi
ctory. The
following week the first World Series broadcast was heard. By 1922 more than two
hundred
stations were operating, and radio soon began to feature paid advertisements for
products, giving
birth to the modern practice of sponsor payment for programming on public airwav
es.
Perhaps it was no coincidence that the best-known baseball player of all time, a
nd perhaps the most
dominant athlete in any sport at any time in American history, George Herman “Babe”
Ruth (1895–
1948), captured America’s imagination just as radio could broadcast his exploits,
among which was
setting the record, in 1927, of sixty home runs in a single season. A larger-tha
n-life figure, Ruth not
only led all of baseball in both home runs and strikeouts, but according to most
contemporary
newspaper accounts, he also surpassed any other player in his ability to party a
ll night, carouse,
smoke cigars, and then play a doubleheader.10
Motion pictures, another new technology, competed with radio as a main source of
public
entertainment. “Movies” originated with Thomas Edison in the late 1880s, and in 1903
The Great
Train Robbery became “the first movie with a recognizable plot.”11 Almost a decade l
ater, D. W.
Griffith produced The Birth of a Nation, about the Civil War, arguably creating
the first true
modern-era motion picture. But the greatest motion picture director of all, Ceci
l B. DeMille,
captured the grand sweep of the 1920s with his epics The Ten Commandments (1923)
and King of
Kings (1927).12
Warner Bros., however, provided the decade’s key breakthrough when Al Jolson appea
red in the
first film with a sound track, The Jazz Singer (1927). Previously, movies had re
lied on written text
to move the plot along, although posher theaters featured live organists or even
orchestras playing
along with the screen action. Jolson’s breakthrough opened the floodgates for the “t
alkies,”
instantly ending the careers of many silent film artists who looked appealing, b
ut sounded bad, and
demanding more overall of the actor’s craft. With the industry producing up to fiv
e hundred movies
a year, in a short time Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino, Cha
rlie Chaplin, and
Clara Bow would epitomize the lavish lifestyles and celebrity culture that later
was synonymous
with Hollywood. Next to The Jazz Singer, though, was the other revolutionary mot
ion picture of
the decade—this one starring a mouse. Walter Elias “Walt” Disney, an illustrator and a
nimator, had
dreamed of producing a full-length motion picture cartoon. He took a giant step
toward fulfilling
that dream with Steamboat Willie in 1928, which introduced the world to a whistl
ing Mickey
Mouse. Motion pictures and radios were joined by another new consumer item—the tel
ephone. In
1920, for every 1,000 city dwellers there were 61 telephones; by 1928 the number
had risen to 92
per 1,000.13
Wets Versus Drys
As the idealism of Prohibition faded, and the reality of crime associated with b
ootlegging set in, the
effort to ban alcohol began to unravel. One reason was that enforcement mechanis
ms were pitifully
weak. The government had hired only fifteen hundred agents to support local poli
ce, compared to
the thousand gunmen in Al Capone’s employ added to the dozens of other gangs of co
mparable
size. Gunplay and violence, as law enforcement agents tried to shut down bootleg
ging operations,
led to countless deaths. Intergang warfare killed hundreds in Chicago alone betw
een 1920 and
1927. By some estimates, the number of bootleggers and illegal saloons went up a
fter Prohibition.
Washington, D.C., and Boston both saw the stratospheric increase in the number o
f liquor joints.
Kansas, the origin of the dry movement, did not have a town where alcohol could
not be obtained,
at least according to an expert witness before the House Judiciary Committee.14
The leadership of the early Prohibition movement included many famous women, suc
h as Carry
Nation, who were concerned with protecting the nuclear family from the assault b
y liquor and
prostitution. She was wrong in her assessment of the problem. Far from protectin
g women by
improving the character of men, Prohibition perversely led women down to the sal
oon. Cocktails,
especially, were in vogue among these “liberated” women, who, like their reformer si
sters, came
from the ranks of the well-to-do.
Liquor spread through organized crime into the hands (or bellies) of the lower c
lasses only
gradually in the 1920s, eventually entering into the political arena with the pr
esidential campaign of
Al Smith. By that time, much of the support for Prohibition had disappeared beca
use several factors
had coalesced to destroy the dry coalition. First, the drys lost some of their f
lexible and dynamic
leaders, who in turn were replaced with more dogmatic and less imaginative types
. Second, dry
politicians, who were already in power, bore much of the blame for the economic
fallout associated
with the market crash in 1929. Third, public tastes had shifted (literally in so
me cases) to
accommodate the new freedom of the age represented by the automobile and the rad
io. Restricting
individual choices about anything did not fit well with those new icons. Finally
, states chafed under
federal laws. Above all, the liquor industry pumped massive resources into the r
epeal campaign,
obtaining a “monopoly on…press coverage by providing reporters with reliable—and const
ant—
information.”15 By the late 1920s and early 1930s, “it was unusual to find a story a
bout prohibition
in small local papers that did not have its origin with the [anti-Prohibition fo
rces].”16
Not to be discounted, either, was the fact that the intelligentsia turned agains
t Prohibition. Neo-
Freudians—the rage in psychology circles—scorned the reformers, in sharp contrast to
the pre–
World War I sympathy they’d enjoyed in intellectual circles. Psychologists now saw
Progressive
reformers as sexually repressed meddlers.
All of these factors led toward the inexorable repeal of Prohibition with the Tw
enty-first
Amendment in 1933. Still, for history written since the 1960s, where an open soc
iety was deemed
the highest good and any restrictions on personal freedom were viewed as inheren
tly autocratic,
Prohibition left a more mixed legacy than is commonly portrayed. In the first pl
ace, it was not
designed to stop private individuals from drinking, but only to eliminate the so
urce of (as the
reformers saw it) evil and misery, the saloon. Moreover, historians have display
ed a nearly
irresistible urge to saddle white rural Protestants with Prohibition, despite it
s female, upper-to
upper-middle-class urban origins. A concurrent lack of attention was given to th
e measurable
results of Prohibition. The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, fo
r example,
prepared a report called “Alcohol and Health” in 1971, which showed that per capita
consumption
of alcoholic beverages fell by at least 40 percent in 1920, marking a permanent
reduction in
drinking.17 Economist Clark Warburton’s 1932 study analyzed a wide array of data,
all of which
were refined further by other economists in 1948. The conclusion of these studie
s was that alcohol
consumption declined by 30 to 50 percent, or roughly what the 1971 HEW report ha
d claimed.
Other benefits of Prohibition are overstated. Arrests for public drunkenness fel
l, leading to lower
public expenses for dealing with drunks; the rates of alcoholic psychoses fell;
and medical
problems related to drinking in almost every category plummeted so much that med
ical journals
scarcely mentioned it as a public health problem.18 Yet these statistics ignored
a lag time of
disease—especially illnesses such as psychoses and liver problems, which are cumul
ative and
would not have shown up until the late 1920s, if then.
What about the crime wave associated with Prohibition? Norman Clark points out, “T
here is no
reason to suppose that the speakeasy…in any quantifiable way, replaced the saloon.
In fact…most
Americans outside the larger cities never knew a bootlegger, never saw a speakea
sy, and would not
have known where to look for one.”19 Federal expenditures for law enforcement rose
at an annual
rate of 17.5 percent during the Prohibition years, with liquor-related enforceme
nt costs exceeding
budgets and revenues from licenses every year.20 Defenders of Prohibition argued
that crime was
growing anyway, and that gambling, not liquor, remained organized crime’s major mo
ney source.
Prohibition may have accelerated the rise of the gangsters, but it did not cause
the rise of organized
crime.
Prohibition therefore provided ammunition for both sides of the public health de
bate in subsequent
generations; thus it usually came down to issues about personal rights. Critics
pointed to its later
failures; supporters, to its early successes.
Bulls and…Bulls
Prohibition’s social sideshow had little effect on the continued technological adv
ances of the
twenties and their spillover effect on the stock market and the American economy
. Improved
productivity in the brokerage and investment firms expanded their ability to pro
vide capital for the
growing number of auto factories, glassworks, cement plants, tire manufacturers,
and dozens of
other complementary enterprises. Moreover, both traditional manufacturing and th
e new industries
of radio, movies, finance, and telephones all required electricity. With electri
c power applied as
never before, the utilities industries also witnessed a boom. In 1899, for examp
le, electrical motors
accounted for only 5 percent of all the installed horsepower in the United State
s, but thirty years
later electrical power accounted for 80 percent of the installed horsepower. One
estimate found that
electricity could increase productivity on a given task by two thirds.
That automobile/electrical nexus probably would have sustained the Great Bull Ma
rket by itself;
but added to it were several other unrelated industries, including radio broadca
sters, who reached
7.5 million sets by 1928. Radio broadcasting stood uniquely among all industries
in that it
depended entirely on advertising for its sustenance. Advertising revenues on rad
io had accounted
for $350 million by the middle of the decade, reflecting the growing power of Ma
dison Avenue and
professional advertising. For the first time, advertising and professional marke
ting entered the
mainstream of American society, shucking the aura of hucksterism associated with
P. T. Barnum.
All this growth, energy, and American industrial success alarmed the Europeans.
In 1927 at the
International Economic Conference in Geneva, which met at the behest of the Fren
ch, proposals
were put forward for “an economic League of Nations whose long-term goal…is the crea
tion of a
United States of Europe.” This was, according to the chairman, “the sole economic fo
rmula which
can effectively fight against the United States of America.”21 English writer J. B
. Priestley
complained a few years later that British roads “only differ in a few minor detail
s from a few
thousand such roads in the United States, where the same toothpastes and soaps a
nd gramophone
records are being sold, the very same films are being shown [here].”22 Europeans s
eemed
uniformly wary of the rising American economic might, with books such as America
Coming of
Age (1927) warning of the rising giant across the Atlantic. We should not discou
nt these reactions,
because they underscored the fact that the U.S. economy was robust and reinforce
d evidence that
the stock market boom was not an illusion.
Rather than a frenzy of speculation, the Great Bull Market reflected the fantast
ic growth in genuine
production, which did not fall; consequently, stocks did not fall either. Using
an index of common
stock prices for the year 1900 equaling 100, the index topped 130 in 1922, 140 i
n 1924, 320 in
1928, and 423 in October 1929. Individual stocks refused to go down. Radio Corpo
ration of
America (RCA) never paid a single dividend, yet its stock went from $85 a share
to $289 in 1928
alone. General Motors stock that was worth $25,000 in 1921 was valued at $1 mill
ion in 1929. Was
that all speculation? It is doubtful: GM produced $200 million in profits in 192
9 alone; and
electricity, which was ubiquitous by 1925, promised only steady gains in utiliti
es securities.
Certainly the securities firms gave the market a push whenever possible, mostly
through margin
sales in which an individual could put down as little as 10 percent early in the
decade to purchase
stock, using the stock itself as collateral for the 90 percent borrowed from the
broker. By
middecade, most firms had raised their margins to 15 percent, yet margin buying
continued to
accelerate, going from $1 billion in 1921 to $8 billion in 1929. But it wasn’t onl
y the rich investing
in the market. In 1900, 15 percent of American families owned stock; by 1929, 28
percent of
American families held stock. One analysis of those buying at least fifty shares
of stock in one
large utility issue showed that the most numerous purchasers, in order, were hou
sekeepers, clerks,
factory workers, merchants, chauffeurs and drivers, electricians, mechanics, and
foremen—in other
words, hardly the wealthy speculators that critics of the twenties would suggest
.23
The fact that many Americans were better off than they had ever been before deep
ly disturbed
some, partly because the middle class was rapidly closing in on the monied elite
s. Writers like F.
Scott Fitzgerald sneered that Americans had engaged in the “greatest, gaudiest spr
ee in history.”
Others, employing religious models, viewed the prosperity of the 1920s as a mate
rialist binge that
required a disciplinary correction. But the facts of the consumer-durables revol
ution reflected both
the width and depth of the wealth explosion: by 1928, American homes had 15 mill
ion irons, 6.8
million vacuum cleaners, 5 million washers, 4.5 million toasters, and 750,000 el
ectric refrigerators.
Housing construction reached record levels, beginning in 1920, when the United S
tates embarked
on the longest building boom in history. By the middle of the decade, more than
11 million families
had acquired homes, three fourths of which had electrical power by 1930. During
the 1920s, total
electrical-product sales had increased to $2.4 billion. Per capita income had in
creased from $522 to
$716 between 1921 and 1929 in real terms, and such a rising tide of affluence al
lowed people to
save and invest as never before, acquiring such instruments of savings as life i
nsurance policies.
Indeed, the notion—first offered by John Maynard Keynes in his General Theory of E
mployment,
Interest, and Money (1936) and later championed by John Kenneth Galbraith in The
Great Crash
(1955)—that consumer purchasing fell behind the productivity increases, causing a
glut of goods
late in the decade, doesn’t wash. In 1921 the consumer share of GNP was $54 billio
n, and it
quickly rose to $73 billion, adding 5 percent at a time when consumer prices wer
e falling. It gave
consumers the available cash to own not only stocks and bonds, but also to contr
ol five sixths of the
world’s production of autos—one car for every five people in America—and allowed a gro
wing
number of people to engage in travel by air. In 1920 there were only 40,000 air
passengers, but by
1930 the number had leaped to 417,000, and it shot up again, to 3.1 million, by
1940.
The soaring level of investment in securities and the business boom fostered the
legend that both
Harding and Coolidge were rabid probusiness types. Attackers have especially, an
d selectively,
repeated Coolidge’s comment that “the business of America is business” and his suggest
ion that
“the man who builds a factory builds a temple.” What did Coolidge really say about b
usiness when
all of his comments were put into context? “We live in an age of…abounding accumulat
ion of
material things. These did not create our Declaration. Our Declaration created t
hem. The things of
the spirit come first.”24
Criticized by historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., who served as the “court historian”
for Franklin
Roosevelt and John Kennedy, as wanting a “business government,” Coolidge in fact sai
d that
America needed a government that “will understand business. I mean a government ab
le to
establish the best possible relations between the people in their business capac
ity and the people in
their social capacity.”25
Silent Cal had a few weaknesses, including his intolerance for the insubordinate
(but ultimately
accurate) predictions of Colonel Billy Mitchell and his support of tariffs. Over
all, though, it was
Coolidge’s moral compass and self-control over executive power that allowed the bu
lls to dominate
Wall Street. Contributing to the Great Bull Market, however, were successful for
eign policies that
also helped usher in a decade of peace that contributed to the prosperity.
A “Tornado of Cheering”
Following the Great War—the worst war in human history up to that point—few nations
had the
resources or the desire to fan even the smallest embers of conflict. The Republi
can administrations
sought to go even further, however, by ensuring peace through active negotiation
s to limit
weapons, encouraging discussions among the former enemies, and assisting the Ger
man Weimar
Republic when it experienced rampant inflation in the mid-1920s. These were not
isolationist
positions in the least, nor did they characterize small-government views associa
ted with the
Republicans, especially when it came to the German question.
Germany, saddled with tremendous (and, in many ways, unreasonable) war reparatio
n debts from
World War I, had been consigned to a form of national servitude to Britain and F
rance after the
conflict. Among other penalties, Germany had to provide France with thousands of
locomotives
and railroad cars, free, and give to Britain hundreds of thousands of tons of sh
ipping—again, at no
cost. Because the Treaty of Versailles demanded that Germany pay billions of mar
ks to France,
Germany simply devalued the mark and printed currency in geometric increments, h
anding the
French, in essence, worthless money. When the French converted the marks into fr
ancs and then
shipped the converted marks back home to Germany, hyperinflation ensued. In a ma
tter of months,
German currency plummeted to such lows in value that people burned money in fire
places and
stoves because it was cheaper than using the money to buy wood.
France moved in to take over German industries in the Ruhr Valley, and tensions
escalated. Fearing
another war, the United States devised a 1924 plan implemented by Charles G. Daw
es. A banker
who had coordinated procurement in Europe during the war, Dawes had become a hou
sehold name
following his kinetic postwar testimony before Congress. Grilled about paying to
p dollar for
supplies, Dawes leaped from the witness chair, shouting “Helen Maria! I would have
paid horse
prices for sheep, if sheep could have pulled artillery to the front!”26 When the w
ire services carried
the line, they garbled the “Helen Maria” phrase—a Nebraska farm saying—so it read “Hell ’n’
Maria.” Dawes quickly became an icon in American pop culture. Such a man was perfe
ct to head
the committee to untangle the reparations mess. Coolidge, admonishing the member
s before they
left, said, “Just remember that you are Americans!”27
By April 1924, the Dawes committee had completed its work. It proposed that Germ
an reparations
be lowered, that the Deutschemark be pegged to the gold-based American dollar, t
hat half of future
reparations come from taxes, and that the United States lend Germany some of the
money to get
back on its feet. Dawes thus defused the situation, sharing the Nobel Peace Priz
e the following year
with Sir Josiah Stamp, another member of the delegation (who had done the number
crunching).
The Dawes Plan perhaps staved off war, and certainly the loans returned to Ameri
can business to
purchase U.S. products.28
Concerns over naval power also dominated postwar policy. After the war, Congress
had refused to
continue to appropriate money for the Naval Act, which would have created the la
rgest fleet in the
world. Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes rightly saw naval affairs as the
most critical
elements of America’s near-term security. No nation in the world could have launch
ed air attacks
on the United States in the 1920s, and landing any ground troops would have requ
ired an armada as
yet unseen in human history. Increasingly, however, America depended on trade, a
nd any threat to
U.S. trade routes concerned Washington.
Delegates from the major naval powers of the world were invited to a conference
in Washington in
1921. Hughes directed the tenor and direction of the meeting toward arms limitat
ions, especially on
what some had called “the ultimate weapon,” the battleship. Like many arms control a
greements
that followed, the Five Power Pact that emerged from the Washington conference r
elied on
maintaining rough equality of weapons among the participants, enforcing a sort o
f balance of terror.
Signatories agreed to limits on the tonnage (that is, tons of water displaced as
an indicator of the
size, and often type, of ship) each nation would build. For every 525,000 tons o
f capital ships the
United States built, England could build the same amount; Japan could build 315,
000 tons; and
France and Italy, 175,000 tons each. Over time, the agreement came to be referre
d to by a sort of
shorthand reference to the tonnage limitations, namely the 5-5-3 ratio. Moreover
, Hughes urged the
delegates to cancel production entirely on all those battleships currently under
construction.
Met with a “tornado of cheering” as “delegates whooped and embraced,” the agreement was
a
typically utopian and wrongheaded approach to maintaining peace.29 Nations indee
d limited the
tonnage of ships, but instantly cheated by changing both the character and letha
lity of such vessels.
On the one hand, they shifted production to a newer ship type that would soon pr
ove far more
potent, the aircraft carrier (which had not been covered in the agreement), and
on the other, they
simply installed more, and bigger, guns on existing platforms. Indeed, many of t
he Japanese
carriers that struck Pearl Harbor were battleship hulls converted in the wake of
the Washington
agreements and retrofitted with carrier decks. And it was no accident that the s
ize of long-range
guns mounted on existing battleships and cruisers increased, from twelve to four
teen inches aboard
the USS Arizona, sunk at Pearl Harbor, to the sixteen-inch guns of the USS Misso
uri and the
eighteen-inch guns of the German superbattleships Bismarck and Tirpiz. Japan top
ped everyone
with its massive battleships Yamato and Musashi, each featuring nine eighteen-in
ch guns. All
nations reinvigorated their submarine programs as well. Thus the Washington conf
erence had the
ironic effect of encouraging the development of two new weapons—the carrier and th
e
submarine—that would prove far more effective than the increasingly obsolete battl
eships the
treaties sought to control.
Few paid any attention to such realities. The euphoria of arms control reached i
ts absurd conclusion
in 1928 with the Kellogg-Briand pact (named for Frank Kellogg, U.S. secretary of
state, and
Aristide Briand, French foreign minister), which outlawed war. War was now illeg
al! One wonders
if the delegates had considered repealing the law of gravity while they were at
it. The ink on this
incredible document, signed with a foot-long pen of gold, remained dry for scarc
ely a decade
before Adolf Hitler plunged the world into the most catastrophic war in human hi
story.
Coolidge refused to be sucked into the orbit of the “outlawrists.” He did not oppose
arms
limitations on general grounds, but rather doubted that the European powers woul
d limit their own
numbers of ships in any significant way. He had the luxury of knowing that in a
practical sense, the
only way the United States was vulnerable to a direct attack was by sea, and the
refore American
security could be achieved by reducing the ability of others to build capital sh
ips. Coolidge also
saw the potential for arms reductions to further limit the size of government ex
penditures and thus
the size of government—something he always considered worthwhile.
Significantly, after a brief foray into an international arms reduction agreemen
t in 1926–27,
Coolidge realized that foreign powers were not about to sacrifice any advantages
they held. In 1927
he therefore recommended a nine-year naval development program, and although he “n
ever
completely surrendered hope that the powers could…restrict their sea strength…he cou
ld take no
chances with his country’s defenses.”30 It was vintage Coolidge: reduce government,
promote
peace, but protect yourself and stand firm when necessary.
The New Deal Writ Small
Coolidge could have stood for reelection, but he chose not to. In his Autobiogra
phy, he pointed to
the fact that presidents who served eight years were not effective in the latter
parts of their term.
Some suspect Coolidge sensed that an economic downturn lay ahead. Still others p
oint to odd
statements by Coolidge, whose son died in 1924 of an infected blister on his foo
t, suggesting the
president believed his death was some sort of spiritual “price exacted for occupyi
ng the White
House.”31 Whatever the reason, with typical Coolidge brusqueness, during a press c
onference, the
president quietly marched down a line of newsmen, handing them each a little str
ip of paper with
the words, “I do not choose to run for President in nineteen twenty-eight.”32
His successor, Herbert Clark Hoover (1874–1964), could not have been more differen
t from Silent
Cal. The secretary of commerce who had headed the Food Administration during the
First World
War, Hoover represented the latest in a long line of Republican Progressives who
m Coolidge
despised. Hoover thus inherited the Teddy Roosevelt/William Howard Taft wing of
the Republican
Party. In some ways, this progressivism, especially as exhibited by Hoover, was
a type of devout
religiosity, with an emphasis on perfection of this world, as opposed to the tra
ditional Christianity
practiced by Coolidge, with its presumption of man’s sinful nature.
Certainly, Hoover was religious. He was born of Iowa Quaker stock, and his churc
h training stayed
with him to the point where he refused to play in Harding’s White House poker game
s. Far from
being conservative in the nineteenth-century sense of the word, Hoover’s views ent
itled him to be
described by one biographer as a “forgotten Progressive.”33 He displayed his “forward-
looking”
views across a wide spectrum of policies, telling his confidants that he wanted “v
ery much to
appoint a woman to a distinguished position” only a decade after women had receive
d the
franchise, adding, “if I could find a distinguished woman to appoint.” His policies
anticipated most
aspects of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal Depression remedies.34
Of course, many of the comments hailing Hoover as a Progressive come from a libe
ral historical
school that endorsed the expansion of government, and by any yardstick, Hoover w
as a biggovernment
type. The Department of Commerce increased its bureaucracy under Hoover, growing
by more than two thousand employees and $13 million at a time when every other d
epartment in
government was shrinking. He was the quintessential manager, in both the best an
d worst senses of
the word, coining new phrases and generating streams of new reports. It should n
ot be a surprise
that, before running against him in an election, Franklin D. Roosevelt called hi
m “a wonder” and
added, “I wish we could make him President…. There couldn’t be a better one.”35 Those sa
me
traits—his obsession with paperwork and bureaucratic forms—caused Coolidge to hold h
im in
contempt, calling him “wonder boy” and noting that Hoover had given him “unsolicited a
dvice for
six years, all of it bad.”36 Hoover was too entrenched to kick out, but Silent Cal
had scarcely said a
good word about him, even during the campaign.37
Hoover’s work with the bureaucracy took his natural affinity for capitalism and se
asoned it with a
dose of corporatism, the notion that large-scale planned organizations could dir
ect outcomes better
than a laissez-faire method. But perhaps a better word for describing Hoover’s app
roach to
government than “corporatism”—which often suggested a form of Benito Mussolini’s fascism—
was “activism” or even a revival of the old mercantilist view of the world. As comme
rce secretary,
he sought to “rationalize” the coal industry, an approach that would have horrified
Lincoln or
Jefferson. He concocted a scheme reminiscent of Albert Gallatin’s inland waterway
plan, proposing
a “comprehensive system of inland waterways that would aid the farmer.”38 These priv
ate/public
“cooperation” policies allowed biographers to claim that Hoover’s presidency incorpora
ted “a
philosophy of individualism through the coordination of capital, government, and
labor.”39
Despite his willingness to employ the federal government to solve problems, Hoov
er’s name,
especially after the Depression, was almost exclusively associated with “rugged in
dividualism” in a
negative sense. As the economic collapse deepened, people assumed he did not car
e for their plight,
despite the fact that he had pushed federal involvement in the private sector to
unprecedented
peacetime levels. It did not help that he had written a book called American Ind
ividualism in
1922.40 Unlike Coolidge, who had no compunction about allowing a recession to lo
wer wages,
Hoover saw high wages as critical to maintaining prosperity. In that respect, he
displayed the
classic Keynesian approach to economics that would soon captivate policy makers
in the West:
demand was what counted, not supply.
Hoover won in 1928 because of Coolidge’s peace and prosperity—always a tough row to
hoe for a
political opponent. The opponent, Democratic candidate Alfred E. Smith, governor
of New York,
represented the growing anti-Prohibition movement. Smith, a Catholic, suffered f
rom anti-Catholic
prejudices and the American distrust of New York urbanites, which helped Hoover,
as did his
Quaker moralism and his seeming concern for common Americans. “A chicken for every
pot and a
car for every garage,” he intoned, and the press that he had carefully cultivated
carried his
proclamations with enthusiasm. Major newspapers endorsed him wholeheartedly. Som
e of their
commentary seems absurd, given the scorn the nation heaped on him just four year
s later: he was
called the “most useful American citizen now alive,” “a new force in economic and soci
al life,”
associated with unfailing integrity, and even “a genius.”41 In some ways, Smith held
positions
more conservative (and more in line with Harding and Coolidge) than did Hoover:
he opposed
government interference with business and the rising expenditures of federal age
ncies, and he
favored restraining or cutting back the Washington bureaucracy.
More Americans voted in the presidential election of 1928 than ever before(67.5
percent of those
eligible), and Hoover won in a landslide, 444 electoral votes to Smith’s 87, racki
ng up more than
21.3 million popular votes in the process. Yet Smith virtually swept the big cit
ies—St. Louis,
Cleveland, San Francisco, New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, and
so on—laying
the groundwork for the Roosevelt coalition four years later. It marked the first
time in the twentieth
century that the big urban areas went overwhelmingly Democratic, a position they
had not
relinquished by the year 2000.
From the hindsight of nearly seventy years, it would appear that when Hoover was
inaugurated in
1929, he had jumped behind the wheel of a flaming gasoline truck with no brakes
headed over a
cliff. But only in hindsight. Hoover’s perspective was that he had the opportunity
to end the
business cycle once and for all—to use the tools of government to manage minor dip
s and hiccups.
Given the emphasis on planning, could not any obstacle be overcome? With enough
information,
could not even the economy be controlled?
Crash and Depression
On October 29, 1929, the economy just dropped off the table. Or so the story goe
s. In fact, several
sectors of the economy had experienced slow growth or even stagnation in the 192
0s. Then there
was the Federal Reserve, which failed to expand the money supply at a pace that
would support the
growth over the long haul. The slow drain caused by the weakened agricultural se
ctor had started to
afflict the financial structure. Manufacturing indices started a natural slowdow
n by mid-1928.
These rather hidden factors were greatly exacerbated by the Smoot-Hawley Tariff;
then, once the
crash occurred, the government made almost every poor policy decision possible.
Farming had never recovered from the end of World War I. By 1927, farm bankruptc
ies stood at
about 1.8 per 100, a rate lower than all American businesses. And farm income av
eraged $7 billion
from 1923 to 1929, after averaging only $4.6 billion during the boom of World Wa
r I.42 Only later,
in the midst of the Depression, did economist Joseph S. Davis observe that “in ret
rospect, in the
light of revised data and a truer perspective, [the mid-to late-1920s] should pr
operly be regarded as
moderately prosperous and relatively normal for agriculture.”43 Much anxiety came
from the socalled
parity formula developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and pushed by a p
air of
farm industrialists, George N. Peek and Hugh S. Johnson of Moline, Illinois. The
y sought to
maintain a relationship between the prices of farm and nonfarm goods. The idea w
as deeply flawed
in that no fixed relationships exist between any goods or services, but rather a
re always subject to
laws of supply and demand. Worse, not only did the USDA’s parity formula understat
e farm
income, it also failed to take into account the revolution in mechanical motoriz
ed farm equipment,
which essentially combined the genius of Henry Ford, John Deere, and Cyrus McCor
mick. That
equipment tended to increase production as farmers plowed far more land, which w
as good, but
depressed prices, which was a continued source of concern. American farmers coul
d overcome
price declines with higher overall sales, but that required open markets, and in
creasingly the
Europeans had erected tariff barriers to imported goods that limited American ag
riculture’s foreign
sales.
The drop in agricultural prices gave the impression that farms in general were i
n trouble when that
was not true, but added to the price decline came several natural shocks that de
stroyed the livestock
and farm economies of several specific regions. Wyoming experienced such a terri
ble winter in the
mid-1920s that bankbooks literally froze in their cabinets and livestock herds w
ere decimated. As
the collateral for livestock loans disappeared, banks in agricultural sectors st
arted to struggle, with
many of them closing. A similar set of natural weather and insect phenomena stru
ck the Deep
South, destroying huge swaths of rice and cotton farms. Coolidge resisted McNary
-Haugenism, a
movement named for the sponsors of several bills (Senator Charles L. McNary of O
regon and
Representative Gilbert N. Haugen of Iowa) to have the government purchase surplu
s agricultural
production to maintain the parity prices. He vetoed two such bills, arguing that
they would
encourage one-crop farming, and he made the vetoes stick.
Pockets where farming was collapsing, especially in the Midwest, certainly weake
ned the banking
system by saddling banks with a mountain of bad debts. Bank distress then contri
buted to the
second problem that developed in the 1920s, namely, the slow growth of the money
supply.
Although no nationally known banks failed before 1930, state banks in the West a
nd South had
failed in droves in the decade. Many of those institutions had small, even minus
cule, capital, and
they passed away without notice. But just as banks “create” money through fractional
reserve
banking when people make deposits, the banking system “destroys” money when banks fa
il. The
Federal Reserve should have deliberately offset those failures—and the contraction
of the money
supply caused by them—by reducing the interest rate it charged member banks and ma
king it easier
for banks to borrow money. Yet it did not: quite the opposite, the Fed had not e
ven been keeping up
with the growth indicators of industry, regardless of the drain posed by the agr
icultural sector.
The nation’s money supply, contrary to the claims of many economists and historian
s, simply failed
to keep up with output. One reason even conservative historians like Paul Johnso
n and mainstream
textbook writers have failed to discern this fact is that, once again, they have
become obsessed with
stock prices. This even led the conservative writer Paul Johnson to claim that t
he market was “pure
speculation, calculated on the assumption that capital gains would continue to b
e made
indefinitely.”44 Many authors cite the price of RCA stock, which went from $85 to
$420 a share in
1928, with Johnson noting that RCA had not paid a dividend. But Carnegie Steel h
ad never paid a
dividend either when its value had soared fifty years earlier. Radio sales had e
xpanded far faster
than stock prices rose, and an argument could be made that RCA stock was still u
ndervalued even
after its spectacular rise. At any rate, securities provided only one snapshot o
f the economy,
whereas the money supply touched everyone from the dockworker to the dentist, an
d from the
typist to the tycoon. As the availability of loans shrank, business had less cas
h with which to
continue to grow.
That was seen in a third factor, the slowing of the manufacturing sector in mid-
1928. Contrary to
demand-side economists like John Kenneth Galbraith and the renowned John Maynard
Keynes,
demand did not disappear in the late 1920s, and wages remained high enough to pu
rchase most of
the vast number of new conveniences or entertainments. But firms could not add n
ew production
facilities without bank loans, which, instead of increasing, tightened when the
Fed grew concerned
about speculation. Members of the Fed’s board of governors mistakenly thought bank
s were
funneling depositors’ money into the stock market, and further dried up credit, in
stigating a
shrinkage of the money supply that would not stop until 1932, when it had squeez
ed one dollar in
three out of the system. Evidence suggests that corporations sensed the tighteni
ng money supply,
and cut back in anticipation of further credit contraction.45
One factor that can account for the sudden nature of the crash, however, was the
Smoot-Hawley
Tariff. This tariff increased rates already enacted under the Fordney-McCumber T
ariff, by about 20
percent on average, but rates were increased much higher on some specific goods.
Obviously, the
passage of the tariff in 1930 discredits assertions that it shaped perceptions i
n late 1929—unless
one takes into account the legislative process. Former Wall Street Journal write
r Jude Wanniski
raised the argument in 1978 with his book The Way the World Works that uncertain
ties over the
effects of the tariff may have triggered the stock market sell-off.46 In the 199
0s a new generation
of scholars interested in trade revisited Wanniski’s views, with Robert Archibald
and David
Feldman finding that the politics of the tariff generated significant business u
ncertainty, and that
the uncertainty began in 1928 (when manufacturing turned down) and grew worse in
late 1929.47
The timing is crucial. The bill cleared key hurdles in committees in the autumn
of 1929, with key
votes coming just prior to the Great Crash. Certainly if business leaders became
convinced that the
tariff, which promised to raise the tax on imports of virtually all items by as
much as 30 percent,
would drive production costs up, and thus reduce sales, they would have prepared
for it as soon as
possible. From that perspective, it is entirely possible that expectations that
Smoot-Hawley would
pass may have caused a massive sell-off in October 1929. And after the crash the
worst fears of the
Smoot-Hawley opponents came to pass as European nations enacted higher tariffs o
n American
goods, forcing prices on those imports up further and reducing demand. Companies’
expectations
were, in fact, critical. If companies believed that the tariff would pass, and i
f they therefore
expected hard times in 1930, it stands to reason that among other precautions th
ey would take,
firms would increase liquidity by selling off some of their own stock. Such sale
s alone could have
sent dangerous signals to average investors, which then could have sparked the g
eneral panic.
Were businesses right to expect problems associated with Smoot-Hawley? Hadn’t busi
ness
interests lobbied for many of the duties that Congress tacked on to the original
bill? Business had
indeed favored tariffs for decades, but favoring something in general and specif
ically assessing its
impact are completely different. It becomes easier to discover the source of ind
ustry’s unease from
hindsight. Among other things recent research has shown, the tariff reduced impo
rts by 4 to 8
percent in nominal terms, but when deflationary effects are factored in—and it see
ms that almost
everyone in the country except the Federal Reserve understood that some degree o
f deflation had
set in by late 1929—the real decline in trade attributable to Smoot-Hawley account
s for one quarter
of the 40 percent decline in imports after 1930.48
Other research has shown that changes in trade had a ripple effect throughout th
e economy, and the
tariff alone could have reduced the U.S. GNP by 2 percent in the 1930s. Moreover
, “had such
tariffs been introduced in any other time period they could have brought about a
recession all by
themselves.”49 Thus we are left with some fairly obvious conclusions: (1) the Smoo
t-Hawley
Tariff had important disruptive effects; (2) few people knew exactly what form t
hose disruptive
effects would take; and (3) unknown to anyone at the time, the Fed made the harm
ful effects even
worse through its policy of deflation. The only link that seems to remain for fu
rther research is how
much the perceptions of impending chaos affected securities sales prior to the G
reat Crash.
The combination of concerns about Smoot-Hawley; the need for a real, but not nec
essarily large,
correction; and the rapid sell-off by speculators triggered a sharp decline. On
Tuesday, October
twenty-ninth, the market traded more than 16 million shares (compared to a norma
l day’s 3 million
shares traded), and the indexes fell sharply. For the month of October alone, th
e New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) dropped almost 40 percent in value. By March, manufacturing orde
rs (which
had already slowed nearly a year before) dried up. Enter Herbert Hoover, who now
turned a bad,
but cyclical, recession into the nation’s worst depression.
Hoover Accelerates the Decline
Almost immediately upon assuming office, Hoover tried to prop up farm prices, cr
eating another
new federal agency with the Agriculture Marketing Act of 1929. Then he turned hi
s attention to the
tariff, where Congress had expanded the number of items in the tariff bill and h
ad also substantially
increased rates on many other items. Once the crash hit, the banking crisis foll
owed. When the
Bank of the United States in New York failed in 1930, followed by the collapse o
f Caldwell and
Company in Nashville, the sense of panic spread. People pulled out their deposit
s, and the Fed
proved unable or unwilling to break the runs. Indeed, contrary to one of the ten
ets of its charter, the
Fed did not even rescue the bank of the United States.50
Hoover did cut taxes, but on an across-the-board basis that made it appear he ca
red for average
Americans, lowering the taxes of a family with an income of $4,000 by two thirds
. As a symbol, it
may have been laudable, but in substance it offered no incentives to the wealthy
to invest in new
plants to stimulate hiring. It was, again, a quintessential Keynesian response—add
ressing demand.
For the first time since the war, the 1930 U.S. government ran a deficit, a fact
that further
destabilized markets. On the other side of the coin, however, Hoover taxed bank
checks, which
acclerated the decline in the availability of money by penalizing people for wri
ting checks.51
Even after the initial panic subsided, the economic downturn continued. Smoot-Ha
wley made
selling goods overseas more difficult than ever; and the public quickly went thr
ough the tiny tax
cut—whereas a steep cut on the upper tier of taxpayers would have resulted in rene
wed investment
and plant openings, thus more employment. Worse, Hoover never inspired confidenc
e. When the
Democrats won the off-term election, taking control of the House, it meant that
any consistent
policy, even if Hoover had had one, was doomed. As the unemployed and poverty st
ricken lost
their houses and cars, a string of appellations beginning with “Hoover” characterize
d all aspects of
the economic collapse. Shantytowns erected on the outskirts of cities were Hoove
rvilles, and a
broken-down car pulled by a team of horses was dubbed a Hoover Wagon.
The most significant response by the Hoover administration was the Reconstructio
n Finance
Corporation (RFC), created in January 1932. Viewed by Hoover as a temporary meas
ure, the RFC
provided $2 billion in funds for financial institutions that were teetering on t
he brink. Although the
RFC made loans (which, for the time, seemed massive) to private businesses, cond
itions of the
loans actually generated instability in the firms the RFC sought to save. Federa
l regulations
required publication of the names of businesses and banks receiving RFC loans. B
anks, which were
in trouble because of the collapse in customer confidence anyway, suffered a ter
rific blow by public
notice that they needed RFC funds. This sent depositors scrambling to remove the
ir money,
weakening the banks even further. Despite a doubling of its funding, the RFC was
a fatally unsound
program.
Having passed a “demand-side” tax cut in June 1932, Hoover then signed the largest p
eacetime tax
increase in history. Whereas the earlier tax cut had proved ineffective because
it had dribbled small
reductions across too large a population, the tax hike took the form of a sales
tax that threatened to
further burden already-struggling middle-class and lower-class families. A tax r
evolt ensued in the
House, and when Hoover signed the bill, he further alienated middle America and
produced one of
the most vibrant tax rebellions since the early national period.52
Banks found their positions going from bad to desperate. As banks failed, they “de
stroyed” money,
not only their depositors’ accounts, but also whatever new loans those deposits wo
uld have
supported. Without prompt Fed action, which never came, between 1929 and 1932 th
e U.S. money
supply fell by one third. Had no other factors been at work—no Smoot-Hawley, no RF
C, no
government deficits—this alone would have pushed the economy over the edge.
By 1933, the numbers produced by this comedy of errors were staggering: national
unemployment
rates reached 25 percent, but within some individual cities, the statistics seem
ed beyond
comprehension. Cleveland reported that 50 percent of its labor force was unemplo
yed; Toledo, 80
percent; and some states even averaged over 40 percent.53 Because of the dual-ed
ged sword of
declining revenues and increasing welfare demands, the burden on the cities push
ed many
municipalities to the brink. Schools in New York shut down, and teachers in Chic
ago were owed
some $20 million. Private schools, in many cases, failed completely. One governm
ent study found
that by 1933 some fifteen hundred colleges had gone belly-up, and book sales plu
mmeted.
Chicago’s library system did not purchase a single book in a year-long period.
Hoover, wedded to the idea of balanced budgets, refused to pay military service
bonuses to
unemployed veterans of World War I. The bonuses were not due until 1945, but the
so-called
Bonus Army wanted the money early. When Hoover refused, the vets erected a shack
city on the
outskirts of Washington. The police shied away from a confrontation, but the U.S
. Army under
General Douglas MacArthur was called in to disperse the Bonus Army in July 1932.
Naturally,
MacArthur’s actions were portrayed in the popular press as bloodthirsty and overze
alous, but in
fact the protesters’ claims had no basis in law, and their deliberate disruption a
nd drain on the
resources of an already depleted D.C. metropolitan area represented an attempt t
o foist off onto
others their own desire for special privileges.
In subsequent decades Hoover would be assailed for his unwillingness to use the
powers of
government to halt the Depression, but the truth is that his activist policies d
eepened and prolonged
the business downturn. Surprisingly, in subsequent decades, even Republicans cam
e to buy the
assertion that Hoover had stood for small government, when in fact he had more i
n common with
Franklin Roosevelt than with Coolidge and Mellon.
Hoover planned to run for reelection, casting a gloom over the Republicans. The
Democrats
realized that almost any candidate could defeat Hoover in 1932. It happened that
they chose the
governor of New York, a wealthy man of an elite and established American family
with a familiar
presidential name. In Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the Democrats did not merely no
minate anybody,
but had instead put forth a formidable candidate. FDR, as he came to be known, w
as the first U.S.
president who had never been obligated to work for a living because of his inher
ited wealth. After
an education at Harvard and Columbia Law School, he served in the New York Senat
e, then,
during World War I, he was the assistant secretary of the navy, where he had ser
ved well in
organizing the supply efforts for the Allies over the ocean.
Franklin shared with his cousin Teddy the disadvantage of never having had to ru
n or manage a
business. He evinced a disdain for commerce; at best he held an aloof attitude t
oward enterprise
and instead developed a penchant for wielding public funds, whether with the nav
y or as governor
of New York. To that end, he had learned how to manipulate patronage better than
any politician
since Boss Tweed. But FDR also had distinctly admirable characteristics, not the
least of which
was his personal courage in overcoming polio, which at the time was a permanentl
y crippling
disease that frequently put victims in iron lungs to help them breathe. Yet Roos
evelt never used his
disability for political gain, and whenever possible he kept the disease private
after it struck him in
1921.54
Tutored privately as a child, he went on to attend Groton prep school. There he
absorbed the “social
gospel,” a milk water socialism combined with social universalism, which was “the be
lief that it
was unfair for anyone to be poor, and that government’s task was to eliminate this
unfairness by
siding with poorer over richer, worker over capitalist.”55 How much of this he rea
lly absorbed
remains a matter of debate, but in a 1912 speech Roosevelt revived the themes of
community over
individual, emphasizing a new era of regulation. He proved less adept at managin
g his marriage to
the plain Eleanor Roosevelt, carrying on with a social secretary (Lucy Mercer) a
s early as 1914.
Alice Roosevelt Longworth, Eleanor’s acerbic cousin, had actually encouraged the i
llicit sex,
inviting the couple to her home for dinner without Eleanor, noting sympathetical
ly that Franklin
“deserved a good time. He was married to Eleanor.”56 By 1918 Eleanor had confirmed h
er
suspicions, discovering letters from Lucy to Franklin in a suitcase, and she off
ered FDR a divorce.
Family and political considerations led him to an arrangement with his wife, whe
rein he would
terminate his meetings with Lucy and keep his hands off Eleanor as well.
After a period of depression, FDR used his rehabilitation from polio to develop
qualities he had
never had before, including a sense of timing and patience to let political enem
ies hang themselves.
Most of all, his rehabilitation had conferred on him a discipline that he never
could have mastered
otherwise, committing himself to details and studying public perceptions.
Best known in the context of his fireside chats as president, Roosevelt successf
ully used radio,
beginning with the 1928 nominating speech for Al Smith, which in a manner, he ad
mitted, he
directed specifically to the radio audience. One of his most important speeches,
during his first run
for the presidency, came on the Lucky Strike Hour, sponsored by the American Tob
acco Company.
But it was the fireside chats that allowed Roosevelt to connect with large numbe
rs of Americans.
He deliberately slowed his speech to about 120 words per minute, well below that
of the 170 words
per minute at which most radio orators spoke.57 Despite an elite northeastern ac
cent, Roosevelt
came across as an ordinary American. One summer night in Washington, he asked, o
n air,
“Where’s that glass of water?” and, after a brief pause in which he poured and drank t
he water,
said, “My friends, it’s very hot here in Washington tonight.”58 Realizing that familia
rity breeds
contempt, however, FDR carefully spaced his talks in order to avoid losing their
effectiveness,
aiming for a schedule of one every five or six weeks.
FDR’s adroit manipulation of the media became all the more important when combined
with his
pliable approach to the truth. The Depression, he claimed, stemmed from the “lure
of profit,” and
he decried the “unscrupulous money changers”—warmed-over Populist rhetoric that always
played
well in tough economic times.59 He knew, certainly, or at least his advisers mus
t have told him,
that it was an arm of government, the Fed, which had tightened money, making the
Depression
worse. One hardly thinks Roosevelt had the Fed in mind when he spoke of “unscrupul
ous money
changers.”
Once he won the nomination, he had an opportunity to solidify the markets and re
store at least
some confidence in the economy by stating the truth—that many of his policies woul
d simply
continue Hoover’s. But he would not. Between November and the inauguration, Roosev
elt kept
silent when a few endorsements of Hoover’s policies might have made the difference
between
continued misery and a recovery. These deceptions illustrated Roosevelt’s continue
d facility with
lying. Nor was he above pure hypocrisy: during the campaign, FDR, a man whose pr
esidency
would feature by far the largest expansion of the federal government ever, calle
d for a balanced
budget and accused Hoover of heading “the greatest spending Administration in…all ou
r history
[which] has piled bureau on bureau, commission on commission.”60 Honest observers
can find
little difference between his programs and Hoover’s. His own advisers admitted as
much. Rexford
Tugwell, for example, noted, “We didn’t admit it at the time, but practically the wh
ole New Deal
was extrapolated from programs that Hoover started.”61
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Enlarging the Public Sector, 1932–40
Economic Chaos
In addition to all his natural advantages—the flashy smile, personal courage, and
his family
name—Franklin Roosevelt also had good old-fashioned luck. After narrowly escaping
an
assassination attempt in Miami, Roosevelt took the controls of the U.S. governme
nt just as repeal
of Prohibition had cleared Congress, leading to the slogan, “Beer by Easter.” If not
hing else, the
free flow of alcohol seemed to liven the spirits of the nation. (It also filled
the federal coffers,
providing new sources of revenue that the Roosevelt administration desperately n
eeded.)
When voters went to the polls in November 1932, they handed Roosevelt a landslid
e victory,
giving him the entire West and South. Roosevelt received 22.8 million votes to H
oover’s 15.7
million, a remarkably strong showing for the loser considering the circumstances
of the Depression.
Roosevelt heaped dishonor on the defeated Hoover, denying him even a Secret Serv
ice guard out of
town. Congress paid a price as well, having done nothing during the lame-duck se
ssion because
many members knew the new president would purposely torpedo any actions they too
k.
In fact, Roosevelt hoped to capitalize on the terrifying collapse of the economy
, his own absence of
preelection promises, and a timid Congress to bulldoze through a set of policies
that fundamentally
rearranged the business and welfare foundations of American life. Many of FDR’s pr
ograms—
undertaken under the rubric of a “New Deal” for Americans—came as spur-of-the-moment
reactions to the latest crisis. The absence of internal consistency has thus pro
duced confusion over
whether there was a single New Deal or two distinct programs that were dramatica
lly different.
Time Line
1932:
Roosevelt elected; Japanese aggression in China
1933:
The Hundred Days; New Deal legislation passed; Bank Holiday; Prohibition repeale
d; FDR takes
nation off gold standard; National Industrial Recovery Act; Adolf Hitler named C
hancellor in
Germany
1934:
Securities and Exchange Commission established; temporary minimum wage law passe
d
1935:
Glass-Steagall Act; Wagner Act; Works Progress Administration; Social Security p
rogram created;
Neutrality Act passed
1936:
Roosevelt reelected
1937:
Rape of Nanking by Japanese troops; U.S. gunboat Panay sunk
1938:
German expansion in Czechoslovakia; U.S. unemployment soars again
1939:
“Golden year” for American cinema; Hitler invades Poland, starting World War II
1940:
Roosevelt reelected
1941:
Lend-Lease Act passed; Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor; United States declares war on
Axis powers
Were There Two New Deals?
Just as a fable developed about business failures causing the stock market colla
pse and the
subsequent recession, a similar tale arose about Roosevelt’s New Deal program to r
escue America.
Although most scholars have maintained that there were two New Deals, not one, t
hey differ on the
direction and extent of the changes between the first and second. According to o
ne tradition,
Roosevelt came into office with a dramatically different plan from Hoover’s “do-noth
ingism,” and
the president set out to restore health to the American economy by “saving capital
ism.” However,
although the first phase of FDR’s master plan—roughly between 1933 and 1935—consisted
of
adopting a widespread series of measures at the national level that emphasized r
elief, around 1936
he shifted the legislation toward reform.
Another variant of this theory saw the early measures as designed to keep capita
lism afloat,
especially the banking legislation, with a deliberate attempt to introduce plann
ing into the
economy. Rexford Tugwell subscribed to this interpretation, complaining that con
servative
elements stifled attempts to centralize control over the economy in the federal
government’s hands.
At the point where FDR had found that more radical redistributions of wealth cou
ld not be attained,
a second, more conservative New Deal evolved that emphasized piecemeal measures.
Generally
speaking, the Tugwell interpretation is endorsed by the Left, which suggests tha
t FDR saved
capitalism from itself by entrenching a number of regulatory measures and social
programs that
kept the market economy from its own “excesses.”
That there is confusion about how many New Deals there were reflected the utter
lack of a
blueprint or consistency to Roosevelt’s programs. Rather, a single theme underlay
all of them,
namely that government could and should do things that citizens previously had d
one themselves.
In fact, FDR’s policies were haphazard, fluctuating with whichever advisers happen
ed to be on the
ascent at the time.
Then Nazi Germany invaded Poland, and many New Dealers realized that in a coming
war—if it
came—they needed capitalists. World War II in a sense saved the nation from the Ne
w Deal by
unleashing the power of the private sector to make implements of war—rather than t
he New Deal
saved capitalism.
The two–New Deals interpretation has allowed scholars to deal simultaneously with
the relative
ineffectiveness of FDR’s policies to extricate the nation from the Depression and
to explain the
contradictions of FDR’s first half-dozen years in office.1 For example, he often c
laimed that he was
committed to a balanced budget, yet he ran what were—and remain to the present, in
real terms—
all-time record deficits. Those deficits came in spite of the Revenue Act of 193
5 that raised the tax
rates on the upper classes from the already high level of 59 percent to 75 perce
nt. More than
anything, the two New Deals view paralleled the ascendance and decline of differ
ent groups within
the administration, revealing policy influences on Roosevelt from among a staff
who spanned the
ideological spectrum.
At the advice of Raymond Moley, a Columbia University professor, Roosevelt sough
t to raid the
nation’s universities to produce a “Brain Trust” of intellectuals, then mix in a cross
section of
business leaders or career politicians from around the country. Moley became FDR’s
trusted
adviser and speechwriter, and he later served in the State Department. Roosevelt’s
administration
also included Texan Jessie H. Jones (head of the Reconstruction Finance Corporat
ion); two
Columbia University professors, Rexford Tugwell (assistant secretary of agricult
ure) and Adolph
Berle (a member of the Brain Trust); Arizonan Lewis Douglas (director of the bud
get); Louis
Brandeis (associate justice of the Supreme Court); and Harry Hopkins. Some, such
as Budget
Director Douglas, were budget balancers, pure and simple. When Roosevelt took th
e nation off the
gold standard, Douglas envisioned waves of inflation sweeping through the countr
y, at which point
someone suggested to him that they change the inscription on money from “In God We
Trust” to “I
Hope That My Redeemer Liveth.” Tugwell was an intellectual and scholar who had wri
tten on
economics. In 1939, summing up his views as the New Deal began, he exposed what
he called the
“myths” of laissez-faire, stating flatly, “The jig is up. There is no invisible hand.
There never
was.”2
Others, such as Jones, who headed the RFC—a New Deal holdover from the Hoover year
s—were
big government activists extolling the efficiencies of government/business partn
erships. Still others,
like Hugh Johnson, who ran the National Industrial Recovery Agency (NIRA), was a
n antibusiness
bully who threatened corporate leaders who resisted his “voluntary” programs with “a s
ock right on
the nose.”3
Most of these policy makers subscribed in one way or another to the theories of
English economist
John Maynard Keynes, whose book The General Theory of Employment, Interest and M
oney had
appeared in 1936. Long before Keynes had published the General Theory, however,
his papers had
circulated and his basic premises—that government spending would spur demand and t
hus pull a
nation out of a depression—had thoroughly seasoned the thinking of the Brain Trust
members. As
Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau noted, a number of acolytes already labored
within the
government to ensure that federal spending was transformed “from a temporary exped
ient to a
permanent instrument of government.”4 Traditionalists, including Morgenthau and Bu
dget Director
Douglas, instead argued for cutting government spending to encourage private inv
estment. For
weeks (the nature of the crisis had compressed the time available for considerin
g the positions), the
two camps fought over Roosevelt’s soul, but the president sided with the Keynesian
s, and the race
to spend federal money was on.
Given these disparate influences on Roosevelt, it became possible for sympatheti
c writers at the
time, and to historians subsequently, to portray FDR as either a conservative co
rporatist intent on
saving the free enterprise system through regulation or as a revolutionary who u
nderstood the limits
of genuine reform. But there is another alternative, namely, that the New Deal—or
either of them,
if one prefers—had no overarching principles, no long-term vision, no guiding fund
amentals, but
was rather a reactive network of plans designed to “get” business. Many members of R
oosevelt’s
New Deal Brain Trust could not identify any coherent precepts even years later—cer
tainly nothing
of majestic civic virtue or high moral cause. Quite the contrary, whatever clear
policies could be
identified, such as electric-power policy, the administration’s aims were crudely
simple: “One
objective [of New Deal power policy] was to enlarge the publicly owned sector of
the power
industry…as a means of diminishing private control over the necessities of life.”5
It did not help that FDR had few business leaders among his advisers. He distrus
ted them.
Roosevelt told Moley that he “had talked to a great many business men, in fact to
more…than any
other President, and that they are generally stupid.”6 Roosevelt cared nothing abo
ut the effects of
the class warfare that he had started. When Moley questioned how the welfare of
the country could
be served by “totally discrediting business to the people,” he concluded that Roosev
elt “was
thinking merely in terms of the political advantage to him in creating the impre
ssion through the
country that he was being unjustly attacked by business men.”7 FDR specifically lo
oked for “high
spots” in his speeches to get in “a dig at his enemies.” More than by the president’s vi
ndictiveness,
Moley was “impressed as never before by the utter lack of logic of the man, the sc
antiness of his
precise knowledge of things that he was talking about [and] by the immense and g
rowing egotism
that came from his office.”8
It is true that “the New Dealers shared John Dewey’s conviction that organized socia
l intelligence
could shape society, and some, like [Adoph] Berle, reflected the hope of the Soc
ial Gospel of
creating a Kingdom of God on earth.”9 Roosevelt, however, had enough vision to kno
w that the
public would not share in his enthusiasm for many large-scale programs. Tugwell
observed that the
president engaged in “secret amputation” when it came to introducing programs that m
ight generate
opposition: “If you have to do some social reorganizing,” Tugwell noted, “you do it as
quietly as
possible. You play down its implications.”10 Mixing Hooverism with spot emergency
measures,
applied to selective sectors of the economy, then combining them with stealth so
cial engineering,
the New Deal took on a variegated appearance, and perhaps the only thread that r
an through it
emanated from the Keynesian policy recommendations.
By the time the New Deal got underway, Keynes had already established a spectacu
lar scholarly
reputation as well as a talent for turning quick profits in the British stock ma
rket. His General
Theory did not appear until 1936, but Keynes had published the essentials in sch
olarly studies and
white papers that found their way to the United States through academia. They ha
d thoroughly
penetrated American economic thinking even while Hoover was in the Oval Office.
Few seemed troubled by the fact that Britain had pursued Keynesian policies with
little success for
some time prior to Roosevelt’s election. Moreover, people pointed to Roosevelt’s com
ments about
the need to balance the budget, and his choice of Douglas (a budget balancer par
excellence) as
budget director, as evidence that Roosevelt never endorsed Keynesian economics.
But the deficits
told a different story, and between 1932 and 1939, the federal debt—the accumulate
d deficits—had
leaped from $3 billion to $9 billion, and the national debt had soared to real l
evels unmatched to
this day. Insiders with Roosevelt’s ear, such as Tugwell, saw the only hope for es
caping the
Depression as lying with increasing purchasing power on the part of ordinary Ame
ricans, not with
stimulating business investment.
Thus, the New Deal contained little in the way of a guiding philosophy, except t
hat government
should “do something.” Equally as important as the lack of direction, virtually all
of the New
Dealers shared, to one degree or another, a distrust of business and entrepreneu
rship that they
thought had landed the nation in its current distressed condition. Above all, em
ergency measures
needed to be done quickly before opposition could mount to many of these breatht
aking challenges
to the Constitution.
The Hundred Days
Although many historians characterize the New Deal programs as divided into cate
gories of relief,
reform, and recovery, such a neat compartmentalization of the programs clouds th
e fact that they
were passed in haste—occasionally, even frenzy—and that no one in 1933 knew that any
of the
programs would be effective or politically beneficial. Rather, the Hundred Days
especially
addressed areas of the economy that seemed to be most distressed. The banking sy
stem had to be
stabilized, and wages (including farm income) increased. And the only calculated
policy Roosevelt
had, namely, to somehow restore the morale of the nation, rested almost entirely
on intangibles
such as public emotion and a willingness to believe change would occur. When FDR
addressed the
nation in his first inaugural, his comment that “the only thing we have to fear is
fear itself”
embodied the single most important element of Roosevelt’s recovery program, a sens
e of
confidence at the top.
Bolstering optimism was no small task. Roosevelt excelled at projecting a reassu
rance to the public,
and, surprisingly to some, most Americans neither lost hope nor drifted into let
hargy.11 Many of
the groups hardest hit—the Okies and African Americans—remained hopeful and sanguine
that
despite the impediments, a better future lay ahead.
By far, the bank collapse was the most serious threat to the nation. Some 5,500
banks had closed in
a three-year period, stimulated by the outflow of gold, which had undergirded th
e banking
structure. Roosevelt immediately called Congress into special session and reques
ted broad
executive powers. Even before the session was convened, FDR announced on March 5
, 1933, a
national bank holiday in which all state and national banks would be closed and
then examined.
After the examiners found that the banks were solvent, they would be allowed to
reopen. Banks that
still might be in danger, but which were fundamentally strong, could reopen with
government
support. Weak banks would be closed. Congress, convening a few days later, appro
ved the
measures. The bank holiday, obviously, stopped the runs by closing the banks. In
his first fireside
chat radio address on March twelfth, Roosevelt reassured the nation that the gov
ernment had
stepped in to protect the banks, and when banks began reopening on the thirteent
h, deposits
returned, leaving Raymond Moley to pontificate, “Capitalism was saved in eight day
s.”12
While not publicly tied to the bank holiday, Roosevelt’s most important single act
in saving the
banking system occurred when he took the United States off the gold standard in
April 1933,
ending the requirement that all U.S. dollars be converted into gold upon request
. Other countries
not on the gold standard could convert dollars to gold, but the United States co
uld not convert
francs or pound sterling notes to gold. Foreign notes flowed in, then were conve
rted to gold, which
flowed out. That destabilized the banks in the most fundamental sense by kicking
out from under
them the gold reserve that propped them up. By protecting the gold reserves, FDR
ended the drain,
and quietly and immediately restored viability to the financial structure. All a
long, the banking/gold
destabilization had been a response to government manipulation of market forces
in which
Europeans sought to gain an advantage by going off gold. If all nations had rema
ined on gold, the
market would have gradually reestablished stability; or if none remained on gold
the same result
would have been achieved. America’s bank destabilization occurred in part because
only the United
States continued to honor gold contracts, which was akin to being the only bank
in town to remain
open during a run, whereupon sooner or later it, too, would run out of money. Th
is single positive
action by FDR is widely overlooked.13
Over the Hundred Days, FDR unleashed a torrent of presidential initiatives focus
ed mainly on
raising wages or providing jobs. Congress turned out the legislation, creating w
hat was referred to
as the “alphabet soup” agencies because of the abbreviations of the host of new offi
ces and acts.
The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the Public Works Administration (PWA)
both
promised to put people (mostly young men) to work in government-paid make-work j
obs. The
CCC paid boys from the cities to work in the forests planting trees, cutting fir
ebreaks, and in
general doing something that would justify the government paying them. Two milli
on jobs were
created, and it made great press. As supporters said, Roosevelt sent “boys into th
e forests to get us
out of the woods.”
Two Roosevelt Brain Trusters, Harry Hopkins and Harold Ickes, battled for contro
l of the piles of
new public monies. Ickes, who headed the PWA, insisted that the jobs involve mea
ningful work
and that they pay a wage that would allow the employees to purchase goods, stimu
lating
consumption. The PWA, therefore, tended toward large-scale public works such as
new school
buildings, hospitals, city halls, sewage plants, and courthouses. Many of these
might have
constituted worthwhile additions to the infrastructure under normal circumstance
s, and perhaps a
few genuinely fell in the domain of the public sector. But the necessary tradeof
f of taxes for public
works was missing. At the same time, schools were closing at a record pace becau
se of the inability
of local districts to pay teachers and buy books; and pouring money into courtho
uses and city halls
rekindled memories of the Tweed Ring’s abuses. Indeed, had every dollar dumped int
o public
facilities (for which there still existed no funding for the people to operate t
he facilities) remained
in private hands, the private sector would have rebounded in a more healthy, but
far less
flamboyant, way. And grandiose these projects were: the PWA constructed the Linc
oln Tunnel, the
Triborough Bridge, and linked Florida’s mainland with Key West. PWA money also pai
d for
construction of the navy’s aircraft carriers Yorktown and Enterprise.
On the surface, large-scale projects brought some measure of hope and demonstrat
ed that the
government was doing something—that America was building again. And, no question,
the
projects were impressive. Yet what could not be seen was that the capital for th
ese projects came
from the private sector, where it would have generated a similar amount of econo
mic activity, but
activity that was demanded by the market.
But the job not seen is a vote not won, and therefore public activities had to b
e…well, public. Harry
Hopkins’s Works Progress Administration (WPA), which had come out of the Emergency
Relief
Appropriation Act (1935), extended some of the initiatives of the Civil Works Ad
ministration
begun a year earlier that had given jobs to some 4 million people. The WPA came
about even as
Roosevelt warned Congress that welfare was “a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the
human spirit.”
Yet the WPA generated jobs of far more dubious value than the PWA.14 There is no
question that
the WPA (which critics label We Piddle Around) produced benefits in the public s
ector. By 1940,
the WPA could claim a half million miles of roads, 100,000 bridges and public bu
ildings, 18,000
miles of storm drains and sewers, 200 airfields, and other worthwhile projects.
It also generated a
certain temporary measure of self-respect: unemployed men could look their child
ren in their faces
as breadwinners. In an era in which most people took any work seriously, and inf
used it with pride,
even make-work programs had some virtue. But it also built opera houses, hired w
riters to design
travel guides, and paid for traveling circuses.15
Over the long haul, however, government’s attempt to endow work with true market v
alue proved
as futile for Roosevelt’s New Dealers as for Robert Owens’s utopians in New Harmony
or the
Brook Farm communalists. The inescapable conclusion was that if a task was valua
ble, someone in
the private sector would have paid to have it done, or, at least, citizens would
have imposed taxes
on themselves to pay for it in the first place. If Roosevelt’s New Dealers thought
that they could
shift the tax burden for all these projects onto the wealthy, they were wrong. A
s always, the rich
could hide much of their income from taxation. What the Brain Trusters did not t
ake into account
was the depressing drain on the overall economy by the disincentives to invest a
nd make profits.
Virtually all private investment stopped as industry felt punished.
Another act, designed to work in conjunction with employment measures, the Natio
nal Industrial
Recovery Act (NIRA) of 1933, was directed by the National Recovery Administratio
n (NRA)
under the hand of Hugh Johnson. A man given to a robust vocabulary of profanity,
Johnson had
been a lawyer and businessman as well as a soldier, and was capable of using his
dynamic genius
and exceptional energy to design and administer large-scale military-style opera
tions such as the
NRA. Symbolized by a blue eagle—a bright military badge, to Johnson—the NRA authoriz
ed
industrial and trade associations to establish production codes (based on a blan
ket code), set prices
and wages, and otherwise collude. The NIRA completely reversed the TR–Taft antitru
st legislation,
suspending antitrust acts, and recognized (from the federal level) the rights of
employees to
organize unions and bargain collectively, effectively cementing organized labor
as a permanent
voting bloc for the Democratic Party.
It was unclear, however, how merely allowing corporations to become larger throu
gh nonmarket
forces and to fix prices would restore vitality to the system. Eventually the co
llusive effects of the
NIRA sparked intense opposition, especially from small employers, who referred t
o the Blue Eagle
as a Soviet duck or a fascist pigeon, culminating with the Supreme Court’s declari
ng the act
unconstitutional in 1935. But in the meantime, it did what most New Deal program
s did: it spent
money on a large scale. The NRA became so corrupt that Johnson himself persuaded
the Senate to
name a committee to investigate, headed by the famous attorney Clarence Darrow.
The
committee’s report, delivered in May 1934, called the NRA, among other things, “ghas
tly,”
“preposterous,” “savage,” “wolfish,” “monopolistic,” and “invasive.”16
Labor and Leviathan
By that time, however, the Democratic Party realized that it had struck gold in
the votes of the labor
unions, which it courted even more intensively after 1934, when the midterm elec
tions gave the
Democrats an even larger majority. The new House had 322 Democrats to only 103 R
epublicans
and fewer than a dozen third-and fourth-party representatives. The Democrats hel
d more than a
two-thirds majority in the Senate as well. It was the closest a single party had
come to dominating
the government since the Southern Democrats had walked out during secession. Tra
ditional
Democratic supporters, such as the unions, saw their opportunity to seize power
on a more or less
permanent basis, and even the split of the unions in 1935, when John L. Lewis le
ft the older, more
established American Federation of Labor, did not damage the Democrats’ support wi
th organized
labor. Lewis’s new union, the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), drew tog
ether industrial
unions like the United Mine Workers, the Ladies Garment Workers, and the Amalgam
ated
Clothing Workers. In 1934, however, the unions overplayed their hand. A series o
f violent strikes,
many of them initiated by radical elements, resulted in a wave of looting, burni
ng, and general
rioting in New York, Philadelphia, and Milwaukee. That was even before the texti
le workers began
a strike of monstrous proportions, slamming shut factory gates in twenty states
and setting off
armed conflicts when police and troops battled strikers. Roosevelt conveniently
was out of the
country at the time, arriving home (with his characteristic good fortune) after
the strike had ended.
If anything, labor unrest only encouraged the more radical elements of the Democ
ratic Party to
press for more extreme demands within their new majority. Many viewed the period
after the 1934
elections as a chance to entrench programs that only a decade earlier might have
seemed
unattainable, locking their party into power for the foreseeable future.17 Harry
Hopkins sensed the
critical timing, declaring desperately, “We’ve got to get everything we want—a works p
rogram,
social security, wages and hours, everything—now or never.”18 Securing the loyalty o
f the labor
unions was crucial to establishing the Democrats permanently as the majority par
ty; thus the new
Congress passed the National Labor Relations Act, known for its author, Robert W
agner of New
York, as the Wagner Act, which protected the right to organize unions and prohib
ited firing union
activists. More important, perhaps, Congress established the National Labor Rela
tions Board
(NLRB) to bring management and labor together, at least in theory. In practical
terms, however,
management had to bargain in good faith, meaning that anytime the NLRB decided m
anagement
was not acting in good faith, it could impose sanctions. The Wagner Act thus thr
ew the entire
weight of government behind the unions—a 180-degree turn from the government’s posit
ion in the
late 1800s.
Similar prolabor legislation involved the Fair Labor Standards Act, which establ
ished a minimum
wage. With the legislators’ focus on raising the wages of employees, especially ma
le family heads,
little attention was directed at the natural business reaction, which was to tri
m workforces. More
than any other single policy, the minimum wage law cemented unemployment levels
that were
nearly twice those of 1929, ensuring that many Americans who wanted jobs could n
ot accept any
wage offered by industry, but could only work for the approved government wage.
After the law, in
order to pay minimum wage to a workforce that had previously consisted of ten em
ployees, the
employer now could only retain eight. The problem was that no set wage level cre
ates wealth; it
only reflects it.
Employment recovery represented the industrial side of job relief, whereas raisi
ng income in the
agricultural sector was the aim of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (A
AA), which
sought to drive up prices by restricting farm output. Aimed at addressing the ce
ntral problem of
agriculture in the 1920s—overproduction, which had resulted in lower prices—the AAA
subsidized
farmers not to produce, that is, to restrict production. In one summer southern
farmers received
funds to plow up 10 million acres of cotton, and midwestern farmers were paid to
eliminate 9
million pounds of pork, all at a time when unemployed starving people stood in s
oup lines. Farm
income indeed rose, but only because farmers took the government subsidies and k
ept their
production levels up, occasionally double planting on the remaining acreage. Lar
ge corporate
producers did well in the new system, receiving substantial government checks, w
ith a large sugar
company receiving more than $1 million not to produce sugar. But the farm progra
ms worked in
favor of the Democrats, adding to the Roosevelt coalition. Even after the Suprem
e Court declared
the AAA unconstitutional, the administration shuffled the subsidies off to exist
ing soil conservation
programs, where in one form or another they remained until the 1990s, when Congr
ess finally
eliminated most of them.
Still other parts of the Hundred Days incorporated more direct state planning, s
uch as the
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) Act, which authorized public money for multipur
pose dams to
generate power for rural areas. The authority would build a 650-mile canal from
Knoxville,
Tennessee, to Paducah, Kentucky, and marked a further insinuation of government
into private
markets.
Although most of the recovery efforts could be, and were, justified as necessary
to pull the nation
out of the Depression, it would be naive to ignore the political implications of
the measures,
especially for the Democratic Party. With each new government initiative, relian
ce on the federal
government grew, and the party that would promise to maintain, or even expand, g
overnment
assistance, could count on the votes of large numbers of Americans who saw the o
pportunity to tax
others for their own benefit. Such was the case with the Home Owners’ Loan Act of
June 1933, in
which the government guaranteed home loans. This legislation had the effect of b
enefiting new
home buyers by making it less risky for a lender to extend credit, but it create
d a new quasidependent
class of people who assumed it was the government’s responsibility to guarantee th
at
everyone could own a home. Supports of this type were expanded under similar Fed
eral Housing
Administration (FHA) and, after World War II, Veterans Administration (VA) loans
, all under the
guise of making home ownership a right.19
All these acts carried the potentially fatal risk that at some point a majority
of Americans would see
the path to prosperity as running through the government—essentially taking from t
heir neighbors
to pad their own pockets—and at that point the game would be up. All politics woul
d disintegrate
into a contest of promising to dispense more goodies than the other fellow.
Regardless, the political and economic policies of the New Deal almost without e
xception created
long-term unintended effects that severely damaged the nation (see below, The Ne
w Deal:
Immediate Goals, Unintended Results). Only a half century later did Americans pa
y attention to the
warnings given by conservatives in the 1930s about the dangers posed by introduc
ing such
massively destructive social and economic incentives into American life. In almo
st every case, the
temporary fix offered by the New Deal program resulted in substantial long-term
disruptions of
labor markets and financial structures and reduced American competitiveness. Whe
ther or not they
led to an inflationary state (as some conservatives contend) is unproved, but wi
thout question they
saddled future generations with mountains of unfunded obligations (like Social S
ecurity), and laid
the groundwork for destroying the black family through AFDC and other welfare po
licies.
The New Deal: Immediate Goals, Unintended Results
NEW DEAL PROGRAM
INTENDED EFFECT AND/OR IMMEDIATE RESULT
LONG-TERM EFFECT AFTER 50 YEARS
Civilian Conservation Corps
To provide employment to 2.5 million; address conservation issues.
Negligible. Program ended in 1942.
Agricultural Adjustment Act
To control production; raise prices by offering subsidies to farmers. Farm incom
e rose 51%, but did
not return to 1929 levels until 1941.
Farm subsidies raised prices to consumers, benefited large agribusinesses, and e
ncouraged
overproduction. In 1995, Congress ended most agricultural subsidies because of c
ost, inefficiency,
and discrimination against both consumers and small farmers. Subsidies on dairy
products and
sugar remained.
Glass-Steagell Act (1935)
To seperate investment banking (brokerage of stocks and bonds) from commercial b
anking (loans,
checking, and savings accounts)
Allowed financial institutions other than banks (e.g., insurance companies) to c
ompete with banks
in a wide range of services, such as checking and insurance; limited American ba
nks’ ability to
compete in world markets and to diversify.
Tennessee Valley Authority Act
To create the TVA and provide government-subsidized electric power to private ci
tizens.
Developed Tennessee River Valley hydroelectric dams with locks; increased govern
ment’s
intrusion into private sector electric utility operations; fostered monopolies i
n electric power.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (1934)
To insure all bank deposits up to $5,000 per account; bring stability to the ban
king system.
Sister agency, Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC), contribut
ed to the
collapse of the S&L industry in the 1970s and 1980s by encouraging risky investm
ents by
managers and owners. Total tab: $800 billion.
Revenue Act of 1935
To offset huge federal deficits under FDR by enacting huge tax hikes and estate
taxes.
Accelerated progressive notions of redistribution by targeting upper classes. Di
d not offset deficits,
but rather ensured that the rich would continue to avoid taxes by being able to
move money
offshore or purchase tax-free municipal bonds, shifting the real burden onto the
poor and middle
classes. Concept remained in place until John Kennedy’s and Ronald Reagan’s cuts, bo
th of which
increased the amount paid by the wealthy.
Works Progress Administration (1935)
To create public works jobs for 9 million to construct bridges, sidewalks, art t
heaters, opera houses,
and other projects.
Ended in 1943 during World War II. By 1937, though, unemployment had again soare
d to 14
million. Many WPA projects were unnecessary economically and often catered to th
e elites (opera
houses, art galleries, etc.) and subsidized via deficits.
Social Security Act (1935)
To provide a supplemental old-age pension and emergency unemployment compensatio
n as well as
aid to families with dependent children (AFDC).
Because of cross-generational transfers, the Social Security Trust Fund, while s
olvent during the
baby boom years, is projected to be in severe deficit by 2020, and, depending on
the economic
conditions, bankrupt not long after that, even according to the most optimistic
estimates. The
system faces massive overhaul, with higher taxes, lower benefits, or privatizati
on. One result of
AFDC was the “illegitimacy explosion” of the 1960s–1970s and was substantially curtail
ed in 1995
as part of the welfare reform bill.
Fair Labor Standards Act (1934)
To set minimum wages and maximum hours that could be worked; raised wages in ind
ustry while
reducing employment overall.
New studies suggest this might have prolonged the Great Depression; minimum wage
laws in the
1950s and 1960s were closely correlated with minority teenage unemployment at th
e time,
suggesting the laws encouraged discrimination.
Moreover, the New Deal caused a new influx of corporate money into politics unli
ke anything seen
before. What stands out is how little business gave to either political party pr
ior to the Great
Depression and the manipulation of the tax code that politicians wrought in an a
ttempt to combat
it.20 Sociologist Michael Webber has conducted a study of the contributions of c
orporate boards of
directors in 1936, finding that region and religion—not class identity—determined wh
o gave how
much to either the Democrats or the Republicans. Instead, the lesson corporate d
onors learned in
1936 was that government had put itself in the position of picking winners and l
osers in the tax
code, making it critical, for the first time, to influence politicians with mone
y.
Social Change in the Great Depression
With the end of Prohibition, the saloon business mushroomed—one of the few growing
areas of
enterprise in the 1930s. Another growing industry, which served somewhat the sam
e purpose with
less destructive physical effects, was motion pictures. Although several studios
met with hard times
during the Depression, movies became more popular than ever, providing a low-cos
t way for
people to escape reality temporarily. Some 60 to 90 million Americans went to th
e movies every
week, seeing classic stars such as Greta Garbo, Jean Harlow, Clark Gable, Cary G
rant, and Joan
Crawford, as well as a relatively new use of the silver screen for full-length a
nimated features,
pioneered by Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Walt Disney Stu
dios,
MGM, Warner Bros., and many others cranked out formula pictures from the famous
studio system
in which a motion picture company signed artists and directors to long-term cont
racts, making them
(in some cases) little more than assembly-line employees. The assembly-line proc
ess of making
movies led to great names in the industry being shuffled in and out of pictures
like the
interchangeable bolts and screws in Eli Whitney’s factory.
For all its detractors, the studio system attained, at least briefly, a level of
quality that has never
been matched. Consider the stunning releases of 1939—by far the best year in motio
n picture
history, with no other coming close. Several notable pictures received Academy A
ward
nominations, including Dark Victory, Of Mice and Men, and Wuthering Heights. At
least five of
the nominees rank among the greatest films ever to grace the silver screen: The
Wizard of Oz,
Stagecoach, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Goodbye Mr. Chips, and, of course, the
picture that
swept the Academy Awards, Gone With the Wind. That year, John Wayne, Judy Garlan
d, Jimmy
Stewart, and Clark Gable all appeared in roles that defined their careers. Even
B-list movies from
that year, such as Beau Geste, are considered classics.
Radio broadcasting also reached new heights, with more than 39 million household
s owning radios
by the end of the 1930s. They heard stars like comedians Jack Benny and Edgar Be
rgen, or listened
to adventure shows such as The Lone Ranger. Perhaps the event that best demonstr
ated radio’s
tremendous influence was Orson Welles’s broadcast of “The War of the Worlds” on Octobe
r 30,
1938, on The Mercury Theatre on the Air. The broadcast induced mass panic as Wel
les convinced
thousands of Americans that Martians had landed and had laid waste to major citi
es in an
intergalactic war.
The popularity of radio and movies said much about the desire of Americans to es
cape from the
circumstances of the Depression and also from the relentless criticism of Americ
an life that
emanated from intellectual circles. Such attacks on American institutions common
ly appeared in
many of the books deemed classics today, but which inspired few at the time. Chi
ef among the
critical writers of the day, John Steinbeck (Grapes of Wrath, 1939, and Tortilla
Flat, 1935) and
John Dos Passos (Adventures of a Young Man, 1939) won literary acclaim, but the
general public
passed their books on the way to purchase Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind (
1936).
Americans showed that they needed chicken soup for the soul—stories of courage, ho
pe, and
optimism—not another application of leeches or a dose of castor oil masquerading a
s social
commentary.
The First Referendum
After four years of the New Deal, many of the programs had shown positive short-
term results.
Unemployment had dropped from 12 million to about 8 million; the banking system
had been
saved; and the panic mentality associated with the stock market crash had ebbed.
Most important,
Roosevelt’s flurry of activity convinced average Americans that he cared about the
ir circumstances,
and that the administration was at least trying to solve the nation’s economic woe
s. On the other
hand, most of the long-term dangers and structural damage done by New Deal progr
ams remained
hidden. Even business still hesitated to attack Roosevelt’s statism, which provide
d a chance for
those companies still operating to solidify their hold on the market, free of ne
w competitors. Thus,
Roosevelt stood little chance of being unseated by any candidate in 1936. The Re
publicans ran Alf
Landon, governor of Kansas, who all but endorsed Roosevelt with a me-too-only-be
tter attitude, as
a sacrificial candidate. Landon was trounced, receiving only the electoral votes
of Maine and
Vermont.
The Democratic Party completed its remarkable comeback from the depths of Recons
truction by
forging a new coalition. Despite the hardships caused by the New Deal’s agricultur
al programs,
farmers—especially in the South and West—still remained loyal to the party. Unionize
d labor’s
votes were cemented through the minimum wage legislation and the Wagner Act, whe
reas ethnic
groups, such as Italian Catholics and Jews, were enticed by large numbers of pol
itical appointments
and repelled by memories of the Republicans’ Prohibition policies. But the newest
group to
complete the coalition was comprised of blacks, who had supported the GOP since
Reconstruction.
The shift of the black vote provided the Democratic Party with its single most l
oyal constituency
well after the millennium. Eleanor Roosevelt, in particular, publicly courted bl
ack voters for her
husband, and public education programs temporarily provided a stimulus for reduc
ing black
illiteracy. New Deal public health programs also proved popular, and Roosevelt’s r
hetoric, if not
his actions, was supportive and sympathetic to black concerns. Republicans, who
had essentially
abandoned blacks after 1877 and refused to challenge Plessy, lost their appeal t
o black citizens who
still labored under strict segregation in parts of the country and blatant racia
l discrimination
virtually everywhere. A combination of blacks, unions, ethnic groups, and big-ci
ty intellectual
elites ensured Democratic dominance over both houses of Congress for more than f
orty years,
ensuring a total grip on public policy agendas, even when Republican presidents
were in office.
Roosevelt’s Second Hundred Days promised to exceed the ambitions of the first term
, building on
the huge congressional majorities and his reelection landslide. The president pr
oposed a new set of
radical taxes and redistributionist measures aimed at ending inheritance, penali
zing successful
corporations, and beginning a steady attack on top-bracket individual fortunes.2
1
It is worth reiterating, however, that New Deal policies were only aimed in part
at restoring the
American economy, just as Reconstruction policies were only directed, in part, a
t helping the
freedmen. One important objective always lurked just below the smooth waters of
Roosevelt’s
rhetoric, and that was the ability of his policies to maintain the Democratic Pa
rty in power for the
next several generations. Virtually every one of the New Deal programs in some w
ay made people
more dependent on government—not more independent, or self-sufficient—and when the
government was run by Democrats, the logical conclusion voters had to draw was t
hat whatever
they “got” from government “came” from the Democrats. Social Security, farm subsidies, s
pecial
favors for labor—they all targeted separate groups and played on their specific fe
ars, and all
problems were “solved” only through the efforts of Democratic politicians in Washing
ton. Merely
to raise the question of whether such policies were wise invited attack at elect
ion time, usually in
the form of a question to the (usually Republican) opponent: “Why do you want to (
fill in the blank
with ‘take food away from the elderly,’ ‘keep farmers poor,’ and so on).” Roosevelt had cr
eated a
sea change, therefore, not only in dealing with a national economic crisis, but
also by establishing
an entirely new political culture of Democratic dominance for decades to come.
The New Deal Stalls
Just as it appeared that the New Deal might enter a higher orbit in the universe
of policy making,
several events brought the Roosevelt administration down to earth. First, the Su
preme Court, with a
string of rulings, found that many components of the New Deal, including the NRA
, the AAA, and
a number of smaller New Deal acts, or state variants of New Deal laws, were unco
nstitutional.
Seeing the Supreme Court as standing athwart the tide of progressive history, FD
R found an
obscure precedent in the British system that, he thought, allowed him to diminis
h the relative vote
of the four hard-core conservatives on the Supreme Court by simply adding more m
embers—the
judicial equivalent of watering down soup. Roosevelt justified his bold attempt
by arguing that the
justices were overworked, proposing that for every justice of at least ten years’
experience over the
age of seventy, the president should be allowed to appoint a new one. Here FDR n
ot only alienated
many of his congressional supporters, who were themselves in their sixties and s
eventies, but also
positioned himself against the checks-and-balances system of the federal governm
ent.
The issue threatened to erode much of Roosevelt’s support in Congress until, abrup
tly, the Supreme
Court issued several decisions favorable to the New Deal, and at the same time o
ne of the
conservative justices announced his retirement. A more pliable court—in the eyes o
f the New
Dealers—killed the court reform bill before it caused FDR further damage. Over the
next three
years, Roosevelt appointed five of his own men, all Democrats, to the Supreme Co
urt, making it a
true Roosevelt Court and further molding Washington into a one-party town.
Roosevelt was preparing to launch another round of legislation when a second dev
elopment
hammered the administration on the economic front. In 1937, the nation had final
ly squeaked past
the output levels attained before the crash, marking seven years’ worth of complet
e stagnation.
Then, suddenly, the business index plummeted, dropping below 1935 levels. Steel
production
dropped from 80 percent of capacity to below 20 percent, and government deficits
shot up despite
all-time-high levels of taxation. Some in the Brain Trust rightly perceived that
business had been
terrorized, but the timing wasn’t right. No particular act had just been implement
ed. What had so
frightened industry? The answer was that the cumulative effects of the minimum w
age law, the
Wagner Act, high taxation, and Keynesian inflationist policies all combined with
what now
appeared to be unchecked power in FDR’s hands. Hearing a new explosion of heated
antimonopolist rhetoric by Roosevelt’s advisers, business began to question how lo
ng it could
absorb further punishment. Although in the early 1930s American business had sup
ported some of
the relief programs to keep from being the scapegoats of the Depression, by late
in the decade, the
business community feared that even the most radical social and political reorga
nization was not
beyond consideration by the New Dealers. Assistant Attorney General Robert Jacks
on singled out
by name leading industrialists and criticized their salaries; Harold Ickes charg
ed that “sixty
families” sought to establish control over the nation and that the struggle “must be
fought through
to a finish.”22 Roosevelt’s New Dealers had taken Reconstruction-era sectional antag
onisms,
repackaged them as class envy, and offered them up on an apocalyptic scale that
was the Great
Depression equivalent of “waving the bloody shirt” or, perhaps more fittingly, wavin
g the
unemployment compensation check.
The New Dealers’ comments made business more skittish than it already was, and pre
cipitated the
Roosevelt recession. Between October 1937 and May 1938, WPA relief rolls in the
auto towns in
the Midwest swelled, increasing 194 percent in Toledo and 434 percent in Detroit
. St. Louis,
Cleveland, Omaha, and Chicago all eliminated or drastically curtailed welfare an
d unemployment
payments. Nationally, unemployment rose from near 12 percent back to 19 percent.
The ranks of
organizations like the National Association of Manufacturers, which opposed the
New Deal, started
to swell. Roosevelt, nevertheless, remarked, “We are on our way back…we planned it t
hat way.”23
What FDR did not understand was that although many people accepted some New Deal
programs
as necessary, they saw them as only temporary expedients. Meanwhile, “the New Deal
ers were
never able to develop an adequate reform ideology to challenge the business rhet
oricians.”24 A
third shift against the New Deal came at the ballot box. The public grew concern
ed enough about
the unchecked power of the Democrats that in the 1938 midterm elections the Repu
blicans picked
up eighty-one seats in the House, eight in the Senate, and thirteen governorship
s. It was a stinging
rebuke to New Deal excesses and was achieved despite the fact that the Democrats
had started to
call in their patronage markers. This meshing of politics and jobs during the 19
38 congressional
elections raised another unsettling aspect of the New Deal. Allegations that WPA
funds had been
used in a Kentucky campaign prompted a Senate investigation, which raised questi
ons about the
potential abuse of federal offices for electioneering. As a consequence, the Hat
ch Act, prohibiting
political activity by federal officials or campaign activities on federal proper
ty (and named for
Senator Carl Hatch of New Mexico), was passed in 1939.
Fourth, Roosevelt had caused more than a little concern when he introduced a ben
ign-appearing
reorganization bill in Congress. At first it appeared to be a routine reshufflin
g of bureaucratic
agencies. But by the time Congress (which was now more Republican) debated the b
ill, in 1938,
the Court-packing scheme was fresh in the legislators’ minds, as was the fascist t
akeover of the
Weimar Republic in Germany. No one thought FDR was Hitler, but papers were incre
asingly using
the term “dictator” when they referred to the president. Congress decided that Roose
velt had started
to infringe on constitutional separation of powers. Shocking the president, 108
Democrats crossed
the aisle to defeat the reorganization bill in the House, prodded by thousands o
f telegrams from
home.
Reaction to Roosevelt’s power grab revealed how deeply entrenched values regarding
private
property, opportunity, and upward mobility still were. Despite six years of cont
rolling the
American economy, of dominating the political appointment process, of rigging th
e system with
government bribes to special interest groups, and of generally favorable press,
the public still
resisted attempts to socialize the industrial system or to hand the president mo
re power. It was a
healthy sign—one not seen across the oceans, where dark forces snuffed out the lig
ht of freedom.
Demons Unleashed
As the nation struggled in its economic morass, events in Europe and Asia had po
sed an additional
and even more serious threat than the Depression. For more than a decade, Americ
ans had enjoyed
relative peace in foreign affairs and had taken the lead in forging so-called ar
ms control
agreements. This was not out of altruism or pacifism, but out of a practical awa
reness that in the
Atlantic the United States could keep up with Great Britain, but only at the exp
ense of ceding the
Pacific to the rising Empire of Japan.
America’s relationship with Japan had been deteriorating for years. In 1915, Japan
had stated in its
Twenty-one Demands that it had a special position in China. Two years later, wit
h the United
States at war in Europe, Japanese negotiators upped the ante in their bid for do
minance of China
when Viscount Kikujiro Ishii met with Robert Lansing, the secretary of state. In
the resulting
Lansing-Ishii Agreement, the United States acknowledged that Japan had special i
nterests in China,
essentially abandoning the Open Door won just twenty years earlier. Reining in t
he Japanese in
China had to involve obtaining naval parity in the Pacific. That proved to be no
small task.
The Empire of Japan had emerged victorious in two major naval actions in the Rus
so-Japanese
War. Although the Japanese also captured Port Arthur on the Russian Pacific coas
t, the victory had
come at a terrible cost, revealing that Japan would face severe difficulties if
it ever engaged in a
full-scale land war with Russia. Although Japan had courted both British and Ame
rican favor
during the first decade of the 1900s, by the 1930s, stung by what it viewed as d
iscriminatory
treatment in the Washington Conference agreements, Japan increasingly looked to
herself.
America had competitors—and perhaps enemies—on each ocean, and the most practical me
thod of
leveling the playing field was to restrain naval construction. That was the thou
ght behind the
Washington Conference. Ever since Lansing-Ishii, Japanese strategy had emphasize
d large-scale
naval battles that sought to bring the enemy into one climactic engagement. But
Japanese planners
recognized that it would be years before they could produce a fleet comparable t
o that of either the
British or the Americans, and so although they chafed at the inequitable provisi
ons of the
Washington Conference, “arms limitations” temporarily provided a means to tie up pot
ential
adversaries in meaningless agreements while quietly catching up technologically
where it really
mattered.
All signatories to the Washington Pact accepted as fact the continued dominance
of the battleship
in future naval actions. In doing so, they all but ignored a series of critical
tests in 1921 when an
Army Air Force colonel, William “Billy” Mitchell, staged a demonstration that flabbe
rgasted army
and navy brass. Using the Ost-friesland, a German battleship acquired by the U.S
. Navy in the
Treaty of Versailles, as a target, Mitchell managed to sink the ship with bomber
aircraft while the
vessel was steaming in the open sea. Many, if not most, of the “battleship admiral
s” considered this
an impossibility, and even after the fact, the astonished naval officers still r
efused to believe that it
was anything other than a trick.
Four years later, in 1925, navy aircraft attacked a U.S. fleet in simulated bomb
ing runs and
“destroyed” some sixty ships, all without the antiaircraft guns scoring a single hit
on the towed
targets. This pathetic performance occurred despite the fact that naval gunners
fired off 880 rounds
against the attackers.25 The episode so embarrassed the navy that in subsequent
tests antiaircraft
guns scored a large number of hits, only to be exposed by Colonel Mitchell as bu
nk because the
aircraft had been limited to flying at a mere thirty-three miles per hour. Mitch
ell was later courtmartialed
for his comments on the culpability of the government when it had failed to prov
ide
weather stations after the lightning-induced destruction of the blimp Shenandoah
. Mitchell also
outlined how an Asian enemy—he said, “the Empire of Japan”—could launch a surprise attac
k on
Pearl Harbor and expect complete success. Japan took notes on Mitchell’s concepts,
and the attack
on Pearl Harbor bore an eerie resemblance to his scenario.
By the time of his death in 1936, few besides Mitchell considered Japan any kind
of serious threat.
And no one thought much could come from a revived Italy led by Benito Mussolini
and his Fascist
Party. Mussolini was the son of a blacksmith and, in all respects, a problem chi
ld who was expelled
from school. A Socialist Party member, Mussolini had taught school, served at th
e front in World
War I (where he was wounded), and become a newspaper editor. Along with Antonio
Gramsci,
Mussolini formed a new political movement—a hybrid of state corporatism, nationali
sm, and
socialism—called fascism.
The Fascists’ economic doctrines lacked any cohesion except that they wedged a lay
er of corporate
leaders between state planning and the rest of the economy. There was no operati
on of the free
market in fascism, but rather the illusion of a group of independent corporate l
eaders who, in
reality, acted as extensions of the state and were allowed to keep impressive sa
laries as a payoff.
Even there, however, the Italian state bought large stock holdings in the major
banks and other
companies, making it the leading stockholder in ventures controlling 70 percent
of iron production
and almost half of all steel production. It was as close to communism as one cou
ld get without
collectivizing all industry, and fascism certainly shared with communism a bent
for terrorism and
violence. There was “no life without shedding blood,” according to Mussolini.26
Mussolini himself had not broken with the Socialists over economic issues, but o
ver Italy’s
participation in World War I, and he seized as the symbol of his Fascist Party t
he Roman fasces—a
bundle of sticks tied around an ax, representing authority and strength. From it
s origins, fascism
was never anything but convoluted socialism—a point obscured still further by Adol
f Hitler in
Germany with his incessant attacks on both capitalism and communism. Seeing Jews
behind each
allowed him to conceal fascism’s close similarity to Stalin’s Soviet system.
In 1922, Mussolini’s followers staged a march on Rome, handing him the Italian gov
ernment, after
which the Italian king named Il Duce (the leader) prime minister of Italy. Musso
lini thus took by
intimidation what he could not win at the ballot box. Within two years, after ce
nsoring press
opposition (but not completely closing down antagonistic publishers) and manipul
ating the voting
laws, he consolidated all power into his party’s hands, with himself as dictator,
albeit one far
weaker than the Nazi leader. Fables that he made the trains run on time and work
ed other economic
miracles were more publicity and propaganda than fact, but they attracted the at
tention of many
Americans, especially before the German Nazis started to enact their anti-Jewish
legislation.
Among those who lauded Mussolini was Breckinridge Long, ambassador to Italy, who
called
fascism “the most interesting experiment in government to come above the horizon s
ince the
formulation of our Constitution.”27 Long praised the “Fascisti in their black shirts….
They are
dapper and well dressed and stand up straight and lend an atmosphere of individu
ality and
importance to their surroundings.”28 A young American diplomat named George Kennan
, far from
being repulsed by the Fascists, concluded that “benevolent despotism had greater p
ossibilities for
good” than did democracy, and that the United States needed to travel “along the roa
d which leads
through consitutional change to the authoritarian state.”29 Meanwhile, Mussolini g
rew in
popularity by promising the Italian people that he would restore the Roman Empir
e. With most of
the former Roman Empire occupied by the French, Spaniards, Austrians, and others
, Mussolini
picked out the path of least resistance—parts of Africa not occupied by Europe, li
ke Ethiopia. In
1935, Italian armies armed with the latest weapons, including aircraft, trucks,
tanks, and machine
guns, invaded a backward Ethiopia, whose emperor begged the League of Nations to
intervene.
Except for minor sanctions, the League turned a deaf ear, and Italian forces cap
tured the Ethiopian
capital in 1936. (Breckinridge Long, Il Duce’s cheerleader in the administration,
referred to Italy’s
crushing of backward Ethiopia as the “fruitful harvest of Mussolini’s enterprise.”)
Like Mussolini, Adolf Hitler had had a troubled childhood. The son of a customs
inspector, Hitler
had dropped out of high school and worked as an artist in Vienna prior to World
War I. He proved
a failure at art, was twice rejected for architectural school, then finally enli
sted in the German army
at the start of the Great War. After the war he joined the German Workers’ Party,
a socialist but
anti-Marxist organization that emphasized nationalism and anti-Semitism. There H
itler found his
niche, developing the skills of a hypnotic speaker and emotional actor for the p
arty, which had
taken a new name, the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, or Nazis.
Hitler toiled within the Nazi Party until the German hyperinflation of 1923 near
ly caused the
collapse of the Weimar Republic. Seeing his opportunity, Hitler led an attempted
takeover, or
putsch, but the police were ready for him. Arrested and sentenced to five years
in prison, he wrote
Mein Kampf (My Struggle) from behind bars. A rambling book that detailed his hat
red for Jews;
his intentions to create a new German Reich, or empire; and his economic policie
s—which were as
contradictory and confused as Mussolini’s—Mein Kampf provided a road map for anyone
willing
to take it seriously. For example, he alerted everyone to his intentions of subj
ecting even the
innocent to violence by stating that early in his political career, “the importanc
e of physical terror
became clear to me.” Hitler gained his release after only a few months in confinem
ent, by which
time the Nazis had emerged as a powerful force in German politics. He gained con
trol of the party
within two years. When Germany started to slide into the economic depression tha
t gripped the rest
of the world, Hitler had the issue he needed to appeal to large numbers of Germa
ns, who responded
to his calls for a socialist reordering of society along the lines of Mussolini’s
corporatism.
The Rome/Berlin Axis used a revolution in Spain as a warm-up to test its weapons
and armies in
combat. Playing on Japan’s fears of an expansionist Soviet Union in the Far East,
Hitler pulled
Japan into the Axis as a de facto member with the Anti-Comintern Pact (1935). Ja
pan thus threw
her lot in with an ideological cause for which the Japanese people had no connec
tion or affinity
except for apprehension about Soviet Russia. Still, the Japanese warlords resemb
led the fascists in
their utter brutality, and the European fascist states and Japan did have one im
portant trait in
common: a growing comfort level with totalitarianism. The United States certainl
y wanted nothing
to do with Mussolini’s invasion of Ethiopia—a desert war over the questionable indep
endence of
some obscure African nation. Nor were the sides clear in Spain. How to choose, f
or example,
between Hitler (who had yet to engage in mass murder) and Stalin (where reports
of millions of
deaths at his hands had already leaked out)? Still, hundreds of idealistic Ameri
cans volunteered to
fight in Spain against Franco, who had Fascist ties but was no ally of Hitler’s. O
fficial
noninvolvement by the United States and Britain, however, set a pattern: the dem
ocracies would
not intervene, no matter who the villains were or how egregious their atrocities
.
The plea by Ethiopia to the League of Nations for help against Mussolini resembl
ed an appeal two
years earlier from halfway across the globe, from China, where American interest
s stood out more
clearly. There the Empire of Japan had expanded its foothold in Manchuria (gaine
d in the Russo-
Japanese War, 1904–5). Although Manchuria, in theory, was independent, Japan occup
ied it as a
protectorate. Then in September 1931 it ostensibly staged an attack on a Japanes
e railroad at
Mukden as an excuse to send in the army. Within a few months, Japan had complete
control over
Manchuria (renaming it Manchukuo), which provided a jumping-off point for invadi
ng other areas
of China, whose pleas for assistance the League ignored.
Japan’s actions came as its military was increasingly usurping civilian control of
the government.
Assassination of public officials began to match the levels associated with mode
rn-day Colombia,
but instead of criminal or drug gangs doing the killing, they were fanatical Jap
anese nationalists. In
1933 the emperor himself was nearly assassinated—a remarkable event, considering t
hat the
Japanese people viewed him as a god incarnate. Chicago-style gangsters often con
trolled the
streets, replete with zoot-suit garb and Thompson-style submachine guns. The mor
e dangerous
gangsters, however, roamed the palace halls and the military barracks. After a t
emporary recovery
of parliamentary government in 1936, the military staged a coup attempt during w
hich
assassination squads and regular infantry units surrounded the imperial palace a
nd attempted to
assassinate the civilian leadership of Japan. They killed the finance and educat
ion ministers, injured
the chamberlain (Admiral Kantaro Suzuki), and killed several other administrator
s. They failed to
kill the prime minister, whose wife locked him in a cupboard, but assassins shot
his brother by
mistake. Another prime target, the emperor, also survived, and within days order
had been restored.
But no civilian leaders forgot, nor did the military, which was now calling the
shots. Indeed, many
of Japan’s “saviors” merely looked for their own opportunity to grab power, which they
saw
increasingly as coming from expansion in China. It is significant that Japan—at a
crossroads
between expansion in China and Russia, her traditional rival to the north—chose Ch
ina, which
engaged Japanese forces in a quagmire.
By 1937, Japanese troops had ruthlessly destroyed Shanghai and Canton, and slaug
htered 300,000
civilians in Nanking. At one point in the Rape of Nanking, as it was called in p
art because of the
systematic atrocities against women, the Japanese marched some 20,000 young Chin
ese outside the
city and machine-gunned them. In retrospect, the League’s refusal to intervene in
China and
Ethiopia proved to be a costly error. American policy was pro-China in sentiment
, thanks to a large
China lobby in Washington, but in action America remained steadfastly aloof from
the atrocities.
Even after reports that the Chinese were hunted like rabbits in Nanking and that
anything that
moved was shot, and despite the fact that in addition to Chiang’s pro-Western army
, Mao Tse-tung
had a large communist army dedicated to evicting the Japanese, the United States
did not offer even
token help.
As in Spain, several idealistic aviators, flying nearly obsolete P-40 War Hawks,
went to China to
earn enduring acclaim as the Flying Tigers, but a handful of fighter pilots simp
ly proved inadequate
against the Rising Sun. The democracies’ inaction only whetted the appetites of th
e dogs of war,
encouraging Italy, Germany, and Japan to seek other conquests.
At one point in 1937 it appeared that the Japanese had become too brazen and car
eless: on
December twelfth, imperial Japanese war planes strafed and bombed several ships
on the Yangtze
River. Three of them were Standard Oil tankers, and the fourth, a U.S. gunboat,
the Panay, was
sunk despite flying a large American flag and having Old Glory spread out on the
awnings. Two
crewmen and an Italian journalist were killed, and another eleven were wounded.
Even with a
deliberate attack in broad daylight, however, popular sentiment resisted any tho
ught of war.
Roosevelt only asked his aides to examine whether the Japanese could be held lia
ble for monetary
damages. Several admirals argued that Japan intended a war with the United State
s, but they were
ignored by all except Harold Ickes, who noted, “Certainly war with Japan is inevit
able sooner or
later, and if we have to fight her, isn’t this the best possible time?”30 Upon refle
ction, the Japanese
knew they had made a potentially disastrous miscalculation—one that could push the
m into a war
with America years before they were ready. Consequently, Tokyo issued a thorough
apology,
promising to pay every cent in indemnities and recalling the commander of the Ja
panese naval
forces. The measures satisfied most Americans, with newspapers such as the Chris
tian Science
Monitor urging its readers to differentiate between the Panay incident and the s
inking of the Maine.
Japan further saw that Britain would be tied up with Hitler, should he press mat
ters in Europe,
opening up Malaya and, farther to the southeast, Indonesia and the rich Dutch oi
l fields. If the cards
fell right, many strategists suggested, the Japanese might not have to deal with
Great Britain at all.
In this context, America’s response would prove critical. The U.S. presence in the
Philippines,
Wake Island, Guam, and Hawaii meant that eventually Japan would have to negotiat
e or fight to
expand her empire to the south and west. Instead, the United States compounded t
he disarmament
mistakes of the 1920s by slumping into an isolationist funk.
Isolationism Ascendant
The very fact that the British hid behind their navy, and the French behind thei
r massive
fortifications along the German border (the Maginot Line), indicated that the ma
jor Western powers
never believed their own arms control promises. As in the United States, a malai
se developed in
these nations out of the Great Depression, producing a helplessness and lethargy
. In many circles, a
perception existed that nothing could be done to stop the Italian, German, and J
apanese
expansionists, at least within Europe and Asia. Moreover, the U.S. Senate’s Nye Co
mmittee had
investigated the munitions industry, the “merchants of death” that supposedly had dr
iven the nation
into World War I, adding to suspicions of those calling for military readiness.
Britain remained the most important trading partner for American firms in the 19
30s, but overseas
trade was relatively insignificant to the domestic U.S. market, and the loss of
that trade, while
undesirable, was not crucial except to the British, who desperately needed war g
oods. High tariffs
remained the rule of the day, reflecting the prevailing doctrine that one nation
could “tax” the work
of another to its own benefit. That view changed sharply after Cordell Hull beca
me secretary of
state under Roosevelt. A free trader who favored lower tariffs, his views would
have been entirely
appropriate for the 1920s and might have provided a firewall against the economi
c collapse. But by
the mid-1930s, with the dictators firmly entrenched, the circumstances had chang
ed dramatically
enough to work against the doctrine of free trade. Indeed, at that point the tra
de weapon had to be
used, and events demanded that free nations play favorites in resisting aggresso
rs.
As the economic expansion of the 1920s gave way to the Great Depression, even st
ronger impulses
toward isolation arose, as symbolized by the First Neutrality Act (1935), issued
in response to
Ethiopia’s plea for help. Further congressional action in early 1937 prohibited su
pplying arms to
either side of the Spanish Civil War. Isolationists of every political stripe te
nded to portray all sides
in a conflict as “belligerents,” thus removing any moral judgments about who might b
e the
aggressor. The ambassador to Great Britain, Joseph Kennedy, went so far as to su
ggest that the
democracies and the Axis powers put aside their minor disagreements and, in so m
any words, just
get along.
Cordell Hull was among the few who saw the unprecedented evil inherent in the Na
zi regime. In
the wake of the disastrous Munich Agreement of 1938, which ceded to Hitler the S
udetenland he
got all of Czechoslovakia in 1939. Speaking off the record to members of the Sen
ate Foreign
Relations Committee, Hull bluntly warned them that the coming war would not be “an
other
goddam piddling dispute over a boundary line,” but a full-scale assault on world o
rder by
“powerful nations, armed to the teeth, preaching a doctrine of naked force and pra
cticing a
philosophy of barbarism.”31
Hull favored a cash-and-carry policy, which he thought would allow Britain to pu
rchase whatever
war materials were needed. In reality, however, at the time that the British des
perately needed
arms, food, and machinery, her accounts had sunk so low that she scarcely had th
e hard currency
needed to actually purchase the goods. Hull’s policy seemed a magnanimous gesture,
but by then,
much more generous terms were needed. Indeed, the neutrality acts often punished
the states
(Ethiopia or China) that had attempted to resist the Italian and Japanese aggres
sors. Such was the
case with the 1937 cash-and-carry legislation, which sold American goods to any
belligerent that
could pay cash and ship the materials in its own vessels. Clearly, Britain, with
her navy, benefited
from this legislation the most; but Italy, Japan, and Germany fared well too.
The isolationist mood was encouraged by the intelligentsia, which, although supp
orting the
procommunist Republican forces in the Spanish Civil War, otherwise viewed any ov
erseas
escapades as inherently imperialistic. American leftists Walter Duranty, Upton S
inclair, Langston
Hughes, E. W. Scripps, Alger Hiss, and Edmund Wilson had made excuses for Lenin’s
Red terror
and Stalin’s “harvest of sorrow”—despite full knowledge that millions of Soviet citizens
were
being exterminated—and refused to engage in any public policy debates over the mor
ality of one
side or another.
International communist movements also condemned any involvement against the Axi
s powers as
imperialistic, at least until the Soviet Union herself became a target of Hitler’s
invasion in June
1941. For example, in 1940, communist-dominated delegations to the Emergency Pea
ce
Mobilization, which met in Chicago, refused to criticize the Axis powers, but ma
naged to scorn the
“war policies” of Roosevelt.32 Only after Operation Barbarossa and the Nazi advance
into Russia,
did the peace groups change their tune.
Against all these forces, solid leadership from Roosevelt’s advisers—especially in t
he diplomatic
corps—still might have convinced him and Congress that the fascists and the Japane
se imperialists
only understood power. Ickes, for example, lobbied for more severe sanctions aga
inst the Japanese.
Other appointments proved colossally inappropriate, particularly the ambassadors
to Britain and the
Soviet Union. Joseph P. Kennedy, for example, the “thief” that FDR had chosen as hea
d of the
Securities and Exchange Commission “to catch a thief,” received an appointment as am
bassador to
Britain, despite his outspoken anti-British views. Kennedy suspected every Briti
sh move,
convinced that England was manipulating Germany into another war.
Joseph Davies, Roosevelt’s ambassador to Russia, on the other hand, completely ref
used to criticize
one of the most vile regimes on the planet. He said Joseph Stalin, despite exter
minating all
opponents within the Communist Party, “is the ‘easy boss’ type—quiet, self-effacing, per
sonally
kindly. Like all the other Soviet leaders, Stalin works hard, lives simply, and
administers his job
with complete honesty.”33 The ambassador’s naive characterizations extended to Stali
n’s
subordinates, who, like Stalin, worked hard and lived simply, performing their t
asks without
corruption. “It is generally admitted that no graft exits in high places in Moscow
,” he claimed.34
Even where Roosevelt appointed capable men, they were ill suited for the time. S
ecretary of State
Hull, a former judge and congressman from Tennessee, often seemed as anti-Britis
h as Kennedy,
exactly at the time that the situation required the Western powers to resist agg
ression together.
Instead of squarely facing the Axis threat in Europe, Hull sought to erode Briti
sh trading influence
in the Pacific to open more markets for U.S. goods. To his credit, treasury secr
etary Henry
Morgenthau battled to sell both France and Britain top-of-the-line aircraft, to
which Roosevelt
finally agreed in late 1938, although whether Morgenthau favored the sales becau
se they genuinely
helped the Allies or because, as he put it, “Our aircraft industry desperately nee
de[ed] a shot in the
arm [and] here was the hypodermic poised.”35 Between 1937 and 1940, then, Roosevel
t, prompted
by Hull and Kennedy, provided only a modicum of support to Britain under exorbit
ant terms
compared to the boatloads of materials later handed out to the Soviets at much l
ower costs. Yet
even that small level of support enabled Britain to hold out during 1940–41.
Desperate to avoid even the appearance of forming an alliance against the fascis
t powers, American
diplomats blamed Britain and France for refusing to stand up to Hitler and there
fore, in essence for
saving Americans from having to confront the evil empires as well. Kennedy argue
d for giving
Hitler a free hand in Eastern Europe; ambassador to France William Bullitt urged
a Franco-German
accommodation; and Breckinridge Long, the former American ambassador to Italy, b
lamed Britain
for treating Mussolini unfairly. Roosevelt looked for any assurance from Hitler
that he would
behave, in 1939 sending a message asking Hitler and Mussolini if they would prom
ise not to attack
some thirty-one nations named in the letter. Hitler responded by reading it to t
he Reichstag,
mockingly ticking off “Finland…Lithuania…Juden,” to howls of laughter from the delegates
, few
of whom would have guessed that in the next few years he would seek to control o
r capture parts or
all of these nations and peoples.36
In September 1939, Hitler’s armies rolled into one of the nations he claimed to ha
ve no interest in
invading—Poland. World War II had begun in Europe. America remained steadfastly ne
utral as the
blitzkrieg, or lightning war, swept through the Polish armies, then turned on De
nmark, Norway,
Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and France, all in less than a year. Even
as Nazi tanks
smashed French forces and trapped nearly half a million British and French troop
s at Dunkirk,
Cordell Hull characterized French cries for U.S. support as “hysterical appeals,” an
d Joseph
Kennedy bluntly told the British that they could expect “zero support.”37 Hull and K
ennedy had
their own agendas, but they probably reflected the fact that many, if not most,
Americans wanted
nothing to do with war.
Just two years after Neville Chamberlain, the British prime minister, had return
ed from Munich
with an agreement with Hitler that, he said, ensured “peace in our time,” all of mai
nland Europe
was under the iron grip of the Nazis, Italian Fascists, their allies, or the Com
munist Soviets, whose
behavior in taking half of Poland, as well as Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, and pa
rt of Finland
somehow escaped the ire of the West.38 Britain stood alone. Nearly broke, with n
ational reserves
down to $12 million, Britain could no longer buy war materials or food. Prime Mi
nister Winston
Churchill begged Roosevelt to “lend” fifty aged World War I destroyers for antisubma
rine patrols,
and FDR finally came around. “I have been thinking very hard…what we should do for E
ngland….
The thing to do is to get away from a dollar sign.”39 The answer was an exchange o
f weapons for
long-term leases for several British bases, mostly in the Caribbean, although Ro
osevelt turned
down a suggestion that would have included British ships in the West Indies, not
ing that they
would be antiquated. He also rejected as too big a burden, both on himself and t
he nation, the
suggestion that the United States take the West Indies themselves. The final leg
islation, which
passed in March 1941, was known as the Lend-Lease Act. It assisted the British i
n protecting their
sea-lanes.
Isolationists (more accurately, noninterventionists) claimed Lend-Lease would dr
ag the United
States into the war.40 Senator Burton K. Wheeler called it the “New Deal’s triple A
foreign policy:
it will plow under every fourth American boy.”41 Significantly, Roosevelt had reje
cted appeals
from Norway and France, citing the fact that leasing ships to belligerents would
violate
international law. The destroyer deal reflected less a commitment to principle t
han an admission
that the public mood was beginning to shift, and again demonstrated that far fro
m leading from
principle, FDR waited for the political winds to swing in his direction.
Those winds had a considerably stealthy boost from British agents in the United
States. Believing
the Nazis a menace to their very existence, the British hardly played by the rul
es in attempting to
lure America into the conflict as an ally. The British used deception and crafti
ly tailored
propaganda to swing American public opinion into bringing the United States into
the war,
engaging in covert manipulation of democratic processes to achieve their ends.42
Backed by a number of American pan-Atlanticists in newspapers, Congress, and eve
n polling
organizations, British agents conducted a silent war to persuade U.S. lawmakers
to enact a
peacetime draft; support Lend-Lease; and, they hoped, eventually ally the United
States against
Hitler. The most shocking and effective aspect of British covert operations in A
merica involved
shaping public opinion through polls. It is important to note that polls, which
were supposedly
designed to reflect the public’s mood, in fact were used as tools to create a mand
ate for positions
the pollsters wanted. Although this was the first documented time that polls wou
ld be used in such
a way, it certainly wouldn’t be the last. British agents working for Gallup and Ro
per, as well as
other American polling organizations, alternatively suppressed or publicized pol
ls that supported
America’s entry into the war. One American pollster, sympathetic to the British, a
dmitted
“cooking” polls by “suggesting issues and questions the vote on which I was fairly sur
e would be
on the right side.”43 In November 1941 the Fight for Freedom Committee, an interve
ntionist
group, ran a rigged poll at the Congress of Industrial Organization’s national con
vention, taking
“great care…beforehand to make certain the poll results would turn out as desired.”44
Another poll
found 81 percent of young men facing the draft favored compulsory military servi
ce, an
astoundingly high figure given that congressional mail ran “overwhelmingly” against
conscription.45
On the other side of the argument were a few outright loonies, of course, includ
ing discredited
socialists, and the entire front for the American Communist Party. The American
Peace
Mobilization Committee, for example, had peace marches right up to the day that
Hitler invaded
the USSR, when signs protesting American involvement in the war were literally c
hanged on the
spot to read open the second front!46 Where five minutes earlier American commun
ists had
opposed American involvement, once Stalin’s bacon was in the fire they demanded U.
S.
intervention.
Besides these fringe groups, however, were millions of well-intentioned American
s who sincerely
wanted to avoid another European entanglement. Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, Rep
ublican of
Michigan, aptly expressed the views of the vast majority of so-called isolationi
sts when he wrote in
his diary, “I hate Hitlerism and Naziism and Communism as completely as any person
living. But I
decline to embrace the opportunist idea…that we can stop these things in Europe wi
thout entering
the conflict with everything at our command…. There is no middle ground. We are ei
ther all the
way in or all the way out.”47
Indeed, the dirty little secret of the prewar period was that polls, when not do
ctored by the British,
showed that most Americans agreed with aviator Charles Lindbergh’s antiwar positio
n. A few
months later, in February 1941, the “Lone Eagle” testified before Congress about his
firsthand
inspection of Hitler’s Luftwaffe. Roosevelt, convinced the aviator was attempting
to undermine his
Lend-Lease program, launched a campaign through subordinates to convince America
ns that
Lindbergh was a Nazi.48 The entire saga showed how far the corruption of Hitler,
Italian fascism,
Japanese militarism, and Soviet communism had spread: the British conducted wide
spread spying
and manipulations inside the borders of their closest ally; an American hero was
tarred with the
appellation Nazi for holding a position different from the president’s about the b
est way to defeat
the Nazis; and the Roosevelt administration increasingly had to accommodate an u
tterly evil
Stalinist regime in Russia for the sole reason that the Soviets were fighting th
e Nazis.
Roosevelt, then, governed a nation that wanted to remain out of the conflict, ye
t despised the Axis
and possessed deep sympathies for the English. Public attitudes required a clear
presentation of
both the costs of involvement and the dangers of neutrality, but FDR’s foreign pol
icy appointees
lacked the skill to deal with either the British or the Axis.
In that context, by 1940 the isolationists certainly had drifted into a never-ne
ver land of illusion,
thereby risking essential strategic advantages that, if conceded, could indeed h
ave threatened the
U.S. mainland. Isolationists, unfortunately, probably had a point when they comp
lained that the
French and Belgians “deserved” their fate. As Nazi tanks rolled over Europe, one Eur
opean
countess lamented that “these European peoples themselves have become indifferent
to
democracy…. I saw that not more than ten percent of the people on the European con
tinent cared
for individual freedom or were vitally interested in it to fight for its preserv
ation.”49
Yet in many ways, the only difference between the French and the isolationist Am
ericans, who
obsessed about the depressed economy, was one of geography: France was “over there
,” with
Hitler, and Americans were not—yet. Thus, Roosevelt’s dilemma lay in controlling the
British
covert agents (whose methods were illegal and repugnant, but whose cause was jus
t) while
preparing the reluctant public for an inevitable war and demonstrating that the
isolationists had lost
touch with strategic reality (without questioning their patriotism or motives)—all
the while
overcoming ambassadorial appointees who sabotaged any coherent policies.
In any event, he had a responsibility to rapidly upgrade the military by using t
he bully pulpit to
prepare Americans for war. Instead, he chose the politically expedient course. H
e rebuilt the
navy—a wise policy—but by stealth, shifting NIRA funds and other government slush mo
ney into
ship construction. The United States took important strategic steps to ensure ou
r sea-lanes to
Britain, assuming control of Greenland in April 1941 and, three months later, oc
cupying Iceland,
allowing the British garrison there to deploy elsewhere. But these, and even the
shoot-on-sight
orders given to U.S. warships protecting convoys across half of the Atlantic, ne
ver required the
voters to confront reality, which Roosevelt could have done prior to Pearl Harbo
r without
alienating the isolationists. By waiting for the public to lead on the issue of
war, Roosevelt reaped
the worst of all worlds: he allowed the British to manipulate the United States
and at the same time
failed to prepare either the military or the public adequately for a forthcoming
conflict. In 1939 he
had argued forcefully for a repeal of the arms embargo against Britain, and he w
on. But a month
later FDR defined the combat zone as the Baltic and the Atlantic Ocean from Norw
ay to Spain. In
essence, Roosevelt took American ships off any oceans where they might have to d
efend freedom
of the seas, handing a major victory to the isolationists. He also delayed aid t
o Finland, which had
heroically tried to hold off the giant Soviet army in the dead of winter, until
a large chunk of that
nation had fallen under Soviet tyranny.
In short, the Roosevelt war legacy is mixed: although he clearly (and more than
most American
political leaders) appreciated the threat posed by Hitler, he failed to mobilize
public opinion,
waiting instead for events to do so. He never found the Soviets guilty of any of
the territorial
violations that he had criticized. Just as the war saved Roosevelt from a final
verdict on the
effectiveness of his New Deal policies, so too did Pearl Harbor ensure that hist
ory could not
effectively evaluate his wartime preparations oriented toward the Atlantic. One
could say the
Roosevelt legacy was twice saved by the same war.
Reelection and Inevitability
Roosevelt kept his intentions to run for reelection a secret for as long as he c
ould. Faced with the
war in Europe, FDR had decided to run, but he wanted his candidacy to appear as
a draft-Roosevelt
movement. He even allowed a spokesman to read an announcement to the Democratic
National
Committee stating that he did not want to run. It was grandstanding at its worst
, but it had the
desired result: echoes of “We want Roosevelt” rang out in the convention hall. The “dr
aft” worked,
and FDR selected Henry Wallace, the secretary of agriculture and a man to the le
ft of Roosevelt, as
a new vice president. Against the incumbent president, the Republicans nominated
Wendell
Willkie, chief executive of the Commonwealth and Southern Corporation, a utility
company.
Willkie, in addition to being a businessman, was also an Indiana lawyer and farm
er, owning “two
farms he actually farmed,” in contrast to the country squire Roosevelt.50 Willkie
actually managed
to gain some traction against Roosevelt on the economic front, arguing that the
New Deal had
failed to eliminate mass unemployment; still later, he tried to paint FDR as a w
armonger. Without a
clear vision for a smaller-state America, Willkie was doomed. In the reelection,
Roosevelt racked
up another electoral college victory with a margin of 449 to 82, but in the popu
lar vote, the
Republicans narrowed the margin considerably, with 22 million votes to FDR’s 27 mi
llion. Once
again the Democrats controlled the big cities with their combination of politica
l machines and
government funds.
In charging Roosevelt with desiring war, Willkie failed to appreciate the comple
x forces at work in
the United States or the president’s lack of a well-thought-out strategy. Througho
ut 1939–40,
Roosevelt seemed to appreciate the dangers posed by the fascist states, though n
ever Japan.
However, he never made a clear case for war with Germany or Italy, having been l
ulled into a false
sense of security by the Royal Navy’s control of the Atlantic. When he finally did
risk his
popularity by taking the case to the public in early 1940, Congress gave him eve
rything he asked
for and more, giving lie to the position that Congress wouldn’t have supported him
even if he had
provided leadership. Quite the contrary: Congress authorized 1.3 million tons of
new fighting ships
(some of which went to sea at the very time Japan stood poised to overrun the Pa
cific), and overall
Congress voted $17 billion for defense. The president appointed two prominent Re
publicans to
defense positions, naming Henry Stimson as secretary of war and Frank Knox as se
cretary of the
navy. Both those men advocated much more militant positions than did Roosevelt,
favoring, for
example, armed escorts for U.S. shipping to Britain.
One sound argument for giving less aid to England did emerge. American forces we
re so
unprepared after a decade’s worth of neglect that if the United States energetical
ly threw its
military behind England (say, by sending aircraft and antiaircraft guns), and if
, despite the help, the
British surrendered, America would be left essentially defenseless. Only 160 P-4
0 War Hawks
were in working order, and the army lacked antiaircraft ammunition, which would
not be available
for six more months. Advisers close to Roosevelt glumly expected Britain to fall
.
Hitler’s massive air attacks on England, known as the Battle of Britain, began in
July 1940 to
prepare for Germany’s Operation Sea Lion, the invasion of England. Use of radar, c
ombined with
Churchill’s timely attacks on Germany by long-range bombers, saved the day. By Oct
ober, the
Royal Air Force had turned back the Luftwaffe, but Britain remained isolated, br
oke, and under
increasing danger of starvation because of U-boat attacks on merchant vessels. A
t about the time
the British had survived Germany’s aerial attacks, Mussolini attempted to expand t
he southern front
by invading Greece. With British support, the Greeks repulsed the Italians; Brit
ain then
counterattacked in Africa, striking at the Italian forces in Libya. Mussolini’s fo
olishness brought
the Nazi armies into North Africa, and with great success at first. General Erwi
n Rommel took only
eleven days to defeat the British and chase them back to Egypt. Yugoslavia, Gree
ce, and Crete also
fell, joining Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria under German rule.
At that point, during a critical juncture in world history, two factors made Ame
rican intervention to
save Britain unnecessary in military terms and yet critical in the long run for
stabilizing Western
Europe for decades. First, following a November 1940 raid by the Royal Navy, the
Italian fleet at
Taranto had to withdraw to its ports, ceding sea control of the Mediterranean to
the British. This
made it difficult, though not impossible, for Hitler to consider smashing the Br
itish ground troops
in Egypt and marching eastward toward India, where he entertained some thoughts
of linking up
with the Japanese. As long as the British had free reign of the Mediterranean, h
owever, resupply of
such an effort would have to be conducted overland. This prospect led to the sec
ond critical
development, Hitler’s decision to invade the Soviet Union in June 1941. In part, t
he Soviet invasion
was inevitable in Hitler’s mind. Since Mein Kampf, he had clung to the notion that
Poland and
western Russia represented the only hope for Germany’s “overpopulation” (in his mind).
As a result, when the bombs fell in Hawaii on December 7, 1941, the shocking unp
reparedness of
American forces and the disastrous defeat at Pearl Harbor provided just enough e
vidence for critics
of the president to claim that he had what he had wanted all along, a war in Eur
ope through the
back door of Asia. Here the critics missed the mark: FDR had had no advance warn
ing about Pearl
Harbor. Nevertheless, his unwillingness to stand clearly in favor of rebuilding
the military at the
risk of losing at the ballot box ensured that, despite Roosevelt’s otherwise good
inclinations,
somewhere, at some time, U.S. military forces would take a beating.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Democracy’s Finest Hour, 1941–45
Democracy in Peril
World War II presented an unparalleled challenge to the United States because, f
or the first time,
two capable and determined enemies faced America simultaneously. These foreign e
nemies were
not merely seeking to maintain colonial empires, nor were they interested in tra
ditional balance-ofpower
concerns. They were, rather, thoroughly and unmistakably evil foes. Nazi Germany
had the
potential technological capability to launch devastating attacks on the American
mainland. The
Empire of Japan had gained more territory and controlled more people in a shorte
r time than the
Romans, the Mongols, or the Muslim empires.
Also for the first time, the United States had to fight with a true coalition. U
nlike World War I,
when Americans were akin to modern free agents entering the war at the last minu
te, the United
States was allied with England, France, and Russia. The USSR was the dominant po
wer west of the
Urals, and the United States was instantly accorded the role of leadership on th
e Western Front.
Although America was substantially free from enemy attack (aside from Pearl Harb
or), the conflict
brought the nation closer to a total-war footing than at any other time in its h
istory. But as in
previous wars, the business leaders of the country again took the lead, burying
the Axis powers in
mountains of planes, ships, tanks, and trucks. Emerging from the war as the worl
d’s dominant
power, imbued with both military force and moral certainty of cause, the United
States stood firm
in democracy’s finest hour.
“The Americans Will Be Overawed”
“Blitzkrieg,” or lightning war, became a familiar word as the Nazi panzer (tank) arm
ies slashed
through Poland in 1939, then France in 1940. Technically a tactic (a method to o
btain an objective),
blitzkrieg also constituted a strategy, that is, a large sweeping plan for victo
ry in war. Few
recognized in 1941 that both Germany and Japan had adopted blitzkrieg because of
the perception
that without access to vital oil supplies, they would quickly lose, but Germany
had slashed through
to the Caucasus oil reserves in southern Russia, and Japan had seized oil-rich I
ndonesia.
There were key differences in the two foes, though. Germany’s productive industry
and
technological capabilities might have sustained her for several years. Japanese
planners harbored
no such illusions about their chances of success. Admiral Nagano Osami, who had
strongly
supported war with America well before the Pearl Harbor plan was formulated, gri
mly promised to
“put up a tough fight for the first six months,” but if the war went for two or thre
e years he had “no
confidence” in Japan’s ability to win.1 Just two months before Pearl Harbor, Nagano
again said
that the imperial navy could hold its own for about two years; other voices in t
he military thought a
year was more realistic. Asked point-blank if Japan could win a quick-strike war
similar to the
Russo-Japanese War nearly forty years earlier, Nagano stated flatly that “it was d
oubtful whether
we could even win,” let alone come close to the success of 1904.2 But the army dic
tated strategy,
and the Bushido warrior code, combined with the assassination of dissenters, sea
led Japan’s doom.
In retrospect, Japan essentially marched grimly into a disaster with most of its
leaders fully aware
that, even with extreme luck, victory was next to impossible.
By 1939, Japan’s army had already wallowed for three years in China, helping itsel
f to Chinese
resources. Despite the fact that China, a pitiful giant, was too divided among f
euding factions and
too backward to resist effectively, Japan had trouble subduing the mainland. By
1940, the Japanese
occupied all the major population centers with a ruthlessness resembling that of
the Nazis, yet they
still could not claim total victory. Imperial policy exacted great costs. In Jul
y 1939 the United
States revoked the most-favored-nation trading status provided by a commercial t
reaty of 1911, and
a month later, in a dispute little noticed in the West, the Soviets defeated Jap
anese troops in
Mongolia.
Japan’s China policy stemmed in part from the perverse power of the military in a
civilian
government on the home islands, where any civilian or military leaders who inter
fered with the
expansionism of the army or navy were muffled or assassinated. Yet for all their
recklessness,
many in the empire’s inner circle viewed any strategy of engaging the United State
s in a full-scale
war as utter lunacy. One logistics expert starkly laid out production differenti
als between America
and Japan: steel, twenty to one; oil, one hundred to one; aircraft, five to one;
and so on. His
arguments fell on deaf ears. By 1940, no Japanese official openly criticized the
momentum toward
war. The American-educated Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto came the closest to outright
opposition.
He had flown across the United States once and soberly observed America’s awesome
productive
capability. His visit to Dayton’s Wright Field, while opening his imagination to t
he potential for
long-range air strikes, also reminded him of the vast gulf between the two natio
ns. When he raised
such concerns with the imperial warlords, they transferred him to sea duty.
Military ascendancy was complete by October 1941, when Japan installed as prime
minister
General Hideki Tojo, known to the British press as the Razor. A stubborn, uncomp
romising man,
Tojo’s ascension to power essentially ended all hopes of a diplomatic solution to
the Asian
situation. Tojo became enamored of a quick knockout blow to the United States, a
dvocating a strike
in which “the Americans [would] be so overawed from the start as to cause them to
shrink from
continuing the war. Faced with [the destruction of ] their entire Pacific fleet
in a single assault
delivered at a range of over three thousand miles, they would be forced to consi
der what chance
there would be of beating this same enemy [across] an impregnable ring of defens
ive positions.”3
Americans had little appreciation for a society steeped in a tradition of extrem
e nationalism,
reinforced through indoctrination in its public education system and replete wit
h military training
of children from the time they could walk.4 Nor did most westerners even begin t
o grasp Bushido,
the Japanese warrior code that demanded death over the “loss of face.” It simply did
not register on
Main Street, U.S.A., that Japan might pose a genuine threat to U.S. security. Qu
ite the contrary, in
February 1941, Time publisher Henry Luce declared the dawning of the “American Cen
tury,”
reflecting the views of probably a majority of Americans.
Americans may have misjudged their enemy, but the delusion in Japan was worse. W
ithdrawing
from Indochina and China, to them, was simply an unacceptable loss of honor. The
refore, by mid-
1941, Japan’s civilian and military leadership had settled on a course of war with
the United States.
Most agreed, however, that Japan’s only hope of victory was a massive all-Asian of
fensive with a
key surprise strike at the U.S. Navy’s main Pacific base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii,
with simultaneous
attacks in the American-held Philippine islands, British Singapore, and Hong Kon
g. Never in
human history had military forces undertaken such sweeping and ambitious operati
ons, let alone
attempted such strikes simultaneously. Most astounding of all, not only did Japa
n make the attempt
to swallow all of Asia in a single gulp, she came within a hair of succeeding.
Time Line
Sept. 1939:
Hitler invades Poland, and World War II begins in Europe
1940:
Germany defeats French and British forces in France; France surrenders and is oc
cupied; Norway
occupied; Battle of Britain
Dec.7,1941:
Japan attacks Pearl Harbor
1942:
United States and Britain invade North Africa; Jimmy Doolittle bombs Tokyo (Febr
uary); Battles
of Coral Sea (May) and Midway (June)
1943:
Allies begin bombing Europe, defeat the Afrika Korps at the battle of Kasserine
Pass (February),
and invade Sicily and Italy (July)
1944:
Invasion of France (June sixth); Paris liberated (August); Battle of the Bulge (
December); invasion
of the Philippines and Battle of Leyte Gulf (October)
1945:
Germany surrenders (May); landings on Iwo Jima and Okinawa (March-June); Trinity
test of
atomic bomb (July); atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (August sixth and n
inth); Japan
surrenders (August twelfth)
1946:
“Iron Curtain” speech by Winston Churchill, Cold War begins
1947:
Marshall Plan, North Atlantic Treaty Organization founded
Back Door to War?
Hitler’s quick conquest of France in 1940 put French possessions in the Far East u
p for grabs. After
Vichy France permitted the Japanese to build airfields in northern Indochina, th
e United States
passed the Export Control Act (July 1940), restricting sales of arms and other m
aterials to Japan.
Over time, scrap iron, gasoline, and other products were added to the strategic
embargo. The
Japanese warlords spoke of a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, a term they
used to describe
an Asia dominated by the Japanese Empire. The fly in the ointment remained oil,
since Japan had
no domestic oil reserves. This made the empire fully dependent on foreign energy
sources, a fact
that had shaped Japan’s war planning.
In September 1940, Tokyo made a colossal blunder by signing the Tripartite Pact
with Germany
and Italy, mainly as a way to acquire British Far Eastern possessions that would
be available if
Hitler conquered Britain. Japan’s dalliance with Germany had run both hot and cold
, but now the
Japanese threw in their lot with the Nazis. In the eyes of many westerners, this
confirmed that the
Japanese warlords were no different from Hitler or Mussolini. The alliance albat
ross hung around
Japan’s neck for the entire war. Hitler hoped to lure Japan into opening a second
front in Siberia
against the Soviets, but Japan, remembering the ill-fated land campaign of 1904,
instead planned to
move south for oil. To eliminate interference from the Russians, Japan signed a
nonaggression pact
with the Soviets in April 1941.
The nonaggression pact freed Japanese troops in Manchuria to move south, whereup
on Japan
announced its intention to control all of Indochina. Roosevelt had had enough. H
e restricted all
exports of oil to Japan and froze Japanese assets in the United States, which ha
d the effect of
choking off Japanese credit and making it nearly impossible for Japan to buy imp
orted oil from
other countries.
Freezing Japan’s assets left the empire with a two-year supply of oil under peacet
ime conditions,
but less than a year’s worth of “war oil” because the consumption of fuel by carriers,
battleships,
and aircraft would rapidly deplete Japan’s reserves. Thus, FDR’s efforts to coerce J
apan into
withdrawing from Indochina had the opposite effect and certainly increased press
ure to go to war.
However, notions that Roosevelt provoked Japan are absurd. Japan was already on
a timetable for
war. Even before the embargo, “Japan was trading at a rate, and with trade deficit
s, which ensured
that she would have exhausted her gold and foreign currency reserves some time i
n early spring
1942.”5 Put another way, with or without the frozen assets, Japan faced national b
ankruptcy in
mid-1942, making the “crisis entirely of Japan’s own making.”6 Equally important, base
d on
shipbuilding ratios then in place, the imperial navy was in a once-in-a-lifetime
position of strength
relative to the Americans. (Even without combat losses, by 1944, the imperial na
vy would have
fallen to 30 percent of U.S. naval strength, which, as a result of the Two-Ocean
Naval Expansion
Act of 1940, would include enough vessels to render the Japanese naval forces “not
hing more than
an impotent irrelevance, wholly deprived of any prospect of giving battle with a
ny hope of
success.”)7
Contrary to the back-door-to-war theories of the Roosevelt haters, Japan’s warlord
s had all but
committed themselves to a conflict with the United States in January 1941, well
before the freezing
of the assets. Moreover, there is some question as to how badly the embargo hurt
Japan: from July
1940 to April 1941, when petroleum supposedly was locked up, American oil compan
ies sold 9.2
million barrels of crude to Japan, and permits were approved for 2 million addit
ional barrels. It is
hard to argue that under such circumstances the United States was squeezing the
Japanese economy
to death.8
Additional warning signs came from American code breakers, who in December 1940
deciphered
the Japanese diplomatic code, called Purple. This allowed the United States to r
ead Japan’s mail for
over a year. From these intercepts it was clear that Japan intended to expand to
the southwest
(Singapore, a British possession), the south (the Philippines), the east (striki
ng at Pearl Harbor), or
all three. A final, failed negotiation included an offer to resume full trade wi
th Japan in return for
her withdrawal from China, after which the imperial fleets raised anchor, placin
g the 7th Fleet at
Pearl Harbor in the center of Yamamoto’s crosshairs.
“A Date Which Will Live in Infamy”
Japanese strategists began planning an air attack on the U.S. naval base in Hawa
ii in the summer of
1941. Japanese preparations for the Pearl Harbor strike comprised only one third
of the overall
military operation, which included two simultaneous invasions of the Philippines
and Malaysia.
Any one of the three prongs of attack would have been a major military undertaki
ng—especially
for a small island nation with limited resources—but coordination of all three spo
ke volumes about
Japan’s delusion and her desperation. The goal of the ambitious strategy was for n
o less than a
knockout blow aimed at all the remaining allied powers in Asia except for India
and Australia.
Despite the interception of Japanese messages, no one had dreamed that this smal
l island nation,
which had never won a major war against European powers, could execute three sep
arate military
operations spanning thousands of miles and engaging two of the most powerful nat
ions on earth as
well as nearly a dozen regional military forces.
Western intelligence did know that Japanese troops and fleets were on the move s
omewhere. But
where? Most trackers had them headed south, toward Singapore, which led to some
complacency at
Pearl Harbor, where Admiral Husband Kimmel and General Walter Short shared respo
nsibilities
for the defense of the Hawaiian Islands. The officers had never worked out an ef
fective division of
command authority and had failed to schedule appropriate air reconnaissance. Des
pite repeated war
warnings, Kimmel and Short had never put the fleet or airfields on full alert. A
s a result, American
ships were sitting ducks on December seventh.
Japan attacked methodically and with deadly efficiency. Bombers, torpedo planes,
dive bombers—
all covered by Mitsubishi Zero fighter planes—took out American air power, then hi
t the
battleships on “battleship row,” sinking or severely damaging every one. The worst c
asualty, the
USS Arizona, went down in ten minutes with a thousand sailors. Few ships of any
sort escaped
damage of some type. Even civilian quarters suffered collateral damage from the
attack, including
large numbers hit by American antiaircraft rounds that fell back to earth.9
Despite the phenomenal success of the attack, Yamamoto did not achieve total vic
tory because
three key targets, the American aircraft carriers, had been out on maneuvers. Go
ing in, Yamamoto
had expected to lose 30 percent of his entire force—ships included—yet he lost nothi
ng larger than
a midget sub and only a handful of aircraft. In a critical error of judgment, Ya
mamoto took his
winnings and left the table without the carriers. Although unforeseen at the tim
e, all the battleships
except the Arizona would be salvaged and returned to action during the war. More
important, by
leaving the oil storage facilities undamaged, Yamamoto allowed U.S. forces to co
ntinue to operate
out of Hawaii and not San Diego or San Francisco. The attack at Pearl Harbor had
indeed been a
crushing defeat for the United States, but the price at which the Japanese acqui
red their victory
could not be measured in ships or men. An outraged American public had been galv
anized and
united.
Did Roosevelt Have Advance Knowledge About the Pearl Harbor Attack?
Even as the last smoke billowed from the sinking or capsized ships in Hawaii, ma
ny people were
asking how the United States could have been so unprepared. Historian Charles Ta
nsill suggested
that the debacle could only have occurred with Franklin Roosevelt’s foreknowledge.
Clearly, if a
president in possession of advance warning had allowed hundreds of sailors and s
oldiers to die in a
surprise attack, it would have constituted high treason. Why would any chief exe
cutive permit such
a strike?
In his famous book, Back Door to War (1952), Tansill accused Roosevelt of allowi
ng a Japanese
attack at Pearl Harbor to provide the United States with the motivation and just
ification to enter the
war against Hitler in Europe. A number of historians and writers added to the Ta
nsill thesis over the
years, but little new evidence was produced until the 1980s, when John Toland pu
blished Infamy,
wherein he claimed to have located a navy witness who, while on duty in San Fran
cisco, received
transmissions locating the Japanese carriers and forwarded the information to Wa
shington.
Adding to Toland’s revelations, a “Notes and Documents” piece in the American Historic
al Review
disclosed that the FBI had acquired information from an Axis double agent named
Duskow Popov
(“Tricycle”), who had information on a microdot about the attack.10 Although Toland
and others
maintained that Popov’s documents included a detailed plan of the Japanese air att
ack, it did no
such thing. Tricycle’s data dealt almost exclusively with buildings and installati
ons, but had
nothing on ships, aircraft, scouting patterns, or any of the rather important it
ems that one would
expect from a “detailed plan.”11
In 1981, Asian historian Gordon Prange published At Dawn We Slept; following his
death, his
students Donald Goldstein and Katherine Dillon completed his work with new Pearl
Harbor claims
in Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History. The authors found Toland’s mystery sailor
, Robert Ogg,
who emphatically rejected Toland’s assertion that he had said he had intercepted m
assive Japanese
radio traffic. Meanwhile, documents acquired from Japanese archives raised a mor
e serious
problem for the conspiracy theorists because they proved the Japanese fleet had
been under strict
radio silence during the attack voyage to Pearl Harbor.
The controversy refused to go away. In 1999, Robert B. Stinnett’s Day of Deceit re
vived the
argument that Roosevelt had prior knowledge of the attack with important new cod
e-breaking
information. But the crucial pieces of “evidence” that Stinnett employed often prove
d the opposite
of what he claimed. He used precise intelligence terms—code breaking, interception
, translation,
analysis—interchangeably, which produced massive errors: an intercepted document i
s not
necessarily broken, and if intercepted and broken, it may not be translated, and
if intercepted,
broken, and translated, it may not be analyzed for days, weeks, or even years. S
ome of the
intercepts in November 1941 were indeed broken, but not translated or analyzed u
ntil…1945!
The entire argument of the revisionists hinges on the notion that FDR couldn’t get
into the war with
Germany without a pretext. But Roosevelt had already had ample cause, if he’d want
ed it, to ask
for a declaration of war against Germany. Nazi U-boats had sunk American ships,
killed American
sailors, and in all ways shown themselves hostile. Against a nation that had dec
lared war on
Mexico over a handful of cavalry troopers or that had declared war on Spain for
the questionable
destruction of a single ship, Germany had long since crossed the line needed for
a declaration of
war. Despite the isolationist elements in Congress, it is entirely possible that
FDR could have asked
for a declaration of war after the sinking of the Reuben James or other such att
acks. Certainly the
U-boats were not going to stop, and it was only a matter of time before more Ame
ricans died. Pearl
Harbor was a tragedy, but not a conspiracy.
Sources: Charles Beard, President Roosevelt and the Coming of the War (New Haven
, Connecticut:
Yale University Press, 1948); Walter Millis, This Is Pearl! (New York: William M
orrow, 1947);
Charles C. Tansill, Back Door to War (Chicago: Regnery, 1952); Gordon W. Prange
with Donald
M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon, At Dawn We Slept (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1
981); John
Toland, Infamy (New York: Doubleday, 1982); Dusko Popov, Spy/Counterspy (New Yor
k: Grosset
& Dunlap, 1974); Harry Elmer Barnes, “Pearl Harbor After a Quarter of a Century,” Le
ft and
Right, IV (1968); Roberta Wohlstetter, Pearl Harbor (Stanford, California: Stanf
ord University
Press, 1962); Robert B. Stinnett, Day of Deceit (New York: Free Press, 2000).
On December eighth, Roosevelt, appearing before the jointly assembled House and
Senate, called
December 7, 1941, a “date which will live in infamy” as he asked Congress for a decl
aration of war
against Japan. Four days later Germany and Italy declared war on the United Stat
es. With a
declaration of war only against Japan, it appeared to some isolationists that it
still might be possible
to avoid entering the war in Europe. Hitler refused to oblige them and rushed he
adlong at the
United States and the USSR simultaneously.
Indeed, Hitler, at the recommendation of his foreign minister, Joachim von Ribbe
ntrop, had no
intention of allowing the United States to get its declaration of war in ahead o
f his own. “A great
power does not allow itself to be declared war upon,” Ribbentrop purportedly said.
“It declares war
on others.”12 War with Germany had been far closer than many isolationists imagine
d: in May
1941, the Nazis sank the freighter Robin Moor, prompting Roosevelt to extend Ame
rican neutral
waters to Iceland and allow American warships to escort U.S. merchantmen farther
out to sea. A
few months later, German vessels attacked the USS Greer; and in October 1941 the
y torpedoed the
destroyer Kearney, which managed to make it back to port. The House of Represent
atives voted the
next day to arm American merchant ships. Then, on Halloween, Germans sank the de
stroyer
Reuben James, killing 115 Americans. At that point, the United States would have
been fully
justified by international law in declaring war on Germany and her allies, but R
oosevelt was still
unconvinced that the American public would support him. Yet even if Japan had no
t bombed Pearl
Harbor, it is inconceivable that tensions with Nazi Germany would have subsided.
Rather, more
casualties and direct German attacks would have provoked the United States into
declaring war on
the Axis powers anyway.
Congress had consistently failed to appreciate the danger posed by both the Nazi
regime and the
perception of U.S. weakness propagated in the Japanese mind by Hitler’s repeated i
ncursions.
Americans came to war with Hitler reluctantly and only as a last resort. At no t
ime prior to Pearl
Harbor did anywhere close to a majority of citizens think the events in Europe s
ufficiently
threatened U.S. national interests. Roosevelt, on the other hand, recognized bot
h the moral evil of
Hitler and the near-term threat to American security posed by Nazi Germany. Howe
ver, he
nevertheless refused to sacrifice his personal popularity to lead the United Sta
tes into the war
sooner, knowing full well it would come eventually—and at a higher cost.
Had the United States deliberately and forcefully entered the war in Europe earl
ier, on its own
timetable, perhaps some of Hitler’s strategic victories (and, possibly, much of th
e Holocaust) might
have been avoided. For example, American aircraft would have already been in Eng
land by 1940,
meaning that the Battle of Britain would not have been close. Moreover, a Europe
an buildup almost
certainly would have brought the Pacific military forces into a higher stage of
alert. And, most
important, an American presence well before 1942 might have been just enough to
force Hitler into
scrapping the German invasion of Russia.
Isolationist critics from the Right have argued that American entry in Europe wa
s needless even
after Pearl Harbor and that the Soviets had all but won the war by the time the
United States got
involved in any significant way.13 This view not only distorts battlefield reali
ties—the Eastern
Front was not decided completely until after Kursk in 1943—but it also ignores the
fact that
American aid may have tipped the balance for the Soviets between 1942 and 1944.
Moreover, it
should be noted that Stalin offered to negotiate with Hitler in December 1942, a
full year after Pearl
Harbor, and again in the summer of 1943—hardly the act of a man confident of victo
ry on the field.
Stalin was as suspicious of Churchill and Roosevelt as he was of Hitler, and he
feared that the
Anglo-American powers would encourage a Nazi-Soviet war of exhaustion.14 Certain
ly the
Soviets wore out the Wehrmacht in the east, and they absorbed a disproportionate
amount of Nazi
resources in some areas, especially men and tanks. But those contributions have
to be seen in the
context of the entire conflict, and not just in the battles on the Eastern Front
. When the bigger
picture is revealed, it is clear the U.S. economy won the war.
Putting the Ax to the Axis
Unlike during the Vietnam conflict some thirty years later, in December 1941 the
only Americans
lying about their ages or searching for sympathetic doctors for notes were tryin
g to fake their way
into the armed forces. Men too old and boys too young to be eligible for service
managed to slip
past the recruitment authorities. It was easy to do with more than 16 million ma
les enlisting or
being drafted into the armed forces. Another 245,000 women in the Women’s Army Cor
ps
(WACS) and WAVES (Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Services, which was the
women’s naval auxiliary created largely through the efforts of Senator Margaret Ch
ase Smith),
supported the effort. Other women, such as actress Ida Lupino, joined the ambula
nce and nurse
corps, and Julia Child, later to be a cooking guru, served with the Office of St
rategic Services in
Ceylon. Ethnic minorities like the Japanese and blacks, discriminated against at
home, brushed off
their mistreatment to enlist, winning battle honors. The Japanese American 442nd
Regimental
Combat Team became the most decorated American division of the war, and included
future U.S.
Senator Daniel K. Inouye, who lost an arm in combat. The all-black 99th Fighter
Squadron saw
action in Italy.
Celebrities of the day did not hesitate to enter the armed forces. Even before P
earl Harbor, many
well-known personalities had signed up for the reserves, including Major Cecil B
. DeMille,
Brigadier General Cornelius Vanderbilt III, and Colonel David Sarnoff. And once
war broke out,
rather than seeking safety behind the lines, a number of movie stars and sons of
elite families gave
up their prestige and the protections of wealth to actively pursue combat assign
ments. Theodore
Roosevelt Jr. quit his job in 1941 to go on active duty as a colonel and later s
aw action on DDay
.15 Academy Award winner Van Heflin joined the army as an artilleryman; televisi
on’s
Gunsmoke hero, James Arness, was in the army and wounded at Anzio, earning a Bro
nze Star;
Eddie Albert, wounded at Tarawa, also earned a Bronze Star rescuing wounded and
stranded
marines from the beach; Get Smart’s Don Adams, a marine, contracted malaria at Gua
dalcanal;
Charleton Heston was a radio operator on B-25 bombers; Art Carney, sidekick of J
ackie Gleason
on The Honeymooners, suffered a shrapnel wound at Saint-Lô before he could fire a
shot. Ernest
Borgnine, who later would play fictional Lieutenant Commander McHale in McHale’s N
avy, had
already served in the navy for twelve years before World War II; Lucille Ball’s fa
mous Cuban
husband, Desi Arnaz, was offered a commission in the Cuban navy, where, as an of
ficer, he would
be relatively safe on patrol in the Caribbean. He refused, choosing instead to e
nlist in the U.S.
Navy, where he was rejected on the grounds that he was a noncitizen. Nevertheles
s, he could be
drafted—and was—and despite failing the physical, went into the infantry, where he i
njured his
knees. He finished the war entertaining troops.
Other young men went on to literary or theatrical fame after the war. Novelist N
orman Mailer went
ashore with his infantry regiment in the Philippines, and western writer Louis L’A
mour hit the
beaches with his tank destroyer on D-Day. Alex Haley, later a famous novelist, s
erved in the U.S.
Coast Guard; and author William Manchester was wounded and left for dead, recove
ring after five
months in a hospital. Tony Bennet, serving as an infantryman in Europe, got his
first chance to sing
while in the army. Men who later would become Hollywood stars, including William
Holden,
Charles Bronson, Jack Lemmon, and Karl Malden, signed up. Holden flew bombers ov
er Germany;
Ed McMahon was a U.S. Marine fighter pilot; and George Kennedy served under Gene
ral George
Patton. Football great Tom Landry, coach of the Dallas Cowboys, flew B-17s with
the Eighth
Army; and baseball legend Yogi Berra served as a gunner on a navy bombardment sh
ip. More than
a few became heroes. Future director Mel Brooks fought at the Battle of the Bulg
e; Tony Curtis
served on a submarine; and an underage Telly Savalas, later known for his televi
sion cop-show role
as Kojak, was wounded and received the Purple Heart. Academy Award winner Lee Ma
rvin
assaulted more than twenty beaches in the Pacific with his marine unit, and afte
r one battle, only
Marvin and 5 others out of 247 had survived. Walter Matthau, famous for his role
s in The Odd
Couple and The Bad News Bears, won an impressive six Silver Stars as an air forc
e gunner. None
was more decorated than Audie Murphy, who became an actor after the war based on
his incredible
career. Murphy was the most decorated soldier in World War II, having been award
ed the Medal of
Honor and twenty-seven other medals as well as the French Legion of Honor and th
e Croix de
Guerre.
Others, such as directors John Huston and John Ford, entered combat situations a
rmed with movie
cameras instead of guns, shooting war documentaries for propaganda. Captain Rona
ld Reagan
commanded a Hollywood documentary film company that, among its varied duties, fi
lmed the
aftermath of the European war, including the Nazi death camps. Science fiction w
riter Ray
Bradbury honed his skills writing patriotic radio commercials. Jazz great Al Hir
t entertained troops
as part of the 82nd Army Band, and bandleader Glenn Miller, who had enlisted in
the air force and
was commissioned a captain, died while flying to Europe to entertain troops. Eve
n civilians, at
home or in service at the front, occasionally made the ultimate sacrifice, as wh
en actress Carole
Lombard died in an airplane crash on a tour selling war bonds. Ironically, one o
f the heroes most
frequently associated with the military, John Wayne, was not drafted because of
his large family,
although he made several war movies that boosted morale immeasurably.
Movie studios, including Walt Disney’s cartoon factory, which had made a war hero
out of Donald
Duck, increased production fivefold. Under the tight control of wartime bureaucr
ats, costs for
producing a typical film dropped from $200 per foot of film shot to $4 as the Di
sney studios
released a torrent of training projects for the military: Dental Health, Operati
on of the C-1 Auto
Pilot, High Level Precision Bombing, and Food Will Win the War for civilians. (R
eagan was
prominent in many of these military training films.) Probably the most successfu
l war cartoon ever,
Der Fuehrer’s Face (1943), with Donald Duck, won an Academy Award. The music indus
try
kicked in too. New York’s song-writing mecca, Tin Pan Alley, cranked out propagand
a ditties like
“It’s Our Pacific, to Be Specific” and “Let’s Put the Ax to the Axis” as well as some racis
tunes
like “When the Cohens and the Kellys Meet the Little Yellow Bellies” and “Let’s Find the
Fellow
Who Is Yellow and Beat Him ’til He’s Red, White, and Blue.” Germans, as they had been
in World
War I, were routinely portrayed as Huns, replete with blooddrenched fangs and be
arskin clothes.
Yet it would be a mistake to overly criticize the necessity of such propaganda.
Americans, as a rule,
were not natural-born killers. Once aroused, the essence of civic militarism pro
duced a warrior who
displayed individuality, determination to stay alive (as opposed to die glorious
ly), and constant
adaptation to circumstances (as opposed to unbending obedience to doctrine).16
Many of these young men came from a generation whose parents had never seen an o
cean, and the
longest journey they had ever made was from one state to another. They came from
a time when
homes did not even have locks on the doors. Most knew little of fascism, except
that they
instinctively hated Hitler—the “paper hangin’ son of a bitch,” Patton called him. The sn
eak attack
on Pearl Harbor struck deeply at their sense of right and wrong and, in their wa
y of thinking, put
the Nazis, Italians, and Japanese all in the same category.17
America’s soldiers were not just motivated; they were also the best educated in th
e world and
arrived at induction centers highly skilled. The U.S. Army put soldiers into the
field who often
were well versed in the use of motor vehicles and mechanized farm implements, me
aning that they
could not only drive them, but could often rebuild and repair them with little t
raining. Prior to the
war, America had had a motor vehicle ratio of four people to one car, whereas Ge
rmany’s ratio was
thirty-seven to one. The GI was four to seven times more likely to have driven a
motor vehicle than
any of his allies or opponents.18 Americans were the highest paid and best fed s
oldiers in the war,
and they received, by far, the best medical attention of any army in history. Wh
en that was
combined with the good—and improving—training they received, American warriors posse
ssed
decided advantages. They soon benefited from an industrial tsunami from the capi
talists back
home.
Democracy’s Industrial Tsunami
Aside from the obvious self-sacrifice of the soldiers and sailors who fought, th
e key contribution to
winning the war came not from Hollywood or Tin Pan Alley, but from American indu
stry, which
had unleashed a tidal wave of war materials, paid for with $80 billion from Uncl
e Sam.
“Capitalism, U.S.A.” buried the fascists and imperialists under a mountain of fighte
r planes, tanks,
and ships. Yankee factories turned out war materials at nearly incomprehensible
levels: 221,000
aircraft and more than 1,500 warships, doubling the entire military production o
f the Axis powers
combined by 1944. Indeed, American business produced almost as much as all other
nations of the
world combined. From 1941 to 1945, the U.S. Navy commissioned 18 fleet carriers,
9 light
carriers, 77 escort carriers, 8 battleships (and repaired all the battleships da
maged at Pearl Harbor
except the Arizona), 46 cruisers, 349 destroyers, 420 destroyer escorts, and mor
e than 200
submarines. In the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the United States had more destroyers d
eployed than the
Japanese had carrier aircraft!
Obviously, the United States had an enormous advantage in sheer economic capabil
ity, even
despite the Great Depression. American gross domestic product (1990 prices) topp
ed $1.4 trillion,
whereas Japan, Germany, and Italy mustered barely half that. But whereas Germany
had had five
years to gear up for war, and Italy had had close to fifteen, the United States
had accelerated to its
phenomenal production capacity within a matter of months. Between 1942 and 1943,
GDP rose
nearly $200 billion—more than Japan’s entire economy.
After only a year of war, the United States had gone from a handful of fighter p
lanes to 78,000,
from 900 tanks to 65,000, and from 544 major naval vessels to 4,500.19 American
shipyards turned
out 16 warships for every 1 Japan built. The Soviet Union—often held up as the mod
el of wartime
production—turned out 80,000 fewer aircraft than did the United States, and well i
nto mid-1943,
the “top Soviet Aces flew Lend-Lease aircraft such as the P-39 Airacobra.”20
The relationship between Russian blood and American dollars in the “grand alliance”
cannot be
overstated. Both were necessary in the watershed year 1943. Although the German
army had been
blunted at Moscow and Stalingrad, the outcome was not sealed until Kursk and, on
the Western
Front, until the invasion of Sicily, when Hitler was finally forced to fight a t
wo-front war. Thus, it
behooves us to consider the mind-boggling war production of the United States as
part and parcel
of the Soviet offensives of 1943. For example, by that time, the bulk of German
air power in the
East had been withdrawn to defend against Allied bombing in the West, and it is
no surprise that
only after German air power had been siphoned off to contest the Anglo-American
bombers did the
Soviets consistently win large offensive armored battles.
It is true that Soviet industry made plenty of tanks. But by the pivotal battle
of Kursk in July 1943,
some 20 percent of Soviet armored brigades already consisted of Lend-Lease Ameri
can-made
tanks.21 Trucks and other vehicles proved even more important: by June 1943 the
USSR had
received 90,000 trucks and 17,000 jeeps, again giving the Red Army important adv
antages. At
Kursk, one new study has concluded, “Lend-Lease trucks and jeeps made a major cont
ribution,”
and even today, “Studebaker” and “Villies” (Willys) are familiar words to Russian vetera
ns of the
Great Patriotic War.22 Then there was the American contribution of 100-octane av
iation fuel,
which by itself improved the performance of Soviet aircraft against the Germans,
and waterproof
telephone wire, which the Soviets could not produce and which they relied on hea
vily.23 Despite
the reputation of the Red Army for turning out armored vehicles, the United Stat
es nearly matched
the USSR in tank/personnel carrier output (99,500 to 102,800), while constructin
g some 8,700
more ships—all the while secretly pouring seemingly limitless funds into the Manha
ttan Project’s
development of the atomic bomb.
Once American businesses saw that FDR would not undercut them with government po
licies, they
responded with mind-boggling speed. Uncle Sam came up with the money by borrowin
g both from
current citizens and from generations unborn; then it provided the buildings (th
rough the Defense
Plant Corporation); then it got out of the way, authorizing the titans of busine
ss to make good arms
and fast ships. Newport News, Litton Ingalls, and other shipbuilders could put a
completed aircraft
carrier in the water fifteen months from keel laying (compared to nearly ten yea
rs in 1999); and a
tank rolled off the assembly line in less than five hours, fabricated from scrat
ch. Perhaps the most
miraculous construction efforts came in the form of Liberty Ships, the simple fr
eighters designed to
carry food, munitions, and other supplies in convoys to England.
Henry Kaiser, who had supervised construction of the Boulder Dam, received an or
der from
Roosevelt to build ships as fast as possible, regardless of cost. He opened seve
ral California
shipyards, importing inner-city workers from Chicago, Detroit, and the East Coas
t, paying them the
highest wages. Aware that the ship workers would have no place to live, Kaiser d
eveloped the
world’s first modular homes, which allowed him to attract employees, and he provid
ed day care for
the children of working mothers. Once shipyards had begun production, Kaiser was
able to slash
the building time of a Liberty Ship from 196 days to 27, setting a record in tur
ning out the Robert
E. Peary, from its keel laying to christening, in 4.5 days. By 1943, the Kaiser
yards were spitting
out a Liberty Ship nearly every 2 days.
The early Kaiser ships were not given the best steel, however, because of milita
ry requirements that
sent the higher-quality steel to “pure” warships. As a result, several of the first
Liberty Ships
literally split in half at sea, especially on runs to Murmansk. Concerned invest
igators found no fault
with the Kaiser production techniques, but they learned that the cheaper grade o
f steel mandated by
the government became exceedingly brittle in icy water. Upon learning of the bri
ttleness problem,
Kaiser adopted a simple solution, which was to weld an additional huge steel sup
port beam on each
side of a ship’s hull, thereby ending that particular problem. Indeed, Kaiser’s orig
inal innovation
had been to weld the Liberty Ships instead of using rivets because welding took
far less time and
permitted crews to construct entire sections in a modular process, literally hoi
sting entire
prefabricated deckhouses into position on a finished hull.
Another shipbuilder, Andrew Jackson Higgins, designed new shallow-draft wooden b
oats
specifically for invading the sandy beaches and coral atolls in the Pacific. Hig
gins, who hailed from
land-locked Nebraska, had built fishing and pleasure craft before the war. When
the war started, the
navy found it had a desperate need for Higgins boats, which featured a flat lip
on the bow that
dropped down as the vessel reached shore, affording the troops a ramp from which
to run onto the
beach. After the war a reporter asked Dwight Eisenhower who had proved most valu
able to the
Allies’ victory, fully expecting Ike would name generals like George Patton or Dou
glas MacArthur
or a naval commander like Admiral Chester Nimitz. Instead, Eisenhower said Higgi
ns was “the
man who won the war.”
Without question, though, countless Americans played a part and voluntarily woul
d have done even
more. A Roper poll in 1941, prior to Pearl Harbor, showed that 89 percent of Ame
rican men would
spend one day a week training for homeland defense and that 78 percent of all Am
ericans would
“willingly” pay a sales tax on everything and cut gasoline consumption by a third in
the event of
war.24 By 1945, pollster George Gallup had found that more than two thirds of Am
ericans thought
they had not made any “real sacrifice” for the war, and 44 percent of the respondent
s in a 1943
Gallup poll said that the government had not gone “far enough” in asking people to m
ake sacrifices
for the war (40 percent said the government’s demands were “about right.”)25 Despite t
he largest
commitment in history by both the U.S. civilian and military sectors, large numb
ers of Americans
thought they still could do more!
In reality, civilians did far more than they imagined. Important equipment like
the jeep came from
civilian-submitted designs, not government bureaucracy. Farmers pushed their pro
ductivity up 30
percent, and average citizens added 8 million more tons of food to the effort th
rough backyard
“victory” gardens. Scrap drives became outlets for patriotic frenzy, and a thirteen-
year-old in
Maywood, Illinois, collected more than 100 tons of paper from 1942 to 1943.26 So
me 40 percent
of the nation’s retirees returned to the workplace. It was as close to a total-war
effort as the United
States has ever seen.
Is This Trip Really Necessary?
The war allowed Roosevelt to accelerate implementation of some of his New Deal g
oals. In 1941,
FDR proposed a 99.5 percent marginal tax rate on all incomes over $100,000. The
measure failed,
but undaunted, he issued an executive order to “tax all income over $25,000 at the
astonishing rate
of 100 percent.”27 Other insidious changes in taxation found their way into the co
de, the most
damaging of which involved the introduction in July 1943 of withholding taxes fr
om the paychecks
of employees. That subtle shift, described sympathetically by one text as an “inno
vative feature”
where “no longer would taxpayers have to set aside money to pay their total tax bi
ll…at the end of
the year,” in fact allowed the government to conceal the total tax burden from the
public and make
it easier to steadily raise taxes, not just during the war, but for decades.28 I
t was that burden of
laying aside the money that had focused the public’s attention on taxation levels.
Subsequently,
many limited-government critics have argued that the single most effective chang
e in regaining
control of the bloated tax code would be to abolish withholding and require that
all individuals
make a one-time tax payment per year, due the last week in October—right before th
e November
elections.
When it came to applying taxes and regulations, however, the administration took
care not to
unnecessarily cripple or alienate business leaders and entrepreneurs. Some obvio
us restrictions
were necessary. War-critical products such as oil, gasoline, cotton, rubber, tin
, and aluminum were
rationed. (A popular phrase of the day, and one that made its way into most cart
oons and movies,
was “Is this trip really necessary?”) Various food items, especially meat and coffee
, also went on
the ration lists. Civilians enthusiastically pitched in with tin can drives, rou
nded up mountains of
old tires for recycling, and collected used toothpaste tubes for their aluminum
content.
To manage the war production and procurement system, Roosevelt named Sears, Roeb
uck
president Donald M. Nelson as the head of the War Production Board (WPB), which
coordinated
the effort. The WPB immediately ordered all civilian car and truck production ha
lted to convert the
factories to the manufacturing of tanks and armored personnel carriers. In theor
y, the WPB was to
have exercised the same types of powers that the WIB under Bernard Baruch had in
World War I.
But Nelson was not Baruch, and the demands of this war were much steeper.
Realizing the nation needed a single source of direction for the production effo
rt, in 1943 Roosevelt
created the Office of War Management (OWM), headed by former Supreme Court Justi
ce (and
FDR crony) James Byrnes. Byrnes soon demonstrated such great access to the presi
dent that people
referred to him as the president’s assistant. Byrnes got the job done, allowing la
rger companies to
make as much as they could, with profits tied strictly to numbers of units produ
ced. The
government had little regard for the cost of specific items—only performance and d
elivery
mattered. The United States was rich enough to survive postwar debt and inflatio
n, but there would
be no surviving a victorious Hitler.
War costs demanded the largest loan the American government had ever received fr
om its people,
in the form of war bonds. Bond drives resulted in a deluge of money for the war.
Yet it paled beside
the demands for cash—$8 billion a month!—to combat the Axis. Between 1941 and 1945 t
he
national debt skyrocketed, from $48 billion to $247 billion. As a share of GNP m
easured in
constant dollars, this represented a 120–fold increase over precrash 1929 debt lev
els.29 This debt
growth illustrated one reason isolationsists were wary of war in the first place
, and it also
confirmed their fears about the rise of a permanent engorged bureaucracy.30
In another area, that of domestic surveillance and intelligence gathering, peopl
e sacrificed liberty
for the war effort. Keeping tabs on the enemy and foreign agents led the governm
ent to nearly triple
the budget of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in just two years. Domestic su
rveillance increased
as the attorney general authorized extensive wiretapping in cases of espionage.
A new propaganda
agency, the Office of War Information, coordinated the information campaign. The
Joint Chiefs of
Staff also needed information on the enemy, so they formed the Office of Strateg
ic Services (OSS),
which would be the forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency, to gather inte
lligence and to
conduct psychological warfare against the enemy. After Americans began to take l
arge numbers of
enemy prisoners, the United States had to establish camps in the Arizona desert
to house the POWs.
(One U-boat commander, determined to escape, broke out of the Papago POW compoun
d near
Scottsdale, Arizona, only to find himself confronted with desert as far as his e
yes could see. He was
recaptured after holing up in the dry Arizona buttes for several days.)
Ironically, the very traits often denounced by the New Dealers—individual effort,
self-reliance, and
capitalism—were now needed to fight the war. Government-backed science, however, d
id succeed
in delivering what no individual could, the “ultimate weapon,” although the atomic b
omb remained
one of the best-kept secrets of the war until August 1945.
The Gadget
Experiments with splitting the atom had taken place in England in 1932, and by t
he time Hitler
invaded Poland, most of the world’s scientists understood that a man-made atomic e
xplosion could
be accomplished. How long before the actual fabrication of such a device could o
ccur, however, no
one knew. Roosevelt had already received a letter from one of the world’s leading
pacifists, Albert
Einstein, urging him to build a uranium bomb before the Nazis did. FDR set up a
Uranium
Committee in October 1939, which gained momentum less than a year later when Bri
tish scientists,
fearing their island might fall to the Nazis, arrived in America with a black bo
x containing British
atomic secrets.31 After mid-1941, when it was established, the Office of Scienti
fic Research and
Development (OSRD), headed by Vannevar Bush, was investigating the bomb’s feasibil
ity.
Kept out of the loop by Bush, who feared he was a security risk, Einstein used h
is influence to
nudge FDR toward the bomb project. Recent evidence suggests Einstein’s role in bri
nging the
problem to Roosevelt’s attention was even greater than previously thought.32 Ironi
cally, as
Einstein’s biographer has pointed out, without the genius’s support, the bombs would
have been
built anyway, but not in time for use against Japan. Instead, with civilian and
military authorities
insufficiently aware of the vast destructiveness of such weapons in real situati
ons, they may well
have been used in Korea, at a time when the Soviet Union would have had its own
bombs for
counterattack, thus offering the terrifying possibility of a nuclear conflict ov
er Korea. By wielding
his considerable influence in 1939 and 1940, Einstein may have saved innumerable
lives, beyond
those of the Americans and Japanese who would have clashed in Operation Olympic,
the invasion
of the Japanese home islands.33
No one knew the status of Hitler’s bomb project—only that there was one. As late as
1944,
American intelligence was still seeking to assassinate Walter Heisenberg (head o
f the Nazi bomb
project), among others, unaware at the time that the German bomb was all but kap
ut. In total
secrecy, then, the Manhattan Project, placed under the U.S. Army’s Corps of Engine
ers and begun
in the Borough of Manhattan, was directed by a general, Leslie Groves, a man wit
h an appreciation
for the fruits of capitalism. He scarcely blinked at the incredible demands for
material, requiring
thousands of tons of silver for wiring, only to be told, “In the Treasury [Departm
ent] we do not
speak of tons of silver. Our unit is the troy ounce.”34 Yet Groves got his silver
and everything else
he required. Roosevelt made sure the Manhattan Project lacked for nothing, altho
ugh Roosevelt
himself died before seeing the terrible fruition of the Manhattan Project’s deadly
labors.
War Strategy: Casablanca
The intense concern both Roosevelt and the British displayed over producing the
bomb reflected
their deepest fear that Hitler’s Germany would soon develop its own weapon of mass
destruction.
They did not know that Germany would soon begin plans for the A-9/A-10 100–ton
intercontinental rocket. In retrospect, if the intercontinental rocket had been
mated to atomic
warheads, the war might have ended much differently. Allied spies were unaware o
f other potential
threats to the U.S. mainland: Germany flew the four-engine Me-264 Amerika bomber
in 1942,
which later was converted into a jet bomber capable of 500-miles-per-hour speeds
. The Nazis had
already flown a Ju-290 reconnaissance plane to New York and back, taking picture
s and proving
that a bomber could attack New York. With their fears of known German technology
combined
with Stalin’s pleas for a second front, Churchill and Roosevelt knew that they had
to focus on
defeating Germany, not Japan, first.
On New Year’s Day, 1942, the representatives of twenty-six nations at war with the
Axis powers
signed a Declaration of the United Nations based on the principles of the Atlant
ic Charter. They
promised not to make a separate peace with any of the Axis powers and agreed to
defeat Germany
first. That decision only formalized what British prime minister Winston Churchi
ll and Roosevelt
had already concluded in private talks. Churchill, one of the few Western leader
s to fully appreciate
the barbarity and evil of Soviet communism, repeatedly expressed his concerns to
FDR. But the
president, based in part on the naïve reports of his ambassador, Joseph Davies, tr
usted Stalin to
behave rationally; thus Churchill, who desperately needed American war matériel, c
ould do little to
talk Roosevelt into a more sober assessment of Russia’s overall aims. In January 1
943, Churchill,
Roosevelt, and the Combined Chiefs of Staff met at Casablanca to discuss war str
ategy. Stalin did
not attend. The meeting produced the defeat-Germany-first decision and directed
the resources to
the European war. It also resulted in a commitment on the part of the Allies to
demand
unconditional surrender from all Axis parties.35
Consequently, the Anglo-American leaders agreed that nearly 80 percent of Americ
a’s war
capacity would go toward the European theater and, especially in the early days,
the bombing
campaign aimed to soften up Germany for the necessary amphibious invasion. Churc
hill saw
bombing as a way to draw in the United States and use her massive economic outpu
t, but at the
same time minimize the loss of American lives and avoid early public hostility.
Since the prospects for invading the European mainland in 1942 were remote, abou
t all Britain and
America could do while building up was launch devastating air strikes on German
manufacturing,
especially on those industries related to aircraft production. The goal was to e
nsure total
domination of the skies over whatever landing area the Allies would choose at so
me future point.
Much debate has ensued over the supposed ineffectiveness of the air campaign tha
t dropped
between 1.5 and 2.6 million tons of bombs (depending on which aircraft are inclu
ded in the survey)
on Germany and related European targets. Many analysts have labeled strategic bo
mbing a failure.
It is true that Germany’s production actually increased between 1942 and 1944, and
bombing was
costly, in both lives and money. Several factors must be weighed, however. Nazi
production
increased because until late in the war Hitler had ordered his production chief
Albert Speer to keep
German civilian life as normal as possible. This meant that Germany retained exc
ess capacity in her
factories until near the end, having never put the nation on a total-war footing
. Some of the
continued buildup during the bombing reflected not a failure of bombing, but of
Germany’s
unwillingness to fully mobilize earlier.
Second, in the early stages of the bombing campaign, neither Great Britain nor t
he United States
had fighter planes with enough range to escort the bombers, so raids were conduc
ted over enemy
skies amid swarms of Luftwaffe aircraft, resulting in substantial losses. The Un
ited States agreed to
fly missions during the day, based in part on the availability of the superior (
and secret) Norden
bombsight, which allowed the Americans to engage in pinpoint bombing as opposed
to area or
carpet bombing.36 That meant the loss of American aircraft and life would be hig
her than that of
the British, who bombed at night. B-17 Flying Fortress bombers began regular rai
ds on European
targets in August 1942, striking targets in France. Then, in January 1943, the E
ighth Army Air
Force began missions against Germany itself.37 Even when flying in tight box for
mations, B-17s
suffered tremendous losses, especially when out of escort range. Nevertheless, G
ermany had to
commit increasingly greater resources to countering the bombers, thus diverting
crucial resources
from antitank tactical aircraft for the Eastern Front.
Despite the high cost in men and planes, the strategic bombing campaign achieved
a decisive
victory almost from its inception. Surprisingly, even the U.S. government’s own “Str
ategic
Bombing Survey” after the war tended to obscure the overwhelming success in the sk
ies. In
retrospect the devastation caused by Allied bombing, and its key role in the war
, is clear. First,
German aircraft were siphoned away from the Eastern Front, where they could have
made the
difference against Russian tanks. Second, the bombing hindered the Third Reich’s w
ar production,
especially of transport and oil, and there is no way of telling how many more ai
rcraft, submarines,
or tanks could have been produced without the bombing. Germany tied up nearly 20
percent of its
nonagricultural workforce in air defense activities, and bombing reduced reserve
s of aviation gas
by 90 percent. This represented millions of combat troops and civilians, not to
mention pilots, who
were pinned down by part-time defense duty. Existing statistics may even substan
tially understate
the percentage of workers absorbed by the bombing because many were foreign slav
es and POWs.
Rail transportation—absolutely critical for getting larger Tiger tanks to the Russ
ian front—
plummeted by 75 percent in a five-month period because of the impact of air powe
r.38
Third, even before the long-range fighter aircraft appeared on the scene in 1943
, the Luftwaffe had
lost large numbers of fighter planes in its attempts to defend against bomber at
tacks. Every time a
Messerschmitt went down, however, it took with it a pilot; and although most Ger
man pilots bailed
out over friendly territory, not all survived. Pilot training took years, placin
g a huge burden on the
Luftwaffe when it had to send up inexperienced youngsters to stop the waves of b
ombers over
German skies. That had a cascading effect: inexperienced pilots were easier to s
hoot down. In
short, the strategic bombing campaign worked more effectively than anyone had dr
eamed. By June
6, 1944, in the skies over Normandy on D-Day, the Allies could put eleven thousa
nd aircraft over
the battlefield. The Germans responded with two, a pair of desperate Messerschmi
tt pilots who
made a single pass over Normandy before fleeing with the satisfaction that “the Lu
ftwaffe has had
its day!”39
“Remember Bataan!”
But the road to D-Day was long and rugged. Despite the strategic concern with Hi
tler, most
Americans had turned their attention first, in 1942, to events in the Pacific, w
here Japan continued
to crush opposition. Singapore, Britain’s powerful naval base in Malaysia, fell in
February 1942,
when Japanese armies cut off the city’s water supplies, having used bicycles to ne
gotiate the dense
impregnable jungle. When they arrived, they were short on food and water, and th
ey took the base
largely through bluff and luck. Moreover, the Japanese soldiers only had a hundr
ed rounds of
ammunition per man left. A vigorous defense of the city would have rendered Gene
ral Tomoyuki
Yamashita’s troops virtually unarmed, but the legend of the invincible Japanese so
ldier already had
started to set in, and the British surrendered.
By that time, Japan had eliminated virtually all Allied naval forces east of Pea
rl Harbor. The British
battleships Repulse and Prince of Wales had left Singapore, only to be destroyed
by air strikes in
December. Australia to the south and Pearl Harbor to the east lay open to Japane
se invasion, and
Australia found itself hamstrung by its own socialist policies and labor unions,
whose stevedores
“refused to modify their union contracts in order to aid the war effort,” including
clauses that
“allowed the laborers to refuse work when it was raining.”40 American forces in the
Philippines
held out until April ninth, but before the surrender President Roosevelt ordered
the American
commander, General Douglas MacArthur, to relocate in Australia, where, as comman
der in chief of
Allied forces in the Pacific, he organized a more tenacious defense. Following t
he surrender of the
American island bastion of Corregidor, some eleven thousand Americans on the Bat
aan Peninsula
were marched inland on hot jungle roads with no food or water. This Bataan Death
March revealed
the Japanese to be every bit as vicious as the Nazis. Japanese soldiers bayonete
d American soldiers
who fell by the wayside or tied them up in barbed wire to be eaten by ants. “Remem
ber Bataan”
and “Remember Pearl Harbor” would soon become the battle cries of GIs who stormed th
e beaches
of Japanese-held islands.
The constant drumbeat of disasters enhanced the image of superhuman Japanese fig
hting forces.
When a Japanese sub surfaced off the coast of Oregon to lob shells harmlessly on
to continental
U.S. soil, American planners anticipated that it indicated an imminent invasion
of San Francisco,
San Diego, or the Los Angeles area. Bunkers were thrown up at Santa Barbara; sky
scrapers in Los
Angeles sported antiaircraft guns on their roofs; and lights on all high-rise bu
ildings were
extinguished or covered at night to make it more difficult for imperial bombers
to hit their targets.
Local rodeo associations and the Shrine Mounted Patrol conducted routine reconna
issance of
mountains, foothills, and deserts, checking for infiltrators. No one could guess
that this shocking
string of victories actually marked the high tide of imperial Japanese success,
not the beginning.
Understanding the psychological impact of the Japanese successes in 1942 is crit
ical to explaining
Roosevelt’s decision to put Japanese American citizens of California, Oregon, and
Washington
State into “relocation camps.” Some 110,000 Japanese Americans, most of them citizen
s, were
removed from their homes and moved to inland centers in Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada,
California,
and Arizona.41 Opponents of the internment of Japanese Americans formed an odd p
olitical mix.
Conservatives included FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who thought the move unnece
ssary, and
Robert Taft of Ohio, who was the only congressman to vote in opposition to the 1
942 bill. Liberal
critics included Supreme Court Justices Felix Frankfurter and Hugo Black and fut
ure Chief Justice
Earl Warren (California’s Republican governor).
Liberal historians have ascribed racist motives to the Japanese American relocat
ion, pointing to the
fact that the same thing was not done to German Americans or Italian Americans o
n the East
Coast.42 In fact, both groups already had been under close scrutiny by the FBI a
nd other agencies,
a holdover policy from World War I, when German Americans had indeed experienced
persecution
and been denied fundamental civil liberties. Yet the comparison of the two is ot
herwise untenable.
Although Germany had for a short time threatened the eastern U.S. coastline, by
1942 the Germans
not only lacked a blue-water fleet, but also had not staged a successful amphibi
ous invasion in two
years. Germany had no aircraft carriers and no troopships. And Germany had certa
inly not
launched an air strike two thousand miles from its home base across an ocean as
had Japan at Pearl
Harbor.
Today, with the benefit of hindsight, most can agree that the relocation of Japa
nese Americans
during World War II was an unfair and mistaken policy. Although the wartime Supr
eme Court
supported Roosvelt’s policy (Executive Order 9066), a subsequent ruling vacated th
e World War II
decision, making the relocation order inoperable (but stopping short of overturn
ing it).
Subsequently, Nisei internees were awarded $1.25 billion in reparations during t
he Reagan
administration. Yet with the benefit of the same hindsight, one must say that th
e relocation was not,
as two historians label it, a policy of “hysterical racial repression.”43 Instead, R
oosevelt took
understandable precautions to protect national security in the face of what most
Americans firmly
believed was an impending attack.
A few contemporary liberal scholars continue to call the Japanese American inter
nment camps
concentration camps. Considering that this same term is also applied to the Nazi
and Japanese
camps, its usage is loaded indeed. In fact, there existed critical and simple di
stinctions between the
two. Can anyone honestly compare the American camps—where perseverant, brave, and
industrious Japanese Americans grew vegetables and flowers, published their own
newspapers,
established schools, and organized glee clubs and Little League baseball teams f
or their children—
to Auschwitz and Bataan? Can anyone forget the brave Nisei men who, despite the
wrongs they
had suffered, left the camps to join and fight bravely in the U.S. Army’s European
theater?
Moreoever, had Germany won the war, does anyone actually believe the inmates in
the Nazi camps
would have been released—let alone paid reparations? The fact that the United Stat
es not only
addressed the constitutional violations with shame, and ultimately attempted to
make restitution
speaks volumes about the fundamental differences in worldviews between America a
nd the Axis.
Yet the constant string of bad news that produced the internment camps, and the
apparent Japanese
invincibility, masked a fatal flaw in the Japanese war mentality. Like other non
-Western cultures,
Japan, despite her rapid modernization in the early twentieth century, had not a
dopted the
fundamentals of a free society that produces westernized soldiers. Bushido, the
warrior code,
combined with the Shinto religion to saddle Japan with a fatal strategy employin
g surprise and
quick strikes—all aimed at forcing the United States to exit the war with a treaty
. Japan did not
understand that it was at war with a westernized democracy with a tradition of c
ivic militarism—an
American nation that fought with intense discipline, yet incorporated the flexib
ility of individuality.
Whereas Japanese admirals went down with their ships, American admirals transfer
red to other
vessels, realizing that long after their ships were gone, the navy would still n
eed their talent. Junior
officers of all ranks respectfully criticized war plans and offered suggestions,
providing a selfevaluation
for the armed forces that did not exist in Germany or Japan. Above all, the West
ern way
of war, with its emphasis on the value of the individual and his life, demanded
an unrelenting
campaign to the finish—a war of annihilation or total surrender, without a face-sa
ving honorable
exit.
American victory, however, seemed in the far distance as Japan conquered Burma,
closing the
Burma supply road to China; captured Wake Island; and threatened Port Moresby in
New Guinea.
In its relentless march of conquest, Japan had grabbed more territory and subjug
ated more people
than any other empire in history and, for the most part, had accomplished all th
is in a matter of
months—all for the net cost of one hundred aircraft, a few destroyers, and minor c
asualties in the
army. Threats still remained, however. Destroying the four American aircraft car
riers in the Pacific,
which had escaped the Pearl Harbor massacre, remained a prime strategic objectiv
e for the imperial
fleet, especially after the shocking bombing of Tokyo in April 1942 by Colonel J
immy Doolittle’s
force.
Doolittle, convinced that the United States needed a victory of some sort to reg
ain its confidence,
conceived a mission in which highly modified B-25 bombers (fittingly named the M
itchell bombers
for Colonel Billy Mitchell) would take off from a carrier, bomb Tokyo, then cont
inue on to safe
airfields inside China. Even in the planning stages, Doolittle doubted that most
of his aircraft would
make it to China. Their chances grew slimmer when the Hornet’s task force was disc
overed and
Doolittle had to launch early. Nevertheless, the strike force attacked Tokyo in
broad daylight as
flabbergasted Japanese warlords looked on (described in Ted Lawson’s famous book,
Thirty
Seconds over Tokyo).44 Although some of the crews were killed or captured—three we
re
beheaded after Japanese trials—the raid exceeded American expectations.
Not only did Doolittle’s brave crews buck up morale, but the attack also so incens
ed imperial
planners that it goaded them into reckless attacks in the Coral Sea and near Por
t Moresby. And it
convinced Yamamoto that Midway Island was a strategic target. At the Battle of t
he Coral Sea,
American and Japanese fleets engaged in the first naval engagement in history fo
ught solely by
carrier-launched aircraft. Most history books call the battle a draw, with both
sides losing a carrier
and the American carrier Yorktown suffering what most thought was crippling dama
ge. In fact,
however, the loss of the Yorktown, which headed for an expected two-month repair
job at Pearl
Harbor, left the Allies with exactly two undamaged capital ships—carriers Enterpri
se and Hornet—
in the eastern Pacific to confront the entire Japanese fleet.
Miracle at Midway
What occurred next was nothing short of what historian Gordon Prange termed a “Mir
acle at
Midway.” Determined to force the last two carriers out in the open and destroy the
m, Yamamoto
moved an invasion force toward Midway Island. His real goal, though, was to lure
the American
carriers into positions for destruction. Midway’s airfield had to be eliminated fi
rst. Japanese attacks
failed to knock out the airfield, requiring second strikes. But where were the c
arriers? After
receiving reports from scout planes he had sent in an arc around Midway, Yamamot
o ordered a
second attack on the island. Only one scout had yet to report when Yamamoto roll
ed the dice and
ordered his tactical bombers to rearm for another attack on the island.
In the midst of this tedious reloading process, word arrived from the last scout
: the American
carrier fleet was right below him! At that point, Yamamoto countermanded his pre
vious order and
then instructed the aircraft to prepare for attacking the carriers (which requir
ed a complete change
in the types of armaments on the planes). Apparently out of nowhere, several squ
adrons of
American planes from the two U.S. carriers—launched independently and groping blin
dly for the
Japanese fleet—all converged at the same instant. They all were shot down. This, a
ctually, was
good news in disguise.
In the process of wiping out the attackers, the Japanese Zeros ran out of fuel,
and there was another
delay as they landed and refueled. Suddenly another squadron of American dive-bo
mbers appeared
above the Japanese fleet, which, with no fighter cover and all its planes, bombs
, and fuel sitting
exposed on its carrier decks, was a giant target in a shooting gallery. The Amer
ican aircraft,
astoundingly enough, had come from the Yorktown, her three-month repair job comp
leted in fortyeight
hours by some twelve hundred technicians working nonstop. In a matter of minutes
,
Yorktown’s aircraft had sunk three of the carriers, and a follow-up strike by the
other U.S. carriers’
reserves destroyed the fourth. Yorktown herself was again badly damaged, and was
sunk by a
Japanese sub on her way back to Pearl, but the United States had pulled off its
miracle. Not only
did Japan lose four modern carriers, but more important, more than three hundred
trained pilots
died when the ships sank. Japan never recovered, and in the blink of an eye, the
empire’s hopes for
victory had vanished. The Japanese never won another substantial victory, and ev
en though bloody
fighting continued on many islands, Japan lost the war in June 1942.
The End of the “Thousand-Year Reich”
Germany’s invasion of Russia in May 1941 led to a string of victories as sweeping
and unrelenting
as Japan’s early conquest of Asia, putting Nazi forces just ten miles outside Mosc
ow. In retrospect
the German assault on Russia was a huge blunder, pitting Nazi armies against the
bottomless pit of
Soviet manpower and the vastness of Russian geography. At the time, even many We
hrmacht
officers knew they lacked the resources to pull off such a military operation. G
ermany’s supply
lines were widely overextended; and Hitler’s generals, who had warned him they nee
ded far more
trucks and tanks, displayed astonishment at the incredible size of Russia, which
seemed to swallow
up their army.
Nevertheless, Nazi successes led Stalin’s diplomats to press the British and Ameri
cans for
immediate relief through an invasion of Europe. As of 1942, neither the United S
tates nor Britain
(nor, certainly, the limited Free French or Polish forces that had retreated to
England) had nearly
enough men or matériel in place to achieve a successful invasion of France from th
e English
Channel. In August 1942 the British tried a mini-invasion, called a reconnaissan
ce-in-force, at
Dieppe, which proved a disaster. The debacle did, however, alert Eisenhower to t
he difficulties of
breaching Hitler’s defenses, called the Atlantic Wall, which was a gigantic series
of concrete
barriers, pillboxes, barbed wire, minefields, and tank traps built by tens of th
ousands of slave
laborers and prisoners of war.
Between January 1942 and July 1943, the war continued on another hidden, but abs
olutely vital,
front. Germany’s U-boats had conducted a devastating undersea war against shipping
from
America to Britain and the Soviet Union. Whatever industrial might the United St
ates had was
meaningless if it was unable to get war materials and food to England and Russia
. In January 1942
a German submarine force of only six vessels unleashed a ferocious series of att
acks on ships
leaving U.S. ports. Many were sunk within sight of the coast, their silhouettes
having marked them
as easy targets against the lights of the cities. During a six-month period, a h
andful of U-boats sank
568 Allied ships. Carefully moving his forces around, German Admiral Karl Doenit
z kept the
Allies off balance, returning to the North Atlantic in November 1942, when many
escorts had been
diverted to support the landings in Africa. That month, Doenitz’s U-boats sank 117
ships. This rate
of sinking exceeded even Henry Kaiser’s incredible capacity to build Liberty Ships
.
Finally, under the direction of Admiral Ernest King, a combination of air cover,
added escorts
(including small carrier escorts that could launch antisubmarine aircraft quickl
y), and the convoy
system, the United States slowly turned the U-boat war around. New location devi
ces—sonar and
radar—aided in the search for subs. By May 1943, when thirty U-boats were sunk, th
e Allies had
made the sea-lanes relatively safe. Again, however, only a narrow margin separat
ed victory from
defeat: a handful of subs had come close to winning the war in the Atlantic. Had
Hitler shifted even
a minimal amount of resources to building additional subs in 1941–42, there could
have been
disastrous consequences for the Allies.
In the meantime, Germany’s success in Africa under General Erwin Rommel, the “Desert
Fox,”
had convinced General Dwight D. “Ike” Eisenhower, commander of the Allied forces in
Northwest
Africa, that the British plan for retaking North Africa was both necessary and f
easible. Ike
commanded a multinational force, with the November 1942 landings in Casablanca (
French
Morocco), Algiers, and Oran (French Algeria) now opening a true second front in
Africa. American
and British forces now closed in on Rommel from the west, while British general
Bernard
Montgomery’s Desert Rats of the Eighth Army pushed out from Egypt through Libya in
the east.
Superior American and British naval power pounded the Germans and Italians from
the sea, and
Allied control of the air soon left the Axis forces in Africa reeling, leaving t
hem holding only
Tunisia. Operation Torch ended any hopes Germany had of extending eastward to li
nk up with the
Japanese. In May 1943 more than a quarter of a million German and Italian soldie
rs surrendered,
dealing Hitler his first serious defeat and securing the Mediterranean for Allie
d navies once and for
all. But Allied forces failed to bag the Desert Fox, who escaped to supervise co
nstruction of the
Atlantic Wall that the Allies would have to breach in June 1944.
Germany’s defeat in North Africa technically opened for Stalin his much-desired se
cond front, but
to little avail. Hitler had dedicated no more than a small portion of Germany’s re
sources to Africa.
However, Sicily, and later mainland Italy, now lay open for invasion. In July 19
43, after deceiving
the Germans with an elaborate hoax involving a corpse that washed ashore in Spai
n with
information that the invasion would occur in Greece, Patton and Montgomery invad
ed Sicily at
different spots on the island. The ruse worked: Hitler had reinforced Greece, an
d advancing
American troops encountered enthusiastic Italian citizens who greeted the libera
tors with cries of
“Down with Mussolini!” and “Long live America!” Italian soldiers surrendered by the thou
sands,
and townspeople threw flowers at GIs and gave them wine and bread. If the Italia
n army no longer
posed a threat to the invaders, the German troops that remained proved far more
determined and
skillful, mining roads, blowing up bridges, and otherwise successfully delaying
the Allied advances
long enough to escape back to the Italian mainland.
The defeat on Sicily coincided with increased Italian dissatisfaction with Musso
lini and his
unpopular war, and it occurred at a pivotal moment during the struggle in the Ea
st. Hitler, weighing
whether to continue the offensive at Kursk with reinforcements or to divert them
to Italy, chose the
latter. His concerns about Italian allegiance were well founded. While the force
s were en route,
Allied aircraft dropped propaganda leaflets urging the Italian people to abandon
the regime, and on
July 24, 1943, even the Fascist ministers in the Grand Council agreed to hand co
ntrol of the Italian
army back to the king, Victor Emmanuel III, who accepted Mussolini’s resignation.
Marshal Pietro
Badoglio, Il Duce’s successor, signed an unconditional surrender in September 1943
. Germany
reacted before the Allies could actually occupy the mainland of Italy or before
Mussolini himself
could be captured, but the second front had in fact helped ensure Soviet victory
at Kursk.
The Nazis’ thirteen divisions—more than 100,000 men—arrived, seized Rome and other maj
or
cities, and freed Mussolini from his house arrest, reinstalling him as a puppet
dictator. That meant,
of course, that Hitler was then calling the shots for all of Italy. German gener
al Albert Kesselring,
who directed the German defense, instructed his troops to dig in across the rock
y northern part of
the country and fortify every pass. Patton’s open-field tank tactics would have be
en useless even if
he had remained in command, but an incident in which he slapped soldiers for cow
ardice on two
separate occasions prompted Eisenhower to discipline him. Patton’s temper tantrum
(which his
biographer suggests may have been caused by the general’s own battle fatigue) was
a blessing in
disguise because it saved him from a slow and bloody slog up the Italian coast.
Murderous fire and
dogged resistance by the Germans delayed the American conquest of Italy, which h
ad other
unintended effects. A rapid Italian campaign would have enabled the Anglo-Americ
an forces to
invade the Balkans, preventing Eastern Europe from falling into the grasp of the
Red Army.
Instead, Naples fell on September 30, 1943, after which Allied troops plodded in
ch by inch up the
coast, covering less than a hundred miles by June 1944, when Rome was liberated,
only two days
before the D-Day invasion.
The Longest Day
Thanks to Admiral King’s effective anti-U-boat campaign, and air superiority, by 1
943 the United
States had turned a trickle of supplies, maintained by a tenuous lifeline throug
h the submarine
packs, into a flood that poured through open-ocean pipelines. On any given day,
more than thirty
convoys were at sea with more than 650 merchant ships and 140 escorts. After mid
year, virtually
none of the troopships were lost to torpedoes. This stream of materials and men
had made possible
the invasion of Sicily and Italy, and now it opened the door for the invasion of
France.
All along, Roosevelt and Churchill, despite their hopes for a quick surge up the
coast of Italy, knew
that talk of the “soft underbelly of Europe” was just that, and an invasion of Franc
e by sea was
necessary. Planners had concluded that an invasion could only occur during summe
r months, given
the tides along the beaches at Normandy where the Allies wanted to land and the
weather that
would permit air cover. In December 1943, Roosevelt and Churchill appointed Gene
ral Eisenhower
commander of the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), headqu
artered in
London. As a masterful diversion, Patton, who had been languishing in Eisenhower’s
doghouse
because of his Sicilian slaps, was ordered to set up a vast—and completely phony—“army”
poised
to attack the Pasde-Calais, exactly where Hitler had determined the Allies would
strike. But Ike had
other ideas. The real invasion was to occur two hundred miles away, on the beach
es of Normandy,
where there was more room and fewer German ports or defenses. Operation Overlord
involved
more than 1.6 million American soldiers as well as British, Canadians, Poles, an
d Free French.
In retrospect, the invasion seemed destined for success from the outset: the All
ies owned the air and
sea-lanes; they vastly outnumbered the defenders—some of whom were the unlikeliest
of
conscripts (including a handful of Korean POWs)—and they had the French and Belgia
n resistance
movements to assist behind the lines. At the time, however, the invasion present
ed countless
dangers and could have collapsed at any of a number of points. Lingering in the
minds of Allied
planners was the Canadian disaster at Dieppe and the ill-fated landing at Anzio.
Churchill worried
about another potential catastrophe, perhaps a new Dunkirk, and Ike’s own advisers
estimated the
odds of success at no better than even.45
Nevertheless, the Allies possessed overwhelming air and sea superiority, large n
umbers of fresh
troops, and the element of surprise. They read the German secret Enigma codes, w
hich provided
crucial, often pinpoint, intelligence. The bombing campaign had already severely
winnowed not
only the Luftwaffe, but the regular army and defensive positions. Both the Briti
sh and American
forces had good field commanders like General Montgomery, General Omar Bradley,
and
Lieutenant General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., the son of President Teddy Roosevelt.
Facing them, the
German commander was no less than the famed Desert Fox, Rommel himself, who had
organized a
thorough network of coastal defenses including mines, barbed wire, tank traps, b
unkers, and
pillboxes—all topped off with a series of trenches running along the high ground a
bove the
beaches. Rommel had strenuously argued for concentrating his forces—including the
reserves of
Panzers—close to the beaches and fighting at the water’s edge. His superior, Field M
arshal Gerd
von Rundstedt, favored allowing the enemy to land, then striking before they cou
ld consolidate. As
a result, the Germans had infantry at the beaches, tanks in the rear, and little
coordination between
them. Rommel appreciated the difficulty of the situation and prophesied that the
re would only be
one chance to defeat the invasion, and perhaps, decide the entire war: “The war wi
ll be won or lost
on the beaches…. We’ll have only one chance to stop the enemy and that’s while he’s in t
he
water.” It would be, he observed, “the longest day” of the war.46
Eisenhower had to consider another enemy: the weather, which could do as much da
mage to the
invasion fleet as the Germans. On June fourth, when he had originally planned to
launch Overlord,
strong winds, rain, and waves scuttled the landings. Weather forecasts suggested
that they had a
thirty-six-hour window to invade, or risk delaying another month, and that, in t
urn, could hang up
Allied troops on the Siegfried line in winter.
More than 2,700 ships headed across the Channel, and on the night of June fifth,
thousands of
airborne and glider troops of the 101st Airborne and 82nd Airborne dropped in be
hind the beaches
to disrupt communications and transportation, and to hold key bridges. Although
some units were
blown as far as thirty-five miles off course by high winds, most of them secured
the important
causeways and bridges, aided by thousands of human-looking one-third-scale dummy
paratroopers
that fell from the sky along with the real soldiers. The dummies contributed to
the confusion and
chaos of German forces holding key towns. Next, at dawn on D-Day, June 6, 1944,
came more than
11,000 aircraft, pounding targets and raining bombs onto the German positions. U
nfortunately,
clouds and smoke obscured the targets, and the air cover contributed little to r
elieving the hell on
the beaches when the first units went ashore.
Fighting on parts of Omaha Beach proved particularly gruesome. Hundreds of men d
rowned in the
choppy Channel water; German gunners peppered the ramps of the landing boats wit
h machine-gun
and sniper fire even before they dropped, pinning the helpless men behind the de
ad and wounded in
front of them; and a murderous cross fire slaughtered 197 out of 205 men in a si
ngle rifle company.
Even if the men leaped over the side of the Higgins boats, the rain of fire from
the bluffs raked the
water mercilessly—if the weight of their own packs and equipment did not drown the
m first. All
the troops could do was frantically run or crawl to the sand dunes at the base o
f the Atlantic Wall,
where they were temporarily immune from fire, but where they also remained helpl
ess to strike
back. One heroic tank group, whose Higgins boat was unable to get any closer tha
n three miles
from shore, insisted on plunging into the water. All the tankers drowned trying
to reach land.
Meanwhile, those trapped ashore had to attack or die. Rising as if one, thousand
s of Americans on
the beaches rose at the urging of brave captains, lieutenants, and sergeants and
assaulted the
defenses. One colonel urged his men on, screaming, “There are only two kinds of pe
ople on this
beach. Those who are dead and those who will be. Move in!”47 Slowly, the enemy pos
itions
collapsed, and as each fell, the overlapping fields of fire vanished, allowing s
till more GIs to pour
ashore. By the end of the day, Allied beachheads penetrated as far inland as sev
en miles. What
Rommel had predicted would be the longest day of the war was over, and the Allie
s held the field,
but more than 10,000 Allied soldiers were dead or wounded. Despite the carnage o
n Omaha,
however, the inability of the Atlantic Wall to contain the invaders had to be co
nsidered one of the
greatest military failures of the war.
Churchill hailed the invasion. “What a plan!” he said to Parliament, and even Stalin
called the
invasion unprecedented in history, with its “vast conception and its orderly execu
tion.”48 All
along, though, Ike had known that the Normandy invasion contained enormous risks
for potential
disaster. He had therefore drafted a statement in the afternoon of June fifth, h
ours before the first
airborne troops would touch European soil: “Our landings…have failed and I have with
drawn the
troops…. Any blame…is mine alone.”49 In failure Eisenhower was willing to shoulder all
the
blame, yet in victory he gladly shared credit with his commanders and his troops
. “It just shows
what free men will do rather than be slaves,” he told reporter Walter Cronkite in
1964.50
Within two months, the Allies held a tactical beachhead and had brought in enoug
h supplies that at
the end of July they could attempt a breakout. Using a devastating air bombardme
nt—this time
extremely effective—Bradley’s troops punched out at Saint-Lô. With the Americans comin
g down
from the northeast (behind the enemy), and the British and Americans from the we
st, the German
Seventh Army was nearly encircled. Hitler ordered a counterattack to drive betwe
en the armies, but
once again, Ultra, the code-breaking operation, allowed the Allies to place anti
tank guns in
defensive positions to slaughter the advancing panzers. Hitler finally ordered a
retreat. German
forces now rushed to escape complete encirclement. Thanks to a rearguard defense
at the Falaise
Gap, one third of the German forces escaped the pincer, but overall, the disaste
r “was the worst
German defeat since Stalingrad,” and it ensured the liberation of France.51 Moreov
er, Patton,
reassigned to command of the U.S. Third Army, was now in his element—in the open f
ields of
France with plenty of gas. By that time, the U.S. Seventh Army had invaded south
ern France and
driven north to link up. The delay in unifying the northern and southern command
in France
ensured the communist domination of southeastern Europe. Already the Soviets had
taken Poland
and other territories. Churchill urged the United States to divert forces from t
he southern French
landings to an amphibious invasion on the Adriatic side of Italy, where the Angl
o-American forces
could swing east and save large parts of the Balkans from Soviet conquest. But a
t the Tehran
Conference in 1943, Roosevelt had promised eastern Europe to Stalin.
Meanwhile, Patton launched his armored invasion, bypassing Paris in pursuit of t
he fleeing German
army, capturing an astounding 2,700 Germans per day. This allowed French partisa
ns, in
conjunction with the French Second Armored Division, to liberate the City of Lig
ht. General
Charles de Gaulle led the procession down the Champs-Élysées in August 1944. With Br
adley’s
armies gulping enormous quantities of fuel and consuming vast stockpiles of supp
lies, the Red Ball
Express, a continuous trucking route from the beaches to the front, tried to mai
ntain a flow of
materials.
Here Eisenhower’s good judgment failed him. Montgomery from the north and Bradley
in the
center-south both demanded supplies, and the Allies had enough to keep only one
of the two groups
moving decisively. Either group probably could have punched through to Berlin, p
erhaps ahead of
the Soviets. True to his diplomatic evenhandedness throughout the invasion effor
t, however, Ike
refused to focus all the emphasis on one spearhead, choosing to advance slowly a
cross a broad
front. Perhaps because he realized that the Anglo-American forces were capable o
f a bolder stroke,
Eisenhower approved Montgomery’s plan for Operation Market Garden, an overly ambit
ious
airborne drop intended to capture six key bridges in Holland leading into German
y. But advancing
British armored units could not seize the bridge at Arnhem in time, and the oper
ation failed.
Weather, not Hitler, slowed the Allies. Over Christmas, 1944, American armies se
ttled down for a
hibernal regrouping.
A Contrast in Governments
Meanwhile, a political nonevent occurred back home. In November 1944, Roosevelt
ran for a
fourth term. Governor Thomas A. Dewey of New York, the Republican nominee, came
remarkably
close in the popular vote (22 million to FDR’s 25 million), but suffered a blowout
in the electoral
college (432 to 99). Dewey and the Republicans had virtually no platform. They s
upported the war
and could hardly complain about FDR’s wartime leadership. Roosevelt, by virtue of
his control
over presidential events at a time when gas and even newsreels were “war materials
,” could
overwhelm any foe with a propaganda blitz. To appease the party bosses, however,
Roosevelt
ditched left-wing vice president Henry Wallace, who was certainly the most radic
al politician ever
to hold that office, and replaced him with someone more politically appealing, S
enator Harry S.
Truman of Missouri.
An “election” of sorts was also being held in Germany, where, not long after D-Day,
a cadre of
German officers attempted to assassinate Hitler with a bomb at his Wolf’s Lair bun
ker. They failed.
He had the ringleaders brutally executed.
The contrast between the two episodes of choosing leadership—one in America, one i
n Nazi
Germany—could not be clearer. In the totalitarian state, where death reigned, Hitl
er escaped
removal through luck, terror, and total control of the state media. But in the U
nited States, even
during a major war whose outcome still had not been decided, regular elections t
ook place, and the
Republican opponent mounted a substantial challenge to a popular incumbent.
The Wolf’s Lair assassination attempt reflected the desperation of the professiona
l officer class in
Germany, which was in sharp contrast to the deluded Hitler’s fantasies of victory.
Despite the
increasing collapse of the Eastern Front, Hitler remained convinced that a sharp
victory would turn
American public opinion against the war and allow him to regain the initiative.
He therefore
stockpiled some 2,000 tanks, including the new Tiger IIs, an equal number of pla
nes, and three full
armies for a massive counterattack through Belgium under the cover of winter wea
ther. Hitler still
fantasized that he could split Allied lines, somehow force the United States to
withdraw from the
war, and defeat the Soviets in the East without pressure from the Western Front.
In December
1944, the Battle of the Bulge began as Germans ripped a hole forty-five miles wi
de in Allied lines.
Devoid of air cover, Allied troops rushed poorly supplied units, such as the 101
st Airborne, under
General Anthony McAuliffe, to key spots like Bastogne. Lacking winter gear, and
often without
ammunition, the airborne forces nevertheless somehow held out as an isolated poc
ket in the
German rear. When German negotiators approached, asking McAuliffe to surrender,
he responded
with the one-word reply, “Nuts!” Then the weather cleared, and the Nazi advance grou
nd to a halt.
Eisenhower’s staff quickly assembled 11,000 trucks and 60,000 men to throw into th
e breach on a
single day. Again, American productivity and volume of equipment overcame tempor
ary tactical
disadvantages as the American forces hurled a quarter of a million men at the Ge
rman troops,
spearheaded by Patton’s Third Army, which arrived to rescue the 101st.52 To this d
ay, living
members of the 82nd reject the notion that they needed rescuing. Either way, the
outcome in the
West was no longer in doubt.
In another sense, however, the Battle of the Bulge was a postwar defeat for the
United States: by
shifting massive forces away from the Eastern Front, Hitler had ensured that the
Soviets and not the
Anglo-Americans would capture Berlin. Attacking just weeks after Bastogne was re
lieved, the Red
Army swept through Poland, moved into East Prussia, and slowed only thirty miles
from Berlin.
Eisenhower’s resupplied troops crossed the Rhine River (Patton ceremoniously urina
ted in the
river), capturing the bridge at Remagen that the Germans had intended, but faile
d, to destroy. While
the Russians regrouped on the Oder River east of Berlin, Patton swung into Czech
oslovakia, and
other Allied units reached the Elbe River. There Ike ordered the troops to halt.
He had received a
mandate from Roosevelt that Prague and Berlin were to be captured by Soviet forc
es. Patton
fumed, arguing that he should march into the German capital before the Red army,
but Ike, wishing
to keep out of the geopolitics, blundered by allowing the communists to bring hi
storic and strategic
cities into their empire.
Shaping the Postwar World
Soviet forces closed to within fifty miles of Berlin by February 1945, establish
ing communist
regimes in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary. Austria was poised to collapse,
and much of
Finland lay in Soviet hands. In Eastern Europe, only Greece, where Churchill had
dispatched
British troops to prevent a communist takeover, remained out of Stalin’s orbit. Th
e communist
dictator arrived at Yalta in the Crimea for a meeting with the other members of
the Big Three,
Churchill and Roosevelt, able to deal from a position of strength. From February
fourth to the
eleventh, the three men deliberated the fate of postwar Europe. Stalin told the
western leaders he
would brook no unfriendly governments on his borders. Yet what, exactly, constit
uted the borders
of an expansionist Soviet state? The boundaries of prewar Russia? Germany? Stali
n did not
elaborate. In fact, the Soviets, stung by the loss of millions of lives during W
orld War II and fueled
by communist self-righteousness, fully intended to impose a buffer zone across a
ll of Eastern
Europe.
Roosevelt had entered the alliance with a naïve view of Stalin, believing his advi
sers’ reports that
the dictator was interested in traditional balance-of-power concerns, not a buff
er zone or an
expansionist communist ideology. Roosevelt ignored the reality of Stalin’s mass ex
terminations—
which had exceeded Hitler’s—going so far as to tell Churchill, “I think I can personal
ly handle
Stalin better than either your Foreign Office or my State Department.”53 Roosevelt
even admitted
planning to give Stalin “everything I possibly can and ask nothing from him in ret
urn [and
therefore] he won’t try to annex anything and will work with me for a world of dem
ocracy and
peace.”54 This, of course, was Roosevelt admitting that he would violate the princ
iples of the
Atlantic Charter of August 1941, which he himself had codrafted, and which prohi
bited turning
territories over to occupying countries without the “freely expressed wishes of th
e people
concerned.”
No doubt his failing health contributed to the mistaken notion that he could “cont
rol” Stalin. Stalin
promised “free and unfettered elections” in Poland at the earliest convenience, but
neither there, nor
in other areas seized by the Red Army, did the USSR take the slightest step to w
ithdraw. Roosevelt,
on the other hand, seemed obsessed with drawing the Soviets into the war with Ja
pan, perhaps
fearing the high casualties that he knew a full-scale invasion of the home islan
ds would produce
and hoping that the Red Army would absorb its share. And at the time, FDR did no
t know with
confidence that the atomic bomb would be ready anytime soon; he knew only that A
merican
scientists were working on it. He informed Stalin of the existence of such a pro
gram, to which
Stalin responded with a shrug of indifference. The Russian dictator already knew
about it, of
course, through his spies; but that would only become apparent after the war.
Among other agreements at Yalta, the Big Three decided to try German and Japanes
e principals as
war criminals, creating for the first time in history a dubious new category of
villainy for the losers
of a conflict. The Holocaust notwithstanding, it set a dangerous and perverse pr
ecedent, for at
anytime in the future, heads of state on the wrong side of a military outcome co
uld be easily
demonized and tried for “crimes against humanity.” Worse, unpopular winners could no
w find
themselves accused of war crimes by losers whose religion or politics were share
d by whatever
majority of the international governing body happened, at the time, to be overse
eing such nonsense.
Predictably, critics of American policy in the Vietnam War some twenty years lat
er would employ
the same language against Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon.
Yalta also produced an agreement to hold a United Nations conference in San Fran
cisco in April
1945, with the objective of creating an effective successor to the old League of
Nations. To
Roosevelt, these “concessions” by Stalin indicated his willingness to work for peace
. Little did he
know that Soviet spies in the United States had already provided the Russian dic
tator with all the
information he needed about the American positions, and thus he easily outnegoti
ated the “woolly
and wobbly” Roosevelt.55 Others, however, noted that Stalin traded words and promi
ses for carte
blanche within territory he already held, and that having lost more than 20 mill
ion defeating Hitler,
Stalin felt a few more casualties in the invasion of Japan seemed a cheap price
in exchange for
occupying large chunks of China, Korea, and northern Japan.
Whether or not the Soviets would actually enter the conflict in the Far East rem
ained a matter of
doubt. What was not in doubt was the complete collapse of the Axis and the inglo
rious deaths of
the fascist dictators. Allied armies closed in on Mussolini at Milan; he fled, o
nly to be captured by
Italian communist partisans who killed the dictator and his mistress. Then, with
the Red Army
entering Berlin, Hitler married his mistress and the two committed suicide. On M
ay 7, 1945,
General Alfred Jodl, chief of staff of the German armed forces, surrendered unco
nditionally. VE
Day (Victory in Europe Day), May 8, 1945, generated huge celebrations. These, ho
wever, would be
tempered in relatively short order with revelations of the Holocaust and of the
vast empire that the
Soviets had now established. It cannot be ignored that “more Jews would be gassed
from the time
Patton closed in on the German border in late summer 1944 until May 1945 than ha
d been killed
during the entire first four years of the war.”56 Thus, there is some evidence to
support the notion
that a “narrow front” might have saved countless Jewish lives.
The Holocaust and American Jews
Roosevelt’s Soviet policy, which gave the Communists undeniable advantages in post
war Europe,
must be seen in the context of another issue in which pressures existed to diver
t resources from
purely military aims, namely, a steady stream of information reaching the United
States about the
mass murder of Jews by the Nazis. America’s response to news of this genocide, the
Holocaust,
patterned exactly FDR’s approach to the Soviet advances and demonstrated remarkabl
e consistency
by the American government. In each case, the goal remained winning the war as q
uickly as
possible. Roosevelt refused to veer off into any other direction, whether it inv
olved denying the
Soviets postwar footholds in the Balkans or diverting air power to bomb railroad
s leading to the
Nazi death camps. In retrospect, however, the two issues were vastly different,
and required
separate analysis and solutions.
Hitler had made clear to anyone willing to read his writings or listen to his sp
eeches that from at
least 1919 he intended a Judenfrei (Jewish-free) Germany. Those who suggest he d
id not intend the
physical extermination of the Jews ignore the consistency with which Hitler oper
ated and the
single-minded relentlessness of the Nuremberg Laws and other anti-Semitic legisl
ation. Most of all,
they ignore Hitler’s own language: he referred to Jews as subhuman, a “bacillus,” or a
s “parasites”
on the German body. One does not reform a parasite or educate a bacillus. From h
is earliest
speeches, he compared Jews to a disease. One does not exile a disease; one eradi
cates any sign of
it.
Hitler’s anti-Semitism has been explained by a variety of factors, none completely
convincing. His
motivations are irrelevant in the long run. Hitler made clear he would elevate d
estruction of the
Jews above even winning the war.
Following a relentless and incremental program to isolate and dehumanize Jews, G
ermany began
systematic extermination during the invasion of Russia, where killing squads cal
led Einsatzgruppen
followed closely behind the regular army units and massacred Jews in captured to
wns. Hitler
carefully avoided written orders on the Holocaust, and apparently other particip
ants received
unmistakable directions to keep as much as possible out of the written record. T
he Nazi leader
Alfred Rosenberg, after a meeting with Hitler on the Jewish issue, commented on
the secrecy of the
program.57 Hitler’s reluctance to document his killing program, or even discuss it
publicly, is
demonstrated in Himmler’s speech to a group of SS officers in 1943, wherein he urg
ed that they all
“take this secret with us to the grave.”58
In July 1941, Hitler ordered (through his propaganda head Josef Goebbels) Reinha
rd Heydrich to
enact the “final solution,” at which time some 500,000 Russian Jews already had been
executed by
firing squads. The term “final solution,” which some Holocaust deniers lamely have t
ried to argue
meant relocation, was defined by Goebbels—on Hitler’s orders—to Heydrich. According to
Heydrich’s assistant, Adolf Eichmann, the term meant “the planned biological destruc
tion of the
Jewish race in the Eastern territories.”59 At the time the Japanese bombed Pearl H
arbor, Hitler
already controlled more than 8.7 million Jews in Europe, with orders going out t
he following April
to round up all Jews into concentration camps.
When, exactly, FDR learned of the Holocaust remains murky. Reports had already r
eached public
newspapers by 1942, and it is likely he knew at that time. At least one early ca
ble, to the State
Department’s European Division, detailed the atrocities, yet was met with “universal
disbelief,”
and was suppressed by Paul Culbertson, the assistant division chief.60 Certainly
the latest date at
which Roosevelt could claim ignorance was November 1942, by which time “an impress
ive
collection of affidavits and personal testimony” had descended upon the State Depa
rtment.61 Most
scholars agree that by 1943 at the latest he had solid information that Hitler p
lanned to exterminate
the entire Jewish population of Europe even if it cost him the war to do so. Pol
ls showed that more
than 40 percent of all Americans at the time thought Hitler was systematically s
laughtering the
Jews.
For years, Roosevelt had “devoted a good deal of rhetorical sympathy to the Jews,
but did nothing
practical to help them get into America.”62 He had at his disposal a multitude of
executive orders,
bureaucratic options, and even arm-twisting with Congress, yet FDR—often accused b
y critics of
being blatantly pro-Jewish—turned his back on Europe’s Jews in their darkest hour. N
o special
immigration waivers, exemptions, or other administrative manipulations were empl
oyed; no
lobbying of allies in Latin America or elsewhere occurred, asking them to accept
more Jewish
immigrants.63 The Anglo-American Bermuda Conference, ostensibly called to offer
some relief,
was a “mandate for inaction.”64 Roosevelt claimed that attempting to change immigrat
ion policies
would result in a lengthy and bitter debate in Congress. Backed by a Treasury De
partment report,
and amid growing public concerns that the United States should act, FDR establis
hed a War
Refugee Board with limited resources and a broad mandate not specifically direct
ed at Jews. While
it facilitated the escape of perhaps two hundred thousand Jews, the government d
id little else.
The most recent student of the failed refugee policies, David Wyman, concludes, “T
he American
State Department…had no intention of rescuing large numbers of European Jews.” He po
ints out
that even under existing administrative policies, the United States admitted onl
y 10 percent of the
number of Jews who legally could have been allowed in.65 Roosevelt’s indifference
was so
“momentous” that it constituted the “worst failure of [his] presidency.”66 That said, FD
R’s policy
nevertheless demonstrated rigid consistency: he pursued victory over German armi
es in the field in
the most narrow sense, pushing aside all other considerations.
Ironically, Roosevelt’s lack of concern for the Jews seemed to matter little to hi
s Jewish supporters,
who remained loyal to the Democratic Party despite the president’s unenthusiastic
responses to
Zionist calls for the creation of the state of Israel. Had FDR not died in April
1945, it is doubtful
whether Israel would have come into existence at all, as one of his assistants n
oted.67 Neither he
nor his State Department supported the formation of a Jewish state in Palestine.
The British Foreign
Office opposed it, despite signing the Balfour Declaration in 1921 guaranteeing
the creation of a
Zionist state; the defense departments in both the United States and Britain opp
osed it; and most
business interests opposed it, wishing to avoid any disruption of Middle Eastern
oil flow. Many
American politicians worried about the influence of the “Jewish lobby.” Secretary of
Defense
James Forrestal referred specifically to American Jews when he wrote that no gro
up should “be
permitted to influence our policy to the point where it could endanger our natio
nal security.”68
On April 12, 1945, Franklin Roosevelt, in Warm Springs, Georgia, to prepare for
the upcoming
United Nations conference, died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Hitler, delusional to
the end, thought
that with FDR’s death, the Americans would pack up and go home. Instead, the const
itutional
process worked perfectly, as Vice President Harry S. Truman took the oath of off
ice as the new
president. Repeatedly underestimated, Truman hardly elicited confidence from the
New Deal inner
circle. David Lilienthal, head of the TVA, described in his diary a “sick, hapless
feeling” when it
dawned on him who would replace Roosevelt.69 Harold Ickes, the secretary of the
interior, worried
that Truman “doesn’t have great depth mentally.”70 Truman, as dogged as Roosevelt abou
t
bringing the war to an end, nevertheless differed from FDR in his view of the So
viets—he neither
liked nor trusted them—and was much more supportive of an Israeli state. By then i
t was too late to
do much about the Holocaust, or about the communist occupation of most of Easter
n Europe.
Thus, the two nonmilitary issues that could have shaped American strategy in Wor
ld War II, Soviet
empire building and the Holocaust, both turned on the decision by the U.S. gover
nment—from the
president through the chief of staff to Eisenhower—to concentrate narrowly upon wi
nning the war
as quickly as possible. That view no doubt had its roots in the significant isol
ationism before the
war. The United States defined the Second World War in strictly military terms,
and remained
completely consistent in the pursuit of military victory to the war’s last days an
d through two
different presidents. In the Pacific, the narrow focus maintained a relentless d
emand for the
unconditional surrender of the Empire of Japan. Japanese leaders ignored those d
emands at a
terrifying cost.
On to Japan!
Following Midway, Admiral Chester Nimitz and General Douglas MacArthur controlle
d the skies
in the Pacific and, for the most part, the seas. Japan had lost too many trained
pilots and too many
ships and aircraft at Midway to oppose the steady string of island invasions tha
t followed. Instead,
Admirals Yamamoto and Nagumo conserved their naval forces, still hoping for a si
ngle Tsushimastyle
“big battle” that would give them a decisive victory.71
Guadalcanal, some six hundred miles southeast of the main Japanese staging base
at Rabaul, soon
emerged as the key to driving the Japanese out of the island chains. Japan had t
ried to build an
airfield there, leading the United States to send 19,000 marines to eliminate th
e threat. In August
1942, less than a year after the Japanese thought they had put the American flee
t out of action,
eighty-nine American ships landed thousands of marines on Guadalcanal. Japan lau
nched an
immediate counterattack by the imperial navy, forcing the American support fleet
to withdraw. The
stranded marines were on their own. For four long months, Japanese banzai attack
s hammered the
leathernecks until they were rescued by Admiral William “Bull” Halsey. After the Jap
anese defeat,
and their failure to retain the airstrip, in just over twenty-four hours the Sea
bees (navy construction
batallions) had aircraft flying out of Guadalcanal. The victory was as momentous
as the Midway
success farther to the north in May, and it was quickly followed by the Australi
an-American
invasion of Port Moresby on New Guinea.
Provided with air cover from New Guinea and Guadalcanal, MacArthur implemented h
is strategy
of bypassing many of the more entrenched Japanese fortifications and cutting off
their lines of
supply and communications. Island hopping played to American strengths in number
s of aircraft
and ships while at the same time minimizing U.S. casualties. In several encounte
rs, American air
superiority caused devastating losses for Japan. An important blow was delivered
to the Japanese at
Tarawa, an island defended to the death by forces dug into honeycombs of caves a
nd tunnels. “A
million men cannot take Tarawa in a hundred years,” boasted its commander, but it
took only
12,000 Marines four days to secure the island.72 It was not easy. At “Bloody Taraw
a,” the United
States suffered one of its highest casualty tolls, losing 983 marines killed and
2,186 wounded, but
positioning American forces to strike the key Japanese naval base at Truk.73 All
but about 100 of
the nearly 5,000 defenders died, refusing to surrender. “Here was an army unique i
n history, not
because it was sworn to fight to the last man, but because it very nearly did.”74
Japan tried one last time to deliver a crushing blow at sea to the U.S. Navy, in
June 1944. Admiral
Soemu Toyoda, by then in charge, planned an ambitious attack with his heaviest b
attleships and
waves of aircraft. Before the Japanese could even get into action, American ship
s had sunk two
carriers, and waves of Japanese strike aircraft were shot down in what was label
ed the “Marianas
Turkey Shoot.” Japan lost 445 pilots, which, when combined with the losses at Midw
ay, virtually
eliminated any Japanese naval air activity for the rest of the war. Then, in the
fall of 1944, the U.S.
Navy wiped out the remainder of the Japanese fleet at the Battle of the Philippi
ne Sea.
Bloody struggles over Iwo Jima and Okinawa remained. Despite heavy losses in eac
h battle,
MacArthur’s casualty ratio in the Pacific was lower than any other general’s in any
theater. The
success of island hopping reflected the clear superiority of American technology
and U.S. wartime
manufacturing capability, and enabled U.S. forces to achieve casualty ratios sim
ilar to those of
Europe’s colonial era. At the same time, the staggering number of American casualt
ies on Okinawa
convinced U.S. planners that an invasion of the Japanese home islands would be e
xtremely costly,
and in the long run the lists of dead from Okinawa made Truman’s decision on the a
tomic bomb
fairly easy.75
Since November 1944, American bombers (the new B-29 Superfortresses) had attacke
d the
Japanese home islands from bases in the Marianas. Japanese radar installations o
n Iwo Jima alerted
interceptor aircraft of the approaching B-29 formations, and the defenders infli
cted sharp losses on
the bombers. Iwo Jima not only provided an early warning system for the Japanese
, but it also
offered the potential of a landing field for the B-29s if it could be captured.
The four-mile-long
island, defended to the death by the 21,000–man garrison, featured a honeycomb of
caves in which
the Japanese hid. In February 1945, U.S. Marines stormed ashore to little resist
ance. Ordered to
hold their fire until the invaders actually got on the beaches, the defenders sa
t through an awesome
bombardment, which nevertheless did little damage to the entrenched and camoufla
ged Japanese
troops. Once the marines were on the beaches, however, the U.S. Navy had to lift
much of its
bombardment, allowing the Japanese to open fire. Still, the marines moved in ste
adily, and on
February twenty-third, a patrol scrambled its way to the top of Mount Suribachi,
where it raised a
small American flag—too small to be seen by the troops below. Later, another large
r flag appeared;
five marines and a navy medic raised the flag, captured in the classic photo by
Joe Rosenthal of the
Associated Press, and later reproduced as the bronze memorial to the U.S. Marine
s at Arlington
Cemetery. Taking the island had indeed exacted the fearful cost the Japanese gen
eral had expected,
with some 7,000 Americans killed, including 5,900 marines. Only 200 of the 21,00
0 defenders
surrendered.
With Iwo Jima as a base, the bombings of Japan intensified. In March a B-29 raid
on Tokyo
destroyed a quarter of a million homes in the most destructive single bombing mi
ssion of the war.
Astonishingly, the Japanese still refused to surrender. That required the invasi
on of Okinawa, just
350 miles south of Japan. Like Iwo Jima, Okinawa was defended with suicidal ferv
or, including
generous use of the kamikaze (divine wind) suicide planes. Contrary to the myth
that Japanese
airmen had to be forcibly strapped into the planes, the pilots of the kamikazes
volunteered for
missions in which they would crash their small aircraft full of bombs into an en
emy ship. One life
for a thousand, the strategic reasoning went. The standard kamikaze aircraft, ca
lled baka bombs by
the Americans (baka is Japanese for idiot), consisted of four-thousand-pound roc
ket vehicles
dropped from manned bombers to be guided by their human pilots to a divine explo
sion on the
deck of a U.S. carrier. Clouds of kamikazes—up to 350 at a time—swept down on the Ok
inawa
landing force. Gunners shot down the incoming suicide planes in vast numbers, bu
t enough got
through that 34 ships were sunk and another 368 damaged. The attacks just about
emptied Japan’s
arsenal, since more than 4,200 were shot down. Meanwhile, the American invasion
forces pressed
on, and by June, Okinawa was secured.
By that time, only Emperor Hirohito was pressing his Supreme War Council to seek
peace,
although recently released Japanese documents have questioned how sincere this “pe
ace offensive”
was. Hirohito himself vacillated between resistance and surrender.76 Surrounded
by American
submarines, which had completely sealed off Japan and prevented importation of a
ny raw materials
from China, the country was now subjected to heavy air bombardment; and having l
ost virtually its
entire navy, it faced direct invasion. Within the Japanese hierarchy, however, a
sharp division arose
between the military commanders directing the war, who had no intention of surre
ndering, and a
peace or moderate faction. The warlords carried the day.
In June 1945, Japanese military leaders issued Operation Decision, a massive def
ense plan of the
home islands in which some 2.5 million troops, backed by a civilian militia of 2
8 million, would
resist the American invaders with muzzle loaders if necessary. Women “practiced ho
w to face
American tanks with bamboo spears,” according to Japanese historian Sadao Asada.77
Almost 1
million soldiers would attack the Americans on the beaches, supported by midget
submarines used
as manned torpedoes and more than ten thousand suicide aircraft, many of them co
nverted trainer
planes.
Aware that no hope for victory remained, the warlords promised to fight to the b
itter end, and they
treated the Potsdam Proclamation, issued in July by the United States, Britain,
and China, with utter
contempt. Although the Potsdam Proclamation stated that the term “unconditional su
rrender”
applied only to military forces, it also made clear that Japan’s home islands woul
d be occupied, that
she would lose all overseas possessions, and that a new elected government would
have to replace
the imperial military rule. One sticking point that remained was the fate of Emp
eror Hirohito,
whom the Japanese people, in the tradition of the Shinto religion, regarded as a
god. Would he be a
war criminal subjected to the same kinds of trials as the Nazi killers, even tho
ugh the Allies had
specifically exempted Hirohito from reprisals? And even if he was exempted, woul
d that change
the opinion of the same warlords who had ordered the Rape of Nanking or the Bata
an Death
March? Reports had already leaked out about Japanese treatment of prisoners of w
ar and Asians
trapped inside the Japanese Empire. As the Allied noose tightened, the Japanese
became even more
brutal toward their prisoners. In Burma and elsewhere, Japanese slave-labor camp
s, though lacking
the merciless efficiency of the Nazis, nevertheless imitated them in a more prim
itive form, stacking
masses of bodies on teak logs and firing the pyres. As one observer reported,
When the bodies started to char, their arms and legs twitched, and they sat up a
s if they were alive.
Smoke came out of their burned-out eyes, their mouths opened, and licks of flame
s came out….78
Ground Zero
On July 16, 1945, at a desolate spot 160 miles from Los Alamos, New Mexico, the
United States
tested a weapon that would make even the most hardened and suicidal Japanese lea
ders change
their minds. The device, referred to by the Los Alamos technicians as the gadget
(and never as an
atomic bomb), represented an astounding technological leap and an acceleration o
f the normal
peacetime process needed to do the job by a factor of three, compressing some fi
fteen to twenty
years of work into five. Yet the test was only that, a test. No bomb was actuall
y dropped. Instead, a
device sitting atop a huge tower in the New Mexico desert was detonated through
cables and wires
from bunkers thousands of yards away. Few, however, were prepared for the fantas
tic destructive
power released at the Trinity bomb site on July sixteenth. A fireball with tempe
ratures four times
the heat of the sun’s center produced a cloud that reached thirty-eight thousand f
eet into the sky
while simultaneously turning the sand below into glass. The cloud was followed b
y a shock wave
that shattered windows two hundred miles away and hurricane-strength winds carry
ing deadly
radioactive dust, the dangers of which few perceived at the time. Brigadier Gene
ral Thomas Farrell
reported that the air blast that came after the fireball was “followed almost imme
diately by the
strong, sustained, awesome roar which warned of doomsday and made us feel that w
e were puny
things, were blasphemous to dare tamper with the forces heretofore reserved to T
he Almighty.”79
All along, the U.S. government had intended to use the weapon as soon as it beca
me available on
any of the Axis powers still in the war. Truman said he “regarded the bomb as a mi
litary weapon
and never had any doubt that it should be used.”80 Nor did he find the actual deci
sion to use the
bomb difficult. The former army artillery major recalled that giving authority t
o use the atomic
bomb “was no great decision, not any decision you had to worry about,” but rather ca
lled the bomb
“merely another powerful weapon in the arsenal of righteousnss.”81 Thus, both the co
ndition and
the attitude of Japan in late July, as the invasion and the bombs were being rea
died, remains the key
issue in determining how necessary the use of the bombs was. At the same time, t
he American
public had started to expect some of the troops in Europe to come home, forcing
the army to adopt
a point system based on a soldier’s length of service, military honors, and partic
ipation in
campaigns. The perverse effect of this was that “for the first time in their army
careers, the officers
and men became seriously concerned with medals.”82 Having defeated the Germans, fe
w
servicemen wanted to be transferred to fight the Japanese, which was an increasi
ngly likely
prospect.
Regardless of the fact that Japan had launched no new offensives, their capabili
ty to resist a largescale
invasion, with bloody results, still remained. No one doubts that in the absence
of the bombs
an invasion would have occurred.83 Instead, liberal critics challenge the casual
ty estimates of the
American planners. Based on Japan’s remaining military forces, and using Iwo Jima
and Okinawa
casualty rates as a barometer, strategists concluded that between 100,000 and 1
million American
soldiers and sailors would die in a full-scale invasion. In addition, using as a
guide the civilian
casualties at Manila, Okinawa, and other densely populated areas that the U.S. h
ad reconquered
during the war, the numbers of Japanese civilians expected to die in such an inv
asion were put at
between 1 and 9 million. Critics charge that these numbers represented only the
highest initial
estimates, and that expected casualty rates were scaled down.
In fact, however, the estimates were probably low.84 The figures only included g
round-battle
casualties, not total expected losses to such deadly weapons as kamikazes. Moreo
ver, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff considered its estimates, at best, only educated guesses and tha
t the projections of
Japanese resistance severely understated the number of Japanese troops.85 Equall
y distressing,
intercepts of Japanese secret documents revealed that Japan had concentrated all
of its troops near
the southern beaches, the location where the invasion was planned to begin.86 Th
is proved
particularly troubling because the first round of casualty guesses in June was b
ased on the
anticipation that Japan’s forces would be dispersed. Indeed, there were probably f
ar more than
350,000 Japanese troops in the southern part of Kyushu—a fact that could yield at
least 900,000
American combat casualties.
Other models used for estimates produced even more sobering predictors of Japane
se resistance. At
Tarawa, of 2,571 enemy soldiers on the island when the U.S. Marines landed, only
8 men were
captured alive, indicating a shocking casualty rate of 99.7 percent; and in the
Aleutians, only 29 out
of 2,350 surrendered, for a fatality rate of 98.8 percent. Worse, on Saipan, hun
dreds of civilians
refused to surrender. Marines watched whole families wade into the ocean to drow
n together or
huddle around grenades; parents “tossed their children off cliffs before leaping t
o join them in
death.”87 It seems clear, then, that no matter which estimates are employed, more
than a million
soldiers and civilians at least would die in an invasion under even the rosiest
scenarios. If the bomb
could save lives in the end, the morality of dropping it was clear. Perhaps more
important than the
what-ifs, the Japanese reaction provides sobering testimony of the bombs’ value, b
ecause even after
the first bomb fell, the Japanese made no effort whatsoever to surrender.
Recent research in classified Japanese governmental documents confirms the wisdo
m of Truman’s
decision. Historian Sadao Asada argues that it was most likely the atom bomb tha
t finally overcame
the warlords’ tenacious (and suicidal) opposition to surrender. Asada concludes fr
om postwar
memoranda left by the inner councils that “the atomic bombing was crucial in accel
erating the
peace process.” Although some hard-liners were also concerned about the possibilit
y of a
concurrent Soviet/U.S. invasion, that fear merely served as the coup de grâce. The
memoirs of the
deputy chief of the Army General Staff confirm this when he noted, “There is nothi
ng we can do
about the…atomic bomb. That nullifies everything.”88
Truman never had the slightest hesitation about using the bomb, leaving left-win
g scholars to scour
his memoirs and letters for even the slightest evidence of second thoughts. He p
romptly gave his
approval as soon as the Trinity test proved successful. Moreover, Truman planned
to drop the
existing bombs in a fairly rapid sequence if the warlords did not surrender, in
order to convince
Japan that Americans had a plentiful supply.
On August 6, 1945, two B-29s flew over Hiroshima, one of them a reconnaissance/p
hoto plane,
another the Enola Gay, under the command of Colonel Paul Tibbets, which carried
the atomic
bomb. American aircraft two days earlier had dropped three-quarters of a million
warning leaflets
informing citizens of Hiroshima that the city would be obliterated, but few Japa
nese had heeded the
message. Rumors that Truman’s mother had once lived nearby or that the United Stat
es planned to
make the city an occupation center or just plain stubbornness contributed to the
fatal decision of
most inhabitants to remain.
Tibbets’s payload produced an explosion about the size of 20,000 tons of TNT, or a
bout three times
the size of the August first raid, when 820 B-29 bombers had dropped 6,600 tons
of TNT on several
cities. More than 66,000 people in Hiroshima died instantly or soon after the ex
plosion; some
80,000 more were injured; and another 300,000 were exposed to radiation. The Jap
anese
government reacted by calling in its own top atomic scientist, Dr. Yoshio Nishin
a, inquiring
whether Japan could make such a weapon in a short period.89 Clearly, this was no
t the response of
a “defeated” nation seeking an end to hostilities. After nothing but a deafening sil
ence had
emanated from Tokyo, Truman ordered the second bomb to be dropped. On August nin
th,
Nagasaki, an alternative target to Kokura, was hit. (The B-29 pilot, ordered to
strike a clear target,
had to abandon munitions-rich Kokura because of cloud conditions.) The deadly re
sults were
similar to those in Hiroshima: nearly 75,000 dead.
After Nagasaki, Japanese officials cabled a message that they accepted in princi
ple the terms of
unconditional surrender. Still, that cable did not itself constitute a surrender
. Truman halted atomic
warfare (an act that in itself was a bluff, since the United States had no more
bombs immediately
ready), but conventional raids continued while the Japanese officials argued hea
tedly about their
course of action. Indeed, for a brief time on August tenth, even though no Japan
ese reply had
surfaced, Marshall ordered a halt to the strategic bombing. On August fourteenth
, the Japanese
cabinet was still divided over the prospect of surrender, with the war minister
and members of the
chiefs of staff still opposing it.
Only when that gridlock prevented a decision did the new prime minister, Kantaro
Suzuki, ask
Emperor Hirohito to intervene. By Japanese tradition, he had to remain silent un
til that moment, but
allowed to speak, he quickly sided with those favoring surrender. Hirohito’s decis
ion, broadcast on
radio, was an amazing occurrence. Most Japanese people had never before heard th
e voice of this
“god,” so to lessen the trauma the emperor had recorded the message, instructing his
citizens that
they had to “endure the unendurable” and allow American occupation because the only
alternative
was the “total extinction of human civilization.”90 Even then, aides worried that mi
litarists would
attempt to assassinate him before he could record the message. He told his subje
cts, “The time has
come when we must bear the unbearable…. I swallow my own tears and give my sanctio
n to the
proposal to accept the Allied proclamation.”91 Even in defeat, however, the empero
r’s comments
gave insight into the nature of the Japanese thinking that had started the war i
n the first place: the
massacre of two hundred thousand Chinese at Nanking apparently did not count whe
n it came to
“human civilization”—only Japanese dead. American commanders ordered their forces to c
ease
fire on August fifteenth, and on September second, aboard the USS Missouri in To
kyo Bay,
General MacArthur and Admiral Nimitz, along with representatives of the other Al
lied powers in
the Pacific, accepted the Japanese surrender. American planes blackened the skie
s above, and most
of the ships in the Pacific fleet sailed by in a massive display of might. As on
e veteran at the
ceremonies observed, “We wanted to make sure they knew who won the war.”92
Most Americans seemed undisturbed by the use of atomic weapons to end the war. F
ar from
causing “nuclear nightmares,” as activists liked to imply later, some 65 percent of
Gallup Poll
respondents claimed they were not concerned about the bomb or its implications.9
3 Truman
remained unmoved in his view that the bomb’s use was thoroughly justified. When th
e head of the
atomic bomb project, J. Robert Oppenheimer, commented to Truman that some of the
scientists
“felt like they had blood on their hands…, [Truman] offered him a handkerchief and s
aid: ‘Well,
here, would you like to wipe off your hands?’”94 Years later, when a crew filming a
documentary
on Hiroshima asked Truman if he would consider a pilgrimage to ground zero, he c
austically
responded, “I’ll go to Japan if that’s what you want. But I won’t kiss their ass.”95
In retrospect, three central reasons justified the dropping of the atomic bombs.
First, and most
important, the invasion of Japan would cost more American lives—up to a million, p
erhaps far
more. The interests of the United States demanded that the government do everyth
ing in its power
to see that not one more American soldier or sailor died than was absolutely nec
essary, and the
atomic bombs ensured that result. Second, Japan would not surrender, nor did its
leaders give any
indication whatsoever that they would surrender short of annihilation. One can e
ngage in
hypothetical discussions about possible intentions, but public statements such a
s the fight-to-thebitter-
end comment and the summoning of Japan’s top atomic scientist after the Hiroshima
bomb
was dropped demonstrate rather conclusively that the empire planned to fight on.
Third, the
depredations of the Japanese equaled those of the Nazis. The Allies, therefore,
were justified in
nothing less than unconditional surrender and a complete dismantling of the samu
rai Bushido as a
requirement for peace.
Only in the aftermath, when the prisoner-of-war camps were opened, did it become
apparent that
the Japanese regime had been every bit as brutal as the Nazis, if less focused o
n particular groups.
Thousands of prisoners died working on the Siam railway, and field commanders ha
d working
instructions to kill any prisoners incapable of labor. (Guards routinely forced
fistfuls of rice down
prisoners’ throats, then filled them with water, then as their stomachs swelled, p
unched or kicked
the men’s bellies.)96 Almost five times as many Anglo-American POWs died in Japane
se hands as
in the Nazi camps, which reflected almost benign treatment in comparison to what
Chinese and
other Asians received at the hands of the Japanese. As with the Nazis, such horr
ors illustrated not
only individuals’ capacity for evil but, more important, they also illustrated the
nature of the brutal
system that had produced a view of non-Japanese as “subhumans.”
At the same time, Japan’s fanaticism led to a paralysis of government that prevent
ed the nation
from surrendering. The outcome of the war, evident after Midway, was probably de
cided even
before. In February 1942, advisers had told the emperor that Japan could not pos
sibly win. Human
suicide bombers were used in 1944 with no end of the war in sight. Fanaticism of
that type
mirrored the fiendish Nazi ideology, and in the end, the Japanese warlords and N
azi despots had
made the Second World War a contest between barbarism and civilization. Civiliza
tion won.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
America’s “Happy Days,” 1946–59
Atoms for Peace
Having defeated the totalitarians and vanquished the Great Depression, it was in
evitable that the
United States would develop a can-do optimism and problem-solving confidence at
the end of
World War II. Threats remained, at home and abroad, yet were these not minor com
pared to the
victories already achieved? By 1960, however, many would reflect on the immediat
e postwar years
soberly, reevaluating their optimism. For by that time the civil rights movement
would have
exposed racism and the lingering effects of Jim Crow; the Soviet Union would hav
e shown itself to
be a dangerous and well-armed enemy; and the role of world leader meant that Ame
rica could
afford few mistakes—politically, morally, or culturally.
Having just fought and bled a second time in thirty years, having witnessed a ma
ssive—though
many at the time thought necessary—shift of power to the executive branch, and hav
ing seen
inflation and high taxes eat away at the prosperity that they anticipated would
come from defeating
the Axis powers, Americans were open to change in 1946. Government had grown rap
idly in the
period following the Great Crash, and the size of the federal government doubled
in a scant three
years from 1939 to 1942, ballooning to almost 2 million employees! More than 250
,000
government workers lived in the Washington area alone, up from a mere 73,000 in
1932.
The 1946 elections, in which Republicans ran against “big government, big labor, b
ig regulation,
and the New Deal’s links to communism” produced a rout in which the GOP captured con
trol of
both houses of Congress for the first time since before the Great Depression.1 N
ot only had the
Republicans whipped the Democrats, but they also virtually annihilated the liber
al wing of the
Democratic machine, sending 37 of 69 liberal Democrats in Congress down to defea
t, shattering the
Left-laborite coalition that had sustained FDR.
Part of the Republican victory could be attributed to the high taxes and heavy r
egulation imposed
by the New Deal and the war. U.S. News & World Report’s headlines blared the hando
ut era is
over as the can-do attitude that characterized the war effort quickly replaced t
he helplessness of the
New Deal.2 National security and communism also concerned the public. Shortly af
ter Germany
surrendered, the nation was shocked by the discovery that the magazine Amerasia
had been passing
highly classified documents to the Soviets. In June of 1945, the FBI traced the
documents to a
massive Soviet espionage ring in the United States.3 When word of that leaked, i
t gave credence to
allegations that the Roosevelt administration had been soft on communists. Conse
quently, the
Republican Congress came in, as Representative Clarence Brown put it, to “open wit
h a prayer, and
close with a probe.”4 Far from being paranoid, most Americans correctly perceived
that Soviet
espionage and domestic subversion was a serious a threat.
President Harry Truman eventually made hay campaigning against the Republican “do-
nothing
Congress,” but in fact it did a great deal—just nothing that Truman liked. The Eight
ieth Congress
passed the first balanced budget since the Great Crash; chopped taxes by nearly
$5 billion (while at
the same time exempting millions of low-income working-class Americans from taxa
tion); quashed
a socialist national health-care scheme; passed the Taft-Hartley freedom-to-work
act over the
president’s veto; and closed the Office of Price Administration, which had fixed p
rices since the
beginning of the war. In a massive reorganization of government, Congress folded
the departments
of the army and navy into a new Department of Defense, and the National Security
Act created the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) out of the former OSS. In international affair
s, Congress funded
the Marshall Plan and America’s commitment to the new North Atlantic Treaty Organi
zation
(NATO) and the United Nations.
An Atomic World
In a sense, World War II did not end with the surrender of Germany in May 1945,
or even of Japan
in August 1945, but rather continued until the 1990s, when the Soviet communist
state fell. The
Second World War, after all, was a struggle between barbarism and civilization,
and it only moved
from an active heated battle in 1945 into a quieter, but equally dangerous phase
thereafter. Indeed,
instead of a true two-sided conflict, World War II had been a triangular struggl
e pitting Hitler and
his demonic allies in one corner, Stalin and his communist accomplices in anothe
r, and the Western
democracies in a third. Keep in mind that until Hitler invaded Russia in 1941, h
e and Stalin were de
facto allies, and American communists, such as the American Peace Mobilization a
nd the
Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA), had lobbied hard for
nonintervention.5
Shaking off the shortsightedness of Roosevelt and other policy makers, by 1946 a
few advisers in
the Truman administration had recognized the dangers posed by an expansionist So
viet Union.
Truman himself required more convincing. As late as 1945 the president had refer
red privately to
Stalin as “a fine man who wanted to do the right thing”—this about a dictator whose ma
ss murders
had exceeded those of Hitler and Tojo combined.6 Stalin was, said Truman, “an hone
st man who is
easy to get along with—who arrives at sound decisions.”7 Well before the Missourian
spoke those
words, however, this “fine man” had started work on a Soviet atomic bomb—developing th
e
weapon in the middle of the Battle of Stalingrad, when it was apparent it could
not be ready in time
to assist in the destruction of Germany. Stalin was already looking ahead to the
postwar world and
his new enemies, the United States and Great Britain.8
Over time, Truman formulated a different assessment of the Soviet dictator, reco
gnizing the
dangers posed by an expansionist Soviet Union. For the next forty-five years the
ensuing cold war
in many ways required more national commitment than was ever before seen in Amer
ican history.
By 1991 the Soviet system had collapsed, and the United States and the West coul
d claim victory.
In a sense, this constituted the unfinished conclusion of World War II’s struggle
against tyranny.
Victory had several architects, including Americans Harry Truman, George Kennan,
Dwight
Eisenhower, John Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George Bush as well
as British
allies Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher.
Only the most prescient foresaw that conflict. By the time the atomic bombs had
fallen on Japan,
the United States had lost 280,677 men in Europe, 41,322 in the Pacific, and 115
,187 in training
accidents and noncombat losses along with 10,650 deceased POWs (about one fourth
of all
American prisoners held by the Japanese) for a total of 447,836 dead and 971,801
wounded. The
war drove the national debt up (constant dollars, as a share of GNP) to a level
two and a half times
larger than the $5 trillion national debt of the United States in the 1990s. Alt
hough the domestic
economy recovered during the war, a complete rebound from the Great Depression m
ay not have
occurred until 1946.9
Dropping the atomic bombs had the unintended effect of showing the rest of the w
orld the power of
nuclear weapons and made clear that, at least until 1949, America had a monopoly
over such
weapons. The United States had successfully bluffed other nations into thinking
it could deliver
large numbers of atomic bombs, even deep into the Soviet Union. In reality, howe
ver, America’s
nuclear arsenal remained a hollow threat until the early 1950s because of the li
mited range of
strategic aircraft and the small number of available nuclear bombs.10 By the tim
e of the Korean
War, nuclear capability had caught up to the perception, and the United States n
ever looked back. It
“had a force…with potential to deliver a smashing blow against Soviet cities,” consist
ing of some
hundred atomic bombs and two hundred aircraft capable of hitting Russia from mai
nland American
bases through the use of aerial refueling.11 Despite a new threat that emerged w
hen the USSR
exploded its own atomic bomb in 1949, Truman and Eisenhower maintained American
nuclear
superiority.
Time Line
1945:
Harry Truman ascends to the U.S. presidency upon the death of Franklin D. Roosev
elt
1946:
Republicans capture both the House and Senate in midterm elections
1947:
Truman Doctrine implemented; cold war begins; Marshall Plan instituted; Taft-Har
tley Act
1948:
Berlin airlift; Truman reelected
1949:
NATO formed; Communists take control of China
1950:
Alger Hiss convicted; Korean War begins
1952:
Dwight D. Eisenhower elected
1953:
Korean War ends
1954:
Brown v. Board of Education
1955:
SEATO formed
1956:
Soviets crush Hungarian uprising; Eisenhower reelected
1957:
Eisenhower orders federal troops to desegregate Little Rock High School; Soviets
launch Sputnik
1959:
Castro captures Cuba
1960:
John F. Kennedy elected president
The Iron Curtain and the Cold War
Soviet domination of Eastern Europe, along with the potential for communist regi
mes in Greece,
Italy, and even France posed a new communist version of the old Nazi threat. In
key elements,
communism and fascism looked remarkably similar: totalitarian control of the eco
nomy,
communication, and information centers; a national identity based on a single ch
aracteristic (race
with the Nazis, class with the communists); the obsession over existence of an e
nemy, whose very
presence supposedly prevented the appearance of the ideological utopia; and all
power relegated to
a dangerous and ambitious dictator. It is true that the Soviets, who lost millio
ns of lives in World
War II, had good reason to strike a strong defensive posture after the war, but
that does not justify
their takeover of sovereign nations. Mistakenly, most of the Allies—again, Churchi
ll was the lone
exception—hoped the USSR really did not mean its rhetoric about international revo
lution and the
destruction of the international bourgeoisie. When it became clear that the Sovi
ets had no intention
of leaving occupied areas, but rather planned to incorporate them into a new Sov
iet empire, a
belated light went on in the heads of many in the State Department.
Churchill had been sounding the alarm about the communists for years. Roosevelt,
however,
naively expressed his confidence in his one-on-one ability to handle Stalin, eer
ily echoing the
attitudes of Neville Chamberlain, who thought he could handle Hitler at Munich.
Once again,
FDR’s own prejudices had been amplified by rosy reports from the U.S. ambassador t
o the USSR,
Joseph Davies, who instructed the president that to “distrust Stalin was ‘bad Christ
ianity, bad
sportsmanship, bad sense.’”12 By 1945, Churchill was shrewdly trying to manipulate A
merican
power like a “great unwieldy barge,” steering it into the “right harbor,” lest it “wallow
in the
ocean.”13 Churchill remained clear eyed about the long-term threat posed by an exp
ansionist,
communist Soviet Union. His March 5, 1946, speech to Westminster College in Miss
ouri
proclaimed that “an iron curtain has descended across the continent,” placing the na
tions of Eastern
Europe under a “high and in many cases increasing measure of control from Moscow.”14
Truman
refused to endorse Churchill’s position, continuing to refer to the Soviets as “frie
nds,” even
offering Stalin a chance to deliver a rebuttal to the students at Westminster! Y
et beneath the
surface, Truman’s attitudes had started to change.
Harry Truman was born in Independence, Missouri, to a life of great contrasts. R
aised in a
Southern Baptist tradition, steeped in Victorian morality, he wrote in his diary
in the 1930s that
America needed a “reformation of the heart.” At the same time, he used profanity wit
h staggering
deftness, and in any company. One Roosevelt appointee, Chester Bowles, expressed
his shock at
the emotional discussions he had had with Truman in a half-hour conversation “punc
tuated by
extraordinary profanity.”15
Truman’s World War I combat experience gave him what no president since Teddy Roos
evelt had
possessed—firsthand knowledge of the horrors of war. Perhaps that fact accounts fo
r both men’s
willingness to support a strong peacetime military force, when others, including
Coolidge, had
failed to see the need for such investments. After the war Truman moved to Kansa
s City, where he
opened a haberdashery. That, like most of his other business attempts, failed.
Business failure led Truman to his true calling in politics. Taken under the win
g of Thomas J.
Pendergast’s Kansas City Democratic machine, Truman won election as a judge on the
Jackson
County Court in 1922, with the unusual job (for a jurist) of overseeing the Kans
as City road system
and supervising its (largely corrupt) paymasters. This was akin to trying to sta
y sweet smelling in a
fertilizer factory! Truman pulled it off, largely by throwing himself into the l
egitimate aspects of
the road programs. Truman’s frugal lower-middle-class lifestyle testified to his f
undamental
honesty. When his mentor, Pendergast, was tagged with a $350,000 fine and fiftee
n months in
Leavenworth Federal Prison for graft, Truman wrote Bess, “Looks like everyone got
rich in
Jackson County but me.”16
Voters rewarded his independence in 1934, electing him to a U.S. Senate seat, bu
t six years later
the association with Pendergast still threatened his reelection. Then, at the ve
ry moment when
Truman might have fallen off the pages of history, an odd serendipity intervened
. The county
seized the Truman family farm, making it abundantly clear that he had not profit
ed from his public
service, and he was reelected. In his second term he headed the Truman Committee
investigation of
price gouging by defense contractors during the war. His turning up numerous exa
mples of fraud
and waste made him a national figure and put his name before the Democratic Part
y power brokers,
who in turn urged him on Roosevelt in 1944. FDR’s death, of course, catapulted the
humble
Missourian into history.
President Harry Truman knew in 1946 that the American public would not tolerate
another new
conflict, especially over Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. On the other h
and, he wished to
avoid encouraging another Hitler to swallow up other European countries. When th
e Soviets failed
to withdraw from Iran on deadline, as they had promised, Truman viewed it as the
first test of
Western resolve. “This may lead to war,” he told his commerce secretary.17 Subordina
tes pressed
the matter strongly in the United Nations Security Council, at which time the So
viets reluctantly
accepted the fact that they could not pull off a Munich. Negotiations between th
e Iranians and
Soviets resulted in the Russians pulling out, but there is little question they
did so because they
realized Truman, although no Churchill, was no Chamberlain either. Whether he fu
lly appreciated
it or not, Truman had sided with those who viewed the Soviet Union as fundamenta
lly different
from other Russian empires. Stalin’s USSR was an ideological expansionist state, n
ot just a
traditional big power seeking to protect its borders.
A third group remained active in government, however—those who saw the USSR as a p
otential
model for human development. Many of the New Dealers, including Rexford Tugwell
and
Roosevelt’s agriculture secretary (and later, vice president), Henry Wallace, prof
oundly admired
Stalin, and most of these intellectuals favored complete pacifism and disarmamen
t in the face of
Soviet expansion. To a far greater extent than many Americans want to believe, c
ommunist agents
had penetrated the Roosevelt administration and reached high levels: Harold Ware
had staffed his
AAA agency with communist sympathizers; Ware and his AAA colleagues John Abt, Le
e
Pressman, and Nathan Witt (all devout communists) worked with spy Alger Hiss. Ot
her
underground agents worked in the Office of Price Administration (Victor Perlo),
the NRA (Henry
Collins), and the Farm Security Administration (Nathan Silvermaster). There were
communist
agents in the Treasury, State, and Interior departments, and even in the nation’s
spy agency, the
OSS. Duncan Lee, the chief of staff for the OSS, was a KGB agent.18
Perhaps the most dangerous of these characters was Wallace, whom Roosevelt named
as commerce
secretary after he was dropped from the 1944 ticket to make room for Truman. Wal
lace pulled the
department further to the left during the New Deal, when he expressed his admira
tion for Stalin’s
economic achievements. By the time Truman replaced him, Wallace was leader of th
e
progressive/socialist wing of the Democratic Party.19
It did not take long for the former veep to make waves. He wrote the president a
long memo in July
1945, advocating unilateral disarmament, then leaked the contents to the press i
n a startling display
of presumptuousness and contempt for the chain of command. Many in Roosevelt’s adm
inistration
viewed Wallace as a mystic, a wild spender who would “give every Hottentot a pint
of American
milk every day.”20 Wallace seriously entertained notions that groups of generals w
ere scheming to
stage a coup against the president. Truman bluntly called Wallace a “cat bastard.”21
To have such
an apologist for the Soviets in a cabinet-level position shocked Truman: “Wallace
is a pacifist 100
per cent. He wants us to disband our armed forces, give Russia our atomic secret
s and trust a bunch
of adventurers in the Politburo.”22
Extremist New Dealers viewed Wallace as the genuine heir to the Roosevelt mantle
; Truman was
an unsatisfactory substitute. Truman’s unexpected ascension to the presidency dram
atically altered
the expected steady march of the New Deal. One historian called Wallace “the close
st the Soviets
ever came to choosing and nominating a candidate for the American presidency.”23 R
ecently
released KGB archive material has revealed that at the time, Harry Dexter White,
in the Treasury
Department, and Lawrence Duggan were Soviet agents. Wallace later said that had
he become
president, White would have been his treasury secretary and Duggan his secretary
of state.24
Furthermore, Wallace’s Progressive Party had active Soviet agents at every level o
f its
organization, including platform committee chairman, recording secretary, and Wa
llace’s chief
speechwriter. A Wallace presidency probably would have led to new rounds of Sovi
et
expansionism, most likely in Europe. Given the determination of the French and B
ritish to remain
independent, and the fact that they were both nuclear players by the mid-1950s,
it is not
unreasonable to conclude that nuclear weapons would have been used at some point
against Soviet
incursions. By naming the hard-line Truman, FDR may have prevented a nuclear war
in more ways
than one.
Attacking Communism with a Two-Edged Sword…and a Saxophone!
Most American policy analysts agreed that the United States, even with the full
support of the
European allies, was not militarily capable of pushing the Soviets out of their
occupied areas.
Therefore, the United States needed another strategy of resistance. Truman had k
ept his eye on
British efforts to support the Greek government against communist guerrillas sin
ce March 1946,
but by early 1947, England was running out of money. Her own economy had suffere
d, the empire
was in disarray, and the war had simply sapped the will of the British citizenry
in such matters.
In February 1947, Truman, George Marshall (army chief of staff and now secretary
of state),
George Kennan (head of the Policy Planning Staff), and Dean Acheson (undersecret
ary of state)
met with leaders from the newly elected Republican-dominated Congress, whose sup
port would be
essential. In the past they had resisted overseas involvement. Senator Arthur Va
ndenberg assured
Truman that the Republicans would support him, but that the president would have
to take his case
directly to the American people too. Consequently, Truman laid out the Truman Do
ctrine,
establishing as American policy the support of “free peoples who are resisting att
empted
subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressure.” The cold war had begun.
Aid to Greece and Turkey solved the immediate problem, but the whole dam threate
ned to break
unless extensive support was extended to the rest of Western Europe. Communists
gained ground
in the 1947 French and Italian elections as both nations struggled to recover fr
om the ravages of
war. Stopping Soviet expansionism would require the United States to inject capi
tal, expertise, and
economic support of every type into Europe in order to revive the free economies
there. The
Marshall Plan, outlined in June 1947, proved exactly the right remedy. European
nations requested
$17 billion over a four-year period. It joined the Truman Doctrine as a basis fo
r America’s cold war
strategy.
The coup in Czechoslovakia and the near collapse of Greece led Kennan to conceiv
e a framework
for resisting communism that involved neither appeasement nor full-scale conflic
t. Kennan had trod
a remarkable intellectual journey since the prewar years. Four years of war agai
nst fascist troops
had given Kennan a keen knowledge of the grave threat posed by totalitarian dict
atorships,
especially the USSR.25 In July 1947, Kennan wrote an article under the pseudonym
Mr. X for
Foreign Affairs entitled “The Sources of Soviet Conduct,” which outlined a strategy
for dealing
with an aggressive Soviet Union.26 The key to winning the cold war, Kennan wrote
, lay in a
strategy of “containment,” in which the United States did not seek to roll back Sovi
et gains as much
as to build a giant economic/military/political fence around the communist state
so that it could not
expand farther. America should respond to Soviet advances with “the adroit and vig
ilant
application of counterforce at a series of constantly shifting geographical and
political points,”
Kennan wrote.27
Curiously, containment introduced a diametric inversion of V. I. Lenin’s own Marxi
st hypotheses
from the turn of the century, when European nations still engaged in creating ov
erseas empires.
Lenin’s Imperialism sought to explain why there were no communist revolutions in c
apitalist
nations, as predicted by Marx. According to Marx, the overproduction of the capi
talist’s boom-andbust
business cycle would lead to a wide depression, yet no such revolutions had occu
rred. Why?
Lenin reasoned that imperialism explained this glitch—that capitalist countries ex
ported their
surpluses to the underdeveloped sections of the globe through the process of acq
uiring empires.
Without this expansion, capitalism would die.
Kennan’s containment doctrine stood Lenin’s thesis on its head. It was the Soviet Un
ion—not the
capitalist countries—that needed to expand to survive. Without expansion to justif
y totalitarian
controls, a huge secret police, and massive expenditures on the military, the US
SR and its leaders
would have to explain to the people why they had virtually no cars, little good
food, and a
staggering lack of basic items such as soap and toilet paper. Containing the Sov
iets and stifling
their expansionist ventures would focus Russian attention on their sad domestic
economy, which
was accelerating the collapse of communism through its own dead weight. Containm
ent would
make the communists, not the capitalists, their own grave diggers. The second ed
ge of the sword,
then, became a military alliance with the free countries of Europe. Several Euro
pean countries—
England, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg—had signed a collective
defense
pact in 1948. Now Truman sought to join and expand and strengthen it. Norway and
Italy were
invited to join along with Canada. On April 4, 1949, the North Atlantic Treaty O
rganization
(NATO) was established, linking America directly to European entanglements for t
he first time
since the Revolution. Under the agreement, an “armed attack against one” would be co
nsidered an
attack upon all. Since the United States already had established the fact that a
ny attack on
American assets was an act of war, to which the response could be atomic bombing
, the NATO
treaty effectively linked the Western European powers to the U.S. atomic umbrell
a. To more firmly
cement this relationship, Truman ordered four U.S. divisions to Europe for perma
nent duty there—
with the Allies’ consent—in essence, putting American bodies in the line of fire to
ensure full
participation by the United States.
Leftist scholars have sought to paint the Soviets as victims and NATO as the vil
lain. One
mainstream text argues that “there was no evidence of any Russian plan to invade W
estern Europe,
and in the face of the American atomic bomb, none was likely.”28 This is simply fa
ntasy, as recent
documents from the former Soviet states have revealed. The Warsaw Pact had a pla
n in place for an
invasion of the West that included a barrage of tactical nuclear weapons just ah
ead of the Soviet
advance. More important, the Soviets’ espionage network informed them fully that A
merican
atomic bombs could not be delivered in sufficient numbers against targets in the
USSR—and
certainly could not be dropped on Western European soil without a massive backla
sh that probably
would split the alliance. Pro-Soviet historians ignore the incredible buildup of
offensive forces by
the USSR, giving the lie to the notion that the massive Soviet arms expansion wa
s defensive.
Almost immediately, Stalin, in June 1948, probed into the Allied belly at Berlin
.
The former German capital, fully surrounded by communist East Germany, remained
an isolated
outpost of liberty in an ocean of totalitarian control. West Germany had limited
access to the
western sectors of Berlin while the Soviets controlled the other half of the cit
y, making Berlin an
outpost in enemy territory. If such a metropolitan region became prosperous, as
was the tendency
of capitalist areas, it would pose a startling shining contrast to whatever Marx’s
ghost offered. On
June 20, 1948, Stalin sought to eliminate this potential threat by cutting off t
he railroad and traffic
lines into West Berlin.
Stalin’s move came at a key point in the election cycle—just as Truman was engaged i
n a tough
reelection fight not only against the Republican, New York governor Thomas E. De
wey, but also
against two renegades from his own party: Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond, who headed a
states’ rights
wing of the Democratic Party, and Henry Wallace, who appealed to the party’s disaf
fected radicals
as the Progressive Party candidate. Wallace ran a phenomenally expensive campaig
n, spending $3
million as a third-party candidate—easily the most costly and least-productive-per
-dollar
presidential run ever attempted, generating only 2.4 percent of the vote.
As usual, everyone underestimated Truman, who threw himself into a whistle-stop
campaign as
only an American president could do.29 At one campaign stop, a supporter yelled,
“Give ’em hell,
Harry.” Truman shot back, “I only tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” The electora
te appreciated
his candid approach, even if the media discounted him. When Newsweek magazine ra
n a survey of
fifty journalists, all of whom predicted Truman would lose, the president counte
red, “I know every
one of those fifty fellows and not one of them has enough sense to pound sand in
to a rathole.”30
The epitome of media goofs occurred when the Chicago Tribune prematurely ran a b
anner headline
reading dewey defeats truman. It wouldn’t be the last time the mainstream media wa
s embarrassed
on election night.
Once again, the country had rallied around an incumbent in a crisis. Stalin had
to deal with a
tenacious Truman rather than a conciliatory Dewey. Truman refused to give up Ber
lin, but had to
do so without touching off World War III. He found a middle ground that forced t
he Soviets into
the position of having to fire the first shot.
Truman deployed three squadrons of B-29 bombers to Europe, hoping that Stalin wo
uld think they
were equipped with atomic bombs (they were not). Rejecting General Lucius Clay’s p
roposal to
resupply Berlin by truck, Truman opted for a massive airlift. From December 1948
to the spring of
1949, American C-47s, C-52s, and escorts shuttled in up to seven thousand tons o
f supplies a day,
demonstrating the Allies’ resolve and impressing upon the Soviets the size and qua
lity of U.S. air
superiority. The Soviet dictator realized he could not order any planes shot dow
n—that would be an
act of war—and accepted, temporarily, that he was beaten, removing Soviet barricad
es and
roadblocks to Berlin from the West in May 1949.
Most advisers realized they had to rapidly rebuild the armed forces to counter t
he the 2.5-millionman
Soviet army. The cold war would be a long one, one not decided by a few early sk
irmishes
like Berlin. In fact, Stalin had made a critical error by greedily attempting to
seize Berlin. Had he
waited, the United States might have disarmed so thoroughly that rearming would
have been
politically impossible. His divisions might have simply walked into Berlin, but
Eisenhower saw the
danger and stepped in to support the president by conducting a swing through NAT
O capitals. He
then returned to Washington to argue for decisive commitments to NATO. Eisenhowe
r’s speeches
convinced Americans and Europeans that resisting the Soviets required them to ac
t together.
So Truman, occasionally in spite of himself, managed to win early victories on t
he political and
military fronts, but there was yet one more battlefield for the cold war—that of c
ulture. America
faced a serious propaganda hurdle when the communists could point to segregation
of blacks within
parts of the American South, and claim that the democratic ideals held out to ot
her regions of the
globe were empty words. A series of programs sponsored by the U.S. State Departm
ent that sent
American jazz musicians overseas proved important in that regard. American jazz
was already
extremely popular in Europe, with a ready-built audience for jazzmen like Dizzy
Gillespie, Benny
Goodman, and Louis Armstrong, who made tours of Europe, the Middle East, and Lat
in America.
Jazz opened doors no diplomats could. As Eisenhower’s vice president, Richard Nixo
n had
encountered crowds in Latin America that spit on him and threw rocks at his car.
But Louis
Armstrong drew crowds that greeted him with standing ovations. Jazz bands carrie
d understated,
but obvious, messages without the need for speeches. First, many of the bands we
re integrated.
Black, white, Jewish, and Hispanic musicians played alongside each other. Second
, the very nature
of jazz (and later, rock and roll) epitomized democracy: the whole band played t
ogether in the
opening verses and choruses, then a soloist would depart from the band to do his
own thing while
the rest of the group held the song together. Ultimately, the soloist would retu
rn to the scripted
parts, reflecting the notion that in a democracy people can cooperate, yet have
infinite individuality.
Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong symbolized, as a band leader, that African Americans could
attain
leadership positions in American culture. Armstrong knew America had its faults—he
had
criticized the American government during the 1950s school desegregation crisis
and the Civil
Rights era—yet he was also a proud American. He gained such fame that he became kn
own as the
U.S. Ambassador of Jazz. In 1965 his band toured Eastern Europe, taking American
jazz behind the
Iron Curtain. Twenty years later, when Ronald Reagan brought down the Soviet emp
ire, another
American music form, rock and roll, played no small role in undermining communis
m’s grip on the
minds of the young.
Containment and Korea
When Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met at Yalta, they agreed to maintain sphe
res of influence in
Asia, with the Russians taking the northeastern part of Asia, including North Ko
rea, and the
Americans dominating the southern part of China and South Korea below the thirty
-eighth parallel.
Mao Tse-tung, the communist Chinese leader in the north, had the advantage of a
unified command
of a large patriotic army and virtual sovereignty in Manchuria after the Soviets
pulled out (taking
all the machinery and hardware they could carry with them). His opponent, Chiang
Kai-shek,
leader of the Nationalist camp, had some American support, but he suffered from
internal
dissension among his officers, terrible economic conditions inherited from the J
apanese, and
corruption. Chiang had squandered vast piles of American assistance, which total
ed $2 billion from
1945 to 1949 (although much of it simply vanished through the skyrocketing infla
tion inside
China). Other factors much more insidious also helped undercut Chiang, including
the State
Department’s pro-Mao tilt that consistently painted Chiang in the worst possible l
ight and depicted
Mao as a peasant freedom fighter. The result was that aid earmarked for Chiang—esp
ecially gold
that could have stabilized the inflation—was delayed at critical times. All of thi
s would surface
later, yet the question of how U.S. policy toward China was bent toward Mao’s forc
es went
essentially unexamined.
In 1949, Mao’s troops crossed the Yangtze, capturing the capital city, Nanking, af
ter which all but
the most loyal of Chiang’s army disintegrated and was pushed entirely off the main
land to the
island of Taiwan (Formosa). There the refractory Chiang established the “true” Chine
se
government in exile and vowed a return to the mainland. Amid all this communist
expansion,
where was the United States?
Secretary of State Dean Acheson produced a white paper explaining that the Unite
d States had no
hope of affecting the outcome of the Chinese “civil war,” and that getting American
troops into a
land war in China would be a disaster. Republicans, still isolationist at the co
re, nevertheless
reveled in seeing the Democratic administration stumble so badly. Congress blame
d the “loss of
China” on policy errors and incompetent diplomacy. In truth, Acheson was right. De
spite having
utterly demolished the Japanese just four years earlier, the United States had p
layed almost no role
in actual mainland fighting—that had been conducted by the Chinese of both groups
and the
British, Australians, New Zealanders, and Indians. The forces that had existed i
n the Far East at the
end of World War II had for the most part been decommissioned or reassigned. Any
serious
attempt to intervene would have required a full-scale buildup equivalent to that
of 1942, combined
with unrelenting use of atomic bombs, and then only if Russia stood by.
No sooner had the world readjusted its maps to the new People’s Republic of China
than Acheson
gave an unfortunate speech to the National Press Club. There he implied that Kor
ea was no longer
considered within the U.S. containment fence, thus suggesting to Kim Il-sung of
North Korea that
the southern part of the Korean peninsula might be obtained at a minimal price.
Using the
justification that the Nationalist leader of the South, Syngman Rhee, would try
to unify the two
Koreas, Kim launched a general attack on June 25, 1950, quickly pummeling the Re
public of Korea
(ROK) forces. Truman had not backed down in Berlin, and would not now hand over
Korea to the
communists. “We’ve go to stop the sons-of-bitches no matter what,” he told Acheson. Wh
ereas the
military and politicians alike shied away from a land war in China, Korea was di
fferent. Its small
size and abundant coastline played to America’s greatest advantages, mobile amphib
ious attacks,
carrier-based air power, and easy defense of choke points. Truman also appreciat
ed the fact that
unlike the Berlin crisis four years earlier, the United States now had an ample
stockpile of atomic
weapons and long-range delivery aircraft.
Here, Stalin sought to play the Chinese against the Americans, warning Kim that
the USSR
wouldn’t “lift a finger” if the North got “kicked in the teeth” by the United States. Inst
ead, he
admonished Kim, “ask Mao for all the help.”31 The Soviet dictator now joined the pre
ss and
Truman’s political opponents in underestimating Truman. Even so, Stalin was startl
ed by the
timing of Kim’s invasion. The Soviets had been engaged in a walkout of the United
Nations
Security Council over another matter, meaning that for one of only a handful of
times in its history,
the Security Council voted with the United States on a major international issue
. While the UN vote
was desirable, and put all forces in Korea under United Nations command, it coul
d not conceal the
obvious: the Americans would provide the bulk of the forces as well as the supre
me commander of
the UN forces, General Douglas MacArthur.
Even after the arrival of American forces, the North Koreans continued to push t
he ROK forces
back toward Seoul. Finally, the UN/ROK troops managed to stabilize a perimeter n
ear Pusan. To
gain that territory, the communists had overextended their lines, which they cou
ld neither defend
nor patrol effectively. Taking advantage of U.S. seapower, MacArthur staged a da
ring amphibious
invasion at Inchon, behind North Korean lines, threatening to encircle and exter
minate the entire
North Korean army. His risky gambit is considered one of the most daring invasio
ns in military
history.32 The geography of the location alone presented almost insurmountable c
hallenges. The
tidal swell at Inchon was thirty-seven feet, meaning that although high-tide lan
dings would be
relatively easy, at low tide ships would be stuck in mud. Initial troops would h
ave to hold for
twelve hours before reinforcements could again arrive. Wolmido Island, which con
trolled the
harbor, had to be taken first, which would alert enemy forces to the attack when
surprise was of the
essence.33
American marines took the island in forty-five minutes, eliminated all the dug-i
n defenders, and did
so without a single American death. MacArthur then defeated Korean troops that n
umbered 5,000
to 6,000 in the harbor and surrounding areas. In less than two weeks, Allied tro
ops cut all the way
across Korea, regaining the thirty-eighth parallel line—the original border whose
violation had
sparked the war. But MacArthur had proceeded farther north. For reasons of tempe
rament and
political ambition, MacArthur would have liked to have pursued the war beyond th
e thirty-eighth
parallel anyway, but he had also received clear instructions from Secretary of D
efense Marshall to
“feel unhampered tactically and strategically to proceed north of the 38th paralle
l [emphasis
added].”34 Both MacArthur and Acheson had assured Truman that the Chinese would no
t
intervene, with the general predicting a slaughter if Chinese troops crossed the
Yalu River. When
the Chinese did launch a massive counterattack in November 1950, the UN struggle
d to hold the
line at the thirty-eighth parallel.
MacArthur, meanwhile, had grown increasingly critical of the president. He urged
bringing the
Taiwanese into the war, called for intensive bombing of Chinese bases, and a tho
rough blockade of
the People’s Republic. General Omar Bradley, among others, warned Truman that a fu
ll-scale war
in China would be the “wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time,” and the pr
esident wisely
refused to expand the conflict. Meanwhile, MacArthur’s “rank insubordination,” as Trum
an called
it, was not only undesirable but dangerous, unconstitutional, and counter to the
American tradition
of keeping the military under control of civilians. In a bold and necessary stro
ke, Truman relieved
MacArthur, sparking a public firestorm that even he misjudged. MacArthur returne
d like a Roman
conqueror to address Congress to thunderous ovations as he bade farewell, saying
, “Old soldiers
never die. They just fade away.”
Relieving MacArthur had placed Truman in the crucible of public criticism, which
naturally did not
faze the president. “What would Jesus Christ have preached if he had taken a poll
in the land of
Israel?” he asked. “It isn’t [polls] that count. It is right and wrong, and leadership
.”35 Despite his
frequent underestimation of the communist threat, the feisty Missourian protecte
d the integrity of
the presidency and squelched permanently any notion that military leaders could
dictate public
policy. Not since Washington had a general come so close to wielding as much pow
er with public
opinion as had MacArthur. It was a battle Truman had to engage in.
The Korean conflict ended in a cease-fire in July 1953 (no peace treaty was ever
negotiated), and as
late as the 1990s, the Demilitarized Zone between the two Koreas constantly thre
atened to erupt
into widespread violence. The war had not been cheap. Some 33,000 Americans died
in battle, in
addition to more than 100,000 wounded and 15,000 missing or made prisoners. The
Korean War,
like Vietnam, featured dozens of bloody engagements and few memorable battles. H
ills often had
numbers, not names, and the most successful offensive of the war, devised by Gen
eral Matthew
Ridgway, was aptly named the meatgrinder. The most oft-referenced geographic spo
t was not a
battlefield such as Gettysburg, where a great victory had occurred, but the Yalu
River, which
American pursuit aircraft were not to cross. It was, according to one soldier, “th
e war we can’t win,
we can’t lose, and we can’t quit.”36
The war was the high-water mark of Truman’s administration, which was noteworthy f
or its
foreign policy successes. But his presidency was far from perfect. Economic grow
th remained
sporadic, and high inflation had left Truman with the nickname Horsemeat Harry f
or the meats
housewives had to substitute when beef prices rose too high. Labor battles had s
hut down several
industries. All of this could have been treated easily, however, by application
of basic free-market
economics, had Truman been so inclined. More problematic, Truman inherited a raf
t of Roosevelt
appointees who were sympathetic to communists at best or who engaged in treasono
us activities
and espionage at worst. Revelations about Soviet spies in America severely damag
ed Truman’s
otherwise well-earned reputation.
Soviet Espionage in 1950s America
Soviet spies in America had been active for more than two decades, of course, ju
st as Americans
themselves conducted intelligence operations in most major foreign countries. Wh
at the Soviets
gained through their American agents, however, was substantial. One new study co
ncludes that
contrary to the claims of liberals for many years, physicist Robert Oppenheimer,
the father of the
atomic bomb, helped write American Communist Party literature at the University
of California
and may have been a party member.37 Another recent study of Soviet agents in Ame
rica, based on
newly released KGB documents and coauthored by a former Soviet agent, revealed t
hat Russian
intelligence agencies “received substantial and sometimes critical information (in
cluding many
classified documents) concerning U.S. government policies on highly sensitive su
bjects, its
confidential negotiating strategies, and secret weapons development, including e
ssential processes
involved in building the atomic bomb.”38 The agents’ skills ranged from those of pra
cticed
professionals to bumbling amateurs, but, significantly, their level of penetrati
on into the U.S.
government is no longer in doubt.
Ironically, by the time Senator Joseph McCarthy, Republican of Wisconsin, got ar
ound to
discovering the presence of this underground network, it had been shut down for
several years
because of the defection of a single mentally depressed female agent. McCarthy,
whose name has
sloppily been linked to hysteria and totalitarianism, was a complex figure.39 Th
e last major
American political figure raised in a log cabin, the Irish Democrat had switched
parties after the
Second World War, winning a judgeship, then the Senate seat that had belonged to
Robert
LaFollette. He came into the Senate with his two friends John Kennedy and Richar
d Nixon. Joe
Kennedy liked McCarthy, and Robert F. Kennedy worked as the senator’s staffer duri
ng his
investigations.
Like Joe Kennedy, McCarthy was blue collar, rough, and viewed as an outsider. Gi
ven to both
overdrinking and overwork, McCarthy had a strong record on civil rights and supp
ort of
Wisconsin’s farmers, but he tended to operate within the committee on which he was
seated, the
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI). The PSI resembled the House Un-A
merican
Activities Committee (HUAC), which had commenced operation in 1938 to deal with
both Nazi
and Communist subversion. McCarthy failed to appreciate—or capitalize on—his own evi
dence
that indicated America’s national security had been penetrated at the highest leve
ls under
Roosevelt. The Agricultural Adjustment Administration had provided a breeding gr
ound for young
communist agents, sympathizers, and radicals in the 1930s, including John Abt, L
ee Pressman,
Nathan Witt, Harold Ware, and Alger Hiss. Ware, for example, had already set up
a network in
Washington with seven cells, all linked to the USSR. Though opposed by his Senat
e committee,
McCarthy, soon assisted on his own staff by young Robert F. Kennedy, and on the
House side by
Congressman Richard Nixon (pursuing Alger Hiss), succeeded in grabbing headlines
and sounding
a warning. Too often McCarthy’s willingness to tout any unverified piece of inform
ation or to act
before he had proof obscured the fact that the genuine damage already had been d
one to American
security.
Alleging that the U.S. Army itself had security issues, McCarthy challenged the
integrity of
General George Marshall, at which point Americans’ patience ran out. Many of his s
upporters
turned against him; the Senate censured him in 1954; and his health deteriorated
until his death
three years later after long bouts with alcoholism.
“McCarthyism” subsequently became a term synonymous with repression and terror—an amaz
ing
development considering that not one of the people subpoenaed by the senator to
testify lacked
legal counsel; none were arrested or detained without due process; and no one we
nt to jail without a
trial. “All through the ‘worst’ of the McCarthy period, the Communist Party itself was
never
outlawed, membership in the party was never declared a crime, and it continued t
o maintain public
offices, publish books and the Daily Worker,” wrote McCarthy biographer Arthur Her
man.40 If
anything, McCarthy’s investigations underestimated the number of active Soviet age
nts in the
country. At one time or another, the KGB regularly debriefed not only Harry Dext
er White and
Laurence Duggan, but also Michael Straight in the State Department; an agent kno
wn as Moris
(thought to be John Abt in the Justice Department); Boris Morros, a Hollywood pr
oducer; and wellknown
columnist Walter Lippmann. Some, such as Duggan and White, deliberately and freq
uently
shaped their internal policy memos to best benefit the USSR, not the United Stat
es, according to
recently released KGB material from the Soviet Archives.41
Even though the Eisenhower administration quietly abandoned the search for commu
nists in the
government, the assault on American communists became broader and, one could say
, “more
democratic,” as communists found themselves harassed, prosecuted, and hunted by th
e government
with the enthusiastic support of large segments of the public. Unions, led by Wa
lter Reuther of the
United Auto Workers and Philip Murray of the CIO, had kicked known communists ou
t even
before McCarthy started his famous hearings. J. Edgar Hoover, the director of th
e FBI, turned
anticommunism at the Bureau into a nearly personal vendetta: from its 1944 peak
of eighty
thousand members, the American Communist Party had shrunk to below twenty thousa
nd in 1956
and fewer than three thousand in 1971.42 Hoover had considerable help, however.
Public officials
often ignored or violated the constitutional rights of Communist Party members,
and more extreme
groups encouraged vigilante activity against known communists. Harvard Universit
y stated in May
1953 that “membership in the Communist Party is beyond the scope of academic freed
om,” and
constituted “grave misconduct justifying dismissal.”43 That said, the fundamental fa
ct was that
overall the constitutional protections and the fair play and ethics of the major
ity of citizens
restrained and limited anticommunist zeal.
Without doubt, the public was hostile to communism and suspicious of fellow trav
elers (nonparty
members who abetted communism). In its last burst of pro-America activism, Holly
wood chipped
in with movies such as I Married a Communist and The Red Menace, produced betwee
n 1947 and
1949. The blacklisting of the Hollywood Ten is well known. Hearings into the mov
ie industry saw
one resolute witness, a young Ronald Reagan, defend the industry and question th
e attacks on civil
liberties. Public schools promoted prodemocracy programs, and tell-all books by
former
communists abounded.
The bottom line, however, was that anticommunism was a serious response to genui
ne threats on
many levels than it was a form of paranoia. And overall, the dislocations attrib
uted to
anticommunist movements were and are exaggerated. As historians of the American
communist
movement noted, “Even during the early 1950s, the high tide of McCarthyism, the Co
mmunist
party functioned legally, its spokesmen publicly advocated its doctrines, its re
cruiters brought in
new members, and its press published daily and weekly newspapers, journals, pamp
hlets, and
books in the millions of copies.”44 University purges were rare. Of the 1,850 coll
eges and
universities with nearly 300,000 faculty in the 1950s, there were 126 cases of p
rofessors (at 58
institutions) dismissed or threatened with dismissal for their communist affilia
tion.
The bad news was that the spy scandals here and in Britain indicated that commun
ist infiltration
into national security and the State Department was worse than imagined. Spies J
ulius Rosenberg,
Claus Fuchs, and others had given the Soviets the data they needed to make an at
omic bomb. The
spy revelations, along with the invasion of South Korea by communist North Korea
and the fall of
China to dictator Mao Tse-tung in 1949, led to sharp concern over Soviet espiona
ge activities in the
United States. Labeling this the Red scare, or hysteria, is a gross exaggeration
. Hysteria is an
ungrounded fear, as opposed to concern based on genuine threats. As newly releas
ed Soviet
documents confirm without question, the USSR had penetrated virtually every impo
rtant division
of the U.S. government related to military, diplomatic, and security issues. Cer
tainly the opposition
to the cold war and agitation by so-called peace movements in America was manipu
lated by the
Soviets. Ironically, evidence for this Soviet involvement in domestic peace orga
nizations comes
from a historian sympathetic to the Left, Robbie Lieberman, who admits that Amer
ican
Communists “saw peace as bound up with the fortunes of the Soviet Union.”45 As he no
ted,
“Communist agitation for peace was bound up with defending the interests of the So
viet Union,
especially guaranteeing its…power (nuclear and otherwise) vis-à-vis the United State
s.”46
The nation was quite rational in exhibiting serious concerns about such developm
ents and, at the
same time, was fortunate to have a war hero and levelheaded Kansan as its new pr
esident—a man
who could stand up to the excesses of McCarthy without in any way backing down f
rom the
commitment to containment abroad. What is less clear is how seriously Eisenhower
took the threat
of communist infiltration into the Roosevelt and Truman administrations: he appe
ared more
embarrassed by McCarthy than concerned with the likes of Owen Lattimore and Alge
r Hiss. Some
of Eisenhower’s approach must in part be attributed to strategy, not wishing to ex
pend little of his
administration’s energy pounding on the errors of his predecessor. Some of it must
be chalked up to
a certain (and in this case, wrong) American presumption that large numbers of f
ellow citizens
would not be traitors. Whatever the reason, Ike’s unwillingness to be even slightl
y associated with
McCarthy’s cause led the new president to miss a golden opportunity to clean house
of Soviet
agents and, in the process, reinvigorate the conservative movement without the t
aint of extremism
associated with the John Birch Society (a far-right anticommunist group) or McCa
rthy.47
The Eisenhower Smile
It was natural that Americans considered military service a training ground for
the presidency—
most presidents had served in the armed forces, many as successful generals—and bo
th Eisenhower
and MacArthur entertained thoughts of a political career. For Dwight Eisenhower,
one potential
roadblock was that he had not been particularly political in his life, nor did t
he public even know
what party he favored, although he had voted Republican those times that he did
vote.
Ike encouraged the impression among the media elites that he was somehow detache
d from the
partisan wrangling of the day. Supporters lobbied him to run for office the minu
te he came home
from Europe, but he demurred. He even indicated that he would have been happy su
pporting the
party favorite, Robert Taft of Ohio (1889–1953) if “Mr. Republican” had endorsed NATO.
Yet in a
meeting with Eisenhower, Taft rejected American involvement in collective securi
ty for Europe,
sealing Ike’s decision to run. Like Truman, Ike did not mind being underestimated.
Elites rallied to
the Democratic candidate, Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois (1900–65), but Eisenhower
appealed to
the common man.
Seeking to blunt attacks from the McCarthy wing of the GOP, Ike named Congressma
n Richard
Nixon of California as his running mate. In the campaign, Democrats charged Nixo
n with financial
irregularities and corruption. The resilient Nixon, in one of the most famous po
litical television
addresses ever, carefully reviewed his finances, noting that he and his family h
ad few luxuries, that
his wife Pat did not have fur coats but a “good Republican cloth coat.” They had acc
epted one
gift—a cocker spaniel named Checkers, and with a tear in his eye Nixon stated he w
ould not give
up the family dog. Unswayed, Ike certainly stood ready to dump Nixon if popular
support didn’t
materialize, but the speech grabbed the nation’s heartstrings, and he stayed on th
e ticket.
Eisenhower buried Stevenson in the popular vote, garnering nearly 10 percent mor
e votes and
overwhelming him in the electoral college, 457 to 73.
Liberal journalists and academics have attempted to portray the election as one
in which the lesser
man won—that “smart” people voted for Stevenson, but were swamped by the rubes. In fac
t,
Stevenson was an avid nonreader, and the only book at his nightstand when he die
d was The Social
Register.48 Voter statistics revealed that the more education someone had, the m
ore likely the
person was to vote for Eisenhower. Oddly, Ike irked the press by smiling a lot.
But he also worked
hard and long, and despite his demeanor, in some ways he lived hard too. No sold
ier could achieve
what Ike had without some rough edges. During the war he drank twenty cups of co
ffee a day,
smoked four packs of cigarettes a day, and lived with myriad constant health pro
blems.49 Ike
played politics with the best, often opting for the indirect route that kept his
friends and foes alike
baffled and, like Ronald Reagan after him, he delegated duties effectively.
Unlike his successors Kennedy and Nixon, Eisenhower had no love for the power or
status of the
office itself. Being president provided the means to improve the nation, and mor
e broadly, the
world. Adviser George Kennan found that in small meetings, especially on foreign
affairs, Ike was
“a man of keen political intelligence and penetration [who] spoke of matters serio
usly…insights of
a high order flashed out time after time.”50 When he wished to avoid a direct answ
er, Eisenhower
employed military jargon to obfuscate, and even pretended not to understand his
own translator to
deflect foreign queries. Most of all, Ike’s animated face fit the times, like Linc
oln’s solemn
demeanor fit his own.
The Eisenhower smile “was a political statement: America was good; unlike Hitler o
r Stalin,
America was offering to the world a good man…. Understandably, it drove fanatics a
nd the
alienated up the wall.”51 He responded with straightforward and simple answers:
Q. Can you bring taxes down?
A. Yes. We will work to cut billions…and bring your taxes down.52
A low inflation rate (just over 1 percent) and virtual full employment (3 percen
t unemployment)
contributed to Eisenhower’s popularity. He balanced his budget three of eight time
s, and the other
years had only minor deficits. Long before Ronald Reagan established the Elevent
h
Commandment—Thou shalt not speak ill of another Republican—Ike had absorbed that pri
nciple.
If he needed to bash a particular GOP opponent, he did so through references to
general
characteristics, not by name. When it came to the Democrats, however, Ike could
be brutal. And
when it came to foreign enemies, Eisenhower took another tack, speaking in parad
oxes and
inscrutable philosophizing.
The “Fair Deal” Becomes “Dynamic Conservatism”
A central, lingering domestic question that both Truman and Eisenhower had to de
al with involved
the continuation of the New Deal—or rolling it back, as some hoped. Welfare-state
liberalism had
become entrenched by 1946, and despite his triumph over Wallace, Truman did litt
le to slow the
extension of federal programs. Truman raised the minimum wage, made an additiona
l 10 million
people eligible for new Social Security benefits, embarked on federal slum clear
ance, and proposed
a large farm-income program. Truman’s domestic program—dubbed the Fair Deal in honor
of his
Progressive forebears—also included 810,000 federally subsidized housing units. At
almost every
point Truman allied with the big-government forces.
In 1953, therefore, Eisenhower had a remarkable opportunity. As the first GOP pr
esident since
Hoover, he was in a position to limit or end some of the New Deal policies, espe
cially with the
House and Senate under Republican control for a brief time. Nevertheless, Ike re
cognized that part
of his appeal rested on his bipartisan image. He had not run as anti-Roosevelt,
and was indeed far
too progressive for some in the Republican Party, including “Mr. Republican,” Senato
r Taft of
Ohio. Many voters thought Taft and other conservatives overemphasized anticommun
ism to the
exclusion of other issues (although Taft is perhaps best known for his sponsorsh
ip of the Taft-
Hartley Act of 1946, prohibiting closed-shop, union-only, workplaces). Taft’s insu
rgency failed,
and the senator died in 1953, removing the most significant Republican opposing
voice to Ike’s
policies, although remaining GOP insurgents forced the president to moderate the
rate of growth of
New Deal programs. Where Ike did reverse New Deal policies was in his cabinet se
lections, who
were mostly businessmen. Among the group was the devout Mormon, Ezra Taft Benson
, who cut
back federal ownership of hydroelectric power businesses and limited regulation
of offshore oil
leases. But Eisenhower did not hesitate to spend: the National Highway Act of 19
56 used federal
money to link the nation’s cities, thus lowering (private) transportation costs. B
lasted as “corporate
socialism” for Detroit, the act reflected Ike’s World War II experience, which impre
ssed on him the
need for a highway system for defense.
His domestic strategy, called dynamic conservatism, was a policy that shed the c
riticism that
conservatives were only against something and offered nothing positive. The mini
mum wage rose
to a dollar an hour under Eisenhower and federal aid to education increased thro
ugh the National
Defense Education Act. Social Security benefits likewise rose, and Ike created a
new
superagency—the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare—to continue to administ
er the
New Deal welfare-state programs. Eisenhower did not end the New Deal, but he slo
wed its growth.
The Atomic Genie
Both Truman and Eisenhower maintained a consistency in dealing with atomic energ
y and atomic
weapons. Realizing that atomic power provided not only new terrors, but also new
sources of
relatively clean energy for civilian use, Congress authorized the Atomic Energy
Commission under
civilian control to examine peaceful uses of nuclear power. Bernard Baruch, head
of the War
Industries Board in World War I, became the American delegate to the newly forme
d United
Nations Atomic Energy Commission. To control the spread of nuclear weapons—which c
ould
easily grow out of the unchecked expansion of peaceful nuclear power—the UN propos
ed an
international agency to supervise all atomic development. Baruch even submitted
a plan to have the
United States hand over atomic secrets to the UN, on the condition that the Unit
ed States, the
USSR, and other nations likely to develop nuclear power would agree to allow int
ernational
inspections at atomic installations. The United States, under those conditions,
would agree to
destroy its nuclear stockpile. The Soviets had already secretly started construc
tion of their own
atomic bombs, and they had no intention of allowing free access by international
inspectors to
anything.
H-bomb testing produced fallout of a different sort when a national meeting of c
hurch leaders,
scientists, authors, and other notables in June 1957 led to the formation of the
National Committee
for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE). Emphasizing the “human community,” SANE placed ads
in
major papers protesting the H-bomb tests, but soon its agenda included internati
onal control over
all U.S. weapons.
By 1948, even before the USSR had detonated its own atomic bomb, the Joint Chief
s of Staff and
Truman’s security advisers understood that temporarily the only way to protect Eur
ope from further
Soviet expansion was the threat, sometimes subtle, sometimes not, of the use of
nuclear weapons
by the United States in the event of aggression against any of the NATO allies.
In a document
called NSC-30, “the first formal expression of American atomic policy,” the United S
tates
deliberately left its options open regarding the use of nuclear weapons.53 After
NSC-30, which
effectively established the principle of linkage, America’s enemies knew that the
atomic weapons
in the arsenals of democracy would not just sit by while Europe or Asia was bein
g overrun.
At about the same time, an independent group of civilians established the Resear
ch and
Development Corporation (RAND) as a think tank to study problems associated with
nuclear
warfare. RAND employees John D. Williams, mathematician John von Neumann, and ot
hers
concluded that nuclear war was not “unthinkable”; quite the contrary, to prevent it,
someone should
think about it. RAND developed studies that crystallized the armed forces’ concept
s of how to use,
and how to prevent the use of, nuclear weapons, essentially forming the theoreti
cal basis for mutual
assured destruction, or MAD.54
Eisenhower, along with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, further delineated
America’s strategy
in 1954 by making it clear the United States would, if necessary, use nuclear we
apons even on
nonnuclear countries that threatened American national interests. To the Soviets—w
ho by then had
their own nuclear arsenal—this sent a clear message that the United States would n
ot be bullied.
Wishing to keep the nuclear genie in his bottle, however, Eisenhower introduced
a flexible
response that allowed for a wide range of military options when confronted with
local or regional
threats.55 In short, Ike kept America’s enemies guessing and off balance, never su
re if aggression
might invoke a nuclear response. This tended to keep rogue nations cautious and,
for the most part,
peaceful.
Secretly, Eisenhower prepared the nation to win a nuclear war far more than hist
orians have
previously thought, going so far as to disperse nuclear weapons to the soil of a
llies such as Canada,
then later to Greenland, Iceland, Greece, Italy, and Japan, beginning in the 195
0s.56 America kept
ahead of the Soviets and far ahead of the Chinese, as seen in the 1958 confronta
tion with China
over the islands of Quemoy and Matsu in the Formosa Straits. The Nationalist gov
ernment claimed
these islands, as did the communist mainland, which made plans to invade them. Q
uiet diplomacy
provided an agreement, but looming over the discussions was the fact that the Un
ited States had an
“ace in the hole,” as historian Timothy Botti called the nuclear weapons. Time and a
gain, this
nuclear backstop enabled the United States to pursue its national interests in w
ays that few large
states in previous eras ever could have imagined. In short, the implicit threat
of its large nuclear
arsenal permitted the United States to engage in less than total war and to purs
ue localized, or
limited, wars on several occasions.
Eisenhower also sought to develop a broader nuclear policy that would make use o
f atomic energy
for peaceful purposes. In December 1953, Ike delivered his “Atoms for Peace” speech
at the United
Nations in New York City in hopes of breaking the deadlock over establishing int
ernational
supervision of fissionable materials, and of approving an amendment to the Atomi
c Energy Act of
1946 that provided for research in nuclear energy in civilian areas under the di
rection of the
National Security Council.57 Thus, the federal government assumed authority for
the safety and
regulation of all civilian nuclear plants in the nation. This expanded federal p
ower on the one hand,
but it opened up an untapped resource to be used with confidence on the other.
Sputnik: Cold War in Space
To America’s shock, in August 1957 the cold war took a new turn or, more appropria
tely, an
upward arc when the USSR announced it had successfully tested an intercontinenta
l ballistic
missile (ICBM), a rocket fired upward out of the earth’s atmosphere on an arc that
would descend
on a target and release warheads. Although the public did not immediately apprec
iate the import of
these tests, in October the Soviet Union claimed the lead in the space race by l
aunching Sputnik I
into orbit, using a launcher similar to that on their ICBMs. To the man on the s
treet, Sputnik
represented little more than a Soviet scientific feat, but added to the ICBM tes
t, Sputnik’s
successful orbit suggested that now the USSR had the capability of raining atomi
c bombs on
American soil safely from within bases inside Russia.
Realistically, the Soviets had merely skipped a step in the development of nucle
ar weapons,
temporarily forgoing construction of a long-range bomber fleet. Eisenhower perso
nally seemed
unconcerned. Not so the general public. Popular media publications such as Life
magazine
headlined its post-Sputnik issue with the case for being panicky. The public did
not know that
General Curtis LeMay, of the Strategic Air Command, in an internal study reviewi
ng the results of
a simulated missile attack on American bomber bases, had concluded that the Sovi
et Union could
have wiped out sixty of the major U.S. bases with a coordinated attack. Sputnik
persuaded the
United States to keep a force of long-range reconnaissance aircraft—the U-2 spy pl
anes—in the
skies over the USSR at all times to detect enemy preparations for an attack. Eis
enhower also
offered intermediate-range ballistic missiles to NATO allies, such as Britain, T
urkey, and Italy.
Nevertheless, the public demanded a response to the threat of ICBMs. This came i
n a crash
program aimed in two directions. First, money poured into education, particularl
y into universities
and colleges for engineering, science, and math programs. Through the National D
efense Education
Act (1958), Congress “authorized grants for training in mathematics, science, and
modern
languages.”58 That might have kept the money in the labs where Congress intended i
t, but by also
funding student loans and fellowships, the federal government flooded the humani
ties and other
university departments with cash, providing the financial base for the student r
ebellions that would
dominate the late 1960s.
Second, the United States moved with urgency to develop its own solid-and liquid
-fueled rockets,
resulting in some early spectacular crashes as American technology exploded on l
aunching pads or
flew apart in flight. Defense spending surged, and Congress turned the National
Advisory Council
on Aeronautics (NACA, created in 1915 by President Woodrow Wilson) into a larger
, more
powerful agency, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). In Ma
y 1961,
Commander Alan B. Shepard Jr. became the first American into space; then, in Feb
ruary 1962,
Colonel John Glenn was launched into orbit aboard a Mercury rocket. In both case
s the Soviets
beat the United States to the punch, placing their own “astronauts”—a new term coined
to describe
space travelers, although the Russian “cosmonauts” preceded American astronauts—into s
pace,
then into orbit. To the public, these activities merely confirmed that the commu
nists continued to
lead in the space race. The images of exploding American rockets remained fresh,
and even with
Glenn’s flight, American scientists feared the worst while they hoped (and planned
) for the best.
Military planners even had a plan (Operation Dirty Trick) that would blame Cuban
communists if
the Mercury flight failed.59 Soviet victories in space contributed to the cloud
of anxiety that hung
over what otherwise was a decade of prosperity and growth.
Happy Days: Myth or Reality?
A popular television sitcom called Happy Days appeared from 1974 to 1984 and dep
icted life in
1950s America as lighthearted and easy, with intact families, supportive communi
ties, and
teenagers who, although prone to an occasional prank or misstep, nevertheless be
haved like
upstanding citizens. Even the antihero, the Fonz (Vincent Fonzarelli, played by
Henry Winkler),
who sported a motorcycle jacket and a tough-guy mystique, possessed a heart of g
old and displayed
loyalty, courage, and wisdom. Of course, in the cynical 1970s, critics salivated
at the opportunity to
lampoon Happy Days. They pointed out that the show did not deal at any length wi
th racial
prejudice (it did not, although Asian actor Pat Morita was the original owner of
the diner) or family
problems such as alcoholism and divorce (again, guilty as charged). But the very
fact that so many
critics, especially of the Left, responded so vehemently to Happy Days suggests
that the show
touched a raw nerve. Despite genuine social problems and hidden pathologies, des
pite racial
discrimination and so-called traditional roles for women, and despite the threat
of atomic warfare,
for the vast majority of Americans, the 1950s were happy days.
One view of the 1950s, focused on those who had entered adulthood in the decade
or slightly
before, comes from generational pundits William Strauss and Neil Howe. They labe
l the group
born from 1901 to 1924 the GI generation. By 1946, GIs would have reached twenty
-two at the
youngest and forty-five at the oldest, putting them at the prime earning years o
f their lives. That
coincided with the postwar economic boom that fitted together a generation viewe
d as “fearless but
not reckless,” replete with heroes and full of problem solvers.60 As the inscripti
on on the Iwo Jima
shrine (itself a testament to their courage) puts it, “Uncommon valor was a common
virtue.”
Adults of the 1950s included many of America’s greatest achievers, including Walt
Disney, Ronald
Reagan, Lee Iacocca, Lyndon Johnson, George Bush, Bob Hope, John Wayne, Katharin
e Hepburn,
Ann Landers, Billy Graham, Sidney Poitier, Walter Cronkite, Jimmy Stewart, Charl
es Lindbergh,
and Joe DiMaggio. They produced such cultural monuments as Herman Wouk’s The Caine
Mutiny, Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story, Jackie Gleason’s The Honeymooners, and
Walt
Disney’s Lady and the Tramp and Bambi. They initiated a spiritual revival that spr
ead the Gospel
of Christianity more broadly through Billy Graham and the ministry of Oral Rober
ts. Epitomizing
the spirit of the decade, the best-known comic strip character, Superman, fought
for “truth, justice,
and the American way.”
Nineteen fifties Americans received the benefit of the largest one-generation ju
mp in educational
achievement in the nation’s history; they had learned the importance of work, yet
had worked less
outside the home than any other group; and as a generation they had an uncanny k
nack for backing
the winning candidate in every single major election. As adults, they won two th
irds of all Nobel
prizes ever won by Americans, including all fourteen prizes in economics. Suppor
ted in some of
their affluence by grateful taxpayers, they received housing subsidies through m
ortgage interest
deductions on taxes, and through the Veterans Administration, they received guar
anteed mortgage
loans to purchase houses. This group of adults also effectively changed the deba
te about racial
segregation, with black intellectuals like Ralph Ellison (Invisible Man) arguing
that segregation not
only was morally wrong, but also economically inefficient. By 1965, Look magazin
e would say—
speaking mainly of the adults in society—“Americans today bear themselves like victo
ry-addicted
champions…. They are accustomed to meeting, and beating, tests.”61
This optimism hid a spiritual emptiness that characterized many of this generati
on, the efforts of
preachers such as Billy Graham, Norman Vincent Peale, and Oral Roberts notwithst
anding. Later
surveys would show the 1950s generation to be in many ways one of the least reli
gious groups in
American history, and this may in part account for why their success—while genuine
and
admirable in many cases—was fleeting. Sooner or later, a sandy foundation of civic
virtue,
unsupported by deeper spiritual commitments, would crumble.
What is amazing about all this is that the 1950s still had plenty of structure.
Marriage and
motherhood were considered the main destiny of young women—with teaching and nursi
ng
considered their only “acceptable” careers—and magazines such as Seventeen or Mademois
elle or
popular books such as Mary McGee Williams’s On Becoming a Woman all operated under
this
assumption. “It’s Not Too Soon to Dream of Marriage” ran a typical chapter title in Wi
lliams’s
book. Yet at the same time, the prominent female movie stars were the sexy Maril
yn Monroe,
Jayne Mansfield, Jane Russell, and Brigitte Bardot. Alfred Kinsey’s Sexual Behavio
r in the Human
Female, which appeared in 1953, even if tainted by flawed data still indicated t
hat women were
having sex before marriage in large numbers, perhaps—if Kinsey’s statistics were to
be believed—
up to half of the six thousand women he had interviewed. Certainly men thought a
bout sex all the
time, or at least that was the premise behind the launch of Hugh Hefner’s Playboy
magazine in
1953, wherein photos of nude women were legitimized for viewing by middle-class
men by
packaging them with interviews, fiction, and “serious reporting.” The standard joke
of the day was
that a male, when caught in possession of a Playboy, would claim to read it “just
for the articles.”
As if to follow Hefner’s lead, in 1957 the Searle pharmaceutical company brought o
ut the birthcontrol
pill, which proved instrumental in delinking sexual intercourse from childbearin
g or, put
another way, in separating consequences from actions.
Before the Pill, in the early 1950s, young adults, especially those married in t
he late 1940s,
produced the largest boom in childbirths ever witnessed in the United States. Ap
tly labeled baby
boomers, these children grew up in unprecedented affluence by the standards of t
he day. Adult
expectations were that the boomers stood “on the fringe of a golden era” and would “la
y out blight
proof, smog-free cities, enrich the underdeveloped world, and, no doubt, write f
inis to poverty and
war.”62 New foods developed specifically for babies had experienced slow growth be
fore the
boomers began consuming boxcars full of Frank Gerber’s baby products and pediatric
s “reached its
height of physical aggressiveness: No generation of kids got more shots or opera
tions.”63
Clothes designers targeted babies and children as distinct consumer groups rathe
r than viewing
them as little adults. Manufacturers made clothes tailored for babies’ and childre
n’s bodies, for
play, and for, well…accidents. Barbie dolls, Hula-Hoops, Davy Crockett coonskin ca
ps, and other
toys aimed at children appeared on the market, and other toys invented earlier,
like Tinkertoys and
Lionel trains, saw their sales soar. In short, the baby boomers in general wante
d for no material
thing.
In addition to growing up in abundance, the boom generation also was raised on t
he theories of the
best-selling baby book of all time, Dr. Benjamin Spock’s Common Sense Book of Baby
and Child
Care (1946). Spock, thoroughly steeped in psychoanalysis and Freudianism, had be
en a Coolidge
Republican in early adulthood, but along with his wife had moved steadily leftwa
rd, advocating
positions that would have made Coolidge quiver. He advised parents to refrain fr
om disciplining
their children and to let children determine when and where everything took plac
e, from bathroom
habits to education. American homes overnight became child centered, whereas spa
nking and other
physical discipline was viewed as psychologically unhealthy. The dangerous combi
nation of
material comfort and loose control made for a generation that lacked toughness,
one that literally
fell apart under the pressures of civil rights, the Vietnam War, and economic st
agnation. Not
surprisingly, boomers turned to drugs and sex in record numbers, and divorce amo
ng the generation
skyrocketed.
Along with the permissiveness at home came an unparalleled freedom of travel and
movement.
Some of this movement was permanent relocation for jobs or better living conditi
ons, including
climate. Most of it was from north and east to south and west: between 1947 and
1960, a quarter of
a million Americans left the Great Lakes region and the mid-Atlantic/New England
areas for the far
West, Southwest, and Southeast. At the same time, only twenty-one thousand—virtual
ly all
black—left the South for higher wages and greater social freedom in the North. Thu
s, the Sun Belt
regions netted a huge population gain in just over a decade, dramatically shifti
ng both the economy
and political balance of the country.
Central cities saw their rate of growth slow as suburbs appeared around all the
major metropolitan
areas. Levittown, New York—built by William Levitt in 1947—created such a demand tha
t by the
time it was finished in 1951, it covered 1,200 acres with more than 17,000 homes
, most of them
owned by young families. Levittown quickly acquired the nickname Fertility Valle
y. Levitt’s basic
house consisted of a 720-square-foot Cape Cod, constructed on a concrete slab, i
ncluding a kitchen,
two bedrooms, a bath, a living room with fireplace, and an attic with the potent
ial for conversion
into two more bedrooms. Basic models sold for just under $7,000, whereas larger
versions went for
$10,000.
Many communities like Levittown were planned cities that sought to control the t
ypes of
businesses, architecture, and developments that were permitted in an attempt to
beautify the
environment.64 Oversight by professionals in city planning represented the culmi
nation of the
dreams of the Progressives who had once thought that central cities would evolve
into what the
suburbs, in fact, became. Yet once the planned communities arose, criticism of t
hem from
academics and urban advocates sprang up almost as fast: the “soulless” suburbs, it w
as said, were
draining away the talent and wealth from the inner cities. Instead of praising l
ower crime rates in
the suburbs, critics blamed the suburbanites for abandoning the core city.65 The
y failed to
understand the basic human desire for security, privacy, and property.
Travel for business and pleasure also expanded at geometric rates, thanks to the
widespread
availability of the family automobile. Autos had started to permeate American cu
lture in the 1920s,
but the expansion of auto travel slowed during the Depression and war. After 194
6, however,
people had several years’ worth of wartime savings to spend, and General Motors an
d Ford, the
giants, began to offer their own financing programs, making it still easier to a
cquire dependable
transportation. A feedback loop—a self-reinforcing cycle—occurred as it had in the 1
920s: as more
people obtained autos, they demanded better roads, which state governments start
ed to provide; and
as more roads were laid, reaching more towns and cities, more people wanted cars
. The Big Three
automakers (GM, Ford, and Chrysler) dominated the market, but many other small c
ompanies
remained competitive, such as Jeep, Rambler, Nash, Checker, Willys, and the shor
t-lived (but highselling)
Kaiser-Frazer cars. In the 1950s, U.S. auto production exceeded that of Great Br
itain,
France, Japan, Sweden, and all other nations put together several times over, an
d Ford and GM—
both of which produced their 50 millionth vehicles in the 1950s—posted healthy pro
fits.
Even before the 1956 National Highway Act was passed, building 41,000 miles of i
nterstates, 60
percent of all American households owned a car, but most trips were local. The n
ation’s more than
40 million cars traveled on some 1.6 million miles of surfaced highways, testify
ing to the fact that
auto ownership had become common. Average annual highway driving rose 400 percen
t after the
act, making interstate travel commonplace. But on the negative side, the fuel ta
xes remained in
place long after the highway construction ended, and nearly fifty years later, a
lmost half of the
price of a gallon of gasoline consisted of federal, state, and local taxes. Inde
ed, the leftist notion
that roads use tax dollars to subsidize auto travel fails to confront the realit
y that gasoline taxes
ensured that the people who used the highways would, in fact, pay for them—even as
they were
also paying for the mass transit systems that the “experts” promoted. The unbridled
liberty of the
automobile irks those enamored of planning and control, those who see government
-dominated
mass transit systems as an ordered and structured alternative.
Air travel also entered a new democratic age. While still expensive, passenger f
lights became
increasingly more available to more people. Air carriers, such as Trans World Ai
rlines, American,
Pan Am, and others, flew enough routes at low enough prices that by the late 195
0s average
American families could consider taking an airplane flight to a vacation site or
to see relatives. Juan
Trippe’s Pan American World Airways, which had flown directly to England by the 19
30s and had
mapped South American routes for security purposes during the war, emerged as a
leading overseas
carrier. Howard Hughes, who owned enough of Trans World Airlines (TWA) to assume
hands-on
management, started designing his own giant passenger aircraft even before the w
ar, resulting in
the Lockheed Constellation, which set an “industry standard for size, comfort, and
range.”66 New
technology converged with a glut of war-trained pilots who came on the market af
ter 1945,
producing lower fares. Eastern, American, and TWA offered coach-class tickets th
at made air
travel competitive with rail travel, resulting in a doubling of airplane passeng
ers between 1951 and
1958. The ease with which people traveled by air was, ironically, symbolized by
the first air traffic
jam over New York City in 1954, when three hundred airliners lined up in holding
patterns in the
airspace around the metropolis, involving forty-five thousand passengers in dela
ys.
After Pan Am introduced a new transatlantic airliner designed specifically for p
assengers, the
Douglas DC-7, Boeing matched it with the famous 707 jetliner, providing competit
ion in
passenger-aircraft production that drove down prices. The frequency of air trave
l even produced a
new term in the language, a physical and mental malady called jet lag.
It goes without saying that Americans could fly and drive because their paycheck
s purchased more
than ever before. In 1955 the average income for all industries, excluding farm
labor, topped
$4,220 per year, and by 1959 that had increased by another 10 percent. A New Orl
eans salesman
with a high school education earned $400 per month; a Chicago private secretary
pulled in about
the same; and a Charlotte housekeeper received about $140 a month. Marilyn Monro
e could
command $100,000 a picture—just a little more than the $90,000 annual income earne
d by Peanuts
cartoonist Charles Schulz.67 Such high wages bought a lot of potatoes at $.51 pe
r pound, or rice at
$.19 per pound, and even new electronics gadgets like movie projectors were with
in reach at $89.
Chevrolet’s Corvette—arguably the hottest car of the 1950s—had a sticker price of $3,6
70, or
below the average annual salary in America.
Cookie-Cutter America?
The newfound freedom on the highways and airways held a threat as well as a prom
ise, for
although people could break the restraints of their geography, social class, bac
kground, and family
more easily than ever, they also were exposed to new and unfamiliar, often uncom
fortable social
settings and customs. People responded by seeking a balance, embracing similar—alm
ost
uniform—housing on the one hand and enjoying their visits to other parts of the co
untry on the
other. The popularity of the famous Levittown subdivisions, where all houses wer
e almost
identical, have led some historians to mistake this need for order, and the cost
advantages resulting
from economics of scale, for an overarching quest for conformity. It was no such
thing at all. Just
as the adventurous pilot scans the landscape for a familiar topography every now
and then, so too
did Americans embrace individualism while they retained some sense of order.
To see this, all one has to do is examine American travel patterns to observe ho
w people eagerly
entered into parts of the country that were in many ways foreign to them, even t
hreatening.
Yankees heading to Florida’s vacation spots for the first time crossed through the
redneck
backwoods of the Old South. Easterners visiting California often encountered Asi
ans for the first
time; and midwesterners taking new jobs in the Southwest were exposed to Indian
or Mexican
cultures and probably ate their first taco or tasted their first salsa. Even suc
h things as housing—in
Arizona few multilevel homes were built because of the heat—food, and beverages di
ffered greatly
from place to place. Southern iced tea, for example, was always presweetened, an
d so-called
Mexican food in Texas hardly resembled Mexican food in California. Midwesterners
, who battled
snows and rains all winter and spring, had trouble relating to water politics in
the West, where
titanic struggles over the Colorado River consumed lawmakers and citizens.
Food rapidly democratized and diversified, with the specialized dishes of the el
ites spreading to the
middle class throughout the country. Soldiers who had come back from Italy had a
yearning for
pasta; New Yorkers who knew Coney Island learned the magic of the hot dog and to
ok the concept
with them as they traveled. Asian recipes moved inward from the coasts as Mexica
n cuisine surged
northward. America’s eating establishments became the most richly textured on the
planet, with the
most varied menus anywhere in the world. Within thirty years, Jamaican hot peppe
rs, Indian curry
sauce, flour tortillas, lox, teriyaki sauce, Dutch chocolates, innumerable pasta
variations, and spices
of all descriptions flooded the shelves of American grocers, allowing a cook in
North Dakota to
specialize in cashew chicken, N’Awlins shrimp, or enchiladas. Not surprisingly, so
me of the most
celebrated chefs to come out of this era drew upon their ethnic roots or experie
nces for their
cooking. Martha Stewart (born Martha Kostyra) frequently prepared Polish dishes.
And Julia Child,
who worked in Asia with the Office of Strategic Services and then lived in Paris
(where she learned
to cook), had a broad firsthand exposure to foreign cuisine. Emeril Lagasse, ano
ther future star,
born in the early 1960s, earned his chef’s apron in his parents’ Portuguese bakery.
Far from a decade of conformity, as expressed in the lamentations of books on co
rporate America,
such as William Whyte’s The Organization Man (1956) or Sloan Wilson’s The Man in the
Gray
Flannel Suit (1955), the population had entered a period of sharp transition whe
re technology was
the handmaiden of turmoil. These books and others, such as David Reisman’s The Lon
ely Crowd
(1950), emphasized a shift from rugged individualism to a team or corporate orie
ntation. Reality
was quite different: American conformity in fact kept the sudden and difficult t
ransitions of the
postwar world from careening out of control. It is not surprising that the two m
ost popular movie
stars of the day—the establishment’s John Wayne and the counterculture’s James Dean—in
different ways celebrated rugged individualism, not conformity.
No one symbolized the effort to maintain continuity between 1950s America and it
s small-town
roots and patriotic past more than painter Norman Rockwell (1894–1978), who in som
e ways was
the most important and significant American artist in the history of the Republi
c. Born in New
York, Rockwell left school in 1910 to study at the National Academy of Design. A
lmost
immediately his work found an audience and a market. He painted Christmas cards
before he was
sixteen, and while still a teenager was hired to paint the covers of Boys’ Life, t
he official
publication of the Boy Scouts of America.68 Setting up a studio in New Rochelle,
Rockwell
worked for a number of magazines until he received a job in 1916 painting covers
for The Saturday
Evening Post, a magazine Rockwell called the “greatest show window in America.” In a
ll,
Rockwell painted 322 covers for the Post, and illustrated children’s books before
he began painting
for Look magazine.
Critics despised Rockwell because he presented an honest, yet sympathetic and lo
ving, view of
America.69 He insisted on painting those scenes that captured the American spiri
t of family—
independence, patriotism, and commitment to worship. Inspired by one of Franklin
Roosevelt’s
speeches, Rockwell produced his masterpieces, the Four Freedoms, which ran in co
nsecutive issues
of the Post in 1943 along with interpretive essays by contemporary writers. Free
dom from Want
was inspired by his family’s cook presenting a turkey at Thanksgiving. Freedom of
Speech,
possibly the best known Rockwell painting of all, featured a small-town meeting
in which a laborer
in a brown leather jacket speaks with confidence about a bill or proposal tucked
in his pocket.
Rockwell did not ignore the serious deficiencies of American society. His 1964 L
ook painting The
Problem We All Live With remains one of the most powerful indictments of racial
discrimination
ever produced. Depicting the desegregation of a New Orleans school district in 1
960, Rockwell
painted a little black girl, Ruby Bridges, being escorted into the formerly all-
white school by four
federal marshals. The wall in the background has the splattered remains of a tom
ato just under the
graffito nigger that appears above her head. New Kids in the Neighborhood (1967)
pictures a
moving van with two African American kids standing beside it—the new kids staring
at three white
children who are looking at them with curiosity, not anger or fear.
Rockwell’s paintings capture a stability in a sea of unraveling social and regiona
l bonds. Religion
tried to adapt to these changes but failed. It took outsiders, such as Billy Gra
ham and Oral Roberts,
to cut through the serenity, comfort, and even sloth of the mainstream religions
to get Christianity
focused again on saving the lost and empowering the body of Christ. Clinging to
stability and
eschewing change came at a price: the lack of passion and avoidance of contentio
n in many
denominations triggered a staggering decline in membership. One researcher found
that starting in
1955, the Methodist Church lost an average of a thousand members every week for
the next thirty
years.70 In the mid-1950s, churches responded by becoming more traditional and t
urning down the
doctrinal voltage.
As religion grew less denominationally contentious, thus making it less importan
t to live near those
of a similar denomination, Americans found one less impediment to relocating to
other cities or
regions of the country. The market played a role in this sense of regional famil
iarity too. Entire
industries sprang up to meet the demands of an increasingly mobile population. F
or example,
Kemmons Wilson, a Tennessee architect, traveled with his family extensively and
was irritated by
the quality of hotels and the fact that most hotels or motels charged extra for
children. Wilson and
his wife embarked on a cross-country trip in which they took copious notes about
every motel and
hotel where they stayed: size of rooms, facilities, cost, and so on. He then ret
urned home to design
the model motel of optimal size, comfort, and pricing—with kids staying free. The
result—Holiday
Inn—succeeded beyond Wilson’s wildest dreams. By 1962, Wilson had 250 motels in some
35
states. Wilson saw standardization as the key. Each Holiday Inn had to be the sa
me, more or less, as
any other. That way, travelers could always count on a “good night’s sleep,” as he sai
d later.
Americans’ quest for familiar products, foods, and even fuel and music in an age o
f growing
mobility produced a vast market waiting to be tapped.71
Ray Kroc saw that potential. A middle-aged paper-cup salesman who had invented a
multiple-milkshake
mixer, Kroc was impressed with a California hamburger stand owned by a pair of b
rothers
named McDonald. He purchased the rights to the name and the recipes and standard
ized the food.
All burgers, fries, and milk shakes at all locations had to be made in exactly t
he same way. In 1954
he opened the first McDonald’s drive-in restaurant in Des Planes, Illinois, replet
e with its
characteristic golden arches. After five years, there were two hundred McDonald’s
restaurants in
the United States, and Kroc was opening a hundred more per year.72 By the twenty
-first century,
“fast food” had become a derogatory term. But fifty years earlier, when truckers pla
nned their stops
at roadside truck cafés, the appearance of a McDonald’s restaurant in the distance,
with its
consistent level of food quality, brought nothing but smiles.
What Norman Rockwell had done for canvas, Kroc and Wilson did for food and lodgi
ng, in the
sense that they provided buoys of familiarity in a sea of turbulence and interna
tional threats.
Americans needed—indeed, demanded—a number of consistent threads, from music to meal
s,
from autos to dwellings, within which to navigate the sea of transformation in w
hich they found
themselves.
The Invisible Man
One of the main arenas where Americans confronted radical change in the 1950s wa
s in race
relations. The continued injustice of a segregated society in which black people
were either secondclass
citizens or, in more “sophisticated” cities, merely invisible, had finally started t
o change.
Ralph Ellison’s novel The Invisible Man eloquently captured the fact that to most
white Americans,
blacks simply did not exist. Television shows never depicted blacks in central r
oles; black or
“nigger” music, as white-dominated radio stations called it, was banned from playlis
ts (as was Elvis
Presley, whom disc jockeys thought was black, early on). One could search in vai
n for African
American executives heading major white-owned companies.
Few blacks were even remotely equal to whites in economic, political, or cultura
l power. This
situation existed across the nation, where it was winked at or deliberately igno
red by most whites.
But in the South racism was open and institutionalized in state and local laws.
Since Plessy v.
Ferguson the doctrine of “separate but equal” had been applied to southern public fa
cilities,
including schools, transportation, public restrooms and drinking fountains, and
in the vast majority
of private restaurants and in the housing market. On municipal buses, for exampl
e, blacks were
required to give up their seats to whites, and were always expected to go to the
back or middle of
the bus. Segregation of the races divided everything from church services to whi
tes-only diners.
State universities in many southern states would not admit blacks, nor was any b
lack—no matter
how affluent—permitted to join country clubs or civic groups. Indeed, even as late
as the 1990s,
when the black/Asian golfer Tiger Woods became the youngest pro golfer to win th
e Masters, he
was prohibited from joining some of the private golf clubs at which he had playe
d as part of the
Professional Golfers’ Association tour. Also in the 1990s, famous televangelist pa
stor Frederick K.
C. Price was not invited to speak at certain churches because of his skin color.
Large numbers—if not the vast majority—of whites entertained some racial prejudices
if not
outright racism. Confederate flag-wavers, white-robed Ku Klux Klansmen (whose or
ganization had
plummeted in membership since the 1920s), and potbellied southern sheriffs still
stood out as notso-
comical symbols of white racism. Equally dangerous to blacks, though, were well-
meaning
whites, especially northeastern liberals, who practiced a quiet, and perhaps equ
ally systematic,
racism. Those northern white elites would enthusiastically and aggressively supp
ort the fight for
civil rights in the South while carefully segregating their own children at all-
white private schools.
They overwhelmingly supported public school systems with their votes and their e
ditorials, but
insulated their own children from exposure to other races by sending them to And
over or Sidwell
Friends. Few had personal acquaintances who were black, and fewer still, when it
was in their
power, appointed or promoted blacks to corporate, church, or community positions
.
Not surprisingly, this subterranean prejudice was at its worst in liberal meccas
such as Hollywood
and New York City, where television production headquarters selected the program
ming for
virtually all TV broadcasting in the 1950s and early 1960s. With the notable exc
eption of the radio
show Amos and Andy—whose actors were actually white!—black television characters wer
e
nonexistent except as occasional servants or for comic relief or as dancers. The
re were no black
heroes on television; worse, there were no black families. Black children did no
t have many good
role models on television, and those African Americans they did see were seldom
entrepreneurs,
political leaders, or professionals. Perhaps not surprisingly, the wholesale exc
lusion of blacks from
large segments of American society made African Americans suspicious of the few
who did
achieve positions of importance in white business or culture. Ellison’s Invisible
Man appropriately
captured white America’s treatment of more than 10 percent of its population.
Hardly in the vanguard of civil rights, Eisenhower shielded himself from controv
ersy behind the
separation of powers. His position, while perhaps appropriate at times, neverthe
less contradicted
the constitutionally protected civil rights of blacks and cemented the view amon
g black politicians
that their only source of support was the Democratic Party. It is ironic, then,
that two key events in
America’s racial history occurred during Eisenhower’s presidency. The Legal Defense
and
Educational Fund of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Color
ed People),
led by its director, attorney Thurgood Marshall, earlier had started to take on
the “separate but
equal” Plessy decision. Marshall had laid the groundwork with a Texas case, Sweatt
v. Painter
(1950), in which the Supreme Court found that intangible factors, such as isolat
ion from the legal
market, constituted inequality. The real breakthrough, however, came in 1954 thr
ough a case from
Topeka, Kansas, in which the Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v. Board of Education
overturned
Plessy v. Ferguson and prohibited state-supported racial discrimination.
The Reverend Oliver Brown, whose daughter Linda had to walk past a white school
to catch her
bus to a black school, had brought a suit against the Board of Education of Tope
ka, Kansas.73 The
board argued that its schools were separate, but equal (à la Plessy). In 1953, Pre
sident Eisenhower
had appointed a Republican, Earl Warren of California, as chief justice. This br
ought about a shift
in the Court against Plessy, which the Court found inherently unequal. A year la
ter, the Court
required that states with segregated districts (twenty-one states and the Distri
ct of Columbia)
desegregate with “all deliberate speed.” In 1956, Southern states dominated by the D
emocrats
issued a defiant “Southern Manifesto,” in which nineteen senators and eighty-one con
gressmen
promised to use “all lawful means” to reinstate segregation.
The Court’s language and rulings after the case generated confusion, uncertainty,
and resistance.
Racist whites would argue that they were moving with “all deliberate speed” decades
after the
decision. Equally damaging on the other end of the scale, the Court had stated t
hat segregation
“generates a feeling of inferiority” by blacks within the community, which implied t
hat the only
way blacks could overcome “inferiority” was to “sit next to whites”—a position that by the
1980s,
blacks came to ridicule. It further suggested that in any situation, even volunt
ary arrangements in
which some preordained proportion of races was not achieved, it would “generate a
feeling of
inferiority.” Eisenhower thought the Brown decision set back racial progress, argu
ing that real
integration could not be brought about by force.
White resistance to integration involved citizens councils, organizations that t
hreatened blacks
whose children attended white schools with economic retaliation, job loss, and o
ther veiled
intimidation. States that had made up the border areas in the Civil War—Maryland,
Delaware,
Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas—grudgingly began to desegregate. Farther sout
h, though,
in the heart of Dixie, a full-scale offensive against desegregation ensued. Latc
hing onto the
Supreme Court’s wording of “all deliberate speed,” the Deep South engaged in a massive
footdragging
campaign.
In Little Rock, Arkansas, the city school board admitted nine black students to
Central High
School. In response, Governor Orval Faubus, citing the likelihood of violence, e
ncircled the high
school with national guard troops to prevent the students from entering. Eisenho
wer, after
conferring with Faubus, concluded the Arkansas governor would remain intransigen
t. A federal
court order forced the national guard to withdraw, at which point the students a
gain sought to enter
the school. White mobs threatened to drag the students out and intimidated the a
uthorities into
removing the black students. A stunned Ike, who had only months earlier said he
could not imagine
sending federal troops to enforce integration, nationalized the Arkansas Guard a
nd sent in a
thousand paratroopers to ensure the students’ safety. Faubus then closed the schoo
ls, requiring yet
another court ruling to pry them open. Further efforts at “massive resistance,” a ph
rase coined by
Democrat senator Harry F. Byrd of Virginia, led to state attempts to defund dese
gregated schools.
But state and federal courts held firm, and supported with minimal enthusiasm by
Eisenhower and
then by Kennedy, the segregated structure finally began to fracture.
As with much of the history of slavery and racism in America, the desegregation
of schools
ultimately had required a perversion of the apparatus of the state in order to g
et people to act
responsibly and justly. The Founders never imagined in their wildest dreams that
federal courts
would be determining the makeup of student bodies in a local high school, yet th
e utter collapse of
the state legislative process to act morally—or at the very least, even effectivel
y—pushed the
courts into action. It was a cautionary tale. At every point in the past, the co
ntinued refusal of any
group to abide by a modicum of decency and tolerance inevitably brought change,
but also brought
vast expansions of federal power that afflicted all, including the groups that i
nitially benefited from
the needed change.
If lawsuits and federal action constituted one front in the struggle for civil r
ights, the wallet and the
heart were two other critical battlefields. On December 1, 1955, in Montgomery,
Alabama, police
arrested a black seamstress, Rosa Parks, for refusing to give up her seat in the
middle of the bus to a
white man in defiance of a local ordinance. (Blacks could sit in the middle, but
only if no whites
wanted the seat.) “Back of the bus” not only embodied the actual laws of many Southe
rn states, but
it also represented a societywide attitude toward blacks.
Parks, along with other black female activists, members of the Montgomery Women’s
Political
Council, had looked for the proper ordinance to challenge. Her refusal to “get bac
k” sparked an
organized protest by the black community. Local black leaders met the following
night in a Baptist
church to use the power of the market to bring justice to Montgomery. They organ
ized a boycott of
the bus system under the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr., a young Atlanta-b
orn pastor who
had studied Thoreau and Gandhi as well as the Gospels. Contrary to a widely held
view that later
developed among conservatives, King specifically condemned and repudiated commun
ism. A man
with a mighty presence and a charismatic speaker, King had discerned that the ba
ttle was not about
Montgomery—that was only a skirmish in the war for justice—and he developed a brilli
ant plan to
use the innate goodness of many, if not most, Americans to turn the system.
King promised his enemies to “wear you down by our capacity to suffer, and in winn
ing our
freedom we will so appeal to your heart and conscience that we will win you in t
he process.”74
“We are determined,” he stated, “to work and fight until justice runs down like water,
and
righteousness like a mighty stream.”75 King’s gamble hinged on the essential decency
of
Americans, and for every racist he thought could elicit the support of five nonr
acists. King also
appreciated that for all its serious defects, the American system could actually
work in his favor.
Police might unleash dogs, fire hoses, and nightsticks, but (at least in daytime
, under the watchful
eye of the press) they would not dare kill unarmed protesters. While these strat
egies germinated in
his mind he set to the task of leading the boycott.
Blacks constituted the majority of riders on the Montgomery buses, and the prote
sters used car
pools or simply walked as the income plummeted for the privately owned bus compa
ny. The
boycott continued for months, and eventually the media began to notice. Finally,
after a year, the
Supreme Court let stand a lower court ruling stating that the “separate but equal” c
lause was no
longer valid. Montgomery blacks, led by King, boarded buses and sat where they p
leased. The
episode illustrated the power of the market and the colorblind processes in capi
talism.
The moral issues in the initial civil rights cases in the 1950s and 1960s were c
rystal clear. But the
steady encroachment of government into race relations later raised difficult iss
ues about freedom of
choice in America. Black economist Walter Williams has referred to “forced associa
tion laws,”
noting that the logical outcome of defining every business as “public” increasingly
restricts a
person’s freedom to choose those with whom he or she wishes to associate. In cases
of genuinely
public facilities, the issue is clear: all citizens pay taxes, and thus all citi
zens must have access
without regard for race or color. But where was the line drawn? Private clubs? T
he logic of the
issue transcended race. Did Christians or others whose religion dictated that th
ey not aid and abet
sin have to rent apartments to unmarried couples living together? Did Augusta Na
tional Golf
Club—a private club—have to admit women, contrary to its rules? Likewise, the firewa
ll of states’
rights also deteriorated in the civil rights clashes. A phrase used all too ofte
n by racist whites, the
fact is that “states’ rights” still represented a structural safeguard for all citizen
s of a state against
direct federal action.
Both the bus boycott and the Brown decision represented significant steps toward
full equality for
all citizens, but as always the real lever of power remained the ballot. Since R
econstruction,
Southern whites had systematically prevented blacks from voting or had made them
pay dearly for
going to the polls through intimidation, threats, and often outright violence. P
oll taxes sought to
eliminate poorer voters, and literacy tests could be easily manipulated, for ins
tance, by allowing a
white person to read only his name, whereas a black person would be required to
interpret Beowulf
or a Shakespearean play.
Eisenhower offered the first civil rights law since Reconstruction, the Civil Ri
ghts Act of 1957. It
established a Civil Rights Commission and created a Civil Rights Division inside
the Justice
Department specifically charged with prosecuting election crimes. Most Southern
Democrats
opposed the bill, and Southern Democratic governors would not support the law, l
eaving
enforcement to the federal government, which was not equipped to police every pr
ecinct in the
South. Far from revealing Ike’s lack of commitment to civil rights, the president’s
position stated a
reality that, again, underscored the basic structure of the federal system, whic
h never intended
Washington, D.C., to supervise voting in New Orleans or Richmond. More widesprea
d change
depended on a transformation of hearts and attitudes. When the next round of civ
il rights legislation
emerged from Congress in 1964, public perceptions of race and racism had changed
enough that
large numbers of whites, both in the South and from the North, assisted in makin
g it possible to
enforce the laws.76
Black leaders did not simply wait timidly for attitudes to change. They actively
worked to place
racism and discrimination squarely in front of the American public. Following th
e successful bus
boycott, Martin Luther King assembled some hundred black Christian ministers to
establish the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). Assisted by another minister, R
alph
Abernathy, King called on the leaders to engage in the struggle for equality wit
h nonviolence, not
as a symbol of weakness or cowardice, but with courage and persistence. Formatio
n of the SCLC
transferred leadership of the civil rights movements from the descendants of nor
thern freemen of
color to the Southerners who had to live daily with discrimination.77
From Boring to Booming? Expectations at Decade’s End
Given America’s position in the world, its tremendous wealth, the success with whi
ch it had
resisted communism, and the fact that it had at least begun to confront some of
its greatest domestic
problems, most observers in 1959 would have predicted a marvelous decade ahead f
or the United
States. Few would have imagined that within ten years the American economy would
be nearly flat;
that a continued foreign war would absorb tremendous amounts of blood and treasu
re; that society
would find itself ripped asunder and torn by race, generation, and ideology. Few
er still would have
foreseen the earthquake generated by the coming of age of the massive baby-boom
generation.
The United States had gone through a particularly turbulent era whose dynamic up
heavals and
impetus toward freedom and individualism had been effectively masked and less ef
fectively
contained by powerful pressures of order. In the resulting cookie-cutter America
, the outward signs
of conformity concealed a decade of dramatic change in lifestyle, income, social
mobility, religion,
and racial attitudes. The seeds of virtually all of the revolutionary developmen
ts of the 1960s had
already started to bloom before Eisenhower ever left the presidency.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
The Age of Upheaval, 1960–74
The Fractured Decade
Following the perceived stability of the 1950s—a decade which, in reality, involve
d deep social
change and substantial foreign threats—the 1960s were marked by unmistakable turmo
il and
conflict from policy divisions, racial clashes, and generational strife unseen i
n many generations.
Much of the division came from the increasingly vocal presence of the baby boome
rs—exaggerated
and sharpened by a foreign war—the assassination of a president, and, toward the e
nd of the
decade, economic stagnation that had not been seen since the end of World War II
. The “fractured
decade” of the sixties brought some needed social reforms, but also saddled the na
tion with longterm
problems stemming directly from the very policies adopted during the period.
Except, perhaps, for the decade between 1935 and 1945, the 1960s changed America
n life and
culture more profoundly than any other ten-year period in the twentieth century.
Modern society
continues to deal with many of the pathologies generated by the era of “free love,” “t
une in, turn
on, and drop out,” and rebellion.1 Every aspect of America’s fabric, from national i
mage and
reputation to family life, experienced distasteful side effects from the upheava
l that began when
John F. Kennedy won the presidential election over Richard Nixon.
Time Line
1960:
John F. Kennedy elected president
1961:
Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba; Soviet Union erects Berlin Wall
1962:
Cuban Missile Crisis
1963:
John F. Kennedy assassinated; Lyndon B. Johnson assumes presidency
1964:
Johnson introduces Great Society legislation; Civil Rights Act passed; Tonkin Gu
lf Resolution;
Ronald Reagan campaigns for Barry Goldwater’s presidential campaign; Johnson defea
ts
Goldwater
1965:
Johnson sends combat troops to Vietnam
1968:
Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy assassinated; Richard Nixon elected
president
1969:
United States lands man on the moon
1971:
Twenty-sixth Amendment to the Constitution; wage and price controls
1972:
Nixon visits China; Watergate break-in; Nixon reelected
1973:
Nixon withdraws last of American troops from Vietnam; Roe v. Wade case decided
1974:
Nixon resigns; Gerald Ford assumes the presidency
It might have appeared that Richard Nixon should have waltzed to victory in 1960
. He had
numerous advantages. As vice president, he was associated with eight years of pe
ace and prosperity
bestowed on the nation by Eisenhower. A former congressman with a record of bein
g tough on
communists, Nixon would be hard to attack on defense or national security issues
. A well-read man
and a solid, though hardly eloquent, speaker, Nixon had held his own in debates
with the soviet
premier Nikita Khruschev. Yet Nixon began the campaign as the underdog for sever
al reasons.
First, Eisenhower was no traditional Republican and more of a moderate. In his e
ight years, he
posed no threat to Roosevelt’s legacy. Nixon, on the other hand, appeared to repre
sent more of a
break from the New Deal (although, in reality, his social and economic programs
had far more in
common with FDR than with a true conservative like Ronald Reagan).2 Second, publ
ic affection
for Ike was personal, but Nixon generated little fondness. He seemed to have had
only one or two
genuine friends in his entire adult life. Twenty years later, even those Nixon s
ubordinates who had
been caught up in the Watergate scandal—men who received jail sentences and had th
eir careers
destroyed—operated out of loyalty to the cause more than out of love for the man.
Third, Nixon
suffered from plain old bad timing. Whereas the congenial Eisenhower (who did a
great deal
quietly) had met Americans’ desire for a caretaker, the nation, having caught its
breath, now
gathered itself for another step in the ascent to greatness—or so many believed. A
ny candidate who
could give voice to those aspirations, anyone who could lay out a vision, whethe
r he had any
intentions of acting on the promises or not, would have the edge in such a clima
te.
Another factor worked against Nixon: television. Nixon was the first public figu
re to use a
television appearance to swing an election his way with his famous 1952 “Checkers” s
peech, but
the tube became his enemy. It automatically benefited the more handsome and phot
ogenic
candidate. Television news favored the man better suited to deliver a “sound bite” (
although the
term had not yet been coined). Neither case fit Nixon. For the first time in Ame
rican history
physical appearance played a large part in the selection of a president. Finally
, Nixon had never
viewed the press as his friends, and beginning with the 1960 election the media
actively worked
against him. Eisenhower would be the last Republican president to receive favora
ble, or even
balanced and fair, treatment by the increasingly liberal national mainstream pre
ss.
An irony of the election was that Richard Nixon and Jack Kennedy were friends, f
ar more so than
Nixon and Ike, or Kennedy and his running mate, Lyndon Johnson. When JFK was in
the hospital
with back surgery, and close to death (it was thought), Nixon wept. Kennedy, for
his part, told
loyalists that if he did not get the Democratic nomination, he would be voting f
or Nixon in the
November general election.3 Friendship, however, did not stand in the way of win
ning.
As it turned out, Kennedy did not have to go against his party. He carried an in
credibly close
election, but it is questionable whether he won the popular vote. Typical report
s had Kennedy
winning by about 120,000 votes. Little known electoral quirks in Alabama and Geo
rgia reduced
Kennedy’s popular totals. Un-pledged Democratic votes for segregationist Democrat
Henry F.
Byrd and others, totaling 292,121, were lumped eventually with JFK’s totals, givin
g him the final
edge.4
Republican leaders, detecting fraud in two states, Texas and Illinois, urged Nix
on to file a formal
legal challenge and demand a recount. Earl Mazo, the national political correspo
ndent for the New
York Herald Tribune, examining the election returns in Texas, found that huge nu
mbers of votes
were dismissed on technicalities, whereas Kennedy had gained some 100,000 phanto
m ballots.
Nixon lost the state by 46,000 votes, and then lost Illinois by less than 9,000
votes. Robert Finch, a
Nixon confidant who later served as secretary of health, education, and welfare,
said flatly that
fraud had carried Texas and Illinois, and that Kennedy “needed Missouri, too, whic
h was very
close, but we didn’t think he stole that.”5 In one district in Texas, where 86 peopl
e were registered
to vote, Nixon got 24 votes. JFK got 148.
Nixon refused to protest any of these states, saying an electoral crisis had to
be avoided. It would
take a year to get a full recount of Illinois, and Nixon did not want to put the
country through the
ordeal. He not only accepted the electoral college verdict, but also contacted t
he Herald Tribune to
insist that it abort a planned twelve-article series detailing the fraud. It was
a remarkable and civicminded
position taken by a man later excoriated for abusing power, and stands in stark
relief to the
actions of Al Gore in the 2000 election. Nixon never fully realized that in the
contest with his
friend JFK he was pitted against one of the most ruthless candidates—and political
families—in the
twentieth century.
Kennedy and Crisis
John Kennedy’s father, Joseph P. Kennedy, or “old Joe,” as friends called him, had ris
en from
poverty to great wealth primarily through booze running during Prohibition. Havi
ng accumulated a
black-market fortune, Joe “went legit” during the market crash of 1929, buying when
stock prices
bottomed out and becoming a multimillionaire when stock values returned. By then
he had already
decided his oldest son, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., would one day become president of
the United
States.
Roosevelt appointed Joseph senior ambassador to Great Britain (an odd choice, gi
ven that the Irish
Kennedy hated the British), and John Fitzgerald, the second oldest son, studied
in England. As war
loomed, Joseph routinely blamed the British for failing to accommodate Hitler, a
s if the occupation
of Czechoslovakia and the invasion of Poland occurred because Britain had not gi
ven Hitler enough
concessions. John Kennedy supported his father, producing an undergraduate thesi
s on the arrival
of war, called Why England Slept, an oddly pro-German treatment of the Munich Ag
reement, later
made into a book by an affiliate of Joseph’s and published as Kennedy’s original wor
k.6
During the war—at a time when all future political leaders were expected to do the
ir military
duty—Joseph junior went to fly patrol bombers in England. John had a safe position
in naval
intelligence in Washington. There he struck up a sexual relationship with a woma
n named Inga
Arvad, who was suspected by the FBI of being a Nazi spy. Aware of the potential
danger to Jack
(as John F. was called), Joe Kennedy arranged a sudden transfer several thousand
miles from “Inga
Binga” (as the FBI referred to her) to the South Pacific, where he added to his ow
n legend.
As commander of PT-109, Kennedy was engaged in an escort mission at night when a
Japanese
destroyer rammed through the ship. The young commander apparently had posted no
lookouts and
had only one of three engines in gear, making escape impossible. Surviving crew
members drifted
throughout the night, then made it to a nearby atoll, whereupon Kennedy again sw
am back into the
adjacent waters to try to flag down a U.S. ship. Eventually a British coastal na
val watcher
facilitated the rescue. When search parties arrived, they had reporters with the
m—alerted by Joe
Kennedy—and when the group finally reached safety, the British naval watcher was c
onveniently
forgotten in place of the ambassador’s heroic son. Jack certainly exemplified cour
age, endurance,
and physical prowess in getting his crew to the island. A story on PT-109, turne
d into a Reader’s
Digest article that made JFK a war hero, led him to comment, “My story about the c
ollision is
getting better all the time.”7 Not long after, Joseph junior died in a risky fligh
t, making John next in
line for political office in the eyes of his father.
Upon his discharge, Jack entered politics, winning a House seat, then taking the
1952
Massachusetts Senate seat. JFK suffered from severe back problems, which require
d surgery that
fused some of his vertebrae. While recuperating, he managed to write another boo
k, Profiles in
Courage. Or so went the story. In fact, most of the actual research and writing
came from a
veritable Who’s Who of academics, including historians Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and
Allan Nevins,
government professor James Burns, and reliable speechwriter Ted Sorensen (who wo
uld later be
JFK’s press secretary). Despite writing only a tiny fraction of the manuscript, Ke
nnedy acted as
though it were fully his, accepting the 1957 Pulitzer Prize for biography for it
.8
There is no question Kennedy inherited several foreign policy messes from his pr
edecessor, chief
among them the recent overthrow of Cuban dictator Fulgen-cio Batista by communis
t rebel Fidel
Castro in 1959. Advisers to both Ike and JFK argued that the Maximum Leader, as
Castro called
himself, was merely an ardent nationalist and opportunist, much the way Ho Chi M
inh of North
Vietnam was later depicted. Castro encouraged such mischaracterizations, even th
ough he claimed
to have been a Marxist-Leninist when he started his guerrilla activities.9 Unfor
tunately, Eisenhower
had offered diplomatic recognition to Castro’s government. Within a few months, th
e
administration realized it had blundered and that a new Iron Curtain had dropped
over Cuba, behind
which stood a communist dictatorship easily as oppressive as any in Europe. Eise
nhower also
approved a CIA plan in March 1960 to organize an army of Cuban exiles, recruited
mostly in
Miami and based in Guatemala. At the same time, the CIA plotted Castro’s assassina
tion, a project
at which the agency proved so inept that it recruited Mafia dons John Roselli, S
antos Trafficante,
and Sam Giancana to provide hit men to take out Castro. Although some of these m
ore radical
operations originated in the Eisenhower administration (unapproved by the presid
ent), Kennedy
was fully briefed on all of them and through surrogates issued his complete cons
ent. He supposedly
told a reporter that he was “under terrific pressure” from his advisers to have Cast
ro assassinated.
His brother, Robert F. “Bobby” Kennedy was deeply involved in the intrigue: He knew
about his
brother’s close ties to the mob through a sex partner named Judy Exner, whom Kenne
dy shared
with Sam Giancana.10
The first flashpoint, however, involved not the assassination of Castro but an i
nvasion by the exiles
at the Bay of Pigs, which occurred three months after the inauguration. Again, J
FK reviewed and
approved the operation.11 Castro had anticipated an invasion, having told Radio
Havana that the
State of the Union address had indicated “a new attack on Cuba by the United State
s.”12 Success
for any invasion depended entirely on getting Castro out of the way first. As Jo
hn Davis noted, the
dictator’s assassination was “the very lynchpin” of the plan—“an integral part,” as Arthur
Schlesinger had termed it.13 Kennedy even met with the Cuban national hired by t
he Mafia to
eliminate Castro, indicating he knew exactly whom to contact.14
On April 17, 1961, a small army of 1,400 Cuban exiles landed at the Bay of Pigs,
where, they were
assured, the U.S. fleet and CIA-operated warplanes would support the invasion. W
hen things went
badly, however, Kennedy suddenly withheld the promised support, dooming the inva
sion and
sentencing the invaders to prison or death at Castro’s hands. Anti-Castro elements
never forgot that
JFK had betrayed them. American public opinion “was outraged by the Bay of Pigs fa
ilure and
would have supported direct intervention.”15 Chester Bowles, a senior member of th
e Kennedy
administration, said that “at least 90 percent of the people” would have supported a
decision to send
troops into Cuba or otherwise overthrow Castro.16 Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushch
ev viewed
Kennedy’s vacillation as weakness and decided to probe further.
Khrushchev began testing Kennedy in Berlin, where the western half of the divide
d city offered an
escape from communism. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer had encouraged the
refugees
coming across the borders, at a rate of a thousand a day by July 1961. To stanch
this hemorrhage,
the East Germans, with Soviet permission, erected the massive Berlin Wall separa
ting the two
sections of the city. It was left to America to act. A Polk or a Teddy Roosevelt
would have
destroyed the wall immediately. Kennedy called up reservists and began a small-s
cale mobilization,
but otherwise did nothing about the wall itself, which became a physical symbol
of the cold war. Its
barbed wire, minefields, and tank traps—all facing inward—clearly illustrated that t
he chief task of
communism was to keep people from leaving, not to keep invaders from entering.
Kennedy’s weakness in Berlin convinced Khrushchev that the United States would not
resist
communist expansion elsewhere. At Castro’s urging, the Soviet Union had begun to p
lace
intermediate range ballistic missiles (IRBMs) in Cuba. Subsequent letters have s
urfaced that reveal
a wild, almost fanatical Castro hoping to goad the United States into a nuclear
war. The IRBMs
placed in Cuba posed a huge threat: these weapons had a fifteen-minute flight ti
me to major United
States cities, and their launch would provide only a few minutes for actual conf
irmation and
warning, unlike Soviet land-based ICBMs that would have a thirty-minute flight t
ime. Khrushchev
lied about the missiles to Kennedy, claiming they were antiaircraft missiles. U-
2 spy planes soon
revealed the truth. A flight in mid-October 1962 provided photographic confirmat
ion, not only of
the IRBMs, but also of the surface-to-air (SAM) missiles protecting the nuclear
missile sites.
Kennedy’s cabinet divided almost evenly. Some wanted to strike immediately with a
full air attack
and even an invasion, whereas others advocated going to the United Nations and i
nvoking
sanctions. Robert Kennedy came up with a third alternative, a quarantine, or blo
ckade, of Cuba to
keep incomplete weapons from being finished. It provided time to allow the Russi
ans to back down
gracefully. Kennedy announced the quarantine on October twenty-second, with a de
adline on
October twenty-fourth, cabling Khrushchev to return to the “earlier situation” befor
e the missiles.
Negotiating through an ABC newsman, John Scali, the Kennedy administration and t
he Russians
floated several mutual solutions. On October twenty-sixth, Khrushchev in a secre
t letter offered to
withdraw the missiles in return for a pledge by the United States not to invade
Cuba.17 Shortly
after the letter was tendered, the hard-liners inside the Kremlin demanded that
Khrushchev gain
deeper concessions, which he submitted in a second letter insisting on the remov
al of the U.S.
missiles deployed in Turkey. Kennedy brilliantly pretended not to have received
the second letter,
then publicly acknowledged the first, offering the Soviet leader a way out, whic
h he accepted.18
Castro reportedly responded by flying into a rage. His communist sidekick, Che G
uevara, watched
as Castro swore, smashed a mirror, and kicked a hole in a wall.
Meanwhile, the Soviets had been embarrassed by allowing the Cuban dictator to eg
g them on, then
were humiliated a second time when their postoperation intelligence showed that
the U.S. Navy
could have utterly destroyed the Soviet Atlantic fleet in a matter of minutes ha
d hostilities broken
out. From that point on, the USSR set a policy of building a world-class navy ca
pable of blue-water
operations under Admiral Sergei Gorshkov.
But reality matched neither the euphoria of Kennedy’s “victory” nor the “embarrassment” of
the
USSR. The United States had now failed—twice—to evict communists from Cuba. Millions
of
Cubans voted with their feet and relocated to the United States. Most of them mo
ved to Florida,
where they thrived in a capitalist economy, whereas Cuba continued to languish i
n utter poverty.
Castro, over the next thirty years, would prove the single most irritating commu
nist leader on the
planet, launching military operations in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and even Angola
, destabilizing
much of Central America and fomenting revolution in Africa. No other great power
had permitted
an enemy outpost to exist in such proximity when it had the military might to el
iminate it.
Nevertheless, JFK emerged with a public relations victory, heralded as the tough
young president
who had forced the Russians to back down. In fact, he was on the run on other fr
onts, such as
space.
Where Can We Catch Them?
Eisenhower’s concern over Sputnik had led to the massive, if ill-directed, flood o
f federal money
into universities. Another blow to American prestige occurred in April 1961, whe
n the USSR put
the first human in orbit, sending Yuri Gagarin up some four weeks ahead of an Am
erican astronaut.
Two days later Kennedy held a meeting in which he desperately questioned his adv
isers: “Is there
any place where we can catch them [the Soviets]? What can we do? Can we go aroun
d the Moon
before them? Can we put a man on the Moon before them?”19 What Kennedy did not kno
w was
that between Sputnik and Gagarin’s flight, at least three Soviet test pilots had d
ied, having been
fired into the outer atmosphere only to drop back down like flaming meteors. Ano
ther had burned
up in a test chamber in 1961. Even with Gagarin’s flight, the Soviet government wa
s so unsure he
would survive that it generated a news release for the cosmonaut’s death in advanc
e, to be read by
the official TASS news agency if Gagarin did not return alive. The Soviet citize
nry was, as usual,
not informed of any of these events.20
In May 1961, after a frenzied study session with NASA administrators, Kennedy co
mmitted the
United States to putting a man on the moon by the end of the decade, resulting i
n an expenditure of
$5 billion per year on space until 1969. The Soviets had recognized the propagan
da aspects of
space, and they now hustled to add a wooden seat for a third cosmonaut to a two-
man capsule in
order to again beat the U.S. Apollo three-man spacecraft into orbit.21 It was ch
aracteristic of Soviet
mentality when it came to science and technology to ignore human safety or envir
onmental
concerns in favor of a public relations coup.
Kennedy hardly held a more idealistic position. Newly released tapes from the Ke
nnedy library of a
key 1962 discussion with NASA administrator James Webb revealed that Webb repeat
edly resisted
Kennedy’s efforts to turn the U.S. space program into a narrowly focused lunar exp
edition. Another
legend soon exploded—that of Kennedy’s great vision in putting a man on the moon. JF
K wanted a
propaganda victory, pure and simple: “Everything we do [in space] ought to be tied
into getting to
the moon ahead of the Russians.”22 He then laid it on the table for the NASA admin
istrator, saying
that beating the Russians to the moon “is the top priority of the [space] agency a
nd…except for
defense, the top priority of the United States government. Otherwise, we shouldn’t
be spending this
kind of money, because I’m not that interested in space [emphasis ours].”23
Once committed, however, the sheer technological prowess and economic might of t
he United
States closed the gap. When Apollo 11 landed Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, an
d Edwin Aldrin
on the moon on July 20, 1969, the Russians knew they had met their match. More i
mportant, the
Soviets had concluded that the advantages of space-based weaponry—especially given
their
relative technological backwardness compared to the West—were minimal and that mil
itary money
could best be used in nuclear missiles and submarines. Apollo 11 thus marked a v
ictory of sorts in
the cold war, with the Soviets slowly and quietly scaling down their space effor
ts.
In broader terms, the space program presented troubling confirmation of governme
nt centralization
in America, having turned space into a public domain wherein private access was
retarded through
subsidization of orbital launches by taxpayer dollars.24 National security conce
rns engendered
layers of bureaucracy, bringing parts of NASA’s supposedly civilian operations und
er the oversight
of the Pentagon. Space launch was never debated on its own merits, and it was ne
ver placed against
other policy options or even other uses of its massive resources. Kennedy’s “vision” o
f putting a
man on the moon reaped the headlines, whereas the practical utility of space acc
ess had yet to be
attained despite extraordinary financial and social costs.
Having done what some considered impossible, NASA proceeded to flounder during t
he Nixon and
Carter years as it struggled to achieve routine space launch through a questiona
ble commitment to
the expensive and generally inefficient space shuttle.25 To contrast the promise
and the reality of
the space program, one has only to look at such films as Stanley Kubrick’s fantasy
, 2001: A Space
Odyssey, in which spacecraft docked with a wheel-shaped space station to the tun
e of the “Blue
Danube Waltz” as it prepared for deep-space missions. In fact, by the end of 2001,
the United
States did not have anything resembling a fully operational space-based launch p
latform in orbit,
although the Russian Mir space station had already worn out and was positioning
itself to crash into
an ocean. Worse, the United States had no routine way to get to a space station
even in
emergencies.26
Tax Cuts and Growth
Whether it involved the space or antipoverty efforts, already a mind-set had tak
en root in
Washington that money, education, and research could solve any problem. This mar
ked the final
evolution of the Progressive-era embrace of education as the answer to all chall
enges, invoking an
unquestioning trust of the New Deal assumptions that the federal government coul
d overcome any
obstacle. Well before Kennedy took office, Ike’s Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare
(HEW) had spent $46 million on research unrelated to health. Then that number ex
ploded: by 1966,
Johnson had kicked it up to $154 million; then, in a single year, the budget jum
ped to $313 million.
Much of this “research” became circular: defending, reporting, or “explaining” what fede
ral
programs were doing by internal and anonymous literature circulated in obscure j
ournals or by
photocopy. For whoever read it, the results could not have been inspiring. One O
akland jobtraining
program designed to raise wages by teaching new skills to the poor was at first
a Kennedy
showpiece. Years later, when the first internal studies became public, it was re
vealed that male
trainees gained all of $150 to $500 per year in income—for a per capita expenditur
e of
thousands.27
One reason government-oriented elites thought that they could solve problems wit
h money was that
the wealth existed, and the government’s take had increased after the JFK tax cuts
of 1961–62.
West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard had impressed the idea on Kennedy during hi
s visit to
Germany in 1961, instructing JFK to avoid the British model of high taxes, which
had all but killed
economic growth in England. Obviously frustrating liberals in his own party, Ken
nedy delivered a
speech to the Economic Club of New York in which he rebuked the critics: “Our true
choice is not
between tax reduction…and the avoidance of large federal deficits…. It is increasing
ly clear
that…an economy hampered by restrictive tax rates will never produce enough revenu
e to balance
the budget—just as it will never produce enough jobs or enough profits.”28
JFK favored tax cuts, but not to jump-start the economy, which was not in recess
ion, but to
generate wealth that would produce more tax revenues. Put simply, Kennedy realiz
ed that
government could grow with tax cuts if there were no corresponding spending cuts
. He therefore
proposed a two-year across-the-board reduction from 91 percent to 70 percent on
the top rates and
from 20 percent to 14 percent on the bottom rates. He added depreciation incenti
ves for new plant
and equipment purchases, framed in Keynesian defenses. Yet it was pure Mellonism
: giving those
at the top a large cut so that they could invest, start new firms, and add produ
ction facilities,
employing still others who themselves would pay taxes. Critics typically called
it trickle-down
economics, but it was common sense—and it worked. Over the next six years, persona
l savings
rose from a 2 percent annual growth rate to 9 percent; business investment rose
from an annual rate
of 2 percent to 8 percent; GNP rose by 40 percent in two years; job growth doubl
ed; and
unemployment fell by one third.29
Federal revenues rose, and Walter Heller, a Keynesian economist who had tried to
talk Kennedy
out of the tax cut, admitted in testimony to the Joint Economic Committee in 197
7 that the tax cut
paid “for itself in increased revenues…[because] it did seem to have a tremendously
stimulative
effect.”30 But if Kennedy achieved his objective of spurring economic growth with
lower tax rates,
his other policies had tragically unintended consequences, most notably the incr
easingly dangerous
situation in Southeast Asia.
Origins of the Vietnam Quagmire
Just as the space race had its roots in concerns over Soviet ability to strike t
he United States with
atomic weapons, so too did the disaster in Southeast Asia known as the Vietnam W
ar. As he does
for Soviet space supremacy, Eisenhower bears much of the blame for failing to ad
dress the
problems in Vietnam. He failed to lead decisively in the 1954 accords that ended
the French
presence in Vietnam (by which time America already was paying 80 percent of the
French effort
there).31 The communist boss from the North, Ho Chi Minh, or “He Who Shines,” had re
ceived
extensive support from the U.S. wartime spy agency, the OSS (forerunner to the C
entral
Intelligence Agency).32 By 1954, most analysts agree, open and fair elections th
roughout the
whole of Vietnam would have placed Ho in power—an unacceptable outcome to most col
d war
State Department officials. It is also true, however, that when the partition di
d take place, some
nine hundred thousand residents of the North decided to escape the blessings of “e
nlightenment”
offered by the new communist regime and headed south.
Eisenhower helped entrench the view that Vietnam’s fall might topple other “dominoes”
in the
region. History proved Eisenhower partially correct in this regard: after South
Vietnam fell,
Cambodia and Laos soon followed. But then the dominoes stopped falling for a num
ber of reasons,
including the split between China and the Soviet Union that turned off the fundi
ng faucet to the
North’s regime.
Meanwhile, even with the scant attention the United States had paid to Vietnam u
nder Eisenhower,
the country made progress under its premier, Ngo Dinh Diem (a French-educated Ca
tholic in a
primarily Buddhist nation). Advances were so rapid that after a visit to the Sou
th in 1958, North
Vietnamese commissar Le Doan returned with alarming news that conditions in the
South were
improving at such a pace that in the near future insufficient sentiment for a co
mmunist revolution
would exist. Here was the communist bottom line: their cause was only advanced o
ut of misery,
and when average people improved their lot, communism came out a loser. To ensur
e that progress
stopped, Viet Cong (VC) guerrillas assassinated government disease-control squad
s sent out to
spray malarial swamps; they killed doctors traveling away from their hospitals e
n route to the
villages; and killed progovernment village chiefs after hacking off the arms of
their children,
displaying all the impaled heads on stakes outside the village as a warning to o
thers.
Eisenhower had utterly failed to equip and support the interior defense forces i
n the South.
Kennedy, however, wanted to establish the image of a young “cold warrior.” He promis
ed in his
inaugural address that the United States would “pay any price” and “bear any burden” in
the cause
of liberty. After failing to support the Bay of Pigs invasion, Kennedy could not
afford another
foreign policy flop. More than any other twentieth-century president before him,
JFK paid attention
to propaganda and world opinion. He increased the funding and authority of the U
.S. Information
Agency, actively challenging foreign governments by market research and advertis
ing.33 His Peace
Corps fought communism with shovels and spades instead of guns. Kennedy’s appraisa
l of
communism was not at issue.
Even after the Cuban missile crisis, questions remained about whether he (and Am
erica) had the
patience to stay the course in a conflict involving international communism. The
first threat in
Southeast Asia had come in Laos, where again Eisenhower’s failure to commit troops
had sealed a
country’s fate. Kennedy had to negotiate, leading one of the communist leaders of
North Vietnam
to note approvingly that “the American government…has fallen entirely within the sco
pe of
Communist strategy in Laos.”34 That left Vietnam, and Kennedy made clear that he w
ould not
abandon this domino. When, after the disastrous decadelong Vietnam War resulted
in public
criticism and assignment of responsibility, Kennedy should have been at the top
of the blame list.
Why he was not is itself an interesting twist in American history.
Just as in later years writers and historians would ascribe to JFK a zeal to rec
tify economic and
racial disparities that he had never displayed while alive, so too they would la
ter seek to insulate
him from criticism over his Vietnam policy. John Roche, special consultant to Ly
ndon Johnson and
an adviser to Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, recalled that the revival of Ke
nnedy’s Vietnam
record began in 1965–66 by a group Roche labeled the Jackobites.35 As Roche recall
ed, “Odd
stories surfaced: ‘Jack Kennedy had [whispered to speechwriter Kenny O’Donnell] that
once he
was re-elected in 1964 he’d get out of Vietnam.’…The point of all these tales was that
Johnson had
betrayed the Kennedy trust, had gone off on a crazy Texas-style military adventu
re….”36
An “alternative history”—having JFK withdraw from Vietnam right after his reelection—has
appeared, and some have argued that his strong stance prior to the election was
a deception.
Whether Kennedy planned to follow through on his “deception,” or whether he ever int
ended to
withdraw from Vietnam remains a matter of high controversy, with two recent book
s vigorously
arguing that JFK would have withdrawn.37 The evidence, however, paints a much di
fferent picture.
After JFK’s election, American liberals running the war emphasized “winning the hear
ts and minds
of the people” through material prosperity and general progress. But such progress
depended on a
climate of security, which Vietnam did not possess. The VC were not impressed, a
nd without
American or ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam) troops actually present, full
time, to
protect villages, locals swung their allegiance to their only alternative for su
rvival, the Viet Cong.
No president did more to ensure the quagmire of Vietnam than John Kennedy. Fully
briefed by
Eisenhower even before the election of 1960, JFK had been informed that the Join
t Chiefs of Staff
had already estimated that 40,000 American soldiers would be needed to combat th
e estimated
17,000 Viet Cong rebels. If the North Vietnamese got involved, the Joint Chiefs
warned, it would
take three times that many men. Kennedy was the first to order U.S. military tro
ops into Vietnam—
not merely CIA advisers—when he secretly dispatched 500 Green Berets (a new unit o
f highly
trained counterinsurgency soldiers that Kennedy also had formed) into Southeast
Asia. He also
escalated the buildup of American forces faster than any other president, so tha
t by 1963 almost
17,000U.S. military forces were stationed in South Vietnam, augmented by America
n helicopters
and countless naval units not included in the official commitment levels.38 At h
is final press
conference, Kennedy said, “For us to withdraw…would mean a collapse not only of Sout
h Vietnam
but Southeast Asia…. So we are going to stay there.”39 All his principal military ad
visers favored
not only remaining, but also increasing the U.S. commitment. Only the Kennedy im
age machine
spun the notion that Vietnam “wasn’t Jack’s fault.”
The commitment to Vietnam involved more than military forces. Kennedy and his ad
visers had
come to the conclusion that they could not effectively control South Vietnamese
Premier Diem,
who had received sharp Western press criticism for persecuting Buddhists. Far fr
om being the
“Jefferson of Asia,” Diem had engaged in a number of distasteful practices. The exte
nt of Diem’s
anti-Buddhist policies remains in dispute, but little doubt exists that he oppre
ssed Buddhist leaders.
Kennedy worried less about the actual oppression and more about the public relat
ions image. By
1963 he was looking for an opportunity to replace Diem with someone more toleran
t and malleable,
so the United States quietly began searching for South Vietnamese generals who w
ould perform a
coup.40
On November 2, 1963, with full support of the United States and using cash suppl
ied by the CIA,
South Vietnamese generals overthrew Diem. Coup ringleader Duong Van Minh, or “Big
Minh” (no
relation to Ho), described by anti-Diem American reporters as a “deceptively gentl
e man,…[who]
when he spoke of the coup d’état that lifted him into office,…[had] a discernable tone
of apology in
his voice,” nevertheless managed to make sure that Diem and his brother were shot
and knifed
several times en route to their exile, having given the pair assurances they wou
ld be allowed to
live.41 Despite the administration’s support of the coup, Kennedy expressed shock
that Diem had
been assassinated, having fooled himself into thinking that America could topple
a regime in a
third-world country and expect the participants to behave as though they were in
Harvard Yard.
Meanwhile, the leader of the Viet Cong called Diem’s assassination a “gift from Heav
en for us.”42
It wasn’t the only gift the United States would hand Ho.
Kennedy’s secretary of defense and former Ford executive, Robert McNamara, arrived
in
Washington with a long record of mastering statistics for his own purposes. In W
orld War II he and
other whiz kids had put their talents to great use, calculating the most efficie
nt use of bombing by
doing target analysis. After the war, McNamara had used his facility with statis
tics to win almost
every internal debate at Ford.43
Kennedy and McNamara rapidly moved to isolate and weaken the Joint Chiefs of Sta
ff (JCS).44
Often, the JCS did not receive reports critical of the war effort or even object
ive briefings because
of direct intervention by the secretary of defense, the president, or the chairm
an of the Joint Chiefs.
By the time of the Kennedy assassination, the military had to a great extent bee
n cut out of all
substantive planning for a war it was expected to fight and win. And JCS policy
recommendations
were in disarray because each service branch sought to take the lead in the Viet
nam conflict, and
often refused to support the recommendations of other branches. All of these iss
ues, however, were
largely obscured by the confused and tragic nature of the events in Dallas in No
vember 1963, less
than a month after Diem’s assassination.
The Crime of the Century
No sooner had the blood dried on Diem’s corpse than the American public was shocke
d by another
assassination—that of its own president, on home soil, virtually on national telev
ision. By 1963,
John Kennedy, having elicited the hatred of Fidel Castro, anti-Castro Americaniz
ed Cubans, the
Mafia, and many right-wingers because of the Bay of Pigs fiasco and his fondness
(in their view)
for using the United Nations to solve problems, had any number of people who wis
hed him dead.
To say otherwise would be to ignore reality.
On November twenty-second, Kennedy had gone to Dallas to talk up his nuclear tes
t ban treaty and
also to firm up support with Texas Democrats with an eye toward reelection. The
visit included a
ten-mile motorcade through Dallas, an area termed by Kennedy “nut country.” The Kenn
edys were
greatly troubled by what they saw as the right wing. But the lunatic fringe of t
he right wing was
only one group after JFK’s scalp. Both sides of the Cuban imbroglio felt betrayed
by him, as did
the mob. He had already received death threats from Miami and other spots, and K
ennedy did not
take even the most minimal security precautions, riding in an open limo after or
dering the
protective bubble removed. Near the end of the route, Kennedy’s car passed by the
Texas Book
Depository building, where a gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, an odd individual, shot
him twice.
Although the limo immediately sped to Parkland Hospital just a few miles away, t
he president was
pronounced dead within minutes of arrival.
Oswald was arrested just two hours after the shooting, precluding a long investi
gation that surely
would have unearthed a number of facts the Kennedys wanted to remain secret. Ind
eed, Oswald’s
capture had come about after he was first charged with killing a Dallas police o
fficer, J. D. Tippitt,
who had detained him for questioning after news of the assassination had been br
oadcast. Later
charged with killing Kennedy, Oswald was himself shot at point-blank range two d
ays after his
arrest by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby as he was being transferred from one
facility to
another.
A number of things were suspicious about the Kennedy assassination. The police n
ever conducted a
thorough investigation—having caught Oswald so quickly—and the justice system never
held a
trial because Oswald had been killed. Worse, facts of Oswald’s checkered past leak
ed out,
providing grist for the mill of “researchers” with almost any political viewpoint. O
swald, for
example, had become a Soviet citizen in 1959 and had handed out pro-Castro tract
s in New
Orleans. Yet he was also a former soldier who had grown dissatisfied with the US
SR and left
voluntarily. Other parts of Oswald’s behavior threw suspicion on the entire assass
ination
investigation. For example, he appeared to have been as much an anticommunist as
a pro-Castroite;
he served in the marines, where he was a marksman; and his brief stay in Russia
led many to argue
that he was in fact a CIA double agent.
The newly sworn-in President Lyndon Johnson knew that an inquiry had to quell fe
ars among
citizens that the Soviets or Cubans had assassinated the president, which led to
the creation of the
Warren Commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren and including bipartisan
officials from
both houses of Congress and other parts of the government, including the former
head of the CIA.
But Johnson gave the Warren Commission two tasks, which might prove mutually exc
lusive. First,
it had to determine who had actually killed Kennedy. Did Oswald act alone? Was t
here a
conspiracy? Were other killers still at large? Second, the commission was charge
d with reassuring
the American public. How could it do the latter if the answers to the former imp
licated the KGB,
Castro, or other sinister elements beyond a “lone gunman”?
In addition, Johnson pressured the members to turn out a report quickly, a requi
rement that worked
against a thorough investigation. Dozens of critical witnesses were never called
to testify. The
commission never addressed the discrepancies between the condition of Kennedy’s bo
dy in Dallas
and its condition in Bethesda, Maryland, at the official autopsy. It never calle
d Jack Ruby to
Washington to testify, although he had indicated that he would have much more to
say there than in
a Dallas jail. The commission’s failure to investigate thoroughly opened the doors
widely to a
variety of conspiracy theorists. More than a few of them have turned up importan
t evidence that the
official story left something to be desired. Although several loose threads in t
he Warren
Commission story remain, the essential evidence supports the conclusion that Osw
ald acted alone.
The most challenged aspect of the evidence, the so-called magic bullet, was reso
lved by Gerald
Posner, who used digitally enhanced versions of the film of the assassination ma
de by Abraham
Zapruder to show conclusively that there indeed had been a magic bullet that acc
ounted for the
multiple wounds.45 “Conclusively” is a subjective term, however, in that dozens, if
not hundreds,
of “researchers” have created a cottage industry churning out the latest “evidence” that
“proves”
JFK was killed by a conspiracy of some type. No evidence will satisfy the dissen
ters, no matter
what its nature.
Lyndon Johnson, Champion Logroller
Taking the oath of office while Air Force One remained on the tarmac at Love Fie
ld in Dallas,
Lyndon Baines Johnson brought to the presidency vastly different strengths and w
eaknesses than
had Kennedy. He never understood the Kennedy mystique.46 Although he taught scho
ol briefly,
for the better part of his life LBJ had been a politician and had never run any
kind of for-profit
enterprise. He was the third consecutive president to have entered the Oval Offi
ce without business
experience, although Eisenhower’s military service had come close in terms of orga
nizational
demands and resource allocation.47 Like Kennedy, Johnson had fought in World War
II, and he
was the first congressman to enlist in the armed services, serving in the navy a
s a lieutenant
commander. After the war, in 1949, he won a Senate seat. A tireless campaigner,
Johnson knew
when to get into the dirt, and he had his share of scandals in Texas. His most s
erious and potentially
damaging relationship involved his onetime secretary Bobby Baker, who in 1963 wa
s charged with
influence peddling to obtain defense contracts for his own company. The connecti
ons to Johnson
appeared pernicious enough that Kennedy sought to jettison the Texan before the
reelection
campaign of 1964, but he thought better of it when the electoral college map was
laid before him.
Kennedy needed Johnson to carry Texas and parts of the South. Democratic senator
s closed ranks
around Johnson, JFK’s media machine insulated him, and when Baker went to jail, th
e scandal did
not touch Johnson.
As Senate majority leader, Johnson had no equal. His anticipation of potential p
itfalls for
legislation combined with his ability to jawbone friends and opponents alike mad
e him the most
effective politician in either house of Congress. His early election victories h
ad come under a cloud
of ballot-stuffing charges (he first won his Senate seat by only 87 votes), whic
h did not seem to
affect his ability to steer legislation through the process. Johnson liked to be
around people—he and
his wife, Lady Bird, entertained more than two hundred thousand dinner guests ov
er a five-year
period at the White House—and when LBJ had his choice, he preferred to be around w
omen.48
Johnson had as many sexual escapades as Kennedy, including a long-running affair
with Madeline
Brown of Dallas. Like Bill Clinton twenty years later, LBJ would have sex in the
Oval Office, and
like Hillary Clinton, Lady Bird Johnson excused Lyndon’s behavior by pointing out
that he “loved
people” and “half the people in the world are women.”49 Johnson’s close ties to FBI dire
ctor J.
Edgar Hoover helped keep his liaisons secret: he had made a calculated choice to
retain Hoover as
director with the memorable phrase, “Better to have him inside the tent pissing ou
t, than outside
pissing in.”
Having emerged from poverty and having seen firsthand as a teacher its impact on
human life,
Johnson used his legislative skills to mount the largest federal programs in his
tory aimed at
eliminating poverty. He enjoyed using government to help others, and America’s aff
luence made it
possible to do so. Announcing his proposals in a May 1964 speech at the Universi
ty of Michigan,
he promised to lead America “upward to the Great Society.”
The campaign of 1964 was, for Johnson, merely a speed bump on the highway to tha
t Great
Society. The Texan dispatched his conservative Republican challenger, Barry Gold
water, with a
mix of often irresponsible scare tactics and equally irresponsible promises of g
overnment largesse.
Goldwater, the most ideologically “pure” candidate since William Jennings Bryan, ran
as an
unabashed conservative. He championed smaller government, states’ rights (which, u
nfortunately,
put him squarely on the wrong side of the Civil Rights Act of 1964), and a stron
ger front against
communism than Johnson. His book, Conscience of a Conservative (1960), provided
a list of
Goldwater’s policy positions, including abolition of the income tax and privatizat
ion of the Social
Security system.50 These were hardly radical positions, and even after the New D
eal, a large
segment of the public still thought “big government” programs to be a foreign concep
t. Known for
his supposedly inflammatory comment (penned by Karl Hess and borrowed from Roman
senator
Cicero) that “extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice,” Goldwater provided fo
dder for
outlandish liberal cartoonists, who depicted him throwing nuclear bombs.
Goldwater, although a nonpracticing Episcopalian, had one set of Jewish grandpar
ents, making him
(and not Joe Lieberman in 2000) the first American of Jewish ancestry to run for
either of the
highest two offices in the land. His anticommunist and free-market credentials w
ere impeccable. A
World War II veteran and general officer in the air force reserve, he viewed com
bat in Vietnam as a
clear-cut prospect: if the United States committed troops to Vietnam, it should
do so intending to
win and using any force necessary, including nuclear weapons. Johnson’s crew demon
ized
Goldwater, running what are widely acknowledged as some of the dirtiest ads in p
olitical history,
one showing a little girl picking flowers just before an atomic blast goes off,
convincing many
Americans that Goldwater was a Dr. Strangelove.
Meanwhile, Johnson, who had never been considered a part of the Kennedy team, ne
vertheless
walked under the bloom of Camelot. He smashed the Arizonan, winning by more than
430 electoral
votes and garnering 16 million more popular votes. For Republicans, whose nation
al political
apparatus appeared in complete disarray, there were two silver linings to this s
torm. An important
conservative youth movement, the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF), sprang up. T
his
organization produced the young turks who would come into the Senate and House i
n the 1980s
Reagan revolution. Another major benefit from that election for the conservative
s was that a former
Democrat, actor Ronald Reagan, made an impressive speech on behalf of Goldwater,
alerting party
brass to a new GOP star.
No one could deny the extent of Johnson’s victory, though. Armed with his impressi
ve electoral
mandate, Johnson unleashed a flood of new federal spending. Sensing the wave of
public sympathy
and the unwillingness to oppose anything that Kennedy would have wanted, he move
d quickly to
push through Congress construction legislation, education bills, expansion of ur
ban mass transit,
and many other pork-barrel measures in addition to the needed and important Civi
l Rights Act of
1964. All of this legislation sailed through, usually with Republicans providing
the key margins.
The Civil Rights Act in particular needed Republican support to get around South
ern Democrats
who vowed to filibuster the act to death.
Race, Rights, and the War on Poverty
Kennedy had scarcely addressed racial issues in his campaign or his two years in
office. By 1963,
however, a number of elements had coalesced to push civil rights onto the front
pages of every
newspaper. In February 1960, four black freshmen from North Carolina Agricultura
l and Technical
College sat down at Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro and demanded service.5
1
Segregation laws of the day meant that they had staged a supreme act of rebellio
n, and although the
management refused to serve them, their numbers grew as other students and citiz
ens joined them.
After five days the owners shut down the store, unsure how to proceed. This bega
n the sit-in
movement. Blacks insisted on access to public places and the same market rights
that whites
enjoyed, and to accomplish this they staged sit-ins to disrupt normal business.
If black people could
not eat and drink at a lunch counter, no one could.52 Students formed a new grou
p, the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), to work with the Southern Christian Le
adership
Conference (SCLC).
Almost instantly other sit-ins occurred across the South, with some white suppor
ters joining blacks.
They received an intimidating reception. Some were arrested for trespassing, oth
ers beaten by
mobs,…but sometimes they were served. Within a year of the Greensboro sit-in, more
than 3,500
protesters had been jailed. Steadily, demonstrations against Jim Crow laws mount
ed, and other
types of protests joined the sit-in. In 1961, to challenge segregated interstate
bus terminals, the
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) instituted “freedom rides” carrying black and whi
te
passengers. Birmingham’s city leadership was brought to heel in part by the losses
to business
caused by segregation.53 A similar development was documented when Averett Colle
ge, a small
Baptist segregated school in Virginia, opened its doors to blacks not under gove
rnment edict but
under financial pressure.54 This indicated that, given enough time, the market c
ould produce
change. Market processes, however, often work slowly.
Robert Kennedy, the attorney general, instead of acting in support of federal la
ws, called for a
cooling-off period, until an incident at the University of Mississippi again pla
ced a president in the
position of having to enforce federal laws against the will of a state.55 In 196
2, James Meredith,
the first black student to enroll at the university, was blocked by the efforts
of Governor Ross
Barnett, who defied federal marshals who had arrived to enforce desegregation la
ws. Robert
Kennedy then sent troops in to preserve order. Meredith was admitted, and by the
n JFK had
proposed civil rights legislation to Congress, but the issues had been ignored t
oo long, and the laws
had come too late to defray black impatience with second-class status.
White racists’ reaction to black demands for rights rapidly spun out of control. I
n June 1962,
Medgar Evers, an official of the Mississippi NAACP, was assassinated. Martin Lut
her King Jr.
continued to instruct demonstrators to abstain from violence. King’s strategy was
to bring the
attention of the white nonracist and nonsegregationist majority to bear upon the
minority racists and
to use righteous indignation as the weapon. This approach required a sharp aware
ness of the power
of the media, which King had. King also appreciated that the power of the pen ha
d been surpassed
by the emotional, virtually real-time appeal offered by the television camera. T
o tap into America’s
sense of justice and morality, King perceived that black people not only had to
force their
adversaries into public acts of brutality, but also had to do so under the eyes
of the omnipresent
television cameras. He possessed this essential insight: that the power of mass
demonstrations
would not just sway policy makers from the sites of the demonstrations, but also
public opinion
across the country. This insight, of course, relied on the fact that the majorit
y of the population was
moral and just and that change was possible in a democracy.
The clearest test of King’s strategy came on August 3, 1963, when King’s nonviolent
campaign
climaxed in a march on Washington, D.C., of two hundred thousand blacks and whit
es. There, in
front of the Lincoln Memorial, King delivered his immortal “I Have a Dream” speech.
Telling the
massive crowd that “we have come here today to dramatize an appalling condition. I
n a sense we
have come…to cash a check,” he cited the “magnificent words of the Constitution and th
e
Declaration of Independence,” a “promissory note to which every American was to fall
heir.”56
King concluded his speech with words almost as famous as those of the Declaratio
n to which he
had referred, saying:
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of former slave
s and the sons of
former slave owners will be able to sit together at the table of brotherhood. I
have a dream that one
day, even the state of Mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of injustic
e…will be transformed
into an oasis of freedom…. I have a dream that one day, down in Alabama, with its
vicious
racists…little black boys and little black girls will be able to join hands with l
ittle white boys and
white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today!57
The moment became etched in the American memory as the multitude cheered and san
g “We Shall
Overcome,” but unfortunately, the violence had just begun. Several weeks later a b
omb detonated
in a black Birmingham Baptist church and killed four children. Civil rights demo
nstrators were
greeted by fire hoses, police dogs, and, when attackers thought they were anonym
ous, deadly force.
During a series of protests in Birmingham, Alabama, during May 1963, the police
commissioner,
Eugene “Bull” Connor, ordered his men to use dogs, tear gas, electric cattle prods,
and clubs on
nonviolent demonstrators—all under the lights of the television cameras. King was
jailed by
Connor, whereupon he wrote “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” a defense of nonviolence r
ooted in
Judeo-Christian and Enlightenment thought and Revolutionary principles, and quot
ing both
Jefferson and Lincoln. “We will reach the goal of America in freedom,” King wrote, “be
cause the
sacred heritage of our nation and the eternal will of God are embodied in our ec
hoing demands.”58
Yet if King changed America, Connor changed King, who now decided that melting t
he hearts of
Southerners might cost too many lives. After Birmingham, King shifted his strate
gy to persuading
non-Southern Americans, outraged at what they had seen, to force the federal gov
ernment into
action.
The civil rights movement’s legitimate goals did not protect it from infiltration
by communist
elements, which sought to radicalize it. That, in turn, only confirmed in the mi
nds of some, such as
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, that the communists were behind the protests.59 Th
ey had almost
nothing to do with the civil rights leadership, but that did not prevent Hoover
from calling King
“the most dangerous Negro…in this nation.”60 Although King’s marital infidelities convin
ced
Hoover that he needed watching, the murders of black leaders and bombing of blac
k churches
apparently did not warrant the resources of Hoover’s FBI.61
There were, in fact, some “dangerous Negroes” in the land, most of them King’s black o
pponents
who thought his program too pacific and servile. One faction, the rapidly growin
g Black Muslim
movement of Elijah Muhammad, saw King as a tool of “the white man.” Muhammad, depart
ing
from traditional Islam, claimed to be the true Messiah. Muhammad hated America a
nd embraced
her enemies, and with a new acolyte, Malcolm X, he recruited thousands of member
s.62
Advocating violence and black separatism, Muhammad and Malcolm ridiculed King an
d the civil
rights movement, comparing the march on Washington to getting “coffee that’s too bla
ck which
means it’s too strong…. You integrate it with cream, you make it weak.”63 Hoover’s ever-
vigilant
FBI also kept constant files and wiretaps on Muhammad and Malcolm, but in this c
ase there indeed
was a threat to the public order afoot. After Malcolm X was assassinated in 1965
, apparently at
Muhammad’s instructions, the movement (now prominently featuring a newcomer named
Louis
Farrakhan) turned increasingly violent and anti-Semitic. Between 1960 and 1970,
Muhammad’s
power and health waned, but the rhetoric grew more aggressive, especially agains
t the Jews, whom
the Muslims blamed for every malady.
Faced with King’s nonviolent movement on the one hand and the more radical racist
initiatives on
the other, on July 3, 1964, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act.64 The gist of
the act was
unmistakable in that no one could ever again legally deny black citizens access
to the institutions of
the United States without being liable to criminal and civil prosecution. Segreg
ation in public
accommodations, such as restaurants, hotels, theaters, and transportation, was p
rohibited. Also
outlawed was discrimination based on race in employment, and to enforce this sec
tion, the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) was formed. Passage of these laws coinc
ided with
another King-led movement to register black voters in Southern states, which cul
minated in a
march from Selma to Montgomery to demand the right to vote. At the bridge over t
he Alabama
River, state troopers mounted on horses intercepted the marchers and plunged int
o them with clubs,
as television cameras followed the action. Within a year, Congress had passed th
e Voting Rights
Act, with a higher percentage of Republicans than Democrats voting for the bill.
Among those
voting against it were prominent Democratic senators, and a former member of the
Klan, Robert
Byrd of West Virginia. These two civil rights laws in fact only ensured enforcem
ent of the
Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of a century earlier, and they worked: withi
n a year black
voter registration had leaped by 28 percent, and black majorities in many distri
cts soon began to
send representatives to Congress.65
Yet less than two weeks after the first of the civil rights acts had passed, the
first large-scale race
riots occurred, in Harlem. Further rioting followed in Rochester, Paterson, Phil
adelphia, and
Chicago, with one of the worst episodes of violence occurring in August 1965 in
Watts, California.
There, following a police arrest (area black leaders had long complained that th
e Los Angeles
Police Department was exceptionally racist and violent), the neighborhood broke
up into a wave of
burning, looting, and destruction, requiring National Guard troops and martial l
aw to end the
violence. Black activists, such as Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown, blamed w
hites, and urged
blacks to join the new Black Panther organization, whose unofficial motto was “Kil
l whitey.”
White liberals responded to the wave of looting by producing reports. A National
Advisory
Commission on Civil Disorders in 1968 flatly misrepresented the problem, claimin
g that the riots
were directed at “white-owned businesses characterized in the Negro community as u
nfair.”66
Then, as in later riots, all businesses were targets, and since the majority wer
e black-owned, the
damage was overwhelmingly detrimental to blacks. Legitimate protest, guided and
directed,
reminded its participants that they were in for the long term and that change wo
uld take time, no
matter what the cause. The inner-city riots, on the other hand, lacked any organ
ization or direction,
appealing to the impulse to get back at someone or get quick restitution through
theft. Typically,
liberal historians claimed the problem was not enough cash—“programs like Model Citi
es had
never been given enough money to work.”67 In fact, welfare and other assistance be
tween 1965
and 1970 represented the largest voluntary transfer of wealth in human history,
with no appreciable
effect—indeed, with horrible consequences. Radical black leaders, such as Malcolm
X, predictably
blamed “white oppression” and “white middlemen” for the conditions of the local economy,
but
after the riots the local consumers did not “evince any great interest in promotin
g black capitalism
or in ‘buying black.’”68
Violence placed black leaders like King in a precarious position: having to fend
off the radicals
while turning up the heat on Washington. (King was booed when he appeared in Wat
ts after the
riots.)69 Separatists led by Stokely Carmichael demanded “Black Power!” and urged bl
acks to start
their own businesses, schools, and militias. The Black Panthers protested a May
1967 gun-control
law understanding that if only the police had guns, blacks would be helpless—and t
hey organized
community patrols to protect people from muggers as well as from mistreatment by
police. Panther
leaders fell far short of King, however, when it came to having either character
or courage: Huey
Newton went to prison for killing a police officer; Eldridge Cleaver left the co
untry; and evidence
surfaced revealing that other Panthers had executed their own members suspected
of being
informants. King might have been able to step into the chasm separating the radi
cals and the
moderates if he had lived. But an assassin took King out of the picture in Memph
is on April 4,
1968, where he had delivered his own eulogy: “I’ve been on the mountaintop.”70 A new s
torm of
rioting ensued, including unrest in Washington, D.C. Predictably, the Johnson ad
ministration
reacted by creating one of the largest bureaucracies since the New Deal and prod
ucing the first
truly dependent class in American history.
Origins of Welfare Dependency
Lost in the violence, rioting, and assassinations was the simple fact that the C
ivil Rights Act had, in
terms of the law, ended the last legal remnants of slavery and reconstruction. Y
et Johnson
immediately proposed a “legislative blitzkreig” that, in the process of the next two
decades, would
reenslave many poor and minorities into a web of government dependency.71 Relyin
g on
questionable statistics from best sellers, such as Michael Harrington’s The Other
America, which
maintained that millions of Americans languished in poverty, Johnson simplistica
lly treated poverty
as an enemy to be defeated. In his 1964 State of the Union message, he announced
, “This
administration today…declares unconditional war on poverty,” and he declared that on
ly “total
victory” would suffice.72 The United States, already a “rich society,” Johnson observe
d, had the
opportunity to move “upward to the Great Society.”73
Johnson constructed a massive framework of new federal programs under the superv
ision of the
Office of Economic Opportunity and the Department of Health, Education, and Welf
are. Many of
the programs seemed innocuous: the Job Corps presumably taught high school dropo
uts job skills;
VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) was little more than a domestic Peace C
orps for
impoverished areas; Head Start sought to prepare low-income children for schools
by offering
meals and other programs.
Without doubt, the most destructive of all the Great Society policies, however,
involved a change in
a New Deal program called Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). The or
iginal AFDC
had been tightly restricted to widows, with the intention of giving taxpayer sub
sidies to oncemarried
women who had lost the chief breadwinner in the family. In the 1960s, however, J
ohnson
and Congress quietly changed AFDC qualifications to include any household where
there was no
male family head present, a shift that now made virtually any divorced or single
mother of low
income eligible for taxpayer money. The incentives of the program made it financ
ially more
lucrative not to be married than to be married. The message from Uncle Sam was, “I
f you are now
married and poor, think about a divorce. If you’re not married now, don’t even think
about getting
married.”
Seen in the numbers, the changes from the previous decade were shocking. In 1950
, 88 percent of
white families and 78 percent of black families consisted of a husband and wife
in a traditional
marriage.74 These numbers had not changed since the Great Depression, but someth
ing happened
after Great Society legislation: white percentages remained unchanged, but black
families began to
break up, beginning in 1967; then the percentage of intact black families began
a steep slide.
Within twelve years, the proportion was down to 59 percent, compared to about 85
percent of
whites. During this fifteen-to twenty-year period, the percentage of black poor
who lived in a
single-female household shot up from under 30 percent to nearly 70 percent. Whit
e poor in singlefemale-
household families increased by about half, but black poor in single-female hous
eholds rose
more than 200 percent, a fact that demonstrated the horrible incentives inserted
into the war on
poverty. Put another way, the war on poverty managed to destroy black marriages
and family
formation at a faster rate than the most brutal slaveholder had ever dreamed!75
Only a government bureaucrat could fail to see the simple logic of what had occu
rred. A couple
living together, but not married, with the male employed, stood to make slightly
more than twice as
much than if they were married. Since the courts had ruled that the presence of
a man in the house
could not be used as a reason to deny a woman “benefits” (a term we shall qualify fo
r now, given
the long-term harms done by these programs), then it seemed to make economic sen
se for a man
and a woman to refrain from marriage and, instead, live together and combine the
ir incomes. Social
changes accounted for most of the fact that divorces rose 30 percent from 1950 t
o 1970, then went
off the charts, nearly doubling again by 1975, but one cannot discount the econo
mic incentives
against marriage.76
This was nothing less than a prescription for the utter destruction of tradition
al black families, and
had it been proposed by the Imperial Wizard of the KKK eighty years earlier, suc
h a program
would have met with a quick and well-deserved fate. But embraced by liberal inte
llectuals and
politicians, the war on poverty and AFDC, especially after the man-in-the-house
rule was struck
down in 1968, was the policy equivalent of smallpox on inner-city black families
in the 1970s. The
AFDC caseload rose 125 percent in just five years, from 1965 to 1970, then anoth
er 29 percent
during the following five years, producing a wave of illegitimate children.
Why were blacks disproportionately affected by the Great Society policies? Minor
ity
communities—especially black—were disproportionately concentrated in urban areas, es
pecially
inner cities.77 Thus, federal welfare workers could much more easily identify ne
edy blacks and
enroll them in welfare programs than they could find, or enlist, rural whites in
similar
circumstances. It wasn’t that there weren’t poor whites, but rather that the whites
were more
diffused and thus difficult to reach. Policies designed for all poor overwhelmin
gly affected, or,
more appropriately, infected, the black community.
Having unleashed a whirlwind of marriage destruction and illegitimacy, AFDC prod
uced two other
destructive side effects. First, because the single highest correlating factor i
n wealth accumulation
is marriage, AFDC inadvertently attacked the most important institution that cou
ld assist people in
getting out of poverty. A debate still rages about how this dynamic works, but t
here appear to be
important social, sexual, and psychological reasons why men need to play a key r
ole in the
economic life of a family. But there is little reason to debate the data showing
that married couples
are more than the sum of their parts: they generate more wealth (if not income)
than single people
living together and obviously more than a single parent trying to raise a family
.78 Divorced
families have less than half the median income of intact families, and even more
to the point, have
less than half the income of stepfamilies.79
A second malignant result of AFDC’s no-father policy was that it left inner-city b
lack boys with no
male role models.80 After a few years at places like Cabrini Green, one of “the pr
ojects”—massive
public housing facilities for low-income renters that had degenerated into pits
of drugs and crime—
a young man could literally look in any direction and not see an intact black fa
mily.81 Stepping up
as role models, the gang leaders from Portland to Syracuse, from Kansas City to
Palmdale, inducted
thousands of impressionable young males into drug running, gun battles, and ofte
n death.82 No
amount of jobs programs would fill the void produced by the Great Society’s perver
ted incentives
that presumed as unnecessary the role of the father.83
Nor did the war on poverty have even the slightest long-run impact on reducing t
he number of
poor. Indeed, prior to 1965, when Johnson had declared war on want, poverty rate
s nationally had
consistently fallen, and sharply dropped after JFK’s tax cut took effect in 1963.
After the Great
Society programs were fully in place—1968 to 1969—progress against poverty ground to
a halt,
and the number of poor started to grow again. No matter which standards are used
, one thing seems
clear: by the mid-1970s, the Great Society antipoverty programs had not had any
measurable
impact on the percentage of poor in America as compared to the trends before the
programs were
enacted. It would not be the last “war” the Johnson administration would lose.
“We’re Not Going North and Drop Bombs”
Lyndon Johnson inherited not only the slain president’s dangerous policy programs
but also his
poor cabinet choices and advisers. On the one hand, LBJ did not want to see Viet
nam detract in any
way from his ambitious social programs. On the other hand, he knew he had a conf
lict to manage
(he carefully avoided the reality of the phrase “a war to fight”), and at the urging
of his (really
Kennedy’s) advisers, he tried to deal with Vietnam quietly. This led to the most d
isastrous of
wartime strategies.
Johnson first had to grapple with the unpleasant fact that he had inherited JFK’s
cabinet, the “best
and the brightest,” as David Halberstam would cynically call them. Both the circum
stances of
Kennedy’s death and the general low esteem in which many of the Kennedy inner circ
le held of
LBJ personally made his task of eliciting loyalty from the staff all the more di
fficult. He appeared
to get on well with Kennedy’s secretary of defense McNamara, whose facility—some wou
ld say
alchemy—with numbers seemed to put him in a fog when it came to seeing the big pic
ture. For
such a man, throwing himself fully into the destruction of a communist system in
North Vietnam
would be difficult, if not impossible. McNamara’s mind-set—that numbers alone determ
ine the
outcome of undertakings, from making cars to conquering enemies—helps explain why
neither he
nor most of Johnson’s other advisers ever made a clear case to the American public
as to why the
United States needed to resist the expansionist North. They did not see much of
a difference
between the communists and the government in the South. Villagers’ heads impaled o
n stakes,
courtesy of the Viet Cong, simply did not register with the bean counters.
When it came to actual military strategy in Vietnam, McNamara was equally obtuse
. He said of the
military situation early in the war, “The greatest contribution Vietnam is making…is
that it is
developing an ability in the United States to fight a limited war, to go to war
without necessity of
arousing the public ire.”84 This admission was nothing short of astonishing. By co
nceding that the
administration did not even want the public to view the North Vietnamese and Vie
t Cong—who
were killing American sons—as the enemy, McNamara ceded the entire propaganda camp
aign to
the communists and their allies. For the first time in American history, the gov
ernment expressed
no spirited animosity toward its enemy, provided U.S. citizens with no examples
of North
Vietnamese or Viet Cong atrocities (even though plenty existed), and refrained f
rom speaking ill of
Ho Chi Minh (let alone demonizing him). It was 180 degrees from the yellow-press
positions a half
century earlier. At no time did the administration launch even the most basic ed
ucation campaign to
explain the communists’ objectives to the American people. Nor did any administrat
ion prior to
Nixon even remotely suggest that the warlords in the North, particularly Ho Chi
Minh, should
personally face retaliation in response to their policies in the way Tojo, Musso
lini, and Hitler had
been singled out as individuals for their actions. Quite the contrary, Johnson d
eliberately avoided
any air strikes that could conceivably have injured or killed Ho. Years later, i
n 1995, Colonel Bui
Tin of the North Vietnamese Army was asked if the United States could have done
anything to
prevent a communist victory. He answered, “Cut the Ho Chi Minh Trail. If Johnson h
ad granted
General Westmoreland’s request to enter Laos and block the Ho Chi Minh Trail, Hano
i could not
have won the war.”85 The entire approach to the war literally stood the principles
of victory on
their head.86
Moreover, by 1966, if the question of complete victory was in doubt, then it was
right to again ask
if Vietnam was the line in the sand for resisting communism wholeheartedly. A po
orly conceived
and inadequately undertaken military action only compounded the larger point: wh
y Vietnam? As
the war dragged on, the only answer increasingly seemed to be, “Because we are the
re.” In
retrospect, a stronger response to either Berlin or Cuba may have proven more ef
fective at stopping
communism. When Ronald Reagan later referred to the “great lesson” the United States
had
learned in Vietnam, that “we sent men to fight a war the government wouldn’t let the
m win,” he
reiterated the central fact that military action must be both purposeful and pra
gmatic. If Vietnam
was ever the former—a point that still remains in doubt—it was never the latter.
In part, this end product stemmed from both Kennedy’s and Johnson’s reluctance to pu
rsue the war
in the first place. In part, it reflected the failure to grasp the fact that thi
s was not, as critics later
claimed, a civil war but a thoroughgoing invasion of the South by the North. Gen
eral Vo Bam of
the North Vietnamese Army let slip that in 1959 he had been instructed to lead t
he “liberation” of
the South. But the failures also illustrated the radical left’s complete dominance
of the dialogue
involving the war. Those sent to fight had virtually no voice at home: “A few phot
ographs of
Vietnamese villagers who had been disemboweled or had their heads impaled on pos
ts [by the
communists] would have destroyed all the leftist arguments and demonstrations fr
om the
beginning.”87
Johnson, rejecting the advice of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) not to engage i
n a limited bombing
of the North, or to use any sort of gradual escalation, chose to do just that. L
ike Kennedy, he hoped
at first to get by with mere U.S. “support” of the ARVN. In July 1964, Johnson had b
oosted U.S.
strength there to 21,000 men, up 30 percent from Kennedy’s levels; then, in August
, an incident
occurred that sealed the involvement of the United States in Vietnam. On August
second, the U.S.
destroyer Maddox, operating in the Gulf of Tonkin off North Vietnam, reported th
at it was under
attack from North Vietnamese PT boats. Questions later arose as to whether the M
addox had been
attacked at all. Two days later a second attack supposedly occurred on the Maddo
x and a second
destroyer, the Turner Joy, and this time the ships called for air support. Comma
nder James
Stockdale, one of the first aviators on the scene, performed a thorough reconnai
ssance and
concluded in his official report that there were no North Vietnamese vessels in
the area, and that the
Maddox and Turner Joy had probably fired on each other in the haze.88
With only a cursory amount of information—and certainly no clear proof of attacks
against the
United States—Johnson went on television to announce that he had ordered air respo
nses to the
attacks. At the same time, he sent a resolution to Congress, which he wanted ado
pted retroactively,
that was the “functional equivalent” of a formal declaration of war.89 The August se
venth Gulf of
Tonkin Resolution said, “Congress approves and supports the determination of the P
resident…to
take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the
United States and to
prevent further aggression.”90 Johnson received all the support he needed. Only tw
o senator (both
Democrats) voted against the measure. Voting in favor were soon-to-be antiwar ac
tivists George
McGovern, Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota, and William Fulbright of Arkansas (all D
emocrats).
Bobby Kennedy, still LBJ’s attorney general, but future senator from New York, sup
ported the
1964 war wholeheartedly.
Johnson, although vastly underestimating the undertaking to which he had committ
ed the nation,
did not lack an awareness of the implications of fighting a war on the Asian mai
nland, saying,
“We’re not going north and drop bombs at this stage…. I want to think about the conseq
uences of
getting American boys into awar with 700 million Chinese.”91 But the Viet Cong wou
ld not
cooperate in letting the United States play a peripheral role. On Christmas Eve,
1964, Viet Cong
bombed a Saigon hotel that quartered American junior officers, killing 2 and wou
nding 38. Then,
on February 7, 1965, a mortar attack on the American air base at Pleiku resulted
in more casualties.
Hundreds of aircraft moved in, but Johnson refused to order a bombing campaign.
The Viet Cong
had already achieved a victory of sorts. More soldiers were needed to keep the a
ircraft safe; and as
the security area around the bases was expanded, the ground troops needed more a
ir power to keep
them safe. It was a nonstrategy, a quicksand, with no hope of producing a victor
ious outcome.
Finally, in March 1965, more attacks led Johnson to approve a bombing campaign k
nown as
Rolling Thunder, and as the name implies, Johnson did not intend for this to be
a knockout blow or
an overwhelming use of power to intimidate the enemy into surrender, but an incr
emental
gradualist strategy.92 He denied outright the military’s request to strike oil-sto
rage facilities.93
Quite the contrary, McNamara and Johnson picked the targets themselves, placing
sharp
restrictions on what was fair game, claiming the purpose of the operation was to
present a “credible
threat of future destruction [emphasis ours].”94 In essence, McNamara had staged a
giant
demonstration, with live antiaircraft fire directed at U.S. airmen. It was immor
al and wasteful, and
it was guaranteed to produce a more determined enemy while at the same time doin
g nothing to
limit the North’s ability to fight. North Vietnam responded by erecting 31 acquisi
tion radars,
adding 70 MiG fighters, and installing deadly SA-2 surface-to-air missiles (SAMs
). By 1967,
Hanoi possessed some 7,000 to 10,000 antiaircraft guns and 200 SAM sites, and co
uld claim credit
for downing 80 U.S. aircraft.95 Even then, American aircraft fighting over the N
orth were
instructed that they were “not, repeat, not authorized to attack North Vietnamese
air bases from
which attacking aircraft may be operating.”96 Nor did Johnson and McNamara permit
American
pilots to eliminate the SAM sites: “The rules of engagement throughout Rolling Thu
nder stipulated
that American aircraft could only attack SAM sites that were actually firing at
them [emphasis
added].”97 Limited war of this sort had been addressed by no less an expert than W
illiam
Tecumseh Sherman a hundred years earlier: “War is cruelty,” he said, “and you cannot r
efine it.”
Meanwhile, on the ground, the United States had grown disenchanted with ARVN ope
rations. By
late 1965, U.S. troop numbers (including all personnel—naval, air, and other) had
reached 200,000,
a number well below what the JCS had categorically stated more than a year earli
er would be
needed to win. Based on the balance of forces alone, the war should have ended l
ong before 1965.
One of the problems involved the complete lack of strategy. General William West
moreland,
named the new army commander in Vietnam in March 1965, was impatient with the So
uth
Vietnamese operations against the Viet Cong and had introduced search-and-destro
y missions by
American forces. Whereas U.S. artillery, air, and armor (to the extent it could
be used) had
previously supported the ARVNs, the new strategy called on the ARVN units to gua
rd cities and
strongholds—exactly what the South Vietnamese warlords wanted in order to preserve
their troops
from combat. Worse, it placed American troops in a position to absorb the bulk o
f the casualties.
Aimed at finding the communists in the countryside, eliminating them and their s
upply bases, and
gradually expanding the safe area of operations, the search-and-destroy missions
, as with all
McNamara ideas, depended heavily on numbers and tallying, specifically of body c
ounts. How
many Viet Cong did an operation kill? The calculation turned into a giant con ga
me. Forces in the
field well knew that the VC tended to drag bodies off so as not to let their ene
my know the casualty
numbers, and that tactic, consequently, led to estimates. Before long the estima
tes were wildly
inflated, and, grotesquely, the policy rewarded the production of any body, whet
her a genuine VC
or not. Loyal or neutral Vietnamese caught in firefights were added to the body-
count totals.
The policy had no grounding in common sense whatsoever: no democracy would willi
ngly fight a
long war of attrition. It goes against the grain of democratic republics to meas
ure success purely in
numbers killed, especially when the enemy, in this case, made clear that it welc
omed such a
tradeoff in human carnage. Ho Chi Minh had explained this exchange flatly to the
French in the
1940s, saying, “You can kill ten of my men for every one I kill of yours, but even
at those odds,
you will lose and I will win.”98 Ho’s statement reflected an awareness that the comm
unists had no
qualms about sacrificing one third to one half of their population to gain a str
ategic victory. Human
life had little meaning to those running the war in Hanoi.
McNamara took his technical solutions to an absurd level when he proposed buildi
ng a giant
electrified reinforced fence across the North-South border to stop the flow of s
upplies. Quick
fixes—technology substituted for a sound war-fighting doctrine—was what Clark Cliffo
rd,
McNamara’s replacement as secretary of defense, found when he arrived on the job i
n 1968. “It
was startling,” Clifford said, “to find out we have no military plan to end the war.”9
9 By that time,
U.S. troop strength neared 470,000, and casualties mounted.
One massive problem that Johnson tried to ignore was that the allied forces (rei
nforced by
Australian, Philippine, and New Zealand units) were not just fighting Viet Cong
rebels in black
pajamas, but also a large and well-equipped People’s Army of Viet Nam (PAVN), or N
orth
Vietnam’s Army. These troops received their supplies from no less than the Soviet
Union itself,
and they delivered them to the South along the infamous Ho Chi Minh Trail, a mor
e than 350-mile
pathway through the jungles of Laos, which terminated at strike points opposite
Da Nang air base,
and the Pleiku and Ankhe firebases.
For all these substantial (and, in most cases, debilitating) weaknesses, the Uni
ted States still had to
snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. The watershed event came with the so-cal
led Tet Offensive
on January 31, 1968, when the Viet Cong assaulted multiple targets throughout th
e South. VC
troops even reached the U.S. embassy in Saigon, where they (contrary to popular
movie renditions)
were killed to a man. They stormed the old capital of Hue and surrounded the U.S
. base at Khe
Sanh. They made spectacular gains, but at great cost: for every American soldier
or marine killed at
Khe Sanh, 50 North Vietnamese died, a ratio “approaching the horrendous slaughter…be
tween the
Spaniards and Aztecs in Mexico or British and Zulus in southern Africa.”100 At Hue
the surprised
and outnumbered U.S. Marines evicted 10,000 Viet Cong and Vietnamese regulars fr
om a fortified
city in less than three weeks and at a loss of only 150 dead.
From that point on, any pretense that Vietnam was a civil war was over. The only
hope the
communists had to win had to come from direct, and heavy, infusions of troops an
d supplies from
Hanoi, Moscow, and Peking. At Khe Sanh, nearly 25,000 air sorties subjected the
seasoned North
Vietnamese attackers to a merciless bombardment, killing 10,000 communists compa
red to 205
Americans.101 One senior American general called Khe Sanh the first major ground
battle won
almost entirely by air power.102 A U.S. military historian, Robert Leckie, refer
red to Tet as “the
most appalling defeat in the history of the war” for Hanoi—an “unmitigated military di
saster.”103
Even General Tran Van Tra, a top-ranking communist, agreed, “We suffered large sac
rifices and
losses with regard to manpower and material, especially cadres at the various ec
helons, which
clearly weakened us.”104
Yet the very failure of the communists’ Tet Offensive illustrated the flawed natur
e of U.S. strategy.
Here, in a single battle, Americans had achieved a fifty-to-one kill ratio, and
yet the media reported
this as a communist victory. embassy in saigon captured! read one erroneous head
line. Television
repeatedly showed a photograph of South Vietnamese police chief Nguyen Ngoc Loan
shooting a
man in the head, claiming the man was a “Vietcong suspect.” In fact, the man was a V
iet Cong
colonel in civilian clothes—a man Loan knew personally—and, by the rules of war, a s
py. Andrew
Jackson had done almost exactly the same thing to British agents more than 120 y
ears earlier. But
Jackson did not have to deal with the power of television or the impact of the c
amera. Scenes were
cut and spliced in the studios into thirty-second clips of marines and body bags
, with an
accompanying text, “American troops mauled.”
After Tet, the “most trusted man in America,” CBS news anchor Walter Cronkite, told
his viewers
the war was unwinnable, at which point Johnson reportedly said that if he had lo
st Walter Cronkite,
he’d lost the American people. Even Newsweek—hardly an objective, patriotic source—adm
itted
that for the first time in history the American press was more friendly to its c
ountry’s enemies than
to the United States. Ironically, the polls showed Johnson consistently drew hig
her support when he
turned up the pressure and when he restarted the bombing of the North. Before th
e 1968 election,
polls showed that no more than 20 percent supported withdrawal, and some of that
20 percent
represented hawks who were dissatisfied with the apparent lack of conviction in
the strategy.105
Coming Apart
No American war has ever enjoyed the full and unwavering support of the entire U
.S. population.
Federalists threatened secession in 1812 in protest of “Mr. Madison’s War”; Henry Davi
d Thoreau
was jailed over his opposition to the Mexican War (a conflict that even Lincoln
challenged); and
the Civil War produced protests against the draft that required the use of Gatli
ng guns to disperse
rioters. World War II came as close as any war to unanimous support, and even th
en there were
dissenters. Vietnam differed sharply because without a declaration of war, the a
dministration lost a
tremendous psychological patriotic edge. People debated a policy decision as opp
osed to an act of
national security. Moreover, inept handling of the press and failure to propagan
dize the conflict in
the manner that a life and death struggle demands only invited rebellion and cri
ticism at home. In
short, Vietnam, in almost every respect, was a textbook example on how not to co
nduct a war. The
media’s proclivities toward an open society increasingly demanded that Americans c
onsider the
communists’ point of view and questioned whether U.S. leadership had an interest i
n the outcome.
This, in turn, meant that acts of defiance against the government were magnified
, exaggerated, and
highlighted.
Real dissent certainly existed. Selective service, better known as the draft, ha
d been reinstituted
during the Korean War and had been renewed regularly by Congress. But a host of
exemptions,
including those for marriage and education, allowed all married men plus upper-a
nd upper-middleclass
men to elude induction. This is not to say Vietnam was a poor man’s war. Rifle com
panies
suffered high numbers of casualties—mostly draftees—but proportionately the worst hi
t were
flyers, virtually all of whom were volunteers, officers, and college graduates.
It would have been
irrelevant if the draft had produced genuine inequities: Radicals still would ha
ve claimed such
injustice existed. A march for peace took place in Washington in late 1965, and
a month earlier the
first publicized case of a draft-card burning had occurred.
Pollsters swept into action, measuring support for the war. Unfortunately, polli
ng, by the nature of
its yes or no answers to questions, tends to put people into one of two camps, e
liminating options.
Consequently, depending on the wording of a particular poll, one could prove tha
t the “majority” of
Americans either approved of, or disapproved of, the Johnson administration’s hand
ling of the war
at any given time. One segment of the population—which grew steadily, but which pe
aked at about
one third—was referred to as doves. The doves themselves were split. One group cri
ticized the
Vietnam War primarily on moral grounds, namely, that the United States, as a “capi
talist imperial”
power, represented the embodiment of evil in the world; whereas communist states
, no matter what
their “excesses,” nevertheless were forces for progress toward a utopian society. Mo
st of those in
this echelon of the dove wing consisted of die-hard communists, dropouts, social
outcasts, militant
anti-American revolutionaries, or disaffected youths who, whatever their educati
on, were ignorant
of the most basic elements of foreign policy.
Another dove wing, the liberal Democrats, generally embraced John Kennedy’s origin
al vision of
“paying any price, bearing any burden” to advance democracy, but they nonetheless sa
w Vietnam
as the wrong war in the wrong place. To this pragmatic wing, the general strateg
y remained sound,
but Southeast Asia already looked like a quagmire the liberals wanted to avoid b
ecause it also
threatened to suck funds from Great Society social programs. Many journalists, s
uch as David
Halberstam and Neil Sheehan, fell into this category.
The opposite segment of public opinion, labeled the hawks, represented the conse
rvative
anticommunists in the Republican and Democratic parties. Hawks viewed it as a cr
itical signal to
the Soviets to hold the line in Vietnam as a continuation of containment that ha
d proved moderately
successful in Korea, Iran, and—its greatest success—NATO and Western Europe. For the
hawks,
withdrawal was not an option because it would put into play the domino theory an
d topple the other
states in Southeast Asia, threatening the entire southern fence holding in the S
oviet empire. Among
the hawk wing of the Democratic Party, the labor unions provided consistent supp
ort for the war.
After Nixon’s election, the so-called hard hats, who represented construction and
line workers,
frequently clashed with the student radicals and the hippies at protest marches.
Three Streams Converge
Vietnam was unique in rallying a large core of opponents—perhaps ultimately as lar
ge a share as
the Tory population opposed to Washington’s armies in the American Revolution. Wha
t made the
Vietnam protests somewhat different was three forces that combined in the mid-19
60s to produce
the student mass demonstrations that disrupted American college campuses and ult
imately spilled
over into the cities.
The first stream to flow into the radicalism of the decade occurred when the bab
y boomers knocked
on the doors of the universities. Boomers numbered some 79 million people born b
etween 1943 and
1960. Coming of college age by 1959 (at the earliest), they ushered in a tidal w
ave of students into
American universities, tripling the percentage of bachelor’s degrees awarded to tw
enty-three-yearolds
between 1950 and 1970.106 The student population—already 2.5 percent in America—furt
her
expanded. This demographic quake alone would have sent shock waves through the s
ystem, despite
the fact that two thirds of the boomers never went to college.
Something else relating to education was at work, however, namely the deprivatiz
ation of
education in the United States. In the 1960s, the percentage of students attendi
ng public rather than
private institutions rose from 59 percent to 73 percent, and the image of a coll
ege graduate as an
elite member of society disappeared when millions of veterans took advantage of
the G.I. Bill.
Public universities reflected this transfer from private to public, especially i
n California, which
opened three new campuses in 1964 and 1965.
By their very size, “whatever age bracket Boomers have occupied has been the cultu
ral and
spiritual focal point for American society as a whole.”107 More bluntly, it was al
ways about them,
and most of the cultural and spiritual trends were troubling: the boomer generat
ion’s death rates
from suicide, drunk driving, illegitimate births, and crime set records, relativ
ely and absolutely. The
incidence of serious crime rose twice as fast for the boomer generation as for t
he population as a
whole.108 Meanwhile, families in which boomers were raised as well as their own
marriages fell
apart with growing frequency, with the ratio of divorces to marriages going from
one in six in 1940
to one in three by 1970.
It is from this background of abundance, self-centeredness, and permissiveness,
combined with
instability and lack of direction, that the boomer students arrived on universit
y campuses in the
early to mid-1960s.109 Because of lower standards, American university enrollmen
t rose from 3.6
million students in 1960 to 9.4 million by 1975, when baby-boom enrollments bega
n to flag. More
than a thousand new colleges or universities—not counting hundreds of community co
lleges and
technical and trade schools—opened during the expansion. In 1950, the United State
s had 1,859
public and private institutions of higher education, a number that had risen to
3,055 by 1975.110
Most of these were public universities (1,454, in 1975), reflecting the national
sense that a college
education was desirable and that a means to guarantee a college education needed
to come from tax
dollars. As a precursor to these attitudes, several studies purported to show th
at from 1947 to 1958
the “knowledge industry” had accounted for more than 28 percent of the nation’s income
, growing
twice as fast as the GNP.111 Other scholars argued that it had increased the nat
ion’s wealth by
more than half, and Clark Kerr likened the university’s transforming effect on the
economy to that
of the railroads.112 By the end of the 1960s, nearly half of all young men were
going to college,
while at the same time a striking grade inflation had started, which was more pr
onounced for the
boomer generation than any other in history. The average collegiate grade rose f
rom C+ to B
between 1969 and 1971, overlapping a historical SAT slide of at least 24 points
for some schools
and up to 50 points for others.113 Never was getting a good grade so easy for so
many people, yet
never had it represented so little.
Some of the incentive for obtaining a higher education came from the oft-cited i
ncome statistics
showing there existed a direct correlation between years of schooling and salary
. In 1949, when the
boomers’ parents began to contemplate the future, the after-tax lifetime income fo
r a person
completing sixteen years of school was almost double that of a person with an ei
ghth-grade
education, a precursor to the late twentieth century, when real wages for those
with less than a high
school diploma fell, compared to college graduates, whose income rose at a stron
g rate.114
Between 1956 and 1972, the lifetime income of men with college educations had in
creased to
almost twice that of male high school graduates.
In the process of appreciating the genuine benefits of education, however, Ameri
cans deified the
college degree, endowing it with magical powers of transformation that it never
possessed. This
nearly religious faith in education spending accounted for a second major factor
that helped foster
student riots in the 1960s: money, especially federal dollars. It began in 1958,
when the National
Defense Education Act not only expanded the federal education budget, but also m
arked the key
shift by making Uncle Sam “the financial dynamic of education.”115 During the Great
Society,
Washington earmarked still more money for education, particularly for less afflu
ent students. The
flood of money was, as usual, well intended. Congress had originally sought to b
uttress math,
science, and engineering programs at colleges and universities. In fact, the mon
ey merely filtered
through the math and science programs in true academic egalitarian fashion on it
s way to liberal
arts and social science programs.
This development by itself might not have produced such a disaster in other eras
. In the 1960s,
however, a third element combined with the explosion in student numbers and the
rising tide of
funding, namely, the leftward tilt of the faculty on campus. The academy always
tended toward
liberalism, but liberal inclinations were kept in check by religion, government,
and society to
render a relative degree of political balance for more than a century. In the 19
30s, the artistic and
intellectual elites rejected capitalism, many going so far as to endorse Stalini
sm. One study, at
Bennington College from 1935 to 1939, showed that students’ attitudes swayed drama
tically as
they matriculated through the university. Some 62 percent entered Bennington as
Republicans, but
by the time they graduated only 15 percent still considered themselves Republica
ns. On the other
hand, the number of those who considered themselves socialist or communist tripl
ed during the
same period.116
With the end of McCarthyism, many universities found that not only could they no
t discriminate
against communists, but they no longer had any right to question radical scholar
ship either. After
all, the thinking went, “Who’s to say what’s right or wrong?” Such views did not go far
in science,
business, or engineering, but the requirements at most universities in general e
ducation fields meant
that the extremely activist and liberal faculty elements were concentrated into
required classes in
history, English, philosophy, and social sciences—in other words, where they would
reach the most
students.
At the same time, students were inadequately grounded in the basic principles of
capitalism or
communism. By the end of 1962, the New York Times noted a discernible national t
rend against
teaching about communism in schools.117 The anti-McCarthy reaction at the univer
sity level led to
a dramatic shift in the other direction. Conservatives were ostracized, viewed a
s no longer cuttingedge
. Tenure committees increasingly had more Marxists on them, and those leftist sc
holars
wielded the tenure knives as freely as the McCarthyites had on communists.118 In
part, this, too,
represented a generational revolt against established existing faculty in colleg
es by young
professors seeking to flex their muscles against groups (including many World Wa
r II vets) that
they thought had given inordinate support to McCarthy’s movement.119 Consequently,
just when
students cognitively reached an age where they could understand the deeper issue
s of capitalism
and communism, they arrived at universities ill prepared to challenge the increa
singly radical
university faculty they were likely to encounter in required classes.
Yet it would be inaccurate to portray the student protest movement as directed b
y the professors.
Although faculty advisers may have provided ammunition for the cause, it was rad
ical students
who led the attack. Many of the agitators’ leaders were “red-diaper babies” whose pare
nts were
Communist Party members or socialists. Some were not even students at the time,
such as Tom
Hayden of the University of Michigan, a journalist who worked as a field secreta
ry for the Students
for a Democratic Society (SDS). Hayden, later known for his famous marriage to a
ctress Jane
Fonda, cofounded the Students for a Democratic Society in 1960 with Al Haber, a
local Michigan
radical. Haber received support from the socialist Student League for Industrial
Democracy.
Though publicly anti-Soviet, they had no intention of opposing communism in word
or in principle.
Steeped in Marxism, both Haber and Hayden hated American capitalism and the midd
le-class
society it produced. The committed Hayden—praised as “the next Lenin”—organized a meetin
g of
activists in Port Huron, Michigan, in 1962 that produced the manifesto of the mo
vement, called the
Port Huron Statement.120 The Port Huron Statement enjoined students to seize con
trol of the
educational system from the administrators and government, that is, from the tax
payers. Hoping to
distance themselves from the Stalinist atrocities of the 1930s, the SDS and othe
r radical
organizations called themselves the New Left. One of the key tenets of the Port
Huron philosophy
was that the United States was the source of conflict and injustice in the world
. Equally important,
though, was the notion that “students were ideally suited to lead,” and that the uni
versity was the
ideal location, if not the only one, from which to launch the new radicalism.121
Consequently, at the very time that waves of new baby-boomer students were swarm
ing into
institutions of higher learning, they were greeted with a torrent of money and a
liberal—if not
radical—faculty that challenged traditional norms of patriotism, religion, and fam
ily. Reinforcing
the message of the student radicals, the faculty provided social and intellectua
l cover for the
disruptions that soon occurred, justifying the mayhem as necessary for education
and social reform.
Under such circumstances, the surprise was not that violent campus revolutions e
nsued, but that
they took so long, especially in light of the Vietnam War, which provided a foca
l point for anti-
American hostility and revolutionary rhetoric.
Red-Diaper Babies
At least some of the unrest emanated from Moscow, which trained and supported an
extensive
network of radical leaders for the purposes of disrupting American society and a
lienating youth
from bourgeois ideas. Sit-in protests and mass demonstrations at California camp
uses appeared as
early as 1958, usually directed at a specific incident or university policies. A
fter 1964, however, at
the University of California at Berkeley, the demonstrations grew increasingly v
iolent under the
Free Speech movement. According to the history of the American communist movemen
t,
“Communists and other varieties of Marxists and Marxist-Leninists were among the o
rganizers and
leaders” of the Free Speech movement.122 SDS leaders, such as Carl Davidson, David
Horowitz,
Country Joe MacDonald, and other red-diaper babies, proudly proclaimed their Mar
xist-Leninist
sympathies. Bernardine Dohrn, leader of the SDS in 1968, asked if she was a soci
alist, answered, “I
consider myself a revolutionary Communist.”123
Although some in the peace movement discouraged a communist presence, the Left d
id not need to
be taken over in the conventional sense—a takeover from below had occurred in the
form of an
infiltration by many thoroughgoing communists and fellow travelers. In an absurd
scene of
supreme irony, suburban radicals such as Tom Bell of Cornell faced harassment an
d taunting from
the audience at the 1968 SDS convention when members of the Progressive Labor wi
ng howled
curses at him for being too anticommunist. Here was a revolutionary who wanted t
o destroy or, at
the very least, fundamentally eviscerate the foundations of American democracy a
nd capitalism
being called a “red baiter.”124 Consequently, just as the SDS had established itself
on 350 to 400
campuses across the country, claiming perhaps a hundred thousand members, commun
ist elements
within the organization tore it apart, achieving the goal of the more militant c
ommunists of pushing
the radical movement toward street violence, yielding its position of influence
to the militant
Weathermen.125
Thus, campus violence was not a case of emotions getting out of hand, as is some
times portrayed.
Nor was it a case of frustrated student radicals who “lacked the patience and disc
ipline for
nonviolent protest.”126 Rather, it represented a predictable evolution of events w
hen a radical
minority steeped in revolutionary tactics and filled with an ideology of terror
attempted to impose
its worldview on the majority by shutting down facilities. But as early as 1964,
“spontaneous”
protests for “student rights” were revealed to be organized, deliberate disruptions
designed to choke
off all educational activities.
It is important to establish clearly, in their own words, the goals and objectiv
es of the radicals and
to note that traditional means of social control, especially arrest and imprison
ment for purposes of
rehabilitation, had little meaning to people who viewed arrest as a status symbo
l. Jerry Rubin, one
of the leaders of the New Left Yippie movement, expressed his contempt for the s
ystem within
which most of the activists operated. Violating the law had no negative connotat
ion for the Yippies,
and few feared genuine reprisals from the “repressive establishment” they denigrated
daily.127
Destroying property, insulting police and city officials, polluting, and breakin
g the law in any way
possible were jokes to some; to others, arrest only signified their commitment o
r validated their
ideology. Rubin, called into court, laughed, “Those who got subpoenas became heroe
s. Those who
didn’t had subpoenas envy. It was almost sexual. ‘Whose is bigger?’ ‘I want one, too.’”128
he
adrenaline rush of activism completely distorted reality. Susan Stern, a member
of the violent
Weathermen gang that blew up a University of Wisconsin lab, killing a student, h
ad participated in
the Chicago riots. Charged with aggravated assault and battery, and assault with
a deadly weapon
for attacking police (which carried a maximum penalty of forty years in prison),
she recalled being
“enthralled by the adventure and excitement of my first bust,” oblivious to the pros
pect that she
might spend most of her life behind bars.129
Radicals like Rubin noted that the essence of the movement was twofold: repel an
d alienate
mainstream American society, setting the radicals up as antiestablishment heroes
who would have a
natural appeal to teens and college students seeking to break away from their pa
rents; and refuse
rational negotiation in order to polarize and radicalize campuses (and, they hop
ed, the rest of the
United States). Rubin “repelled” and “alienated” quite well. As he once put it, “We were d
irty,
smelly, grimy, foul, loud, dope-crazed, hell-bent and leather-jacketed.” The hippi
es took pride in
the fact that they “were a public display of filth and shabbiness, living-in-the-f
lesh rejects of
middle-class standards [who] pissed and s**t and f***ed in public.” Far from hidin
g their drug use,
Rubin noted: “We were constantly stoned and tripping on every drug known to man…[and
were]
outlaw forces of America displaying ourselves flagrantly on the world stage.”130
For mainstream America, which often received skewed news reports of the ostensib
le causes of the
disruption, it appeared that students only wanted to challenge unreasonable dres
s codes, or have a
say in curriculum, or protest unpopular college policies. These causes for prote
st masked their true
tactics, which were to use any initial demand as a starting point for closing th
e university, then
destroying the rest of society. As radical leaders themselves later admitted, th
ey practiced a strategy
of constantly escalating demands so that no compromise could ever be reached wit
h them. Rubin,
who drafted many of these early tactics, explained: “Satisfy our demands and we go
twelve
more…. All we want from these meetings are demands that the Establishment can neve
r satisfy.
…Demonstrators are never ‘reasonable’ [emphasis ours].” When the demands reached the poi
nt
that no rational university administrator or public official could possibly comp
ly with them, Rubin
noted, “Then we scream, righteously angry…. Goals are irrelevant. The tactics, the a
ctions are
critical.”131 Yet Rubin was not being entirely candid: Short-term goals were irrel
evant, but the
destabilization of society as a long-term objective was quite relevant to the ac
tivists.
Over time, the movement not only grew more radical but also more blatantly anti-
American. Peter
Collier, on the staff of Ramparts magazine, recalled: “We had a weekly ritual of s
itting in front of
the television set and cheering as Walter Cronkite announced the ever-rising bod
y count on
CBS.”132 Actress Jane Fonda visited Hanoi in 1972 with her then-husband, activist
Tom Hayden.
In a famous photo, she posed sitting in the gunner’s seat of a North Vietnamese an
tiaircraft gun—
exactly the type used to shoot down the American pilots who were held nearby in
the Hanoi Hilton
prison, being tortured and starved—then spoke on Radio Hanoi as American POWs were
forced to
listen.133
Sex, Drugs, and Rock and Roll
Enhancing the freedom from responsibility and the associated notion that normal
activities such as
holding jobs and raising families were somehow meaningless, the new drug culture
spread through
the underculture like wildfire. Timothy Leary’s famous call to tune in, turn on, a
nd drop out
reached innocent ears like a siren song, and many youth, already convinced their
parents had lied to
them about rock and roll, sex, and Vietnam, listened attentively. LSD (lysergic
acid diethylamide)
was the subject of extensive tests by the CIA in the 1950s. One CIA researcher r
ecalled the lab staff
using it themselves, saying, “There was an extensive amount of self-experimentatio
n…[because]
we felt that a firsthand knowledge of the subjective effects of these drugs [was
] important.”134
LSD spread throughout the subculture and by the 1960s, dropping acid was equated
with a religious
exerience by Beat poet Allen Ginsburg.135
Increasingly, intellectuals in the 1960s advocated chemical use purely for pleas
ure and mind
expansion. And not just LSD, but mescaline, heroin, amphetamines, Ditran, and ot
her mysterious
substances, all, of course, undergirded by the all-purpose and ubiquitous mariju
ana. Writer Ken
Kesey credited his LSD trip for his insight in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest; le
aders of the
Berkeley Free Speech movement saw drugs as a natural element in their attack on
conformity; and
indeed drug use was, in their view, “an important political catalyst…[that enabled]
questioning of
the official mythology of the governing class.”136 Or, as a veteran of the Free Sp
eech movement
bragged, “When a young person took his first puff of psychoactive smoke,…[he] became
a youth
criminal against the State.”137 It was all so much empty rhetoric, but when draped
in the language
of academia, it took on a certain respectability.
Sexual freedom without consequence was glamorized and pushed by Hollywood and th
e music
industry. Censorship laws, which had eroded since the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roth de
cision (1957),
established that obscenity had to appeal to “prurient interests” and run contrary to
“contemporary
community standards.” Justice William Brennan further eliminated barriers to impos
ing any limits
by ruling that the public could not ban a work unless it was “utterly” without “redeem
ing social
value.”138 This, of course, meant that no town, ever, could prohibit any book or m
ovie, since
someone could always find “redeeming social value” somewhere in the work.
The free love movement, supported by the hippies, also reinforced the attack on
constraints. Two
strains of free love arguments appeared. One held that any breaking of sexual ta
boos and any attack
on censorship represented an advance against the male-dominated power structure.
Thus, some
supported the women’s movement not because it allowed women to seek self-fulfillme
nt outside
the home, but because it undercut capitalism and traditionalism. A second, more
radical, wave of
sexual politics involved the quest for polymorphous perversity—a call to try every
thing, do
everything, and ignore all restraints against homosexuality, pedophilia, and bes
tiality—and the
destruction of all distinctions between men and women. Any type of affection tha
t affirmed life,
these advocates argued, was desirable. Marriage and heterosexuality inhibited su
ch life affirmation
and therefore were wrong.
No doubt some Americans held these views in all previous eras, but the physiolog
y of conception
placed severe constraints on “If it feels good, do it.” Pregnancy out of wedlock was
received with
such social ostracism that it curtailed experimentation, even if social mores se
emingly punished
females more than the often unnamed male partners. The Pill changed that to the
extent that the
1999 millennial issue of The Economist called it the greatest scientific and tec
hnological advance
of the twentieth century.139 Without question, the Pill also triggered a boom in
women’s education
similar to what men had experienced: in medicine, first-year women students trip
led within ten
years of the spread of the Pill, and female MBA students nearly quadrupled. What
ever its beneficial
effects, the Pill exacerbated the erotic impulses already spinning out of contro
l.
Rock music reaffirmed the sexual and drug revolutions at every turn. By 1970, al
though still
exceptionally popular, neither the Beatles nor their bad-boy counterparts, the R
olling Stones, had
the aura of hipness, having ceded that to rising new and more radical groups who
se music carried
deeper drug overtones. Jimi Hendrix sang of flying on giant dragonflies and Jim
Morrison of the
Doors saw himself as the “lizard king.” Pink Floyd, Jefferson Airplane, and Iron But
terfly
unashamedly wrote music for drug trips.
By this time even clothing embodied antiestablishment traits. Blue jeans, the an
tifashion,
completely dominated the youth culture, constituting what one author called the “J
eaning of
America.”140 The entire genre emphasized sex and free love, pointing to the Woodst
ock music
festival of August 15–17, 1969, as evidence of what a hippie republic would look l
ike. “Peace,
love, and rock ’n’ roll,” read the logos on commercial products celebrating the event.
“Gonna join
in a rock ’n’ roll band…and set my soul free,” wailed Stephen Stills, of Crosby, Stills
& Nash
(CSN), in the anthem of the three-day concert. CSN popularized the event with a
top-forty song
called “Woodstock,” and the group starred in a full-length movie that followed. Wood
stock was
“touted as a new stage in the psychic evolution of the world, a mass celebration o
f what the 1960s
was all about,” an assertion defying reality.141 When up to half a million hippies—t
he
counterculture rock fans (including more than a few chronic drug users)—showed up
at Max
Yasgur’s farm to hear a cornucopia of headline rock bands, the result was predicta
ble: it had little
to do with love or peace and quite a bit to do with money.
As one participant recalled, “There was a lot made of how peaceful the event was.
But what else
would half a million kids on grass, acid, and hog tranquilizers be? Woodstock, i
f anything, was the
point at which psychedelics [drugs] ceased being tools for experience…and became a
means of
crowd control.”142 Said Grateful Dead guitarist (and drug addict) Jerry Garcia, “You
could feel the
presence of the invisible time travelers from the future,” but Garcia apparently d
idn’t see the “kids
freaking out from megadoses of acid or almost audibly buzzing from battery-acid
crank like flies
trapped in a soda can.”143 Having celebrated drug use, within a few years Garcia,
Sly Stone, David
Crosby, Keith Moon, Janis Joplin, and Jimi Hendrix, among other participants at
Woodstock, either
died of overdoses or otherwise destroyed their careers or bodies. Other Woodstoc
k veterans met
similar distasteful ends. Felix Pappalardi of Mountain survived one drug overdos
e only to be shot
by his wife in 1983.
Hendrix, already a guitar legend, wrapped up Woodstock with a “truly apocalyptic” vi
sion of a
“battlefield, [with] zombies crawling over a field littered with paper cups, plast
ic wrappers, and
half-eaten food, gnawing on corn husks, slobbering over ketchup-and mustard-smea
red half-eaten
hot dog rolls sprinkled with ants….”144 The event generated the single largest pile
of garbage of
any event in human history, and when the perpetrators departed, they left the me
ss for someone else
to clean up.
Less than a week before Woodstock, on August 9, 1969, the cult followers of Char
les Manson
broke into the house of director Roman Polanski in Bel Air, California. Polanski
was away, but his
beautiful pregnant wife, Sharon Tate, and four of her friends were home. Manson’s
gang—though
not Manson himself—stabbed and butchered the houseguests, smearing slogans on the
walls in the
victims’ blood. Reflecting the depravity of the counterculture, the underground pa
per Tuesday’s
Child named Manson its man of the year. Yippie leader Jerry Rubin said he fell i
n love with
Manson’s “cherub face and sparkling eyes,” and Bernardine Dohrn, leader of the Weather
men,
exclaimed, “Dig it! First they killed those pigs, then they ate dinner in the same
room with them,
then they even shoved a fork into [Sharon Tate’s] stomach! Wild!”145 If anything, th
e Manson
murders hurled icy water on the sixties myth that drugs made people holy, nonvio
lent, or pure.
At any rate, the drug culture and the so-called hippie movement never amounted t
o more than a
well-publicized fringe. It certainly did not outnumber the body of apathetic or
apolitical youth, and,
even though it enjoyed better publicity, the hippie movement may have had fewer
adherents than a
growing conservative student movement that had taken root two years before the P
ort Huron
Statement. The media did not view conservative youth groups, such as the Young A
mericans for
Freedom, as newsworthy, and thus they never received the attention or coverage o
f the radicals, but
they were influential nonetheless. Traditionalists and conservatives, those that
Richard Nixon
would call the Silent Majority, all faded into relative nonexistence from the me
dia’s perspective. It
was much more interesting to cover a firebombing or a riot.
Protests, Mobs, and the Media
Given the radicals’ dominance of the antiwar movement, it should not be surprising
that “the
demonstrations at the time of the Democratic convention in August 1968, and the
moratorium
events of October 1969 were orchestrated by organizations with changing names bu
t with
essentially the same cast of leaders.”146 On March 31, 1968, Lyndon Johnson shocke
d the country
with an unexpected announcement that he would not again seek the Democratic nomi
nation for
president. Polls had indicated that he probably would lose, especially with a ch
allenge from the
dovish side of the Democratic Party. Equally shocking to some was that one of th
e emerging
“doves,” Robert Kennedy, had abruptly repudiated his brother’s war. Suddenly many who
still
yearned for the presidency of John Kennedy—and the magic of Camelot—found him availa
ble
again in the person of Robert. But just two months after Martin Luther King’s assa
ssination, Bobby
Kennedy, giving a speech in Los Angeles, was killed by Sirhan Sirhan. The motive
given for the
assassination—Sirhan was an Arab nationalist—remains puzzling to this day: Kennedy d
id not
have a reputation as a strong friend of Israel, although he did come from New Yo
rk, which had a
strong Jewish lobby. Kennedy’s assassination left a void among the antiwar Left in
the Democratic
Party, whose dove leadership now devolved to the rather bland Eugene McCarthy. C
ertainly,
though, the antiwar Left would not unite behind Vice President Hubert H. Humphre
y of Minnesota.
A tireless legislator and principal author of the affirmative action laws, Humph
rey lacked the
commanding presence of a national leader and could only have won by sidestepping
the turmoil
that the antiwar elements promised to bring to the Democrats’ convention. Those gr
oups sought to
nominate McCarthy, a sincere-looking, soft-spoken senator from Minnesota who rem
inded people
of a wise uncle. His appearance enhanced his antiwar positions, which were in ma
ny respects
dangerous. Between 10,000 and 20,000 protesters moved into Chicago, with some of
the most
radical elements threatening to pour LSD into the city’s water or throw acid into
the eyes of
policemen. Others promised to lead a 150,000-person march on the Amphitheater. D
emocratic
mayor Richard Daley, having just regained control of the city from race riots, h
ad no intention of
allowing a new group to disrupt the Windy City when he authorized police to “shoot
to kill” any
suspected looters.
Daley placed the nearly 12,000-strong Chicago police on twelve-hour shifts, augm
ented by 7,500
army troops airlifted in from Texas, Oklahoma, and Colorado. He dispatched polic
e to guard
Chicago’s water supply and assembled “Daley dozers,” jeeps specially outfitted with ro
lls of
barbed wire on the front to clear streets of demonstrators. More important, he h
ad already
infiltrated the radical groups, sabotaging their schemes to acquire buses, and g
iving out false
information at phone banks.147 After weeks of denying the protesters march permi
ts, Daley
relented. The first riot broke out on August 25, 1968, when the police charged L
incoln Park,
driving the peaceniks out. One policeman told a reporter, “The word is out to get
newsmen,” and
Daley himself implied that journalists would not be protected.148
A symbiotic relationship, which developed between the Chicago protesters and the
news media,
accelerated. But the journalists also failed to see the adroit manipulation by t
he demonstrators.
Witnesses reported an absence of violence until the mobs saw television cameras,
at which point
they began their act. A later study by the national Commission on the Causes and
Prevention of
Violence reported that demonstrators stepped up their activities when reporters
and photographers
appeared, and, worse, camera crews “on at least two occasions did stage violence a
nd fake injuries
(emphasis ours).”149 The city of Chicago issued a report on the riots charging tha
t the news media
was guilty of “surprising naïveté,” but in reality the television cameras especially had
encouraged
and facilitated the rioters, and the images shifted all the blame to the police,
who had their share of
malignant club-wielding patrolmen. Advocates for maintaining public order were f
ew and far
between: NBC Today Show host Hugh Downs asked his viewers if the label “pigs” didn’t a
pply to
the Chicago police. Chet Huntley of NBC complained that “the news profession…is now
under
assault by the Chicago police,” and Walter Cronkite said on the air that the “Battle
of Michigan
Avenue” made him want to “pack my bags and get out of this city.”150 Such rhetoric qui
ckly faded
as the media quietly reaffirmed its support of the Democratic Party in the gener
al election.
The 1968 race pitted the inevitable winner, Humphrey, against the suddenly reviv
ed Richard
Nixon, who had made one of the most amazing political comebacks of all time to c
apture the
Republican nomination. Just six years earlier, when he lost the governor’s race in
California, Nixon
had told reporters, “You won’t have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore.” Nixon resurrec
ted
himself largely because of the rampant lawlessness in the country and his insigh
t that Americans
longed for “law and order.” He also understood that, if elected, he had to get the U
nited States out
of the war, one way or another, and he therefore claimed to have a “secret plan” to
get America out
of Vietnam. His anticommunist record suggested that whatever it was, it would no
t be concession
to Hanoi. Claiming there was a “Silent Majority” of Americans who did not protest an
d did not
demonstrate, but worked at their jobs, paid their taxes, and raised their famili
es, Nixon appealed to
the many who held the country together, kept the roads and Social Security funde
d, and raised kids
who never broke any laws, yet who constantly found themselves portrayed by the m
edia as boring,
unimaginative, unhip, uncool, and generally not with it. In selecting Spiro T. A
gnew, the governor
of Maryland, as his running mate, Nixon further alienated the media and the elit
es, handing them a
human lighting rod to absorb their attacks. During the first incarnation of the
Republican “southern
strategy,” Nixon told southern convention delegates that he would not “ram anything
down your
throats” and that he disliked federal intervention. Many took Nixon’s comments as co
de words for
a lackadaisical approach to desegregation—which they may well have been—but he had a
lso
acknowledged that states did have legitimate constitutional protections against
federal interference.
At any rate, the southern strategy effectively nullified a strong third-party ca
ndidacy by former
Alabama governor George Wallace, a segregationist and strong hawk.151
Although the margin of victory was somewhat distorted by Wallace, Richard Nixon
won
convincingly in the electoral college, 302 to 191. Wallace received nearly 10 mi
llion popular votes,
along with 46 electoral votes in five southern states that almost certainly woul
d have gone to Nixon
in a two-way race. This meant that Nixon received only 43 percent of the popular
vote, or about the
same as in other three-way races, for example, Wilson in 1912 or Bill Clinton in
1992. He failed to
carry a single large city, yet racked up California, Illinois, Ohio, and virtual
ly all of the West except
Texas.152 Viewing the Nixon and Wallace states together spotlighted a strong rej
ection of LBJ and
his policies. Of course, the press was unhappy with this result. Reporter David
Broder warned that
the “men and the movement that broke Lyndon Johnson’s authority in 1968 are out to b
reak
Richard Nixon…[and it is] easier to accomplish the second time round.”153 Nixon saw
the press as
the enemy, telling his staff “nobody in the press is a friend.”154
In fact, he was right. Virtually unnoticed, the media in America had undergone a
fundamental and
radical shift in the sixties. This began with journalists’ utter failure to cover
the Kennedy
administration fairly and, subsequently, to cover the assassination either objec
tively or thoroughly.
Seeking to recover lost ground and their journalistic virginity, members of the
press had accelerated
their attack on LBJ throughout the Vietnam War; then, when “their” candidate—Eugene
McCarthy—scarcely made a dent in the Democratic nominating process, they opened up
all their
guns on Nixon. Most members of the press did not like Nixon, either personally o
r ideologically,
and his “illegitimate” election allowed them to attack mercilessly.
“We Are All Keynesians Now”
Nixon came into office hoping to restore the pomp and circumstance of the White
House, outfitting
the marine guards with European-style ostentatious uniforms. Patriotic, convince
d of the rightness
of his position, Nixon unfortunately lacked the charisma that Kennedy, Jackson,
or the Roosevelts
had exhibited. His taste never seemed quite right: the new uniforms he had order
ed for the White
House guards only led to complaints that he was trying to create an “imperial” presi
dency. Having
struggled through a poor childhood, Nixon never adapted to the modest wealth and
trappings
associated with the presidency. He never looked comfortable in anything less tha
n a coat and tie.
Yet he was a remarkable man.
Raised as a Quaker, he had played piano in church and was a high school debater.
He entered the
navy in World War II after putting himself through Whittier College and Duke Uni
versity Law
School. Elected to Congress from California in 1946, he was largely associated w
ith
anticommunism, especially the investigation of Alger Hiss. Criticized for failin
g to support
desegregation issues, Nixon took states’ rights seriously. The notion that he was
a racist in any way
is preposterous: since 1950, when it was definitely not fashionable, he had been
a member of the
NAACP, and he had received the praise of Eleanor Roosevelt for his nondiscrimina
tion policies as
chairman of the Committee on Government Contracts.
Politically, Nixon’s election promises of respecting Main Street and upholding “law
and order” had
touched a desire among Americans to control the decade that had spun out of cont
rol.155 Billed as
the “the most reactionary and unscrupulous politician to reach the White House in
the postwar era,”
Nixon was neither.156 Both Kennedy and Johnson had exceeded Nixon in their abili
ty to deceive
and lie, and if one considers Nixon’s economics, he was arguably was less conserva
tive than
Truman.
Far from retreating from liberalism, Nixon fully embraced the basics of New Deal
economics and,
at least in practice, continued to treat social programs as though they were ind
eed effective and
justifiable public policies. “We are all Keynesians now,” he stated, indicating a fa
ith in Keynesian
economics, or the proposition that the government, through fiscal and monetary p
olicy, could heat
up or cool off the business climate. With the remnants of Great Society congress
ional delegations
entrenched, and with the Democrats controlling both houses of Congress, the gian
t welfare state of
the Great Society promised to grow, and grow rapidly, without a chief executive
holding it in
check. Meanwhile, the bill for LBJ’s programs started to come due under Nixon, and
social
spending rose dramatically during his administration, especially the budget for
AFDC. Per-person
costs to “lift” someone out of poverty went from $2,000 in 1965 to $167,000 by 1977.
157
Even without the prodding of the Democrats, Nixon expanded government’s scope and
activities.
Under his watch, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) came into being, with
its tendency to
acquire vast and unchecked powers over private property in the name of the envir
onment. The
agency had a $2.5 billion budget and had employed seven thousand people in less
than two
years.158 Its Endangered Species Act of 1973 stopped construction of a $116 mill
ion dam in
Tennessee because it might affect a fish called a snail darter, but that was onl
y a taste of the
runaway power the environmental agencies would later wield. By 1998, some 1,100
different
endangered species were protected by the government to the extent that merely sh
ining a light on a
kangaroo rat at night—even if by accident—constituted a federal violation!
Farmers watched in horror as EPA agents, often dressed in black with firearms, s
ealed off their land
or seized their equipment for threatening “wildlife preserves,” otherwise known as r
ancid ponds.
Restrictions on killing predators in the West grew so oppressive that ranchers e
ngaged in the shootand-
shovel approach, where they simply killed coyotes or wolves and buried the bodie
s. By the
1990s, a Florida man was sent to prison for two years after placing clean sand o
n his own lot; a
Michigan man was jailed for dumping dirt on his property (because his wife had a
sthma); and an
Oregon school district was taken to court for dumping sand on a baseball field.
Land that was dry
350 of 365 days a year could be designated by the EPA as a “wetland”! The government
claimed
private land as small as 20 feet by 20 feet as a sanctuary for passing birds—or, a
s one wag called
them, glancing geese. These and numerous other excessive and outrageous practice
s by the EPA
and related land and environmental agencies went far beyond Teddy Roosevelt’s goal
of
conserving wildlife and nature and bordered on elevating animals to human status
.159
Such an approach was not surprising. A linchpin of the modern environmental move
ment, made
popular in a 1968 book by biologist Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb, was the n
otion that people
were reproducing far too rapidly and would soon create such environmental and po
pulation
problems that the seas would dry up and “millions” would starve when the agricultura
l sector could
not keep up.160 “The battle to feed all of humanity is over,” he intoned: “In the 1970
s and 1980s
hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash progra
ms embarked upon
now.”161 Malthus eventually repented of such preposterous views after he had writt
en them.
Almost two hundred years later, events proved Ehrlich’s theories as wrong as flat-
earth
theories.162 The United States—and the world, for that matter—continued to increase
food
production per capita, both on average and on every continent. Indeed, with very
few exceptions,
almost every twentieth-century famine was politically induced.163 At the time Eh
rlich predicted
the deaths of “hundreds of millions,” an Iowan named Norman Borlaug, who had grown u
p in the
Depression-era Dust Bowl, concluded from observing dry midwestern fields that th
e problem was
the lack of technology, not the application of it.164 Borlaug engineered new str
ains of wheat,
which expanded food production in sub-Saharan Africa, one of the slowest food-gr
owing regions of
the world. Not only did Borlaug’s efforts produce more food overall, but his techn
iques increased
production per acre.
Of more immediate impact on the Nixon-era economy was the environmental movement’s
attack
on the automobile. Seeking to drastically cut back auto emissions, the EPA plann
ed widespread
new controls to “rein in” Detroit. Exhaust gases in the atmosphere, by then called s
mog, which
included less visible but possibly more dangerous elements, had become an obviou
s problem in
many cities, especially Los Angeles. The problem arose from the “tragedy of the co
mmons,”
wherein it was in the individual interest of people to pollute, but in no one’s in
dividual interest to
spend money for expensive pollution equipment on a car. Rather than provide tax
incentives or
other indirect methods to encourage people to move, on their own, to less pollut
ing vehicles, the
government used brute force. Even for those convinced that the government needed
to act, the
emphasis should have been on having the government set a standard—as it does with
the
department of weights and measures—and allowing Detroit to meet it by whichever me
ans it found
most effective or profitable. Instead, the EPA quickly drifted into determining
which technologies
cars “should” use. Without doubt, the air was cleaned up within twenty years, but ot
her aspects of
American life suffered dramatically as Americans saw taxes for the growing burea
ucracy increase
while their choices shrank, and there is no evidence that the same results could
not have been
achieved through market-oriented methods.
Similar measures passed by the 1968–74 congresses included the Occupational Health
and Safety
Act (administered by OSHA, the Occupational and Safety Health Administration), t
he Toxic
Substances Control Act, and a series of clean air and pure food and drug acts. B
y 1976, businesses
estimated that it cost $63 billion per year to comply with this legislation—money
that ultimately
did not come from the “evil corporations,” but from (often low-income) consumers who
paid
higher and higher prices. At the same time, productivity fell. The Coal Mine Hea
lth and Safety Act
reduced coal production by 32 percent. “Good,” shouted the environmentalists, but it
made
America more dependent on foreign fuels. Worse, unemployment soared in states wh
ere federal
pollution mandates forced vast new expenditures on scrubbers and other pollution
-control devices.
Not only did Nixon fail to resist any of these measures, he embraced them, accel
erating the growth
of government on his own, even when legislation was not foisted on him. The Whit
e House staff,
which before Kennedy consisted of 23, rose to 1,664 by the time of his assassina
tion, then leaped to
5,395 by 1971.165 Expanding government across a wide range of activities by main
taining the
Great Society social programs and the space race, and adding the requirements of
Vietnam and the
cold war on top of all the new costs of the EPA and other legislation, had made
Washington’s debts
such a drag on the economy that it had to slow down, if not collapse. The first
sign that something
was seriously wrong was inflation and its related effect, the declining value of
the dollar abroad.
Europeans, especially, did not want to hold dollars that had steadily lost their
value. If the U.S.
government could not control its appetites, then the international banking syste
m—headed by
American banks—could and did.
The postwar financial structure, created under the Bretton Woods agreement of 19
44, called for
foreign currencies to be pegged to the dollar—the international medium of exchange—a
nd for the
dollar to be held relatively constant to gold (at about $35 per ounce). A stable
dollar was achieved
through balanced budgets and fiscal restraint in the United States. Once the Gre
at Society programs
had kicked in, however, balancing the budget—especially under Nixon’s Keynesian stru
cture—was
nearly impossible. Every new deficit seemed to call for new taxes, which, in tur
n, forced
productivity and employment downward, generating more deficits. Eventually, Nixo
n severed the
link to gold, and although many conservative economists howled, he had actually
unwittingly
foisted the dollar into an arena of international competition that imposed disci
pline on the U.S.
Congress that it could never achieve itself. Within a decade, as electronic mone
y transfers became
common, the free-floating currency markets reacted swiftly and viciously against
any government
that spent money too freely. Nixon’s paradoxical legacy was that he helped kill Ke
ynesian
economics in the United States for good.
The End of Vietnamization
“Peace with honor” had characterized Nixon’s approach to getting the United States out
of
Vietnam. Along with his national security adviser, Harvard professor Henry Kissi
nger, Nixon had
sought to combine a carrot-and-stick approach to dealing with Hanoi. The “carrot” ne
gotiations
involved continuing talks in Paris to get the North Vietnamese out of the South.
After Tet, with the
elimination of most of the VC armies, this would have amounted to a victory for
the South. But
Hanoi did not want any genuine negotiations and had stalled, hoping to run out t
he clock on the
patience of the American public. Kissinger’s “stick” included an accelerated bombing o
f the North
combined with an immense resupply of the Vietnamese army, known as Vietnamizatio
n.
In reality, Vietnamization returned to the original Kennedy policy of supporting
Vietnamese troops
in the field, and by 1969 the Saigon government seemed much more enthusiastic ab
out demanding
that its own generals actually fight. As it turned out, as long as they had Amer
ican air support and
supply, the Vietnamese troops proved capable, holding their own against the comm
unists. Nixon,
whose name is strongly associated with the Vietnam War because of the protests,
withdrew
Americans at a faster rate than John Kennedy had put them in.
In May 1969, Nixon announced a new eight-point plan for withdrawing all foreign
troops from
Vietnam and holding internationally supervised elections. Under the new plan, th
e United States
agreed to talk directly to the National Liberation Front (NLF), but behind the s
cenes it sent
Kissinger to work the Soviet Union to pressure the North. That June, Nixon also
withdrew the first
large number of troops from Vietnam, some 25,000. Another 85,000 men would be br
ought home
before the end of the year. This, obviously, was the corollary of Vietnamization—t
he withdrawal of
American forces, which, after hitting a peak of 540,000 troops when Nixon came i
nto office,
steadily declined to only about 50,000 at the time of his resignation.
Another element of the stick strategy, though, was a renewed commitment to bombi
ng North
Vietnam. Here the United States missed yet another opportunity to take control o
f the conflict.
Unlike Johnson, who had made the strategic bombing of the North ineffectual by s
electing targets
and instituting pauses and peace offensives, Nixon appreciated the necessity for
pressure applied
consistently and focused particularly on Hanoi. Still, North Vietnamese casualti
es were light, with
only 1,500 civilians killed during the entire war compared to nearly 100,000 dea
d in the bombing
of Tokyo in World War II. Such facts did not dissuade antiwar Senator George McG
overn from
telling NBC that the United States had conducted “the most murderous aerial bombar
dment in the
history of the world,” had engaged in “the most immoral action that this nation has
ever
committed,” and had carried out a “policy of mass murder.”166 In fact, a real “mass murd
er” had
occurred, although it had taken place nearly a year before, while Johnson was st
ill in office.
In the fall of 1969 the Pentagon revealed that during the Tet offensive, America
n soldiers had
entered a village at My Lai and massacred the inhabitants, including women and c
hildren. First
Lieutenant William Calley, who had led the assault, was court-martialed and sent
enced to life
imprisonment for the murder of twenty-two unarmed civilians. A psychiatric team
who examined
the men concluded they were sane, and had known what they were doing at the time
. Naturally, this
incident fanned the flames of the antiwar movement, which derided soldiers as “bab
y killers.”
Calley’s statement justifying his conduct indicated that he had not differentiated
at all between
Vietnamese civilians and Viet Cong or North Vietnamese soldiers. “It was no big de
al,” Calley
said. “That was my enemy out there.”167
It was not My Lai, but another action, this time by Nixon, that set off the prot
esters like never
before. Nixon did not intend to let the communists attack allied bases from Camb
odia with
impunity, and beginning in March 1969, the president sent American aircraft on s
ecret bombing
missions over Cambodia, exposing North Vietnamese troops there to fire. A year l
ater, on April 30,
1970, U.S. troops entered Cambodia to clear out the North Vietnamese sanctuaries
. It was a move
that should have occurred in 1965, and would have occurred in any declared war a
lmost instantly.
But this merely temporarily protected Americans already in the South. It did lit
tle to affect the
attitudes of the North.
Instead, the bombing sparked new protests, with fatal results. At Kent State Uni
versity, a bucolic,
nonviolent Ohio campus prior to May 1970, a tragic shooting occurred when protes
ters had become
so destructive that the National Guard was called out.168 Students first torched
the ROTC building,
then attacked firemen who struggled to put out the fires, slashing their hoses.
During subsequent
protests, the guardsmen unexpectedly fired into the crowd, killing four. In May,
at the all-black
campus of Jackson State, rioting unrelated to the war resulted in the police kil
ling two students.
Both events solidified in the public mind the violent nature of the antiwar/“stude
nt” movements.
From January 1959 to April 1970, more than 4,300 bombings racked universities, g
overnment
buildings, and other facilities, at a rate of nine a day, most by the radical We
athermen.
Protest took on a form different from demonstrating or bombing: releasing secure
or classified
documents that could damage America’s war efforts. In 1971, a former Defense Depar
tment
official, Daniel Ellsberg, provided secret documents to the New York Times, whic
h published the
classified Pentagon study called The History of the U.S. Decision Making Process
in Vietnam.
These excerpts revealed that in many cases the Johnson administration had lied a
bout U.S.
involvement. Even though the documents only covered events until 1965, the natur
e of the analysis
and the sources of some of the data would have exposed U.S. intelligence-gatheri
ng methods and
threatened national security. For that reason, Nixon rightly fought their releas
e in court, losing a
Supreme Court decision that allowed their publication. The New York Times knew t
hat all the
significant information contained in the so-called Pentagon Papers had already b
een made public.
The affair had nothing to do with informing the public and everything to do with
further
embarrassing the government, especially Nixon, who was tarred with Johnson’s actio
ns. Like the
protests, publication of the Pentagon Papers only added to Hanoi’s resolve, convin
cing the
communists that America would soon crack. Nixon, on the other hand, thought that
it was Hanoi
that was close to surrender.
His one serious attempt at bringing the North to the bargaining table through bo
mbing involved the
April to August 1972 Linebacker offensive. Linebacker proved extremely successfu
l: more than 70
percent of enemy tanks were destroyed or damaged by tactical aircraft and gunshi
ps, and by
August, allied air power had virtually eliminated any armored capability in the
North.169
Linebacker II, unleashed in December after Hanoi had grown intransigent, consist
ed of an elevenday
bombing. According to one analyst of air power, “the effect of the…campaign on Hanoi’s
ability to resist was crushing. In what now stands as another preview of the fun
ctional effects
achieved by allied air power two decades later in Desert Storm, the rail system
around Hanoi was
attacked with such persistence and intensity that poststrike reconnaissance show
ed that repair crews
were making no effort to restore even token rail traffic.”170 Another source concl
uded that North
Vietnam was “laid open for terminal destruction.”171 POWs in Hanoi confirmed that th
e North
Vietnamese were nearly on the verge of collapse during the bombing, a view suppo
rted by the
British and other foreign ambassadors there.
Even with the bombing pauses, the communist warlords in the North realized that
they could not
take much more punishment, and certainly they could not sustain any more “victorie
s” like Tet.
Until that time, there is considerable evidence that the North was counting on t
he antiwar protesters
to coerce America into withdrawal, but Nixon had gone over the media’s heads in No
vember 1969
in a speech to the “great, silent majority,” which was followed by a January 1970 Ga
llup Poll
showing a 65 percent approval rating on his handling of the war. The protesters
and their allies in
the media had lost decisively and embarrassingly.
Developments in Vietnam always had to be kept in the context of the larger cold
war strategy.
Neither Kennedy nor Johnson had any long-term plan for dealing with the USSR or
China. Nixon
was convinced he could make inroads to each, possibly opening up a discussion th
at could
ultimately reduce nuclear weapons and even, he thought, bring pressure to bear o
n Hanoi. In
February 1969, Nixon circulated a memorandum outlining his plans for China, whos
e relations
with the USSR had grown strained. Nixon perceived that the split was an opportun
ity to play one
against the other, and he even cautioned Soviet leaders that the United States w
ould not
countenance an invasion of China.172 Internally, Nixon and Kissinger referred to
leverage against
Russia as “playing the China card,” starting matters off with “ping-pong diplomacy,” in
which the
Chinese entertained the American table tennis team in April 1971. Nixon then sho
cked the world
when, in 1972, he flew to Peking (later, under the new Anglo respelling of the C
hinese alphabet,
“Beijing”), where foreign minister Zhou Enlai greeted him and a military band struck
up “The Star-
Spangled Banner.”173
It was a stunning and important meeting, leading to the phrase “It takes Nixon to
go to China”
(meaning that only a conservative anticommunist would have the credentials to de
flect attacks that
he was selling out). Nixon’s visit sent a message in all directions: to America’s al
ly, Taiwan, it was
a reality bath. Taiwan realistically had no claim to the hundreds of millions of
people on the
mainland, but Nixon also made clear he would not abandon the island to the commu
nists. To the
USSR, the China card meant that Soviet posturing toward Western Europe was compl
icated by the
necessity of keeping a constant eye toward the East, where massive Chinese armie
s could
overwhelm local defenses. But the entire diplomatic offensive was dropped by Nix
on’s successors,
Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, and by the time Ronald Reagan came into office in
1981, time and
the death of key players had eroded many of Nixon’s gains.
Aside from Vietnam, Nixon had to continue to fight the cold war on a strategic l
evel. That required
a commitment to keeping the Soviets’ nuclear arsenal safely locked up while offset
ting their vastly
superior land and tactical air power in the European/NATO theater. The problem h
ere was that the
United States had allowed much of its nuclear arsenal to grow outdated, a point
Nixon hoped to
correct. In 1969, the navy embarked on a study of its submarine force, leading t
o the funding and
construction of state-of-the-art Trident ballistic missile submarines.174 Indepe
ndently, the navy, air
force, and army had contributed toward developing new low-flying, air-breathing
cruise missiles.
Independent of those efforts, the United States had researched and started to de
ploy an antiballistic
missile (ABM) defense network around the ICBM bases and Washington, D.C. All of
these
weapons were hugely expensive, reflecting a half decade’s worth of neglect by McNa
mara and
Johnson, and their funding added to the Nixon-era inflation.
When it came to matching weapons with the Soviets, the United States had a signi
ficant advantage
in its capitalist agricultural system. The USSR was chronically short of food, w
hich made it
possible (when combined with the China card) for Nixon to follow up his China vi
sit with a historic
trip to the Soviet Union. Ushering in a new détente, or easing of tensions, betwee
n the two
superpowers, Nixon met with Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev, promising the sale o
f $1 billion
worth of grain. In return, Brezhnev quietly scaled down Soviet support for some
terrorist activities.
More important, though, the two countries hammered out an arms control treaty ca
lled SALT I
(Strategic Arms Limitations Talks), signed in May 1972. Lacking the sophisticati
on of American
technology, Soviet military planners counted on sheer force and overwhelming num
bers. Any
launch of a nuclear attack against the United States had to be massive in order
to destroy all U.S.
bombers on the ground and knock out as many submarines as possible. But the deve
lopment of
ABM technology threatened to erase the Soviets’ lead in pure numbers. Defensive we
apons, which
were far cheaper than the heavy nuclear missiles they would target, could offset
many times their
actual number because the launchers were reusable and the antimissile missiles p
lentiful.
Here was an area where the United States had a decisive technological and moral
lead, but the
SALT I treaty gave it away, getting little in return. No limits were placed on S
oviet launcher
numbers, or on sub-launched ballistic missiles, or bombers. The military, alread
y seeing the USSR
rapidly catching up in quality, and having watched the president bargain away a
critical
technological advantage, found itself preparing to defend the country with incre
asingly obsolete
weapons. Nevertheless, Nixon had done what Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and John
son had not:
he had negotiated deals with America’s two archenemies and managed, at some level,
to control
further proliferation of nuclear weapons. For that, and many other reasons, Nixo
n was poised to
coast to a reelection against a pitifully weak opponent. And at that moment, his
insecurities
triumphed.
America’s Second Constitutional Crisis
Realizing they could not beat the United States as long as Nixon remained in the
presidency, the
North Vietnamese boldly sought to influence the November elections by convincing
Americans of
the hopelessness of their cause. On March 30, 1972, after Nixon had gone on tele
vision to lay out
the history of months of secret—but so far, fruitless—negotiations with the communis
ts, more than
120,000 North Vietnamese troops poured across the demilitarized zone into South
Vietnam in a
last-ditch desperate invasion. Supported by Soviet-made armor and artillery, the
communists
encountered the new ARVNs. Despite the initial surprise of the offensive, the tr
oops from the
South shocked Ho’s forces by their cohesion, courage, and tenacity. Facing heavy u
se of enemy
armor for the first time, the ARVNs held their ground, losing control of only on
e provincial capital.
Nixon unleashed U.S. air power to shatter shipping and to resupply, and the offe
nsive sputtered.
Accurate numbers are hard to come by, but the communists lost between one fourth
and one half of
their entire invading force—staggering losses, again, for such a tiny country.
But the attack failed to achieve the communists’ goals in the election. The Democr
atic front-runner,
South Dakota senator George McGovern, promised a unilateral withdrawal if electe
d. As the
favorite of the media and easily the most liberal candidate in history to run fo
r president from either
of the two parties, McGovern supported the legalization of marijuana and promise
d every
American family an income floor of $10,000 from Uncle Sam. He had no plan for ex
tracting the
prisoners of war from North Vietnam, other than to just “ask” for their return. He a
lienated the
Democratic Party’s southern base, the union hard hats, and the social conservative
s, but he thrilled
the eastern elites.
Nixon crushed McGovern in November, sweeping all but 17 electoral votes and winn
ing nearly 61
percent of the popular vote (including 56 percent of the blue-collar ballots). T
he press was
outraged. One editor said, “We’ve got to make sure nobody even thinks of doing anyth
ing like this
again,” referring to Nixon’s overwhelming victory over a full-blown liberal.175 Film
critic of The
New Yorker magazine, Pauline Kael, reflected the elitism that pervaded much of t
he media when
she said, “I can’t believe it! I don’t know a single person who voted for him!”176 Nixon’s
affirmation by the public ended North Vietnam’s hopes of using American public opi
nion to force
an end to the conflict on the communists’ terms.
Out of options, consequently, on January 23, 1973, Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam s
igned an
agreement with U.S. Secretary of State William Rogers ending the war. Nixon made
clear his
intention of keeping U.S. warships in Southeast Asia and of using American air p
ower stationed in
Thailand or the Philippines to maintain the peace. The North promised to return
all American
POWs. Like any such agreement, it largely hinged on Nixon’s willingness and abilit
y to enforce it.
For all intents and purposes, America’s longest war was over, having cost 58,245 b
attle deaths and
another 300,000 wounded, as well as consuming $165 billion.
Having won every major military encounter in the war, American armed forces with
drew and
Vietnamized the war, as had been the intention since Kennedy. Vietnamization, ho
wever, worked
only as long as the U.S. Congress and the American president remained committed
to supporting
South Vietnam with aid. In the wake of Nixon’s resignation, however, Vietnam could
no longer
count on the president, and shortly thereafter Congress pulled the plug on furth
er assistance,
dooming the free government in the South. In the immediate term, Nixon had fulfi
lled his promise
of withdrawing the American forces from Vietnam, but the media (and most histori
ans) portrayed
the war—which, up to that point, was a victory—as a loss.
There was little time for Nixon to enjoy this substantial achievement. Ever sinc
e the release of the
Pentagon Papers, the Nixon White House had been obsessed with leaks and internal
security.
“Paranoid” might even describe the state of mind at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Having
special
staff to dig up dirt on enemies and pester opponents was nothing new to the pres
idency. Franklin
Roosevelt had had an “intelligence unit” supported by a State Department slush fund;
Kennedy’s
questionable (if not illegal) contacts with the Mafia are well documented. Phone
tapping had
increased under both the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, as had bugging of
suspects’ hotel
rooms and offices. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the targets of the FBI’s exte
nsive bugging
campaigns. Lyndon Johnson bugged Goldwater’s campaign offices in 1964, and nothing
was done
about it. The press laughed it off.
There was a widespread (and realistic) view within the administration that the p
ress was out to get
Nixon. Nixon genuinely believed, though, that the security of the United States
was at risk; thus he
had approved the creation before the 1972 campaign of a “special investigations” uni
t (also known
as the dirty tricks group or the plumbers [plumbers fix leaks]). Whatever delusi
ons Nixon operated
under, he nevertheless had convinced himself that attacks on his administration
threatened the
Constitution.
The plumbers broke into the Watergate building in Washington, D.C., in May 1972
and again on
June 17. Even today it is unclear what their objective was. They were led by G.
Gordon Liddy, a
former attorney, prosecutor, and military officer, but there remains a controver
sy over who in fact
issued the orders to the plumbers. At the time, most reporters took it on faith
that the purpose of the
break-in was to smear McGovern in some way. However, subsequent evidence has sug
gested—and
a trial involving Liddy has confirmed—that the mastermind behind the break-in was
Nixon’s White
House counsel, John Dean.177 Authors Len Colodny and Robert Gettlin contend that
the name of
Dean’s then-girl-friend, Maureen, was connected to a call-girl ring and that Dean
dispatched the
plumbers with cameras to photograph the key address book that would, or would no
t, prove her
involvement. Several subsequent trials involving Liddy have sustained these alle
gations.178
At any rate, a security guard suspected a problem and called the police. Several
burglars were
arrested, including several Cubans hired by Liddy for the operation. A grand jur
y later indicted
Liddy, E. Howard Hunt (Liddy’s contact man in the break-in), and some other minor
players,
including some of the Cubans. Liddy, coming before an anti-Nixon judge, “Maximum” Jo
hn Sirica,
refused to talk, and was given the maximum: five years in prison and a massive f
ine for a first-time
breaking and entering, all to intimidate the other defendants and the White Hous
e.
The Democratic congress, smelling Nixon’s blood in the water, started investigatio
ns. A special
prosecutor, Archibald Cox, of Harvard Law School, was appointed with immense pow
ers to
investigate the president, acquire evidence, and subpoena witnesses. With a staf
f of two hundred,
and the full support of the anti-Nixon media (which could plant selective storie
s and generate
rumors), the special prosecutor became a tool of the Democrats. In fact, the Con
stitution intended
no such role for a special prosecutor, and expected partisan give and take. Inde
ed, the entire process
of impeachment was designed as a form of political combat.
Dean informed Nixon about the break-in after the fact, misled him about its purp
oses, and
convinced him that the plumbers’ efforts had national security implications, there
by persuading
Nixon to obstruct justice. Ordering the CIA to instruct the FBI, investigating t
he crime at the time,
to abandon the case, Nixon broke the very laws he had sworn to uphold, and all o
ver a break-in of
which he had had no prior knowledge. He then compounded his guilt in the matter
by not
demanding that Dean resign immediately, by failing to open his files to the FBI,
and by refusing to
genuinely cooperate with the investigation. Instead, Nixon attempted a tactic th
at would twenty
years later serve Bill Clinton quite well, telling his aides regarding the congr
essional investigations:
“Give ’em an hors d’oeuvre and maybe they won’t come back for the main course.”179 This
worked for Clinton because he had the media on his side, but Nixon faced a bitte
rly hostile press.
Accepting the resignations of Bob Haldeman, John Erlichman (another of those wit
h knowledge of
the dirty tricks), and Richard Kleindienst, and firing Dean in April 1973, scarc
ely did anything to
quell the inquiries.
Congressional testimony, on July 13, 1973, revealed that all of the working conv
ersations in the
Oval Office were tape recorded. If there was a smoking gun implicating Nixon, la
wmakers might
be able find it. Paradoxically, Nixon had ordered the original taping system, wh
ich Johnson had
installed, taken out, only to have replaced it later when he grew concerned that
his Vietnam policies
might be misrepresented.
A massive battle over the tapes and/or transcriptions of the tapes ensued, with
Nixon claiming
executive privilege and the Congress demanding access. The courts sided with Con
gress after a
prolonged battle. On October 30, 1973, rather than surrender the tapes, Nixon fi
red the special
prosecutor, Archibald Cox. He had first ordered the attorney general, Elliot Ric
hardson, to sack
Cox, but Richardson refused and then resigned. Then the deputy attorney general,
William
Ruckelshaus, refused to fire Cox, and also resigned. This Saturday Night Massacr
e produced
outrage in Congress and glee in the media, which now had Nixon on the ropes. A g
rand jury
indicted Nixon’s close associates Chuck Colson, Haldeman, Erlichman, and the physi
cally ailing
former attorney general John Mitchell in hopes of obtaining evidence on Nixon hi
mself, none of
which was forthcoming.
Aware that he had no support in Congress or the media, Nixon tried one last appe
al—to the
American people. In a televised speech Nixon looked into the camera and said, “I a
m not a crook,”
but the public abandoned him.180 An ABC poll conducted within days of the speech
found that
almost 60 percent of Americans did not believe “much of what the president says th
ese days.”181
The House of Representatives then voted overwhelmingly to conduct an impeachment
investigation. The Judiciary Committee, which would handle the case against Nixo
n, was
dominated by Democrats (21 to 17). But possibly the most dangerous foe was a man
on the
committee staff named John Doar, a liberal Republican, who despised Nixon and pl
anned to
“deluge the committee in a blizzard of documentation [while working] with a few se
lect members
of the team…to make sure that they reached the only acceptable objective, the remo
val of Richard
Nixon from the White House.”182 Doar empowered a young lawyer, Hillary Rodham, to
explore
the history of impeachment, specifically to find a loophole around the “high crime
s and
misdemeanors” phrase so that the committee could impeach Nixon over the bombing of
Cambodia.
She soon fed Doar a stream of position papers, arguing against limiting the inve
stigation to criminal
offenses as contrary to the will of the framers of the Constitution—a stunning rec
ommendation,
given that twenty years later, her husband and his advocates would be arguing ju
st the opposite,
that only “criminal” offenses could be grounds for impeachment.183
Hillary Rodham’s zealotry was unnecessary. Doing the math, Nixon knew that 18 of t
he Democrats
would vote for articles of impeachment no matter what the evidence. All 21 did.
Article II charged
him with illegally using the powers of the executive, using the Internal Revenue
Service to harass
citizens, using the FBI to violate the constitutional rights of opponents, and k
nowing about—but
taking no steps to prevent—obstruction of justice by his subordinates.184 Unlike B
ill Clinton,
twenty years later, who had a Senate disinclined to depose him, Nixon lacked a b
lock of Senate
support. To make matters worse, Nixon’s vice president, Spiro Agnew, had resigned
in October
1973 after being indicted for bribery (while governor of Maryland) and after cop
ping a plea to one
charge of tax evasion.185 To replace Agnew, Nixon had appointed Michigan Congres
sman Gerald
Ford, a moderate of the Rockefeller wing of the GOP and a person sure to draw li
ttle criticism from
Democrats.
With the Middle East in turmoil, oil prices rose sharply in 1973. Inflation soar
ed, and the
economy—Nixon’s one hope of holding out against Congress—went into the tank. The House
,
preparing to vote on articles impeaching Nixon, was invested under the Constitut
ion with the sole
duty of establishing whether or not the actions constituted “high crimes” and whethe
r they, in fact,
violated the Constitution. If the House voted in favor of the articles (as it cl
early would, in Nixon’s
case), the Senate would conduct a trial (requiring a two-thirds vote to convict)
supposedly based
solely on guilt or innocence of the charges, not on the seriousness of the charg
e. Key Senate
Republicans, including Barry Goldwater and Howard Baker, told Nixon that many Re
publican
senators were going to cross the aisle to vote against a Republican president.18
6 Out of options,
Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974, and Gerald Ford immediately became president.
One month
later, Ford issued a full and complete pardon for Richard Nixon. By then, Nixon
had reached the
apex as the liberals’ most hated target in America.
Richard Milhous Nixon made one last comeback. Over the years his reputation abro
ad and his
firmness and flexibility in dealing with the Soviets and Chinese had made him a
valuable resource
for world leaders. He wrote books, gaining a reputation that might leave some to
think that the
Richard Nixon of August 9, 1974, and the Nixon of April 22, 1994, the day he die
d and drew praise
from a throng of world leaders and past presidents, were two different people.
More than a few Washington analysts have suggested that the honor given Nixon at
his funeral
stuck in the craw of others who had held the highest office, including Jimmy Car
ter and Bill
Clinton, both of whom had expended considerable effort on their own legacies. Af
ter a monstrously
failed presidency, Carter became a regular on the international peace circuit, f
inally winning the
Nobel Peace Prize in 2002. Clinton, both during and after his presidency, delibe
rately shaped his
policies and even specific actions with an eye toward how history would remember
him. It was
high irony indeed that by the time of his death, Richard Nixon had achieved broa
d-based respect
that he had never enjoyed in life—and that he had lived long enough to make sure t
hat five living
American presidents attended his funeral and, even if unwillingly, paid homage t
o him.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Retreat and Resurrection, 1974–88
Malaise and Recovery
Having endured one of the most socially destructive decades in the nation’s histor
y, having lost a
war for the first time, followed by the humiliation of a president’s resignation,
the United States
arguably was at its lowest ebb ever in 1974. Births out of wedlock increased at
epidemic levels, the
economy stood on a precipice, and leadership was nowhere to be found—politically,
morally, or
culturally. Other civilizations had fallen from a golden age into the depths of
tyranny and decline in
a few years. Would the United States of America?
The constitutional crisis the United States had just weathered would have extrac
ted a painful toll
without any other new pressures. But war, hatred, and conflict never take a vaca
tion. As world
leader, the United States found itself continually involved in hot spots around
the globe. Not only
did the communist bloc sense America’s weakness, but so did a wide range of minor
foreign
enemies, including small states that saw opportunities for mischief they otherwi
se would not have
considered. As always—at least since the 1920s—the single person upon whom much of t
he world
looked for a sign of American resolve and strength was the president of the Unit
ed States.
Time Line
1973–75:
OPEC raises oil prices; oil crisis
1974:
Gerald Ford becomes president after Richard Nixon resigns; War Powers Act passed
by Congress;
busing battles begin in Boston
1975:
Vietnam overrun by North Vietnamese; Communist Pol Pot regime overruns Cambodia;
BASIC
computer language invented by Bill Gates
1976:
Jimmy Carter elected president; Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak market first person
al computers
1979:
Camp David Accords; Iranians storm U.S. embassy in Tehran, take American hostage
s
1980:
Soviets invade Afghanistan; U.S. Olympic ice hockey team wins the gold medal; Ro
nald Reagan
elected president
1981:
Reagan fires air traffic controllers; Reagan shot, nearly killed by John Hinckle
y; Congress passes
Reaganomics tax cuts; Iranian hostages freed
1983:
Economic recovery begins; “Star Wars” speech; marine barracks in Lebanon blown up; S
oviets put
short-range missiles in western USSR aimed at Europe
1985:
Geneva conference with Reagan and Gorbachev
1986:
Reagan and British prime minister Margaret Thatcher announce plan to install sho
rt-range missiles
in Europe in response to Soviet SS-20s; “freeze movement” gains momentum
1986–87:
Iran-contra affair
1987:
Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty signed
Gerald Ford, Caretaker
Not many people wanted the job Gerald Ford inherited when Richard Nixon climbed
aboard the
official helicopter that took him into political exile on August 9, 1974. Ford i
mmediately and
seamlessly, under the terms of constitutional succession, moved into the Oval Of
fice, as had
Lyndon Johnson just over a decade earlier.
Nixon selected Gerald Ford in the wake of the Agnew scandal precisely because of
Ford’s
milquetoast personality. A former star football player at the University of Mich
igan, Ford displayed
little of the ferocity or tenacity in politics that was demanded on the gridiron
. A lieutenant
commander in the navy, Ford had returned to civilian life to win a seat in the U
.S. Congress, which
he held for more than twenty years. His congressional career featured service on
the controversial
Warren Commission that had blamed the JFK assassination on Lee Harvey Oswald.1 H
e advanced
to the position of minority leader, but he surrendered ground willingly and pose
d no obstacle to the
Democratic majority. Ford struck many people as possessing only mediocre intelli
gence—Johnson
said he was “so dumb he can’t fart and chew gum at the same time”—and he was notoriously
clumsy because of an inner ear condition.2 This malady made him a target for eve
ry comedian on
television, most notably Chevy Chase, whose Saturday Night Live skits featured t
he president
stumbling and smacking people with golf balls.
Nevertheless, Ford had several attractive qualities, not the least of which was
his personal honesty,
a trait virtually no one doubted. After the lies of the previous fourteen years,
the nation, like
Diogenes, was seeking an honest man. And after a decade of turmoil, Ford’s bland p
ersonality
provided much-needed relief from the intensity of a Nixon or the egomania of a J
ohnson. Once in
the presidency, Ford’s unconfrontational nature ironically left him with few allie
s. Some
conservatives abandoned the GOP, leaving the amiable Ford as alone politically i
n the White
House as his predecessor. He also offended those out for Nixon’s scalp by pardonin
g Nixon for
“any and all crimes” on September 8, 1974. Since Nixon had not been indicted for any
crimes, not
only did this prevent the attack dogs in Congress from continuing their harassme
nt of the former
president in private life, but it also took Nixon off the front pages of the new
spapers. Most of all, it
denied the media a chance to gloat over what journalists saw as “their” victory over
Nixon.
Later, when commenting candidly about the Nixon pardon, Ford explained that he w
as stunned at
the amount of legal work that he, the new president, would have had to participa
te in if any cases
against Nixon went forward. The subpoenas for documentation alone, he noted, wou
ld have
absorbed all of his staff’s time, and he could not spend 99 percent of his time on
the affairs of one
man. Critics, of course, claimed that Nixon had brought Ford in as a quid pro qu
o, that knowing his
own resignation was imminent, Nixon protected himself with a pardon deal. Such a
scenario fits
neither Ford’s personality nor Nixon’s own perceptions of the state of things when h
e had chosen
the vice president.
None of Nixon’s associates received pardons. By 1975, almost forty administration
officials had
been named in criminal indictments, including John Mitchell, John Erlichman, H.
R. Haldeman,
and G. Gordon Liddy. Charges included violations normally associated with the mo
b: fraud,
extortion, illegal wiretapping, destruction of evidence, and obstruction of just
ice.3 It was a record
for corruption and criminality that exceeded everything in the past, with the ex
ception, perhaps, of
Grant’s administration. Ford and Congress slowly uncovered violations of practice
and law by both
the FBI and the CIA, with the latter organization coming under new restrictions
in 1974 that would
subsequently prove short-sighted and, indeed, deadly. Meanwhile, public confiden
ce in the office
of the presidency had plummeted: a poll of that year revealed that more than 40
percent had “hardly
any” confidence in the executive branch of government.4
North Vietnam immediately sensed a vacuum in American leadership. Already Congre
ss had
chipped away at the powers aggrandized by Kennedy, Johnson, then Nixon, and inde
ed all three
presidents had overstepped their constitutional bounds. Congress placed several
limitations on the
executive, including the Jackson-Vanik and Stevenson Amendments of 1973–74, the Ar
ms Export
Control Act of 1975, and most important, the War Powers Act of 1974. The latter
required a
president to notify Congress within forty-eight hours if troops were dispatched
overseas, and it
allowed a window of only sixty days for those troops to continue operations with
out congressional
ratification. These restrictions rightly attempted to redress the imbalance that
had accumulated
during fourteen years, but in many cases the laws hamstrung legitimate actions b
y presidents to
deal with incidents long before they became major conflicts.
Congress also sought to seal its victory over the presidency through the budget
process. Staff
numbers exploded, and the House International Relations Committee staff tripled
between 1971
and 1977. Overall, the ratio of unelected officials in Washington to elected rep
resentatives reached
a stunning 5,400:1. Worse, it put Congress in the driver’s seat over Vietnam polic
y. Congress had
already slashed military aid to South Vietnam. Once the North realized that Ford
either could not or
would not revive a bombing campaign, the South was ripe for a new invasion, whic
h occurred in
January 1975. ARVN forces evacuated northern provinces and within a matter of we
eks, the
communists surrounded Saigon. News footage showed American helicopters lifting o
ff with U.S.
citizens as helpless Vietnamese were kept off the choppers at gunpoint. Those im
ages did not move
Congress, where lawmakers repeatedly denied or ignored Ford’s urgent requests to a
ct. More than a
hundred thousand Vietnamese “boat people,” desperate to escape communism, took to th
e seas and
suffered at the hands of pirates and the elements. Eventually, thousands of thes
e Vietnamese
immigrated to such far-flung locations as Los Angeles and Galveston, where they
reestablished
themselves to dominate the artificial fingernail businesses in the former (more
than 50 percent of
all nail salons were Vietnamese owned) and the fishing trade in the latter. They
were fortunate. Of
those who remained behind, more than a million were killed by the communist inva
ders during
“reeducation” programs.
Dwight Eisenhower, lampooned by critics for espousing the domino theory, suddenl
y seemed
sagacious. No sooner had the last Americans left Vietnam than a new communist of
fensive was
under way in Cambodia. After the communist Khmer Rouge organization under Pol Po
t conquered
the country in April 1975, it embarked on a social reconstruction of the country
unmatched even by
Mao Tsetung’s indoctrination camps. More than 3.5 million people were forced out o
f cities into
the countryside while communists rampaged through towns throwing every book they
could find
into the Mekong River. Sexual relations were forbidden, and married people could
not talk to each
other for extended periods of time. In mass public executions, entire families d
ied together in the
city squares. Although the western media ignored the developments, statistics ev
entually found
their way into print. Almost 1.2 million Cambodians, or one fifth of the total p
opulation, were
slaughtered in the “killing fields.”5
Laos, it should be noted, had already fallen. By the end of the 1970s, the only
domino left was
Thailand, and it certainly would have collapsed next if Soviet support of the No
rth Vietnamese had
not suddenly dried up. But in 1979, North Vietnam broke with the Cambodian commu
nist
government, reinvaded Cambodia, and united it with the North Vietnamese dictator
ship.
Middle East Instability, Economic Crisis
On top of the collapse of Vietnam, the erosion of American credibility internati
onally also harmed
the nation’s ability to maintain order in other Middle Eastern countries, with sev
ere consequences
for the economy. Understanding the events in the Middle East requires a review o
f the creation of
the state of Israel in 1947. Following the revelations of the Holocaust, the Eur
opean Jewish
community revived demands for a Jewish state located in Palestine. In the Balfou
r Declaration, the
British (who had governed the region after World War I through a mandate from th
e League of
Nations after the partition of the Ottoman Empire) promised the World Zionist Or
ganization a
Jewish home in the traditional lands established in the Bible. Unfortunately, th
e British had also
secretly guaranteed the Arabs the same land in return for an Arab uprising again
st the Turks.
During the interwar period, the British curtailed Jewish migration to the region
, which remained
under the local control of Arab mufti.
For centuries, Jews in Europe had attempted to blend in, adopting local customs
and languages and
participating in the economic and political life of the European nations. Despit
e frequent and
consistent anti-Jewish purges in almost every European country, the Jews remaine
d optimistic they
would be protected by democratic governments. Hitler changed all that. Jews conc
luded that no
nation would ever protect them, and that their only hope of survival was through
an independent
Jewish state. Some European leaders agreed, and after the evidence of the Holoca
ust surfaced,
Britain especially loosened immigration restrictions into Palestine.6
In America, a large, successful Jewish community had come into its own in the tw
entieth century.
Roosevelt was the first to tap into the Jewish vote, which could swing such stat
es as Illinois and
New York.7 Chaim Weizmann of the World Zionist Organization, after encouraging w
ords from
British (and Jewish) leader David Ben-Gurion, appreciated the political pressure
5 million Jewish
voters could bring, directly targeting American Jewish support after 1942.
Harry Truman played a key role in the formation of Israel. Roosevelt’s State Depar
tment opposed
the plan, but Truman distrusted the “striped-pants boys” as he called them. Thus, wh
en the newly
formed United Nations General Assembly voted for the formation of a Jewish and a
n Arab state in
territory formerly under the British mandate, it marked one of the rare times in
the entire history of
the United Nations that its membership substantially agreed with the American po
sition. It is
inconceivable that the tiny nation could have appeared at any other moment. Cert
ainly, after 1947
the Soviets never would have permitted it, nor, of course, would the Arabs. Brit
ain backed the plan
only to the extent that it relieved the empire of her “Jewish problem.” Except for T
ruman,
American leaders opposed the formation of Israel. Secretary of the Navy James Fo
rrestal
complained that Jews exercised an undue influence over American policy. When Isr
ael declared its
independence on May 14, 1948, Truman quickly accorded her diplomatic recognition
over the
protests of the State Department and the Pentagon.
Israel’s formation proved a watershed event for American goals, such as they were,
in the Middle
East, and it tied the two countries together for the remainder of the twentieth
century. It
permanently placed the United States in the unenviable position of having to ref
eree two
implacable foes. As soon as the UN partition scheme was pushed through, war brok
e out, mainly
led by Egypt, but with elements of the Syrian, Jordanian, Iraqi, Lebanese, and P
alestinian armies
outnumbering the 20,000-man Israeli defense forces. Against all expectations, it
was the Arab
forces that suffered a humiliating defeat, and Israel secured her existence for
a time. Although the
United States had done little aside from recognizing the state of Israel, sudden
ly Truman (and soon,
his successors) had to balance support for the only genuine democracy in the ent
ire Middle East,
Israel, against the abundant Arab oil supplies discovered in the region.
The United States had followed Britain into the Middle Eastern oil fields in 192
4, with the
American share of oil pumped from the desert growing steadily from one sixth of
the total in 1936
to more than half by the end of World War II. Most of the crude came from Saudi
Arabia, but there
was oil everywhere, leading the head of the U.S. Petroleum Commission to refer t
o the Middle East
as the “center of gravity of world oil production.”8 America’s dependence on foreign o
il or, better
phrased, Detroit’s dependence, became more acute during the next round of Arab-Jew
ish conflicts
in 1956 with the Suez Crisis. As with the two wars that followed it, this strugg
le only marked a
continuation of the unresolved hostilities lingering from the 1947–48 Arab-Israeli
war.
In May 1967, Egypt and her Arab allies were ready to try again to evict Israel.
After ejecting the
UN peacekeepers, Egyptian President Abdel Gamal Nasser stated on Cairo Radio tha
t the offensive
was to be a “mortal blow of annihilation,” and it was his intention to “wipe Israel of
f the map.”9
Again, Israel did not wait to be overwhelmed by the forces concentrating on her
borders, but, as in
1956, launched air strikes that decimated Arab air power, thus exposing invading
tank columns to
merciless bombardment from the skies. The war lasted only six days, allowing Isr
ael to capture the
Golan Heights near Galilee, the Sinai, and the West Bank—all parts of the biblical
boundaries
promised the Jews. Yet even after smashing Arab military forces and unifying Jer
usalem under
Jewish control for the first time since a.d. 70, the Israeli victory did not pro
duce a lasting peace.
Nasser’s successor, Anwar Sadat, quickly rebuilt the Egyptian military and organiz
ed yet another
invasion in 1973. Striking on Yom Kippur, the holiest of Jewish religious observ
ance days, Sadat’s
well-coordinated attack this time attained success. Supplied by the Soviets, the
Arab armies offset
the Israeli advantages in the skies, knocking out 20 percent of Israel’s planes in
four days. Tel Aviv
was in panic. Israeli (and American-born) Prime Minister Golda Meir persuaded Ni
xon to provide
an emergency airlift of arms, which provided the logistics for a Jewish countera
ttack after days of
absorbing blows. America’s airlift was reminiscent of the Berlin effort, covering
6,400 miles per
day and delivering thousands of tons of supplies. In his darkest hour Nixon, alo
ne, virtually saved
Israel.
Within a short period the Israeli counterattack routed the Arab armies. The Sovi
ets, responding to
Sadat’s request for aid, threatened to enter the conflict. By that time, Nixon was
spending virtually
all his time combating the Watergate investigators and editing tapes. He deploye
d Kissinger to
respond to the Soviet threat; and in an unprecedented occurrence, Kissinger, not
Nixon, issued the
orders for American military units to go on full-scale, worldwide alert—the first
time since JFK
had issued similar orders in 1962. Watergate had by then engulfed and distracted
the president to
the point where he could not conduct international negotiations.
The combatants brokered another truce, but this time the United States paid a he
avy price for its
involvement. In October 1973 the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (
OPEC), which
represented virtually all of the Muslim oil-producing nations, cut production of
oil and boosted
prices 70 percent. Two months later OPEC jacked up prices another 128 percent. G
asoline and
home heating oil prices in the United States soared, to which Nixon, the born-ag
ain Keynesian,
responded by imposing a price ceiling on oil. This made gasoline artificially ch
eap. Americans
knew what gas was really worth, but the government had just encouraged them to a
ct as though it
cost a fraction of what it really did. Demand shot up; supply remained low, but
prices were fixed.
Available stores of oil disappeared as fast as people could pump the cheap gas i
nto their cars. An
incredible spectacle ensued of car lines at gas stations—sometimes reaching comple
tely around city
blocks—to purchase the scarce, yet still cheap, fuel. State governments instituted
an array of
gimmicks to limit consumption, including setting up an even-odd license-plate-nu
mber purchase
system. None of it worked. The wealthiest nation in the world slowed to a crawl
because the
government had artificially lowered fuel prices.
The high cost of energy, in turn, sent price shocks throughout industry and comm
erce. Sugar,
which cost 13 cents in 1970, had risen to 33 cents by 1974. Flour, at 11 cents p
er pound in 1970,
had nearly doubled to 20 cents four years later. Steaks that had cost $1.54 per
pound rose to $2.12
per pound in 1974. Stereos priced at $119 in 1970 rose to more than $154 in 1974
, and a man’s
shirt rose more than 30 percent in price.10 All consumers, not just drivers, wer
e hurt by the
government’s flawed policies.
That did not stop Congress from getting into the act and setting the speed limit
on federal highways
at 55 miles per hour, a pace that was unrealistic for the vastness of places lik
e Texas or Nevada,
and one that often caused auto engines to operate at less than peak efficiency (
thus burning more
gas!). At the same time, Congress also established fuel-efficiency standards for
all new cars, known
as the CAFE regulations, which conflicted directly with the environmental pollut
ion restrictions
that lawmakers had earlier placed on automakers. Auto manufacturers responded by
adopting
lighter materials, such as aluminum and fiberglass, which proved less safe in th
e event of accidents.
Gas mileage went up, but so did highway fatalities, even at slower speeds.
The blizzard of rules and regulations only displayed the utter incapability of t
he government to
manage market-related issues. For example, to make cars safer, in 1966 the gover
nment
implemented the National Traffic Motor Vehicle Safety Act—partly in response to Ra
lph Nader’s
Unsafe at Any Speed—requiring automakers to install as standard equipment seat bel
ts, impactabsorbing
steering columns, and padded dashboards.11 These additions all drove up weight,
which
reduced gas mileage! Rather than trust consumers at the showroom to determine wh
ich “values” or
characteristics were most important to them (good fuel economy, safety, or envir
onment-friendly
features), the government had created battling bureaus, each with its own budget
justifications,
lobbying against each other for funding.
In 1970 the Environmental Protection Agency decreed that auto companies had to r
educe emissions
to 10 percent of existing levels by 1976. Language contained in this bill, howev
er, only affected
autos made after 1970, by which time emissions in new cars had already been redu
ced from 70 to
80 percent. Thus, the new law required the existing autos to further reduce emis
sions (on the
remaining 20 to 30 percent) by 90 percent, to a total emissions percentage of 3
percent! Achieving
the last few percent of performance of anything is nearly impossible, and the ma
n who coined the
term “smog” referred to the EPA air quality standards as “absurd.”12
Detroit had no choice but to comply. GM introduced the catalytic converter, whic
h only worked
with unleaded gasoline (the tetraethyl lead had been removed). This, in turn, en
tailed a sizable
drop-off in power, but made for longer-lasting engines. To compensate for the po
wer drop-off,
automakers looked to professional racing for ideas, souping up engines with over
head camshafts,
turbochargers, fuel injection, and a host of other high-performance equipment th
at soon became
standard on passenger cars. But the entire process of regulating, then powering
up, was the
equivalent of adding a small anchor to a boat, then installing the extra engines
to overcome the
drag!
Fuel efficiency, of course, is desirable if the market determines that it is a m
ore important use of
scarce resources than, say, cost or safety. When the United States had limitless
forests, colonists
burned trees at record levels because they were cheap. Whale oil was only replac
ed as interior
illumination when it got more expensive than John D. Rockefeller’s kerosene. Thus,
when it came
to the “oil crisis,” without the government interference, one fact is undeniable: in
1973 and 1974,
American gasoline prices would have risen dramatically, and that, in turn, would
have forced down
auto use and/or caused consumers themselves to demand more fuel-efficient cars.
Based on the
evidence of history, these changes would have occurred sooner without Nixon’s acti
ons.
Honey, I Shrank the Economy!
Even though prices were controlled at the pump, Americans felt the oil price hik
es ripple through
the entire economy, via the industrial sector which had no government protection
. This drove up
the cost of production, forcing layoffs, pushing the United States into a steep
recession.
Unemployment rose to 8.5 percent in 1975—a postwar high—and the gross domestic produ
ct
(GDP) fell in both 1974 and 1975. The oil-related recession cost the United Stat
es as much as 5
percent of its prehike gross national product (GNP), or a level five times great
er than the
cumulative impact of the Navigation Acts that had “started” the American Revolution.
Great Society spending and layers of federal regulations made matters worse. Som
e states and
cities suffered even more than the nation as a whole. New York’s liberal spending
policies swung
the city into bankruptcy, and the mayor asked for a federal bailout. New Yorkers
had voted
themselves into their problems, then looked to taxpayers from Colorado and Rhode
Island to dig
them out. President Ford, however, courageously promised to veto any federal bai
lout of the Big
Apple. A local newspaper, with typical New York attitude, ran the headline, ford
to new york: drop
dead!13 In fact, Ford’s decision not to reward the city for financial malfeasance
was exactly the
appropriate constitutional response. Left to their own devices, New Yorkers work
ed their city back
into the black.
In almost every area of American life, the federal government had already done q
uite enough.
Whether through the EPA, OSHA, the Consumer Products Safety Commission, or myria
d other
new agencies, government at all levels had started to heap voluminous oppressive
regulations on
business. In 1975 alone, 177 proposed “new rules appeared, as did 2,865 proposed a
mendments, for
a total of 10,656 new and proposed rules and amendments, most of which applied t
o nearly all
firms.”14 According to one study, environmental regulations enacted prior to 1990
by
themselves—not including the 1970 Clean Air Act, the single largest antipollution
law—reduced
the GNP by 2.5 percent.15 Activists such as Ralph Nader and the environmentalist
s expected the
“evil” corporations to simply absorb the costs (never expressing concern about the a
verage people
who had invested in such businesses to provide funds for a new home or a college
education for the
children).
Companies, of course, did not just passively accept the new costly regulations.
Instead, American
business battled the government on three fronts, increasing spending for lobbyis
ts in Congress,
fighting the new rules in the judicial system and in the court of public opinion
, and passing along
the costs of the regulations to the consumers. Not surprisingly, the pages in th
e Federal Register,
which contained these rules, ballooned from 10,286 in 1950 to 61,000 in 1978, an
d at the same
time, the numbers of attorneys in the United States rose by 52 percent in a ten-
year period. More
important, district court cases grew 131 percent and U.S. appeals court civil ca
ses, where product
liability cases more likely occurred, exploded by 398 percent.16 Predictably, co
rporations spent
more on their legal divisions, while spending on research and development—the life
blood of new
products—consistently fell. There simply was not enough money to fund both lawyers
and
scientists.17 Every dollar spent to influence a lawmaker or run consumer-friendl
y ads was a dollar
not spent on developing better and safer products or reducing the costs of exist
ing goods. By 1980,
America had four times as many attorneys, per capita, as Germany and twenty time
s more per
capita than Japan, both of which had surged ahead of the United States in produc
tivity, the key
indicator of real economic growth.18
Meanwhile, big business was working against itself by avoiding change and innova
tion the way
dogs resist baths. Significantly, not one of the top fifty technological changes
in twentieth-century
America came from established leaders in the field.19 IBM did not create the per
sonal computer,
nor did the calculator giant of IBM’s day, the slide-rule company Keuffel, create
the punch-card
computer. Airplanes sprang from the minds of bicycle mechanics and word-processi
ng programs
from the scribblings of college dropouts. Cellular phones were not developed by
AT&T or even the
famous Bell Labs.20
Stability had served industry well when the United States passed some of the oth
er fading
economic powers, then easily perpetuated growth during the postwar decade when t
here was little
competition. But then complacency set in. Once the Japanese and Germans reentere
d world
markets, U.S. companies lacked the competitive edge that had served them well ha
lf a century
earlier. Afraid of rapid change, corporations introduced only marginal improveme
nts. Automakers
for almost two decades thought that merely by tweaking a body style or introduci
ng minor interior
comforts they could compete with dramatic changes in actual auto design from Jap
an. Japanese
carmakers had struggled for ten years to adapt their vehicles to American roads
and to larger
American physiques, so when oil prices suddenly placed greater value on smaller
front-wheeldrive,
fuel-efficient cars, Honda, Nissan, and Toyota were more than ready. To their di
scredit,
American auto executives continued to denigrate foreign innovations. It took a b
ankrupt Chrysler
Corporation, under Lee Iacocca—the brains behind the Ford Mustang—to shock Detroit o
ut of its
doldrums. “We were wrong,” he courageously announced in one of his televised ads for
Chrysler.21
New industrial evangelists like Iacocca, even had they been in the majority, con
stituted only half
the equation for turning American business around. Labor, led by the hardscrabbl
e union bosses
who had achieved great gains at tremendous cost in the 1950s and 1960s, still ac
ted as though it
spoke for a majority of working Americans. By the 1970s, however, the unions wer
e losing
members at precipitous rates. Trade unions had formed a critical part of the Dem
ocratic Party’s
New Deal coalition, and the most important organizations—the AFL-CIO and the Teams
ters—
were able to demand exceptionally high wages for their members in the automobile
, steel, and
trucking industries. By 1970, a typical line worker in Detroit commanded $22 an
hour, owned two
cars, a boat, and a vacation home on a lake, or the equivalent of the earnings o
f a midlevel attorney
in 2002. Miners and truckers, as well as those working in manufacturing jobs, ha
d substantially
higher incomes than many professionals and received better benefits than people
in almost any
income category.22 Unionized employees routinely made between $10,000 and $12,00
0 per year
with overtime. New homes sold for about $23,000, meaning that a worker dedicatin
g 30 percent of
his income to a mortgage could own a house in six or seven years, which compared
quite closely to
a 1990s professional earning a $70,000 salary and supporting a $150,000 mortgage
.23 Equally as
valuable as cash, during the salad days of steadily increasing auto sales, auto
and steel unions
negotiated generous benefit and pension packages, adding to the real value of th
eir contracts.
Leaders such as George Meany of the AFL-CIO and Jimmy Hoffa of the Teamsters wie
lded
tremendous influence, not only over the Democratic Party, but also over the nati
on’s economy.
“Big Steel” and the auto companies, of course, did not just absorb these expenses, b
ut passed them
on to consumers, which added to inflation. American manufactured products, espec
ially textiles,
steel, autos, and electronics, rose in price relative to foreign competition. In
steel alone, the cost of
labor was six times that of foreign competitors.24 Sometime in the early 1970s,
prices exceeded the
threshold that most consumers were willing to pay in order to remain loyal to Am
erican-made
products, and buyers began to switch to foreign goods. Recapturing formerly loya
l customers is
twice as difficult as holding them. Japanese and European manufacturers, who wer
e turning out
lower-priced quality goods, gained millions of new American customers in the 197
0s. For the first
time, “Made in Japan” was not viewed as a sign of cheap, shoddy goods, but as a mark
of quality.
Foreign competitors increased their steel production by some 700 million net ton
s, and builders
scrambled to replace expensive American steel with fiberglass, aluminum, plastic
s, ceramics, and
concrete.
American steel companies took the biggest hit of all. The industry had seen its
international market
share fall 20 percent since the Korean War, when U.S. steelmakers claimed 60 per
cent of the
world’s sales. Worse, only one new steel plant—a Bethlehem facility in Indiana—was con
structed
between 1950 and 1970. At the same time, Japan gave birth to fifty-three new int
egrated steel
companies, most of them with brand-new efficient mills, and Japanese assets in s
teel plants rose 23
percent between 1966 and 1972, compared to an investment in American plants of o
nly 4 percent.
The overall output of U.S.-made steel barely changed between 1948 and 1982, lead
ing many steel
executives to try to diversify their companies. Layoffs began with the expectati
on that they would
be temporary. Then weeks stretched into months and into years. By 1980, it was c
lear that after
years of sounding unheeded warnings, the wolf had finally come, and the industry
would never
return to its 1960s peak.25
This was the last gasp of organized union power in manufacturing America. From 3
5 percent of the
American workforce in 1960, union membership entered a downward spiral, to 27 pe
rcent of the
workforce in 1990. That did not tell the whole story, however, because the hard-
core industrial
unions had plunged even more sharply than the total, which was kept afloat only
by the two largest
unions in America, the National Education Association (NEA) and the American Fed
eration of
State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). By 1980, AFSCME had twice the
membership of the United Steel Workers.26 Thus, it became eminently clear why or
ganized labor
had a commitment to a permanently large and growing government and to public sch
ools: those
employees—operating outside the free market—now represented unions’ only hope of long-
term
survival.
The ensuing recession shattered the underlying premises of Keynesian economics o
nce and for all.
According to the prevailing Phillips Curve theory, an economy could not have bot
h high
unemployment and high inflation at the same time. This stemmed from the notion t
hat inflation
resulted from government spending for new jobs. It was all poppycock. The govern
ment could not
create wealth in the 1970s any more than it could in the 1930s. More accurately,
a bizarre
expectations game occurred—“taxflation”—wherein businesses sensed that when new governme
nt
programs were announced, their taxes would go up, and they responded by hiking p
rices merely in
anticipation of the new taxes.
Gerald Ford possessed none of the qualities needed to deal with any aspect of th
e sinking economy.
As a progressive (so called moderate) Republican, he sympathized with much of th
e Great Society
spending. As a caretaker president, he did not possess the public support to for
ce OPEC to increase
production or lower prices. And, as a Nixon appointee, he faced a hostile and ro
gue Congress out to
destroy all vestiges of the modern Republican Party much the way the Radical Rep
ublicans in
Reconstruction had hoped to kill the Democratic Party. All Ford had in his favor
was honesty, but
his lack of imagination left him helpless in the face of further business declin
es. Having no desire
for tax cuts that might revive the economy—and blocked by a spendthrift Congress t
hat would not
enact tax cuts anyway—Ford launched a campaign that was almost comedic in design.
He sought to
mobilize public support to hold down prices by introducing win (Whip Inflation N
ow) buttons.
The damage done to the American economy by almost a decade of exorbitant social
spending,
increasing environmental and workplace regulations, and Keynesian policies from
the Johnson-
Nixon administrations cannot be overstated. Yet just as government almost never
gets the credit
when economic growth occurs, so too its overall impact on the nation’s business he
alth must be
tempered with the appreciation for the poor planning and lack of innovation in t
he corporate sector.
All that, combined with the impact of greedy union demands in heavy industry, ma
de any foolish
policies of government relatively insignificant. Perhaps worst of all, inflation
had eroded earnings,
creating new financial pressures for women to work.
Sex, the Church, and the Collapse of Marriage
By the mid-1970s, women’s entry into the workforce was being championed by the twe
ntiethcentury
feminist movement. Armed with the Pill, feminists targeted the seeming lack of f
airness in
the job market, which punished women for dropping out of the market for several
years to have
children. But where their rhetoric failed to change corporations, the Pill chang
ed women. By
delaying childbirth, the Pill allowed women to enter professional schools in rap
idly growing
numbers.27
Paradoxically, the Pill placed more pressure on women to protect themselves duri
ng sex. And
rather than liberating women for a career in place of a family, feminism heaped
a career on top of a
family. Women’s workloads only grew, and the moral burden on women to resist the a
dvances of
males expanded geometrically. Equally ironic, as women entered the workforce in
greater numbers,
increasing the expectation that young married women would work, the “expectations
index” for
couples soared. Newlyweds saw larger houses with bigger mortgages and more upsca
le cars as the
norm because, after all, they had two incomes. This created a feedback loop that
forced women to
remain in the labor force after childbearing, and in many cases, after they wish
ed to leave their jobs
outside the home.
With all biological consequences removed from engaging in pre-or extramarital se
x, the only
barrier remaining was religion. But the church had seen much of its moral author
ity shattered in the
1960s, when on the one hand, large numbers of white Christians had remained mute
during the civil
rights struggles, and on the other, liberal-leftist elements in the church had a
ssociated themselves
with communist dictators. In either case, the church (as many saw it) had allied
itself with
oppression against liberty.
When it came to sex, traditional Christianity had appeared hypocritical. Wives w
ho dutifully served
their families had to deal with alcoholic husbands and domestic abuse. (It is cr
ucial to understand
that perception is reality, and while the vast majority of husbands loved and se
rved their wives, the
fact that any domestic abuse occurred without comment from the local pulpit or a
visit from the
pastor or priest was unacceptable.) The more traditional and fundamentalist chur
ches that preached
against divorce and railed against premarital sex, said little to nothing about
spouse or child abuse
in their own congregations. At the other extreme, churches attempting to reach o
ut to women and
portray themselves as modern opened their pulpits to female ministers but ignore
d the moral
necessity of demanding chastity and commitment from Christians in sexual matters
. The former
group preached piety and practiced unacceptable toleration of sin, while the lat
ter celebrated its
toleration, but ignored holiness.
For all their failures to stand up for women’s and civil rights, the hard-line fun
damentalist churches
nevertheless continued to grow throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, if for no o
ther reason than it
was clear they stood for clear and unwavering principles. Liberal Protestant den
ominations, on the
other hand, shrank at shocking rates, despite their new inclusion policies. Amer
ican Baptists,
Disciples of Christ, Episcopalians, Lutherans, Methodists, Presbyterians, and Un
ited Church of
Christ all lost members from 1960 to 1975. Although people claimed that they sta
yed home on
Sunday because they thought churches were behind the times, those churches most
behind the
times seemed to thrive.28 Southern Baptists nearly doubled in numbers of churche
s between 1958
and 1971. Even more astounding, televangelist Oral Roberts, a charismatic faith
healer, reached 2.3
million viewers in a single broadcast, a number that nearly equaled the entire e
stimated Sunday
attendance of all the Methodist churches in the nation! When one combined the au
diences of the
top eight televised ministries during a single broadcast—virtually all of them out
side the
mainstream—they matched that of the estimated church attendance of the top six den
ominations
combined.29 Indeed, one scholar, looking at these viewing trends, concluded that
the numbers
“reveal a previously unmapped dimension of religion in America, a basic fundamenta
list
orientation that cuts across denominational lines.”30
Transcending denominational differences went so far as to see Protestants and Ca
tholics beginning
to share similar worship experiences. The Roman Catholic Church had modernized w
ith its Vatican
II (1962–65) Council, making such changes as having the priest face the congregati
on for mass
(which now was said in English, not Latin). Nevertheless, the Catholic Church at
midcentury
witnessed a stunning decline, not only in members, but in clergy. American nuns
decreased in
number by 14,000 in the last half of the sixties, and by 1976, 45,000 priests an
d nuns had
abandoned the cloth. (Among the vanguard order, the Jesuits, recruitment numbers
plummeted by
80 percent in the 1990s.) Although American Catholicism revived in the latter pa
rt of the twentieth
century because of immigration, it still had difficulty attracting young men to
its seminaries and
women to its convents. A subculture of homosexuality began to permeate the order
s, driving out
heterosexual men who vowed to remain celibate, creating what was called the “gayin
g and
graying” of the Church. (In 2002, this exploded as a full-scale scandal when sever
al lawsuits were
brought against many priests for sexual abuse and pedophilia, threatening to ban
krupt the Boston
Catholic Church. But the Church claimed to be unaware of these offenses.) One su
bgroup within
the Catholic Church, however, the Catholic Charismatic movement, nevertheless sh
owed strong
gains. It did so because it intersected with the Protestant “faith movement” with sp
iritual
expressions such as speaking in tongues, healing, and other supernatural outpour
ings.
Clearly a major split had occurred in the American church from 1960 to 1975, and
it did so rather
rapidly. In 1962, for example, some 31 percent of those polled said that religio
n was losing its
influence, almost twice as many as had answered the question affirmatively five
years earlier.31 At
nearly the same time, the Federal Communications Commission had begun allowing t
elevision and
radio stations to use paid programming to fulfill their public service broadcast
ing requirements.
This silenced the mainstream liberal churches, which suddenly found that despite
a decade’s worth
of monopoly over the airwaves, they could no longer generate enough funds to pur
chase airtime.32
Instead, the so-called fundamentalist and Pentecostal denominations “dominated the
airwaves,
having ‘honed their skills at the fringes of the industry.’”33 Indeed, Pentecostal den
ominations—
and even nondenominational congregations led by individual charismatic (in all s
enses of the
word!) leaders—soared in membership. Oral Roberts, the best known of the “faith” minis
ters, built
an entire university and hospital in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and some of his students,
such as Kenneth
Copeland, or contemporaries, such as Kenneth Hagin, developed powerful healing a
nd “prosperity”
ministries.
Traditional churches, of course, despised the charismatics, whose main identifyi
ng practice was
that of speaking in tongues under the influence of the Holy Spirit. These charis
matic churches
featured several characteristics that antagonized the mainstream churches: they
were racially
integrated, they crossed all economic lines, and women had prominent positions o
f power in the
organizations. Faith healer Katherine Kuhlmann, for example, had been the first
female with a
regular religious show on television. Discrimination still existed, and many of
the Pentecostal
denominations still frowned on interracial marriage. But compared to the mainstr
eam church, the
underground Pentecostal movement was remarkably free of racism, classism, and ge
nder bias.
Instead of moving in the direction of their flocks, mainstream churches sought t
o be inclusive,
leading them to reinterpret church practices in a number of areas. Most of the m
ainstream churches,
for example, started to ordain women by the 1970s. These female ministers in lib
eral Protestant
churches “tended to side with radical feminists on the most volatile issues of the
day,” especially
abortion.34 Scarcely had the ink dried on the key sexual reproduction case of th
e century, Roe v.
Wade (1973), than the Methodists, Presbyterians, American Baptists, United Churc
h of Christ,
Disciples of Christ, and Episcopal Church all adopted proabortion positions.35
In 1973 the U.S. Supreme Court, hearing a pair of cases (generally referred to b
y the first case’s
name, Roe v. Wade), concluded that Texas antiabortion laws violated a constituti
onal “right to
privacy.”36 Of course, no such phrase can be found in the Constitution. That, howe
ver, did not stop
the Court from establishing—with no law’s ever being passed and no constitutional am
endment’s
ever being ratified—the premise that a woman had a constitutional right to an abor
tion during the
first trimester of pregnancy. Later, sympathetic doctors would expand the contex
t of health risk to
the mother so broadly as to permit abortions almost on demand. Instantly the fem
inist movement
leaped into action, portraying unborn babies as first, fetuses, then as “blobs of
tissue.” A battle with
prolife forces led to an odd media acceptance of each side’s own terminology of it
self: the labels
that the media used were “prochoice” (not “proabortion”) and “prolife” not “antichoice.” Wh
s
not so odd was the stunning explosion of abortions in the United States, which t
otaled at least 35
million over the first twenty-five years after Roe. Claims that without safe and
legal abortions,
women would die in abortion mills seemed to pale beside the stack of fetal bodie
s that resulted
from the change in abortion laws.
For those who had championed the Pill as liberating women from the natural resul
ts of sex—
babies—this proved nettlesome. More than 82 percent of the women who chose abortio
n in 1990
were unmarried. Had not the Pill protected them? Had it not liberated them to ha
ve sex without
consequences? The bitter fact was that with the restraints of the church removed
, the Pill and
feminism had only exposed women to higher risks of pregnancy and, thus, “eligibili
ty” for an
abortion. It also exempted men almost totally from their role as fathers, leavin
g them the easy
escape of pointing out to the female that abortion was an alternative to having
an illegitimate child.
Fatherhood, and the role of men, was already under assault by feminist groups. B
y the 1970s,
fathers had become a central target for the media, especially entertainment. Fat
hers were
increasingly portrayed as buffoons, even as evil, on prime-time television. Come
dies, according to
one study of thirty years of network television, presented blue-collar or middle
-class fathers as
foolish, although less so than the portrayals of upper-class fathers.37
Feminists had unwittingly given men a remarkable gift, pushing as they had for n
o-fault divorce.
Divorce laws began changing at the state level in the early 1970s, at which time
a full court hearing
and proof of cause was no longer required. Instead, if both parties agreed that
they had
irreconcilable differences, they simply obtained an inexpensive no-fault divorce
. This proved a
boon for men because it turned the social world into an “arena of sexual competiti
on [making] men
and women view each other as prey and their own sex as competitors to a degree t
hat corrodes
civility.”38 Divorce rates skyrocketed, with more than 1.1 million divorces occurr
ing in 1979, and
the number of children under the age of eighteen who lived in one-parent familie
s rising during the
decade of the 1970s from 11 percent to 19 percent. Although it took about twenty
years for
sociologists to study the phenomena, scholars almost universally agreed by the 1
990s that children
of one-parent families suffered from more pathologies, more criminal behavior, w
orse grades, and
lower self-esteem than kids from traditional families.39
A husband, able to easily escape from matrimony because it no longer proved fulf
illing (or more
likely, he desired a younger woman), now only had to show that he could not get
along with his
current wife—not that she had done anything wrong or been unfaithful. In turn, the
process called
the “one-to-a-customer” rule by George Gilder in his controversial Men and Marriage
was instantly
killed.40 In its place, wealthy older men could almost always attract younger wo
men, but older
women (regardless of their personal wealth) usually could not attract men their
age, who instead
snapped up younger “hard bodies” (as these physically fit women were called). Wherea
s in
previous eras these younger women would have married middle-or lower-class men o
f roughly
their own age and started families, they now became prey for the middle-aged wea
lthy men with
“Jennifer Fever.” The new Jennifer herself only lasted temporarily until she, too, w
as discarded.41
Pools of available middle-aged women, often with money, and younger men may have
seemed to
sociologists to be a logical match, but in fact the two groups were biologically
and culturally
incompatible. Instead, young men with looks and vitality battled against older m
ales with money
and status for the affections of an increasingly smaller group of twenty-to thir
ty-year-old females,
while an army of middle-aged female divorcées struggled to raise children from one
or more
marriages.
Feminism’s sexual freedom thus placed older women into a no-win competition with t
he young,
and in either group, the losers of the game had limited options. The process slo
wly created an
entirely new class of females who lacked male financial support and who had to t
urn to the state as
a surrogate husband, producing one of the most misunderstood political phenomena
of the late
twentieth century, the so-called gender gap. In reality, as most political analy
sts admit, this was a
marriage gap. Married women voted Republican in about the same numbers as men di
d; it was only
the single mothers, as casualties of the sexual free-fire zone the feminists had
dropped them into,
who saw government as a savior instead of a threat.
Meanwhile thanks to the women’s movement, a new option opened to women in the 1970
s that had
not existed to the same degree in earlier decades: a career. Women applied to la
w and medical
schools, moved into the universities, and even gradually made inroads into engin
eering and the
hard sciences.
Inflation had actually smoothed the way for women to enter professional fields.
As families
struggled and a second income was needed, men usually preferred their wives to h
ave the highest
paying job possible. Personnel directors and company presidents—usually men—could no
t help but
appreciate the fact that many of their own wives had started to interview for jo
bs too. Over time,
this realization helped override any macho chauvinism they may have possessed.
The working female brought a new set of economic realities. First, large numbers
of women
entering the workforce tended to distort the statistics. There is no question th
at more overall activity
occurred in the economy as women now spent more on housekeepers, gas, fast food,
and child care.
But there were also hidden economic indicators of social pathology: suicides wer
e up, as was drug
use, alcoholism, clinical depression, and, of course, divorce. What went almost
unnoticed was that
productivity—the key measure of all wealth growth—fell steadily throughout the 1970s
, despite a
tidal wave of women entering the job markets.
As more people moved into the workforce, there were increased family pressures f
or child care.
Once touted as the salvation of the working family, child care has been shown to
be undesirable at
best and extremely damaging at worst.42 Moreover, with both parents coming home
around six in
the evening, families tended to eat out more, send out laundry more often, and p
ay for yard or other
domestic work as well as additional taxes, all of which chewed up most of the ex
tra cash brought in
by the wife’s job. Although by 1978 the median family income had risen to $17,640,
up from
$9,867 in 1970, that increase had occurred by having two adults, rather than one
, in the workplace.
Children increasingly were viewed as impediments to a more prosperous lifestyle
and, accordingly,
the number of live births fell sharply from what it had been in 1960.
All of these indicators told Americans what they already had known for years: th
e great prosperity
of the 1950s had slowed, if not stopped altogether. Social upheaval, which was e
xcused in the
1960s as an expression of legitimate grievances, took on a darker tone as illegi
timacy yielded gangs
of young boys in the inner cities, and in suburban homes both parents worked for
ty hours a week to
stay afloat. It would provide the Democratic challenger to the presidency with a
powerful issue in
November 1976, even if no other reasons to oust Ford existed. But events abroad
would prove
disastrous for Gerald Ford.
Foreign Policy Adrift
Domestic issues may have absorbed Americans’ attention more after Vietnam, but for
eign threats
had hardly diminished. Making matters worse, Ford was weak in dealing with forei
gn leaders.
Soviet dictators, always probing for soft spots, found one at Vladivostok in 197
4, when Ford met
with Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev. A hard-line communist, Brezhnev nevertheles
s was
vulnerable. He had suffered a series of strokes that had left him a semi-invalid
, attended constantly
by a KGB nurse who “fed him a daily stream of pills without consulting his doctors
.”43 His
entourage was followed everywhere by a resuscitation vehicle. When it came to ba
rgaining with the
“main adversary,” as he viewed the United States, Brezhnev differed little from Stal
in. He was
searching for a strategic advantage that could offset several new U.S. military
technologies.44
Of most concern to the Soviets was the antiballistic missile (ABM) system allowe
d under SALT I.
If deployed across the nation, even at low levels of effectiveness, antimissile
missiles could
effectively combat nuclear warheads aimed at the United States. The ABM system r
epresented a
tremendous bargaining chip against the Soviets, since their heavy land-based mis
siles represented
their only guaranteed threat against the United States whereas American deterren
t forces were
evenly divided within the triad of submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs)
, long-range
bombers, and ICBMs. Another concern for the USSR was the new MIRV capability of
U.S.
missiles. MIRV, or multiple independent reentry vehicles, meant that a single Am
erican ICBM
could hit multiple targets. Its “bus” vehicle carrying up to ten MIRVs could deliver
nuclear
payloads to as many as ten different locations within a broad target area. There
fore, any advantage
the Soviets had in sheer numbers of missiles was offset by the ability to conver
t existing U.S.
ICBMs to MIRVs.
Political will, however, proved more important than advanced technology. As long
as Nixon
remained in office, he could with some degree of certainty keep together a pro-P
entagon coalition
of Republicans and hawk Democrats (such as Richard Russell of Georgia and Henry “S
coop”
Jackson of Washington). Ford, in contrast, was out of his element. He and his ad
visers failed to
distinguish between warheads and launchers. The Russians enthusiastically agreed
to a new SALT
treaty (SALT II) that placed limits on launchers, leaving the United States at a
permanent
disadvantage, which could only be counterbalanced by introducing newer and more
survivable
submarines, bombers, and ICBM systems. To obtain a treaty that had so clearly pu
t the United
States at a disadvantage, Ford and Congress had assured the Joint Chiefs of Staf
f—without whose
approval the treaty would never have passed—that programs such as the B-1 bomber,
MX missile,
ABM system, and Trident submarine would continue to be funded. Like the support
of Vietnam, all
these promises rested solely on the will and character of the president and Cong
ress who stood
behind them.
“I’ll Never Lie to You”
Had Gerald Ford not had social decay and economic disruption to deal with, he st
ill would have
been hard pressed to defeat Georgia Governor James Earl “Jimmy” Carter in 1976. Cart
er was one
of a line of presidential candidates to “run against Washington.” Born in Plains, Ge
orgia—the first
president born in a hospital—Carter was raised in a religious household. He was a
professed bornagain
Christian and a practicing Baptist. He graduated from the United States Naval Ac
ademy,
entering the submarine service under the “father of the nuclear navy,” Admiral Hyman
Rickover.
After his service ended, Carter ran his family’s substantial peanut farm and seed
enterprise, making
him the first president since Truman to have any significant experience in priva
te business. He
entered Georgia politics, winning the governorship in 1970, which gave him all t
he qualifications—
except for foreign policy experience—to hold the highest office. He had improved t
he efficiency of
his state government bureaucracy and ran it on budget, a point that allowed him
to criticize
Washington’s deficit spending. A southerner and a Southern Baptist, Carter appeale
d to both white
conservatives and the religious faithful who perceived that morality was slippin
g from public
service. His military service suggested that he would not abandon the military,
and his commitment
to racial justice showed that he would not abandon blacks.
Carter also benefited from the self-destruction of the last Kennedy rival. Senat
or Edward “Ted”
Kennedy, the youngest and last of Joe Kennedy’s boys (and easily the least talente
d politically),
had cultivated hopes of attaining the presidency that his brother Robert, in the
eyes of many, had
been denied by an assassin’s bullet. Certainly the Democratic Party would have ent
husiastically
welcomed a Kennedy heading a ticket. But in July 1969, Kennedy drove his Oldsmob
ile off a
bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, drowning his passenger, staffer Mary Jo Kopechn
e. The
implications of cavorting with his young campaign worker were damaging, and prob
ably
contributed to Kennedy’s decision to leave the scene of the accident. He did not e
ven report the
incident to police and made no effort to save the trapped woman as she drowned.
The Kennedy spin
machine immediately flew into high gear, containing the press coverage, inquest,
and grand jury
probe. Still, few scholars looking at the evidence have concluded anything other
than the fact that
Ted Kennedy was culpable in the death of Kopechne.45 After lying low in 1972, Ke
nnedy took the
nation’s political pulse in 1976, and found that tremendous resentment accompanied
the
unanswered questions about the incident. He quietly ceded the field to the Georg
ia governor.
Having begun a long preparation in 1974, Carter sealed the nomination and then l
ed Gerald Ford by
some thirty points in the polls. Selecting Walter Mondale of Minnesota as his vi
ce presidential
running mate, Carter nailed down his liberal base, then veered back to the cente
r with pithy but
pointed remarks. “I’ll never lie to you,” he told the public, then proved it by giving
Playboy
magazine an interview, the first presidential candidate to do so, in which he ad
mitted that he had
“lusted in his heart” after women. Such poor judgment undercut his image as a religi
ous man and
helped erode much of the lead he had built up. Ford proved little better. Having
barely held off
challenger Ronald Reagan in the Republican primary, Ford blundered by stating in
a television
debate that Eastern Europe was not under Soviet domination. Americans concluded
that Ford was
dense or uninformed. His running mate, moderate Kansas Senator Bob Dole, a disab
led war
veteran, was designated the attack dog, endowing him with a reputation for conse
rvatism he did not
deserve.
Ultimately, the campaign turned on the economy rather than either candidate’s comp
etence.
Carter’s aides concocted a “misery index” comprised of the unemployment rate added to
the
inflation rate, which, depending on the source, was 10 percent in 1975 (but had
dropped back to
about 6 percent at election time). Carter asked a simple question of the voters:
“Are you better off
today than you were four years ago?” Most people answered in the negative, giving
Carter a 51 to
48 percent popular vote margin (but a much narrower electoral victory, 297 to 24
0). A swing of
two large states, such as Ohio and Pennsylvania, would have made Ford president.
Any Democratic
strategist looking at the map would have been concerned. Carter had lost the ent
ire West except for
Texas, most of New England, and the key midwestern states of Illinois, Michigan,
and Indiana. The
party’s success came almost entirely from the South, where only Virginia voted for
Ford.
Attempting to enhance the outsider image, Carter walked rather than rode in his
inaugural parade.
He sold the White House yacht and adopted an informal atmosphere, even wearing a
sweater
instead of a suit during a televised “fireside chat.” Like Ford’s win button, though,
the cardigan
sweater gained a negative connotation, reflecting the president’s inability to do
anything about the
ongoing energy crisis. Invoking a preacher’s style of moral calling to the public,
Carter encouraged
Americans to turn down their thermostats and conserve. Labeling the energy crisi
s the “moral
equivalent of war,” Carter only stirred up memories of the last two wars the natio
n had entered, and
lost—Vietnam and the war on poverty.
Adopting a comprehensive energy policy, Carter and Congress rolled out multimill
ion-dollar
subsidies for solar and wind power, biomass, and other alternative fuels, virtua
lly none of which
could come online soon enough to affect the nation’s immediate energy problems. Wi
nd farms of
massive and unsightly windmills only generated a fraction of the kilowatts of a
soundly run coalfired
or hydroelectric plant. (Later, environmentalists would shut down the windmill f
arms in the
San Francisco area because the windmill blades were killing birds.) Solar power,
which worked
well in places like Arizona and Florida, was dangerous to install and, at best,
unreliable. In colder
climates it was completely impractical.
The nation desperately needed new sources of energy, and the cheapest and safest
was nuclear
power. But already the antinuclear movement had demonized atomic energy, even th
ough the
nations with the longest history of nuclear power use—France and Japan—had never had
a serious
accident. Nuclear power in America had a similar spotless record until March 197
9, when an
accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania necessitated the
release of
radioactive gases. Not a single person was killed or injured, but the media and
activists ensured that
nuclear plant construction would be dramatically curtailed, if not stopped.
Leverage over foreign powers proved even more difficult for Carter than Ford bec
ause the new
president imposed a requirement that countries observe basic human rights. Longt
ime allies in
Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East suddenly became the objects of criticis
m. Although
Carter did point out Soviet treatment of dissidents, he avoided any broad and en
ergetic
condemnation of either the Soviet or Chinese systems, both of which were inheren
tly hostile to
human rights. The entire policy, designed to reverse the realpolitik of Henry Ki
ssinger, was fraught
with danger. No nation—including the United States, with its history of slavery an
d its treatment of
Native Americans and Japanese Americans during World War II—had hands that were en
tirely
clean. On a practical level, spying demanded that one work with people of questi
onable character:
murderers, terrorists, and people willing to sell out their own countrymen. From
where else would
the information come? And when it came to strategic issues, the time-tested rule
was “My enemy’s
enemy is my friend.”
Implementing the most idealistic foreign policy since Woodrow Wilson was Wall St
reet lawyer
Cyrus Vance (secretary of state) and Columbia University professor Zbigniew Brze
zinski (national
security adviser), a Polish-born liberal wrongly portrayed as a cold war hawk. C
arter also appointed
Andrew Young, a veteran of the civil rights movement with no foreign experience,
as the
ambassador to the United Nations. Their inexperience compounded the impracticali
ty of human
rights emphasis in foreign policy.
Carter angered conservatives by winning Senate ratification of the treaty return
ing the Panama
Canal Zone to the nation of Panama and announcing support of black majority rule
in several
African states. He denounced pro-U.S. Latin American dictators, which encouraged
the Cubanbacked
communist Sandinista guerrillas to overthrow the Somoza government in Nicaragua.
In
each instance, Carter traded the substance of strategic control and genuine work
ing alliances for a
shadowy world of public opinion and goodwill.
Carter finally appeared to have found his stride in foreign relations when he pl
ayed a broker’s role
in negotiating a remarkable Middle East peace. Faced with prospects of another A
rab-Israeli war,
Carter invited leaders of Egypt and Israel to the Camp David retreat. Egypt was
represented by its
president, Anwar el-Sadat, who had allied with the Nazis in World War II. Israel
sent its prime
minister, Menachem Begin, who had engaged in terrorist activities against Palest
inians as a
member of Israeli Irgun commando units. These were fighters—men who knew war and h
ad no
illusions about the cost, but who were also fatigued and desperate for a comprom
ise. Meeting in
February 1979, with Carter smoothing over hard points and even jawboning the pai
r to keep them
from walking out, Begin and Sadat signed the Camp David Accords, normalizing rel
ations between
Egypt and Israel and paving the way for Israel to withdraw from the Sinai Penins
ula. The final
agreement, however, was accomplished only when Carter bribed the signatories wit
h “the largestever
American foreign-aid package…a total of [$5 billion] over a three-year period.”46 Is
raeli
withdrawal, in particular, came when Carter promised that the United States woul
d construct two
military airfields for Israel in the Negev. Money talked, at least temporarily.
Arab states quickly
denounced the agreement, and the fundamentalist wing of Islam threatened to boil
over. Begin and
Sadat won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1978, for which Sadat paid with his life in O
ctober 1981, when
Islamic extremists in his own army assassinated him.
In fact, Egypt obtained everything it wanted but the Israelis were left to deal
with the central canker
sore of the region, the Palestinian issue. Israel had begun to sell land in the
occupied territories (the
West Bank, which is within Israel’s biblical borders) to its own settlers in 1979,
and Camp David
did nothing to address the problem in favor of either side.
The apparent triumph of Camp David masked Carter’s more significant weakness in de
aling with
the USSR. He canceled the planned B-1 bomber (which had been promised to the air
force for its
support of SALT II) and delayed the deployment of the MX missile (which had been
guaranteed to
the Joint Chiefs of Staff in return for the military’s support of Salt II). Carter
also ended all serious
consideration of reviving the ABM, another promise related to SALT II that went
down the drain.
If there was one thing the Soviets could smell, it was weakness in a leader. In
short order, the
number of worldwide terrorist incidents started to rise, with most of the fundin
g coming from
Moscow.
A far more dangerous development accompanied the Soviets’ assessment that Carter w
as weak: the
“window of vulnerability” opened. In the mid-1970s the Soviets developed two new ICB
Ms, the
SS-18 and SS-19, which reflected a completely different nuclear strategy in that
each carried a
single huge warhead (as opposed to multiple warheads). The new missiles had one
purpose: to
burrow into American ICBM silos in a surprise attack and destroy U.S. missiles o
n the ground. Any
astute observer would immediately ask if U.S. missiles would not be airborne the
instant a Soviet
launch was detected on radar, but this was a question of political will, not tec
hnology. Not only did
the new heavy missiles of the Soviet missile forces indicate that there was seri
ous consideration of
a first-strike surprise attack, but publications by Soviet strategists themselve
s openly discussed their
military doctrine. These publications increasingly were dominated by phrases suc
h as “the first
strike,” the “offensive,” and “surprise,” which indicated that planning for a nuclear war—o
, more
precisely, to fight and win a nuclear war—had intensified since Nixon left office.
Cancellation of numerous new high-tech weapons by the Carter administration conv
inced many
Soviet leaders that the president would not respond in the event of a surgical a
ttack aimed “only” at
American missile fields. Under such a scenario, the Soviets would destroy the U.
S. ICBM fields,
killing relatively few people, and the president would hesitate, or negotiate, w
hile the Soviets
reloaded their missile silos (a feature ours did not have), threatening a second
all-out attack against
a disarmed America’s major cities. (For a number of reasons, bombers and SLBMs wer
e not
capable of taking out Soviet missile silos.)
This concept was poorly understood by the American media, which seemed capable o
nly of
parroting lines such as “We have enough warheads to blow up the world several time
s over.” In
fact, the proper illustration was two gunfighters: one draws first and shoots th
e gun out of the
other’s hand. Despite the fact that the other has a belt full of bullets, he is ma
de helpless by the fact
that the weapon needed to fire the bullets is disabled. Leverage came from avail
able launchers, not
warheads. Security came from will, not technology. Ford’s and Carter’s aura of weakn
ess opened
this window of vulnerability, which reached its widest level around 1979, when t
he United States
came the closest to nuclear war than at any time in its history, including the C
uban crisis.
Carter had none of Franklin Roosevelt’s luck. No sooner had he helped negotiate th
e Camp David
Accords than a revolution in Iran, in January 1979, overthrew the pro-American s
hah with an
Islamic fundamentalist, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Carter made overtures to th
e new Islamic
government, which rebuffed him, calling the United States the Great Satan before
shutting off all
oil exports to America. Failing to see the dangers posed by a new government tha
t hated the United
States, Carter did not withdraw the American embassy personnel. He antagonized t
he Iranian
mullahs when, several months later, he admitted deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahla
vi into the
United States for medical treatment. Iranian mobs, fanned by the ayatollahs, eru
pted and stormed
the U.S. embassy, taking hostage sixty-six Americans inside. Khomeini warned tha
t any attempt to
rescue them would result in their execution (although he later released all wome
n, blacks, and one
ill white male). Television pictures transmitted to North America revealed to a
stunned public the
raw hatred of the mobs. Carter seemed helpless to do anything about the situatio
n. Lacking the
impetuosity of a Teddy Roosevelt, who would have sent a military force to punish
the Iranians, or
the stoicism of a Coolidge to ride it out, or the deviousness of Nixon to strike
through covert
measures, Carter adopted halfway measures and always employed them too late.
Television made matters worse. News networks kept a daily tracking of the fiasco
, leading each
newscast with banners reading america held hostage. America, of course, was only
held hostage if
it allowed a foreign country to use the fifty remaining captives as leverage. Th
e public, unable to do
anything substantial, engaged in symbolic gestures like tying yellow ribbons aro
und trees and
flagpoles. Carter compounded the error by elevating the safe return of the hosta
ges to his
administration’s top priority. American helplessness in Iran exposed the Camp Davi
d agreements
as of minimal value, since Carter refrained from military action, in part becaus
e of fear that the
Arab world would support the Iranians. Days turned into weeks, then into months.
Perceiving that Carter was distracted, the USSR staged a full-scale invasion of
Afghanistan in
December 1979 and installed a puppet government in Kabul. Carter belatedly order
ed a defense
buildup and sent warships to the Persian Gulf, but Afghanistan was already in So
viet hands.
With such futility in the Oval Office, it is not surprising that the brightest m
oment for Americans
scarcely involved government. It came at the Winter Olympic Games held at Lake P
lacid, New
York, when the U.S. ice hockey team, substantial underdogs to the professional S
oviet skaters,
played one of the most heroic games in Olympic history. The U.S. team grabbed th
e lead and, as
the clock ticked down, the pro-American crowd waved American flags and chanted “U-
S-A, U-SA
.” In the final seconds, broadcaster Al Michaels delivered one of the most memorab
le lines in all
sports history as the amateur American team beat the Soviets: “Do you believe in m
iracles?
Yeeeesssss!” If only symbolically, the American Olympic ice hockey team had done w
hat Carter
could not.
Whipsawed between Afghanistan and Iran, in April 1980, Carter, having lost all i
nitiative and the
element of surprise, finally approved a risky scheme to rescue the Iranian hosta
ges. The complex
plan called for a hazardous nighttime desert rendezvous, with numerous aircraft,
and operated on
what military people call zero margin—no room for error. En route mechanical diffi
culties aborted
the mission, but the choppers still had to refuel, and one, in the process of ta
king off during a
windstorm, clipped a fuel plane with its rotor, causing a massive fireball. Inte
rnational news later
broadcast video of Iranians waving the mutilated body parts of charred American
troops. It is safe
to say that even including the burning of Washington, D.C., in the War of 1812,
the United States
had never sunk to a lower, more humiliating point internationally.
Treating his inability to govern as a virtual crisis, Carter retreated to Camp D
avid, emerging to
deliver his famous “malaise” speech, although he never used the word specifically, b
laming the
American public for a national “crisis of confidence.”47 Andrew Young had already re
signed in
controversy, and Cyrus Vance quit in a disagreement over the Iranian rescue. Car
ter’s solid
personal character had been overwhelmed by his insistence on micromanaging the a
dministration.
Absorbed with Afghanistan, Iran, and the Middle East, Carter failed to comprehen
d the significance
of one of the most important and sweeping movements of the twentieth century, wh
en a powerful
resistance movement to communism arose in Poland and other parts of Eastern Euro
pe. Cardinal
Karol Wojtyla of Poland, John Paul II, had been elected pope in October 1978, th
e first non-Italian
to be so honored since 1522, and quickly became the most popular pontiff in hist
ory. John Paul II
energized anticommunism from the outside, while Polish shipyard worker Lech Wale
sa led a
resistance from the inside in the form of strikes.
Ironically, Carter was not the only one distracted by Afghanistan: the Soviets s
eemed paralyzed by
the growing independence of the trade unions in Poland and, in any event, could
not financially
continue to support the rotting carcass of the Eastern European communist states
. The sword cut
both ways. Where Stalin would have moved in to crush Walesa’s Solidarity Union, so
too a
Truman or a Teddy Roosevelt would have moved to support such a movement. Instead
, both
Brezhnev and Carter floundered in the Iranian deserts and Afghan mountains.
“Well, There You Go Again!”
On every front, the United States seemed in decline. Economically, socially, and
in international
relations, by 1980 America was in retreat. Yet at this point of weakness, the na
tion stood on the
edge of its greatest resurgence since the months following Doolittle’s bombing of
Tokyo. The
turnaround began with an upheaval within the Republican Party.
Since the defeat of Goldwater in 1964, the American conservative movement had st
eadily given
ground. Nixon and Ford, at best, were moderates on most hot-button conservative
issues, and other
potential Republican alternatives to Jimmy Carter—Nelson Rockefeller, for example—re
presented
the blue-hair wing of the country-club GOP, which offered no significant change
in philosophy
from the Georgian’s. Then onto the scene came a sixty-nine-year-old former actor,
Goldwaterite,
and governor of California, Ronald Wilson Reagan. At one time a New Deal Democra
t who had
voted four times for FDR, Reagan was fond of saying that he “didn’t leave the Democr
atic Party; it
left me.” Reagan contended that the liberals of the 1970s had abandoned the princi
ples that had
made up the Democratic Party of John Kennedy and Harry Truman, and that those pr
inciples—
anticommunism, a growing economy for middle-class Americans, and the rule of law—w
ere more
in line with the post-Nixon Republican Party.
Born in Illinois (and the first president ever to have lived in Chicago), Reagan
created an alter ego
for himself with his portrayal of Notre Dame football player George Gipp in Knut
e Rockne, All
American (1940), in which he immortalized the line spoken by the dying Gipp to t
he Fighting Irish
football team, “Go out there and win one for the Gipper.” Later in public life, Reag
an enjoyed
being referred to as the Gipper. His most critically acclaimed role, however, ha
d come in King’s
Row (1942). At Eureka College, he led a successful student strike aimed at resto
ring faculty
members whom the school had fired, which later gave him the distinction of havin
g been the only
U.S. president to have led a student protest march. He headed the Screen Actors
Guild in 1947, the
Hollywood labor union for motion picture artists, energetically working to excis
e communists from
its ranks, while at the same time endeavoring to clear the names of noncommunist
s who had been
unfairly targeted by the FBI or HUAC. Just as the student strike had made him un
ique, the union
experience marked him as the only twentieth-century American president to have s
erved in a union
position.
Never as overtly religious as Coolidge before him or George W. Bush after him, R
eagan’s moral
sense was acute. When he learned that the Los Angeles Lakeside Country Club, to
which he
belonged, did not admit Jews, he resigned. At a World War II celebration of Unit
ed America Days,
where he honored a Nisei sergeant, Kazuo Masuda, who had died in the war, Reagan
reminded the
audience, “The blood that has soaked into the sands of the beaches is all one colo
r. America stands
unique in the world—a country not founded on race, but on…an ideal.”48 Only after his
death in
2004 was Reagan’s Christian faith more completely examined and publicized.
During the 1960s he began to explore a political career, first working for Goldw
ater, then running
for governor of California. Reagan won the 1966 gubernatorial election, then ree
lection. He
reformed welfare in one of the nation’s most free-spending states, vetoed more tha
n nine hundred
bills (of which only one passed over his veto), and imposed a rule of common sen
se.49
Branded by his opponents as an extremist and an anticommunist zealot, Reagan in
fact practiced
the art of compromise, comparing success in politics to a batting average. He wa
rned conservatives
that the game required give and take, working with Democrats in California to sh
ed seventy-five
thousand from the state’s welfare rolls while increasing benefits for the poorest.
Bolstered by a
winning smile, an indefatigable charm, and the ability to shrug off criticism wi
th a wink and a grin,
he drove his opponents into even greater froths. The most gifted presidential or
ator of the twentieth
century, Reagan was ridiculed for reading from index cards, a habit he had picke
d up from his
years on the rubber-chicken circuit giving speeches before chambers of commerce
and community
groups as official spokesman for the General Electric Corporation. Ridiculed for
his acting
background and characterized as a dim bulb, Reagan, in fact, wrote extensively,
on almost every
subject, with deep understanding.50 The Gipper also put things in everyday langu
age. Speaking of
the dismal economy, he said, “A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A d
epression is
when you lose yours. A recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his.”
In the general election campaign, Reagan ran on three simple promises: he would
revive the
economy through tax cuts and deregulation, cutting the size of government; he wo
uld wage the cold
war with renewed vigor; and he would address the nation’s energy problems by seeki
ng market
solutions. He mollified moderates by naming George H. W. Bush of Texas, former C
IA director, as
his running mate, but the race belonged to Reagan. Turning Carter’s own once-winni
ng question
around on the Georgian, the Gipper asked, “Are you better off today than you were
four years
ago?”51 He also dusted off the misery index, which had risen sharply under Carter.
Short-term
interest rates, which had stood at 5.35 percent when Carter took office, had mor
e than doubled to
12.29 percent in 1980, which Reagan did not hesitate to point out. The price of
gold, traditionally a
barometer of inflation, had gone off the charts during the Carter years, reachin
g its record high of
$875 an ounce. At the same time (1980), Japan passed the United States as the wo
rld’s largest auto
producer, and one third of all Americans drove a Japanese car. Even if Carter be
en a competent
president and candidate, those numbers would have done him in.
Though not trailing significantly in the polls, Carter knew he was in trouble. D
emocratic strategists
had placed much of their hopes of keeping the White House on the presidential de
bates, where it
was thought the younger, Washington-toughened Carter might expose Reagan as a do
ddering
inexperienced political newbie. Yet whenever Carter distorted Reagan’s record or t
ried to portray
him as an extremist, the Gipper smiled, cocked his head, and quipped, “Well, there
you go again,”
five words that Reagan credited with winning him the election. The debates made
the incumbent
look like a sincere but naive child arguing with his wise uncle. On election eve
, despite surveys
showing Reagan trailing, the Californian came back so strongly that Carter appal
led Democrat
strategists by conceding the campaign while the polls were still open in Califor
nia. Reagan carried
the electoral college 489 to 49, the most stunning and overwhelming loss for an
incumbent since
the ill-fated Hoover had gone down in 1932. The Republicans also gained thirteen
seats in the
Senate to win a majority there for the first time in nearly thirty years, and th
ey picked up thirtythree
House seats. But the desire for change in the nation was far deeper than that. A
mong the
Democrats who had won election, some thirty to forty “boll weevils” from conservativ
e districts
supported stronger defense and tax cuts, and they voted for the Reagan proposals
consistently.
Many of them eventually switched parties.
Reaganophobia
Liberal textbook writers have endeavored to distort and taint Reagan’s record more
than they have
any other subject except the Great Depression. They began by attempting to minim
ize the extent of
Reagan’s massive and shocking victory by pointing to low turnout, which had in fac
t been
exacerbated by massive drives by liberals to register voters who in fact had no
intention of ever
voting.52
Another strategy to discredit Reagan was to attack his acting career, pointing t
o the absence of
many critically acclaimed roles. This allowed them to label him a B actor. Yet t
his argument
contradicted another line of attack on the Gipper, claiming that he had no genui
ne political instincts
or serious policy ideas, and that he was merely a master of the camera. For exam
ple, a photo
caption in American Journey, after acknowledging Reagan’s communication skills, du
tifully noted
that “critics questioned his grasp of complex issues.”53 Reagan “was no intellectual,” a
nnounced
the popular textbook The American Pageant.54
Both the Democrats and the media continually underestimated Reagan, mistakenly t
hinking that his
acting background and camera presence had supplied his margin of victory. Neithe
r group took
seriously his ideas—or the fact that those ideas were consistent and appealed to l
arge majorities of
Americans. Refusing to engage in combative dialogue with his media enemies Reaga
n repeatedly
used them to his advantage, and kept his eyes on the prize. Reagan was in fact w
idely read and
perceptive too: in 1981, he had latched on to a pathbreaking book by George Gild
er, Wealth &
Poverty, which to the lament of mainstream academics, turned the economic world
upside down
with its supply-side doctrine and stunning insights.55
Symbolically, although Carter had negotiated an end to the hostage crisis, the a
yatollah did not
release the prisoners until January 20, 1981, the day of Reagan’s inauguration. (I
t was characteristic
of Reagan, in his diary, to note how sorry he had felt for the departing Carter,
who did not have the
fortune of seeing the hostages released.) Symbolism aside, the Reagan Revolution
shocked the
FDR coalition to its roots. Even unions started to splinter over supporting some
of Reagan’s
proposals, and although publicly the Democrats downplayed the extent of the dama
ge, privately
Democratic Party strategist Al From was so shaken that he initiated a study to d
etermine if Reagan
was a fluke or if a broad transformation of the electorate had started to occur.
56 He did not like the
answers. Going in, Reagan knew that fixing more than a decade’s worth of mismanage
ment in
energy, monetary policy, national security, and other areas of neglect would be
a long-term
prospect. It required a policy style that did not veer from crisis to crisis, bu
t which held firm to
conservative principles, even when it meant disregarding short-term pain. Equall
y important, it
meant that Reagan personally had to ditch the Carter “malaise” that hung over the na
tion like a
blanket and replace it with the old-fashioned can-do optimism that was inherentl
y Reaganesque.
The Gipper accomplished this by refusing to engage in Beltway battles with repor
ters or even
Democrats on a personal basis. He completely ignored the press, especially when
it was critical.
Laughing and joking with Democrats, he kept their ideology, which he strenuously
opposed,
separate from the people themselves. These characteristics made it intensely dif
ficult even for
Washington reporters and die-hard Democrats to dislike him, although Carter rese
nted the election
loss for more than a decade. Reagan frustrated reporters and intellectuals with
a maddening
simplicity, asking why we needed the Federal Reserve at all and why, if the ozon
e layer was being
destroyed, we couldn’t replace it. He possessed a sense of humor and self-deprecat
ion not seen
since Truman. Having acted in his share of bad movies, Reagan provided plenty of
ammunition to
critics. When one reporter brought him a studio picture from a movie he had made
with a
chimpanzee, Bedtime for Bonzo, the Gipper good-naturedly signed it and wrote, “I’m t
he one with
the watch.”57 Just two months after his inauguration, Reagan was the victim of an
assassination
attempt by John Hinckley. With a bullet still lodged in his chest, Reagan, taken
into surgery,
quipped to the doctors, “I hope you’re all Republicans!”58 In his 1982 State of the Un
ion address,
the Gipper quoted George Washington. Then, lampooning his own age, he added: “For
our friends
in the press, who place a high premium on accuracy, let me say I did not actuall
y hear George
Washington say that, but it is a matter of historic record.” Aware the nation need
ed to revive the
spirit of achievement, Reagan introduced everyday “American heroes” in his State of
the Union
messages.
When celebrating triumphs—whether over inflation, interest rates, unemployment, or
communism—Reagan used “we” or “together.” When calling on fellow citizens for support, he
expressed his points in clear examples and heartwarming stories. An example, he
said, was always
better than a sermon. No matter what he or government did, to Reagan it was alwa
ys the people of
the nation who made the country grow and prosper. Most important, he did not hes
itate to speak
what he thought was the truth, calling the Soviet Union the “evil empire,” a term th
at immediately
struck a note with millions of Star Wars fans and conjuring up the image of a de
crepit Soviet leader
as the “emperor” bent on destroying the Galactic Republic (America). Once, preparing
to make a
statement about the Soviet Union, Reagan did not realize a microphone was left o
n, and he joked to
a friend, “The bombing begins in five minutes.” Horrified reporters scurried about i
n panic, certain
that this gunslinger-cowboy president was serious.
But Reagan relied on more than language to accomplish his goals. Criticized as a
hands-off
president, he in fact was a master delegator, using a troika of Edwin Meese, Jam
es Baker, and
Donald Regan (who held various advisory positions, with Baker and Regan actually
trading jobs in
1985) to supervise every important issue. That left Reagan free to do the strate
gic thinking and to
galvanize public opinion. Indeed, Reagan flustered his opponents, who thought hi
m intellectually
weak, precisely because he did not micromanage and thus devoted himself to the t
ruly important
issues, often catching his adversaries completely unaware. His grasp of the deta
ils of government,
clear in his autobiography, An American Life, shows that in one-on-one meetings
over details of
tax cuts, defense, and other issues, Reagan had mastered the important specifics
. However, he also
believed in getting the best people and letting them speak their mind, even when
he had made up
his. He repeatedly left hotly charged meetings, telling the participants, “I’ll let
you know my
decision,” rather than embarrass the losing side in front of the winners.
Tax Cuts Revive the Nation
To say that Reagan had a single most important issue would be difficult, for he
saw rebuilding
America’s economy and resisting Soviet communism as two sides to the same coin. Ne
vertheless,
the key to the second came from success with the first: reviving the economy had
to occur before
the nation could commit to any major military expansion to resist the USSR. Acco
rding to the
traditional explanations, since the mid-1970s Reagan had steadily gravitated tow
ard supply-side
economics, touted by economists Arthur Laffer and Jude Wanniski. The supply-side
rs emphasized
tax cuts to stimulate investment by making it more lucrative to build plants and
start businesses
instead of stimulating consumer demand, as Keynes and the Democrats had practice
d for years.
Cuts on the margin made a tremendous difference in purchasing and investing, the
supply-siders
argued, and the Laffer curve proved that tax cuts could actually increase revenu
es.59 Reagan’s vice
president and opponent for the nomination, George H. W. Bush, had called supply-
side cuts
“voodoo economics,” but it was common sense, representing a revival of Mellon’s and Ke
nnedy’s
tax policies, both of which proved extremely successful. In Reagan’s hands, it bec
ame
“Reaganomics.”
With the economy in such disrepair, Reagan easily persuaded Congress to back the
concept, but he
asked for an immediate 30 percent across-the-board cut (meaning that the wealthy
would get tax
relief too). Instead, Congress, afraid of appearing to favor the rich, strung th
e cut out for three years
in 5, 10, and 10 percent increments through the Economic Recovery Act, passed in
August 1981. In
addition to lowering the top rates from 70 percent to 50 percent, and then still
further, it lowered the
all-important capital gains tax from 28 percent to 20 percent. Spreading out the
cuts minimized the
stimulus impact Reagan had sought. The economy recovered, slowly at first, then
after the last
segment of the cut was in place, rapidly. Lower capital gains rates caused inves
tors to pump money
into the economy as never before: their reported taxable income soared sevenfold
and the amount
of taxes paid by the investor classes rose fivefold.
But in the interim, from 1981 to 1982 the economy dipped even deeper into recess
ion, with
unemployment reaching 10 percent in 1982. Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker,
with
encouragement from Reagan, contributed to some of the downturn by restricting th
e money supply
as a means to squeeze the skyrocketing inflation out of the system. Volcker succ
eeded: in one
quarter, the inflation rate dipped to zero. It had dropped overall from 12 perce
nt just a few years
earlier to 4 percent. It was a monumental accomplishment, but largely missed by
the media, which
focused, instead, on unemployment in the “Reagan recession” as journalists dubbed it
.60
Reagan knew in his soul the tax cuts would work, but as his diary revealed, the
dark days of late
1981 and early 1982 brought nothing but bad news:
Christmas [1981] The recession has worsened, throwing our earlier figures off. N
ow my team is
pushing for a tax increase to help hold down the deficits…. I intend to wait and s
ee some results.
Jan. 11 [1982] Republican House leaders came down to the W. H. Except for Jack K
emp they are
h--l bent on new taxes and cutting the defense budget. Looks like a heavy year a
head.
Jan. 20 First anniversary of inauguration. The day was a tough one. A budget mee
ting and pressure
from everyone to give in to increases in excise taxes…I finally gave in but my hea
rt wasn’t in it.
Feb. 22 Lunch on issues. I’m convinced of the need to address the people on our bu
dget and the
economy. The press has done a job on us and the polls show its effect. The peopl
e are confused
about [the] economic program. They’ve been told it has failed and it’s just started.
April 26…at 10:15 addressed 2000 delegates of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce convent
ion. What
a shot in the arm. They interrupted me a dozen times or more…. The Dems are playin
g games—
they want me to rescind the third year of the tax cuts—not in a million years!61
And so on. By November the nation had started to pull out of the recession, and
within a year it was
rocketing ahead at a pace never before seen.
Determined to slash government regulation, Reagan benefited greatly from momentu
m already
begun under Carter, for which, surprisingly, Carter took little credit during th
e campaign.
Beginning in the mid-1970s, consumer groups had joined conservatives in working
to deregulate
the airline industry. Economist Alfred Kahn, who had joined the government’s Civil
Aeronautics
Board in 1977, knew that a stranglehold on routes had kept airline prices high a
nd the number of
carriers low.62 The government first allowed airlines to discount nonpeak hours,
then, gradually, to
discount all fares. At the same time, new competitors entered the market, forcin
g prices down
further, until, by the 1980s, air travel was virtually deregulated. Lower prices
put people on
airplanes at astounding rates: in 1977, passenger boardings stood at 225 million
, but by 1992 they
had nearly doubled to 432 million. At the same time (contrary to critics’ claims),
eight of the ten
major airlines had boosted their per-share earnings, all while lowering the numb
er of fatalities per
air mile traveled.63
In parcel delivery and overnight mail, United Parcel Service (UPS) and newcomer
Federal Express
also fought the postal service’s monopoly and drove down rates by using jet aircra
ft to deliver
mail.64 Across the board, though, the percentage of share of freight regulated b
y the federal
government plunged in the 1980s in both rail and truck transportation.65 Despite
Reagan’s affinity
for chopping government bureaus, he was able to eliminate only a few minor agenc
ies during his
term, a fact that reflected as much the previous success of deregulation of truc
king and the air travel
industry as it did his failures in cutting still more. He later referred to his
inability to affect the
scope of government as his greatest single failure in office. Ultimately, Reagan
concluded that it
was a task for another time and, perhaps, for another man or woman.
The tax cuts started to have their effect. Production, employment, job creation,
and
entrepreneurship all surged, soon achieving near-record levels. And, true to the
supply-side
promise, government revenues soared, increasing by more than one third during Re
agan’s eight
years. Yet despite oceans of new money and Reagan’s constant foot on the brake, go
vernment
continued to spend more than it took in, increasing outlays by nearly 40 percent
in the same period.
To restrain spending, Reagan cut a deal with Congress in which the Democrats agr
eed to hold
spending down in return for closing tax loopholes (which really involved raising
taxes again, but
only in specific industries, such as yachts and pleasure boats). No sooner had C
ongress closed the
deal than it passed new higher spending, generating sizable, but not record, def
icits.
One of the most oft-repeated mantras of the 1980s—that Reagan’s military buildup acc
ounted for
the extra expenditures—was utterly false.66 Military budgets did grow, but barely.
Defense
spending never much exceeded $200 billion per year, whereas social spending unde
r the Democrats
consistently remained slightly higher. After Reagan left office, domestic nondef
ense spending was
nearly double that of the Pentagon’s budget.67
None of this seemed to faze average Americans, who could see by their wallets th
at the economy
was growing by leaps and bounds. At the end of eight years of Reaganomics, Ameri
ca’s revived
industrial might had produced 14 million net new jobs. This was nothing short of
stupendous, given
that since 1970, all the European nations combined had not generated a single ne
t new job!68
Most of these “gloomsters,” as one economist called them, were stuck in the manufact
uring mindset,
but even manufacturing had not declined as they claimed. Production as a share o
f U.S. gross
domestic product dipped in the 1970s, but rose throughout the 1980s, reaching 36
.1 percent in
1989, the highest level in American history!69
Without question, however, America’s traditional heavy industry had been taking it
on the chin
since 1970, and job losses in steel, textiles, and automobile industries particu
larly underscored the
trauma. Entire cities dried up when manufacturing moved out, leading to the coin
ing of a new term,
the Rust Belt. But other, high-tech cities blossomed, and not just with services
, but with new
manufacturing industries.
While the industrial policy critics, mostly from the Democratic side, complained
about the loss of
blue-collar manufacturing jobs, a whole new computer industry had grown up under
their noses.
American computer manufacturers in the 1980s snapped up 70 percent of the world’s
software
market and 80 percent of the world’s hard-drive business, all while a fellow named
Bill Gates came
to completely dominate the human-to-machine interface known as computer “language.”
Nothing
spoke to the lack of value in chip production more loudly than the plummeting pr
ices of computer
chips by the 1990s, when individual chips literally cost of a hundredth of a cen
t.
Silicon Valley replaced Detroit as the most important economic hub in the nation
. Behind its laidback
style, Silicon Valley concealed a fiercely competitive collection of computer en
trepreneurs
whose synergy led to breakthrough after breakthrough. Eventually, the region wou
ld become so
efficient and productive that in the late 1990s it had a severe recession. But a
t the beginning of the
boom, Japan had nothing to match Silicon Valley.
By the end of the 1980s it took only half as much labor to purchase a gallon of
milk as it had in
1950, the peak of heavy-industry America; and the cost in labor of a gallon of g
asoline had fallen
by two thirds. Some critics pointed to declining average wage growth as evidence
that the U.S.
economy, without heavy industry, would stagnate. In fact, wage growth was better
when total
compensation (such as medical benefits, retirement, and so on) was included, alt
hough the rate of
increase had slowed some.
The result of the tax cuts, therefore, was not only revival of the economy but a
lso restoration of
confidence in American productivity and purpose. In addition, Reagan had mounted
a strong
counterattack on liberalism’s dependency mentality, cracking it with the assistanc
e of “blue-dog”
Democrats who supported his tax relief. If he had not entirely rolled back gover
nment, Reagan had
at least destroyed liberal assumptions that only a steadily growing government s
ector could produce
economic stability and prosperity.70 Yet tax cuts and the resurgence of the Amer
ican economy
only constituted part of Reagan’s success.
Reagan dealt with foreign terrorists and usurpers quickly and decisively. Warned
of a possible
Cuban takeover of the little Caribbean nation of Grenada in 1983, he ordered in
troops to thwart
Castro’s invasion. When a terrorist bombing in 1986 of a West German disco frequen
ted by
American GIs was linked to the radical Islamic state Libya and its unpredictable
dictator Muammar
al Qaddafi, Reagan authorized the bombing of the terrorist camps. American aircr
aft also struck
Qaddafi’s home, but the colonel was not home when the bombs fell. Nevertheless, he
got the
message, and Libya dropped off the international terrorist radar screen for the
remainder of the
decade. World terrorism fell sharply alongside the declining power of the Soviet
Union, to the point
where the number of reported incidents by 1987 was about half that of 1970.71
Only in one foreign policy situation—removal of the communist government in Nicara
gua—was
Reagan unable to make the progress he had hoped for. The communist regime in Nic
aragua under
Daniel Ortega, funded and equipped by Castro, not only gave the Soviets a footho
ld on the Central
American mainland, but it also provided a staging area for terrorist activities
against neighbors,
such as El Salvador and Honduras. Reagan was committed to evicting Ortega’s regime
by
supporting the pro-American rebels in his country, the contras. Congressional De
mocrats had
continually thwarted any assistance to the contras, raising fears again and agai
n of another
Vietnam. Despite Reagan’s concerns that Nicaragua could become a second Cuba, the
Democrats
turned back several aid packages. Frustration over this festering problem mounte
d within the
administration.
Reagan also made a serious error by inserting peacekeeping troops in Lebanon. Th
is was an
expensive mistake, which he quickly repented. In 1983 he had dispatched American
marines to
Beirut to separate warring militias there. A suicide bomber drove a truck full o
f explosives through
sentry checkpoints and blew up the marine barracks at the Beirut airport, killin
g 241 marines and
wounding more than 100. Lebanon caused the president to rethink the key requirem
ents for any
future U.S. action. Military forces, he determined, should be committed only und
er the following
conditions: (1) if the cause is “vital to our national interest,” (2) if the commitm
ent is made with
“clear intent and support needed to win the conflict,” (3) if there is “reasonable ass
urance” that the
cause “will have the support of the American people and Congress,” and (4) as a last
resort, when
no other choices remain.72 Between 1988 and 2002, three U.S. presidents committe
d American
forces (only two sent ground troops) to three major engagements—the Gulf War, the
Bosnia/Kosovo conflict, and the war on terror in Afghanistan. In two of the thre
e, Reagan’s
conditions were met, and both engagements proved militarily successful, receivin
g full backing of
the public and Congress. However, in the third (Bosnia/Kosovo), where only U.S.
air units were
involved, the record was mixed: there was no vital interest, other options were
not exhausted, and
the public was far from united.
Later, in his dealings with the USSR, Reagan added yet one more strategic object
ive, known as the
Reagan doctrine. Rather than contain the Soviet Union, the United States should
actively attempt to
roll it back. Freedom, he observed, “is not the sole prerogative of a lucky few, b
ut the inalienable
and universal right of all human beings….” He predicted that “Marxism-Leninism would b
e tossed
on the ash heap of history like all other forms of tyranny that preceded it.”73
Microprocessors and Missiles
It was at that point that the new computer/information sector converged with Rea
gan’s steadfast
goal of defeating Soviet communism to produce one of the most amazing wonder wea
pons of all
time. Perhaps the most amazing thing about it—the weapon was a space-based defense
shield
called Star Wars—was that it was not built and still has not been deployed (althou
gh parts of the
technology are in use). Understanding the phenomenal impact of the computer on n
ational security
in the cold war, however, requires a cursory review of America’s computer industry
.
The rise of computers dates from Charles Babbage’s nineteenth-century punch cards
to the ENIAC
computer of World War II. A key breakthrough occurred in 1952, when Texas Instru
ments
researchers discovered that silicon, which could sustain temperatures of 1,200 d
egrees Celsius, was
the perfect sealant for a transistor. In 1971 another company, Intel, managed to
put an entire
computer on a single chip called a microprocessor.
Virtually every other machine in human history had gotten more powerful by getti
ng larger. This
fact was epitomized by the internal combustion engines in use in Detroit’s “muscle c
ars” at the very
time the personal computer (PC) was invented. Obversely, computers promised to b
ecome more
powerful the smaller they got, and to work faster the hotter they became. Chips,
whose central
element was silicon (available from ordinary sand), thus portended to offer a li
mitless resource,
overthrowing the tyranny of physical materiality to a great extent. Finally, com
puters reinforced the
pattern in American history that the most significant technological breakthrough
s never come from
leaders in the field but from total unknowns—many of them completely outside the f
ield of their
great success.
Within five years of the microprocessor’s invention, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak,
two California
college dropouts, founded the personal computer industry with Apple Computers, I
nc., in the Jobs
family garage. Selling each Apple for $666, Jobs and Wozniak gained reputations
as geniuses, and
their company joined the Fortune 500 in less time than any company in history.74
Apple was
quickly eclipsed by other computer companies, but Jobs and Wozniak had “taken a te
chnology of
government and big business…and humanized it, putting power in the hands of the pe
ople in the
most immediate sense of the term.”75 Starting from a time of essentially no comput
ers in homes,
the U.S. computer “population” had swelled to one computer for every 2.6 people by 1
990. This
amounted to the most rapid proliferation of a product in human history: the PC t
ook only sixteen
years to reach one fourth of all Americans compared to radio’s twenty-two years, e
lectricity’s
forty-six years, and television’s twenty-six years.76
Computer technology alone did not ensure the success of the PC, however. An equa
lly important
breakthrough came from a Seattle-born Harvard dropout named Bill Gates, who, alo
ng with partner
Paul Allen, cracked the language problem of programming computers, introducing B
ASIC in 1975,
and founded Microsoft. Gates eventually refined and popularized the DOS system,
used by
virtually all computers by the 1990s. Solving the language problem was the equiv
alent of putting
all of the trains of the 1850s on the same gauge rails. Gates reached his apex w
ith the introduction
of Windows, which used a point-and-click “mouse” controller to give the computer com
mands. In
the process, he became the richest American in history, with a personal wealth e
xceeding that of
Carnegie or Rockefeller in dollar equivalents.77 Jobs, Gates, and the “boys of Sil
icon Valley” had
not only transformed the information industry, but had touched off a revolution
as profound as the
industrial revolution, redefining every activity in terms of measurement, improv
ement, or
facilitation through the application of computers. More important, as they did s
o, the prices of
computers (especially microprocessors) plummeted, making them almost literally d
irt cheap.78 All
that remained was to find a way for computers to “talk” to each other or, to stay wi
th the railroad
metaphor, to hook all the train tracks together.
In 1969, under a Pentagon contract, four universities connected their computers,
and three years
later e-mail was developed. By 1980, some online news and discussion groups had
appeared.
Although the World Wide Web was not formally inaugurated until 1991, and the ear
ly Internet was
still complex and highly limited to select users, it was nevertheless hurtling f
ull speed toward the
business and civilian sectors. Government was involved in the original Pentagon
hookups, but true
intercomputer communication did not occur until the free market found ways to ex
ploit its
commercial potential.
This promise was seen in the burst of patent activity. (The total number of pate
nts in the United
States actually fell until the Reagan tax cuts.) High-temperature superconductor
s appeared early in
the decade, which set in motion a torrent of patents—just under 150,000 by 1998, o
r triple what the
number had been in 1980. This was the most rapid patent expansion in American hi
story, eclipsing
the period 1945–75, which had seen the introduction of the transistor, the polio v
accine, and the
microprocessor.79
Computer technologies played a critical role in ending the cold war but only whe
n they were placed
in the policy “hands” of a leader who had the insight to use them to the fullest adv
antage. That
leader was Ronald Reagan. In his first press conference, the president announced
his opposition to
the SALT II treaty, which the Senate had not passed in the wake of the Soviet in
vasion of
Afghanistan. Announcing his intention to rectify the imbalance in forces between
the United States
and the USSR, Reagan signaled to the communist leadership that he would never al
low the Soviet
Union to attain military superiority. It was a message that terrified the entren
ched Soviet leadership.
In one of Yuri Andropov’s final decrees before stepping down from his fifteen-year
term as
chairman of the KGB, he stated that the most pressing objective of all Soviet sp
ies, whatever their
rank or specialty, was to ensure that Reagan was not reelected.80 Soviet resista
nce only convinced
Reagan all the more. In short order, Reagan had authorized the construction of o
ne hundred B-1
bombers, continued funding of the controversial B-2 Stealth bomber, commissioned
a speedy
review of the MX missile to determine the most survivable deployment disposition
, and ordered the
armed forces to deploy cruise missiles (some of them with nuclear warheads) on a
ll available
platforms. At the same time that he ditched SALT II, Reagan offered genuine redu
ctions under the
new Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START), but movement from the Soviet side oc
curred only
after the Reagan buildup. Moreover, the powerful Trident submarines went on stat
ion concurrent
with Reagan’s inauguration, and so, in a heartbeat of time, the window of vulnerab
ility slammed
shut.81
To anyone capable of evaluating the strength of the U.S. and Soviet economies, R
eagan’s defense
budget illustrated another reality: he intended to spend the Soviets into the gr
ound. The United
States could continue to grow its defense sector severalfold without severe econ
omic disruption.
Soviet leaders knew that, and they knew they could not. Perhaps even more obviou
s, there was an
innovation gap between the communist and capitalist systems that translated into
nonmarket sectors
like the military. A top-down structure like Soviet Russia adopted new technolog
ies reluctantly and
eyed with suspicion anything that threatened to overturn the existing military h
ierarchy.82 The vise
had been set. On March 8, 1983, Reagan gave it another twist.
Speaking to the American Association of Evangelicals, Reagan told the assembled
clergy that
“appeasement…is folly,” for they could not ignore the “aggressive impulses of an evil em
pire.”83
Intellectuals and the media were angered and dumbfounded by the speech, which wa
s received
quite differently behind the Iron Curtain. Two former Soviet historians later re
minded westerners,
“The Soviet Union finds life-giving energy only in expansionism and an aggressive
foreign
policy.”84
The “evil empire” speech paved the way for one of the most momentous events of the p
ost–World
War II era. On March 23, 1983, in a television address, after revealing previous
ly classified
photographs of new Soviet weapons and installations in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Gren
ada, and
reviewing the Soviet advantage in heavy missiles, Reagan surprised even many of
his supporters by
calling for a massive national commitment to build a defense against ballistic m
issiles. He urged
scientists and engineers to use any and all new technologies, including (but not
limited to) laserbeam
weapons in space.
A hostile press immediately disparaged the program, calling it Star Wars after t
he 1977 George
Lucas film, but unwittingly the media and critics had only underscored the moral
superiority of the
system. In the film Star Wars everyone knew that Luke was the good guy and the e
vil emperor was
a decrepit and corrupt dictator, much like the Soviet tyrants. Reagan’s concept ba
ffled reporters and
Washington liberal elites who secretly viewed it as lacking sufficient intellect
ual weight. Stu
Spencer, a political strategist, explained why Reagan was at once so popular wit
h the public and so
despised by the chattering classes: “Reagan’s solutions to problems were always the
same as the
guy in the bar.”85
The Gipper had always viewed MAD as an insane policy. He told Lou Cannon, “It’s like
you and
me sitting here in a discussion where we are each pointing a loaded gun at each
other, and if you
say anything wrong or I say anything wrong, we’re going to pull the trigger.”86 As e
arly as 1967
he had been asking scientists and engineers about the technology of defeating IC
BMs with
antimissiles. He found support from Admiral James Watkins, the chief of naval op
erations, a
devout Catholic who hated MAD and who was outraged by a pastoral letter from the
U.S. Catholic
bishops condemning the nuclear arms race without ever implicating the USSR as it
s cause. Watkins
and army general John Vessey were encouraged to get beyond the narrow MAD thinki
ng that had
shackled the United States for twenty years.
Kremlin insiders were terrified about the proposed program, largely because they
knew it would
work. Since the early 1970s, Soviet scientists and engineers had conducted a ded
icated program of
testing for ruby quartz lasers and charged-particle beam weapons. When confronte
d by the massive
cost of such weapons, however, especially when having to acquire technology comm
onplace in the
United States, the Soviet Union gave up on lasers in favor of blunt instruments
like the single
warhead silo-buster missiles.
Several realities of Star Wars were irrelevant. It would not be ready for years.
It might violate
existing arms control treaties (but not the proposed START). Even when deployed,
it could not be
100 percent effective against incoming warheads. And there were other complaints
about Reagan’s
proposal. America’s allies, except for the staunch supporter Margaret Thatcher, pr
ime minister of
England, were ill at ease with anything that would give either side a distinct e
dge, a stance that had
evolved from the fear of provoking the Soviets into an invasion the Europeans co
uld not withstand.
The Soviets railed against it. But all of these criticisms of the Strategic Defe
nse Initiative (SDI), as
the program was formally called, were completely irrelevant to its intended resu
lt: to render
obsolete, once and for all, much of the USSR’s advantage in nuclear missiles.87
Reagan had been briefed on the concept in 1982. He and his national security adv
iser, Robert S.
McFarlane, both despised the MAD strategy, believing it was both immoral and des
tabilizing. It
locked the country into a position of barely staying even with the Soviets inste
ad of permitting
opportunities to seek superiority. Once he and McFarlane agreed on SDI, it took
only a year to
flesh out and propose in a national policy initiative. Star Wars “was an example o
f Reagan’s ability
to grasp a big new idea, simplify it, and sell it to the American people with co
nsummate skill.”88
He wanted reductions, not limitations, but he knew that the Soviets would never
negotiate while
they held all the cards. Star Wars changed all that, literally in the space of a
n hour.
The Soviets had spent the better part of two decades and hundreds of billions of
dollars
constructing a specific class of weapons that, now, literally could be rendered
useless in a matter of
years. Clearly the Soviets knew SDI would work, and fully expected the United St
ates to build and
deploy it. That assumption left the Kremlin with two options, neither of them go
od. First, the
Soviets could try to counteract SDI through technical modifications to their mis
siles—hardening
the shells, spinning the rockets in flight, and using decoys. None of these were
pursued because
every one involved adding weight or cost to the missiles, and the USSR was alrea
dy spending
approximately 25 percent of its GNP on the military.
A second alternative was to defeat Star Wars through advanced computer applicati
ons, finding
ways to outguess the SDI satellites. Reagan, however, had already thwarted that
by banning
advanced technology sales to the Soviet Union. The Soviets’ hysteria over SDI, whi
ch became even
more apparent later, belies the idea still promoted by some liberals that it had
little effect in the
downfall of the USSR. As Vladimir Lukhim, former Soviet ambassador to the United
States, later
said, “It’s clear SDI accelerated our catastrophe by at least five years.”89
Communism’s Last Gasp
After Leonid Brezhnev died in 1982, and his successor, Yuri Andropov, died two y
ears later, the
leadership of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union fell to another ailing lea
der, Konstantin
Chernenko. In 1985 he, too, died, at which time Mikhail Gorbachev, the “young” (fift
y-four-yearold)
new general secretary took control of the Kremlin. Gorbachev was immediately cel
ebrated in
the western media as a new type of communist who, journalists contended, underst
ood incentives.
Lauded as a sophisticated and sensible reformer, Gorbachev differed little from
any of his three
dead predecessors, except that they were dead communists and he was still breath
ing. He did admit
that the Soviet Union was in trouble. A dedicated Marxist-Leninist, married to a
teacher of
Marxism-Leninism, Gorbachev had no intention of abandoning the dream of victory
over the West.
As Arkady Shevchenko, a Soviet diplomat, pointed out, “Men do not reach the pinnac
le of
Communist power without…an abiding commitment to the rightness of the Soviet syste
m.”90 As
late as 1987, Gorbachev still thought “the works of Lenin and his ideals of social
ism…an
inexhaustible source of…creative thought, theoretical wealth, and moral sagacity.”91
Indeed, Gorbachev saw the Stalin era and the Brezhnev period as simply a pervers
ion of communist
ideology, not its failure. In speeches before foreign audiences, he routinely po
rtrayed the Soviet
economy as “fundamentally sound and merely fatigued.”92 But his practical nature tol
d him that
the USSR was taking a beating in Afghanistan and was hopelessly outclassed by th
e U.S. economy,
and that Reagan’s Star Wars proposal had theoretically eliminated the only signifi
cant advantage
the USSR still held over America—its ICBMs.93
Gorbachev also found himself bound by Andropov’s policy of installing mobile, shor
t-range SS-20
nuclear missiles west of the Ural Mountains. Although a smaller and potentially
less destructive
class of missiles, the SS-20s were in fact extremely destabilizing weapons. Thei
r mobility made
them impossible to verify in treaty negotiations: How many were there? Where wer
e they? Also,
unlike every previous class of nuclear weapon employed by the Soviet Union, thes
e missiles were
not aimed at the United States, but at European capitals (Bonn, Brussels, Paris,
London). Their
purpose was crystal clear. They existed to frighten Europeans into breaching the
NATO pact,
“delinking” Europe from the U.S. nuclear umbrella. Once that had been accomplished,
the Soviets
could again regain the offensive through intimidation and, if necessary, well-pl
aced force.
Jimmy Carter had committed, in principle, to offsetting these weapons with Persh
ing and groundbased
cruise missiles. Whether he ever would have deployed them was a question left un
answered
by his defeat at the polls, but Reagan certainly had no hesitation in meeting th
e Soviet response.
Working closely with Margaret Thatcher, Reagan persuaded NATO heads to accept th
e U.S.
missiles on European soil. On November 14, 1983, after the Kremlin refused to wi
thdraw its SS-
20s, American cruise missiles and Pershings arrived in England and West Germany.
When
Gorbachev ascended to power, he intuitively concluded that the last hope of Sovi
et communism lay
in the “Euromissiles,” and Soviet propagandists mounted a massive campaign to intimi
date the
Europeans into demanding the removal of the NATO weapons. Soviet spy Vasili Mitr
okhin
reported that the KGB was confident it “possessed a nerve-hold on Western public o
pinion when it
came to European attitudes toward the United States and NATO.”94
Still attempting to shape American public opinion, the Soviets supported and fun
ded the nuclear
freeze movement, which sought to freeze all new construction or deployment of nu
clear weapons,
leaving the Soviets with a huge strategic advantage. This included a “status quo a
nte,” that would
return Europe to its condition before the missiles were installed. Virtually the
entire European Left
mobilized, using massive parades and demonstrations to intimidate the NATO gover
nments.
By the time Gorbachev had become general secretary—and inherited both Afghanistan
and the
Euromissile crisis—he knew that he could not defeat the West. Gorbachev never cons
idered a non-
Communist Soviet Union. As dissident Vladimir Bukovsky has said, “He wants to save
it, together
with his skin.”95 But the general secretary could read, and his senior economist a
t the Soviet
Institute of U.S. and Canadian Studies and economic adviser, Alexander Zaichenko
, warned him
that if he tried to rebuild the Soviet economic glass house, “it would shatter.”96 Z
aichenko pointed
out to Gorbachev that the USSR was spending 20 percent of its GNP on weapons and
research,
whereas the United States was spending only 3 to 4 percent.
Reagan appreciated Gorbachev’s position, and he sensed in him a Russian leader who
could
actually be approached on a personal level. In 1985, at a Geneva meeting, Reagan
managed to spirit
Gorbachev away from his advisers—just the two men and their interpreters in a smal
l cabin with a
fire—and he spoke plainly, face-to-face with the communist premier. By the time th
e hour-and-ahalf
meeting ended, Reagan had told Gorbachev bluntly, “You can’t win” an arms race, then h
e
offered the olive branch by inviting the Russian to visit the United States. Gor
bachev accepted,
then insisted Reagan come to Moscow. Meeting privately, the leaders of the two s
uperpowers had
accomplished far more than their advisers ever thought possible.97
It did not hurt Reagan’s leverage that the Soviets found themselves bogged down in
Afghanistan
fighting against the Muslim rebels. At first, Gorbachev had planned to sharply e
scalate their attacks
on the rebels, but in March 1985, Reagan and his advisers developed a plan to ar
m the Afghans
with a powerful Stinger antiaircraft missile. New evidence shows that although t
he CIA had tried to
keep the Pentagon from providing support to the rebels (because it would interfe
re with low-level
programs the CIA had), Reagan and a group of CIA officers nevertheless managed t
o get Stinger
missiles into the hands of the anticommunist forces.98 The missiles gave the Afg
han warriors
(including a young radical named Osama bin Laden) the capability of shooting dow
n Soviet
helicopters and even low-level fighters. Soviet losses mounted.
Following the failure of the nuclear-freeze propaganda campaign, Gorbachev gave
up on the
Euromissles. He agreed to remove the SS-20s, and opened up a dialogue with Reaga
n leading to the
Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty(1987). The INF Treaty was the first of
its kind. Both
sides agreed to withdraw their weapons and to destroy the SS-20s and the Pershin
gs. From there it
appeared that Reagan’s START Treaty would have clear sailing. In fact, however, it
would not be
needed: the Soviet Union would collapse before further treaties were required. W
hen Reagan left
office, he had greatly helped to cut down the rotting tree of Soviet communism.
All that was
needed for it to topple was a push from his successor.
Morning in America
Not since 1972 had a starker contrast been put before the American electorate th
an in the election
of 1984. Reagan’s conservatism had ridden a wave of triumph since 1980: the tax cu
ts had
produced a tremendous boom, the stock market had taken off, and the armed forces
were resupplied
and rearmed. More important, the nation had shaken off much of the self-doubt th
at had lingered
since Vietnam and deepened under Carter. At the GOP convention renominating Reag
an and Bush,
the theme was “It’s morning in America.” Reagan’s natural optimism merged with the rapid
ly
improving state of the Union to make him almost unbeatable.
Democrats ran former Minnesota senator and former vice president Walter Mondale,
who was a
New Deal liberal to the left of Carter. Mondale chose a woman, Geraldine Ferraro
, as his running
mate, but the gimmick backfired because she brought to the campaign a tremendous
amount of
baggage in the form of charges of corruption in her husband’s business and in her
own campaign
funding. Mondale, with little in the Reagan record to criticize, focused on the
budget deficits and
hoped to make an issue of the Gipper’s age. But to address the deficits, Mondale p
romised to raise
taxes, claiming he was only being honest, and most Americans were wary of return
ing to the bad
old days of high taxes and high unemployment. When a moderator raised the questi
on of Reagan’s
age in a debate, the president, off the cuff, responded, “I won’t hold my opponent’s y
outh and
inexperience against him.” Even Mondale laughed at that clever turnaround, which l
eft the age
issue in the dust.
Mondale was crushed, losing every state but his home state of Minnesota (which h
e nearly lost as
well), whereas Reagan had rolled up 59 percent of the popular vote, exceeding th
e victory margins
of every other twentieth-century candidate except Roosevelt in 1936. His optimis
m remained
undaunted: “America is back,” he said. “It’s morning again.” For those who wanted to see t
he
United States as the fount of evil in the world, this was distressing indeed.
Of course, to many others—especially those still trapped behind barbed wire and to
wers—his
reelection was a sign of hope. Ten women in a Soviet forced-labor camp managed t
o smuggle out
an unusual message on a tiny piece of tissue paper, which Reagan could barely re
ad with a
magnifying glass. It said, “Mr. President: We, women political prisoners of the So
viet Union,
congratulate you on your reelection…. We look with hope to your country, which is
on the road of
freedom and respect for human rights.”99
Despite his massive victory, Reagan soon faced a hostile Congress. In 1986 contr
ol of the Senate
had shifted back to the Democrats. This was partly because of poor timing for Re
publicans, who
had a number of key retirements. In part it also reflected the unwillingness of
many Republicans to
sign on to Reagan’s values, distancing themselves from supply-side economics and t
he tax cuts. In
1986, Congress, browbeaten by the media over the deficits, tinkered with the tax
code again,
eliminating many deductions. This had no effect on the deficits, but it slightly
reduced the rate of
growth of the economy.
Even so, the phenomenal expansion put in place by the tax cuts in 1981 had produ
ced astonishing
growth. Contrary to Reagan’s critics, who claim the “rich got rich and the poor got
poorer,” the
blessings reached across the entire racial and class strata of American life. Fr
om 1982 to 1988, per
capita income for whites rose 14 percent, and for blacks, 18 percent (compared t
o the Carter years
of 2.4 percent for whites and 1 percent for blacks). Black unemployment was cut
in half under
Reagan, with 2.6 million African Americans joining the labor force, and the numb
er of black
families in the highest income bracket ($50,000 and over) rose by 86 percent.100
Reagan broke ground in other ways. In 1981 he had named the first woman to the S
upreme Court
when he appointed the moderate Arizonan Sandra Day O’Connor, and in 1986, when Chi
ef Justice
Warren Burger retired, Reagan moved conservative William Rehnquist into Burger’s t
op slot.
Rehnquist’s seat was filled by another Reagan appointee, the brilliant Antonin Sca
lia, who would
often be alone in his dissents until the appointment of his future soulmate, Cla
rence Thomas, by
George H. W. Bush. But in 1988, Reagan’s team failed him when, without properly so
lidifying
support first, they sent to the Senate the name of another legal genius, Robert
Bork, a federal
appeals court judge and former U.S. solicitor general. The Democrats lay in wait
for Bork. Caught
completely unawares, the president saw his nominee fail to win Senate approval,
giving rise to a
new term: “to be borked.”
The new-look court (with Anthony Kennedy eventually winning Bork’s slot) reversed
some two
decades of legal liberalism and criminals’-rights decisions. States gradually won
back some of their
constitutionally granted powers, and the Court curtailed the easy filing of disc
rimination suits that
had clogged the judiciary with thousands of questionable claims. Reagan’s goal of “p
rotecting the
law-abiding citizens” was realized, and the public approval numbers reflected its
appreciation.
A more serious reverse for the Reagan agenda came in November 1986 when news sur
faced that
administration officials had been involved in an effort to negotiate an arms-for
-hostage deal with
the Iranians. The United States had a long-standing set policy of refusing to ne
gotiate with
terrorists, but Reagan, who was personally troubled by the suffering of three Am
ericans being held
by radical Muslim groups in the Middle East, approved a deal that sent Iran weap
ons for use in
Iran’s war against Iraq. Even more troubling was the revelation that administratio
n officials,
apparently without Reagan’s approval, had funneled money from that arms trade to t
he contra
rebels fighting in Nicaragua against the communist government there. Marine Colo
nel Oliver
North, who became the focal point of the congressional inquiry that followed, wa
s given immunity
and proceeded to take all the blame himself, insulating Reagan. Democrats on the
committee were
outraged. Having given North immunity to, in their view, implicate the president
, all they had was a
low-level colonel who had admitted to everything!
Critics of Reagan’s administration cite the Iran-contra affair as the central reas
on why the Gipper’s
last four years were not as productive as his first term. Much more damaging, ho
wever, was the
shift in control of the Senate, combined with a host of cabinet-level resignatio
ns, defections, and
even a death (Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge in a rodeo accident). Many of
Reagan’s key
insiders left to take advantage of their temporary fame and marketability. Ultim
ately, however,
Reagan realized that he had only enough time and energy left to see to fruition
a couple of his most
important agenda items, and at the top of the list was the demise of the Soviet
Union.
By 1986, rumblings within the Soviet empire were a concern to the Kremlin. Dissi
dents had
appeared with increasing frequency in Poland, Hungary, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvi
a, and other
corners of the USSR. Meanwhile, more than 100,000 Soviet troops continued to be
pinned down in
Afghanistan, and air losses there to the Stinger missiles (supplied by the Reaga
n administration)
had accelerated. This prompted Gorbachev to issue an order that marked the first
significant fissure
in the Soviet empire’s wall: he ordered the withdrawal of 8,000 troops from Afghan
istan. It was the
first time during the cold war that the Soviets had been stopped by a native pop
ulation.
Reagan kept the pressure on. Visiting the Berlin Wall in 1987 in one of history’s
most memorable
moments, he demanded, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” Ironically, a brief setb
ack in market
capitalism helped to tear down that wall. The Dow Jones dropped 508 points on Oc
tober 19, 1987,
in the worst decline since Black Tuesday in 1929. Much of the drop had to do wit
h market
perceptions that foreign loans, especially to communist countries, would not be
repaid. Major banks
turned off the credit spigots, and money flowing into Eastern Europe dried up. A
nger over the false
promises of communism boiled over in May 1988, when Hungary removed its single-p
arty
government and began to roll up its section of the Iron Curtain. Gorbachev, stun
g by Afghanistan,
did not react. Poland followed.
On election day in the United States, November 4, 1988—when Reagan’s successor, Geor
ge H. W.
Bush was winning his own landslide—a million people marched in East Berlin. Five d
ays later, the
crowds took picks and axes to the Berlin Wall, destroying it and signaling the b
eginning of the end
of the cold war. “It’s morning in America,” Reagan’s 1984 reelection campaign theme had
proclaimed, and when the Gipper turned over the reins of power to Bush in Januar
y 1989, it was
morning throughout much of the world. Ronald Reagan was in no small degree respo
nsible for that
dawn.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
The Moral Crossroads, 1989–2000
Win One for the Gipper
When the Soviet Union abruptly fell apart in 1991, the nemesis that had opposed
the United States
in the cold war for almost fifty years vanished overnight. Communism’s demise stun
ned observers
across the ideological spectrum, instantly changing the focus of American domest
ic politics.
Republicans, who had championed a strong, well-funded military, suddenly found t
hemselves
without a major issue, and Democrats, who had complained that the military-indus
trial complex
siphoned off resources from needed social programs, no longer had an excuse for
failing to solve
domestic problems. Moreover, Republicans found that some of their voting base—engi
neers and
defense-sector workers—had suffered an economic recession caused by the very succe
ss of
Reagan’s policies. Without the issue of Soviet communism to sharpen political choi
ces, a move to
the middle by both parties was natural, although not necessarily beneficial.
Standing before the exuberant GOP convention in 1988, Reagan urged the delegates
to support his
successor, Vice President George H. W. Bush, the party’s nominee. “Go out there and
win one for
the Gipper,” Reagan enjoined the Republican faithful. And although he would not of
ficially leave
office until January 1989, Reagan cordially and politely stepped off the stage h
e had held for eight
years in order to turn the limelight on Bush. Five years later, in a poignant le
tter to the nation,
Reagan announced he had Alzheimer’s disease. His quick wit faded, as did his healt
h, until his
death in 2004.
Time Line
1988:
George H. W. Bush elected president; Hungary begins rolling up Iron Curtain
1989:
Berlin Wall falls
1990:
Bush violates “read my lips” pledge on taxes; Iraq invades Kuwait; Bush announces Op
eration
Desert Shield
1991:
Operation Desert Storm evicts Iraq from Kuwait; Soviet Union collapses, replaced
by Russia and
independent states
1992:
Bill Clinton elected president; Rodney King beating
1993:
Travelgate; health care bill defeated; Branch Davidian compound at Waco destroye
d by FBI and
ATF agents; World Trade Center bombed by Al Qaeda; U.S. Rangers killed in Somali
raids
1994:
Republicans win House of Representatives for the first time in forty years, pass
es nine tenths of
Contract with America; Special prosecutor appointed to investigate Clinton’s White
water scandal
1995:
Oklahoma City bombing
1996:
Clinton reelected
1998:
Lewinsky scandal breaks; Al Qaeda bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa; Clinton
impeached; air
war against Serbia
1999:
Senate acquits Clinton
2000:
Economy begins to slow; Y2K scare proves groundless
George Herbert Walker Bush came from a political family that many associated wit
h privilege,
even though his own money had come from hard work in the oil business. His fathe
r, Prescott
Bush, had been a U.S. senator, and although the younger Bush had not held as man
y elective
offices as a Walter Mondale or a Richard Nixon, he had been in and around Washin
gton for long
periods in his life. A fighter pilot who had seen combat in World War II, he ret
urned to civilian life
to make a fortune in petroleum, so he knew how the free market worked. He had se
rved as
ambassador, congressman, and, after the Nixon debacles, CIA director, restoring
some of the
confidence in that agency.
Bush suffered from lingering distrust by conservatives because of his 1980 prima
ry campaign
against the clearly more conservative Reagan, during which the Texan had called
Reagan’s supplyside
theories “voodoo economics.”1 He was the last of the Teddy Roosevelt Progressive
Republicans, although he lacked their righteous fervor. In contrast to the Democ
rats, however,
Bush refused to abandon foreign affairs to serendipity. Unfortunately, he saw th
e economy in static
terms, disdaining the benefits of tax cuts. Still, after eight years of defendin
g Reagan’s successful
policies and seeing their benefits, he had no choice in 1988 but to run on the R
eagan record. This
proved to be his great mistake: by lashing himself to a mast that he had no real
faith in, his
convention pledge—“Read My Lips! No New Taxes”—would come back to haunt him. But that
was 1990, and in 1988 Bush convinced enough Republicans that he was, indeed, a c
onservative. To
further solidify their support, he chose young Indiana senator Dan Quayle as his
running mate.
Quayle had a strong promilitary record in the Senate (even though during the cam
paign questions
arose about his serving in the National Guard instead of in the regular army in
Vietnam), and he
had impeccable bona fides with the Reaganites. Unfortunately, he was painted by
the media as a
dim bulb, and he contributed to the image with uninspiring and mistake-prone spe
eches.
Ironically, the real story of the 1988 election was not about what had happened
on the winning
Republican side, but about the troubling changes that had taken place inside the
losing camp and
their long-range implications. Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis, the liberal g
overnor of
Massachusetts, had continued the left-wing tilt of the party. A new rival wing o
f the party, the
Democratic Leadership Council (DLC), had originated from strategist Al From’s stud
y of the 1984
election disaster, which argued that the party had lost the middle-class vote an
d needed to move
toward the center. Although such a strategy might seem like common sense, it ref
lected the
problems of the Great Society party that had become little more than a collectio
n of special
interests—minorities (especially blacks, Hispanics, homosexuals, and feminists), l
abor unions, and
environmentalists. Internal polling by the DLC, however, showed that the Democra
tic Party “was
losing elections because it embraced a public philosophy that repelled the worki
ng-class and
middle-class voters.”2
The DLC leadership took some very un-Democratic stands on certain issues, such a
s favoring free
trade and a willingness to examine minor welfare reform. Members like Tennessee
senator Al Gore
and Arkansas governor Bill Clinton claimed to embrace the new high-tech economy.
Michael
Dukakis also seemed enthusiastic about the high-tech economy, running on the muc
h-ballyhooed
“Massachusetts miracle,” his state’s rebirth of jobs in the computer industry. When Fr
om and other
DLC founders designed the centrist strategy, they envisioned it as providing a v
ehicle to the
presidency for one man—Al Gore.
The strategy ran into trouble when the self-appointed civil rights spokesman Jes
se Jackson
announced plans to run as an unabashed liberal, forming the Rainbow Coalition, s
pecial interest
groups that mainly had victimhood in common. Jackson had two personas. One was w
hen he
appeared in the inner cities, instructing kids to stay off drugs and to avoid ha
ving illegitimate
children. The other Jesse whom most Americans saw was the man who ranted about i
nsufficient
government funding for social programs and cavorted with third-world terrorists.
Jackson beat
Gore in the South, but could not attract the moderate base elsewhere. Jackson’s ca
ndidacy
unintentionally handed the nomination to Michael Dukakis, who by all measures wa
s nearly as
liberal as Jackson.
In the general election, Dukakis actually ran well ahead of Bush early in the ca
mpaign, stressing
competence over ideology. Then Bush’s strategist, Lee Atwater, zeroed in on Dukaki
s’s liberal
policies in Massachusetts, including a prison furlough program. Contrary to the
anti-Bush legends
that have since appeared, it was Democratic Senator Gary Hart, in the primaries,
who premiered the
television ads featuring Willie Horton, an African American criminal who took ad
vantage of his
Massachusetts prison furlough to commit a rape. Atwater borrowed Hart’s concept an
d created a
campaign ad featuring Massachusetts as a revolving door for criminals. Despite t
he fact that all the
faces in the ad were white, Democrats complained that the ad was racist. It prov
ed deadly to the
Dukakis campaign. The coup de grâce was administered by the diminutive governor hi
mself when,
seeking to bolster his image as promilitary, he rode in a tank with only his sma
ll helmeted head
sticking out of the massive armored vehicle. From then on, Dukakis could not esc
ape editorial
cartoons likening him to the cartoon soldier Beetle Bailey. Bush surged into the
lead and on
election day crushed the Massachusetts governor, grabbing 426 electoral votes, f
orty states, and
more than 53 percent of the vote.
Communism Collapses in Europe
George Bush had differences with his predecessor over economic issues, but when
it came to the
cold war, he saw things much the same way as Reagan. Bush continued Reagan’s hard-
line
policies, and no sooner had he taken office than massive anticommunist labor str
ikes occurred in
Poland under the Solidarity movement led by Lech Walesa. At the same time, Hunga
ry announced
it would roll up its portion of the Iron Curtain. Having just pulled troops out
of Afghanistan, Soviet
strongman Mikhail Gorbachev had no appetite for sending tanks into Poland. The U
SSR looked on
as the Poles demanded, and won, an agreement to hold free elections in 1990. Cze
choslovakia and
Romania soon followed; then travel restrictions to West Germany from East German
y were lifted.
Berliners responded, in 1989, by smashing the most visible sign of oppression in
the world—the
Berlin Wall.
At that point, the Soviet Union itself was starting to unravel. Patriots in Esto
nia, Lithuania, and
Latvia—the Baltic Republics brutally seized by Joseph Stalin in 1939—broke ties with
the Soviet
Union, again, with no retribution. Gorbachev, believing his western press clippi
ngs, assumed that
Soviet citizens would view him the way American and European journalists saw him—a
s a “man
of peace” and “reason” who had come to save the world. Instead, Soviet citizens, given
a chance, in
December 1991, to vote for the first time since the communists took power in 191
7, turned the
communists out in consecutive elections once and for all. Subsequently, Boris Ye
ltsin, the
chairman of the Russian parliament, emerged as leader of the anticommunist movem
ent, and
shortly thereafter the once-independent republics, like Ukraine, peeled themselv
es off. Yeltsin
presided over the creation of eleven separate republics, joined under the new Co
mmonwealth of
Independent States (CIS), which had none of the power, communist ideology, or ma
licious intent of
its predecessor. The U.S. Congress authorized nearly half a billion dollars to a
ssist the republics in
becoming stable democracies, but much of the cash disappeared into a cesspool of
bribery and
Mafia-like operations. Lacking a tradition of either private property or rule of
law, Russia would
find that a peaceful transition to American-style capitalism would not come inst
antly.
Ironically, communism almost fell “too fast”: American leaders for decades had suppo
rted
prodemocracy forces in the Soviet Union, but at the moment of communism’s collapse
, Bush and
his advisers appeared cautious, almost reticent, to acknowledge that the Soviet
dictatorship was
gone. They hesitated to recognize many of the newly independent republics.3 The
fact is that like
most western anticommunists, Bush had not anticipated that the USSR would simply
fall apart. He
and Reagan had expected change, but the history of failed rebellions in Hungary,
Czechoslovakia,
and other parts of the communist bloc had convinced them that change would be ev
olutionary, and
slow. For all of Reagan’s insight (much of which had rubbed off on Bush), he did n
ot see the moral
abdication of the Soviet leadership coming. Soviet officials had ceased believin
g in the efficacy of
Marxism/Leninism for years, a development characterized by Valery Boldin, Gorbac
hev’s chief of
staff, as the “internal capitulation” of Soviet leadership. The surrender by Soviet
elites revealed
what Polish dissident Adam Michnik called the “intimate bond [that] exists between
force and
deception…. Deception becomes a method of self-defense.”4 Boldin described the resul
ting
western triumph as “a total rout of the…USSR and the moral devastation of a once pow
erful
adversary.”5
One author noted, “Just before the breakup of the USSR, the view of that country a
s a model of the
most stable and durable regime in the world had gained wide acceptance among Wes
tern
Sovietologists…there was not one American political scientist who predicted the co
llapse of the
USSR.”6 Richard Pipes, a Harvard Sovietologist, had done so, but he was nearly alo
ne. Most
western intellectuals thought the Soviet government was indestructible, and libe
rals and
conservatives alike had almost universally overrated the Soviet GNP and underrat
ed its arms
production.
There is a certain truth to the notion that freedom itself constituted a potent
weapon in the demise
of Soviet communism. Freedom’s steady buffeting of the communist system was most v
isible in
Berlin, when, during a concert in the mid-1980s by rock star Bruce Springsteen a
t the Berlin Wall,
a scene took place that at one time would have seemed impossible to the party bo
sses. Springsteen
naturally attracted thousands of free West Berliners, but hundreds of communist
youths showed up
on the other side of the wall to listen. When Springsteen sang “Born in the USA,” th
ere were
thousands of ostensibly good socialists singing along, “Born…in the USA, I was…born in
the
USA.” Soviet spy Vasili Mitrokhin’s smuggled notes revealed that popular music and r
adio
broadcasts from the West produced “unhealthy signs of interest in…pop stars” and led t
o an
“almost surreal…musical subversion” in some cities.7 The KGB estimated that 80 percent
of its
youth listened to western rock music broadcasts, which “gave young people [in the
eyes of the
KGB] a distorted idea of Soviet reality, and led to incidents of a treasonable n
ature.”8 Spy memos
warned that rock and roll “has a negative influence on the interest of society, in
flames vain
ambitions and unjustified demands, and can encourage the emergence of informal…gro
ups with a
treasonable tendency.”9 Just as Ike had fought the Soviets of the 1950s with Louis
Armstrong,
Reagan and Bush ironically benefited from the influences of Madonna and Kiss!
The American public, although pleased with the apparent end of the cold war, rem
ained skeptical
and puzzled, unsure if the new system in Russia could last. A decade after the f
all of communism,
there has not yet been a single national celebration over the success, nor a mon
ument to the victory.
Communism went out with a whimper, not a bang, hobbling the victory dance.
Even before the cold war embers had stopped smoking, Bush and the Democrats in C
ongress
started spending the “peace dividend” they anticipated would result from the reducti
on of military
forces. The demobilization that ensued, although smaller in scale than the reduc
tion in force
associated with any previous war, nevertheless produced economic and social turm
oil. In a period
of only a few years, aerospace and shipbuilding giants were nearly out of busine
ss; thousands of
engineers, especially in California, received pink slips. Companies scrambled to
get out of defense
contracting. Soldiers, airmen, and sailors were laid off, or “riffed,” an acronym fo
r “reduction in
force.” Bush foresaw a new world order arising out of the ashes of communism’s defea
t. His
unfortunate phrase set off the paranoid at both political extremes, who for year
s had prophesied that
a secret international United Nations–directed body would dominate the world’s affai
rs. Right-wing
conspiracy theorists fretted about Bush’s involvement in the Trilateral Commission
and the Council
on Foreign Relations, whereas left-wing paranoids saw the new world order as the
final triumph of
a greedy oil cartel. Bush lacked the political imagination for such global nonse
nse. What the
verbally challenged president meant was that the world agreed communism was doom
ed, and the
developed nations (including Russia) had to think in terms of cooperation instea
d of conflict. To
that end, he sought to bring many former East-bloc countries into NATO, and in 1
991 Congress
provided $400 million to help Ukraine and other fragments of the Soviet empire d
ismantle their
nuclear weapons.
Saddam Hussein, Megalomaniac
Military leaders, having learned their lessons in Vietnam, had already sensed th
at the next war
would not resemble the massive armored frontal battle in European forests or a S
outheast Asian
jungle planned for by strategists of the cold war. In all likelihood, new confli
cts would involve a
confrontation with a third-world power. The generals correctly anticipated the s
tyle of the threat,
but they failed to anticipate the setting.
Communism had barely begun its collapse when Iraqi tanks rolled into neighboring
Kuwait on
August 2, 1990. Claiming that Kuwait was rightfully part of Iraq and illegally s
eparated by
international fiat, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein threatened all of the Persian
Gulf with his large
well-trained army. Hussein, who wore an army uniform, held the title of presiden
t, but he stood in a
long line of third-world dictators like Idi Amin and Muammar al Qaddafi. Despite
repeated
warnings from American and Kuwaiti oil producers (who had witnessed the military
buildup) and
from the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, the Bush administration, preoccupied with Russ
ia, was
unprepared for the Iraqi invasion.
By invading another Arab state—rather than Israel—Hussein had the potential to captu
re and
control large parts of oil production in the Middle East, creating a direct haza
rd to the free flow of
oil at market prices. This danger, in turn, posed a clear risk to American natio
nal security. Hussein
had the largest and best-equipped army and air force (aside from Israel’s) in the
Middle East.
Bush saw the peril of Hussein’s control of the lion’s share of Mideast oil: if Husse
in succeeded in
Kuwait, Saudi Arabia would be next. Uncharacteristically, Bush acted swiftly. De
spite stiff
resistance from Democrats in Congress, Bush mobilized an international response
in the diplomatic
arena: the United Nations imposed economic sanctions and prepared for military a
ctions. He
allowed a reasonable time for the economic pressure to work, at the same time in
stituting a buildup
of troops in Saudi Arabia. Persuading the Muslim Saudis to permit large continge
nts of foreign
(largely Christian and Jewish) troops in their nation was a foreign relations co
up for the American
president. Under operation Desert Shield, the United States sent 230,000 troops
to ensure that the
Iraqis did not invade Saudi Arabia, a force General Norman Schwartzkopf referred
to as a
“tripwire.”
Democrats opposed plans to liberate Kuwait, raising the specter of another Vietn
am. Senator Ted
Kennedy and Congressman Richard Gephardt (Democrat of Missouri) warned of “80,000
body
bags” returning U.S. dead from the Persian Gulf if a war broke out—a number greater
than the
entire toll of dead in the ten-year Vietnam conflict. But some isolationist cons
ervatives, such as
Nixon and Reagan speechwriter and presidential candidate Patrick Buchanan, also
bitterly
condemned Bush’s actions as unchecked internationalism. A small antiwar movement o
rganized,
brandishing signs saying no blood for oil and bury your car.10
The administration, however, had no intention of being sucked into another protr
acted conflict, and
in fact intended to apply the lessons of Vietnam, which strategists and military
theoreticians had
studied for years. Moreover, Bush followed Reagan’s rules for engagement. Bush and
his strategic
leadership team of Joint Chiefs chairman Colin Powell (the highest-ranking Afric
an American
soldier ever) and Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney ensured from the outset th
at three critical
differences would separate the war against Iraq from the failed Vietnam experien
ce. First, Bush
mobilized an international alliance such as the world had never seen. After secu
ring authorization
from the United Nations to repel Iraqi aggression, Bush persuaded (among others)
Saudi Arabia,
Egypt, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, and most of the NATO countries
to send
military forces totaling 200,000. More impressive, he gained assurances from Isr
ael that if the
Iraqis launched missile or air attacks on the Jewish state, Israel would refrain
from counterattacks,
which could have caused all the other Muslim members of the alliance to quit.
Working with Russian leaders, Bush also obtained promises that Russia would not
sell weapons to
Iraq or offer other military assistance. This was remarkable in itself: it was t
he first time since the
cold war had begun that the two superpowers were aligned on the same side of a f
ight. Finally,
although Japan’s pacifist post–World War II constitution prohibited it from sending
ground troops,
Bush gained a commitment for substantial Japanese funding of the effort. Since J
apan had to import
100 percent of its oil, the Persian Gulf conflict clearly affected Japan’s nationa
l security. All in all,
Bush had accomplished a stunning diplomatic coup by aligning virtually the entir
e world against
Hussein, even to the point of neutralizing the Israeli-Arab antagonisms.
Second, Bush’s team was committed to not repeating the incrementalism that had cha
racterized
American involvement in Southeast Asia. Instead, in the Persian Gulf the United
States followed
the Reagan rules of identifying a clear objective, then deploying overwhelming f
orce and sufficient
matériel to accomplish the task. Whereas it took years to build up American forces
in Vietnam to
the 565,000 level, allied forces in the Gulf numbered 430,000 after only a few m
onths. Moreover,
the allies did not act until they had massed sufficient forces.
Finally, Bush established a clear exit strategy: liberate Kuwait (and force the
removal of all Iraqi
troops) and significantly diminish Iraq’s ability to threaten her neighbors again.
Although critics
complained about the word “significantly,” the objectives given to Allied Commander
General
Norman Schwartzkopf set specific reduction levels in tanks that would leave Iraq
with no more
than a “foot-soldier” army. As Powell had told his staff early on, “I won’t be happy unt
il I see those
tanks destroyed…. I want to finish it; to destroy Iraq’s army on the ground.”11
“Cut Off the Head and Kill the Body”
Air power as a decisive (strategic) factor in war had been hotly debated since W
orld War II’s
“strategic bombing survey.” After Vietnam, criticism of air effectiveness escalated,
to the point
where the air force, army, and navy each undertook internal studies of the use o
f air power and
engaged in planning for joint operations in which units of the different service
s would work
together on the battlefield.12
Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait offered a battlefield test of air power and its new d
octrines. Here was
a modernized enemy force, complete with top-level Soviet fighter planes, thick a
ir defense around a
major city, and troops who were dug in and (according to the prevailing views of
strategic bombing
in World War II) relatively safe from attacks from the air. Yet allied air strik
es so effectively
eliminated enemy opposition that the United States suffered fewer ground troops
killed than in any
major conflict in history, and the majority of those who perished were killed in
either incidents of
friendly fire or from a single long-range Scud missile attack on a barracks. Act
ual combat losses to
the Iraqis were minuscule: 148 killed in the actual course of fighting.13
Using antiradar missiles, the coalition forces, in a matter of hours, eradicated
all of Iraq’s ability to
“see” allied aircraft.14 Without enemy radar to contend with, coalition aircraft los
ses dropped to
one aircraft per 1,800 sorties, a rate fourteen times lower than during Vietnam’s
Linebacker II.15
And nowhere was that total control more evident than in the air war against armo
r and men. Even
the hunkered-down, dug-in Iraqi armor was helpless against the air campaign. One
crew of an F-
111 bomber summed matters up in a nutshell: “If armies dig in, they die. If they c
ome out of their
holes, they die sooner.” Another likened the Iraqi army to a “tethered goat.”16 Using
synthetic
aperture radar (SAR) and other radar systems, virtually every vehicle that moved
could be
identified and tracked. “It was mind-boggling,” one coalition radar operator marvele
d: “Sometimes
there were so many [vehicles] you couldn’t even count them all…. Then all of a sudde
n you don’t
see any more traffic…. [and they] left the road or stopped. Then you use your SAR
and shazam!
All of a sudden, we’ve got the exact number of vehicles, where they would be parke
d and we
would relay that information to fighters and the Army….”17
Mind-boggling was a good term for the carnage of Iraqi armored vehicles that fol
lowed. Over the
course of the war, to February 14, 1991, the radar-supported bombers decimated t
he Iraqis,
“plinking” 1,300 out of 6,100 tanks, and even increasing that rate, taking out 500 p
er day at the
peak of operations! Using the advanced radar systems, high-altitude aircraft wou
ld simply “paint”
an armored vehicle or tank with a laser, and attack craft would launch fire-and-
forget laser-guided
weapons that would lock onto the targets while the plane looked for another mena
ce. Powell’s
prophecy—that he would “cut off the head and kill the body” of the Iraqi army—had been
fulfilled.18
Schwarzkopf’s daring February twenty-third offensive, which he called the Hail Mar
y, called for a
feint into Kuwait where the Iraqi defenses were thickest, followed by a second f
ake by amphibious
troops at the coast. Then he would use the cover of night to conduct a massive a
nd unprecedented
shift of tanks, troops, helicopters, and, most important, fuel and supply vehicl
es, far to the Iraqi
flank in the desert. The war was over before it began: the Iraqis lost 76 percen
t of their tanks, 55
percent of their armored personnel carriers (APCs), and 90 percent of their drea
ded artillery in
approximately one hundred hours.19 Iraqi soldiers, starving and mercilessly poun
ded by air strikes,
surrendered to CNN newsmen, armed only with microphones, and deserted at rates o
f 25 to 30
percent.20 Sensing they would be slaughtered if they remained anywhere near thei
r vehicles, Iraqi
drivers and gunners abandoned thousands of trucks, tanks, APCs, and scout cars o
n the famous
Highway of Death leading out of Kuwait City. Estimates of Iraqi troop losses, al
though not entirely
reliable, put the enemy death toll at 100,000, and the wounded at an equal numbe
r. Air power had
proved so thoroughly destructive that the army only had to fire 2 percent of the
220,000 rounds of
ammunition it had ordered for the theater.21 The allied effort was a classic exa
mple of what Victor
Davis Hansen called the western way of war, “all part of a cultural tradition to e
nd hostilities
quickly, decisively, and utterly.”22
On February twenty-eighth, Hussein agreed to allied terms. Unfortunately, at no
time did the
United Nations resolution or American objectives include taking Baghdad or overt
hrowing
Hussein, leaving him as a malignancy in the region for another decade. At the ti
me, however,
Bush’s advisers feared such an action would have deployed American troops as “peacek
eepers” in
the middle of violent factions fighting for control of a Saddam-less Iraq. The e
xperience in the
Reagan administration when the marines were killed by a suicide truck bomber in
Lebanon
remained fresh in the president’s mind. Meanwhile, Democrats at home used every op
portunity to
warn of a quagmire or another Vietnam. Coalition partners, especially Islamic st
ates like Egypt,
Turkey, and Saudi Arabia, feared that a fundamentalist Shiite regime might arise
out of a Husseinless
Iraq. In short, from the perspective of 1992, there were compelling reasons to q
uit. These were
reasons that—even with the hindsight of the later attacks of 2001—one must conclude
seemed
sound at the time.23
“A Kinder, Gentler America”
Successful prosecution of the Gulf War propelled Bush to unparalleled levels of
popular support—
but only briefly. The public quickly forgot his overseas accomplishments when a
brief recession
ended the decade-long Reagan boom. In 1991 and much of 1992 the economy slowed.
Historically,
it was a mild recession, but the media and the Democratic contenders for preside
nt in 1992 made it
out to be the worst economy in the last fifty years, a phrase Bill Clinton used
repeatedly in his
campaign.
Bush had himself to blame. From the moment he took office, he believed the media
“gloomsters”
and Texas millionaire Ross Perot, who warned that the federal budget deficits ha
d reached
intolerable levels. When considered in real constant dollars, the deficits were
slightly higher than in
past decades, but hardly dangerous. Quite the contrary, the nation’s GNP had grown
faster than the
deficits, reducing the real level of deficits-to-GNP throughout the Reagan/Bush
years. But Bush
had surrounded himself with Keynesian advisers who saw tax increases as the only
solution to
rising deficits.
What followed was one of the most incredible political meltdowns in history. In
1990, pressure
built on Bush to compromise with Democrats in Congress to raise taxes, ostensibl
y to reduce the
deficit. Yet Democratic congresses for thirty years had been comfortable with co
nstant deficits,
most of them proportionally higher than those existing in 1990. Only when it bec
ame a political
weapon did they suddenly exhibit concern about the nation’s finances, and then onl
y in terms of
raising taxes, not in terms of cutting massive federal expenditures. Bush agreed
to cut spending in
return for a $133 billion in new taxes—the largest tax increase in the nation’s hist
ory. The
agreement slammed the top rate back up to 31 percent from 27 percent; imposed so
-called sin taxes
on tobacco and alcohol, which penalized the poor; and eliminated exemptions. Mos
t important, it
put Bush in the position of reneging on his “read my lips, no new taxes” convention
pledge.
Bush sorely underestimated the public resentment of a bald-faced lie, especially
the reaction of
conservatives. Worse, he overestimated the veracity of the Democrats in Congress
, where no
substantive spending cuts took place. In the hinterlands, however, the Republica
n base was
outraged, especially since Bush had marketed himself in 1988 as Reagan’s successor
specifically
on supply-side principles. read my lips: i lied, blared the New York Post’s front
page.24 Many
abandoned the GOP in disgust.
Bush had put himself in a hole: having sided with the Democrats and their tax in
creases, Bush
could not tout tax cuts as a means to end the economy’s slide. In addition, he see
med out of touch
with the lives of ordinary Americans and unwilling to embrace Reagan’s legacy. Whe
reas Reagan
had come into office eager to abolish the Department of Energy and the Departmen
t of Education
(and had failed to do so), Bush had no such prejudices against big government. H
is campaign
theme of a “kinder, gentler America” seemed to agree with Democratic criticisms that
Reagan’s
America had been mean and harsh. Bush celebrated a “thousand points of light,” a phr
ase that
referred to the good deeds of millions of individual Americans who could private
ly shoulder some
responsibilities carried by Uncle Sam. But he lacked a clear vision and obviousl
y did not have
Reagan’s communication skills to enable him to go over the heads of the Washington
/New York
media elites, straight to American citizens.
Even when Bush took positions that were far to the left of his conservative base
, such as pushing
through the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and stricter environmental law
s, he won no
praise from the media, but instead was criticized for not doing enough. When Thu
rgood Marshall,
the only African American on the U.S. Supreme Court, retired, Bush nominated Cla
rence Thomas,
a black conservative federal judge with an impeccable record. Instead of praisin
g Bush’s racial
sensitivity, Thomas was nearly “borked” at the Senate hearings when a University of
Oklahoma
law professor, Anita Hill, claimed Thomas had sexually harassed her. After a hig
h-profile Senate
hearing Thomas was confirmed and became an outstanding and consistent justice.
Thomas was representative of a new class of African Americans who had become suc
cessful and
prosperous with minimal, if any, aid from government. As such, he represented a
significant threat
to the civil rights establishment, whose central objective remained lobbying for
government action
on behalf of those it claimed to represent. Men and women like John Johnson, Mic
hael Jordan,
Herman Cain, and Oprah Winfrey illustrated by their success within the market sy
stem that
political favors played almost no part in economic achievement for blacks. At th
e same time, a new
class of conservative black intellectuals arose—Thomas himself and men like Shelby
Steele,
Walter Williams, Glenn Loury, and Thomas Sowell—that was at odds with the entrench
ed civil
rights leadership, yet were deliberately ignored and trivialized by the media.
Episodes of racial injustice—no matter how unusual or atypical—turned into opportuni
ties to once
again mobilize black political support around civil rights themes. One such even
t occurred in April
1992, when four white Los Angeles police officers attempted to stop a black moto
rist who had run
from them at speeds of more than a hundred miles per hour. The driver, Rodney Ki
ng, repeatedly
resisted the officers, and the police suspected he was high on a narcotic, possi
bly PCP
(psychoactive drug phencyclidine), which diminishes pain receptors. When King di
d not respond to
oral commands, the police beat him with their clubs and hit him with a Taser stu
n gun. A witness
taped the entire episode with a video camera, and King sued the Los Angeles Poli
ce Department for
violations of his civil rights. Tried in Simi Valley, a northern Los Angeles sub
urb, the officers were
acquitted by an all-white jury, some of whom stated that when viewed in context,
the tapes showed
that King had appeared dangerous as he continued to resist.
When the verdict was announced, South-Central Los Angeles broke out in Watts-lik
e riots and
looting, protesting the appearance that the white officers got off the hook. It
took troops three days
to restore order, by which time fifty-four people had died and thousands of buil
dings had been
damaged or destroyed. The Bush Department of Justice quickly hauled the officers
up on federal
civil rights charges, and on April 17, 1992, two of them were found guilty of vi
olating King’s civil
rights and sentenced to thirty months in prison. It would not be the first racia
lly charged case in Los
Angeles to make news during the decade.
“I Didn’t Inhale”
Bush’s weakness on the economy opened the door for a serious challenge to the sitt
ing president
from the Democrats, but it was still one he should have weathered. Instead, Bush
found himself
besieged not by one, but by two political opponents.
Americans had become frustrated with the national debt and the annual deficits,
but were unwilling
to elect individual legislators who would resist the siren song of spending. A d
ynamic developed in
which, to get elected, politicians of both parties would tout their ability to b
ring in dollars locally
while opposing national spending programs in other districts.
Moreover, structural impediments to change had afflicted the House of Representa
tives, where, by
law, spending bills originated. Having held the majority for almost forty years,
the Democrats
dominated committees, and they did so in such a way that there was little debate
or discussion
about many legislative items. Democrats controlled the rules committee, and simp
ly prohibited
extensive analysis of spending bills. Indeed, proposals to cut taxes, to restrai
n spending, and to
force various caps onto the budgetary process never made it to the floor of the
House for a vote.
Democrat leaders killed the proposals in committee, quietly, and away from publi
c roll calls. This
process shielded Democrats from charges from opponents of being big spenders by
keeping the
votes secret: a politician could simply deny that he supported a particular meas
ure and that was the
end of it.
Politicians had also started to become permanent Washington fixtures. Far from t
he Jeffersonian
ideal of citizen legislators, many of the people who ran the nation had never li
ved or worked
outside of Washington; most of the members of Congress were lawyers who had gone
straight from
law school to government work. Few had ever run a business or had had to show a
profit or meet a
payroll. In contrast, as legislators, when government ran short of money, they e
ither ran a deficit or
hiked taxes. There was never any talk of actually cutting back, or belt tighteni
ng. Gradually,
popular resentment built up against “politics as usual.”
It took the right person to tap into this well of anti-Washington sentiment. In
1992, H. Ross Perot, a
Texas billionaire, burst onto the political scene. He had founded Electronic Dat
a Systems (EDS) in
1962, turning it into a cash machine.25 In 1979 he funded a successful effort to
pluck several EDS
employees out of revolutionary Iran, which author Ken Follett later turned into
a best-selling novel,
On the Wings of Eagles. After selling EDS to General Motors, he started Perot Sy
stems. By the
time he began to appear in public forums, Perot possessed a certain amount of cr
edibility. He
initially appealed to many as homey, sensible, and practical, but at the same ti
me, he turned off
elites like those swarming around the Clinton staff. (Clinton communications dir
ector George
Stephanopoulos called Perot a “weird little man who was a ventriloquist’s dummy for
voter anger,”
a comment that itself showed how detached insiders like Stehanopoulos were).26 P
erot’s business
background attracted many who were outraged by out-of-control deficit spending,
and his simplesounding
solutions on the surface had appeal. He played to his role as an outsider, claim
ing he
owed nothing to either of the established parties. Denouncing campaign spending,
Perot refused
federal money and financed himself in 1992. He carefully avoided any abortion po
sition that would
have alienated the sea of moderates, and he stayed away from any specifics in hi
s policy
recommendations for as long as possible. Adept with charts and graphs, Perot was
the master of the
political infomercial, but he faltered badly when confronted by a forceful criti
c.
Unlike Reagan’s, Perot’s simple-sounding solutions were often contradictory and poor
ly grounded
in political realities. After a brief infatuation with Perot, the media turned h
ostile in early summer,
leading the Texan to withdraw from the race in July. The withdrawal, however, wa
s another Perot
ploy to avoid close inspection. He reentered the race in October, when the press
had to pay more
attention to the established candidates, and although the two-month hiatus may h
ave cost him a few
votes, Perot gained much more by avoiding the media scrutiny during the summer.
He hoped to
gain a plurality of the vote in enough states to snatch the presidency from Bush
or Clinton.
The Democrats, in the wake of the 1988 Dukakis debacle, had listened to calls to
move to the
center. That year, Al From decided that Bill Clinton had to be made the chairman
of the DLC, and
he began to organize a structure that would facilitate a White House run by the
DLC chairman. It
was nothing less than a breathtaking transformation of American campaign finance
practices. In
1990, Clinton accepted the position with the promise that he could use the resou
rces of the DLC as
a fund-raising apparatus. Indeed, from the outset, Clinton’s primary purpose at th
e organization was
raising money.
Bolstered by a series of New Democrat studies, Clinton supported several moderat
e positions,
especially free trade through the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) an
d welfare
reform rather than welfare expansion. Along with other New Democrats, Clinton to
uted law-andorder
issues and railed against deficits. Above all, he sought to repackage old, dilap
idated liberal
ideas with new language, calling government spending “investment” and referring to t
axes as
“contributions.”27
At the convention, Clinton chose as his running mate Al Gore of Tennessee, whom
the DLC had
originally intended as its model candidate back in 1988. Awash in money and wiel
ding a series of
policy proposals designed to win back the middle class, Clinton should have been
a formidable
candidate. As it was, he stumbled.
For one thing, he had dodged the draft during the Vietnam war. Reporters who had
known the story
all along and had failed to address it finally began to home in on his flight to
England as a Rhodes
Scholar (where he participated in antiwar protests) and on his manipulation of h
is college ROTC
classification. There were equally damaging allegations of marital infidelity. G
ennifer Flowers, a
former lover, produced a tape-recorded conversation of Clinton telling her to li
e about their
relationship. Once again, the press had known about that relationship and effect
ively buried it until
it could no longer be contained. Appearing with his wife, Hillary, on a 60 Minut
es television
interview, Clinton evaded the Flowers allegations but admitted there had been “pai
n in their
marriage,” and the pair continued on as the happy (and ever politic) couple.28
As the first major candidate from the boomer generation, Clinton portrayed himse
lf as young and
hip, appearing on a nighttime television show in sunglasses to play the saxophon
e with the band,
and answering questions about the type of underwear he wore on MTV. He admitted
to smoking
marijuana—but he “didn’t inhale.” (His brother, Roger, had been jailed for possession of
cocaine.)
When it came to women, Clinton had used state troopers in Arkansas to “introduce” hi
m to various
girls and then employed the bodyguards to transport the females to and from thei
r assignations.
Most of his former sex partners remained silent. The few who did speak up came u
nder withering
fire from Clinton allies, who vilified them as “nuts and sluts.” (A female Clinton s
taffer was hired
to specifically deal with “bimbo eruptions,” claims by other women that they had had
affairs with
the candidate.)
Clinton’s flagrant disregard of traditional morals outraged large segments of the
public, who were
already concerned about high crime rates, rising illegitimacy, soaring divorce n
umbers, and public
schools that suffered from a plague of violence. Although George Bush confidentl
y believed that
his character would stand in stark relief to that of Clinton’s, he himself had bra
zenly lied about the
tax hikes.
On election day, Clinton effectively secured 43 percent of the vote. Bush netted
only 37 percent,
and the spoiler Perot siphoned off 19 percent. Perot’s total was significant, equa
ling the amount
won by Teddy Roosevelt in 1912, when he had essentially denied the presidency to
William
Howard Taft. It would be inaccurate, however, to claim that Perot stole the elec
tion from Bush: exit
polls show that he took votes equally from both established candidates. Perot di
d damage Bush,
however, by muddying the waters on Clinton’s character, and by portraying both par
ties as equally
guilty of deficits, insulating Clinton from tax-and-spend criticisms.
Given Clinton’s anemic popular vote, historians, who, for the most part are libera
ls, have distorted
the 1992 election to portray it as victory for liberalism. Emphasizing the turno
ut, it was claimed the
election “reversed 32 years of steady decline in participation.”29 Yet the additiona
l turnout was not
for liberalism or Clinton, but for Perot, and constituted a protest vote of disg
ust against both major
parties. The election proved little. Bush had run away from his conservative bas
e and alienated the
low-tax crowd, while Clinton, portraying himself as a New Democrat, had adopted
many of the
Republican positions. Perot had offered no specifics whatsoever. Yet Clinton, wh
o ran as a
“moderate,” no sooner took office than he made a hard left turn.
The Clinton Presidency
Understanding the Clinton presidency requires an appreciation for the symbiotic
relationship
between Bill Clinton and his aggressive wife, Hillary. Mrs. Clinton, a Yale Law
School grad and
staffer in the Nixon impeachment, had harbored political ambitions for herself s
ince her
undergraduate days at Wellesley. Her personal demeanor, however, was abrasive an
d irritating and
doused any hopes she had of winning a political seat on her own early in her lif
e. When she met
Clinton at Yale, he seemed a perfect fit. He was gregarious, smart, and charisma
tic, but not
particularly deep. A sponge for detail, Clinton lacked a consistent ideology upo
n which to hang his
facts. This was the yin to Hillary Rodham’s yang: the driven ideologue Hillary ran
her husband’s
campaigns, directed and organized the staff, and controlled his appearances. Sin
ce her political
future was entirely in his hands, she willingly assumed the role of governor’s wif
e after Clinton
won his first election. When Clinton gained the presidency in 1992, Hillary was
fully in her
element.
Clearly an understanding had been struck long before the election: Hillary Clint
on would play the
loyal wife in order to gain power, and once in office, Bill would reward her thr
ough policy
appointments that did not require Senate confirmation. The couple even joked to
one reporter that if
the voters elected Clinton, they would get “two for the price of one.” Consummating
the deal, the
president immediately named Hillary to head a task force to review and fix the n
ation’s health-care
“crisis.” The only real crisis was the lack of congressional will to cut costs or ra
ise revenue for the
costly and inefficient Medicare and Medicaid programs. Instead, Hillary Clinton
and the
Democratic National Committee diverted the debate to one of uninsurability, impl
ying that any
Americans who lacked insurance had no access to medical treatment. In fact, it m
eant nothing of
the sort. Millions of Americans in sole proprietorships or other small businesse
s found it cheaper to
pay cash for medical care, and there was always emergency medical care available
to anyone,
insured or not.
Mrs. Clinton had her opening to policy direction. Meeting with dozens of Democra
tic allies and
experts in secret sessions—in clear violation of federal sunshine laws, as a subse
quent court ruling
later made plain—Hillary, with the help of Ira Magaziner, finally unveiled a healt
h care plan so
massive in scope that even other advisers were aghast. It was a political blunde
r of enormous
magnitude. One of the administration’s own economists had argued that “one of the fi
rst messages
from the new Democratic administration should not be to put 1/7th of the America
n economy under
the command and control of the federal government.”30 The plan dictated, among oth
er things, the
specialties medical students should pursue, where doctors could practice, and wh
ich physicians
individual Americans would be allowed to see. More stunning, the proposal threat
ened to punish by
fines and jail doctors who accepted cash for providing a service and patients wh
o paid cash for
health care! In addition, “employer mandates” for even the smallest of businesses to
ensure
employees would have been the death knell of millions of small businesses. When
word of
“Hillarycare” started to leak out, it produced a firestorm of opposition.
Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh, who had a national weekly audience of nearly
20 million,
led the assault by reading on-air critiques of the health care plan by Democrati
c consumer writer
Elizabeth McCaughey. Needless to say, few legislators, and even fewer average ci
tizens, had read
the massive 1,342-page document, but McCaughey had, and Limbaugh exposed the det
ails on a
daily basis. Legislators of both parties ran for the hills away from Hillarycare
, and it went down to
ignominious defeat when the majority Democrats in the House refused to bring Hil
larycare up for a
vote. Arguably, it was the first time in history that a single radio (or televis
ion) personality had
exercised so much influence in defeating unpopular legislation. In no way was th
e bill the “victim
of…intense partisan wrangling” or “the determination of Republican leaders to deny the
president
any kind of victory on this potent issue,” as liberal historians argued.31
Yet Clinton had not needed his wife’s assistance to stumble out of the gate. One o
f his first
initiatives involved removing the military’s ban against homosexuals in active ser
vice. When
military and profamily groups got wind of the plan, it generated such reaction t
hat Clinton retreated
to a compromise position of “Don’t ask, don’t tell.”
Nor did his budget measures fare well: the first Clinton budget, a deficit-reduc
tion plan, hiked taxes
(including a Social Security tax on the elderly) and required a tie-breaking vot
e from his vice
president. Early on, Clinton’s war room of strategists had convinced him that he h
ad to attack the
deficits, and that such action would give him credibility in other (more liberal
) initiatives. Treasury
secretary Lloyd Bentsen impressed in unusually blunt language the significance o
f soothing Wall
Street with his budget. “You mean to tell me,” Clinton asked his advisers, “that the s
uccess of the
program and my reelection hinges on…a bunch of f**king bond traders?” Nods from arou
nd the
table greeted him.32 To further portray himself as a moderate, Clinton instructe
d his vice president,
Al Gore, to head a project called the Reinvention of Government. It was heralded
as Clinton’s
response to conservative calls that the growth of government needed to be checke
d, and Gore soon
dutifully reported that his group had lopped 305,000 off government job rolls. A
closer look,
however, revealed an ominous trend: 286,000 of those job cuts came from the Depa
rtment of
Defense.33 It marked the beginning of a simultaneous slashing of military capabi
lity on the one
hand and unparalleled military commitments abroad on the other. Within three yea
rs, Clinton had
increased overseas deployments and, at the same time, reduced the total active-d
uty force from 2.1
million to 1.6 million, reduced the army from eighteen full-strength divisions t
o twelve (the Gulf
War alone had taken ten), cut the navy’s fleet from 546 ships to 380, and decrease
d the number of
air force squadrons by one third.
Before long, even Clinton’s most loyal staff became befuddled by his apparent lack
of deeply held
principles. After securing Clinton’s election, James Carville, one of his politica
l advisers, still did
not know what he valued. Carville once took out a piece of paper, drew a small s
quare, and tapped
it with his pen: “Where is the hallowed ground?” he asked. “Where does he stand? What
does he
stand for?”34 That his own confidants had no idea what principles Clinton would fi
ght for was a
troubling aspect of Clinton’s character. Most serious, however, was another hangov
er from the
campaign, a savings and loan investment called Whitewater that had involved the
Clintons. The
issues were serious enough that the Clinton-controlled Justice Department appoin
ted a special
prosecutor—an investigative holdover from the Nixon Watergate days—charged with look
ing into
the land speculations.
Clinton had announced his intention to appoint a “cabinet that looked like America”
by including
plenty of women, blacks, and Hispanics. Yet within a few years his critics would
joke that his
cabinet in fact looked more like America’s Most Wanted. More than a dozen special
prosecutors
had opened investigations into the administration’s appointees. Clinton had invoke
d quotas on
nearly every cabinet position, regardless of competence. Above all, party loyali
sts and fund-raisers
were to be rewarded. Ron Brown, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, w
as placed in
the powerful cabinet post of secretary of commerce. This later facilitated the s
ales of high-tech
weaponry to the communist Chinese government when authority was transferred earl
y from the
State Department, which had opposed such sales, to the pliant Commerce Departmen
t under
Brown. Other cabinet officials ranged from barely competent to utterly incompete
nt. Clinton’s
surgeon general, Jocelyn Elders, committed one gaffe after another, testifying b
efore a
congressional hearing on gun control that “what we need are safer bullets” and calli
ng for lessons
in public schools on masturbation. Ultimately, the Clinton administration could
not survive her
inanities and dismissed her.
Where Elders was merely incompetent, many other appointees surpassed Grant’s or Ha
rding’s
cabinet in their corruption or outright criminal behavior. Housing and Urban Dev
elopment (HUD)
Secretary Henry Cisneros was forced to resign after a sexual harassment suit; as
sociate attorney
general Webster Hubbell was indicted in the Whitewater investigation; Secretary
of Agriculture
Mike Espy was investigated for illicit connections to Arkansas-based Tyson Foods
; and an
independent prosecutor examined Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt for illegal dea
lings with Indian
tribes. Virtually all the investigations in some respect dealt with money, graft
, and bribery, making
a mockery of the Clinton campaign promise to appoint the “most ethical administrat
ion in history.”
It was an ironic turn, given Clinton’s repeated claims that the Reagan era was a “de
cade of greed.”
Only the investment banker Robert Rubin, who handled Treasury, seemed remotely s
uited to the
task.
At first, Clinton’s choices for these departments seemed to reflect only his lack
of executive
experience, but events soon unfolded that made the placement of key individuals
look suspiciously
like Nixon-esque attempts to stack the system at critical positions with people
who would either
bend or break the law on the Clintons’ behalf. Webster Hubbell and Vincent Foster,
for example,
who were law partners with Hillary at the Rose Law Firm in Arkansas, were brough
t into the
Justice Department, where they could effectively block or derail investigations
into the
administration. Attorney General Janet Reno had to defer to Associate Attorney G
eneral Hubble on
many occasions. In a shocking break with tradition, Clinton, immediately upon ta
king office, fired
all 93 U.S. attorneys throughout the country, thereby nipping any federal invest
igations of him in
the bud.
FBI background checks on White House personnel were also curtailed, apparently f
or what they
might reveal about the appointees. All this only reinforced the suspicion that a
number of
individuals of questionable character worked in the administration, but it also
proved dangerous,
facilitating the attendance at White House functions of criminals such as drug-r
unner Jorge
Cabrera. Among the other guests at Clinton functions was Wang Jun, an arms deale
r who supplied
Los Angeles street gangs with automatic weapons; international fugitive Marc Ric
h; and a steady
stream of foreigners whose visits were arranged by John Huang, an indicted Arkan
sas restaurateur.
According to the foreign visitors, they were explicitly told that they could inf
luence the government
of the United States by Huang, who himself visited the White House more often th
an members of
Clinton’s cabinet—always, he later testified, to arrange fund-raising with foreign n
ationals.
Clinton’s disapproval numbers in public polls rose sharply, and surveys showed tha
t people were
increasingly convinced the government itself was getting out of hand. For the fi
rst time since before
the New Deal, Americans started to become concerned about the dark side of progr
ams deemed
beneficial by the federal government.
Sex, Lies, and Monicagate
Whatever dissatisfaction the public had with government in general, nothing coul
d hide the
continued revelations about unethical and illegal activities by Clinton, his wif
e, or members of the
cabinet. In particular, the Clintons’ involvement in the bankrupt Whitewater Devel
opment
Company in Arkansas and its domino effect in bankrupting the Madison Guaranty Sa
vings & Loan
forced a three-judge panel in 1994 to name an independent prosecutor, Robert Fis
ke, to investigate
the Clintons’ actions. No sooner had Fiske been appointed than the Clinton spin ma
chine (the
administration’s media managers) initiated a campaign that would typify the Clinto
ns’ response to
any charges. In 1994, a strategy of demonizing the messenger, which was first us
ed on Fiske,
would be finely honed for subsequent, and more effective, attacks on Fiske’s succe
ssor, Judge
Kenneth Starr. Starr had an impeccable reputation, but he soon found himself und
er daily attack by
Clinton associate James Carville, who announced he would start his own investiga
tion of Starr!
The special prosecutor’s job was to investigate conflict of interest charges again
st the Clintons
related to the Whitewater Development Company in Arkansas and promoter James McD
ougal.
McDougal also ran the Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan, which had failed in 1989,
but by 1993
evidence had surfaced that Madison funds had gone into Whitewater. Further evide
nce revealed
that the Clintons received preferential treatment in the form of waived fees and
had had their share
of the down payment in the investments put up by McDougal or others. Billing rec
ords with
Hillary’s name on them surfaced, indicating that she had done substantial work on
Whitewater
while at the Rose Law Firm, and thus knew exactly where the money had gone, even
though she
later told a Senate committee that while she had signed the sheets, she had not
done the actual
work.
Yet the more one pulled on the Whitewater string, the more the fabric seemed to
unravel. First
there was “Travelgate,” in which Hillary dismissed the employees of the White House
travel office
(a nonpartisan group) in order to replace them with the travel firm of her frien
ds (and high-powered
Hollywood producers) Harry and Susan Thomason. Still, there had been no illegali
ty. What turned
a presidential preference into an ethical and legal violation was that Mrs. Clin
ton, to provide a
public relations cover for firing so many loyal employees in such a callous fash
ion, ordered an FBI
investigation of Billy Dale, head of the travel office. A midlevel civil servant
who had done nothing
but hold a job that Hillary had coveted for her friends, suddenly found himself
having to secure
lawyers to defend against charges of corruption. Dale was acquitted of all charg
es, but he was
nearly bankrupted.
There were too many improprieties in Travelgate to ignore, and the same three-ju
dge panel that had
appointed Starr empowered him to expand his probe into the travel office events.
Then, in 1993,
Vince Foster, a Rose Law Firm friend of Hillary’s who had worked with her at the W
hite House,
was found dead at Fort Marcy Park, an apparent suicide. Again, there were enough
irregularities in
the U.S. Park Police investigation (such as possible movement of the body) that
the three-judge
panel ordered Starr to add that to his list. By then, as Clinton adviser George
Stephanopoulos noted,
“We had a team of lawyers, nicknamed the Masters of Disaster, whose sole job was t
o handle
Whitewater and related inquiries.”35
Despite the origins of this added tasking of Starr into separate, and apparently
unrelated, cases by
the three-judge panel, contemporary history textbooks continue to claim, “Starr mo
ved aggressively
to expand his inquiry…and seemed intent on securing an indictment against at least
one of the
Clintons.”36 Another textbook claimed, “Starr had been investigating the Whitewater
matter for
nearly four years without significant results,” somehow ignoring indictments and c
onvictions
against Webster Hubbell, Susan McDougal, and James McDougal.37 Starr was three f
or three
before a young woman from Arkansas reacted to a story about Clinton that had app
eared in The
American Spectator magazine, one in which she was named as having been “procured” fo
r Clinton
by Arkansas state troopers. This forced the three-judge panel to put yet another
investigation on
Starr’s plate. While that scenario unfolded, however, dissatisfaction with Clinton’s
policies—as
opposed to allegations of corruption—led to another surprising change.
The Contract with America
Drawing upon the widespread unease with—and in some cases, outright fear about—the g
rowing
power and insulation of the federal government from the people who paid the taxe
s, the Republican
Party under the leadership of Representative Newt Gingrich of Georgia devised a
radical strategy.
For essentially sixty years (allowing for two brief interludes in 1946 to 1948 a
nd 1954 to 1956), the
Democrats had held the House of Representatives, employing Tip O’Neil’s maxim, “All po
litics is
local.” Because of Democratic dominance of the House, bills introduced by Republic
ans to lower
taxes, impose term limits, or enact a line-item veto were not even brought up fo
r a vote. This tactic
allowed House Democrats to stay off record, and to bring home the pork while dec
rying national
budget deficits, or to claim to favor measures on which they never had to vote.
Gingrich, sensing
that the public was frustrated with the inability to change things in Washington
, created a ten-point
Contract with America, which promised to bring to the House floor for a vote the
following ten
measures: (1) a balanced-budget law and a line-item veto to enforce it, (2) an a
nticrime package,
(3) a welfare reform bill, (4) a family reinforcement act designed to increase a
doptions and enforce
child support laws, (5) an increased Pentagon budget and a prohibition on U.S. t
roops serving under
United Nations control, (6) a product liability/legal reform bill and an end to
unfunded federal
mandates, (7) an increase in the senior-citizen Social Security tax limits, (8)
a repeal of the
“marriage tax” and a child tax credit, (9) a cut in capital gains taxes, and (10) a
term limits bill.
Overlaying all of these was an eleventh promise—reorganization of the House to ens
ure greater
congressional accountability, which included opening committee meetings to the p
ublic, requiring
that all laws that apply to the country also apply to Congress, cutting the numb
er of committees and
staff by one third, and requiring a three-fifths vote to pass any tax increase.
The power of the
Contract, however, was that Gingrich had managed to obtain the support of three
hundred hopeful
Republicans either in Congress or running for the House, demonstrating a virtual
unanimity of
purpose.
By persuading so many Republicans to stand together on these ten issues, Gingric
h effectively
“nationalized” the local House races and made the 1994 election a national referendu
m on Bill
Clinton’s presidency.38 When the votes were counted in October, the results stunne
d virtually all
political pundits, especially the big-name analysts in the media. For the first
time in forty years, the
Republicans had captured both the House and Senate. Wresting the House from the
Democrats,
Republicans had defeated thirty-five incumbents, including Tom Foley, the Speake
r of the House,
befuddling newscasters trying to explain the political shift they had denied wou
ld happen. ABC
anchor Peter Jennings likened the vote to a “temper tantrum” by the voters.
For a temper tantrum, the voter response was surprisingly consistent and one-sid
ed. In addition to
the House and Senate gains, Republicans picked up eleven governorships. Although
the media
attempted to portray the election as a “reaction against incumbents,” it was telling
that every single
Republican incumbent—House, Senate, or statehouse—won reelection. Only Democrats wer
e
thrown out. In the wake of the debacle, still other Democrats in the House and a
t the local level
switched parties in droves, with some five hundred joining the Republican Party
nationally, the
most prominent of whom was the newly elected U.S. senator from Colorado, Ben Nig
hthorse
Campbell, the first Native American senator.
Clinton, already in political hot water, brought in one of his old political adv
isers, Dick Morris, to
craft a new plan to keep his floundering presidency afloat. Morris concocted a s
trategy called
triangulation.39 He reasoned that Clinton could portray the Republicans and his
own party in
Congress as obstructionists and claim to serve the greater good. This required a
perceived move to
the center. Morris urged Clinton to portray both Republicans and Democrats as sq
uabbling
children, who need his fatherly presence to serve the public. Consequently, in h
is first speech
before the Republican-controlled Congress, Clinton said, “The era of big governmen
t is over” to
wildly enthusiastic applause. But far from admitting defeat for his modernized N
ew Deal-like
programs, Clinton merely began a long series of deceptions designed to slow the
Republican
Revolution as much as possible, hoping Democrats would recapture the House and S
enate in 1996.
House Republicans moved with unusual rapidity. They made good on their contract,
bringing up
for a vote on the House floor nine of the ten items (only term limits failed to
get to the floor, and
even that was debated in committee—which had never happened before). Even more sur
prising, the
House passed all nine, and the Senate brought to a floor vote six of them. The S
upreme Court
struck down term limits as unconstitutional before the Senate could act on it, a
nd the line-item veto
was ruled unconstitutional after Clinton had signed it into law.
Among the legislation that passed both houses, a welfare reform bill dramaticall
y curtailed Aid to
Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) programs, to the howls of protest from l
iberal groups,
who prophesied that millions would be put on the streets. In fact, by the mid-19
90s, welfare
benefits at the state levels in New England had a generosity that rivaled that o
f socialist Sweden.
Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., and Rhode Is
land all had
an after-tax value of welfare benefits (including food stamps, AFDC, public hous
ing, Medicaid,
and other subsidized services) that exceeded a $12-per-hour job. New York City’s r
ates had
reached the astronomical level of $30,700 per year, or more than the starting sa
lary of a computer
scientist or secretary. Clinton promptly vetoed the bill, whereupon the House pa
ssed it a second
time. Clinton vetoed it a second time, before Morris’s polling information told hi
m that in fact the
bill was quite popular. Finally, after at last signing welfare reform, Clinton c
laimed credit for it.
In the end, Clinton signed three of the contract items—welfare reform, unfunded fe
deral mandates,
and a line-item veto—and Congress overrode his veto of the stockholder bill of rig
hts. For the
business-as-usual crowd in Washington, it was a stunning display of promises kep
t: 40 percent of
the items that the GOP had promised only to bring to the floor for discussion ac
tually became
law.40 Clinton’s own polling and focus group data from Morris and Clinton’s pollster
had
confirmed he had to sign these pieces of legislation to maintain his triangulati
on.41
House conservatives mistook their stunning, but narrow, election as an overwhelm
ing mandate for
change. Instead of taking small steps, then returning to the voters to ask their
validation,
Republicans advanced on a number of fronts, including launching investigations o
f Whitewater and
conducting an emotional hearing on the Waco, Texas, disaster in April 1993. At W
aco, a sect of the
Seventh-Day Adventists church, the Branch Davidians under David Koresh, had hole
d up in a
compound after agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF) bot
ched a raid
based on scanty evidence and unsubstantiated claims of child abuse. Ignoring sev
eral opportunities
to arrest Koresh outside the compound and avoid a firefight, the agents, bolster
ed by the Texas
Rangers and National Guard troops, attacked, firing gas grenades inside the buil
dings. Fires broke
out instantly, killing eighty-two men, women, and children. Questions as to how
the fires started
implicated both the Davidians and the government.
Clinton claimed to have no knowledge of the operation, passing the buck to his a
ttorney general,
Janet Reno, who in turn did not take action against any of the FBI agents involv
ed in improper and
possibly illegal acts. Civil rights activists were outraged, and the GOP Congres
s, already concerned
about the growing abuse of power by the IRS, BATF, and FBI, listened to witnesse
s from inside the
compound describe attacks by a government tank that had smashed down the compoun
d’s walls
and sharpshooters who had peppered the Davidian complex. Democrats, desperate to
protect
Clinton and Reno from any political fallout, muddied the waters sufficiently so
that no government
agents were charged. But in 1997 an independent filmmaker produced Waco: The Rul
es of
Engagement, which casts doubt on government explanations that the Davidians had
set the fires.42
Much of the support for congressional Republicans emanated from their curbing of
federal power,
especially in the law enforcement agencies. The 1992 shooting of Randy Weaver’s wi
fe by FBI
sharpshooters at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, combined with Waco and alarming reports of b
rutal behavior
by agents of the EPA, led to a sense that the federal government was out of cont
rol and that
individual agents had started to act, in the words of Democratic congressman Joh
n Conyers, like
“jack-booted thugs.” Clinton was put on the defensive, and despite triangulation his
poll numbers
continued to fall. Then an explosion in Oklahoma City halted the congressional m
omentum while
at the same time presenting Clinton with a golden opportunity to generate sympat
hy for the federal
government.
A disaffected and mentally unstable Gulf War veteran, Timothy McVeigh, and at le
ast one
accomplice, Terry Nichols, planned, positioned, and detonated a massive bomb out
side the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995. The blast killed
169 men, women,
and children—there was a day-care facility in the building—and constituted the worst
terrorist
attack up to that point in American history.
President Clinton traveled to Oklahoma City and, according to one of his worst j
ournalistic
enemies, “handled the ceremony with consummate skill.”43 He also took the opportunit
y, in a
national address, to blame conservative “talk radio” (meaning Limbaugh) for an “atmosp
here of
hate” that had produced, in his view, Tim McVeigh. The president used the disaster
to shift public
attention from the abusive actions of government to the crazed behavior of the b
omber and the
American militia movement, which had steadily gained members prior to April 1995
. McVeigh
later admitted responsibility for the bombing and placed himself fully in the an
tigovernment
movement, claiming that he was seeking retribution for the devastation at Waco t
wo years
earlier.44 He had even attempted to time the explosion to coincide with the anni
versary of the
assault on the Branch Davidians. However, disturbing questions remain about the
possibility of
Middle Eastern terrorists in the bombing. Several sources, most recently Jayna D
avis, have found
links between the “third terrorist” (“John Doe #2”), Iraq, and possibly Al Qaeda.45
In the wake of Oklahoma City, Clinton’s ratings rose from an anemic 42 percent to
51 percent, and
he never really saw his popularity diminish again. But in his haste to lay the b
lame on
antigovernment extremists, Clinton and the entire U.S. intelligence community mi
ssed several
troubling clues that perhaps McVeigh and Nichols had not acted alone. Nichols, f
or example, was
in the same part of the Philippines—and at the same time—as Al Qadea bomb maker Ramz
i
Yousef. Moreover, numerous witnesses testified that McVeigh and Nichols lacked s
ufficient bombmaking
skills, but that their bomb was a near-perfect replica of the 1993 World Trade C
enter bomb
devised by Yousef. Certainly their actions, in light of the 1993 World Trade Cen
ter bombing and
events overseas, were evidence that the United States was no longer safe from te
rrorism from any
group inside our borders. McVeigh was sentenced to death in 1997. Four years lat
er, when his
appeals had run out, networks provided a grotesque minute-by-minute coverage of
his final hours,
further sensationalizing the most widely followed American execution since that
of the Rosenbergs,
and turning McVeigh’s lethal injection into a public spectacle.46
Neither Waco nor the Oklahoma City bombings seemed to affect the recovering econ
omy or the
booming stock market. Clinton owed much of his renewed approval ratings to the 1
990s boom. But
could he claim credit for it?
Riding Reagan’s Coattails: The Roaring Nineties
Having run against “the worst economy in the last fifty years” and having ridden int
o office by
reminding themselves and George Bush, “It’s the economy, stupid,” the Clinton team kne
w that in
fact the industrial and technological growth that had occurred since 1993 was in
no small way the
result of the Reagan policies they publicly derided. Despite tax hikes under Bus
h and Clinton, the
incentives created in the Reagan years continued to generate jobs and growth. Cl
inton had one
progrowth policy: the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which would l
ower tariffs
between the United States and its two major continental trading partners, Canada
and Mexico. But
it ran into stiff opposition from Clinton’s own party in Congress. Environmentalis
ts, labor unions,
and protectionists all lobbied against the bill, and “Citizen Perot” led the anti-NA
FTA crusade to
television, where he faced Vice President Gore on CNN in a debate over the plan.
(Gore won,
hands down, leaving the flummoxed Perot to constantly ask the host, Larry King, “A
re you going
to let me talk? Can I talk now?”) In Congress, however, the bill was saved only wh
en a large
percentage of Republicans in the House voted for it, whereas the Democrats voted
in large numbers
against it. NAFTA proceeded over the next several years to add large numbers of
jobs to the U.S.
economy, contrary to the dire predictions of its opponents.
More important to the financial markets, after the Republicans gained control of
Congress, the
message was that, indeed, the era of big government was over. Or so it seemed. A
t any rate, the
financial markets reacted. Although Wall Street had crept upward from 1992 to 19
94, the Dow
Jones flew into the stratosphere, climbing further and faster than the market ha
d at any time since
the Great Depression. Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) swelled in value as
yuppies, or
young urban professionals, entered the stock market in growing numbers through t
heir retirement
plans. More Americans than ever held securities and paid attention to the market
s—not as
speculators, but as investors in their retirements and college tuition for their
children.
Already on the defensive after the Oklahoma City bombing, Republicans neverthele
ss thought they
could rebound by refocusing on the 1995 budget. Gingrich hoped to impose an aust
ere but
reasonable spending plan on Clinton, unaware that the president had already dete
rmined to use the
budget impasse to close all nonessential government services and blame it on the
Republicans.
Documents later leaked out showing that in the summer, several months before the
shutdown
occurred, Clinton administration officials had met with leaders of the federal e
mployee unions to
ensure that they would side with the White House. When the GOP submitted its pla
n, Clinton
refused to sign the bills and allowed all nonessential government services—parks,
libraries, citizen
assistance bureaus, museums, and all noncritical offices—to shut down. The media c
ooperated
fully, having already characterized Gingrich as Dr. Seuss’s Grinch with the headli
ne The Gingrich
Who Stole Christmas, portraying the shutdown as a disaster, despite the fact tha
t Defense, the IRS,
and other essential federal offices continued to work. Television talk shows fea
tured laid-off park
rangers or private-sector entrepreneurs who supplied the government with goods—all
of whom
suddenly had no income. At the end of a few weeks, the media had convinced the p
ublic that the
Republicans were to blame.47
The shell-shocked congressional Republicans did not recover their confidence for
years. Portrayals
of the Republican House members set new low marks for distortion, deception, and
fear mongering
in American politics. But it was effective. After 1995, many Republicans drifted
to a more
moderate position to avoid incurring the wrath of the Washington press corps.48
Still, Clinton’s own polling told him the issue of fiscal responsibility that the
GOP had advocated
was warmly received in the heartland, and he could not ignore it. Clinton spoke
with greater
frequency about balancing the budget—a phrase uttered only by Republicans in the p
revious sixty
years. He admitted that the robust economy had generated such tax revenues that
with a modicum
of fiscal restraint, the United States could balance the budget in ten years, or
in seven years, or even
sooner. Such talk only further accelerated the markets. By the time Clinton left
office, the Dow had
broken the 11,000 mark; and although it was already in retreat in Clinton’s last s
ix months, it
produced consistent federal budget surpluses. Yet it would not be completely acc
urate to ascribe
the exceptional economic growth of the 1990s entirely to the tax cuts of the 198
0s, to the elections
of 1994, or to Clinton’s support of NAFTA. Powerful economic forces coalesced to c
ontribute to
the creation of such fantastic wealth.
Computer chip prices had plummeted at an annual rate of 68 percent since the 198
0s, to the extent
that by the year 2000 “the price of a bit is…close to a millionth of a cent as the b
illion transistor
device—the gigachip—is introduced.”49 A single production line could fabricate 1.6 tri
llion
transistors in twenty-four hours, and in 1999 alone, 50,000 trillion transistors
were produced,
providing such a surplus that Americans used them to play solitaire or to keep t
he interior
temperature of Cadillacs at 65 degrees. Equally impressive, in 1999, Internet tr
affic and bandwidth
doubled every three months, traveling over fiber cable that carried 8.6 petabits
per second per fiber
sheath, or a number equal to the entire Internet traffic per month carried in 19
95. Indeed, the
computer had spread more rapidly to one quarter of the population than any other
technology in
American history, except the cellular phone (sixteen years compared to thirteen)
.50 That
remarkable democratization of technology would quickly be eclipsed by yet anothe
r computerrelated
product, the Internet, which spread to a quarter of the population in merely sev
en years.51
Naturally, such stunning increases in productivity caused the value of tech comp
anies to soar.
Qualcomm, a company few people had even heard of prior to 1999, saw its shares r
ise in value by
2,619 percent in less than two years! Brokerage and finance firms grew so fast t
hey defied
traditional accounting and measurement tools: employment only doubled in the bro
kerage business
between 1973 to 1987, yet the number of shares traded daily exploded, from 5.7 m
illion to 63.8
million. Although the Bureau of Labor Statistics recorded a 50 percent drop in p
roductivity costs of
computers from 1992 to 1994, in fact the costs had fallen at a rate closer to 40
percent per year, and
those price declines only accelerated.
Astonishingly, Clinton actually sought to interfere with this growth. In 1993, t
he Clinton Justice
Department initiated a campaign against the nation’s largest operating systems com
pany, Bill
Gates’s Microsoft, for allegedly bundling its Internet browser with its Windows op
erating system.
In May 1998, the department’s Antitrust Division filed suit against Microsoft. Nin
eteen states,
seeing a new gravy train alongside tobacco litigation, joined the suit. The Just
ice Department
contended that the bundling required consumers to buy both products and gave Mic
rosoft an unfair
advantage over Netscape and other rival companies. Yet Netscape was the industry
leader, and
there was no evidence that Microsoft met any of the traditional criteria that de
fined “restraint of
trade.” For example, Microsoft’s prices on its products were falling, and its servic
e was good.
There were no barriers to entry into the browser market—indeed, Netscape dominated
that market.
But Americans seldom get worked up when the wealthy are targeted by government,
and although
consumer surveys showed that upward of 90 percent of Microsoft customers applaud
ed the
company, competitors were visceral in their anger toward Gates, who many claimed
had stolen
others’ ideas.
Whereas monopoly theory posits that competitors should benefit from litigation a
gainst a
monopolist, exactly the opposite happened with Microsoft. Every time the governm
ent advanced in
the case, the stocks of virtually all of the computer companies—especially Microso
ft’s main
competitors—fell.52 Each time Microsoft gained ground, the share values of all Mic
rosoft’s
competitors rose. Thus, while the federal and state governments engaged in an at
tack on a major
American business in the name of promoting competition, in reality the market ju
dged that the
Microsoft suit was damaging the entire computer industry. An ominous reaction oc
curred in the
wake of the Microsoft antitrust announcement when markets slowed, then as the ca
se drew to a
conclusion, turned downward.
By that time, some analysts had lumped these businesses into a catch-all phrase
called the new
economy, which included medical, optics, fiber, aviation, computers, software,
telecommunications, and any other field that they could fit into the digital rev
olution. Computers
produced remarkable increases in virtually all related fields and started to pul
l away from the
otherwise impressive gains made in low-tech industries, at least until the year
2000.
A second contributing factor to the business boom of the nineties was the openin
g of markets in the
former Soviet bloc. As Eastern European countries for the first time since 1939
engaged in free
trade with the West, the resulting flow of goods and services eastward resembled
the American
entrance into western Europe at the end of World War II. U.S. entrepreneurs, oil
experts, bankers,
computer geeks, and academic consultants poured into Hungary, Romania, Poland, U
kraine,
Russia, and the Baltic Republics. American overseas trade to those areas grew ac
cordingly.
Still another part of the economic equation—low energy prices—played a role in susta
ining the
boom. The Gulf War had secured Middle Eastern oil at low prices, and although Am
erican oil
companies, drillers, and refiners operated on thin profit margins, the cheap ene
rgy costs spilled
over into almost every sector of the economy. Any products made with petroleum b
ecame cheaper
to make; everything that was shipped by rail, truck, or aircraft was cheaper to
transport, and the
portion of manufacturing cost dedicated to energy plummeted. Even if goods did n
ot seem cheaper
on the rack or at the store, corporations reallocated resources within their fir
ms toward research and
development, turning out new products and adding value.
That did not guarantee that the rich got richer, especially when it came to busi
nesses, where only
thirty-four of the top one hundred firms in the Wall Street Journal in 1990 were
still on the list in
1999. This trend was confirmed in the international arena (where, again, America
n companies were
heavily represented): there was a 25 percent turnover among the top one hundred
multinational
firms from 1990 to 1997.53 At the same time, the share of total corporate assets
held by the top five
hundred industrial firms fell by 20 percent, and the employment by those same fi
rms fell 29
percent.54 The share of gross domestic product generated by those firms plummete
d 39 percent in
thirteen years. With the economy growing, the expansion showed two clear trends.
First, the growth
came from small companies and new entrepreneurs; and second, there was tremendou
s turnover at
the top, indicating extremely high levels of competition. Both trends were highl
y favorable for a
vibrant economy.
Throughout the Bush and Clinton presidencies, Alan Greenspan, a disciple of free
-market
economist Friedrich Hayek and an avid reader of Ayn Rand, had served as chairman
of the Federal
Reserve Board. Greenspan had lived through the Ford/Carter inflationary years an
d had watched
with concern the rise of federal deficits in the 1980s. Early in Clinton’s term, w
hile interest rates
remained low, the president took an action that dictated the behavior of the Fed
and its chairman for
the entire decade. In order to show rapid progress against the “Reagan/Bush defici
ts,” Clinton
refinanced large chunks of the national debt at the lowest rates possible, regar
dless of the length of
maturity. Much of this consisted of short-term bonds; but it had the effect of r
educing the interest
paid by the government on the debt, thus giving the appearance of reducing the d
eficits. By doing
so, Clinton refused to refinance the debt in much longer term securities at a sl
ightly higher rate. As
long as inflation, and therefore, interest rates, stayed low, it was a good deal
for the country. But
the slightest uptick in inflation would add billions to the national debt and ra
ised the specter of a
massive refinancing of the debt at much higher prices.
Clinton’s action in essence locked the Fed into a permanent antiinflation mode. An
y good news in
the economy—rising industrial production, higher employment figures, better trade
numbers—
might cause prices to go up, which would appear on Greenspan’s radar detector as a
threat. The
chairman found himself raising the prime rate repeatedly, trying to slow down th
e stock market. It
was a perverse situation, to say the least: the most powerful banker in America
constantly slapping
the nation’s wage-earners and entrepreneurs for their success. Worse, Greenspan’s ac
tions resulted
in a constant underfunding of business, a steady deflation affecting long-term i
nvestment. Although
few spotted it (George Gilder and Jude Wanniski were two exceptions), the nation
suffered from a
slow-acting capital anemia.
Home prices continued to rise, though not at levels seen in the 1970s. As Americ
ans invested in
both homes and the stock market, wealth levels grew as never before. The 1990s s
aw more
millionaires made than at any other time in American history, and at the same ti
me, the “wealth
gap” between the top 20 percent and the bottom 20 percent grew. Some of this was t
o be expected:
in any growing, thriving economy, that gap should expand as rapid leaps of innov
ation and
invention make entrepreneurs rich overnight. There was some disconcerting eviden
ce, however,
that the 1990s, much more so than the 1980s, was a decade of greed. For example,
American
family debt levels soared faster than ever, and the ratio of debt to equity in f
amily homes rose
steadily. A robust economy also provided Clinton with one of his main selling po
ints—a claim to
have provided budget surpluses resulting from his economic policies.55 In fact,
Clinton and
Congress could enjoy (and spend) the fruits of a roaring economy provided by Rea
gan’s policies
and numerous other factors over which they had no control at all. Indeed, no gen
uine “surpluses”
existed if one included the Medicare and Social Security trust funds that had lo
ng ago been folded
into general revenues. But the balanced budgets helped insulate Clinton from att
acks on his ethics
and character, providing him with the critical flak jacket he needed late in the
decade.
Prosperity, undergirded by liberty, continued to act as a magnet to draw people
from all over the
world to America’s shores. Increasingly, Asian and Indian engineers populated the
engineering
departments of major American universities; West Indian and Jamaican immigrants
carved out
thriving restaurant and grocery businesses in Atlantic seaboard cities; and form
er “boat people”
from Vietnam populated the fishing fleet on the Gulf Coast. The success of immig
rants changed the
look of America, and in the 2000 census individual Americans for the first time
could mark their
descent from more than one race, creating some fifty-seven new categories of eth
nicities.56 As
early as 1990, the fastest-growing racial category on a census form was “other,” in
part
representing a genuine feeling that people saw themselves as multiethnic, but al
so reflecting the
position that one’s race was only one of many determinants of self-identity. Alrea
dy, multiracial
groups composed 8 percent of Hawaii’s population and 10 percent of Oklahoma’s. Altho
ugh
traditionalists worried that such distinctions would open a Pandora’s box of mixed
-race claims, in
fact it portended the genuine “end of racism” as author Dinesh D’Souza had prophesied
almost a
decade earlier.57
Whether racism and ethnic distrust had increased or decreased in the 1990s depen
ded on which
surveys one consulted. More Americans than ever before encountered people of all
races, ethnic
identities, and faiths in their daily routine. Affirmative action had placed, in
many cases,
disproportionate numbers of blacks and Hispanics in a wide variety of occupation
s, government
service, and in higher education, although the same laws tended to exclude Asian
s and Jews.
Thus, as the year 2000 neared, racial harmony remained the dream Martin Luther K
ing had had
some twenty years before, but at the same time, the realization of that dream in
practical terms was
closer than ever because millions of black families had entered the middle class
, become
stockholders and business owners, professionals and labor leaders, executives an
d stars. Although
the O. J. Simpson murder case in the early 1990s threatened to divide black and
white America,
even anger over that soon subsided. Despite its shortcomings, race relations at
the end of the 1990s
remained better than anywhere else in the world, as horrible race riots in Engla
nd and Muslim gang
attacks on native French citizens there would later attest.
Social Pathologies, Spiritual Renewal
Unlike the 1960s, when street crime led to surging gun ownership, in the 1990s i
t was renewed
distrust of government that had sparked a rise in gun sales and concealed-carry
laws. In the wake of
the McVeigh bombing, gun control groups pressed for the Brady Bill, legislation
named after
President Reagan’s press secretary Jim Brady, who had been wounded in the 1983 ass
assination
attempt, and which had been advocated by his wife, Sarah. The Brady Bill require
d registration by
gun purchasers and a waiting period before acquiring a gun, ostensibly to reduce
gun crimes. Gun
owners feared this was the first step in a national confiscation, as had occurre
d in the Weimar
Republic in the 1920s, leaving the public defenseless against a tyrannical gover
nment.
There was one small detail that gun control groups ignored: gun crimes, accordin
g to both federal
and state authorities, peaked in Bush’s term, roughly two years before the Brady B
ill kicked in.
Under Reagan and Bush, prosecutions of federal gun violations had risen from 2,5
00 to about 9,500
in 1992.58 This was remarkable because the call for new gun laws came on the hee
ls of two years
of nonprosecution of existing gun laws by the Clinton administration. It allowed
Clinton to set up a
self-fulfilling cycle: there were more gun crimes; therefore, the nation needed
more gun laws. The
Brady Act was passed in February 1994, followed by the Clinton-Gore semiautomati
c ban later that
year, yet gun prosecutions at the federal level continued to fall sharply, back
to where the number
had stood when Bush took office. It allowed Clinton, in the wake of several high
ly publicized gun
crimes (including the Columbine High School shooting in April 1999), to paint gu
n owners as
irresponsible at a time when his administration failed to enforce the existing g
un laws. In fact,
momentum swung toward less gun regulation: several states began to pass conceale
d-carry laws
that tended to further reduce crime. Through a crime crackdown under Republican
mayor Rudolph
Giuliani, New York City homicides per hundred thousand were lower than in the 18
00s.59 Issues
of gun ownership reached a key point in 2001 when the Emerson case in Texas came
before a
federal district court. It represented the first time since the Great Depression’s
original gun control
laws had taken effect that the meaning of the Second Amendment was actually addr
essed in a
higher court. The judges ruled that in fact the “right to bear arms” was an individu
al right, not a
militia right, and therefore meant exactly what proponents of the amendment for
years had said it
did. Although the justices attempted to include language that might still allow
state and local gun
regulation, the critical issue of whether the “militia” referred to the National Gua
rd units or to
armed individuals was settled in favor of individuals.
Issues of gun control divided the public almost as sharply as the abortion issue
. Each, in turn, was
closely associated with particular religious viewpoints. A growing number of Ame
ricans seemed
concerned about family values and social maladies including abortion, drugs, ill
egitimacy, and
street crime, which were broadly linked to a decline in the spiritual side of Am
erican life.
The nation had slowly but steadily moved toward attitudes more favorable to reli
gion, and
generally—though not universally—expressed at the polls concerns against normalizing
what were
once considered objectionable or even deviant lifestyles. In early 2001, the Pew
Charitable Trusts
concluded a broad study of the role of religion in public life and found, “America
ns strongly equate
religion with personal ethics and behavior, considering it an antidote to the mo
ral decline they
perceive in our nation today.”60 This was accompanied by an “equally strong respect
for religious
diversity…[and] tolerance of other people’s beliefs.” Nearly 70 percent disagreed with
the
statement that the nation would “do well even if many Americans were to abandon th
eir religious
faith,” and a similar percentage wanted religion’s influence on American society to
grow, whereas
only 6 percent wanted it to weaken. Nearly 80 percent supported either a moment
of silence or a
specific prayer in public schools; and at a ratio of two-to-one the respondents
agreed that prayer
taught children that religion and God were important. Two thirds of the responde
nts were not
threatened by more religious leaders becoming involved in politics. Majorities o
f Americans sensed
a bias among journalists against Christians and 68 percent agreed that there was
“a lot of prejudice
[in the media] toward Evangelical Christians.”
The spiritual renewal had started perhaps as early as the 1980s, when a Gallup s
urvey found that 80
percent of Americans believed in a final judgment before God; 90 percent claimed
to pray; and 84
percent said, “Jesus was God or the Son of God.”61 Most of the growth that had occur
red in
American Christianity came from one of two sources. First, Hispanic immigrants,
who tended to be
Catholics, brought renewed energy to the Roman Catholic Church, which, with 60 m
illion
members, was the largest denomination in the United States. Second,
independent/nondenominational churches grew at astronomical rates. The largest c
hurches in
America—that is, a group of similarly minded believers at a single location—included
Willow
Creek (20,000 members) in Chicago, Crenshaw Christian Center (22,000 members) in
Los
Angeles, and Southeast Christian Church in Louisville (17,000 members). Focused
on “soul
winning” through modern methods—contemporary music, abundant church athletic and mus
ical
activities, large youth programs—these churches kept two groups who had abandoned
the
mainstream churches years earlier—males and young people.
A sure sign of a church in decline is the absence of men and a preponderance of
elderly women.
The newer churches had tapped into the call for men to be family heads, and, ass
isted by such
independent programs as Promise Keepers, they emphasized strong traditional fami
lies with a male
family leader. At the same time, the use of contemporary music, innovative teach
ing methods, and
teen-oriented Bible messages brought millions of American youths to Christianity
. By 1991, a
survey showed that 86 percent of teens said they believed “Jesus Christ is God or
the Son of God,
and 73 percent considered regular church attendance an important aspect of Ameri
can citizenship.”
An even more surprising, perhaps, statistic showed that nearly one third accepte
d the Bible as the
literal word of God.62
Ever attuned to image and style, Clinton early in his presidency had suddenly be
gun attending
church regularly. But Clinton best employed religion during the impeachment scan
dal, when he
brought in several spiritual advisers, such as the Reverend Jesse Jackson (who a
t the time was
secretly conducting his own extramarital affair) to help him deal with his “mistak
es.” In fact, the
spiritual renewal that had begun percolating through the United States had not q
uite come to a boil
by 1996, when Clinton campaigned for reelection, or even by 1998, when he was im
peached, but
the general sense of moral unease with the president’s actions certainly came into
focus after 1999.
“I Did Not Have Sex with That Woman”
The buoyant economy was a tremendous fire wall for Clinton against any Republica
n challenger in
1996. It was ironic that, having come into office criticizing the Reagan policie
s, Clinton now
claimed credit for them and fortified his reelection bid with them. Perhaps awar
e that any candidate
would be a sacrificial lamb—the “Mondale of 1996”—the Republicans nominated warhorse Rob
ert
Dole of Kansas, who had walked point for Gerald Ford in 1976. Dole had paid his
dues, and minor
challenges from other candidates had failed to gain traction. Already the questi
on before the
electorate was clear: would any candidate running on “character issues” be sufficien
t to unseat a
president in a booming economy in peacetime?
Ross Perot returned with another independent campaign as the nominee of the Refo
rm Party.
However, in 1996, the issues differed dramatically from those of 1992: budget de
ficits were gone
or disappearing; unemployment had plummeted; and free trade no longer seemed a t
hreat. Perot
severely hurt himself by failing to attack Clinton’s credibility and character pro
blems, leaving Dole
as the only real alternative to Clinton.
Dole lacked Reagan’s charm and grace, and, though not without humor (Dole later ap
peared in
clever Pepsi, Visa, and Viagra commercials), the GOP standard-bearer seemed too
old (he was
younger than Reagan, at 73, but seemed to lack energy). His vice-presidential no
minee, tax-cutting
advocate (and former Buffalo Bills quarterback) Jack Kemp, lacked the aggressive
ness to attack
weaknesses in the Democratic platform. Above all, Dole and Kemp still operated o
ut of fear that
lingered from the 1995 government shutdown, when the Democrats had successfully
demonized
Republicans as opposing children and the elderly.
Clinton’s vulnerability lay in the serious character weaknesses—the lies about extra
marital affairs
had already become well-documented. Equally important, the Democratic National C
ommittee had
developed a strategy for burying the Republicans under a tidal wave of cash, fro
m any source.
Clinton rode the crest of that wave. Slowly at first, then with greater frequenc
y, reports of Clinton’s
unethical and often illegal fund-raising activities began to appear in the press
. Concern about
money from the communist People’s Republic of China, funneled through John Huang i
nto the
Clinton/Gore coffers, percolated through newsrooms, but the media never closed t
he loop of
equating the cash with policy payoffs by the administration. Huang’s cash payments
were the most
serious breach of government ethics since Teapot Dome and, more important, were
grounds for a
special prosecutor, but the Clinton Justice Department was certainly not about t
o conduct such an
investigation.
With the Clinton media team in full spin mode, each new revelation was carefully
managed by
several loyalists who received talking points by fax machines each morning. They
were
immediately dispatched to the television talk shows to claim that (1) everybody
does it, (2) there
was really nothing illegal about the transactions, and (3) the allegations were
merely Republican
efforts to smear Clinton. Without a tenacious—or, more appropriate, vicious—press to
look
skeptically at every administration defense (and defender), as it had in the Wat
ergate era, Clinton
successfully swept aside the most damaging issues of the campaign.
When the votes were tallied in November, Clinton still had not cracked the 50 pe
rcent mark, netting
49 percent, whereas Dole received 41 percent and Perot snatched 8 percent. Clint
on increased his
electoral margin over 1992 by 9 electoral votes, indicating the damage done to h
im by the ongoing
scandals.
Even after his reelection, the character issue haunted Clinton in the form of an
ongoing thorn in his
side named Paula Corbin Jones. Named in The American Spectator “troopergate” story a
s having
had an affair with then-governor Clinton, Jones set out to prove that something
quite different had
happened. In 1994, Jones filed a civil lawsuit against President Bill Clinton fo
r sexual harassment
during a political event at a Little Rock hotel while Clinton was governor of Ar
kansas. While
working a meeting at the Excelsior Hotel in 1991, Clinton sent troopers to ask h
er to come up to a
hotel room to meet the governor, and Jones claimed that once she had entered the
room, and
realized that only she and Clinton were there, Governor Clinton exposed himself
and asked her to
perform oral sex on him. Jones refused, left the room, then alleged that she had
suffered “various
job detriments” for refusing his advances.63 The lawsuit proved historic because i
n 1997 the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled against Clinton’s legal claim that a citizen could not sue a p
resident. Quite the
contrary, the Supreme Court unanimously concluded “like every other citizen who pr
operly
invokes [the District Court’s] jurisdiction…[she] has a right to an orderly disposit
ion of her
claims.”64 Or, stated another way, no citizen is above the law.
Jones’s legal team began the discovery process, during which it gathered evidence
and took
depositions. Understandably, one of the questions the Jones legal team asked Cli
nton in his
deposition required him to identify all the women with whom he had had sexual re
lations since
1986. (He was married the entire time.) Clinton answered, under oath, “none.” Alread
y Gennifer
Flowers and former Miss Arkansas Sally Perdue had claimed to have had an affair
with Clinton
(Flowers’s affair occurred during the time in question), but the Jones team found
several others.
One of them was Juanita Broaddrick, who contended that in April 1978, Clinton ha
d raped her
while he was attorney general of Arkansas, and while she had told a coworker at
the time, she had
not pressed charges.
In fact, one relationship was still going on at the time of Jones’s suit—regular sex
ual liaisons at the
White House between Clinton and a young intern, Monica Lewinsky. Most Clinton bi
ographers
disagree over whether Hillary knew about the ongoing liaisons or whether she was
kept in the
dark.65 (She would have protected her husband to prevent their loss of power.) T
he fact that a
president of the United States would boldly lie about his relationship with Lewi
nsky to
representatives of a federal court would have gone unreported except for the wor
k of an Internet
sleuth, Matt Drudge. Drudge, who styled himself after Walter Winchell, the journ
alist who virtually
invented the gossip column, ran a Web site in which he posted the latest rumblin
gs from
newsrooms around the country. He learned that Newsweek magazine had found out ab
out the
Lewinsky affair, but had determined to spike the story. Drudge ran with it, forc
ing the major media
outlets to cover it and, in the process, establishing himself as the vanguard of
a new wave of
Internet reporters.66
The Clinton-Lewinsky case, therefore, became as significant for the change it he
ralded in
journalism as it had done for the actual facts of the case. Already Rush Limbaug
h had exposed the
details of the Clinton health-care plan on AM radio. Now an unknown Internet rep
orter had broken
a case that the major partisan press refused to uncover. Talk radio and the Inte
rnet joined a couple
of conservative papers and the Fox News Network to provide, for the first time i
n fifty years, a
genuine opposition press in America. The dominant liberal media would no longer
control the spin
of public events.
Meanwhile, a wave of indignation spread about the president’s involvement with a y
oung intern.
Clinton concluded that he could not tell the public the truth because it would d
estroy him
politically. In a televised appearance he blatantly lied to the nation, “I did not
have sex with that
woman, Ms. Lewinsky!” It harked back to Nixon’s famous statement to the American peo
ple that
their president was “not a crook.”
Clinton’s team revived the successful “nuts and sluts” strategy that had worked well i
n the early
1990s with Gennifer Flowers: painting Lewinsky, Jones, and Perdue as crazy or pr
omiscuous. Yet
no sooner had the first blast of public scorn receded when another woman, a supp
orter of the
president’s named Kathleen Willey, appeared on a national television news show to
claim that
Clinton had harassed her too, pinning her against a wall while he groped her in
the White House.
Starr’s investigation now had to shift gears. Independent counsels are charged wit
h the task of
investigating all episodes of obstruction of justice, including any new charges
that arise during the
original investigation. That, after all, was exactly what had sunk Nixon: invest
igations of
subsequent infractions, not the burglary. The new allegations required Starr to
investigate the Jones
claims as well, and he was ordered to do so by the three-judge panel that had ha
nded him the Foster
and Travelgate cases. Starr’s investigation was no more about sex than Al Capone’s a
rrest had been
about income tax evasion. Rather, it was about Clinton’s lying to a grand jury—lying
under oath. In
fact, had Starr chosen, he could have packaged the Lewinsky/Travelgate/Whitewate
r/Foster/and
John Huang finance abuses into a giant RICO case (racketeering charges that did
not require a
single criminal behavior but which covered a wide pattern of abuse).
Public opinion polls still reflected high job approval for Clinton, but his pers
onal approval ratings
started to sink. The public seemed willing to ignore the president’s behavior as l
ong as no obvious
evidence of lying to investigators surfaced. However, Lewinsky’s infamous blue dre
ss, containing
Clinton’s DNA, surfaced, ensuring the public that neither Congress nor Clinton cou
ld get off
without making difficult choices. Lewinsky, in one of her encounters with the pr
esident, had saved
the dress she wore that night. Once again, the major media knew about the eviden
ce and buried the
story, and once again Matt Drudge pried it out of the pressrooms.
Drudge’s revelations showed that the president was on record as having lied in fro
nt of a federal
grand jury—a felony, and certainly grounds for removal. On August 17, 1998, he mad
e a public
apology to the nation. Having just weeks earlier flatly lied, he now admitted th
at “while my
answers [to the grand jury] were legally accurate, I did not volunteer informati
on. Indeed, I did
have a relationship with Ms. Lewinsky that was not appropriate. In fact, it was
wrong.”67 Even the
apology, though, which included numerous explanations and rationalizations, was
itself a political
deflection to take the edge off the evidence that Starr was about to deliver.
In order to make abundantly clear the nature of Clinton’s lies, Starr’s report had t
o provide highly
specific sexual details. The same critics who complained about lack of specifici
ty in previous
allegations suddenly wailed about Starr’s evidence being too specific and personal
.
Clinton counted on the House members, including many Republicans, to refuse to e
xamine the
Starr Report when it was finally submitted in September 1998. To his surprise, a
lmost all
Republicans and many Democrats examined the evidence. What they found was shocki
ng. Not
included in the public Starr Report that had hit newsstands shortly after it was
delivered to
Congress was confidential material relating to the rape allegations by Juanita B
roaddrick. When
combined with Kathleen Willey’s testimony about Clinton’s thuggish behavior toward h
er, it
painted a portrait of a multiple offender and, possibly, a rapist. One House mem
ber said that what
he had read nauseated him. There was bipartisan support to begin impeachment pro
ceedings, with
the House voting 258 to 176 for the inquiry. Even after the November elections s
haved a handful of
votes from the Republican ranks, the actual floor vote to impeach saw five Democ
rats join the
House Republicans to vote for two articles of impeachment: obstruction of justic
e and lying to a
federal grand jury. (It could easily have been three counts: later, Judge Susan
Webber Wright
would state that Clinton had submitted a false affidavit in her hearing as well,
but she did not make
this fact known until after the impeachment process. Wright was a Clinton appoin
tee, and a former
student of his when he had taught at the University of Arkansas.)
At that point, the media failed in its job of presenting facts and educating the
public.
Constitutionally, the purpose of the House investigation is to determine whether
laws have been
broken that pose a threat to the integrity of the legal system or whether the of
fense rises to the
constitutional level called high crimes and misdemeanors. Simply engaging in beh
avior detrimental
to the office of the presidency can be interpreted by the House as a “high crime”—diff
erent from a
statutory crime. Whether or not an act is an impeachable offense is strictly wit
hin the jurisdiction of
the House, according to the Constitution. Once the House has turned out articles
of impeachment,
the trial takes place in the Senate, whose sole constitutional duty is to determ
ine the guilt or
innocence of the accused—not to render judgment on the seriousness of the crimes.
Clinton and the
Senate Democrats counted on flawed public understanding of the Constitution, com
bined with the
willing alliance of the media, to cloud the procedures. When the Senate trial be
gan in early 1999,
the House sent thirteen “managers” to present the case, pleading with the senators t
o examine the
confidential material. The House managers, led by Henry Hyde of Illinois and cou
nsel David
Schippers, a Democrat, were convinced that an objective person reading the Broad
drick and Willey
accounts would conclude that Clinton had lied and had done so repeatedly and del
iberately, and
that he posed an ongoing threat to other women in the White House. But Schippers
was stunned to
hear one senator state flatly that most of them had no intention of even looking
at the evidence, and
that even if there was a dead body in the Oval Office, “You wouldn’t get 67 votes to
convict.”68
Republican senators, cowed by the polls, made it clear before the proceedings st
arted that they
would not call witnesses, introduce new evidence into the record, or in any way
ask any questions
that might embarrass the president. The trial was over before it had begun, and
Clinton was
acquitted by a vote of 56 to 44. Although four Republicans voted for acquittal,
not a single
Democrat voted for conviction.
Clinton and the Democrats crowed about the November elections in which the Repub
licans lost
seats in the House (but still maintained a majority) as evidence that impeachmen
t was misguided.
Clinton tried to claim vindication by the vote. In fact, however, a cynical disg
ust had set in. Just as
the Republicans had overestimated the strength of their 1994 victory, Clinton mi
sread both the
verdict of impeachment and the results of the two national elections in which he
had failed to
receive 50 percent of the vote in either. By 1999, surveys increasingly showed t
hat people would
not go into business with the president, or even allow him to babysit for their
kids. The public
tolerated him, but certainly did not trust him. Late-night comedians made Clinto
n a regular part of
their routines, and Saturday Night Live mercilessly ridiculed him. By the time i
mpeachment was
over, Hubbell and the McDougals had been jailed; Vince Foster was dead; Elders a
nd Espy had
resigned in disgrace; and Dick Morris, Clinton’s adviser, had quit in the midst of
his own scandal
with a prostitute. Later, on the basis of his fraudulent statement to Judge Wrig
ht, Clinton was
disbarred in Arkansas.
Once cleared of the charges, Clinton embarked on a quest for legacy building, at
tempting to erase
the state of the Lewinsky saga from his presidency. Much of his effort involved
intervention
abroad, although some of those initiatives had started long before any articles
of impeachment were
drawn up. Unfortunately, some of them were shaped and directed while Clinton’s min
d was on his
impeachment battle, among other things.
Missions Undefined
Having avoided the military draft during the Vietnam era, President Clinton comm
itted more troops
to combat situations than any peacetime president in American history. Supportin
g a humanitarian
food-delivery mission in Somalia in 1992, George Bush had dispatched 25,000 troo
ps with the
understanding that the United Nations would take over the job of food distributi
on. But in June
1993, after Pakistani peacekeepers were killed by local warlords, Clinton expand
ed the mission to
hunt down the leading troublemaker, General Mohammed Adid.
Using seize-and-arrest missions, carried out by the Rangers and Delta Force, mos
tly in Mogadishu,
American troops sought Adid without success, although they captured many of his
lieutenants. The
raids usually went off without a hitch, but one attempt to grab Adid turned into
a disaster. When the
plan went awry, American helicopters were shot down and 18 Rangers, pilots, and
special forces
troops were killed. One Ranger’s dead body was dragged through the streets of Moga
dishu.69
Clinton pulled the American forces out, leading anti-American terrorists like Os
ama bin Laden and
Saddam Hussein to coin a “Mogadishu strategy”: killing enough American soldiers that
a president
would lose popular support for the mission.
Unlike Somalia, which the world soon forgot or ignored, a more troublesome sore
spot was the
Balkans, in which Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. Yugosla
via had been
kept together in the communist era by Marshall Tito’s delicate use of brute force
and political
balance. Once communism fell, each ethnic group again sought its own national st
atus. Notions that
these groups lived peacefully side by side under communism seriously underestima
ted the skill and
oppressive force that Tito had used to keep the fractured nation together.
When Croatia withdrew from Yugoslavia, the major substate, Serbia, under Preside
nt Slobodan
Milosevic, sent troops to aid the local Serb sympathizers in putting down the Cr
oatian rebellion.
Croatia managed to stave off the Serbs, but Bosnia, which had declared independe
nce in 1992, had
mixed ethnic groups and multiple nationalities, presenting a more difficult task
in resisting the
Serbs. A new Balkan war started to erupt as the Serbs engaged in “ethnic cleansing
,” a process of
outright killing of non-Serbs or, at the very least, driving them out of areas c
ontrolled by
Milosevic’s forces. Serb policies starkly resembled Hitler’s campaign to eradicate t
he Jews, and
Milosevic was personally so unappealing that he was easily demonized in the pres
s. Although
Clinton promised support to NATO, most Americans viewed the Balkans as a Europea
n problem.
Moreover, with Russia’s continued support of its old ally, Serbia, the old NATO-ve
rsus-Warsaw
Pact antagonisms threatened to reignite.
NATO air power supported Croatian and Bosnian forces in driving back the Serbs.
In 1995 the
warring parties agreed to a meeting in Dayton, Ohio, where they signed the Dayto
n Accords,
creating a unified but partitioned Bosnia with Muslims and Croats in one area an
d Bosnian Serbs in
another. This agreement required the presence of 60,000 NATO peacekeepers, inclu
ding 20,000
U.S. troops, which testified to the weakness of the settlement. United Nations i
nvestigators found
mass graves containing 3,000 Muslims, leading to the indictments of several Serb
leaders as war
criminals.
Milosevic refused to go away, instead focusing on a new target, the region of Ko
sovo, controlled
by a Serbian minority and populated by numerous Muslim Albanians. The Kosovo Lib
eration
Army, a Muslim-armed terrorist organization, began a series of attacks on Serb t
argets in 1998,
whereupon Milosevic dispatched more Serb troops. Western press reports of widesp
read
atrocities—most of which were later shown to be unverifiable—once again prompted Cli
nton to
commit American forces through NATO. Desperate to draw attention away from his W
hite House
scandals, yet aware that he did not dare repeat the Vietnam ground scenario in t
he Balkans, Clinton
ordered the Pentagon to carefully conduct the campaign from 15,000 feet to avoid
U.S. casualties.
According to the U.S. Air Force chief of staff, Clinton made a “major blunder” in ru
ling out the use
of ground troops from the beginning.70 Despite steady bombardment, the Serbs suf
fered only
minor military damage: the worst destruction involved a mistaken American attack
on the Chinese
embassy. The Serbs had fooled NATO, skillfully employing clever decoys in large
numbers. Like
the Gulf War, the Kosovo campaign featured a coalition of NATO aircraft, but unl
ike Desert
Storm, it lacked any clear mission except to make Kosovo safe for the Kosovars.
Once Milosevic
had forced all the Kosovars out—which had been his objective—he agreed to negotiatio
ns. Less
than a decade later, NATO commanders would admit they could not “keep peace” there a
ny longer.
Another ongoing source of foreign policy trouble was the Middle East, especially
the Arab-Israeli
conflict. Since the administration of Jimmy Carter, American policy makers have
expended
countless hours and vast treasure on obtaining a peace in the region, specifical
ly a lasting
agreement between Israel and her Muslim neighbors.
Handshake agreements with photo opportunities, such as the Wye Plantation “nonagre
ement”
between the Israelis and the Palestinians, played perfectly to Clinton’s own incli
nations for quick
fixes abroad. Two interrelated challenges revealed the deadly weakness of this v
iew of international
affairs. The first was the revival of Saddam Hussein. During the Gulf War, Georg
e Bush and his
advisers had chosen not to overthrow Hussein because it would, in all likelihood
, have resulted in a
bloody civil war among Sunni and Shiite Muslims, as well as the minority Kurds,
and it risked
escalation to a broader war involving Iran or Turkey. An inevitable American/NAT
O/allied
occupation of Baghdad would have placed U.S. peacekeepers in constant danger fro
m all parties.
Thus, allied war aims in 1991 did not include removing Hussein; he was only to b
e rendered
incapable of offensive military action. Many analysts in Europe and the Middle E
ast thought
internal opposition would force Hussein out anyway without additional pressure.
That did not
happen, and Hussein carried a grudge from his battlefield humiliation.
Where Clinton underestimated Hussein was in the Iraqi’s ability and willingness to
use terrorist
weapons against western powers. In 1981 the Israeli Air Force had bombed the Ira
qi Osirak nuclear
power facility, claiming that Hussein intended it for the production of nuclear
weapons. Iraq then
took its nuclear program underground, employing as many as seven thousand in an
attempt to
manufacture a nuclear bomb or missile.71 Hussein cleverly hid his main biologica
l and chemical
weapons facilities in defiance of United Nations resolutions. Throughout the Cli
nton
administration, in speech after speech by Clinton, Al Gore, and other top Democr
ats, the point was
reaffirmed that Saddam Hussein had chemical and biological weapons, and was like
ly getting
nukes.
Another figure, whom the Clinton administration totally ignored, actually posed
a more immediate
threat. Osama bin Laden, a wealthy Saudi-born fundamentalist Muslim who had been
exiled from
his homeland and taken up residence in Afghanistan, directly attacked United Sta
tes soil. On
February 26, 1993, bin Laden’s agents (using Iraqi passports) had set off a massiv
e car bomb under
the structure of the World Trade Center (WTC), killing seven people and wounding
some seven
hundred. They had intended to bring the WTC down but failed. Four Muslims were c
aptured and
tried, including Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman. In 1994 a New York City jury found all
four guilty of
murder. Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind behind the plan, was captured two years lat
er and also
convicted.
From the safety of Sudan, then Afghanistan, bin Laden planned his next strike ag
ainst the United
States. A plan to hijack several airliners over the Pacific was foiled. Then, in
August 1998,
powerful bombs ripped apart the American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Tanzan
ia, leaving
184 dead (including 12 Americans) and thousands wounded.72 Clinton ordered retal
iatory strikes,
including the bombing of alleged terrorist camps in Sudan and bin Laden’s headquar
ters in
Afghanistan, but only an aspirin factory was hit. Clinton succeeded in proving t
o bin Laden that he
wanted a bloodless victory from afar.
The entire Clinton approach to bin Laden (and all terrorists) was to treat terro
rism as a law
enforcement problem and not a national security/military issue. This policy had
far-reaching (and
negative) effects because when a terrorist like Ramzi Yousef is indicted, all ev
idence is sealed and
cannot be used by the FBI or CIA to thwart other attacks. It was not a program d
esigned to deal
with the evil bin Laden. Bin Laden’s forces staged other attacks: on the Khobar To
wers in Dharan,
Saudi Arabia; on the USS Cole; and a foiled assault on the USS The Sullivans—all w
ithout any
serious retaliation by the United States under Clinton.
Only after 9/11 did evidence surface that Clinton had turned down not one but th
ree offers from
foreign governments to seize bin Laden, one by Sudan in 1996 and one by a Pakist
ani official
working with an “unnamed Gulf State” in July 2000, and a third undated offer from th
e Saudi
secret police, who had traced the luggage of bin Laden’s mother when she visited h
im.73 Having
hurled expensive Tomahawks at unoccupied tents in a public show of force, Clinto
n thereafter,
according to his advisers, demonstrated a consistent lack of interest in, or com
mitment to, the fight
against terrorism. He consistently downgraded funding requests for the Central I
ntelligence
Agency’s human intelligence capabilities and rejected any attempts to watch terror
suspects within
U.S. borders, unless they were somehow tied to white militia groups.74
Yet as Clinton escaped conviction and coasted to the end of his second term, the
threat of Osama
bin Laden seemed remote, if not insignificant. Saddam Hussein posed what was tho
ught to be a
regional threat, but lacked (it was thought) the ability to launch direct attack
s on the United States.
Damaged but still determined, Clinton continued to rely on the economy to advanc
e his proposals,
though they became increasingly smaller in focus. Evidence had already begun to
surface, however,
that the economy was not in the great shape Clinton—and the country—thought. Worse,
the
terrorist threat he had all but ignored resurfaced in a tragic and horrific way.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
America, World Leader, 2000 and Beyond
A Generation Challenged
During the 1990s, Americans were repeatedly reminded of “the greatest generation”—thos
e who
had come out of the Great Depression and swept away the Axis powers in World War
II.1 Implied
in the term was the assumption that the United States had reached its apex of ho
nor, courage, and
determination in 1945, and had been on a downward slope ever since. The Clinton
presidency
seemed to underscore this assumption. The first boomer president, Clinton seemed
to personify
everything the GIs had not: a self-absorbed man who had avoided national militar
y service and
never delayed gratification.
Many Americans were beginning to doubt their own purpose, and America’s position,
in the world.
Yet just when some thought that the horrors endured by the GIs could not be topp
ed, nor their
courage matched, and just as the nation’s moral compass fluttered wildly, everythi
ng changed in a
nanosecond. A bitterly contested election put an unlikely figure in the White Ho
use, but a
bloodthirsty attack drew Americans together, at least temporarily, with directio
n and patriotism. An
old enemy surfaced to remind the United States of its primacy in the world and o
f the relative
irrelevance of international action.
Time Line
2000:
Election of George W. Bush disputed by Al Gore; case goes to United States Supre
me Court in
December; Court rules that Gore’s challenge is unconstitutional; Bush elected pres
ident by
electoral college; Republicans win Senate and House for first time since the 195
0s
2001:
Muslim terrorists attack World Trade Center and Pentagon (9/11); Bush declares w
ar on terror;
United States invades Afghanistan and overthrows Taliban government friendly to
Al Qaeda
terrorists; Al Qaeda evicted from Afghanistan, assets frozen
2002:
Al Qaeda bases in Afghanistan destroyed; “Axis of Evil” speech; D.C. Snipers; GOP wi
ns historic
election
2003:
Operation Iraqi Freedom; Baghdad captured
2004:
Iraqi interim government assumes control of Iraq
Clintonism Collapses
After the 1996 election—and before the impeachment process had gained momentum—Bill
Clinton stood atop the political world. His approval ratings held in the low 60
percent range; he
successfully claimed credit for reforming welfare and for getting the North Amer
ican Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) passed; and he had mastered the new political art of triangula
tion. Pockets of
hard-core liberalism remained—on the West Coast and in New England especially—but Cl
inton
thrived largely by taking credit for conservative legislation, such as welfare r
eform, passed by the
Republicans. Most of all, he pointed to the apparently healthy economy.
All of these benefits fell on the obvious Democratic nominee, incumbent Vice Pre
sident Albert
Gore Jr., who had easily won the Democratic nomination in Los Angeles.
Seldom in American history had sitting vice presidents lost during times of peac
e and prosperity
(Richard Nixon, in 1960, is one of the few who did). The advantages of incumbenc
y, combined
with unease about changing horses, creates a powerful disadvantage for the chall
enger. Al Gore,
however, could not boast too much about the economy without associating himself
with his boss.
Consequently, during his acceptance speech (where he introduced his mantra “I am m
y own man”)
and throughout his campaign, he shied away from the Clinton record, even to the
extent that he did
not tout the booming economy. A darker fact may also have influenced Gore’s unwill
ingness to run
on prosperity: storm warnings were appearing on the horizon by mid-2000, but sub
sequent review
of Commerce Department statistics suggests the government had put the best possi
ble spin on the
nation’s economic health, possibly even misstating the actual growth numbers.2 Eit
her way, Gore
could see that he had no choice but to distance himself from the president.
As for Republicans, the race for the White House actually started with Bob Dole’s
defeat in
November 1996. Many GOP analysts concluded that the party needed a “charisma injec
tion,” and
that it could not afford to run any more “tired old men” merely out of obligation. S
ome Republicans
yearned for a “GOP Clinton”—someone who could soften the ideological edges to appeal t
o the
soccer moms and the independents who had deserted Dole in 1996.3 However, any ca
ndidate had
to represent strong conservative positions against gun control, abortion, and ta
xes.
In late 1999, just such a new star appeared on the GOP horizon when popular Texa
s Governor
George W. Bush, the son of the former president, threw his hat in the ring. Bush
, or Dubya, as he
was called to differentiate him from his father, had gone from Midland, Texas, t
o Andover and
Yale, where he admittedly achieved mediocrity. A typical frat boy, Bush graduate
d and served as a
lieutenant in the air national guard, where he flew F-104 fighter planes. He rec
eived an MBA from
Harvard (the first president ever to do so), where he began to take his educatio
n more seriously.4
Returning to Midland, he attempted to make a career in the oil business, but it
went badly. Bush
and other investors had started a small company just as oil prices plunged world
wide. When his
father ran for president in 1988, Dubya worked on his campaign as a speechwriter
and made
enough contacts to put together a partnership to purchase the Texas Rangers prof
essional baseball
team in 1989. Running the team as managing general partner, Bush later joked tha
t his only
noteworthy accomplishment had been trading home run star Sammy Sosa to the Chica
go Cubs. In
fact, he did an excellent job restoring the team to competitiveness on the field
and solvency on the
books.
After a wild youth in which he gained a reputation as a regular partygoer, Bush
experienced a
religious conversion in 1988, later becoming the first modern presidential candi
date to specifically
name Jesus Christ as the chief influence on his life. During the debates with De
mocratic
presidential candidate Al Gore, Bush handled the pressure by fingering a tiny cr
oss in his pocket.
Time and again, whether in the postelection recount turmoil, or the horrific day
s following 9/11,
Bush’s religious faith was front and center. He had become, easily, the most publi
cly religious
president since Lincoln.
In 1994, Bush ran for governor of Texas against a popular Democratic incumbent,
Ann Richards, a
silver-haired flamethrower who had lambasted the elder Bush at the 1992 Democrat
ic campaign
with the line, “Poor George! He was born with a silver foot in his mouth!” But two y
ears later,
“poor George’s” son exacted political revenge. Richards badly underestimated Bush, moc
king him
as an intellectual lightweight, but he won with 53 percent of the vote. Clinging
to the Right on
matters of economics and taxes, Bush gained a reputation for working with politi
cal opponents to
advance important legislation. Equally surprising, he made sharp inroads into th
e traditionally
Democratic Hispanic vote. In 1998, he ran for reelection, winning in a landslide
.
Bush had learned one lesson quite well from Clinton: money overcomes myriad poli
tical sins. He
committed himself to raising more money, from more small donors, than any other
candidate in
history. This allowed him to turn down federal campaign funds, thereby freeing h
im from federal
election spending limits. Breaking new ground by soliciting funds through the In
ternet, Bush
hauled in thousands in $50 increments, and within three months of his announceme
nt, had raised an
astonishing $36 million. He would later prove to be the greatest political fund-
raiser in American
history, dwarfing the-then record levels of cash pulled in by Bill Clinton.
Understanding the reality that defeating an incumbent party during a peacetime g
ood economy was
a Herculean task, Bush quietly worked to gain the support of the more than thirt
y Republican
governors, including his brother, Jeb Bush of Florida, whose state support he wo
uld need in
November 2000 if he got that far. Bush’s team also controlled the convention in Ph
iladelphia,
where the party was determined to shatter the image that it was for rich white m
en once and for all,
with dozens of black, Hispanic, Asian, disabled, and women speakers. The only su
rprise was the
selection of former Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney as the vice presidential
nominee.
Gore looked forward to the televised debates, where his advisers were convinced
their man’s
experience would easily carry the day. To their horror, Bush not only held his o
wn, but he won all
three. Worse for Gore, the Green Party fielded a candidate in the election, Ralp
h Nader, who was
certainly guaranteed to take votes from the Democrat. Unable to run far enough t
o the left to
capture Nader’s supporters, Gore’s chances slipped away. With Bush clinging to a nar
row lead in
the polls, on the last weekend of the election, a Democratic operative in New Ha
mpshire
discovered an old arrest record of Bush from his college days for driving under
the influence.
Pollsters found the race tightening up rapidly in the forty-eight hours before t
he election, and what
had appeared at one point to be a Bush electoral landslide became the tightest r
ace in American
history.
The night began poorly for Bush when Gore “won” a shocker in Florida. The networks c
alled that
key state before the polls had closed in its western part, by all accounts causi
ng numerous Bush
supporters en route to abandon their intention to vote. After all, Gore had won
the state. Or had he?
After a few hours, the networks backtracked, saying Florida was too close to cal
l.5 In fact, Bush led
in every tallied count in the state at the time, although he watched a large lea
d of more than 10,000
votes shrink to 537 in the final minutes of counting. By that time, every other
state had been called
(except Alaska and Hawaii, each of whose three electoral votes canceled the othe
r out). With
Florida’s 25 electoral votes, Bush had 271, or one more electoral vote than necess
ary to win the
election. Without them, Gore, who had narrowly won the popular vote (50.15 milli
on to Bush’s
49.82 million), would also take the electoral college.
At three o’clock in the morning, after the final votes in Florida had certified Bu
sh the winner by
950 votes, Gore telephoned Bush with his concession. Under Florida’s laws, however
, the
closeness of the vote triggered an automatic recount, so Gore, sensing he still
had a chance, called
Bush back an hour later to retract the concession. The recount cost Bush a few v
otes, but he still
emerged with a 327-vote lead. Meanwhile, in Palm Beach County some residents cla
imed that they
had been confused by the county’s ballots.6 Gore’s advisers saw an opportunity to se
lectively use a
hand recount in only Democratic strongholds where they could “find” the necessary vo
tes to
overcome Bush’s slim lead.7
Like their Reconstruction Republican counterparts, the modern Democrats thought
they had an
edge because they controlled the voting machines in the local districts that wou
ld ultimately be
involved in any recount, so naturally Bush petitioned a federal court to block s
elected hand
recounts. By then, Bush had assembled a top-flight legal team, directed on the g
round by former
secretary of state and Reagan adviser James Baker. Bush, meanwhile, stayed behin
d the scenes at
his ranch in Crawford, Texas. Gore assembled his own “dream team” of liberal lawyers
, including
Laurence Tribe and the protagonist in the Microsoft lawsuit, David Boies. Their
strategy was
simple: “Do everything you can to put numbers on the board. Whether they’re erased o
r chiseled in
granite, get them on the board.”8 To counter that, the Bush team emphasized the eq
ual protection
clause of the Constitution. Counting (or recounting) some votes and not others v
iolated the
principle of one man, one vote.
For days, panels of election officials stared blankly at ballots, trying to dete
rmine if a ballot had
been punched or not. Determining intent in such circumstances was impossible. Th
is painstaking
process took time, but Florida law required that the secretary of state, Katheri
ne Harris, certify the
final results from all counties on the seventh day following the general electio
n. Although the
Florida Supreme Court prohibited Harris from certifying the results, giving the
recount process still
more time, overseas ballots had pushed Bush’s lead to 930. Secretary of State Harr
is followed the
Florida constitution and certified the election on November twenty-sixth, whereu
pon she declared
Bush the winner. With the ballots counted three times, and the result each time
in his favor, Bush
made a national television appearance to claim victory.
Gore realized that he had seriously miscalculated the public relations fallout c
aused by calling for
only a partial recount, and that the Constitution had put in place a ticking ele
ctoral college clock.9
He then shifted gears, calling for a statewide recount. A key ruling by Florida
Circuit Judge N.
Sander Sauls rejected the request for a hand recount of selected (disputed) coun
ties, and at the same
time, the Republican-controlled Florida legislature prepared to appoint its own
slate of federal
electors if the dispute was not settled by the December twelfth constitutional d
eadline. By then,
Gore realized he had shot himself in the foot by demanding selected initial reco
unts from three
precincts in the state of Florida, which chewed a valuable amount of time off th
e clock, which
might have permitted a statewide recount later. He appealed to the U.S. Supreme
Court to extend
Florida deadlines and to allow hand recounts. That same day, the U.S. Supreme Co
urt vacated (set
aside) the November twenty-first Florida Supreme Court ruling; in essence, rulin
g that the Florida
Supreme Court had delivered a purely partisan decision. Yet the state justices r
esponded by
ordering a statewide recount of all ballots where no vote was detectable—some 43,0
00 ballots—
essentially claiming that no choice was not an acceptable choice, and that all b
allots, in essence,
must have chosen a presidential candidate. When Leon County Judge Terry Lewis or
dered the local
boards to determine what constituted a vote, the Bush team told Gore lead attorn
ey David Boies,
“We just won this case.”10 Any variance by any local board in accepting votes after
the fact
constituted a violation of due process for all those who had already voted in al
l the other counties
and whose votes were not going to be reinterpreted. Bush’s victory may have been a
pparent to the
Bush lawyers, though not to Gore’s team, when on Tuesday, December twelfth—the feder
al
deadline for the submission of all presidential electors’ names—the United States Su
preme Court
reversed the Florida Supreme Court decision by a 5–4 vote. But the actual decision
on key points
was not that close. The key Supreme Court ruling was 7–2 that the hand-counting pr
ocess violated
federal equal protection clauses because of the absence of objective standards o
n the dimpled chads
and other ballots. Five justices also stated that there was not enough time to c
ount the votes (with
the results due that day according to the Constituton). Gore conceded. Polls sho
wed that people
thought the Supreme Court had reached its decision on the merits of the case, no
t out of partisan
leanings toward Bush.11 Numerous media-sponsored recounts occurred in the wake o
f the election,
well into May 2001. Most concluded that Bush would have won under almost any sta
ndard. A USA
Today/Miami Herald survey of 61,000 ballots, followed by a broader review of 111
,000 overvotes
(where voters marked more than one candidate’s name, and thus were disallowed), fo
und that if
Gore had received the manual recounts he had requested in four counties, Bush wo
uld have gained
yet another 152 votes; and if the Supreme Court had not stopped the hand countin
g of the
undervotes (ballots where a hole had not been punched cleanly through), Bush wou
ld have won
under three of four standards for determining voter intent.12
More ominous overtones emerged from the election, which revealed a division in A
merica
identified by the colors of a countrywide county map. The counties Bush carried
were colored red
and Gore’s blue. Gore carried only 677 counties in the United States, whereas Bush
won 2,434,
encompassing more than 2.4 million square miles to the blue states’ 580,000 square
miles. Most
striking, with few exceptions, from New York to California, the entire map is re
d: Gore won some
border areas, the coasts, and a thin line stretching from Minnesota down the Mis
sissippi River. The
visual representation of the election was stunning, with virtually all of the in
terior United States (or
what elites often derisively refer to as “flyover country”) voting for Bush. Symboli
cally, it appeared
that the Democrats had been isolated into a few urban coastal cities, increasing
ly divorced from
middle America.
Grand Corruption and Petty Larceny
Had Clinton chosen to view it in such a manner, Gore’s defeat would not have meant
a rebuke for
his own presidency. After all, it could be reasoned, Gore had won a majority of
the popular vote.
But Clinton took the election as a plebiscite on his two terms and fumed that Go
re had bungled a
gift-wrapped package. But America had not seen the last of the Clintons.
In 1999, Hillary had already decided to run for the U.S. Senate seat held by the
retiring Patrick
Moynihan of New York. Along with Massachusetts and, perhaps, California, New Yor
k is one of
the safest Democratic states in the United States. Having never lived in the sta
te, and with little
understanding of issues important to New Yorkers, Hillary donned a New York Yank
ees cap and
purchased a mansion in Chappaqua, a posh New York City suburb that would permit
her to claim
residency. She faced a tough campaign against New York City Mayor Rudolph “Rudy” Giu
liani,
but he developed prostate cancer and, at the same time, his failing marriage was
being splashed
across tabloid pages. He handed over the nomination to Congressman Rick Lazio, w
ho lost to
Hillary heavily (53 percent to 45 percent).
With Hillary’s November 2000 victory, the Clintons had a house. To furnish it, Hil
lary—who had
just signed a massive, controversial $8 million book deal for her memoirs—register
ed with major
stores in New York and Washington, almost as a newlywed couple would. Friends we
re asked by
party loyalists to furnish the house as an appreciation of the eight years of se
rvice.13
An avalanche of gifts rolled in from the Clintons’ registries (many, it was noted,
from individuals
or companies that still stood to gain from Senator Clinton’s access to power): Gle
n Eden Carpets in
Georgia gave two $6,000 carpets; Lynn Forester of New York City gave Hillary a $
1,300 cashmere
sweater; Arthur Athis in Los Angeles provided $2,400 in dining chairs; Walter Ka
ye of New York
City donated more than $9,000 in gifts; and the Georgetown alumni, class of 1968
, gave a designer
$38,000 basket set.14 Other presidents, especially the Reagans, had refurbished
the presidential
mansion and received gifts for redecorating, but all the gifts stayed at the Whi
te House, becoming
gifts to the nation. Not with the Clintons. In January 2001, Hillary Clinton beg
an shipping furniture
from the White House to her New York home. These items had all been donated as p
art of the
$396,000 redecoration undertaken by the Clintons in 1993 and were not private, b
ut public,
property. Under intense criticism, the Clintons returned four items clearly mark
ed “National Park
Service,” and in another return, sent back a “truckload of couches, lamps and other
furnishings.”15
That was fairly insignificant next to some of the other actions by the departing
president, most
notably an orgy of pardons and commutations. Every president has an unlimited pa
rdon power:
there is no review, and it is absolute. On his last day alone, Clinton issued 14
0 pardons and 36
sentence commutations. One television commentator said, “Not since the opening of
the gates of
the Bastille have so many criminals been liberated on a single day.”16 Among those
pardoned was
a group of Puerto Rican terrorists responsible for 130 bombing attacks in Chicag
o, New York, and
other locations. Perhaps more offensive was the pardon of Marc Rich, an internat
ional arms runner
indicted in the United States for tax evasion and counts of fraud. Rich had fled
to Europe, where he
peddled (illegal) Libyan oil past embargoes and paid for the oil with grain (aga
in illegal because it
was embargoed).17
When he boarded the marine helicopter for the last time on January 20, 2001, to
leave for his new
life, Bill Clinton was departing as only the second president to be impeached; t
he first ever to have
been charged with lying to a grand jury; the first ever to be disbarred; the fir
st judged guilty of
perjury against a federal court and forced to pay a fine; and the first sued in
a civil suit for sexual
harassment. His failure to earn the respect of the military could be seen in a s
mall detail when the
marine guards who stood by the presidential helicopter failed to execute a right
face to stand facing
the president’s back as he walked away from the chopper. Yet these marine guards m
anaged to
relearn the maneuver after George W. Bush took office on January 20.
Clinton’s legacy to his party was no less destructive than his imprint on the pres
idency. When he
came to the office in 1992, the Democrats held both the House and the Senate and
the governorship
of New York as well as the mayoralities of New York City and Los Angeles. Within
a decade, the
Republicans held the House, the Senate, and the presidency, and conservative ide
als were held by a
slim majority of the United States Supreme Court justices. In states with a “pure” t
wo-party
legislature after 2002, there were twenty-five Republican chambers, twenty-two D
emocratic
chambers, and two that were tied. Despite the perception that he was good for th
e party, most of the
candidates Clinton personally campaigned for had lost, and few Democrats (except
in the
absolutely safest seats) could afford to be seen with him.
Team Bush
Although the transition was delayed by the Gore election challenge, Bush had his
cabinet lined up
even before the election. Colin Powell, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of S
taff, was secretary
of state, and a former secretary of defense in the Ford administration. Donald R
umsfeld was tapped
to be the secretary of defense. Not only did Bush appoint the highest-ranking Af
rican American in
American history in the person of Powell, but he also named black Stanford profe
ssor Condoleezza
Rice as his national security adviser, making her the highest-ranking black woma
n in the United
States and the first woman or black named to the national security post. Rod Pai
ge, Bush’s
secretary of education, became the first African American in that post. By the t
ime Bush finished
his appointments, he had more African Americans, women, and minorities in positi
ons of power
than any other administration.
Bush knew he would need some Democratic support. In the House, Republicans had l
ost a few
seats in 2000, but they still held a slim majority. A number of incumbent Republ
ican senators had
lost close races, leaving the Republicans only the tie-breaking vote of Vice Pre
sident Cheney (as
Senate president) to retain their majority. This portended difficulty for Bush’s p
rogram, which
included a tax cut, partial privatization of Social Security, education reform,
and deployment of the
Strategic Defense Initiative. Pressing ahead with his agenda, Bush advanced a br
oad tax-cut plan to
revive the economy, which had begun to turn down even before the election. The t
ax cuts involved
a popular tax rebate for every American as well as longer-term tax reductions. W
ith support from
several Senate Democrats, the package passed. An education reform bill also emer
ged from
Congress, emphasizing teacher accountability and test scores.
But then a surprise defection handed the Senate back to the Democrats. Vermont s
enator Jim
Jeffords, a long-time liberal Republican, in May 2001 suddenly caucused with the
Democrats,
making South Dakota Senator Tom Daschle the majority leader. Jeffords’s defection
essentially
blocked all further legislation for the rest of the year. The Democrats stalled
Bush’s judicial
nominations, effectively blocked any discussion of Social Security privatization
, and nipped at the
edges of the tax cut (without publicly favoring a tax increase). American politi
cs seemed bogged in
a morass of obstructionism and delay, with Bush’s popularity hovering in the low 5
0 percent range
and the public nearly evenly split on policy prescriptions. No American had a cl
ue that the world
was about to change as surely as it had on December 7, 1941, at Pearl Harbor.
9/11
On the morning of September 10, 2001, the Washington Times carried the latest cr
iticism by the
National Academy of Sciences on the Bush administration’s directives for controver
sial stem-cell
research, and the New York Post carried the latest news about California Congres
sman Gary
Condit, who was under investigation in the disappearance of a Washington intern,
Chandra Levy,
with whom he had a sexual relationship. CBS reported that pressure was mounting
on Bush to do
something about the deepening economic gloom. The Republicans in Congress had de
layed
immigration reform legislation until the White House plan to fix the Immigration
and
Naturalization Service had been submitted. Concerned groups had been warning tha
t immigration
policies were too liberal and immigrants too poorly screened. New doubts had sur
faced about a
controversial study of early American gun ownership (a thinly disguised attack o
n the National
Rifle Association), leading to an investigation of the scholar who had produced
it, and jury
selection was proceeding in the murder case of Andrea Yates, who was accused of
drowning her
five children. All in all, September tenth seemed like just another day in Ameri
ca. Everything
would change in less than twenty-four hours.
On September 11, 2001, President Bush was in Florida for an event in which he wo
uld read to a
group of elementary school children to push his No Child Left Behind education p
roposal. As
White House staffers left for the school at 8:42 a.m., their pagers and cell pho
nes went wild. An
aircraft had hit the North Tower of the World Trade Center (WTC). Early reports
indicated that it
had been a small twin-engine plane, and the only explanation was, as the preside
nt later recalled,
that the pilot “must have had a heart attack.”18 Air traffic controllers in Newark,
New Jersey, knew
differently. Just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, they had followed the
radar screens
tracing American Airlines Flight 11, a Boeing 767 en route from Boston to Los An
geles. Then
through the windows to the outside, they had watched as the aircraft descended,
its transponder off.
Controller Rick Tepper said, “One of the towers, one of the trade towers, is on fi
re.”19
In fact, only minutes earlier, a radio signal from Flight 11 was heard in the Bo
ston regional air
traffic control center—an ominous voice saying, “We have some planes.” Expecting a hos
tage
situation from the first aircraft, FAA officials treated it according to protoco
l, not realizing that the
hijackers had something far more deadly in mind than landing in Cuba. Hijacked F
light 11, with
eighty-one passengers and eleven crew members, flew a straight path into the Wor
ld Trade
Center’s North Tower, erupting into an inferno sending temperatures soaring to 1,8
00 degrees and
engulfing the 110-story building in a ball of flame and smoke above the hundredt
h floor. As the
emergency rescue teams raced to the site of the crash, most people still thought
they were dealing
with pilot error or a massive accident, not a deliberate act of terror. Glass, s
teel, and charred human
remains rained down on the police and fire personnel who had rushed into the bui
lding, even as
masses of frantic people streamed out. Many, trapped on the floors above the exp
losion, quickly
realized they had no hope. Some jumped more than a hundred floors to their death
s. Others chose
to remain, overcome by smoke inhalation or seared by the flames. Those on lower
floors evacuated,
efficiently and quickly, but surprisingly few doubted what had happened. “I knew i
t was a terrorist
attack the moment I looked up and saw the smoke,” said one survivor. “I saw the face
of evil.”20
By that time, the attention of news cameras and crowds was focused on the North
Tower when a
second jumbo jet, United Flight 175 from Boston to Los Angeles with fifty-six pa
ssengers and nine
crew members, hurtled through the skyline, performing a sharp turn and crashing
into the South
Tower, generating a second massive fireball. In Florida, President Bush had just
begun to read to
second-graders when his chief of staff, Andrew Card, entered the classroom and w
hispered in his
ear, “A second plane has hit the second tower. America is under attack.”21 Bush late
r remembered
thinking, “They had declared war on us, and I made up my mind at that moment we we
re going to
war.”22 CIA director George Tenet received the news in Washington. “This has bin Lad
en all over
it,” referring to the renegade terrorist Osama bin Laden.23 He immediately recalle
d that the FBI
had detained Zacarias Massoui in August after suspicions had been raised when he
sought training
at a Minnesota flight school. Tenet speculated that he might have a connection t
o the attack.
A shaken Bush appeared on television before the twin towers collapsed, informing
the American
public of “an apparent terrorist attack,” promising (in “oddly informal” language) to ch
ase down
“those folks who committed this act.”24 Already, he was being urged to stay away fro
m
Washington and to board Air Force One as soon as possible. The FAA knew that mor
e than 4,200
planes still filled the skies—thousands of potential bombs in the hands of terrori
sts—and officials
had already decided to ground any remaining airborne planes when, at 9:03, they
saw United Flight
175 fly into the South Tower. A conference call to other air traffic controllers
confirmed what they
dreaded. A third plane was in the hands of hijackers—American Flight 77, bound for
Los Angeles
from Washington with 58 passengers and 8 crew members. Shortly after Bush delive
red his terse
address to the nation at 9:41, Flight 77 reappeared over Washington, D.C., and c
rashed into the
Pentagon, killing all aboard and 125 people inside the building.
By that time, the FAA had commanded all aircraft to land as soon as possible, an
ywhere. Word
spread overseas, and international flights to the United States were grounded—just
in time, as it
turned out, since other hijackers were prepared to take control of still other a
irplanes targeted for
Big Ben and Parliament in England.
Meawhile, fire and rescue teams at the World Trade Center struggled to get survi
vors out,
hamstrung by communications glitches among police, fire, and the New York Port A
uthority, who
had jurisdiction over the towers. “There’s a lot of bodies,” said one fireman, as he r
eached the
forty-fifth floor of the South Tower.25 Only sixteen people survived from the So
uth Tower above
the ninetieth floor, where the plane hit; none survived above the seventy-eighth
floor crash line in
the North Tower.
Although the buildings had been built to sustain accidental impacts of aircraft,
no one dreamed that
fully fueled jetliners would be deliberately aimed at the center of the structur
es. Even so, the towers
stood for far longer than most structural analysts thought they could. Initial e
stimates that upward
of ten thousand might have been killed were revised downward every minute the bu
ildings stood—
until 9:50 a.m. At that moment the South Tower collapsed and crumbled to the gro
und in a torrent
of debris, dust, and thousands of human body parts, burying, among others, hundr
eds of firemen
and rescue teams who had set up headquarters close to the building. Less than ha
lf an hour later, the
other tower, with its massive antenna spike plunging straight into the middle of
the disintegrating
mass, imploded, with floors crashing straight down like pancakes. Hundreds of fi
refighters, trapped
in the building, were crushed. News anchor Jon Scott, who provided a somber comm
entary on the
morning’s events, went silent for many moments as the towers disintegrated. “America
, offer a
prayer,” he concluded.26 One structural engineer marveled that the towers stood as
long as they
did, noting that the worst worse-case scenarios could not have envisioned such a
n attack: “You may
as well be talking about giant objects from space.”27 New York’s mayor Giuliani was
a blur of
energy, ordering certain areas evacuated, consoling firefighters and workers on
the line, and
supervising the environmental checks for poisonous gases and biological or other
airborne threats.
At the time, one more plane was unaccounted for: United Airlines Flight 93 bound
for San
Francisco with forty-five people aboard had started an unauthorized climb at 9:3
5 a.m., raising
concerns that it, too, had been hijacked. It had flown by Cleveland, made a U-tu
rn, and then
accelerated past Pittsburgh. Somewhere hear Shanksville, Pennsylvania, the plane
wobbled out of
control and plunged into a field, exploding in a fireball. Evidence soon surface
d that several
courageous men and women led by Todd Beamer, who had heard of the WTC attack fro
m other
phone calls, realized their own aircraft was a suicide bomb headed for a target.
The passengers had
to overpower at least three men at the front of the plane or in the cockpit, one
of them with bombs
supposedly strapped to his body. Convinced the aircraft was turning for its fina
l approach, Beamer
said to the others, “Let’s roll.” Whether they succeeded in storming the cockpit, some
thing forced
the hijackers to crash the plane before reaching the intended target (which subs
equent evidence
indicates was the Capitol).28
Government offices in Washington had been evacuated, and President Bush was warn
ed away by
the Secret Service and the military. Air Force One was thought to be a prime tar
get, since intercepts
had showed that the terrorists knew Air Force One’s code sign for that day. Bush m
aintained phone
communication with Vice President Cheney, National Security Adviser Rice, and th
e Joint Chiefs
of Staff, immediately ordering a massive manhunt for those responsible. “We’re going
to find out
who did this. They’re not going to like me as president,” he said.29 Bush was more b
lunt to
Cheney: “We’re going to find out who did this and we’re going to kick their asses.”30
Bush declared a DefCon 3, the highest level of military readiness in twenty-eigh
t years. That
evening the president went on television to address the nation. “These acts of mas
s murder,” he
said, “were intended to frighten our nation into chaos and retreat. But they have
failed…. Terrorist
attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touc
h the foundation of
America.”31
Within hours the CIA and FBI had conclusively determined that the hijackings wer
e the result of
Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda terrorist network based in Afghanistan. For many years
after 1993,
when the first attack on the WTC by bin Laden’s operatives failed, most Americans
had dismissed
him as a crackpot and a minor annoyance. Indeed, The first WTC bombing attempt k
illed only six
people, and a bombing in Yemen, which he had also sponsored, did not kill a sing
le American,
frustrating bin Laden even more.
An elaborate rationale quickly sprang up among the blame-America-first crowd tha
t bin Laden had
only become obsessed with the United States after the Gulf War, when the presenc
e of Americans
on “holy” Islamic soil threatened to pollute bin Laden’s homeland. But according to Ge
rald Posner,
bin Laden was already committed to guerrilla war and terrorism by 1989. One memb
er of Islamic
Jihad had told Egyptian police that bin Laden wanted to launch a holy war throug
hout the world.32
Other researchers agree that bin Laden’s die was already cast, if perhaps accelera
ted by the Gulf
War. One thing is certain: the CIA never paid bin Laden for his role in the anti
-Soviet struggle in
Afghanistan, nor was he ever pro-American prior to the Gulf War. Now, however, h
e was gleeful:
“Its greatest buildings were destroyed,” bin Laden exclaimed. “America! Full of fear…. T
hank God
for that.”33
Six months after the attacks, FBI agents, diplomats, and reporters produced shar
ds of evidence that
the United States had had warning about 9/11. Yet a memo here and a report of su
spicious activity
there, dropped into the massive pile of more than three million pieces of intell
igence information
accumulated per day by the CIA and National Security Agency alone, constituted n
o warning at all.
If anything, Congress learned that much of the information that intelligence age
ncies had
accumulated had crashed into bureaucratic walls. The separation of the CIA and F
BI prompted by
Democrats in the wake of Watergate and exacerbated by a directive in the Clinton
administration
(referred to as the wall memo) now returned to plague the U.S. intelligence serv
ices. Over the next
several months, the Bush administration studied the breakdown in intelligence, p
roposing the most
massive reorganization of the government since the New Deal, highlighted by the
creation of a
Department of Homeland Security, which would facilitate information flow between
the FBI, the
CIA, and the NSA. It also split the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
into two parts,
one focused on security, and one focused on facilitating the admission of new im
migrants.
Immediately after the attacks, however, the administration’s economic team swung i
nto action,
using free-market principles—not government power—whenever possible. Treasury Secret
ary Paul
O’Neill jawboned bank executives to maintain the flow of credit to the airlines, w
hich had come
under massive financial pressure in the days after 9/11 when air ridership plumm
eted. The New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the other exchanges were shut down to prevent a p
anic. Once
they reopened, the Dow still fell almost five hundred points in the first hours
of trading but then
stabilized.34 The attacks hit the U.S. economy hard: one study put 9/11-related
losses at almost $2
trillion.35
Very soon thousands of volunteers streamed into New York to help search for surv
ivors or
excavate the site. Thousands more lined up to give blood, and entertainers held
massive telethons to
generate millions of dollars in relief for the victims’ families. Amid the rubble,
workers unearthed a
remarkable piece of steel: two girders, molded by the flames into a cross, which
the workers raised
up. One of the most memorable photos of the event—three firemen hoisting the Ameri
can flag
above the trade site soon emerged as the singular symbolic picture of defiance.
It reflected the
resolve that had surfaced in just a matter of days, surging past the grief as th
e nation set its jaw.
Indeed, New York City immediately entertained designs to rebuild the massive WTC
and began
soliciting designs. (The winning design technically would be taller than either
of the previous
towers.)
The collapse of the buildings, symbolic though they were, remained insignificant
next to the loss of
the 2,749 people who died at the World Trade Center, the forty-five passengers a
nd crew who died
in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, and those who died in the crash at the Pentagon. T
he initial estimates
suggesting that ten thousand might have died in New York alone had been thankful
ly proved
wrong. In less than a year after the attack the Pentagon was rebuilt. Ironically
, work crews had
broken ground to build the massive Pentagon in 1941—on September eleventh.
Immediately after 9/11, the president still had to rally the nation, displaying
the proper balance of
defiance, sympathy, compassion, and resolution. Arguably his best speech, and on
e of the most
moving presidential speeches since Reagan’s ode to the Challenger crew in 1986, it
was delivered
on September fourteenth, designated by Bush as a national day of prayer and reme
mbrance. (One
of the first things the president did was to request that all Americans pray, an
d pray often, not only
for the victims and their families, but also for the nation.) At the National Ca
thedral, Bush ascended
the steps in the mammoth nave in total isolation. His words touched the nation:
On Tuesday, our country was attacked with deliberate and massive cruelty. We hav
e seen the
images of fire and ashes, and bent steel. Now come the names, the list of casual
ties we are only
beginning to read…. They are the names of people who faced death, and in their las
t moments
called home to say, “Be brave, and I love you.”…War has been waged against us by steal
th and
deceit and murder…. This conflict was begun on the timing and terms of others. It
will end in a
way, and at an hour, of our choosing.36
After Bush’s speech—to a room bursting with emotion—he flew to Ground Zero. After chan
ging
into a plain yellow windbreaker, Bush walked amid the firefighters and rescue wo
rkers who had
been digging and excavating, some of them for three days straight. Mounting a tw
isted pile of steel
and bricks and standing next to a retired fireman who had, by his own words, “scam
med” his way
in to help in the relief effort, Bush took the only public address system availa
ble—a bullhorn—and
began to address the crowd of burly men. The bullhorn cut out during the preside
nt’s prepared
remarks, and someone shouted, “We can’t hear you.” Bush tried again, and again the sho
ut came,
“We can’t hear you,” at which point the president reacted on instinct, responding, “I ca
n hear you.
The rest of the world hears you, and…”—pointing to the spot where the buildings had st
ood, he
shouted—“and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon!”37
In two remarkable settings, the National Cathedral and the WTC site, and in two
speeches—one
formal, one impromptu—Bush had brought the nation together and set it on the task
of finding and
eliminating the perpetrators. Jonathan Alter, a journalist and bitter Bush foe,
nevertheless sensed
that a defining point had been reached: “This is a turning point in history,” he tol
d Bush press
secretary Ari Fleischer. Or, as Bush put it just a few days later in a defiant m
essage to a joint
session of Congress, “Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.” This
quickly became
known as the Bush Doctrine.
“It Starts Today”
On September 17, 2001, Bush met with his war cabinet, presenting the members wit
h an
unequivocal task. “It starts today,” he said. “The purpose of this meeting is to assig
n tasks for the
first wave of the war against terrorism.”38 Bush had already solicited advice: “I wa
nt the CIA to be
the first on the ground” in Afghanistan, he instructed; “We’ll attack with missiles, b
ombers and
boots on the ground,” he concluded.39 As for bin Laden, Bush told the press he wan
ted the terrorist
“dead or alive.”
On October 7, 2001, a massive series of air strikes in Afghanistan smashed mainl
ine Taliban forces,
allowing the special forces and regular military, who had been airlifted in, to
join forces with the
Northern Alliance of anti-Taliban fighters. Code-named Operation Enduring Freedo
m, this was
Bush’s “new kind of war,” lacking long, clear battle lines and instead using selected
air power,
highly trained commando and special forces units, and above all, electronic and
human intelligence
to identify and destroy Al Qaeda and Taliban strongholds. The UK Telegraph repor
ted that a
handful of U.S. Green Beret teams, directing air power before finishing the job
on the ground, had
killed more than 1,300 Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters. “You bomb one side of a hill
and push them
in one direction,” observed a Green Beret spotter, “then bomb the next hill over and
push guys the
other way. Then, when they’re all bunched up, you…drop right on them.”40
Nevertheless, it took the press only a few weeks to flip from patriotic to harsh
, with journalists
invoking the shopworn “Vietnam” and “quagmire” lines less than a month into combat.
Newsweek’s Evan Thomas prophesied that the United States would need 250,000 troops
on the
ground (the real total was under 20,000). Terry Moran, the White House correspon
dent for ABC,
dourly asserted, “I think the bad guys are winning.”41 ABC’s Cokie Roberts grilled Rum
sfeld,
claiming, “There have been stories…that give the perception…that this war, after three
weeks, is
not going very well.”42 In fact, the journalists missed the evidence in front of t
heir faces. Once the
war on terror had been engaged, it played out along the same lines as most other
western versus
nonwestern conflicts. American air power utterly dominated the battlefield, and
as in the Gulf War,
the “combination of the information revolution and precision munitions…produced a qu
antum leap
in lethality.”43 Small units of special operations troops on the ground, guiding t
he bombing with
laser targeting, provided pinpoint targeting to enable the smart weapons to shat
ter Taliban forces on
the ground. War analyst Victor Hanson summed up the combat situation: “Glad we are
not fighting
us.”
Unlike the Soviet infantry and armor doctrines that had failed in Afghanistan ju
st twenty years
earlier, the U.S. military employed dynamic, not static, tactics. An armored div
ision might be used
for one purpose, a smart bomb for another; Green Berets and Delta Force for cert
ain tasks; air
power for yet others. Bush told correspondent Bill Sammon, “We fought the first ca
valry charge of
the twenty-first century—special forces and CIA agents on wooden saddles with some
of the most
sophisticated technology developed by mankind.”44
In many ways, Operation Enduring Freedom was even more successful than Desert St
orm, routing
the Taliban and Al Qaeda and searching them out in the Tora Bora mountains, wher
e bin Laden
was thought to have holed up. A massive bombing of the mountains in December eit
her drove bin
Laden farther underground or seriously wounded him. Within a few months, the Tal
iban were
evicted, and special forces had hunted down and killed hundreds of Al Qaeda terr
orists and arrested
thousands of others for interrogation. By 2003, bin Laden had not made a single
verifiable public
appearence that could be time-stamped or dated, despite several tape recordings
he released. In fact,
he was becoming irrelevant as more subtle American financial attacks were shutti
ng down much of
the worldwide financial network supporting Al Qaeda and establishing a civilian
functioning
government in Afghanistan. One year after the attacks, it was thought that close
to half of Al
Qaeda’s leaders were dead or in custody.
Another casualty of Operation Enduring Freedom was “gloomster” journalism. A Gallup
Poll
conducted in November 2001 found that 54 percent of the public disapproved of th
e news media,
although Bush’s ratings remained in the high 80 percent range. Indeed, the news me
dia was the
only major American organization to see its approval numbers decline (and the nu
mbers declined
precipitously). On the other hand, for the first time, polls asked people what t
hey thought of cabinet
members, and again, the results stunned the hostile media. Defense Secretary Rum
sfeld had an 80
percent approval rating, Vice President Cheney had a 75 percent rating, and Secr
etary of State
Powell topped the list with an 87 percent favorable rating. Bush’s instincts for c
hoosing competent
people, far from insulating him from decision making, had proven prescient.45
Terrorists still had the potential for devastating attacks, and several were int
ercepted before
completing their missions. Richard Reid (Muslim name Riady), an Al Qaeda-connect
ed shoe
bomber, attempted to smuggle explosives through his shoes into a passenger jet.
Al Qaeda
operatives blew up a Christian church in Pakistan, assassinated the newly named
vice president in
Afghanistan, and continued to make assassination attempts on U.S. soldiers overs
eas. A French
freighter was bombed by Al Qaeda operatives; then, in October 2002, the island v
acation area on
Bali was rocked by a bomb explosion at a resort, killing 181 (mostly Australian)
vacationers and
employees. Adding to the terror—although not directly linked to the terrorist netw
ork—a team of
snipers rained death on Virginia and Maryland citizens for almost a month. In Ma
rch 2004,
terrorists thought to be linked to Al Qaeda unleashed multiple bombs on Spanish
trains, killing and
wounding hundreds.
Bush had promised to carry the war not only to the terrorists but also to “those w
ho harbor them,” a
clear threat to such Muslim states as Iran, Iraq, Sudan, and Yemen. Bush had mad
e matters even
plainer in his January 2002 State of the Union speech in which he referred to Ir
aq, Iran, and North
Korea and other “states like these” as an “axis of evil” that had allied themselves with
terrorists. It
was abundantly clear which rogue states were next on the 9/11 hit list. Evidence
that Saddam
Hussein had links to the Al Qaeda terrorists, combined with continued reports th
at Iraq had violated
United Nations resolutions requiring the nation to allow in weapons inspectors,
made Hussein the
next obvious target in the terror war.46 Soon, other nations were reminded that
9/11 was an attack
on all nations that embraced freedom and democracy.
The results of the first year and a half of the war on terror were impressive bu
t difficult to fully
evaluate, given the secretive nature of many of the important accomplishments. A
t minimum:
Several hundred Al Qaeda members and suspected members were detained at Guantánamo
Bay,
Cuba, for incarceration and interrogation as prisoners of war.
Approximately two dozen of bin Laden’s top Al Qaeda leaders were dead or in custod
y.
The Taliban were eradicated as the governing force in Afghanistan, and a new dem
ocratic
government was installed. Schools previously closed to women were opened, and a
spirit of liberty
spread through a land that had known little.
The FBI, the CIA, and allied intelligence agencies had successfully prevented an
other attack. Riady
and José Padilla (the dirty bomber) had both been arrested before perpetrating any
terrorist acts;
several Al Qaeda cells (in Buffalo, Detroit, and the Pacific Northwest) were cap
tured. In addition,
British, Spanish, Moroccan, German, and other foreign intelligence networks had
bagged several
dozen Al Qaeda suspects.
Millions of dollars in assets tied to Al Qaeda worldwide were frozen in U.S. and
friendly banks.
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, Ramzi Yousef’s uncle and the tactical mastermind behind th
e 9/11
plot, was captured.
In 2004, a raid in Pakistan captured one of Al Qaeda’s top computer nerds—Muhammad K
han—
whose treasure trove of information threw the doors open to capturing dozens of
cell members and
breaking up a planned attack on the United States.
Many analysts suggested that the Bali bombing, the multiple attacks in Africa on
Israeli embassies
in late 2002, the Spanish train bombings in 2004, and bombings in Turkey and Sau
di Arabia in
2004 indicated that Al Qaeda could no longer get through U.S. security and was t
herefore forced to
strike softer targets. Of course, no one in the Bush administration or in the se
curity agencies of
America’s allies believed the war on terror was over, but important inroads had be
en made into
enemy geographical and financial strongholds.
In what some termed “the new normal,” post-9/11 America seemed shaken from more than
a
decade’s worth of doldrums into purpose and conviction. Perhaps it was fitting tha
t in the 2001
World Series, played only a month after the towers fell, one of the teams was th
e New York
Yankees. Then, at the quintessential American event, pro football’s Super Bowl con
test, this time
between St. Louis and New England, the championship was won by…the Patriots.
Midterm Mayhem
Going into the summer of 2002, the Democratic Senate, thanks to its one-vote mar
gin provided by
the defection of Jim Jeffords, had elevated South Dakota’s Senator Tom Daschle to
the majority
leader position. With his slim margin, Daschle successfully blocked Bush’s judicia
l nominees, held
up drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), and stifled a
ny attempt to cut
taxes or otherwise stimulate the economy.
Lacking a majority in the Senate, in the early part of 2002, Bush and his politi
cal adviser Karl Rove
embarked on a brilliant campaign strategy for the 2002 midterm elections to try
to reclaim control
of the Senate. Whereas by historical standards, the GOP should have lost nearly
two dozen House
seats and two Senate seats, the Republicans actually gained seats in both houses
of Congress and
increased their state legislature gains by some 200 seats. The result was an unp
recedented midterm
election.47 The feat was even more impressive historically: because of the timin
g of the open
Senate seats, the Republicans had to defend twenty, but the Democrats only had t
o defend fourteen.
Realizing that mobilization for an Iraq war would take some time—especially since
Al Qaeda was
not entirely eliminated—Bush, Powell, Rumsfeld, and Rice made several policy speec
hes
throughout the summer of 2002 emphasizing the threat posed by Iraq and its weapo
ns of mass
destruction. Democrats jumped at the bait, attacking the president for wanting t
o go it alone without
the support of our allies or the United Nations. In fact, Bush intended all alon
g to solicit support
from important allies and to involve the UN, but he allowed the Democrats to str
etch out their
apparent opposition to the Iraq policy all summer, negating their advantage on s
ome other election
issues. In the fall, Bush brought a war resolution to Congress, forcing the Demo
crats—including
Bush’s future opponent in the November general election, Senator John Kerry of Mas
sachusetts—
to put themselves on record as supporting it. Bush then took his case to the UN
in a powerful
speech in which he offered not one shred of new evidence against Saddam Hussein;
quite the
contrary, he outlined eleven years of Iraqi violations of the UN’s own resolutions
. It was a
masterful performance to the extent that it forced the UN to either act against
Iraq or admit
impotence and become completely irrelevant. The UN gave the administration a new
resolution,
and even Syria voted yes.
When the dust cleared on Election Day, the GOP had won a two-vote margin in the
Senate and
added to their majority in the House. The Republicans had made history. In virtu
ally all of the
victorious Republican senatorial campaigns, national security, in the form of th
e debate over the
homeland security bill, provided much of the cushion. But other surprising signs
of change were
seen in the exit-polling data: candidates advocating privatization of Social Sec
urity won, and the
prolife vote proved critical in many states. There was also evidence that Bush w
as eroding the New
Deal coalition by siphoning off Hispanic and Jewish votes—not in overwhelming numb
ers, but
enough to seriously damage the Democrats.48
Unlike Reagan, Bush used his majority to push big government programs such as a
prescription
drug bill and education reform, signing the single biggest entitlement since the
Great Society (the
Medicaid prescription drug bill). He also rolled back some traditionally liberal
bastions, such as in
the area of abortion, where his executive orders actually restricted abortions o
n federal property and
with federal funds. In 2003 he signed into law a ban on partial birth abortions,
in which an
abortionist partially delivers a late-term baby before killing it.49
The “Axis of Evil”
Bush, in his 2002 State of the Union message, listed Iraq, Iran, and North Korea
as an “axis of evil”
and as indirect allies of Al Qaeda and as state supporters of terrorism.
Since 9/11, the administration had received information tying Saddam Hussein’s Ira
q to Osama bin
Laden’s terror network. Salman Pak, a training facility in Iraq, featured 737 jetl
iner fuselages that
served little purpose except to give terrorists practice at taking over aircraft
. The Iraqi foreign
minister paid a visit to Czechoslovakia prior to 9/11, where, according to Czech
sources, he met
with hijacker Mohammad Atta. There were numerous other connections. Bush and his
team
decided that it was too dangerous to allow Al Qaeda to obtain chemical or biolog
ical weapons that
virtually all nations had conceded were in Iraq. Clinton and Gore both had warne
d of the dangers of
WMDs (weapons of mass destruction). A group of Democratic senators, including Jo
hn Kerry, Carl
Levin, and Ted Kennedy, urged Clinton to take action on Iraq’s WMD. Iraqi dictator
Saddam
Hussein, however, refused to allow United Nations inspection teams to search his
facilities, and he
defied fourteen UN resolutions. Bush gave him one last chance.
After the “Axis of Evil” speech, Bush began a relatively long preparation period to
ready the nation
for war with Iraq if Hussein did not comply. Following the State of the Union, B
ush, Secretary of
State Powell, and Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, along with British Prime Minist
er Tony Blair
(who had received the same briefings) initiated a steady diplomatic assault on I
raq, painting for the
U.S. and British public, and for the world community, a picture of a dictator wh
o had weapons of
mass destruction in his hands. These WMDs posed a particularly dangerous threat
to American
security because they could be easily brought into the United States by terroris
ts. Had one of the
planes that hit the World Trade Center, for example, been carrying a small nucle
ar device or vials
of VX gas, the death toll would have soared exponentially.
In September 2002, in his address to the United Nations, Bush detailed dozens of
violations by
Iraq. Bush and Powell succeeded in obtaining a unanimous resolution from the UN
Security
Council (Resolution 1441) that required new vigorous inspections of Iraq and a f
ull disclosure by
Hussein of all of his WMD programs. Bush expected that the Iraqis would either n
ot comply or
feign compliance. Either way, the president planned to have a military option av
ailable if, within a
reasonable time, Saddam did not demonstrate total transparency. More important,
the
administration used each roadblock Saddam threw up as another piece of evidence
that the regime
itself could not be trusted and had to be dispatched. UN weapons inspectors, mea
nwhile, reported
violation after violation, yet desperately sought to avoid labeling Iraq’s noncomp
liance as such.
Behind the scenes, France, Germany, and Russia—all with powerful economic stakes i
n
maintaining Saddam in power—sought to derail American and British attempts to esta
blish a final
enforcement date of Resolution 1441. Building a larger alliance of nations than
his father had in
1991—Bush termed it “the coalition of the willing”—on March 17, 2003, Bush gave Saddam a
nd
his sons forty-eight hours to leave Iraq or face war. Exactly three days later,
the United States,
having convinced the Iraqis that any new conflict would look much like the Gulf
War (with a long,
protracted bombing campaign called shock and awe), instead launched a single int
ensive air strike
against a location where informants had said Saddam and his sons were. Saddam wa
s not killed but
instantly the Iraqi army began to behave as though it had lost all command and c
ontrol.
Coalition forces tore through Iraqi resistance even as pundits and military comm
entators
(“embedded generals,” as Rumsfeld called them) complained that American forces were
too light
and lacked sufficient boots on the ground.50 Never have so many prognosticators
and journalists
been so wrong about so much: the “elite” Republican Guard, which supposedly would fi
ght for
every inch of Baghdad, collapsed without a fight.51 On April ninth, in just over
two weeks of
fighting, mostly against irregular troops, American armor swept through the dese
rt and into the
center of Baghdad.52 Once the local residents realized Saddam was indeed gone, l
arge celebrations
began, with Iraqis throwing flowers and cheering American soldiers with “Bush, Bus
h, Bush,” and
“We love America!” That day, in what was sure to be one of the most memorable scenes
of the new
century, Iraqi civilians, aided by American trucks, tore down a massive statue o
f Saddam in the
center of Baghdad, then proceeded to drag the head around town as people beat it
with their shoes
and spat on it.
Nothing less than a complete transformation of war had been witnessed by the wor
ld, which saw
twentieth-century mass tactics with the ancillary large casualties replaced by a
technowar of
unparalleled proportions. Merging MacArthur’s island-hopping concepts with the air
superiority
gained in the Gulf War, the United States and allied militaries added a new elem
ent of
unprecedented levels of special forces operating inside Iraq, often within the c
ities themselves.
Those special ops forces used laser targeting devices to focus precision bombs s
o finely that there
was virtually no collateral damage to civilian buildings or noncombatants. Yet t
he precise targeting
was so perfect that tanks hiding underneath bridges were blown up without damagi
ng the bridge
over them, and Saddam’s main command and control buildings were obliterated while
shops next
door remained open for business.
Iraq was a demonstration of the “western way of war” at its pinnacle—or what one Middl
e Eastern
commentator glumly labeled an example of “Mesopotamian show and tell.” The message w
as not
lost on other regimes in the region or around the world. Libyan dictator Muammar
al Qaddafi soon
announced he was giving up his arsenal of WMD. It went unstated that he did not
want the United
States to have a Libyan version of show and tell. On June 28, an interim free Ir
aqi government took
official control of the nation and Hussein entered pleas before a judge within a
week. Within a
period of two years, Bush had effectively cleaned out two major terrorist harbor
s, neutralized a
third, and prompted internal democratic change in Saudi Arabia.
Still, antiwar forces and many Democrats jumped at the chance to claim that the
war on terror had
failed, that Osama bin Laden was not in custody, and that the job in Afghanistan
was unfinished.
Terrorists flocked to Iraq after the invasion, and sporadic fighting continued w
ell into 2004. But
critics overlooked the fact that a free and democratic Iraq and Afghanistan had
become the first true
Arab democracies in the Middle East, and that Al Qaeda now was being sucked into
combat there,
rather than on American soil.
Although research teams failed to find the chemical and biological weapons that
had resulted in the
UN sanctions, many experts and Iraqi informants maintained that Saddam had trans
ported the
weapons of mass destruction out of the country just prior to hostilities. Many s
mall amounts of
biological and chemical weapons were nevertheless discovered in several location
s, usually in
artillery shells, indicating they had existed at one time. But whether the weapo
ns were moved or
were a massive deception by Saddam for some perverted pleasure of fooling the Un
ited States, one
thing is clear: after 2003 he would never threaten any of his neighbors, or Amer
ica, again. Equally
important, Iraq would no longer be a training ground for hijackers.
By late 2004, Iraq was still far from a stable society; bin Laden had not been c
aptured or killed; and
with every new arrest of a terror suspect came an awareness of new vulnerabiliti
es. But many
terrorism experts thought that if the corner had not been turned, it was, at lea
st, in sight. Even so, it
is unlikely Americans will soon return to a 9/10 mentality.
CONCLUSION
If the immediate horror of 9/11 has dissipated, the attack nevertheless served a
s a profound
reminder that buildings, however symbolic they might be, are nothing more than c
oncrete and steel.
The precious human lives they contained testified, by their loss, that what rema
ins are ideas.
Intending to shatter the “materialism” of the United States, Osama bin Laden’s terrori
sts merely
reminded the world of the supremacy of the intangible over the physical, of the
spiritual over the
temporal. Focusing Americans’ thoughts once again on freedom—and its enemies—terrorist
s
united a nation seriously divided by an election and elevated a president under
fire to a position of
historical greatness.
The fatal flaw of bin Laden—like Hitler, Stalin, and even the nearsighted Spaniard
s of five hundred
years ago—was that they fixed their gaze on the physical manifestations of the wea
lth of the West,
failing to understand that wealth is a mere by-product of other, more important
qualities: initiative,
inventiveness, hope, optimism, and above all, faith. The people who had set foot
in Virginia and
Massachusetts almost three centuries ago often arrived poor, usually alone, and
certainly without
lofty titles or royal honors. After they plowed the fields and founded their ent
erprises, it was not the
farms alone that made Benjamin Franklin’s Philadelphia flourish, nor trade alone t
hat breathed life
into the Boston of John Adams. Mere plantations did not produce George Washingto
n and Thomas
Jefferson, nor did a legal system spawn Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln.
American
determination and drive, vision and commitment came not from acquisition of mate
rial things—
though the freedom to acquire things was a prerequisite. Rather, greatness came
from an allconsuming
sense that this was, after all, the “city on a hill,” the “last, best hope for mankind
.” The
United States was, and is, a fountain of hope, and a beacon of liberty.
American democracy flowed from the pursuit of opportunity, governed by respect f
or the law.
American industry burst forth from the brains of Carnegie and Weyerhaeuser, Vand
erbilt and
Gates, most often coming from those owning the least in material goods. And Amer
ican strength
came from the self-assurance—lacking in every other nation in the world by the twe
nty-first
century (or what Bush called liberty’s century)—that this nation uniquely had a char
ge to keep, a
standard to uphold, and a mission to fulfill. In the end, the rest of the world
will probably both
grimly acknowledge and grudgingly admit that, to paraphrase the song, God has “she
d His grace on
thee.” Knowing perfection is unattainable, Americans have not ceased in its pursui
t. Realizing that
war is unavoidable, Americans have never relented in their quest for peace and j
ustice. But
understanding that faith was indispensable, Americans have, more than any other
place on earth,
placed it at the center of the Republic. The American character, and the America
n dream, could
never be disentangled, and ultimately the latter would go only as far as the for
mer would take it.
NOTES
Introduction
1. David McCullough, John Adams (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001), 469.
Chapter 1. The City on the Hill, 1492–1707
1. J. E. Olson and E. G. Bourne, eds., The Northmen, Columbus, and Cabot, 985–1503
(New York:
Charles Scribner’s, 1906).
2. Joel Mokyr, The Lever of Riches: Technological Creativity and Economic Progre
ss (New York:
Oxford, 1990); Robert L. Jones, The European Miracle (Cambridge: Cambridge Unive
rsity Press,
1981).
3. James Burke, Connections (Boston: Little, Brown, 1978), 122–23; Carlo Cipolla,
Guns, Sails and
Empires: Technological Innovations and the Early Phases of European Expansion, 1
400–1700
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1965).
4. Esmond Wright, The Search for Liberty: From Origins to Independence (Oxford:
Blackwell,
1995), 5.
5. Fernand Braudel, Civilization & Capitalism, 15th–18th Century: The Wheels of Co
mmerce, vol.
2 (New York: Harper & Row, 1986), 211.
6. Wright, Search for Liberty, 15.
7. Oliver Perry Chitwood, A History of Colonial America, 3rd ed. (New York: Harp
er & Row,
1961 [1931]), 24.
8. Christopher Columbus, The Diario of Christopher Columbus’s First Voyage to Amer
ica, 1492–
1493, abstracted by Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas, trans. Oliver Dunn and James E. K
elley Jr.
(Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1989), 57–69, entry for October 11, 149
2.
9. Chitwood, A History of Colonial America, 27.
10. Columbus, Diario, 57–69.
11. Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States (New York: Harper & Row,
1980), 7–
11.
12. Christopher Columbus, The Journal of Christopher Columbus, trans. Cecil Jane
(New York:
Clarkson N. Potter, 1960), 191–201.
13. Samuel Eliot Morison, Admiral of the Ocean Sea: A Life of Christopher Columb
us (Boston:
Little, Brown, 1942), 5.
14. Inga Clendinnen, Aztecs: An Interpretation (New York: Cambridge University P
ress, 1991),
37–38 and passim.
15. Victor Davis Hansen, Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of We
stern Power
(New York: Doubleday, 2001), 195.
16. Geoffrey Parker, ed., The Cambridge Illustrated History of Warfare (Cambridg
e: Cambridge
University Press, 1995).
17. Stuart Flexner and Doris Flexner, The Pessimist’s Guide to History, updated ed
. (New York:
Perennial, 2000), 63.
18. Hansen, Carnage and Culture, 228.
19. Bernal Diaz, The Conquest of New Spain, trans. J. M. Cohen (Middlesex, UK: P
enguin Books,
1974 [originally published circa 1576]).
20. Gilberto Freyre, quoted in Wright, Search for Liberty, 160. On the populatio
n of North America
at this time and the impact of diseases, see Michael R. Haines and Richard H. St
eckel, A
Population History of North America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000
).
21. Hansen, Carnage and Culture, 4.
22. Robert C. Puth, American Economic History, 3rd ed. (Fort Worth: Dryden Press
, 1993), 39.
23. James Axtell, “The Invasion Within: The Contest of Cultures in Colonial North
America,” in
his The European and the Indian: Essays in the Ethnohistory of Colonial North Am
erica (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1981), 41.
24. Las Casas, quoted in John Boyd Thacher, Christopher Columbus: His Life, His
Work, His
Remains (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1843), 63–64.
25. For a review of the literature on piracy, see B. R. Burg and Larry Schweikar
t, “Stand by to
Repel Historians: Piracy and Modern Historical Scholarship,” The Historian, March
1984, 219–34;
for specific examples of pirate horrors, see Alexander O. Exquemelin, The Buccan
eers of America,
trans. Alexis Brown (Baltimore: Penguin, 1969 [1678 Dutch]).
26. Winston Churchill, The Great Republic: A History of America (New York: Rando
m House,
1999), 14.
27. Stuart Flexner and Doris Flexner, Pessimist’s Guide to History: From the Big B
ang to the New
Millennium (New York: Quill, 2000), 77–88.
28. Thomas Sowell, Race and Culture: A World View (New York: Basic Books, 1994),
26;
William H. McNeill, The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community (Chic
ago:
University of Chicago Press, 1991), 667.
29. Jaime Vicens Vives, “The Decline of Spain in the Seventeenth Century,” in The Ec
onomic
Decline of Empires, ed. Carlo Cipolla (London: Methuen, 1970), 127.
30. Allan Greer, The People of New France (Toronto: University of Toronto Press,
1997).
31. Ibid., 5.
32. Ibid., 13–14.
33. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 41.
34. Richard Hakluyt, Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffigues, and Discoveries
of the English
Nation (London: J. M. Deut, 1926–31).
35. William H. McNeill, The Pursuit of Power (Chicago: University of Chicago Pre
ss, 1982).
36. Jack A. Goldstone, “Cultural Orthodoxy, Risk, and Innovation: The Divergence o
f East and
West in the Early Modern World,” Sociological Theory, Fall 1987, 119–135 (quotation
on 119).
37. David S. Landes, The Unbound Prometheus: Technical Change and Industrial Dev
elopment in
Western Europe from 1750 to the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1969); Nathan
Rosenberg and L. E. Birdsell Jr., How the West Grew Rich: The Economist Transfor
mation of the
Industrial World (New York: Basic Books, 1986); and Larry Schweikart, The Entrep
reneurial
Adventure: A History of Business in the United States (Fort Worth: Harcourt, 200
0).
38. Philip F. Gura, A Glimpse of Sion’s Glory: Puritan Radicalism in New England,
1620–1600
(Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1984).
39. The charter is found at http://www.mu.cc.va.us/home/nusageh/Hist121/Port1/VA
Com
Charter.htm
40. Quoted in Wright, Search for Liberty, 119.
41. Shepard Kretch III, The Ecological Indian: Myth and History (New York: W. W.
Norton,
1999), 79.
42. Philip L. Barbour, ed., The Complete Works of Captain John Smith (Chapel Hil
l: University of
North Carolina Press, 1986); and Lyon Gardiner Tyler, ed., Narratives of Early V
irginia: 1606–
1625 (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1907).
43. Interestingly, the Walt Disney Pictures film Pocahontas reversed this histor
ical truth, having the
Indian princess converting John Rolfe to animism.
44. James H. Merrell, The Indians’ New World: Catawbas and Their Neighbors from Eu
ropean
Contact Through the Era of Removal (New York: W. W. Norton, 1989), 36–37.
45. Edmund S. Morgan, American Slavery, American Freedom (New York: Norton, 1975
); Abbot
Emerson Smith, Colonists in Bondage: White Servitude and Convict Labor in Americ
a, 1607–1776
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1971).
46. See the entire issues of the William and Mary Quarterly for April 1999 and f
or January 1997,
but some of the relevant articles are James H. Sweet, “The Iberian Roots of Americ
an Racist
Thought,” (January 1997, 143–66); Robin Blackburn, “The Old World Background to Europe
an
Colonial Slavery,” (January 1997, 65–102); David Brion Davis, “Constructing Race: A
Reflection,” (January 1997, 7–21); David Waldstreicher, “Reading the Runaways: Self-Fa
shioning,
Print Culture, and the Confidence in Slavery in the Eighteenth-Century Mid-Atlan
tic,” (April 1999,
243–72); and Christopher L. Brown, “Empire Without Slaves: British Concepts of Emanc
ipation in
the Age of the American Revolution,” (April 1999, 273–306). Also see Shane White, So
mewhat
More Independent: The End of Slavery in New York City, 1770–1810 (Athens, GA: Univ
ersity of
Georgia Press, 1994), for a discussion of the process of manumission in New York
City.
47. Douglas M. MacDowell, The Law in Classical Athens (London: Thames and Hudson
, 1978);
Carl Bridenbaugh, Jamestown, 1544–1699 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980).
48. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 65.
49. Merrell, Indians’ New World, 244.
50. Quoted in Virginius Dabney, Virginia: The New Dominion (Charlottesville: Uni
versity Press of
Virginia, 1971), 62–63; Warren M. Billings, The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Ce
ntury: A
Documentary History of Virginia, 1607–1689 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carol
ina Press,
1975).
51. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 81.
52. Ibid.
53. The Toleration Act is found in Woodrow Wilson, A History of the American Peo
ple, vol. 1
(New York: Harper & Bros., 1902), 130a.
54. Ibid.
55. Leslie H. Fishel Jr. and Benjamin Quarles, The Black American: A Documentary
History
(Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman, 1976), 20–21.
56. Ibid., 21–22.
57. Paul Johnson, “God and the Americans,” Commentary, January 1995, 24–45.
58. Richard White, The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Gre
at Lakes
Region, 1650–1815 (New York: Cambridge, 1991), x.
59. Virginia DeJohn Anderson, New England’s Generation: The Great Migration and th
e
Formation of Society and Culture in the Seventeenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridg
e University
Press, 1991).
60. Found at http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/amerdoc/mayflower.htm.
61. William Bradford, Bradford’s History “Of Plymouth Plantation” (Boston: Wright & Po
tter
Printing, 1898), 114–16.
62. The best short biography of John Winthrop is Edmund S. Morgan’s The Puritan Di
lemma: The
Story of John Winthrop (Boston: Little, Brown, 1958).
63. Clifford K. Shipton, “A Plea for Puritanism,” American Historical Review, April
1935, 467.
64. Kretch, The Ecological Indian, 73.
65. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 111.
66. Gura, A Glimpse of Sion’s Glory, 7.
67. Robert G. Pope, The Half-Way Covenant: Church Membership in Puritan New Engl
and
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969).
68. Anderson, New England’s Generation, 196.
69. Darren Staloff, The Making of an American Thinking Class: Intellectuals and
Intelligentsia in
Puritan Massachusetts (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).
70. Gura, A Glimpse of Sion’s Glory, 213.
71. A Maryland Anglican minister, in 1775, quoted in Daniel Boorstin, The Americ
ans: The
Colonial Experience (New York: Vintage, 1964), 351. Patrick M. Malone, The Skulk
ing Way of
War: Technology and Tactics Among the New England Indians (Lanham, MD: Madison B
ooks,
1991).
72. Ibid.
73. Johnson, “God and the Americans,” 27.
74. John Courtney Murray, “The Problem of Pluralism in America,” Thought, 65, Septem
ber 1990,
323–28, quotation on 343.
75. Johnson, “God and the Americans,” 28; Timothy L. Hall, Separating Church and Sta
te: Roger
Williams and Religious Liberty (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1998).
76. Perry Miller, “Errand into the Wilderness,” William and Mary Quarterly, January
1953, 7–18,
quoted in Wright, Search for Liberty, 213.
77. Jonathan R. T. Hughes, The Vital Few: The Entrepreneur and American Economic
Progress,
exp. ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), 65.
78. Murray, “Problem of Religious Pluralism,” 345.
79. William Cronon, Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of
New England
(New York: Hill and Wang, 1983), supports this point, further arguing that altho
ugh the Europeans
indeed changed the land through property ownership, Indians had their own ecolog
ical impact.
Chapter 2. Colonial Adolescence, 1707–63
1. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, abridged, ed. Richard D. Heffner
(New York:
New American Library, 1956), 170.
2. Francis L. Broderick, “Pulpit, Physics, and Politics: The Curriculum of the Col
lege of New
Jersey, 1746–1794,” William and Mary Quarterly, 6, 1949, 42–68.
3. Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography and Other Writings, ed. Russell B. Nye (Bost
on: Houghton-
Mifflin, 1958), passim.
4. Franklin, Autobiography, 38–40, 94–105.
5. Krech, Ecological Indian, passim.
6. Patrick M. Malone, The Skulking Way of War: Technology and Tactics Among the
New
England Indians (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993).
7. Thomas C. Leonard, News for All (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995); Ri
chard D.
Brown, Knowledge Is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early America, 1700–186
5 (New
York: Oxford, 1989); Charles E. Clark, The Public Prints: The Newspaper in Anglo
-American
Culture, 1665–1740 (New York: Oxford, 1994); and Michael Warner, The Letters of th
e Republic:
Publication and the Public Sphere in Eighteenth-Century America (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard,
1990).
8. Daniel Boorstin, The Americans: The Colonial Experience (New York: Vintage Bo
oks, 1964),
191–202.
9. Ibid., 209–39.
10. Clifton E. Olmstead, History of Religion in the United States (Englewood Cli
ffs, NJ: Prentice-
Hall, 1960).
11. Edwin S. Gaustad, The Great Awakening in New England (Chicago: Quadrangle, 1
968 [1957]);
Jon Butler, Awash in a Sea of Faith: Christianizing the American People (Cambrid
ge: Harvard
University Press, 1990).
12. Ola E. Winslow, ed., Basic Writings of Jonathan Edwards (New York: New Ameri
can Library,
1966), 115, 128–29; Perry Miller, Jonathan Edwards (Cleveland: World, 1959).
13. Quoted in John Morton Blum, et al., The National Experience: A History of th
e United States,
3rd ed. (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973), 65.
14. Edmund S. Morgan, American Slavery, American Freedom (New York: W. W. Norton
, 1975),
passim.
15. Robert C. Davis, Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters (London: Palgrowe, 2002).
16. Frederick K. C. Price, Race, Religion, and Racism . 3 vols. (Los Angeles: Fa
ith One Publishing,
2000–2002). Noah, not God, cursed Ham; there was no indication in the Bible that t
his curse was
skin color. Noah, even if his curse was legitimate, could only affect Ham’s son be
cause Ham was
blessed by God. There is no evidence of racial prejudice by Jesus or the discipl
es, and indeed one
and perhaps two of the disciples were black. Of the family tree of Jesus, there
are only a handful of
women mentioned, and the evidence suggests that in each case the women were blac
k or dark
skinned, based on descent from the Hittites through Bathsheba.
17. Winthrop Jordan, White over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550–1
812
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968), passim.
18. Peter Kolchin, Unfree Labor: American Slavery and Russian Serfdom (Cambridge
: Belknap,
1987).
19. Jack P. Greene, Imperatives, Behaviors, and Identities: Essays in Early Amer
ican Cultural
History (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1992).
20. Jordan, White over Black, 104–39.
21. Jeremy Atack and Peter W. Passell, A New Economic View of American History,
2nd ed.
(New York: W. W. Norton, 1994).
22. Jordan, White over Black, 325–31, 356–57.
23. Scholars continue to debate the direction and intent of the Founders on the
issue of slavery.
William H. Freehling has argued that both the Northwest Ordinance and the abolit
ion of the slave
trade constituted important victories on the road to abolition (“The Founding Fath
ers and Slavery,”
American Historical Review, February 1972, 81–93). William Cohen contends that Tho
mas
Jefferson was committed publicly to ending slavery through at least 1784, when h
e supported the
Ordinance of 1784 (“Thomas Jefferson and the Problem of Slavery,” Journal of America
n History,
December 1969, 503–26); also see Paul Finkleman Slavery and the Founders: Race and
Liberty in
the Age of Jefferson (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1996).
24. William W. Freehling, “The Founding Fathers: Conditional Anti-Slavery and the
Nationalists
of the American Revolution,” in The Reintegration of American History: Slavery and
the Civil
War, William W. Freehling, ed. (New York: Oxford, 1994), 12–33.
25. On the transition of power from the governors to the legislatures, see Rober
t J. Dinkin, Voting
in Provincial America: A Study of Elections in the Thirteen Colonies, 1689–1776 (W
estport, CT:
Greenwood Press, 1977); Robert E. Brown, Middle-Class Democracy and the Revoluti
on in
Massachusetts, 1691–1780 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1955); J. R. Pole, “Repr
esentation and
Authority in Virginia from the Revolution to Reform,” Journal of Southern History,
February 1958,
16–50; Jack P. Green, “The Role of the Lower Houses of Assembly in 18th Century Poli
tics,”
Journal of Southern History, November 1961, 451–74.
26. Esmond Wright, The Search for Liberty: From Origins to Independence (Oxford:
Blackwell,
1995), 327; Bernard Bailyn and Philip D. Morgan, eds., Strangers Within the Real
m
(Williamsburg, VA: Institute of Early American History and Culture, 1991); Berna
rd Bailyn, The
Peopling of British North America (New York: Knopf, 1986).
27. David S. Landes, The Unbound Prometheus: Technical Change and Industrial Dev
elopment in
Western Europe from 1750 to the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1969); Joel
Mokyr, The Lever of Riches (New York: Oxford, 1990).
28. Lawrence Harper, “Mercantilism and the American Revolution,” Canadian Historical
Review,
23 (1942), 1–15; Robert P. Thomas, “A Quantitative Approach to the Study of the Effe
cts of
British Imperial Policy on Colonial Welfare,” Journal of Economic History, 25 (196
5), 615–38.
29. Paul Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins, 199
7), 91.
30. R. J. Brugger, Maryland: A Middle Temperament, 1634–1980 (Baltimore: Johns Hop
kins
University Press, 1988), 87.
31. Thomas Doerflinger, A Vigorous Spirit of Enterprise: Merchants and Economic
Development
in Revolutionary Philadelphia (New York: W. W. Norton, 1986), 351.
32. John J. McCusker and Russel B. Menard, The Economy of British America, 1607–17
89
(Chapel Hill: Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University
of North Carolina
Press, 1985).
33. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 43; Alice Hanson Jones, Wealth of a N
ation to Be: The
American Colonies on the Eve of Revolution (New York: Columbia University Press,
1980).
34. Bernard Bailyn, et al, The Great Republic: A History of the American People,
3rd ed.,
(Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath, 1985), 89–90.
35. Marjorie Marion Spector, The American Department of the British Government,
1768–82 (New
York: Octagon Books, 1976 [1940]).
36. H. H. Peckham, The Colonial Wars, 1689–1762 (Chicago: University of Chicago Pr
ess, 1964);
Max Savelle, Empires to Nations: Expansion in North America (Minneapolis: Univer
sity of
Minnesota Press, 1974); D. E. Leach, Roots of Conflict: British Armed Forces and
Colonial
Americans, 1677–1763 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1986).
37. James T. Flexner, George Washington: The Forge of Experience, 1732–75 (Boston:
Little,
Brown, 1965).
38. Douglas Southall Freeman, George Washington: A Biography, vol. 3. (New York:
Charles
Scribner’s, 1948–1957), 89.
39. France’s victory at Fort William Henry and its shameful role in the massacre t
hat the Indians
soon perpetrated was immortalized in James Fenimore Cooper’s classic novel, The La
st of the
Mohicans: A Narrative of 1757 (New York: State University of New York Press, 198
3).
40. Francis Parkman and C. Vann Woodward, Montcalm and Wolfe (Cambridge, MA: DaC
apo
Press, 2001).
41. Fred Anderson, Crucible of War: The Seven Years’ War and the Fate of Empire in
British
North America, 1754–1766 (New York: Vintage, 2001).
42. Gordon S. Wood, The Radicalism of the American Revolution (New York: Knopf,
1992).
43. Lawrence Gipson, The Coming of the American Revolution, 1763–1775 (New York: H
arper,
1954); Richard Johnson, Adjustment to Empire: The New England Colonies, 1675–1715
(New
Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1981).
Chapter 3. Colonies No More, 1763–83
1. Barbara Graymont, The Iroquois in the American Revolution (Syracuse: Syracuse
University
Press, 1972); Francis Jennins, The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire (New York: W. W. No
rton, 1984);
Richard Aquila, The Iroquois Restoration: Iroquois Diplomacy on the Colonial Fro
ntier, 1701–
1754 (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1997).
2. Gregory E. Dowd, A Spirited Resistance: The North American Indian Struggle fo
r Unity, 1745–
1815 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992); Howard Peckham, Pontiac
and the Indian
Uprising (New York: Russell and Russell, 1970).
3. Jack Sosin, Whitehall and the Wilderness: The Middle West in British Colonial
Policy, 1760–
1775 (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1961).
4. Dale Van Every, Forth to the Wilderness: The First American Frontier, 1754–1774
(New York:
Morrow, 1961).
5. Richard White, The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Grea
t Lakes Region,
1650–1815 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
6. Jack M. Sosin, The Revolutionary Frontier, 1763–1783 (New York: Holt, Rinehart
and Winston,
1967); John W. Shy, Toward Lexington: The Role of the British Army in the Coming
of the
American Revolution (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1065).
7. Lawrence H. Gipson, The British Empire Before the American Revolution (New Yo
rk: Knopf,
1954); Bernard Donoughue, British Politics and the American Revolution: The Path
to War
(London: Macmillan, 1964).
8. Lawrence Harper, “Mercantilism and the American Revolution,” Canadian Historical
Review,
23 (1942), 1–15; Peter McClelland, “The Cost to America of British Imperial Policy,” A
merican
Economic Review, 59 (1969), 370–81.
9. Bernard Bailyn, New England Merchants in the Seventeenth Century (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard
University Press, 1955). Compare his assessment with the class-struggle model (r
ejected here) of
Gary B. Nash, The Urban Crucible: The Northern Seaports and the Origins of the A
merican
Revolution (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, abridged, 1986).
10. Pauline Maier, The Old Revolutionaries: Political Lives in the Age of Samuel
Adams (New
York: Knopf, 1980); and A. J. Langguth, Patriots: The Men who Started the Americ
an Revolution
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988).
11. William B. Willcox, ed., The Papers of Benjamin Franklin (New Haven: Yale Un
iversity Press,
1974), 18:102.
12. Winston Churchill, The Great Republic: A History of America (New York: Rando
m House,
1999), 57.
13. George III quoted in Churchill, Great Republic, 58.
14. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 517; Alan Brinkley, American History:
A Survey, 9th
ed., Vol. I (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995), 104.
15. Oliver M. Dickerson, The Navigation Acts and the American Revolution (Philad
elphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1951).
16. Paul Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins, 199
7), 133;
Esmund Wright, Franklin of Philadelphia (Cambridge: Belknap/Harvard, 1986).
17. Peter D. G. Thomas, The Townshend Duties Crisis: The Second Phase of the Ame
rican
Revolution, 1767–1773 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987); and his Tea Party to Indepe
ndence: The
Third Phase of the American Revolution, 1773–1776 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991).
18. Jerrilyn Marston, King and Congress: The Transfer of Political Legitamacy, 1
774–1776
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987).
19. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, chap. 1.
20. Charles Royster, A Revolutionary People at War: The Continental Army and Ame
rican
Character, 1775–1783 (Chapel Hill, North Carolina: Institute of Early American His
tory and
Culture and University of North Carolina Press, 1979), 6.
21. Johnson, History of the American People, 133; Edmund S. Morgan and Helen M.
Morgan, The
Stamp Act Crisis (New York: Collier, 1962).
22. Adams quoted in Marvin Olasky, Telling the Truth: How to Revitalize Christia
n Journalism
(Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1996), 116.
23. Peter D. G. Thomas, British Politics and the Stamp Act Crisis: The First Pha
se of the American
Revolution, 1763–1767 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975).
24. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, “The Economics of Business,” 54.
25. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 522.
26. Ibid., 523.
27. Bernard Bailyn and J. B. Hench, eds., The Press and the American Revolution
(Worcester, MA:
American Antequarian Society, 1980); Thomas C. Leonard, The Power of the Press:
The Birth of
American Political Reporting (New York: Oxford, 1996); and Charles E. Clark, The
Public Prints:
The Newspaper in Anglo-American Culture (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994
).
28. Wright, The Search for Liberty, 437.
29. L. H. Butterfield, ed., The Adams Papers: The Diary and Autobiography of Joh
n Adams
(Cambridge, MA.: Harvard University Press, 1961), entry of August 14, 1769.
30. David Hackett Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride (New York: Oxford, 1994), appendix D
.
31. Johnson, History of the American People, 142.
32. T. H. Breen, The Tobacco Culture: The Mentality of the Great Tidewater Plant
ers on the Eve of
the Revolution (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985).
33. Thomas Miller, ed., The Selected Writings of John Witherspoon (Carbondale, I
L: Southern
Illinois University Press, 1990), 140–41.
34. James H. Hutson, Religion and the Founding of the American Republic (Washing
ton, DC: The
Library of Congress, 1998).
35. M. Stanton Evans, The Theme Is Freedom: Religion, Politics, and the American
Tradition
(Washington: Regnery, 1994), 99.
36. Woodrow Wilson, A History of the American People, vol. 2 (New York: Harper &
Bros, 1902),
215.
37. Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride, 64.
38. Thomas Hobbes, The Leviathan (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967 [1651]).
39. John Locke, Two Treatises of Government, Peter Laslett, ed., (New York: Ment
or, 1965
[1690]); The Works of John Locke, 10 vols., (London: n.p. 1823).
40. Charles Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws, trans. Anne Cohler, et al. (Cam
bridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1989).
41. Bernard Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Cambridg
e, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1967).
42. Mark A. Beliles and Stephen K. McDowell, America’s Providential History (Charl
ottesville,
VA: Providence Foundation, 1989), 146.
43. Peter Marshall and David Manuel, The Light and the Glory (Old Tappan, NJ: Fl
eming H.
Revell Co., 1977), 309.
44. Roger Finke and Rodney Stark, The Churching of America, 1776–1990: Winners and
Losers in
Our Religious Economy (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1992), 15–16.
45. Finke and Stark, Churching of America, 65.
46. Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride, 152.
47. Ibid., 153.
48. Michael Bellesiles, “The Origins of Gun Culture in the United States, 1760–1865,”
Journal of
American History, September 1996, and his Arming America: The Origins of a Natio
nal Gun
Culture (New York: Knopf, 2000).
49. Clayton E. Cramer, “Gun Scarcity in the Early Republic?” unpublished paper avail
able at www.
ggnra.org/cramer, and his Concealed Weapon Laws of the Early Republic (Westport,
CT: Praeger,
1999). Also see John Shy, A People Numerous and Armed: Reflections on the Milita
ry Struggle for
American Independence (New York: Oxford, 1976).
50. Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride, 150–55.
51. Jim R. McClellan, Changing Interpretations of America’s Past: The Pre-Colonial
Period
Through the Civil War, 2nd ed., vol. 1 (Guilford, CT: Dushkin-McGraw-Hill, 2000)
, 135.
52. John P. Galvin, The Minutemen: The First Fight: Myths and Realities of the A
merican
Revolution (Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s, 1989).
53. Ralph Waldo Emerson, “The Minuteman,” in Mayo W. Hazeltine, ed., Masterpieces of
Eloquence: Famous Orations of Great World Leaders from Early Greece to the Prese
nt Times (New
York: P. F. Collier & Son, 1905), 6001–2.
54. Benjamin Franklin to David Hartley, May 8, 1775, in William B. Willcox, ed.,
The Papers of
Benjamin Franklin, vol. 22 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982), 34.
55. Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride, 155.
56. George Bancroft, History of the United States, vol. 4 (Boston: Little, Brown
, 1855), 12.
57. Douglas Southall Freeman, George Washington: A Biography, 7 vols. (New York:
Charles
Scribner’s, 1948–1957), 3:454.
58. Freeman, George Washington, 3:453; George Washington to Joseph Reed, Novembe
r 28, 1775,
in The Writings of George Washington, ed. John C. Fitzpatrick, from the Original
Manuscript
Sources…, Prepared Under the Direction of the United States George Washington Bice
ntennial
Commission, 39 vols., (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1931–1944), I
V: 124.
59. Charles Royster, A Revolutionary People at War: The Continental Army and Ame
rican
Character, 1775–1783 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press and Institut
e of Early
American History and Culture, 1979), 29.
60. Quoted in Royster, A Revolutionary People at War, 29.
61. Franklin to Charles Lee, February 11, 1776, Papers of Benjamin Franklin, vol
. 22, 343.
62. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 546.
63. Victor Davis Hamson, Courage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of We
stern Power
(New York: Anchor / Doubleday, 2002).
64. Royster, A Revolutionary People at War, 281.
65. George Washington to the President of Congress, December 27, 1776, in Fitzpa
trick, Writings
of George Washington, vol. 6, 444.
66. George Washington to John Cadwalader, December 27, 1776, in Fitzpatrick, Wri
tings of
George Washington, 6:446.
67. Thomas Paine, Common Sense and the Crisis (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 19
73), 69.
68. Constantine G. Guzman, “Old Dominion, New Republic: Making Virginia Republican
, 1776–
1840,” Ph.D. diss., University of Virginia, 1999.
69. Page Smith, John Adams, 1735–1784, vol. 1 (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1962),
270.
70. Larry Schweikart, ed., Readings in Western Civilization, 2nd ed. (Boston: Pe
arson Custom,
2000), 9–14.
71. Pauline Meier, American Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence (N
ew York:
Knopf, 1997), 134.
72. Scot A. French and Edward L. Ayers, “The Strange Career of Thomas Jefferson: R
ace and
Slavery in American Memory, 1943–1993,” in Peter S. Onuf, ed., Jeffersonian Legacies
(Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1993), 418–56.
73. George Washington to the president of the Congress, December 23, 1777, Writi
ngs of George
Washington, 10:194–95.
74. Chitwood, History of Colonial America, 572.
75. Russell Weigley, The American Way of War: A History of United States Militar
y History and
Policy (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1973).
76. Franklin and Mary Wickwire, Cornwallis: The American Adventure (Boston: Houg
hton
Mifflin, 1970), 386.
77. Wright, The Search for Liberty, 482.
78. Richard Morris, The Peacemakers: The Great Powers and American Independence
(New York:
Harper & Row, 1965).
79. James T. Hutson, John Adams and the Diplomacy of the American Revolution (Le
xington, KY:
University Press of Kentucky, 1980); Jonathan Dull, A Diplomatic History of the
American
Revolution (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985); Ronald Hoffman and Peter J.
Albert, eds.,
The Treaty of Paris (1783) in A Changing States System (Maryland Universities Pr
ess of America
for the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1985); and Samuel Flag
g Bemis, The
Diplomacy of the American Revolution (Bloomington, IN: University of Indiana Pre
ss, 1957).
80. Sylvia R. Frey, Water from the Rock: Black Resistance in a Revolutionary Age
(Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1991); Woody Holton, Forced Founders: Indians, Debto
rs, Slaves and
the Making of the American Revolution (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Press, 1999).
Chapter 4. A Nation of Law, 1776–89
1. Gary Wills, Inventing America: Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence (Garden
City, NY:
Doubleday, 1978).
2. Adams quoted in Winthrop Jordan and Leon Litwack, The United States, combined
ed., 7th ed.
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1991), 131.
3. Joseph J. Ellis, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation (New York: V
intage, 2002),
130.
4. Ibid., 121.
5. Gordon S. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787 (New York: W. W. N
orton,
1972) and Forrest McDonald, E Pluribus Unum: The Formation of the American Repub
lic, 1776–
1790 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1965).
6. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 8.
7. Bernard Bailyn, et al., The Great Republic (Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath, 1985)
, 132.
8. Ibid.
9. Paul Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins, 1997
), 179.
10. Ibid.
11. Jackson Turner Main, The Anti-Federalists: Critics of the Constitution, 1781–1
788 (New York:
Norton, 1961), 9.
12. Merrill Jensen, The Articles of Confederation: An Interpretation of the Soci
al-Constitutional
History of the American Revolution, 1774–1781 (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsi
n Press,
1959); and The New Nation: A History of the United States During the Confederati
on, 1781–1789
(New York: Knopf, 1950).
13. Jensen, New Nation, xiii.
14. Ibid., vii–xv.
15. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 125–255.
16. Johnson, A History of the American People, 117.
17. Ibid., 116; Paul Johnson, “God and the Americans,” Commentary, January 1995, 25–45
.
18. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, vol. 1 (New York: Vintage, 1935
), 319.
19. Ibid., 316.
20. Edward L. Queen II, Stephen R. Prothero, and Gardiner H. Shattuck Jr., The E
ncyclopedia of
American Religious History (New York: Facts on File and Proseworks, 1996), 682–86.
21. Thomas Buckley, “After Disestablishment: Thomas Jefferson’s Wall of Separation i
n
Antebellum Virginia,” Journal of Southern History 61 (1995), 445–800, quotation on 4
79–80.
22. Michael Allen, Western Rivermen, 1763–1861: Ohio and Mississippi Boatmen and t
he Myth of
the Alligator Horse (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1990), 58–87.
23. Reuben Gold Thwaites, Daniel Boone (New York: D. Appleton, 1902).
24. George Dangerfield, The Era of Good Feelings (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 195
2), 116, 105–
21.
25. Reginald Horsman, The Frontier in the Formative Years, 1783–1815 (New York: Ho
lt,
Rinehart, and Winston, 1970), 32–36.
26. Ibid., 37, 84–87, 102–3; Francis S. Philbrick, The Rise of the West, 1763–1830 (Ne
w York:
Harper and Row, 1965), 104–33.
27. Michael Allen, Congress and the West, 1783–1787 (New York: Edwin Miller Press)
, chap. 2;
Hernando DeSoto, The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and
Fails
Everywhere Else (New York: Basic Books, 2000).
28. Richard B. Morris, The Forging of the Union, 1781–1789 (New York, 1987), 228.
29. For land and Indian policy, see see Michael Allen, “The Federalists and the We
st, 1783–1803,”
Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, 61, October 1978, 315–32 and “Justice for
the Indians:
The Federalist Quest, 1786–1792,” Essex Institute Historical Collections, 122, April
1986, 124–41.
30. Jacob Piatt Dunn, “Slavery Petitions and Papers,” Indiana State Historical Socie
ty Publications,
2, 1894, 443–529.
31. Peter S. Onuf, “From Constitution to Higher Law: The Reinterpretation of the N
orthwest
Ordinance,” Ohio History, 94, Winter/Spring 1985, 5–33.
32. Paul Finkleman, “States’ Rights North and South in Antebellum America,” in Kermit
L. Hall
and James W. Ely Jr., An Uncertain Tradition: Constitutionalism and the History
of the South
(Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1989), 125–58.
33. Herbert James Henderson, Party Politics in the Continental Congress (New Yor
k: McGraw-
Hill, 1975), 1–3.
34. Gilman M. Ostrander, Republic of Letters: The American Intellectual Communit
y, 1775–1865
(Madison, WI: Madison House, 1999).
35. Main, Anti-Federalists, viii–ix; Edmund S. Morgan, Inventing the People: The R
ise of Popular
Sovereignty in England and America (New York: W. W. Norton, 1988).
36. Jensen, New Nation, 125–28.
37. Hamilton quoted in Winston S. Churchill, The Great Republic: A History of Am
erica (New
York: Random House, 1999), 97.
38. Edwin J. Perkins, American Public Finance and Financial Services, 1700–1815 (C
olumbus:
Ohio State University Press, 1994); E. James Ferguson, The Power of the Purse: A
History of
American Public Finance, 1776–1790 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Pres
s, 1961);
Bray Hammond, Banks and Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War
(Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1957).
39. Charles T. Ritchenseon, Aftermath of Revolution: British Policy Towards the
United States,
1783–1795 (Dallas: Southern Methodist University Press, 1969).
40. Arthur P. Whitaker, The Spanish-American Frontier, 1783–1795 (Boston: Houghton
-Mifflin,
1927); Richard W. Van Alstyne, The Rising American Empire (New York: Oxford, 196
0).
41. Van Beck Hall, Politics Without Parties: Massachusetts, 1780–1791 (Pittsburgh:
University of
Pittsburgh Press, 1972); Ronald Hoffman and Peter Albert, eds., Sovereign States
in an Age of
Uncertainty (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1981); Peter S. Onuf
, The Origins of the
Federal Republic: Jurisdictional Controversies in the United States (Philadelphi
a: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 1983).
42. Catherine Drinker Bowen, Miracle at Philadelphia (Boston: Little, Brown, 196
6), 18.
43. Oscar Handlin and Lilian Handlin, A Restless People: America in Rebellion, 1
770–1787
(Garden City, NY: Anchor Press, 1982).
44. Rock Brynner, “Fire Beneath Our Feet: Shays’ Rebellion and Its Constitutional Im
pact,” Ph.D.
diss., Columbia University, 1993; Daniel P. Szatmary, Shays’ Rebellion: The Making
of an
Agrarian Insurrection (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1980); Robert
A. Freer, Shays’
Rebellion (New York: Garland, 1988); Bowen, Miracle at Philadelphia, 31.
45. Bowen, Miracle at Philadelphia, 31.
46. Charles Beard, The Economic Interpretation of the Constitution (New York: Ma
cmillan, 1913),
passim.
47. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 469–564.
48. Bowen, Miracle at Philadelphia, 13.
49. Christopher M. Duncan, The Anti-Federalists and Early American Political Tho
ught (DeKalb,
IL: Northern Illinois University Press, 1995); and Main, The Anti-Federalists, p
assim.
50. Johnson, History of the American People, 187.
51. Melvin I. Urofsky, A March of Liberty: A Constitutional History of the Unite
d States, 2 vols.
(New York: Knopf, 1988), I:91–92.
52. Johnson, History of the American People, 186.
53. Bailyn, Great Republic, 234.
54. Roger H. Brown, Redeeming the Republic: Federalists, Taxation, and the Origi
ns of the
Constitution (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993).
55. Tocqueville, Democracy in America, I:213.
56. Howard A. Ohline, “Republicanism and Slavery: Origins of the Three-Fifths Clau
se in the
United States Constitution,” William & Mary Quarterly, 28, 1971, 563–84.
57. Max Farrand, ed., The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, rev. ed., (
New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1937), I:193.
58. Donald L. Robinson, Slavery and the Structure of American Politics, 1765–1820
(New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971), 180.
59. William H. Freehling, “The Founding Fathers and Slavery,” American Historical Re
view,
February 1972, 81–93 (quotation on 84).
60. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 89–90.
61. Ibid., 113.
62. Ibid., 158; Fritz Hirschfeld, George Washington and Slavery: A Documentary P
ortrayal
(Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1997); Robert E. Dalzell Jr. and Lee Ba
ldwin Dalzell,
George Washington’s Mount Vernon: At Home in Revolutionary America (New York: Oxfo
rd,
1998), 112, 211–19.
63. William M. Wiecek, The Sources of Antislavery Constitutionalism in America,
1760–1848
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1977), 67.
64. Ibid.
65. Finkleman, “States’ Rights North and South,” passim.
66. William W. Freehling, “The Founding Fathers: Conditional Antislavery and the
Nonradicalization of the American Revolution,” in Freehling, ed., The Reintegratio
n of American
History: Slavery and the Civil War (New York: Oxford, 1994), 12–31.
67. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 93.
68. Johnson, History of the American People, 188.
69. Urofsky, March of Liberty, I:95–96; Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 5
33–35.
70. Main, Anti-Federalists, viii–x.
71. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 533–35.
72. Beard, Economic Interpretation of the Constitution, passim.
73. Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution (C
hicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1958); Robert McGuire and Robert L. Ohsfeldt, “An Eco
nomic Model
of Voting Behavior Over Specific Issues at the Constitutional Convention of 1787
,” Journal of
Economic History, 46, March 1986, 79–111; and their earlier article “Economic Intere
sts and the
American Constitution: A Quantitative Rehabilitation of Charles A. Beard,” ibid.,
44, 1984, 509–
20. See also Richard B. Morris, “The Confederation Period and the American Histori
an,” William
and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 13, 1956, 139–56.
74. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, chap. 2, discusses these issues at le
ngth.
75. M. Stanton Evans, The Theme Is Freedom: Religion, Politics, and the American
Tradition
(Washington, D.C.: Regnery, 1994), 101.
76. George Bancroft, History of the United States of America, vol. 6 (New York:
D. Appleton,
1912), 44–59.
77. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 522.
78. Ibid., 537.
79. “Centinel” quoted in Michael Allen, “Anti-Federalism and Libertarianism,” Reason Pap
ers, 7,
Spring 1981, 85.
80. Jonathan Elliot, The Debates of the Several State Conventions on the Adoptio
n of the Federal
Constitution, vol. 1 (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1859), 44–46.
81. Clinton Rossiter, ed., The Federalist Papers (New York: Signet, 1961).
82. Paul Goodman, “The First American Party System,” in William Nisbet Chambers and
Walter
Dean Burnham, eds., The American Party Systems (New York: Oxford University Pres
s, 1967),
56–89.
83. Charles Calomiris, “Alexander Hamilton,” in Larry Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia
of American
Business and Economic History: Banking and Finance to 1913 (New York: Facts on F
ile, 1990),
239–48.
84. Bancroft, History of the United States, 6:380.
85. Main, The Anti-Federalists, 187–249.
86. R. Kent Newmeyer, “John Marshall and the Southern Constitutional Tradition,” in
Kermit L.
Hall and James W. Ely Jr., eds., An Uncertain Tradition: Constitutionalism and t
he History of the
South (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1989), 105–24 (quotation on 115).
87. Allen, “Antifederalism and Libertarianism,” 86–87.
88. Wood, Creation of the American Republic, 542–43.
89. Robert A. Rutland, ed., The Papers of James Madison (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press,
1962), 10:208; W. Cleon Skousen, The Making of America (Washington, D.C.: The Na
tional
Center for Constitutional Studies, 1985), 5.
90. Sol Bloom, The Story of the Constitution (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Sesquicente
nnial
Commission, 1937), 43.
91. Stephen P. Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed: The Evolution of a Constitutio
nal Right
(Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1984).
92. Urofsky, March of Liberty, I:108–10.
93. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 216.
Chapter 5. Small Republic, Big Shoulders, 1789–1815
1. Ralph Ketcham, Presidents Above Party: The First American Presidency (Chapel
Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1984); Glenn A. Phelps, George Washington an
d American
Constitutionalism (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1993); Stanley Elki
ns and Eric
McKitrick, The Age of Federalism (New York: Oxford, 1993); and John C. Miller, T
he Federalist
Era, 1789–1801 (New York: Harper, 1960).
2. Goldfield, et al., American Journey, 226.
3. See http://etc.princeton.edu/CampusWWW/Companion/freneau_philip.html for a br
ief
biography of Freneau and Philip M. Marsh, Philip Freneau, Poet and Journalist (M
inneapolis:
Dillon Press, 1967).
4. Joseph J. Ellis, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation (New York: V
intage, 2002),
126.
5. Ibid., 121, 126.
6. Ibid., 121.
7. Douglas Southall Freeman, George Washington, a Biography (New York: Charles S
cribner’s,
1948–1957).
8. Leonard C. White, The Federalists: A Study in Administrative History (New Yor
k: Macmillan,
1948); Marcus Cunliffe, George Washington (Boston: Little, Brown, 1958).
9. John E. Ferling, John Adams, A Life (New York: Henry Holt, 1996); Gilbert Chi
nard, Honest
John Adams (Boston: Little, Brown, 1933); Joseph J. Ellis, Passionate Sage: The
Character and
Legacy of John Adams (New York: W. W. Norton, 2001).
10. L. H. Butterfield, ed., John Adams, Diary and Autobiography (Cambridge: Belk
nap, 1961)
allows Adams to speak for himself.
11. Adrienne Koch, Jefferson and Madison: The Great Collaboration (London: Oxfor
d, 1964);
Irving Brant, James Madison (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1941).
12. Paul Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins, 199
7), 211.
13. Dumas Malone, Jefferson and His Time, 5 vols. (Boston: Little, Brown, 1948–198
1); Noble
Cunningham Jr., In Pursuit of Reason: The Life of Thomas Jefferson (Baton Rouge:
Louisiana
State University Press, 1987); Merrill Peterson, Thomas Jefferson and the New Na
tion: A
Biography (New York: Oxford, 1970). A good overview of recent scholarship on Jef
ferson appears
in Peter S. Onuf, “The Scholars’ Jefferson,” William and Mary Quarterly, 3d series, 50
, October
1993, 671–99.
14. Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (Boston: Wells and Lilly, 1
829).
15. Larry Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in th
e United States
(Fort Worth: Harcourt, 2000), 64–67.
16. The Sally Hemings controversy, which erupted again in the 1990s when DNA tes
ts showed that
descendants had the DNA of the Jefferson family, remains clouded, and even the n
ew tests do not
establish Jefferson’s paternity. Among the different views in the recent disputes,
see Douglas L.
Wilson, “Thomas Jefferson and the Character Issue,” Atlantic Monthly, November 1992,
57–74;
Scot A. French and Edward L. Ayers, “The Strange Career of Thomas Jefferson: Race
and Slavery
in American Memory, 1943–1993,” in Peter S. Onuf, ed., Jeffersonian Legacies (Charlo
ttesville:
University Press of Virginia, 1993), 418–56; Lucia Stanton, “Those Who Labor for my
Happiness:
Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves,” ibid., 147–80; and Paul Finkleman, “Jefferson and Sl
avery:
Treason Against the Hopes of the World,” ibid., 181–221.
17. Broadus Mitchell, Alexander Hamilton: A Concise Biography (New York: Oxford
University
Press, 1976); Forrest McDonald, Alexander Hamilton: A Biography (New York: Norto
n, 1979).
18. Cecilia Kenyon, “Alexander Hamilton: Rousseau of the Right,” Political Science Q
uarterly, 73,
June 1958, 161–78.
19. Joyce Appleby, Capitalism and a New Social Order: The Republican Vision of t
he 1790s (New
York: New York University Press, 1984); Richard Buel Jr., Securing the Revolutio
n: Ideology in
American Politics (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1974); Lance Banning, The J
effersonian
Persuasion: Evolution of a Party Ideology (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 197
8); Semour Lipset,
The First New Nation: The United States in Historical and Comparative Perspectiv
e (Garden City,
NY: Doubleday, 1967 [1963]).
20. Charles Calomiris, “Alexander Hamilton,” in Larry Schweikart, ed., The Encyclope
dia of
American Business History and Biography: Banking and Finance to 1913 (New York:
Facts on
File, 1990), 239–48.
21. Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins, 1997), 2
12; W. G.
Anderson, The Price of Liberty: The Public Debt of the Revolution (Charlottesvil
le: University of
Virginia Press, 1983).
22. Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure, 60–64.
23. Kenyon, “Alexander Hamilton,” reprinted in Sidney Fine and Gerald S. Brown, The
American
Past: Conflicting Interpretations of the Great Issues (New York: Macmillan, 1965
), 251–65
(quotation on 257).
24. John Steele Gordon, Hamilton’s Blessing: The Extraordinary Life and Times of O
ur National
Debt (New York: Penguin, 1998).
25. Herbert Sloan, “The Earth Belongs in Usufruct to the Living,” in Peter S. Onuf,
ed.,
Jeffersonian Legacies (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1993), 281–3
15.
26. Naomi Lamoreaux, Insider Lending: Banks, Personal Connections, and Economic
Development
in Industrial New England (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 1994); Lar
ry
Schwiekart, Banking in the American South from the Age of Jackson to Reconstruct
ion (Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987); Lynne Pierson Doti and Larry Sch
weikart,
Banking in the American West from the Gold Rush to Deregulation (Norman, OK: Uni
versity of
Oklahoma Press, 1991).
27. See Gerald Stourzh, Alexander Hamilton and the Idea of Republican Government
(Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 1970).
28. Curtis P. Nettles, The Emergence of a National Economy, 1775–1815 (New York: H
olt,
Rinehart and Winston, 1962).
29. Johnson, History of the American People, 212.
30. Alexander Hamilton, “Report on Manufactures,” in George Billias, ed.,The Federal
ists: Realists
or Ideologues? (Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath, 1970), 25.
31. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 74.
32. Thomas P. Slaughter, The Whiskey Rebellion: Frontier Epilogue to the America
n Revolution
(New York: Oxford, 1986).
33. John Dos Passos, The Men Who Made the Nation (New York: Doubleday, 1957), 18
6.
34. Leland D. Baldwin, Whiskey Rebels: The Story of a Frontier Uprising (Pittsbu
rgh: University
of Pittsburgh Press, 1939).
35. Annals of Congress, May 1796, 92. Also see 1308–22.
36. Richard H. Kohn, Eagle and Sword: The Federalists and the Creation of the Mi
litary
Establishment in America (New York: Free Press, 1975).
37. William Fowler, Jack Tars and Commodores: The American Navy (Boston: Houghto
n Mifflin,
1984).
38. Lewis Condict, “Journal of a Trip to Kentucky in 1795,” New Jersey Historical So
ciety
Proceedings, new series, 4, 1919, 114.
39. Richard C. Knopf, ed., Anthony Wayne, A Name in Arms: Soldier, Diplomat, Def
ender of
Expansion Westward of a Nation (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1959
).
40. Reginald Horsman, The Frontier in the Formative Years, 1783–1815 (New York: Ho
lt,
Rinehart and Winston, 1970).
41. Alexander De Conde, Entangling Alliance: Politics and Diplomacy Under George
Washington
(Durham: Duke University Press, 1958).
42. Page Smith, John Adams, vol. II, 1784–1826 (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1962),
831.
43. Louis M. Sears, George Washington and the French Revolution (Detroit: Wayne
State
University Press, 1960).
44. Alexander DeConde, The Quasi-War: The Politics and Diplomacy of the Undeclar
ed War with
France, 1797–1801 (New York: Scribner, 1966).
45. Melvin I. Urofsky, March of Liberty: A Constitutional History of the United
States, 2 vols.
(New York: Knopf, 1988), I:125.
46. Smith, John Adams, 833.
47. Ibid., 909.
48. Ibid., 909.
49. Ibid., 833.
50. Ibid., 841.
51. Greville Bathe, Citizen Genet, Diplomat and Inventor (Philadelphia: Press of
Allen, Lane and
Scott, 1946); Gilbert Chinard, George Washington as the French Knew Him (Princet
on: Princeton
University Press, 1940).
52. Jerald A. Combs, The Jay Treaty: Political Battleground for the Founding Fat
hers (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1970).
53. Jordan, et al., United States, 7, 162.
54. Miller, Federalist Era, 168.
55. Ibid., 168.
56. John F. Hoadley, Origins of American Political Parties, 1789–1803 (Lexington,
KY: University
of Kentucky Press, 1986).
57. John Lauritz Larson, “Jefferson’s Union and the Problem of Internal Improvements
,” in Onuf,
Jeffersonian Legacies, 340–69, quotation on 342.
58. Smith, John Adams, 842.
59. Paul Goodman, “The First American Party System,” in William N. Chambers and Walt
er Dean
Burnham, eds., The American Party System: Stages of Political Development (Cambr
idge: Oxford
University Press, 1967), 56–89.
60. Miller, Federalist Era, 198 note.
61. Smith, John Adams, 846.
62. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 135.
63. Ibid.
64. Victor Hugo Paltsits, Washington’s Farewell Address (New York: New York Public
Library,
1935); Edmund S. Morgan, The Genius of George Washington (New York: Norton, 1981
).
65. Morton Borden, Parties and Politics in the Early Republic, 1789–1815 (Arlingto
n Heights, IL:
AHM Publishing Corporation, 1967), 8.
66. Ibid., 9.
67. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 190.
68. Ibid.
69. William C. Stinchcombe, The XYZ Affair (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1980)
.
70. Theodore Roscoe and Fred Freeman, Picture History of the U. S. Navy (New Yor
k: Bonanza
Books, 1956), 125 (fig. 257); Russell Weigley, The American Way of War: A Histor
y of United
States Military Strategy and Policy (New York: Macmillan, 1973), 42–45.
71. Tindall and Shi, America: A Narrative History, 5th ed., 2 vols. (New York: W
. W. Norton,
1999), 1:362.
72. Bailyn, et al., The Great Republic, 48.
73. Stephen G. Kurtz, The Presidency of John Adams: The Collapse of Federalism,
1795–1800
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1957); Roger Sharp, American Po
litics in the
Early Republic: The New Nation in Crisis (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993
).
74. Johnson, History of the American People, 234; James Sterling Young, The Wash
ington
Community, 1800–1828 (New York: Harcourt Brace & World, 1966).
75. Smith, John Adams, 846.
76. Manning Dauer, The Adams Federalists (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Pr
ess, 1968).
77. Urofsky, March of Liberty, 177.
78. William A. Gouge, A Short History of Paper Money and Banking in the United S
tates (New
York: Greenwood Press, 1968 [1833]); John Taylor, An Inquiry into the Principles
and Policy of
the United States (Fredericksburg: Green & Cady, 1814).
79. Shane White, Somewhat More Independent: The End of Slavery in New York, 1770–1
810
(Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1991), 26.
80. James E. Davis, Frontier America, 1800–1840: A Comparative Demographic Analysi
s of the
Settlement Process (Glendale, California: A. H. Clark, 1977).
81. Constance McLaughlin Green, Eli Whitney and the Birth of American Technology
(Boston:
Little, Brown, 1956).
82. Alfred Conrad and John Meyer, “The Economics of Slavery in the Antebellum Sout
h,” Journal
of Political Economy, April 1958, 95–130.
83. Grady McWhiney, Cracker Culture: Celtic Ways in the Old South (Tuscaloosa: U
niversity of
Alabama Press, 1988); Terry G. Jordan and Matti Kaups, The American Backwoods Fr
ontier: An
Ethnic and Ecological Interpretation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,
1989).
84. George Dangerfield, The Era of Good Feelings (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 195
2), 120.
85. In addition to the sources listed in note 16, see Fawn M. Brodie, Thomas Jef
ferson: An Intimate
History (New York: Norton, 1974); Peter S. Onum and Jan E. Lewis, eds., Sally He
mings and
Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civil Culture (Charlottesville: Universit
y Press of
Virginia, 1999); Joseph J. Ellis, American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jeffe
rson (New York:
Knopf, 1997); Dumas Malone and Steven Hochman, “A Note on Evidence: The Personal H
istory
of Madison Hemings,” Journal of Southern History, 61, November 1975, 523–28; Joseph
J. Ellis,
“Jefferson Post-DNA,” William & Mary Quarterly, 126, January 2000, 125–38; material fr
om the
Monticello commission, available online at http://www.mindspring.com/~tjshcommis
sion.
86. Malcolm J. Rohrbough, The Land Office Business: The Settlement and Administr
ation of
American Public Land, 1789–1837 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1968).
87. Joseph H. Harrison Jr., “Sic et non: Thomas Jefferson and Internal Improvement
,” Journal of
the Early Republic, 7, 1987, 335–49.
88. Larson, “Jefferson’s Union,” passim.
89. Ibid., 361.
90. Ibid.
91. Calhoun quoted in the Annals of Congress, 14th Congress, 2nd session, Februa
ry 4, 1817; John
Lauritz Larson, “Bind the Republic Together: The National Union and the Struggle f
or a System of
Internal Improvements,” Journal of American History, 74, 1987, 363–87.
92. Albert Gallatin, “Reports on Roads and Canals,” document No. 250, 10th Congress,
1st session,
reprinted in New American State Papers—Transportation, vol. 1 (Wilmington, DE: Sch
olarly
Resources, 1972).
93. Carter Goodrich, Government Promotion of American Canals and Railroads, 1800–1
890
(Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1974 [1960]).
94. Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970 (White Pl
ains: Kraus
International Publications [U. S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census],
1989), 1114–
15.
95. Larson, “Jefferson’s Union,” 362.
96. John R. Nelson Jr., Liberty and Property: Political Economy and Policymaking
in the New
Nation, 1789–1812 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987), 115–33; Drew R.
McCoy,
The Last of the Fathers: James Madison and the Republican Legacy (New York: Camb
ridge, 1989).
97. Burton W. Folsom Jr., The Myth of the Robber Barons (Herndon, VA: Young Amer
ica’s
Foundation, 1991), chap. 1.
98. James Willard Hurst, Law and the Conditions of Freedom in the Nineteenth Cen
tury United
States (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1964).
99. Morton Horowitz, The Transformation of American Law (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University
Press, 1979).
100. Eric Monkkonen, “Bank of Augusta v. Earle: Corporate Growth vs. States’ Rights,”
Alabama
Historical Quarterly, Summer 1972, 113–30.
101. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 114.
102. Malcolm J. Rohrbough, The Trans-Appalachian Frontier: People, Societies, an
d Institutions,
1775–1850 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1978).
103. “Louisiana Purchase,” in Howard R. Lamar, ed., The New Encyclopedia of the Amer
ican
West (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998), 657–58; Alexander DeConde, This Aff
air of
Louisiana (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1976).
104. James Eugene Smith, One Hundred Years of Hartford’s Courant (New York: Anchor
Books,
1949), 82.
105. Seth Ames, ed., Life and Works of Fisher Ames, 2 vols. (Boston: Little, Bro
wn & Co., 1854),
I:323–24.
106. Stephen E. Ambrose, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson a
nd the
Opening of the American West (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996).
107. David Lavender, The Way to the Western Sea: Lewis and Clark Across the Cont
inent (New
York: Harper & Row, 1988).
108. William H. Goetzmann, Army Exploration in the American West, 1803–1863 (New H
aven:
Yale University Press, 1959), and his New Lands, New Men: America and the Second
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109. Marshall Smelser, The Democratic Republic, 1801–1815 (New York: Harper & Row,
1968),
111.
110. Ellis, Founding Brothers, 42.
111. Milton Lomask, Aaron Burr: The Years from Princeton to Vice-President, 1756–1
805 (New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1979), and his Aaron Burr: The Conspiracy and the
Years of Exile,
1805–1836 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982).
112. William Ray, Horrors of Slavery, or, The American Tars in Tripoli (Troy, Ne
w York: Oliver
Lyon, 1808); Cyrus Brady, Stephen Decatur (Boston: Small, Maynard, 1900).
113. Bailyn, The Great Republic, 276.
114. Richard B. Morris, ed., Encyclopedia of American History, Bicentennial Edit
ion (New York:
Harper & Row, 1976), 168.
115. Churchill, Great Republic, 112.
116. Harry L. Coles, The War of 1812 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1965
), 86.
117. Ibid., 81.
118. Ibid., 71–106.
119. Ibid., 129.
120. Reginald Horsman, The War of 1812 (New York: Knopf, 1969).
121. Bailyn, The Great Republic, 279.
122. Larson, “Jefferson’s Union,” passim.
Chapter 6. The First Era of Big Central Government, 1815–36
1. Stuart Flexner and Doris Flexner, The Pessimist’s Guide to History, updated ed.
(New York:
Quill, 2000), 110.
2. Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, “Second Bank of the United States and Independent Treasu
ry,” in Larry
Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia of American Business History and Biography: Bankin
g and Finance
to 1913, 415–20.
3. Paul Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins, 1997
), 288.
4. William N. Gouge, A Short History of Paper-Money and Banking in the United St
ates…, 2 vols.
(Philadelphia: T. W. Ustik, 1833), II:109.
5. Ralph C. H. Catterall, The Second Bank of the United States (Chicago: Univers
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War (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1957); Richard H. Timberlake Jr.
, The Origins of
Central Banking in the United States (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978)
; Larry
Schweikart, “Jacksonian Ideology, Currency Control, and Central Banking: A Reappra
isal,”
Historian, 51, November 1988, 78–102; Peter Temin, The Jacksonian Economy (New Yor
k: W. W.
Norton, 1969); Murray N. Rothbard, The Panic of 1819: Reactions and Policies (Ne
w York:
Columbia University Press, 1962).
6. Jordan and Litwack, The United States, 196.
7. Larry Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in the
United States
(Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt, 2000), 101–2, 112–15.
8. D. E. Engdahl, “John Marshall’s ‘Jeffersonian Concept’ of Judicial Review,” Duke Law Jo
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Wrong Case,” Stanford Law Review, 9 (1957), 710–30; G. Edward White, The Marshall Co
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American Law (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1973). Taylor quoted in Johnson, Histo
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American People, 239.
9. “Rush-Bagot Agreement,” in Richard B. Morris, ed. The Encyclopedia of American Hi
story:
Bicentennial Edition (New York: Harper and Row, 1976), 186.
10. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, II:144.
11. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 128; Joseph J. Fucini and and Suzy Fu
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Entrepreneurs: The Men and Women Behind Famous Brand Names and How They Made It
(Boston: G. K. Hall, 1985), 13–16.
12. Cincinnati Enquirer quoted in William Strauss and Neil Howe, Generations: Th
e History of
America’s Future, 1584 to 2069 (New York: Morrow), 212.
13. William C. Davis, Three Roads to the Alamo: The Lives and Fortunes of David
Crockett, James
Bowie, and William Barret Travis (New York: Harper Perennial, 1999), 99.
14. Johnson, History of the American People, 361.
15. Ibid.
16. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, chap. 3, passim.
17. Merrit Roe Smith, Harpers Ferry Armory and the New Technology (Ithaca, New Y
ork: Cornell
University Press, 1977); David Hounshell, From the American System to Mass Produ
ction
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1984); David F. Noble, “Command Perfor
mance: A
Perspective on the Social and Economic Consequences of Military Enterprise,” in Me
rrit Roe
Smith, ed., Military Enterprise and Technological Change: Perspectives on the Am
erican
Experience (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1985); Donald Hoke, Ingenious Yankees: The Ris
e of the
American System of Manufactures in the Private Sector (New York: Columbia Univer
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(1989), 119–
28.
18. Barbara M. Tucker, “Forms of Ownership and Management,” in Henry C. Dethloff and
C. Joseph Pusateri, eds., American Business History: Case Studies (Arlington Hei
ghts, IL: Harlan-
Davidson, 1987), 60. Also see Barbara M. Tucker, Samuel Slater and the Origins o
f the American
Textile Industry, 1790–1860 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1984).
19. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 79.
20. Ibid., 102; Atack and Passell, New Economic View of American History, 150; C
arter Goodrich,
Government Promotion of American Canals and Railroads, 1800–1890 (New York: Columb
ia
University Press, 1960) and his Canals and American Economic Development (New Yo
rk:
Columbia University Press, 1961), and his The Government and the Economy, 1783–186
1
(Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967); Robert Shaw, Erie Water West: A History of
the Erie Canal,
1792–1854 (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1968); Ronald W. Filante, “A Not
e on the
Economic Viability of the Erie Canal, 1825–60,” Business History Review, 48, Spring
1974, 95–
102;
21. B. R. Burg, “DeWitt Clinton,” in Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia of American Busin
ess History
and Biography: Banking and Finance to 1913, 123–30.
22. Atack and Passell, New American View of American History, 155–56; Roger Ransom
, “Social
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of Political
Economy, 78, September/October 1970, 1041–64, and his “Interregional Canals and Econ
omic
Specialization in the Antebellum United States,” Explorations in Economic History,
5, Fall 1967,
12–35.
23. James Mak and Gary M. Walton, “Steamboats and the Great Productivity Surge in
River
Transportation,” Journal of Economic History, 32, 1972, 619–40, and their Western Ri
ver
Transportation: The Era of Early Internal Development, 1810–1860 (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins
University Press, 1975); Jeremy Atack, et al., “The Profitability of Steamboating
on Western
Rivers: 1850,” Business History Review, 49, Autumn 1975, 350–54; Erik Haites and Jam
es Mak,
“Ohio and Mississippi River Transportation, 1810–1860,” Explorations in Economic Histo
ry, 8,
1970, 153–80.
24. Wheaton J. Lane, Commodore Vanderbilt: An Epic of the Steam Age (New York: A
lfred A.
Knopf, 1942), 148; John G. B. Hutchins, The American Maritime Industries and Pub
lic Policy,
1789–1914 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1941). See also Royal Meeker,
History of
the Shipping Subsidies (New York: Macmillan, 1905), 5–11, and Walter T. Dunmore, S
hip
Subsidies: An Economic Study of the Policy of Subsidizing Merchant Marines (Bost
on: Houghton-
Mifflin, 1907), 92–103.
25. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 107–9.
26. John Steele Gordon, The Scarlet Woman of Wall Street (New York: Weidenfeld &
Nicholson,
1988), 101.
27. John Majewski, “Who Financed the Transportation Revolution? Regional Divergenc
e and
Internal Improvements in Antebellum Pennsylvania and Virginia,” Journal of Economi
c History,
56, December 1996, 763–88; John F. Stover, American Railroads (Chicago: University
of Chicago
Press, 1961) and his Iron Road to the West (New York: Columbia University Press,
1978).
28. Richard R. John, Spreading the News: The American Postal System from Frankli
n to Morse
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995) and his “Private Mail Delivery in
the United
States During the Nineteenth Century—a Sketch,” in William J. Hauseman, ed., Busines
s and
Economic History, 2nd series, 15, 1986, 131–43.
29. George Dangerfield, The Era of Good Feelings (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and
Co., 1952),
126.
30. Ray Allen Billington and Martin Ridge, Westward Expansion: A History of the
American
West, 6th ed. (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2001), 104.
31. Norman A. Graebner, Ideas and Diplomacy: Reading in the Intellectual Traditi
on of the
American Foreign Policy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, 214).
32. Metternich quoted in the Washington National Intelligencer, December 8, 1823
; L’Etoile
quoted in Dexter Perkins, The Monroe Doctrine, 1823–1826 (Cambridge: Harvard Unive
rsity
Press, 1927), 30.
33. Perkins, Monroe Doctrine, 30–31.
34. William M. Wiecek, “Old Times There Are Not Forgotten: The Distinctiveness of
the Southern
Constitutional Experience,” in Kermit L. Hall and James W. Ely, eds., An Uncertain
Tradition:
Constitutionalism and the History of the South (Athens, GA: University of Georgi
a Press, 1989),
159–97, quotation on 164.
35. Robert P. Forbes, “Slavery and the Meaning of America, 1819–1833,” Ph.D. Diss., Ya
le
University, 1994.
36. Richard P. McCormick, “New Perspectives on Jacksonian Politics,” American Histor
ical
Review, 65, October 1959–July 1960, 288–301, quotation on 289.
37. Richard P. McCormick, “Political Development and the Second Party System,” in Wi
lliam
Nisbet Chambers and Walter Dean Burnham, eds., The American Party Systems: Stage
s of Political
Development (London: Oxford University Press, 1967), 90–116, quotation on 107, n.
14. See also
his “New Perspectives on Jacksonian Politics,” American Historical Review, 65, 1960,
288–301
and his The Second American Party System: Party Formation in the Jacksonian Era
(New York: W.
W. Norton, 1966).
38. McCormick, Second American Party System, 351.
39. Robert V. Remini, The Jacksonian Era (Arlington Heights, IL: Harlan Davidson
, 1989), 12.
40. Robert V. Remini, Martin Van Buren and the Making of the Democratic Party (N
ew York:
Columbia University Press, 1959), 12–23.
41. Richard H. Brown, “The Missouri Crisis: Slavery, and the Politics of Jacksonia
nism,” in
Stanley N. Katz and Stanley I. Kutler, New Perspectives on the American Past, vo
l. 1, 1607–1877
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1969), 241–56, quotation on 242.
42. Quoted in Remini, Martin Van Buren and the Making of the Democratic Party, 1
31.
43. Remini, Martin Van Buren and the Making of the Democratic Party, 132.
44. Brown, “Missouri Crisis,” 248.
45. Ibid., 244–45.
46. James Stanton Chase, “Jacksonian Democracy and the Rise of the Nominating Conv
ention,”
Mid-America, 45, 1963, 229–49, quotation on 232.
47. Robert V. Remini, The Election of Andrew Jackson (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippin
cott, 1963), 16.
48. Ibid.
49. Larry Schweikart, “Focus of Power: Henry Clay as Speaker of the House,” Alabama
Historian,
2, Spring 1981, 88–126.
50. Johnson, History of the American People, 323; Glyndon G. van Deusen, Life of
Henry Clay
(Boston: Little Brown & Co., 1937); Robert Remini, Henry Clay: Statesman for the
Union (New
York: W. W. Norton, 1991).
51. Johnson, History of the American People, 329.
52. Remini, Election of Andrew Jackson, 25.
53. Ibid., 28.
54. Ibid., 37.
55. Lynn Marshall, “The Strange Stillbirth of the Whig Party,” American Historical R
eview, 72,
January 1967, 445–69, quotation on 457; Joel H. Silbey, “‘To One or Another of These P
arties
Every Man Belongs’: The American Political Experience from Andrew Jackson to the C
ivil War,”
in Byron E. Shafer and Anthony J. Bager, eds. Contesting Democracy: Substance an
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American Political History (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2001), 65–92
, quotation on
76.
56. Daniel Webster, The Private Correspondence of Daniel Webster, Fletcher Webst
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(Boston: Little, Brown, 1875), I:473; Clay quoted in Johnson, History of the Ame
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57. Johnson, History of the American People, 342.
58. Edward Pessen, Jacksonian America: Society, Personality, and Politics, rev.
ed. (Homewood,
IL: Dorsey Press, 1978); Sean Wilenz, Chants Democratic: New York City and the R
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American Working Class (New York: Oxford University Press, 1984); Harry L. Watso
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59. Alexander Saxton, The Rise and Fall of the White Republic (New York: Verso,
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60. Robert V. Remini, Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 1822–1832
(New
York: Harper & Row, 1981), 261.
61. Ibid.
62. Ibid., 263.
63. Alfred A. Cowe, “Abuse of Power: Andrew Jackson and the Indian Removal Act of
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64. Michael P. Rogin, Fathers and Children: Andrew Jackson and the Subjugation o
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Indian (New York: Knopf, 1975).
65. “Proclamation of General Scott, May 10, 1838,” in Glen Fleischmann, The Cherokee
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1838 (New York: Franklin Watts, 1971), 49–50.
66. Gary E. Moulton, ed., The Papers of Chief John Ross, vol. 1 (Norman, OK: Uni
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67. “A Native of Maine Traveling in the Western Country,” New York Observer, Decembe
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quoted in Grant Foreman, Indian Removal: The Emigration of the Five Civilized Tr
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(Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1966), 306–307; Francis Paul Prucha, Wi
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Hagan, and Alvin M. Josephy Jr., American Indian Policy (Indianapolis: Indiana H
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1971).
68. Fleischmann, Cherokee Removal, 73.
69. Theda Purdue and Michael Green, The Cherokee Removal: A Brief History with D
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(Boston: St. Martin’s Press, 1995), 174–75.
70. Angie Debo, And Still the Waters Run: Betrayal of the Five Civilized Tribes
(Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1973); Anthony F. Wallace, The Long, Bitter Trail: A
ndrew Jackson
and the Indians (New York: Hill and Wang, 1993); Robert V. Remini, Andrew Jackso
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Course of American Empire, 1767–1821 (New York: Harper & Row, 1977).
71. Joseph A. Durrenberger, Turnpikes: A Study of the Toll Road Movement in the
Middle Atlantic
States and Maryland (Valdosta, GA: Southern Stationery and Printing Company, 193
1); Robert F.
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1957; Daniel B. Klein, “The Voluntary Provision of Public Goods? The Turnpike Comp
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Early America,” Economic Inquiry, 28, October 1990, 788–812; David Beito, “From Privie
s to
Boulevards: The Private Supply of Infrastructure in the United States During the
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72. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 266.
73. William H. Freehling, Prelude to Civil War: The Nullification Controversy in
South Carolina,
1816–1836 (New York: Harper & Row, 1966).
74. James L. Huston, “Property Rights in Slaves and the Coming of the Civil War,” Jo
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Southern History, 79, May 1999, 248–86, quotation on 261.
75. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 228.
76. Ibid., 229.
77. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 383.
78. Tindall and Shi, America, 1:458.
79. Ibid., 1:460.
80. Remini, Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 360.
81. The view that Jackson disliked on principle central banks in general or the
BUS in particular is
found in a wide range of scholarship of all political stripes. See Hammond, Bank
s and Politics in
America from the Revolution to the Civil War; Peter Temin, The Jacksonian Econom
y (New York:
W. W. Norton, 1969); Arthur Schlesinger Jr., The Age of Jackson (Boston: Little,
Brown, 1945);
John McFaul, The Politics of Jacksonian Finance (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University
Press, 1962);
James R. Sharpe, The Jacksonians vs. The Banks (New York: Columbia, 1970).
82. See Schweikart, “Jacksonian Ideology, Currency Control and Central Banking,” 78–10
2.
83. “Plan for a National Bank,” in Amos Kendall to Andrew Jackson, November 20, 1829
, Box 1,
File 6, Andrew Jackson Papers, Tennessee Library and Archives, Nashville, Tennes
see.
84. Richard Timberlake Jr., The Origins of Central Banking in the United States
(Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1978), who is perceptive to centralization, still miss
es this point.
85. James A. Hamilton, Reminiscences of James A. Hamilton (New York: Charles Scr
ibner, 1869),
167–68.
86. David Martin’s three articles are critical in determining the Jacksonians’ inten
tions: “Metallism,
Small Notes, and Jackson’s War with the B. U. S.,” Explorations in Economic History,
11, Spring
1974, 297–47; “Bimetallism in the United States Before 1850,” Journal of Political Eco
nomy, 76,
May/June 1968, 428–42; “1853: The End of Bimetallism in the United States,” Journal of
Economic History, 33, December 1973, 825–44; J. Van Fenstermaker and John E. Filer
, “Impact of
the First and Second Bank of the United States and the Suffolk System on New Eng
land Money,
1791–1837,” Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 18, February 1986, 28–40; Fenstermak
er, The
Development of American Commercial Banking (Kent, OH: Kent State University Pres
s, 1965);
Fritz Redlich, The Molding of American Banking, Men and Ideas, 2 vols. (New York
: Johnson
Reprint Co., 1968 [1947]); Larry Schweikart, “U.S. Commercial Banking: A Historiog
raphical
Survey,” Business History Review, 65, Autumn 1991, 606–61.
87. Richard Timberlake, “The Significance of Unaccounted Currencies,” Journal of Eco
nomic
History, 41, December 1981, 853–66.
88. Edwin J. Perkins, “Lost Opportunities for Compromise in the Bank War: A Reasse
ssment of
Jackson’s Veto Message,” Business History Review, 61, Winter 1987, 531–50.
89. Tindall and Shi, America, 1:467.
90. The liberal spin on Jackson’s presidency as champion of the common man is near
universal.
David M. Kennedy, The American Pageant, 12th ed. (New York: Houghton-Mifflin, 20
02), 271,
calls Jackson the “idol of the masses” who “easily defeated the big-money Kentuckian.” G
illon and
Matson (American Experiment) echo the theme by claiming, “It was clear to most obe
srvers that
the Democrats swept up the support of the northeastern working men, western farm
ers, rising
entrepreneurs, shopkeepers, and ambitious professionals who favored Jacksonian a
ttacks against
privilege….” (385). David Goldfield, et al., in The American Journey: A History of t
he United
States, combined edition (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1998) portray J
ackson as the
champion of these who “felt threatened by outside centers of power beyond their co
ntrol” (293) and
who alienated “the business community and eastern elites” (301). The National Republ
ican/Whig
agenda allows John Murrin, et al. (Liberty, Equality, Power) to claim that the “Ja
cksonians were
opposed by those who favored an activist central government” (441), when Jackson h
ad expanded
the power and scope of the central government more than Jefferson, Madison, Monr
oe, and Adams
combined. Liberty, Equality, Power concludes, of the Bank War, that “a majority of
the voters
shared Jackson’s attachment to a society of virtuous, independent producers…they als
o agreed that
the republic was in danger of subversion by parasites who grew rich by manipulat
ing credit, prices,
paper money and government-bestowed privileges” (442). Of course, it isn’t mentioned
that the
Jacksonians virtually invented “government-bestowed privileges,” and that if one eli
minates the
“northeastern working men, western farmers, rising entrepreneurs, shopkeepers, and
ambitious
professionals,” there would have been no one left to vote for Clay, yet the Kentuc
kian managed
530,000 popular votes to Jackson’s 688,000. In short, either the nation was compri
sed of bigmoney
aristocracies, or vast numbers of common people rejected Jackson—not a majority, b
ut
nowhere near the tidal wave of votes that many of the mainstream histories would
suggest.
91. See Temin, Jacksonian Economy, passim.
92. Peter Rousseau, “Jacksonian Monetary Policy, Specie Flows, and the Panic of 18
37,” Journal of
Economic History, June 2002, 457–88.
93. Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970 (White Pl
ains: Kraus
International Publications, 1989), I:211, 1114–15. Special thanks to Tiarr Martin,
whose
unpublished paper, “The Growth of Government During the ‘Age of Jefferson and Jackso
n,’” was
prepared for one of Schweikart’s classes and is in his possession.
Chapter 7. Red Foxes and Bear Flags, 1836–48
1. Tindall and Shi, America, 1:474.
2. Richard Hofstadter, “Marx of the Master Class,” in Sidney Fine and Gerald S. Brow
n, eds., The
American Past, 3rd ed., vol. 1 (London: Macmillan, 1970), 460–80.
3. Maurice Baxter, Henry Clay and the American System (Lexington, KY: University
of Kentucky
Press, 1995).
4. Ronald Walters, American Reformers, 1815–1860 (New York: Hill and Wang, 1978);
Alice Felt
Tyler, Freedom’s Ferment: Phases of American Social History from the Colonial Peri
od to the
Outbreak of the Civil War (New York: Harper and Row, 1944).
5. Walters, American Reformers, passim.
6. The official history of the Seventh-Day Adventists appears at http://www. adv
entist.org/history.
7. Larry Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in the
United States
(Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt, 2000), 210–11.
8. Robert Peel, Christian Science: Its Encounter with American Culture (New York
: Holt, 1958).
9. Johnson, History of the American People, 297.
10. Walters, American Reformers, 27.
11. Quoted at http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/DETOC/religion/finney.html, from
Finney’s
memoirs.
12. Tyler, Freedom’s Ferment, 41; Walters, Jacksonian Reformers, 35–36.
13. Ray Allen Billington and Martin Ridge, Westward Expansion, 5th ed. (New York
: Macmillan,
1982), 476–78.
14. Leonard Arrington, Great Basin Kingdom: An Economic History of the Latter-Da
y Saints
(Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1966 [1958]); B. H. Roberts, A Comprehen
sive History of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Salt Lake City: Deseret News Pr
ess, 1930).
15. Frances S. Trollope, The Domestic Manners of the Americans, Donald Smalley,
ed.
(Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith Publisher Inc., 1974).
16. Johnson, History of the American People, 304.
17. Ronald G. Walters, Antislavery Appeal: American Abolitionism After 1830 (New
York: W. W.
Norton, 1984), 9.
18. Walters, Antislavery Appeal, 62.
19. Walters, American Reformers, 50–55.
20. Johnson, History of the American People, 301.
21. Tyler, Freedom’s Ferment, 110.
22. Walters, American Reformers, 50–55; Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Blithedale Romanc
e (repr.,
New York: Oxford University Press, 1991).
23. Walters, Antislavery Appeal, 94.
24. Louis Menand, The Metaphysical Club (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 20
01), 20.
25. Robert J. Loewenberg, “Emerson’s Platonism and ‘the terrific Jewish Idea,’” Mosaic: A
Journal
for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature, XV, 1982, 93–108; Loewenberg, An Am
erican Idol:
Emerson and the “Jewish Idea” (Washington, D.C.: University Press of America, 1984),
and his
“Emerson and the Genius of American Liberalism,” Center Journal, Summer 1983, 107–28.
26. Arthur Bestor, Backwoods Utopias: The Sectarian Origins and the Owenite Phas
e of
Communitarian Socialism in America (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Pre
ss, 1970
[1950]), 103.
27. Ibid., passim; Tyler, Freedom’s Ferment, 166–224.
28. Tyler, Freedom’s Ferment, 485–486.
29. Ibid., 485.
30. Walters, American Reformers, 81.
31. Van Wyck Brooks, The Flowering of New England, 1815–1865 (New York: E. P. Dutt
on,
1937); F. O. Mathiesson, American Renaissance (New York: Oxford University Press
, 1941).
32. Michael Allen, “Who Was David Crockett?” in Calvin Dickinson and Larry Whiteaker
, eds.,
Tennessee: State of the Nation (New York: American Heritage, 1995), 47–53.
33. William C. Davis, Three Roads to the Alamo: The Lives and Fortunes of David
Crockett, James
Bowie, and William Barret Travis (New York: HarperPerennial, 1999), 86.
34. Even objective biographers, such as Davis, admit that he probably killed mor
e than 50 bears in
the season he referred to—an astounding accomplishment if for no other reason than
the sheer
danger posed by the animals.
35. Davis, Three Roads to the Alamo, 313–37.
36. Allen, “Who Was David Crockett?,” passim.
37. David Waldstreicher, “The Nationalization and Radicalization of American Polit
ics, 1790–
1840,” in Byron E. Shafer and Anthony J. Badger, eds., Contesting Democracy: Subst
ance and
Structure in American Political History, 1775–2000 (Lawrence, KS: University Press
of Kansas,
2001), 37–64, quotation on 55.
38. Tindall and Shi, America, 1:477.
39. Larry Schweikart, Banking in the American South from the Age of Jackson to R
econstruction
(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987).
40. Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, “Martin Van Buren: The Greatest American President,” Inde
pendent
Review, 4, Fall 1999, 255–81, quotation on 261–62.
41. Freeman Cleaves, Old Tippecanoe: William Henry Harrison and His Times (Port
Washington,
NY: Kennikat Press, 1939), 284.
42. Michael F. Holt, Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politi
cs and the Onset
of the Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 95; William J. Coope
r Jr., Liberty
and Slavery: Southern Politics to 1860 (Columbia, SC: University of South Caroli
na Press, 2000).
43. Holt, Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party, 95.
44. Paul S. Boyer, et al., The Enduring Vision: A History of the American People
(Lexington, KY:
D. C. Heath, 1993), 279.
45. Norma Lois Peterson, The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison & John Tyler
(Lawrence,
KS: University Press of Kansas, 1989), 32.
46. Ibid., 45.
47. Edwin S. Corwin, The President: Office and Powers, 1787–1957 (New York: New Yo
rk
University Press, 1957).
48. Dan Monroe, The Republican Vision of John Tyler (College Station, TX: Texas
A & M
University Press, 2002).
49. Bernard Bailyn, et al., The Great Republic: A History of the American People
(New York: D.
C. Heath, 1985), 398.
50. Frederick Merk, Manifest Destiny and Mission in American History (New York:
Vintage,
1963), 46.
51. James D. Richardson, A Compiliation of the Messages and Papers of the Presid
ents, vol. 3
(New York: Bureau of National Literature, 1897), 2225.
52. Paul K. Davis, 100 Decisive Battles from Ancient Times to the Present (New Y
ork: Oxford,
1999), 309; James Pohl, The Battle of San Jacinto (Austin: Texas State Historica
l Association,
1989).
53. Ray Allen Billington and Martin Ridge, Westward Expansion: A History of the
American
Frontier, 6th ed. (Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 2001), 143.
54. Carol Berkin, et al. Making America, 2nd ed. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1999)
, 383.
55. Tindall and Shi, America, 1:607.
56. John Quincy Adams, The Diary of John Quincy Adams, 1794–1845, Allan Nevins, ed
. (New
York: Longmans, Green, 1928), 573–74, February 27 and 28, 1845.
57. Billington and Ridge, Westward Expansion, 232; Richard R. Stenberg, “The Failu
re of Polk’s
Mexican War Intrigue of 1845,” Pacific Historical Review, 1, 1935, 39–68; Ramon Ruiz
, The
Mexican War: Was it Manifest Destiny? (Hinsdale, IL: Dryden Press, 1963), 68–69; J
ustin H.
Smith, The War With Mexico, 2 vols. (New York: Macmillan, 1919); Samuel Flagg Be
mis, A
Diplomatic History of the United States (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1
955).
58. Horace Greeley, New York Tribune, May 12, 1846.
59. Jim R. McClellan, Historical Moments (Guilford, CT: McGraw-Hill, 2000), I:23
.
60. James K. Polk, Polk: The Diary of a President, 1843–1849, Milo Milton Quaife,
ed. (Chicago:
A. C. Clung, 1910), 437–38.
61. Robert W. Leckie, Wars of America, 334.
62. Robert P. Ludlum, “The Antislavery ‘Gag-Rule’: History and Argument,” Journal of Neg
ro
History, 26, 1941, 203–43.
63. Ibid., 229.
64. David M. Potter, The Impending Crisis, completed and edited by Don E. Fehren
bacher (New
York: Harper Torchbooks, 1976), 20.
65. Leckie, Wars of America, 341.
66. Ibid.
67. Ibid.
68. Henry W. Halleck, Elements of Military Art and Science (New York: Appleton,
1862), 414.
69. Potter, Impending Crisis, 3.
70. Leckie, Wars of America, 358; Winfield Scott, Memoirs of Lieut. Gen. Scott,
LLD, Written by
Himself, 2 vols. (New York: Sheldon, 1864), II:425.
71. New York Sun, May 15, 1846.
72. Brooklyn Eagle, June 29, 1846.
73. Potter, Impending Crisis, 6.
74. Robert J. Loewenberg, Equality on the Oregon Frontier: Jason Lee and the Met
hodist Mission
(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1976).
Chapter 8. The House Dividing, 1848–60
1. Wire service report from Alexandria Gazette and Virginia Advertiser, October
18, 1859.
2. Chicago Press and Tribune, October 21, 1859, in Richard Warch and Jonathon Fa
nton, eds., John
Brown (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Spectrum Books, 1973), 119–20.
3. New York Tribune, December 3, 1859.
4. C. Vann Woodward, The Burden of Southern History (New York: Mentor Books, 196
8), 43–44.
5. Stephen B. Oates, To Purge This Land with Blood: A Biography of John Brown (N
ew York:
Harper & Row, 1970), 331–33.
6. Garrison writing in The Liberator, December 16, 1859.
7. Wendell Phillips, speech of November 1, 1859, in Louis Filler, ed., Wendell P
hillips on Civil
Rights and Freedom (New York: Hill and Wang, 1963), 101–2.
8. Alexander B. Callow Jr., The Tweed Ring (New York: Oxford University Press, 1
965), 52.
9. Ibid., 54.
10. Charles Loring Brace, The Dangerous Classes and Twenty Years’ Work Among Them
(New
York: Wynkoop and Hallenbeck, 1872).
11. Callow, Tweed Ring, 54.
12. Gustav Lening, The Dark Side of New York, Life and Its Criminal Classes: Fro
m Fifth Avenue
Down to the Five Points; a Complete Narrative of the Mysteries of New York (New
York:
Frederick Gerhardt, 1873), 348; Edward Asbury, The Gangs of New York: An Informa
l History of
the Underworld (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1927), 177.
13. Rudyard Kipling, “Across a Continent,” quoted in Johnson, History of the America
n People,
511.
14. Carol Berkin, et al., Making America: A History of the United States, 2nd ed
. (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1999), 315, map 11.1.
15. Shirley Blumenthal and Jerome S. Ozer, Coming to America: Immigrants from th
e British Isles
(New York: Dell, 1980), 89.
16. Thomas Sowell, Ethnic America: A History (New York: Basic Books, 1981), 22.
17. Carl Wittke, The Irish in America (New York: Russell and Russell, 1970), 23–24
.
18. Callow, Tweed Ring, 65–66.
19. Blumenthal and Ozer, Coming to America, 90.
20. Stephan Thernstrom, Poverty and Progress: Social Mobility in a Nineteenth Ce
ntury City
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1964), 184–85.
21. Lawrence J. McCaffrey, The Irish Diaspora in America (Bloomington: Indiana U
niversity
Press, 1976), 93.
22. Nathan Glazer and Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Beyond the Melting Pot (Cambridge
, MA: MIT
Press, 1963), 224.
23. Ibid.
24. M. A. Jones, American Immigration (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 196
0), 155;
Wittke, Irish in America, 154.
25. Virginia Brainard Kunz, The Germans in America (Minneapolis: Lerner Publicat
ions, 1966);
Theodore Heubner, The Germans in America (Radnor, PA: Chilton, 1962).
26. Katherine Neils Conzen, Immigrant Milwaukee, 1836–1860 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1976); “German Immigration,” in Stanley Feldstein and Lawrence Cos
tello, eds.
The Ordeal of Assimilation: A Documentary History of the White Working Class (Ne
w York:
Anchor Books, 1974).
27. Avery Craven, The Coming of the Civil War (Chicago: University of Chicago Pr
ess, 1942),
113.
28. Larry Schweikart, Banking in the American South from the Age of Jackson to R
econstruction
(Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press), 87; Ted Worley, “Arkansas and
the Money
Crisis of 1836–1837,” Journal of Southern History, May 1949, 178–91 and “The Control of
the
Real Estate Bank of the State of Arkansas, 1836–1855,” Mississippi Valley Historical
Review,
December 1950, 403–26.
29. Sowell, Ethnic America, 76–77; Frances Butwin, The Jews in America (Minneapoli
s: Lerner
Publications, 1969).
30. Irving Howe, World of Our Fathers (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976
), 82.
31. Ervin L. Jordan Jr., Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virgin
ia
(Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 8.
32. Jeremy Atack, and Peter Passell, A New Economic View of American History, 2n
d ed. (New
York: W. W. Norton, 1994), 305; Michael Tadaman, Speculators and Slaves: Masters
, Traders and
Slaves in the Old South (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989).
33. James L. Huston, “Property Rights in Slavery and the Coming of the Civil War,” J
ournal of
Southern History, 65, May 1999, 248–86.
34. Ibid., 262.
35. Ibid., 279.
36. Robert C. Puth, American Economic History (Chicago: Dryden Press, 1982), 192
.
37. Atack and Passell, A New Economic View of American History, 315. For the eco
nomics of
slavery, see Alfred Conrad and John Meyer, “The Economics of Slavery in the Antebe
llum South,”
Journal of Political Economy, 66, 1958, 95–130; Robert Fogel, Without Consent or C
ontract: The
Rise and Fall of American Slavery, 4 vols. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1989–1992); Eu
gene
Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves Made (New York: Pantheon, 197
4); David
Weiman, “Farmers and the Market in Antebellum America: A View from the Georgia Upc
ountry,”
Journal of Economic History, 47, 1987, 627–48; Paul David, “Explaining the Relative
Efficiency of
Slave Agriculture in the Antebellum South: Comment,” American Economic Review, 69,
1979,
213–16; Robert W. Fogel and Stanley Engerman, Time on the Cross (Boston: Little, B
rown, 1974).
38. Eric Foner, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican
Party Before the
Civil War (New York: Oxford, 1995), 63.
39. Ibid., 62.
40. Gavin Wright, Old South, New South: Revolutions in the Southern Economy Sinc
e the Civil
War (New York: Basic Books, 1986), table 2.4 on 27.
41. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, American Negro Slavery (New York: D. Appleton Compa
ny, 1918),
and his “The Economic Cost of Slave Holding in the Cotton Belt,” Political Science Q
uarterly, 20,
1905, 257–75; Charles Sydnor, Slavery in Mississippi (New York: Appleton-Century,
1933).
42. Fred Bateman and Thomas Weiss, A Deplorable Scarcity: The Failure of Industr
ialization in the
Slave Economy (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981).
43. Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men: A History of
the American
Civil War (Chicago: Open Court, 1996), 42.
44. John H. Moore, “Simon Gray, Riverman: A Slave Who Was Almost Free,” Mississippi
Valley
Historical Review, 49, December 1962, 472–84.
45. Atack and Passell, A New Economic View, 337–39.
46. Leon Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery (New York:
Vintage,
1979), 8.
47. Atack and Passell, A New Economic View, 341–45; Robert A. Margo and Richard H.
Steckel,
“The Heights of American Slaves: New Evidence on Slave Nutrition and Health,” Social
Science
History, 6, 1982, 516–38.
48. Herbert Guttman, The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom (New York: Pantheon
Books,
1976).
49. Kenneth Stampp, The Peculiar Institution (New York: Knopf, 1956); Gavin Wrig
ht, The
Political Economy of the Cotton South (New York: W. W. Norton, 1978); Robert Eva
ns Jr., “The
Economics of American Negro Slavery,” in National Bureau for Economic Research, As
pects of
Labor Economics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1962); Yasukichi Yasuba,
“The
Profitability and Viability of Plantation Slavery in the United States,” in Robert
Fogel and Stanley
Engerman, The Reinterpretation of American Economic History (New York: Harper &
Row,
1971), 362–68.
50. Fred Bateman, James Foust, and Thomas Weiss, “Profitability in Southern Manufa
cturing:
Estimates for 1860,” Explorations in Economic History, 12, 1975, 211–31.
51. Mark Thornton, “Slavery, Profitability, and the Market Process,” Review of Austr
ian
Economics, 7 (1994), 21–27, quotation on 23.
52. Thomas D. Morris, Southern Slavery and the Law, 1619–1860 (Chapel Hill: Univer
sity of
North Carolina Press, 1996); Andrew Fede, People Without Rights: An Interpretati
on of the Law of
Slavery in the U.S. South (New York: Garland, 1992).
53. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 170–72.
54. James G. Ramsdell, “The Natural Limits of Slavery Expansion,” Mississippi Valley
Historical
Review, 16, 1929, 151–71.
55. Claudia Goldin, Urban Slavery in the Antebellum South (Chicago: University o
f Chicago Press,
1976); Richard C. Wade, Slavery in the Cities: The South, 1820–1860 (New York: Oxf
ord
University Press, 1964); Robert S. Starobin, Industrial Slavery in the Old South
(New York:
Oxford University Press, 1970).
56. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 23.
57. George Fitzhugh, Cannibals All! Or, Slaves Without Masters (Cambridge, MA: H
arvard/
Belknap, 1960).
58. Harrison Berry, Slavery and Abolitionism, as Viewed by a Georgia Slave (Atla
nta: M. Lynch,
1861), 7, 24–25, 28, 32–35, 37–46.
59. George Fitzhugh, Sociology for the South: Or the Failure of Free Society (Ri
chmond: A Morris,
1854), 245.
60. Ibid., 30, 170, 179.
61. Robert J. Loewenberg, Freedom’s Despots: The Critique of Abolition (Durham: Ca
rolina
Academic Press, 1986).
62. Larry Schweikart, “Brothers in Chains: Emerson and Fitzhugh on Economic and Po
litical
Liberty,” Reason Papers, 13, Spring 1988, 19–34.
63. Forrest G. Wood, The Arrogance of Faith: Christianity and Race in America fr
om the Colonial
Era to the Twentieth Century (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1990), 125.
64. Ibid.
65. Craven, Coming of the Civil War, 120.
66. Michael P. Johnson, “Denmark Vesey and His Co-Conspirators,” William and Mary Qu
arterly,
58, October 2001, 915–76, and responses, ibid., January 2002; Eugene D. Genovese,
From
Rebellion to Revolution: Afro-American Slave Revolts in the Making of the New Wo
rld (Baton
Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 1979); George M. Frederickson and C
hristopher
Lasch, “Resistance to Slavery,” in Allen Weinstein and Frank Otto Gatell, eds., Amer
ican Negro
Slavery: A Modern Reader, 3rd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1973).
67. Nat Turner, The Confessions of Nat Turner, Leader of the Negro Insurrection
in Southampton
County, Virginia, Made to Thomas L. Gray (Baltimore: Thomas R. Gray, 1831), 3–8.
68. Ibid.
69. City Ordinance of Washington, D.C., October 19, 1831, published in the Alexa
ndria Gazette,
October 26, 1831.
70. Ordinance published in the Maryland Gazette, October 20, 1831.
71. David Grimsted, American Mobbing, 1828–1861 (New York: Oxford, 1998); Christop
her
Waldrep, Roots of Disorder: Race and Criminal Justice in the American South, 181
7–1880
(Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1998).
72. David Waldstreicher, “The Nationalization and Racialization of American Politi
cs, 1790–
1840,” in Byron E. Shafer and Anthony J. Badger, Contesting Democracy: Substance a
nd Structure
in American Political History, 1775–2000 (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas
, 2001), 37–
64, quotation on 54.
73. Daniel Dorchester, Christianity in the United States (New York: Hunt & Eaton
, 1895), 454.
74. Craven, Coming of the Civil War, 137.
75. Ibid., 137–138.
76. Michael F. Holt, Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politi
cs and the Onset
of the Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 269.
77. Ibid., 272.
78. Ibid.
79. Glyndon G. Van Deusen, William Henry Seward (New York: Oxford, 1967), 122–28.
80. Elbert B. Smith, The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor & Millard Fillmore (Lawr
ence, KS:
University Press of Kansas, 1988).
81. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 93.
82. Samuel J. May, The Fugitive Slave Law and Its Victims, rev. ed. (New York: A
merican
AntiSlavery Society, 1861), 15; Stanley W. Campbell, The Slave Catchers: Enforce
ment of the
Fugitive Slave Law (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1970).
83. David M. Potter, The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861. Completed and edited by Don
E.
Fehrenbacher (New York: Harper Torch Books, 1976), 132.
84. Craven, Coming of the Civil War, 323; Potter, Impending Crisis, 132–33.
85. Craven, Coming of the Civil War, 323.
86. C. Vann Woodward, “The Antislavery Myth,” American Scholar, 31, 1962, 312–18; Char
les L.
Blockson, The Underground Railroad (New York: Berkeley, 1987).
87. Frank Luther Mott, Golden Multitudes, The Story of Best Sellers in the Unite
d States (New
York: MacMillan, 1947); Edmund Wilson, Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature
of the American
Civil War (New York: Oxford, 1962); Charles Edward Stowe, Life of Harriet Beeche
r Stowe
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1889).
88. Potter, Impending Crisis, 140.
89. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 95.
90. Herbert Mitgang, ed., Abraham Lincoln; a Press Portrait: His Life and Times
from the Original
Newspaper Documents of the Union, the Confederacy and Europe (Chicago: Quadrangl
e Books,
1971), 373.
91. Holt, Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party, 572.
92. Roy F. Nichols, The Democratic Machine, 1850–1854 (New York: Columbia Universi
ty Press,
1932).
93. Johnson, History of the American People, 425–26.
94. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 96; William C. Davis, Jefferson Davis: The Man
and His Hour
(New York: HarperCollins, 1991), 251.
95. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 96.
96. See Stanley C. Urban, see the articles “The Ideology of Southern Imperialism:
New Orleans
and the Caribbean, 1845–1860,” Louisiana Historical Quarterly, 39, 1956, 48–73; “The
Africanization of Cuba Scare, 1853–1855,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 37, 1
957, 29–
45.
97. Basil Rauch, American Interest in Cuba, 1848–1855 (New York: Columbia Universi
ty Press,
1848); Charles H. Brown, Agents of Manifest Destiny: The Lives and Times of the
Filibuster
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1980); Joseph Allen Stout Jr.,
The Liberators:
Filibustering Expeditions into Mexico, 1848–1862 (Los Angeles: Westernlore Press,
1973).
98. Nelson H. Loomis, “Asa Whitney, Father of Pacific Railroads,” Mississippi Valley
Historical
Association Proceedings, 6, 1912, 166–75, and Margaret L. Brown, “Asa Whitney and Hi
s Pacific
Railroad Publicity Campaign,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 22, 1933–1934, 2
09–24.
99. James C. Malin, “The Proslavery Background of the Kansas Struggle,” Mississippi
Valley
Historical Review, 10, 1923, 285–305 and his “The Motives of Stephen A. Douglas in t
he
Organization of Nebraska Territory: A Letter Dated December 17, 1853,” Kansas Hist
orical
Quarterly, 19, 1951, 31–52; Frank H. Hodder, “The Railroad Background of the Kansas-
Nebraska
Act,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 12, 1925, 3–22; Robert S. Cotterill, “Earl
y Agitation
for a Pacific Railroad, 1845–1850,” Mississippi Valley Historical Revie, 5, 1919, 39
6–414; and
Roy F. Nichols, “The Kansas-Nebraska Act: A Century of Historiography,” Mississippi
Valley
Historical Review, 43, 1956, 187–212, provides a good overview of historians’ assess
ments of the
Kansas-Nebraska Act.
100. Malin, “Motive of Stephen A. Douglas,” passim.
101. Robert W. Johannsen, Stephen A. Douglas (New York: Oxford, 1973).
102. William E. Parrish, David Rice Atchison of Missouri: Border Politician (Col
umbia, Missouri:
University of Missouri Press, 1961), 161.
103. Potter, Impending Crisis, 203.
104. Allan Nevins, The Emergence of Lincoln: Douglas, Buchanan, and Party Chaos,
1857–1859, 2
vols. (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1950), 1:164–65.
105. Potter, Impending Crisis, 222.
106. Allan Nevins, Ordeal of the Union, 2 vols. (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 194
7), 2:329–31.
107. Potter, Impending Crisis, 252.
108. Ibid., 262.
109. John Bassett Moore, ed., The Works of James Buchanan: Comprising His Speech
es, State
Papers, and Private Correspondence (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1908–1911), 10
:88.
110. William M. Wiecek, “‘Old Times There Are Not Forgotten’: The Distinctiveness of t
he
Southern Constitutional Experience,” in Kermit L. Hall and James W. Ely Jr., eds.,
An Uncertain
Tradition: Constitutionalism and the History of the South (Athens, GA: Universit
y of Georgia
Press, 1989), 159–97, quotation on 170.
111. James L. Huston, The Panic of 1857 and the Coming of the Civil War (Baton R
ouge:
Louisiana State University Press, 1987).
112. Charles Calomiris and Larry Schweikart, “The Panic of 1857: Origins, Transmis
sion, and
Containment,” Journal of Economic History, 51, December 1991, 807–34.
113. Johnson, History of the American People, 434.
114. From Abraham Lincoln’s “House Divided” speech, June 16, 1858, in Roy P. Basler, e
d.,
Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, 8 vols. (New Brunswick, NJ: Princeton Univer
sity Press,
1953), 2:465–66.
115. Nevins, Emergence of Lincoln, 174.
116. Potter, Impending Crisis, 299.
117. Stephen Douglas, speech at Milwaukee, October 14, 1860, in the Chicago Time
s and Herald,
October 17, 1860.
118. Nevins, Emergence of Lincoln, 239.
119. New Orleans Picayune of April 29, 1860.
120. Robert A. Johannsen, “Stephen A. Douglas, Popular Sovereignty, and the Territ
ories,”
Historian, 22, 1960, 378–95.
121. Johnson, History of the American People, 436.
122. Reinard H. Luthin, “Abraham Lincoln and the Tariff,” American Historical Review
, 49, July
1944, 609–29, quotation on 610.
123. Johnson, History of the American People, 438.
124. David Donald, Lincoln Reconsidered (New York: Vintage, 1961), 37–56.
125. Stephen B. Oates, With Malice Toward None: The Life of Abraham Lincoln (New
York:
Mentor, 1977), 72.
126. Ibid.
127. Ibid., 71.
128. Richard N. Current, The Lincoln Nobody Knows (New York: Hill and Wang, 1958
), 59.
129. Current, Lincoln Nobody Knows, 59.
130. Ibid., 59–60.
131. Ibid., 63.
132. Quoted in Current, Lincoln Nobody Knows, 65.
133. Ibid.
134. Louis A. Warren, Lincoln’s Youth: Indiana Years, Seven to Twenty-One (Indiana
polis:
Indiana Historical Society, 1959), 68–69, 233.
135. Henry B. Rankin, Personal Recollections of Abraham Lincoln (New York: G. P.
Putnam’s
Sons, 1916), 323.
136. Noah Brooks, Scribner’s Monthly, letter to the Reverend J. A. Reed, July 1893
.
137. William J. Johnson, Abraham Lincoln the Christian (New York: Eaton & Mains,
1913), 172.
Johnson quotes a “Lincoln Memorial Album” kept by O. H. Oldroyd, 1883, 336. Also see
G.
Frederick Owen, Abraham Lincoln: The Man and His Faith (Wheaton, L: Tyndale Hous
e
Publishers, 1981), 86–91. Elton Trueblood Abraham Lincoln: A Spiritual Biography,
Theologian of
American Anguish (New York: Walker and Company, 1986), 130.
138. Current, Lincoln Nobody Knows, 73.
139. Ronald C. White Jr., “Lincoln’s Sermon on the Mount,” in Randall M. Miller, Harry
S. Stout,
and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds., Religion and the American Civil War (New York:
Oxford,
1998), 208–28; Philip Shaw Paludan, A People’s Contest: The Union and Civil War, 186
1–1865
(New York: Harper & Row, 1988); David Hein, “Lincoln’s Theology and Political Ethics
,” in
Kenneth Thompson, ed., Essays on Lincoln’s Faith and Politics (Lathan, MD: Univers
ity Press of
America), 105–56; Reinhold Niebuhr, “The Religion of Abraham Lincoln,” in Allan Nevins
, ed.,
Lincoln and the Gettysburg Address (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 19
64).
140. Potter, Impending Crisis, 333.
141. Abraham Lincoln, “Speech Delivered at Springfield, Illinois, at the Close of
the Republican
State Convention by which Mr. Lincoln had been Named as their Candidate for Unit
ed States
Senator, June 16, 1858,” in T. Harry Williams, ed., Selected Writings and Speeches
of Abraham
Lincoln (New York: Hendricks House, 1943), 53.
142. New York Times, June 23, 1857.
143. Potter, Impending Crisis, 337.
144. Roy F. Nichols, The Disruption of American Democracy (New York: Free Press,
1948), 221.
145. Harry V. Jaffa, Crisis of the House Divided: An Interpretation of the Issue
s in the Lincoln-
Douglas Debates (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
146. Potter, Impending Crisis, 342.
147. Basler, Works of Lincoln, vol. 3, 312–15.
148. Abraham Lincoln, “Mr. Lincoln’s Opening Speech in the Sixth Joint Debate, at Qu
incy,
October 13, 1858,” in Williams, Selected Writings and Speeches, 74.
149. Basler, Works of Lincoln, 3:16 and 2:520.
150. Abraham Lincoln, “Address Before the Young Men’s Lyceum of Springfield, Illinoi
s, January
27, 1838,” in Williams, Selected Writings and Speeches, 8.
151. Ibid.
152. Philip Paludan, The Presidency of Abraham Lincoln (Lawrence, KS: University
Press of
Kansas, 1994).
153. Potter, Impending Crisis, 389.
154. John G. Van Deusen, The Ante-Bellum Southern Commercial Conventions (Durham
, NC:
Duke University Press, 1926), 56–69, 75–79; Herbert Wender, Southern Commercial Conv
entions,
1837–1859 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1930), 177–81, 211–35, and De Bow’s Review, v
ols.
22–27, 1857–1859.
155. William L. Yancey’s speech in De Bow’s Review, 24, 1858, 473–91, 597–605.
156. North American Review, November 1886, “A Slave Trader’s Notebook”; Nevins, Ordeal
of
the Union, 435–437.
Chapter 9. The Crisis of the Union, 1860–65
1. John Witherspoon Du Bose, The Life and Times of William Lowndes Yancey, 2 vol
s.
(Birmingham, Alabama: Roberts and Son, 1892), 2: 457–60.
2. David M. Potter, The Impending Crisis: 1848–1861. Completed and edited by Don E
.
Fehrenbacher (New York: Harper Torch Books, 1976), 422.
3. Reinard H. Luthin, “Abraham Lincoln and the Tariff,” American Historical Review,
49, July
1944, 609–29.
4. Allan Nevins, The Emergence of Lincoln: Douglas, Buchanan, and Party Chaos, 1
857–1859, 2
vols. (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1950), 2:316.
5. Jeffrey Rogers Hummell, Emancipating Slaves: Enslaving Free Men: A History of
the American
Civil War (Chicago: Open Court, 1996), 131.
6. Horace Greeley, The American Conflict, 2 vols. (Hartford: O. D. Case, 1864),
1:380.
7. Nevins, Emergence of Lincoln, 328.
8. Potter, Impending Crisis, 496.
9. Nevins, Emergence of Lincoln, 2:321.
10. Johnson, History of the American People, 458.
11. William C. Davis, Jefferson Davis (New York: HarperCollins, 1991), 258.
12. Richard Bensel, Yankee Leviathan: The Origins of Central Authority in Americ
a, 1859–1877
(New York: Cambridge, 1990), 133.
13. Ibid.
14. Nevins, Emergence of Lincoln, 330.
15. E. L. Harvin, “Arkansas and the Crisis of 1860–61,” manuscript at the University o
f Texas.
16. Weicek, “‘Old Times There Are Not Forgotten,’” 173.
17. Roger W. Shugg, Origins of Class Struggle in Louisiana: A Social History of
White Farmers
and Laborers During Slavery and After, 1840–1875 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Uni
versity
Press, 1939), 167.
18. Broadside, Jefferson Davis Papers, University Library, Washington and Lee Un
iversity,
Lexington, VA.
19. Ibid. See also Charles H. Wesley, “The Employment of Negroes as Soldiers in th
e Confederate
Army,” Journal of Negro Histor, 4, July 1919, 239–53.
20. William J. Davis, Jefferson Davis: The Man and His Hour (New York: HarperCol
lins, 1991),
495.
21. Marie Hochmuth Nichols, “Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address,” in J. Jeffery Auer, e
d.,
Antislavery and Disunion, 1858–1861: Studies in the Rhetoric of Compromise and Con
flict (New
York: Harper & Row, 1963), 392–414.
22. Davis, Jefferson Davis, 325; Richard N. Current, Lincoln and the First Shot
(Philadelphia: J. B.
Lippincott, 1963). For interpretations of the Civil War, see Thomas J. Pressly,
Americans Interpret
Their Civil War (New York: Free Press, 1962 [1954]); Kenneth M. Stampp, “Lincoln a
nd the
Strategy of Defense in the Crisis of 1861,” Journal of Southern History 11, 1945,
297–323; James
G. Randall, Lincoln the President, 4 vols. (New York: Dodd Mead, 1945–1955); Eba A
nderson
Lawton, Major Robert Anderson and Fort Sumter (New York: Knickerbocker Press, 19
11).
23. Allan Nevins, The War for the Union: The Improvised War, 1861–1862 (New York:
Charles
Scribner’s Sons, 1959), 87.
24. Richard N. Current, Lincoln’s Loyalists: Union Soldiers from the Confederacy (
Boston:
Northeastern University Press, 1992).
25. Virgil A. Lewis, How West Virginia Was Made (Charleston, West Virginia: News
-Mail
Company, 1909).
26. Nevins, War for the Union, 146–47; Daniel W. Crofts, Reluctant Confederates: U
pper South
Unionists in the Secession Crisis (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina
, 1989).
27. Current, Lincoln’s Loyalists, 4.
28. Mark Twain, “The Private History of a Campaign That Failed,” in Justin Kaplan, e
d., Great
Short Works of Mark Twain (New York: Harper & Row, 1967), 145.
29. Johnson, History of the American People, 458–59.
30. Boyer, et al, The Enduring Vision, 408.
31. Twain, “Private History,” 147–51.
32. James G. Randall, The Civil War and Reconstruction (Boston: D. C. Heath, 193
7), 265.
33. Ibid.
34. Official Records of the War of the Rebellion (henceforth called OR), 70 vols
. (Washington,
D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1880–1891), 3:i and 303.
35. Nevins, War for the Union, 108–9.
36. Harper’s Magazine, September 1855, 552–55.
37. Richard G. Beringer, et al, eds., Why the South Lost the Civil War (Athens,
GA: University of
Georgia Press, 1986); Richard N. Current, Why the North Won the Civil War (New Y
ork: Colier,
1962); David Donald, ed., Why the North Won the Civil War (Westport, CT: PaperBo
ok Press,
1993).
38. Grady McWhiney and Perry D. Jamieson, Attack and Die: Civil War Military Tac
tics and the
Southern Heritage (University, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1982).
39. Forrest McDonald and Grady McWhiney, “The Antebellum Southern Herdsman: A
Reinterpretation,” Journal of Southern History, 41, 1975, 147–66.
40. McWhiney and Jamieson, Attack and Die, 6.
41. Bernard DeVoto, The Year of Decision, 1846 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1943), 20
3, 284.
42. McWhiney and Jamieson, Attack and Die, 7.
43. Davis, 100 Decisive Battles, 318.
44. T. Harry Williams, Lincoln and His Generals (New York: Vintage Books, 1952),
7.
45. Ibid.
46. Nevins, War for the Union, 179.
47. Stanley Lebergott, “Why the South Lost: Commercial Purpose in the Confederacy,
1861–
1865,” Journal of American History, 70, June 1983, 58–74, and his “Through the Blockad
e: The
Profitability and Extent of Cotton Smuggling, 1861–1865,” Journal of Economic Histor
y, 41,
December 1981, 867–88.
48. James MacPherson, Ordeal by Fire: The Civil War and Reconstruction, 3rd ed.
(New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2001), 272–76.
49. Shelby Foote, The Civil War (Public Broadcasting System) VHS, 9 vols. (Alexa
ndria, VA:
Florentine Films, 1989), vol. 1.
50. MacPherson, Ordeal by Fire, 228.
51. Ibid.
52. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 275–76.
53. William H. Russell, My Diary, North and South (Boston: T.O.H.P. Burnham, 186
3), 451.
54. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 276.
55. Douglas Southall Freeman, Lee’s Lieutenants: A Study in Command (New York: Cha
rles
Scribner’s, 1946), 1:81–82.
56. Robert Underwood Johnson and Clarence C. Buel, eds., Battles and Leaders of
the Civil War, 4
vols. (New York: Century Company, 1884–1887), 1:252.
57. Captain J. R. Hawley to his wife, September 25, 1861, Hawley Papers, Library
of Congress.
58. Nevins, War for the Union, 238; Allen C. Guelzo, The Crisis of the American
Republic: A
History of the Civil War and Reconstruction (New York: St. Martin’s, 1995).
59. William L. Barney, Battleground for the Union: The Era of the Civil War and
Reconstruction,
1848–1977 (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1990), 158.
60. Williams, Lincoln and His Generals, 25.
61. Johnson, History of the American People, 475.
62. Stephen W. Sears, “Lincoln and McClellan,” in Gabor S. Borrit, ed., Lincoln’s Gene
rals (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 1–50, quotation on 13–14.
63. Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men: A History of
the American
Civil War (Chicago: Open Court, 1996), 163.
64. Gordon Warren, Fountain of Discontent: The Trent Affair and Freedom of the S
eas (Boston:
Northeastern University Press, 1981).
65. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 577.
66. Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant (New York: Charles L. Webs
ter, 1886),
1:311.
67. John H. Brinton, The Personal Memoirs of John H. Brinton, Major and Surgeon,
U.S.V., 1861–
1865 (New York: Neale, 1914), 239.
68. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 574; New York Times, February 17, 18
62.
69. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 575.
70. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 529.
71. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 593.
72. Williams, Lincoln and His Generals, 272.
73. Frederick Blue, Salmon P. Chase: A Life in Politics (Kent, OH: Kent State Un
iversity Press,
1987).
74. Roberta Sue Alexander, “Salmon P. Chase,” in Larry Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia
of
American Business History and Biography: Banking and Finance to 1913 (New York:
Facts on
File, 1990), 88–105); David H. Donald, ed., Inside Lincoln’s Cabinet: The War Diarie
s of Salmon
P. Chase (New York: Longmans, Green, 1954).
75. Joseph Rishel, “Jay Cooke,” in Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia of American Busines
s History
and Biography, 135–43; Henrietta M. Larson, Jay Cooke: Private Banker (Cambridge,
Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1936); Ellis Paxon Oberholtzer, Jay Coo
ke: Financier of
the Civil War, 2 vols. (Philadelphia: Jacobs, 1907).
76. Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, “Confederate Finance,” in Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia o
f American
Business History and Biography, 132–35; Richard Cecil Todd, Confederate Finance (A
thens, GA:
University of Georgia Press, 1954); John Christopher Schwab, The Confederate Sta
tes of America,
1861–1865: A Financial and Industrial History of the South During the Civil War (N
ew York:
Charles Scribner’s, 1901); James F. Morgan, Graybacks and Gold: Confederate Moneta
ry Policy
(Pensacola, Florida: Perdido Bay Press, 1985).
77. Douglas B. Ball, Financial Failure and Confederate Defeat (Urbana, IL: Unive
rsity of Illinois
Press, 1991).
78. Although Judith Fenner Gentry labeled this a success, the Erlanger loan mere
ly exposed the
stark inadequacies of the Southern economy compared to the North’s. See Gentry, “A C
onfederate
Success in Europe: The Erlanger Loan,” Journal of Southern History, 36, 1970, 157–88
.
79. Larry Schweikart, Banking in the American South from the Age of Jackson to R
econstruction
(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987), chap. 7, passim.
80. Hummell, Emancipating Slaves, 236–37.
81. James T. Leach, “Proceedings of the Second Confederate Congress, Second Sessio
n in Part,”
27 January 1865, Southern Historical Society Papers, 52, 1959, 242.
82. John H. Hagan to his wife, July 23, 1863, in Bell Irvin Wiley, ed., “The Confe
derate Letters of
John W. Hagan,” Georgia Historical Quarterly, 38, June 1954, 196.
83. Contrast this with David Donald’s view that the South “Died of Democracy.” See Don
ald,
“Died of Democracy,” in Why the North Won the Civil War, 77–90.
84. Bensel, Yankee Leviathan, passim.
85. Davis, 100 Decisive Battles, 318.
86. John Cannan, The Antietam Campaign (New York: Wieser & Wieser, 1990); Jay Lu
vaas and
Harold W. Nelson, eds., The U.S. Army War College Guide to the Battle of Antieta
m (New York:
HarperCollins, 1988); James Murfin, The Gleam of Bayonets (New York: T. Yoseloff
, 1965);
Stephen Sears, Landscape Turned Red (New Haven: Tiknor & Fields, 1983).
87. Oates, With Malice Toward None, 334.
88. Ibid.
89. Ibid., 334–35.
90. Quoted in Oates, With Malice Toward None, 337.
91. Ibid., 339.
92. Ibid., 340.
93. Again, much of this material comes from Oates, With Malice Toward None, 346–47
.
94. Leon Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery (New York:
Vintage,
1980), 27.
95. Contra Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States, 1492–Present (New Y
ork:
HarperPerennial, 1995), 187–88.
96. Ira Berlin, Joseph P. Reidy, and Leslie S. Rowland, Freedom’s Soldiers: The Bl
ack Military
Experience in the Civil War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 10.
97. Jay David and Elaine Crane, The Black Soldier: From the American Revolution
to Vietnam
(New York: William Morrow, 1971).
98. Williams, Lincoln and His Generals, 180.
99. Ibid., 242.
100. Duane Schultz, The Most Glorious Fourth (New York: W. W. Norton, 2002), 5.
101. Michael Shaara, The Killer Angels (New York: Ballantine, 1974); Mark Nesbit
t, Saber and
Scapegoat: J.E.B. Stuart and the Gettysburg Controversy (Mechanicsburg, PA: Stac
kpole Books,
1994); Emory M. Thomas, “Eggs, Aldie, Shepherdstown, and J.E.B. Stuart,” in Gabor S.
Boritt,
ed., The Gettysburg Nobody Knows (New York: Oxford, 1997), 101–21; Edwin B. Coddin
gton,
The Gettysburg Campaign: A Study in Command (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1968);
Emory
M. Thomas, Bold Dragoon: The Life of J.E.B. Stuart (New York: Harper and Row, 19
86).
102. Glenn LaFantasie, “Joshua Chamberlain and the American Dream,” in Boritt, Linco
ln’s
Generals, 31–55.
103. LaFantasie, “Joshua Chamberlain and the American Dream,” 34.
104. Earl J. Hess, Pickett’s Charge: The Last Attack at Gettysburg (Chapel Hill: U
niversity of
North Carolina Press, 2001), passim.
105. James M. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom (New York: Oxford University Pres
s, 1988),
661.
106. Allan Nevins, The War for the Union, vol. 3: The Organized War, 1863–1864 (Ne
w York:
Charles Scribner’s, 1971), 110–11.
107. Gabor S. Boritt, “Unfinished Work: Lincoln, Meade, and Gettysburg,” in Borit, L
incoln’s
Generals, 81–120, quotation on 83.
108. Michael Fellman, “Lincoln and Sherman,” in Boritt, Lincoln’s Generals, 121–59.
109. Ibid., 127.
110. http://ngeorgia.com/people/shermanwt.html.
111. John Y. Simon, “Grant, Lincoln, and Unconditional Surrender,” in Boritt, ed., L
incoln’s
Generals, 163–98, quotation on 195.
112. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 541, 543; George Cary Eggleston, “Note
s on Cold
Harbor,” in Johnson and Buel, Battles and Leaders, 4:230–31.
113. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 274.
114. Berkin, Making America, 455.
115. Ibid., 456.
116. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 550.
117. James G. Blaine, Twenty Years of Congress: From Lincoln to Garfield, 2 vols
. (Norwich, CT:
Henry Bill Publishing, 1884–1886), 1:444.
118. Orville H. Browning, The Diary of Orville Hickman Browning, ed., T. C. Peas
e and J. G.
Randall, 2 vols. (Springfield, IL: Trustees of the Illinois State Historical Lib
rary, 1933), 1:600–601.
119. John Ellis, The Social History of the Machine Gun (New York: Pantheon, 1975
); Paul Wahl
and Donald R. Toppel, The Gatling Gun (New York: Arco, 1965).
120. Berkin, Making America, 458.
121. Ibid.
122. William Tecumseh Sherman, Memoirs of General William T. Sherman, 2 vols. (N
ew York:
Da Capo, 1984), 2:249.
123. Philip Shaw Paludan, “Religion and the American Civil War,” in Randall M. Mille
r, Harry S.
Stout, and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds., Religion and the American Civil War (New
York: Oxford,
1998), 21–42, quotation on 25.
124. Victor Davis Hanson, The Soul of Battle (New York: Free Press, 1999), 173.
125. Ibid., 231.
126. Fellman, “Lincoln and Sherman,” 142.
127. Ibid., 147.
128. Simon, “Grant, Lincoln, and Unconditional Surrender,” 168.
129. Ervin L. Jordan, Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in the Civil War Virgi
nia
(Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 51.
130. Ibid., 62.
131. Confederate States of America Congress, Minority Report [on the recruitment
of black troops]
(Richmond: Confederate States of America, 1865). See also Charles Wesley, “The Emp
loyment of
Negroes as Soldiers in the Confederate Army,” Journal of Negro History, July 1919,
239–53.
132. Jackson News, March 10, 1865, reprinted in John Bettersworth, Mississippi i
n the
Confederacy, 2 vols. (Jackson: Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 1
961), 1:246.
133. Jordan, Black Confederates, 72.
134. Thomas J. Wertenbaker, Norfolk: Historic Southern Port, 2nd ed. (Durham, No
rth Carolina:
Duke University Press, 1962), 220–21.
135. Berkin, Making America, 459.
136. http://www.ibiscom.com/appomatx.htm.
137. Jay Winik, April 1865: The Month That Saved the Union (New York: HarperColl
ins, 2001);
Daniel Sutherland, “Guerrilla Warfare, Democracy, and the Fate of the Confederacy,”
Journal of
Southern History, 68, May 2002, 259–92, quotation on 292.
138. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 291.
139. Second Inaugural Speech of Abraham Lincoln, March 4, 1865, in Williams, ed.
, Selected
Writings and Speeches of Abraham Lincoln, 259–60.
140. Johnson, History of the American People, 495.
141. Washington Evening Star, April 15, 1865, and National Intelligencer, April
15, 1865.
142. http://members.aol.com/RVSNorton/Lincoln.html.
143. Louis Untermeyer, ed., A Treasury of Great Poems English and American (New
York: Simon
& Schuster, 1955), 904–5.
144. Gary Gallagher and Alan T. Nolan, eds., The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civi
l War History
(Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2000).
145. James M. McPherson, Ordeal by Fire (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1982), 476.
146. Schweikart, Banking in the American South, 267–313.
147. Alan T. Nolan, “The Anatomy of the Myth,” in Gallagher and Nolan, eds., Myth of
the Lost
Cause, 11–34, quotation on 20.
148. Frank Moore, Rebellion Record: A Diary of American Events with Documents, N
arratives,
Illustrative Incidents, Poetry, Etc., 11 vols. (New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1861–18
88), 1:844–46.
149. Allen Nevins, The Emergence of Lincoln, 2 vols. (New York: Charles Scribner’s
, 1950),
2:468.
150. Davis, Jefferson Davis, 514.
151. See, in addition to Hummel (who is the most articulate), Allen Buchanan, Se
cession: The
Morality of Political Divorce from Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec (Boulder,
CO: Westview
Press, 1991); Harry Beran, “A Liberal Theory of Secession,” Political Studies, 32, D
ecember 1984,
21–31; Anthony H. Birch, “Another Liberal Theory of Secession,” Political Studies, 32,
December
1984, 596–602; Robert W. McGee, “Secession Reconsidered,” Journal of Libertarian Studi
es, 11,
Fall 1984, 11–33; Murray Rothbard, “War, Peace and the State, in Murray Rothbard, ed
.,
Egalitarianism as a Revolt Against Nature: and Other Essays (Washington: Liberta
rian Review
Press, 1974); Bruce D. Porter, “Parkinson’s Law Revisited: War and the Growth of Gov
ernment,”
The Public Interest, 60, Summer 1980, 50–68, and his War and the Rise of the State
: The Military
Foundations of Modern Politics (New York: Free Press, 1994); Robert Higgs, Crisi
s and Leviathan:
Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government (New York: Oxford Univers
ity Press,
1987).
152. Zinn, People’s History, 193.
Chapter 10. Ideals and Realities of Reconstruction, 1865–76
1. S. R. Mallory, Diary, Southern Historical Collection, University of North Car
olina Library, cited
in Allan Nevins, The War for the Union: The Organized War to Victory, 1864–1865 (N
ew York:
Charles Scribner’s, 1971), 295.
2. Otto Eisenschiml, ed., Vermont General: The Unusual War Experiences of Edward
Hasting
Ripley, 1862–1865 (New York: Devin-Adair, 1960), 296–306.
3. New York Tribune, April 10, 1865.
4. Noah Brooks, Washington in Lincoln’s Time (New York: Century Company, 1895), 21
9.
5. Marquis de Chambrun, “Personal Recollections of Mr. Lincoln,” (New York: Charles
Scribner’s,
January 1893), 13, 36.
6. Rembert Wallace Patrick, The Reconstruction of the Nation (New York: Oxford U
niversity
Press, 1967), 53.
7. David Donald, Lincoln (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995), 582–83.
8. Julian W. George, Political Recollections (Chicago: Jansen, McClurg, 1884), 2
60–61.
9. Claudia Goldin and Frank Lewis, “The Economic Cost of the American Civil War: E
stimates
and Implications,” Journal of Economic History, 35, 1975, 294–396.
10. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 294.
11. Nevins, War for the Union, 374–75.
12. Robert Gallman, “Commodity Output 1839–99,” in National Bureau of Economic Researc
h,
Trends in the American Economy in the 19th Century, vol. 24, Series on Income an
d Wealth
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1960); Charles and Mary Beard, The Rise
of American
Civilization (New York: Macmillan, 1927); Stanley Engerman, “The Economic Impact o
f the Civil
War,” Explorations in Economic History, 3, 1966, 176–99; Jeffrey Williamson, “Watershe
ds and
Turning Points: Conjectures on the Long Term Impact of Civil War Financing,” Journ
al of
Economic History, 34, 1974, 631–61.
13. Carl Schurz, The Reminiscences of Carl Schurz, 3 vols. (New York: The McClur
e Company,
1907–8), 3:167.
14. Ibid.
15. James G. Randall, The Civil War and Reconstruction, 693.
16. Ibid., 694.
17. Tindall and Shi, America, 1:792.
18. Ibid., 1:793.
19. Ibid., 1:792.
20. Richard Easterlin, “Regional Income Trends, 1840–1950,” in Robert W. Fogel and Sta
nley I.
Engerman, eds., The Reinterpretation of American Economic History (New York: Har
per & Row,
1971), Table 1.
21. Atack and Passel, A New Economic View of American History, 379.
22. Berkin, et al., Making America, 476.
23. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 296.
24. Joseph Reid, “Sharecropping as an Understandable Market Response: The Postbell
um South,”
Journal of Economic History, 33, 1973, 106–30; Robert Higgs, Competition and Coerc
ion: Blacks
in the American Economy, 1865–1914 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977); a
nd
Stephen J. Decanio, “Productivity and Income Distribution in the Postbellum South,”
Journal of
Economic History, 34, 1974, 422–46.
25. Roger Ransom and Richard Sutch, One Kind of Freedom: The Economic Consequenc
es of
Emancipation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977); and their articles, “T
he Impact of
the Civil War and of Emancipation on Southern Agriculture,” Explorations in Econom
ic History,
12, 1975, 1–28; “The Ex-Slave in the Postbellum South: A Study of the Impact of Raci
sm in a
Market Environment,” Journal of Economic History, 33, 1973, 131–48; and “Debt Peonage
in the
Cotton South after the Civil War,” Journal of Economic History, 32, 1972, 641–679.
26. Robert A. Margo, “Accumulation of Property by Southern Blacks Before World War
I:
Comment and Further Evidence,” American Economic Review, 74, 1984, 768–76.
27. Robert C. Kenzer, Black Economic Success in North Carolina, 1865–1995 (Charlot
tesville:
University Press of Virginia, 1989), 18, table 5.
28. Theodore Rosengarten, All God’s Dangers: The Life of Nate Shaw (New York: Alfr
ed A.
Knopf, 1974).
29. “Andrew Jackson Beard,” in A Salute to Black Scientists and Inventors, vol. 2 (C
hicago:
Empak Enterprises and Richard L. Green, n.d. ), 6.
30. Robert C. Kenzer, “The Black Business Community in Post Civil War Virginia,” Sou
thern
Studies, new series, 4, Fall 1993, 229–52.
31. Kenzer, “Black Business,” passim.
32. Leon Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery (New York:
Vintage,
1980), 8.
33. Ibid., 18.
34. Ibid., 298.
35. Louis R. Harlan, Booker T. Washington: The Making of a Black Leader, 1865–1901
(New
York: Oxford, 1972), and his Booker T. Washington: The Wizard of Tuskegee, 1901–19
15 (New
York: Oxford, 1983).
36. Walter I. Fleming, Documentary History of Reconstruction: Political, Militar
y, Social,
Religious, Educational and Industrial, 1865 to the Present Time vol. 1 (Clevelan
d, Ohio: Arthur H.
Clark, 1905), 231–33.
37. Rembert W. Patrick, The Reconstruction of the Nation (New York: Oxford, 1967
), 42.
38. David E. Bernstein, Only One Place of Redress: African-Americans, Labor Rela
tions and the
Courts from Reconstruction to the New Deal (Durham: Duke University Press, 2001)
.
39. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 317.
40. William S. McFeely, Yankee Stepfather: O. O. Howard and the Freedmen’s Bureau
(New
York: Norton, 1968), 22.
41. Ibid., 33, 85.
42. Ibid., 89. See also Timothy L. Smith, Revivalism and Social Reform in Mid-Ce
ntury America
(New York: Harper & Row, 1957).
43. McFeely, Yankee Stepfather, 105.
44. Litwack, Been in the Storm So Long, 376.
45. Ibid., 386.
46. McFeely, Yankee Stepfather, 92.
47. Kenneth M. Stampp, The Era of Reconstruction, 1865–1877 (New York: Vintage, 19
63), 102.
48. Ibid., 102.
49. Ibid., 104–5.
50. Randall, Civil War and Reconstruction, 723.
51. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 299.
52. Patrick, Reconstruction of the Nation, 71.
53. Hummel, Emancipating Slaves, 299.
54. U.S. Statutes at Large, 14 (April 9, 1866), 27.
55. James E. Sefton, Andrew Johnson and the Uses of Constitutional Power (Boston
: Little, Brown,
1980), 132.
56. Kenneth E. Mann, “Blanche Kelso Bruce: United States Senator Without a Constit
uency,”
Journal of Mississippi History, 3, May 1976, 183–98; William C. Harris, “Blanche K.
Bruce of
Mississippi: Conservative Assimilationist,” in Howard N. Rabinowitz, ed., Southern
Black Leaders
of the Reconstruction Era (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1982), 3–38;
Samuel L.
Shapiro, “A Black Senator from Mississippi: Blanche K. Bruce (1841–1898),” Review of P
olitics,
44, January 1982, 83–109.
57. Stampp, Era of Reconstruction, 174.
58. Ibid., 175.
59. Ibid.
60. Michael Perman, The Road to Redemption: Southern Politics, 1869–1879 (Chapel H
ill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1984), 74–75.
61. John Hope Franklin, Reconstruction After the Civil War (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press,
1961), 76.
62. Ibid.
63. Ibid., 77.
64. Frank P. Blair to Samuel J. Tilden, July 15, 1868, in John Bigelow, ed., Let
ters and Literary
Memorials of Samuel J. Tilden, vol. 1 (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1908), 241.
65. David Montgomery, Beyond Equality: Labor and the Radical Republican, 1862–1872
(New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1967), 353.
66. Allan Nevins, Hamilton Fish: The Inner History of the Grant Administration (
New York: Dodd
Mead, 1936), 131–36.
67. Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant (New York: Smithmark, 1994
).
68. Geoffrey Perret, Ulysses S. Grant: Soldier and President (New York: Random H
ouse, 1997).
69. James K. Medbury, Men and Mysteries of Wall Street (New York: Fields, Osgood
, 1870), 264–
65; Kenneth D. Acerman, The Gold Ring: Jim Fisk, Jay Gould and Black Friday, 186
9 (New York:
Harper Business, 1988).
70. Burton Folsom Jr., Myth of the Robber Barons: A New Look at the Rise of Big
Business in
America (Herndon, VA: Young America’s Foundation, 1991), 18.
71. Ibid.
72. Ibid.
73. Stephen E. Ambrose, Nothing Like It in the World: The Men Who Built the Tran
scontinental
Railroad, 1863–1869 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000).
74. Robert W. Fogel, The Union Pacific Railroad: A Case of Premature Enterprise
(Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1960); Jay Boyd Crawford, The Credit Mobilier of
America: Its
Origins and History, Its Work of Constructing the Union Pacific Railroad and the
Relation of
Members of Congress Therewith (New York: Greenwood Press, 1969).
75. Mark W. Summers, The Era of Good Stealings (New York: Oxford, 1993).
76. Perman, Road to Redemption, 135.
77. Ibid., 191.
78. Ibid., 217.
79. Ibid., 277.
80. Jennifer Roback, “The Political Economy of Segregation: The Case of Segregated
Streetcars,”
Journal of Political Economy, 46, December 1986, 893–917.
81. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 635.
82. Ibid., 636.
83. Ari Hoogenboom, Rutherford B. Hayes: Warrior and President (Lawrence, KS: Un
iversity
Press of Kansas, 1995), 187.
84. Hayes quoted in Hoogenboom, Rutherford B. Hayes, 199.
85. Hoogenboom, Rutherford B. Hayes, 260.
86. Ibid., 278.
Chapter 11. Lighting Out for the Territories, 1861–90
1. Mark Twain, Roughing It (New York: Signet, 1962 [1872]), 29–30.
2. Howard R. Lamar, ed., The New Encyclopedia of the American West (New Haven: Y
ale
University Press, 1998); Clyde A. Milner II, Carol A. O’Connor, Martha A. Sandweis
s, eds., The
Oxford History of the American West (New York: Oxford, 1994).
3. Frederick Jackson Turner, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History
,” presented at
the American Historical Association, Chicago, 1893, and his The Frontier in Amer
ican History
(New York: Holt, 1935). Biographical works on Turner include Allan G. Bogue, Fre
derick Jackson
Turner (Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998); Ray A. Billington, Fred
erick Jackson
Turner: Historian, Teacher, and Scholar (New York: Oxford, 1973).
4. George Rogers Taylor, The Transportation Revolution, 1815–1860 (New York: Holt
Rinehart,
1962); Guy S. Callender, “The Early Transportation and Banking Enterprises of the
States in
Relation to the Growth of the Corporation,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 17 (19
02), 111–62;
and Albert Fishlow, “Internal Transportation,” in Lance Davis, et al., eds., America
n Economic
Growth (New York: Harper & Row, 1972), 468–547; Carlos Schwantes, Long Day’s Journey
: The
Steamboat and Stagecoach Era in the Northern West (Seattle: University of Washin
gton Press,
1999).
5. Daniel B. Klein, “The Voluntary Provision of Public Goods? The Turnpike Compani
es of Early
America,” Economic Inquiry, October 1990, 788–812; David Beito, “From Privies to Boule
vards:
The Private Supply of Infrastructure in the United States During the Nineteenth
Century,” in Jerry
Jenkins and David E. Sisk, eds., The Voluntary Supply of Public Goods and Servic
es (San
Francisco: Institute for Contemporary Studies, 1993), 23–49; Christopher T. Baer,
Daniel B. Klein,
and John Majewski, “From Trunk to Branch Toll Roads in New York, 1800–1860,” in Edwin
Perkins, ed., Essays in Economic and Business History, 11 (1992), 191–209.
6. John D. Unruh, The Plains Across: The Overland Emigrants and the Trans-Missis
sippi West,
1840–60 (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1993) documented only 350 death
s from Indian
attacks between 1840 and 1860.
7. Don Rickey Jr., $10 Horse, $40 Saddle (Lincoln, NB: University of Nebraska Pr
ess, 1976).
8. Edward Hungerford, Wells Fargo, Advancing the American Frontier (New York: Ra
ndom
House, 1949); Noel L. Loomis, Wells Fargo (New York: Bramhall House, 1968).
9. Louis C. Hunter, Steamboats on the Western Rivers: An Economic and Technologi
cal History
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1949).
10. Douglas J. Puffert, “The Standardization of Track Gauge on North American Rail
ways, 1830–
1890,” Journal of Economic History, 60, December 2000, 933–60.
11. Carlos Schwantes, The Pacific Northwest, 2nd. ed. (Lincoln: University of Ne
braska Press,
1996), 193–99.
12. William L. Lang, “Using and Abusing Abundance: The Western Resource Economy an
d the
Environment,” in Michael P. Malone, ed., Historians and the American West (Lincoln
: University
of Nebraska Press, 1983); Donald Worster, Under Western Skies: Nature and Histor
y in the
American West (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992); John Opie, “The Environme
nt and the
Frontier,” in Roger L. Nichols, ed., American Frontier and Western Issues: A Histo
riographical
Review (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1986); Terry L. Anderson and Donald R. Le
al, “Free
Market Versus Political Environmentalism,” in Michael E. Zimmerman, ed., Environ-
mental
Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prent
ice-Hall,
1998), 364–74.
13. Vernon Carstensen, The Public Lands: Studies in the History of the Public Do
main (Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1962); Paul Wallace Gates, History of Public Land
Law
Development (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968).
14. Richard White, “It’s Your Misfortune and None of My Own”: A History of the America
n West
(Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1991); Patricia Limerick, The Legacy
of Conquest:
The Unbroken Past of the American West (New York: Norton, 1987); Douglass C. Nor
th, Growth
and Welfare in the American Past (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1966); Ro
nald Coase,
“The Problem of Social Cost,” Journal of Law and Economics, 3 (1960), 1–44.
15. John D. Haegar, “Business Strategy and Practice in the Early Republic: John Ja
cob Astor and
the American Fur Trade,” Western Historical Quarterly, May 1988, 183–202; Hiram M. C
hittenden,
The American Fur Trade of the Far West, 3 vols. (New York: Francis M. Harper, 19
02);
Michael F. Konig, “John Jacob Astor,” in Larry Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia of Amer
ican
Business History and Biography: Banking and Finance to 1913 (New York: Facts on
File, 1990),
13–25; Kenneth W. Porter, John Jacob Astor, Business Man, 2 vols. (Cambridge: Harv
ard
University Press, 1931). On banking, see Lynne Pierson Doti and Larry Schweikart
, Banking in the
American West from the Gold Rush to Deregulation (Norman, OK: University of Okla
homa Press,
1991), passim.
16. Terry L. Anderson and Donald R. Leal, “Fishing for Property Rights to Fish,” in
Roger E.
Meiners and Bruce Yandle, eds., Taking the Environment Seriously (Lanham, MD: Ro
wman &
Littlefield, 1993), 161–84.
17. Robert Sobel and David B. Sicilia, The Entrepreneurs: An American Adventure
(Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1986), and Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure, 200–2.
18. Stephen J. Pyne, Fire in America: A Cultural History of Wildland and Rural F
ire (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1982), 11.
19. W. E. Haskell, The International Paper Company: 1898–1924: Its Origins and Gro
wth in a
Quarter of a Century with a Brief Description of the Manufacture of Paper from H
arvesting
Pulpwood to the Finished Roll (New York: International Paper, 1924).
20. Clinton Woods, Ideas that Became Big Business (Baltimore: Founders, Inc., 19
59), 110.
21. Thomas R. Cox, Mills and Markets: A History of the Pacific Coast Lumber Indu
stry to 1900
(Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1974); Thomas R. Cox, et al., This Wel
l-Wooded Land:
Americans and Their Forests from Colonial Times to the Present (Lincoln, NB: Uni
versity of
Nebraska Press, 1985); Michael Williams, Americans and Their Forests: A Historic
al Geography
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989).
22. Don Worcester, The Texas Longhorn: Relic of the Past, Asset for the Future (
College Station,
Texas: Texas A&M University Press, 1987).
23. Jimmy M. Skaggs, The Cattle Trailing Industry: Between Supply and Demand (La
wrence, KS:
University of Kansas Press, 1973).
24. Richard White, “Animals and Enterprise,” in Milner, et al., eds, Oxford History
of the
American West, 237–73; Maruice Frink, et al., When Grass was King: Contribution to
the Western
Range Cattle Industry Study (Boulder: University of Colorado Press, 1956).
25. Robert M. Dykstra, The Cattle Towns (New York: Knopf, 1968).
26. Jimmy M. Skaggs, Prime Cut: Livestock Raising and Meat-packing in the United
States
(College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1986); Ernest S. Osgood, The Day o
f the
Cattleman (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1929).
27. J. Marvin Hunter, The Trail Drivers of Texas (New York: Argosy-Antiquarian,
1963).
28. Richard Maxwell Brown, “Western Violence: Structure, Values, Myth,” Western Hist
orical
Quarterly, February 1993, 5–10; and his No Duty to Retreat: Violence and Values in
American
History and Society (New York: Oxford, 1991).
29. Roger McGrath, Gunfighters, Highwaymen & Vigilantes: Violence on the Frontie
r (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1984).
30. Dykstra, The Cattle Towns, passim.
31. Paul Wallace Gates, Free Homesteads for all Americans: The Homestead Act of
1862
(Washington, Civil War Centennial Commission, 1962); David M. Ellis et al., The
Frontier in
American Developments: Essays in Honor of Paul Wallace Gates (Ithaca: Cornell Un
iversity Press,
1969); David B. Danbom, Born in the Country: A History of Rural America (Baltimo
re: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1995); Morton Rothstein, ed., Quantitative Studies in
Agrarian History
(Ames Iowa: Iowa State University Press, 1993).
32. Wayne Broehl Jr., John Deere’s Company: A History of Deere and Company and Its
Times
(New York: Doubleday, 1984); Oliver E. Allen, “Bet-A-Million,” Audacity, Fall 1996,
18–31;
Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 63–65.
33. John T. Schlebecker, Whereby We Thrive: A History of American Farming, 1607–19
72 (Ames:
Iowa State University Press, 1975).
34. Gerald McFarland, A Scattered People: An American Family Moves West (New Yor
k:
Pantheon, 1985).
35. Johnson, A History of the American People, 515.
36. Larry Schweikart, “John Warne Gates,” in Paul Pascoff, ed., Encyclopedia of Amer
ican
Business History and Biography: Iron and Steel in the 19th Century (New York: Fa
cts on File,
1989), 146–47.
37. Andrew C. Isenberg, The Destruction of the Bison (Cambridge: Cambridge Unive
rsity Press,
2000).
38. Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, 23; Shepard Kretch III, The Ecological I
ndian: Myth and
History (New York: W. W. Norton, 1999), 106.
39. Kretch, Ecological Indian, 213.
40. Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, passim.
41. Frank Gilbert Roe, The North American Buffalo: A Critical Study of the Speci
es in Its Wild
State (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1951), 609.
42. Edwin Thompson Denig, Five Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri: Sioux, Arika
ras,
Assiniboines, Crees, Crows, ed. John C. Dwers (Norman, OK: University of Oklahom
a Press,
1961), 79.
43. Kretch, Ecological Indian, 128.
44. Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, 84.
45. Alfred W. Crosby, Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe
, 900–1900
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986); William Cronon, Changes in the Lan
d: Indians,
Colonists, and the Ecology of New England (New York: Hill and Wang, 1983).
46. The million-dollar figure includes all related expenses. Bernard Bailyn et a
l., The Great
Republic: A History of the American People (Lexington, MA: D. C. Heath, 1985), 5
22.
47. Helen Hunt Jackson, A Century of Dishonor: A Sketch of the United States Gov
ernment’s
Dealings with Some of the Indian Tribes (Boston: Little, Brown, 1903 [1885]).
48. Richard White, “The Winning of the West: The Expansion of the Western Sioux in
the 18th and
19th Centuries,” Journal of American History, September 1978, 319–43.
49. Paul A. Hutton, Phil Sheridan and His Army (Lincoln, NB: University of Nebra
ska Press,
1985).
50. Evan S. Connell, Son of the Morning Star: Custer and the Little Bighorn (San
Francisco: North
Point Press, 1984), 127.
51. Robert G. Athern, William Tecumseh Sherman and the Settlement of the West (N
orman, OK:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1956).
52. Connell, Son of the Morning Star, 127.
53. Robert A. Trennert, Alternative to Extinction: Federal Indian Policy and the
Beginnings of the
Reservation System (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1975); Francis Paul P
rucha, The Great
Father (Lincoln, NB: University of Nebraska Press, 1984); Bernard W. Sheehan, Se
eds of
Extinction: Jeffersonian Philanthropy and the American Indian (Chapel Hill: Univ
ersity of North
Carolina Press, 1973).
54. Schwantes, Pacific Northwest, 568.
55. Robert M. Utley, Frontier Regulars: The United States Army and the Indian, 1
866–1891 (New
York: Macmillan, 1973).
56. Connell, Son of the Morning Star, 126.
57. Clyde Milner, “National Initiatives” in Clyde A. Milner II, Carol A O’Connor, and
Martha
Sandweiss, eds., The Oxford History of the American West (New York: Oxford Unive
rsity Press,
1994), 174.
58. Ray Allen Billington, Westward Expansion (New York: McMillan, 1974), 570.
59. J. W. Vaughn, Indian Fights: New Facts on Seven Encounters (Norman, OK: Univ
ersity of
Oklahoma Press, 1966).
60. Alexander B. Adams, Sitting Bull: An Epic of the Plains (New York: Putnam, 1
973); Joseph
Mazione, I Am Looking to the North for My Life: Sitting Bull, 1876–1881 (Salt Lake
City:
University of Utah Press, 1991).
61. John W. Bailey, Pacifying the Plains: General Alfred Terry and the Decline o
f the Sioux, 1866–
1890 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1979).
62. Doane Robinson, ed., “Crazy Horse’s Story of the Custer Battle,” South Dakota Hist
orical
Collections, vol. 6 (1912); Edgar I. Stewart, “Which Indian Killed Custer?” Montana:
The
Magazine of Western History, vol. 8 (1958).
63. Robert M. Utley, The Lance and the Shield: The Life and Times of Sitting Bul
l (New York:
Holt, 1993).
64. Robert Utley, The Last Days of the Sioux Nation (New Haven: Yale, 1963); Jam
es Mooney,
The Ghost Dance: Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890 (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press,
1965).
65. Alyn Brodsky, Grover Cleveland: A Study in Character (New York: Truman Talle
y, 2000),
139.
66. Brodsky, Grover Cleveland, 139.
67. Peter Micelmore, “Uprising in Indian Country,” Reader’s Digest, reprint, November
1984;
Andrew E. Serwer, “American Indians Discover Money Is Power,” Fortune, reprint from
Choctaw
tribe, April 19, 1993.
68. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 575–76.
69. Kent D. Richards, Isaac Ingalls Stevens: Young Man in a Hurry (Provo, UT: Br
igham Young
University Press, 1979), passim.
70. Leonard J. Arrington, The Mormon Experience: A History of the Latter-Day Sai
nts (New York:
Vintage, 1979), and his Great Basin Kingdom (Cambridge: Harvard University Press
, 1958).
71. Ken Verdoia and Richard Firmage, Utah: The Struggle for Statehood (Salt Lake
City:
University of Utah Press, 1996).
72. Howard R. Lamar, The Far Southwest, 1846–1912 (New Haven: Yale University Pres
s, 1966).
73. Victoria Wyatt, “Alaska and Hawaii,” in Milner, ed., Oxford History of the Ameri
can West,
565–601.
74. Noel J. Kent, Hawaii: Islands Under the Influence (New York: Monthly Review
Press, 1983).
75. Harry N. Scheiber, “The Road to Munn,” in Bernard Bailyn and Donald Fleming, Per
spectives
in American History: Law in American History (Boston: Little, Brown, 1971); Robe
rt C. McMath
Jr., American Populism: A Social History (New York: Hill and Wang, 1993).
76. Jeremy Atack and Fred Bateman, “How Long was the Workday in 1880?” Journal of Ec
onomic
History, March 1992, 129–60; Robert Whaples, “The Great Decline in the Length of the
Workweek,” working paper, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 1988; Albert Rees, Re
al Wages
in Manufacturing, 1890–1914 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961); Clarenc
e D. Long,
Wages and Earnings in the United States, 1860–1890 (Princeton: Princeton Universit
y Press,
1960).
77. Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz, A Monetary History of the United State
s, 1863–1960
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1963).
78. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, chap. 5; Jac C. Heckelman and John Jo
seph Wallis,
“Railroads and Property Taxes,” Explorations in Economic History, 34 (1997), 77–99; Al
bro
Martin, “The Troubled Subject of Railroad Regulation in the Gilded Age—a Reappraisal
,” Journal
of American History, September 1974, 339–71; George H. Miller, Railroads and the G
ranger Laws
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1971); Jack Blicksilver, The Defenders
and Defense of
Big Business in the United States, 1880–1900 (New York: Garland, 1985).
79. George B. Tindall, “Populism: A Semantic Identity Crisis,” Virginia Quarterly Re
view, 48,
1972, 501–18.
80. William Jennings Bryan, “Cross of Gold,” July 9, 1896, in A. Craig Baird, Americ
an Public
Address (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1956), 194–200.
81. Richard Hofstadter, The Age of Reform, From Bryan to F.D.R. (New York: Knopf
, 1955).
Chapter 12. Sinews of Democracy, 1876–96
1. H. Wayne Morgan, From Hayes to McKinley: National Party Politics, 1877–1896 (Sy
racuse:
Syracuse University Press, 1969), 15–16.
2. Morgan, From Hayes to McKinley, 31.
3. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 774.
4. Morgan, From Hayes to McKinley, 39.
5. Ari Hoogenboom, Rutherford B. Hayes: Warrior and President (Lawrence, KS: Uni
versity Press
of Kansas, 1995), 366.
6. Morgan, From Hayes to McKinley, 33.
7. Ibid., 56.
8. Ibid., 117.
9. Justus D. Doenecke, The Presidencies of James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arth
ur (Lawrence,
KS: University of Kansas Press, 1981).
10. See the Lincoln family website, http://home. att. net/~rjnorton/Lincoln66.ht
ml.
11. James C. Clark, The Murder of James A. Garfield: The President’s Last Days and
the Trial and
Execution of His Assassin (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 1993)
.
12. John G. Sproat, The Best Men: Liberal Reformers in the Gilded Age (New York:
Oxford,
1968).
13. Harry Elmer Barnes, Society in Transition: Problems of a Changing Age (New Y
ork: Prentice-
Hall, 1939), 448.
14. Barnes, Society in Transition, 449.
15. Ibid.
16. William P. Mason, Water-Supply (New York: Wiley and Sons, 1897), 466.
17. Earle Lytton Waterman, Elements of Water Supply Engineering (New York: Wiley
and Sons,
1934), 6; Martin V. Melosi, The Sanitary City: Urban Infrastructure in America f
rom Colonial
Times to the Present (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000).
18. Robin Einhorn, Property Rules: Political Economy in Chicago, 1833–1872 (Chicag
o:
University of Chicago Press, 1991), 16–19.
19. Paul Robert Lyons, Fire in America! (Boston: National Fire Protection Associ
ation, 1976), 52–
54.
20. Stephen J. Pyne, Fire in America: A Cultural History of Wildland and Rural F
ire (Seattle:
University of Washington Press, 1982), 92.
21. Martin Gilbert, A History of the Twentieth Century, 1900–1933, vol. 1 (New Yor
k: Avon,
1997), 182.
22. Joseph Wall, Andrew Carnegie (New York: Oxford University Press, 1970); Andr
ew Carnegie,
Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1920); Stuart Leslie
, “Andrew
Carnegie,” in Pascoff, ed., Encyclopedia of American Business History and Biograph
y: Iron and
Steel in the 19th Century, 47–41.
23. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 202–8.
24. Johnson, History of the American People, 554.
25. Allan Nevins, A Study in Power: John D. Rockefeller, 2 vols. (New York: Char
les Scribner’s,
1953), 1:328.
26. Leslie, “Andrew Carnegie,” 69.
27. Johnson, A History of the American People, 552.
28. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 207.
29. Joseph Dorfman, The Economic Mind in American Civilization, 5 vols. (New Yor
k: Augustus
M. Kelly, 1969), 3:117; Ida M. Tarbell, The History of Standard Oil Company, abr
idged, David M.
Chalmers, ed. (New York: Norton, 1969), 27.
30. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 250.
31. D. T. Armentano, The Myths of Antitrust: Economic Theory and Legal Cases (Ne
w Rochelle,
New York: Arlington House, 1972), 77.
32. Nevins, Study in Power, 2:76; 1:277–79.
33. John S. McGee, “Predatory Price-cutting: The Standard Oil (N.J. ) Case,” Journal
of Law and
Economics, October 1958, 137–69, quotation on 138.
34. Alfred D. Chandler Jr., Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American
Business
(Cambridge: Harvard, 1977).
35. Ray Ginger, Age of Excess: The United States from 1877 to 1914, 2nd ed. (Pro
spect Heights,
IL: Waveland Press, 1989), 34–35.
36. Joseph J. Fuchini and Suzy Fuchini, Entrepreneurs: The Men and Women Behind
Famous
Brand Names and How They Made It (Boston: G. K. Hall, 1985), 102–5; Lewis F. Smith
and
Arthur Van Vlissington, The Yankee of the Yards (New York: A. W. Shaw, 1928); Ma
ry Yeager
Kujovich, “The Refrigerator Car and the Growth of the American Dressed Beef Indust
ry,” Business
History Review, 44, 1970, 460–82; “Armour & Company, 1867–1938,” in N.S.B. Gras and
Henrietta Larson, Case Book in American Business History (New York: F. S. Crofts
, 1939), 623–
43.
37. Alfried Leif, “It Floats,” The Story of Procter and Gamble (New York: Holt, Rine
hart and
Winston, 1958); Alecia Swasy, Soap Opera: The Inside Story of Procter and Gamble
(New York:
Times Books, 1993).
38. Scott Derks, Working Americans, 1880–1999, vol. 1 (Lakeville, CT: Grey House P
ublishers,
2000), 12.
39. Derks, Working Americans, 1880–1999, I:26–27.
40. Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler, The Irish American Family Album (New York: Oxfor
d
University Press, 1995); James P. Mitchell, How American Buying Habits Change (W
ashington,
DC: U.S. Department of Labor, 1959); James Michael Russell, Atlanta, 1847–1890 (Ba
ton Rouge:
Louisiana State University Press, 1988); Derks, Working Americans, 1880–1999, I:17–2
5.
41. Matthew Josephson, The Robber Barons: The Great American Capitalist 1861–1901
(New
York: Harcourt Brace, 1934), 338 and chap. 14, passim.
42. Atack and Passell, New Economic View of American History, 414; James Stock, “R
eal Estate
Mortgages, Foreclosures and Midwestern Agrarian Unrest, 1865–1920,” Journal of Econo
mic
History, 44, 1984, 89–105; David B. Danbom, Born in the Country (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins
University Press, 1995).
43. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 231; Stanley Lebergott, Manpower in E
conomic
Growth: The American Record Since 1800 (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964), 524.
44. Clarence D. Long, Wages and Earnings in the United States, 1860–1890 (Princeto
n: Princeton
University Press, 1960); Paul Douglas, Real Wages in the United States, 1890–1926
(Boston:
Houghton-Mifflin, 1930).
45. Kenneth L. Sokoloff and Georgia C. Villafor, “The Market for Manufacturing Wor
kers During
Early Industrialization: The American Northeast, 1820–1860,” in Strategic Factors in
Nineteenth
Century American Economic History: A Volume to Honor Robert W. Fogel (Chicago: U
niversity
of Chicago Press, 1992), 36.
46. Burton Folsom Jr., “Like Fathers, Unlike Sons: The Fall of the Business Elite
in Scranton,
Pennsylvania, 1880–1920,” Pennsylvania History, 46, October 1980, 291–309.
47. Daniel Aaron, Men of Good Hope (New York: Oxford, 1961).
48. Mark Alan Hewitt, The Architect and the American Country House (New Haven: Y
ale
University Press, 1990), 133; David M. Potter, People of Plenty: Economic Abunda
nce and the
American Character (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1954).
49. Johnson, History of the American People, 567.
50. McClellan, Changing Interpretations of America’s Past, 2:92.
51. Harold C. Livesay, Samuel Gompers and Organized Labor in America (Boston: Li
ttle, Brown,
1978), 8–9.
52. Ibid., 21.
53. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:918; Samuel Gompers, Seventy Years of Life and L
abor, 2 vols.
(New York: E. P. Dutton, 1925).
54. Livesay, Samuel Gompers, 50.
55. 1873 WL 8416 (Ill. ), otherwise known as Munn v. Illinois when it reached th
e United States
Supreme Court.
56. William Michael Treanor, “The Original Understanding of the Takings Clause and
the Political
Process,” Columbia Law Review, May 1995, available online at http://www.law.george
town.
edu/gelpi/papers/treanor. htm; Anthony Saul Alperin, “The ‘Takings’ Clause: When Does
Regulation ‘Go Too Far’?” Southwestern University Law Review, 2002, 169–235.
57. Lease quoted in A. James Reichley, The Life of the Parties: A History of Ame
rican Political
Parties (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1992), 135.
58. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 120–25; Gregory J. Millman, The Vandals’
Crown:
How Rebel Currency Traders Overthrew the World’s Central Banks (New York: Free Pre
ss, 1995);
Jonathan Lurie, The Chicago Board of Trade, 1859–1905 (Urbana, IL: University of I
llinois Press,
1979).
59. William “Coin” Harvey, Coin’s Financial School (Chicago: Coin Publishing Company,
1894).
60. Sarah E. V. Emery, Seven Financial Conspiracies That Have Enslaved the Ameri
can People
(Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1975 [1887]); Mary Elizabeth Lease, The Problem o
f Civilization
Solved (Chicago: Laird and Lee, 1895).
61. Richard Hofstadter, The Age of Reform: Bryan to FDR (Cambridge: Harvard Univ
ersity Press,
1955); Walter T. K. Nugent, The Tolerant Populists: Kansas Populism and Nativism
(Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1963).
62. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 761.
63. Ibid.
64. Alexander B. Callow Jr., The Tweed Ring (New York: Oxford, 1966), 145.
65. Mabel Dodge Luhan, Edge of Taos Desert (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1937), 21
6–19.
66. Christopher Lasch, The New Radicalism in America, 1889–1963 (New York: Knopf,
1966), 9.
67. Lasch, New Radicalism, 17; Jane Addams, Twenty Years at Hull-house, With Aut
obiographical
Notes (New York: Macmillan Co., 1910).
68. Lasch, New Radicalism, 260.
69. Phillip Shaw Paludan, “Religion and the American Civil War,” in Randall M. Mille
r, Harry S.
Stout, and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds., Religion and the American Civil War (New
York: Oxford,
1998), 24–40, quotations on 35.
70. The “Forgotten Man” is available at http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Essays/Bes
t/Sumner
Forgotten.htm.
71. http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Essays/Best/SumnerForgotten.htm.
72. Richard Hofstadter, Social Darwinism in American Thought, 1860–1915 (Philadelp
hia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1944).
73. See Staughton Lynd, “Jane Addams and the Radical Impulse,” Commentary, 32, July
1961, 54–
59.
74. John P. Burke, The Institutional Presidency (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univer
sity Press, 1992).
75. Alyn Brodsky, Grover Cleveland: A Study in Character (New York: Truman Talle
y Books,
2000), 92.
76. Robert W. Cherny, American Politics in the Gilded Age, 1868–1900 (Wheeling, Il
linois:
Harlan-Davidson, 1997), 1.
77. Mary R. Dearing, Veterans in Politics: The Story of G.A.R. (Westport, CT: Gr
eenwood Press,
1974).
78. Brodsky, Grover Cleveland, 181–82.
79. Ibid., 182.
80. Paul Kleppner, The Cross of Culture: A Social Analysis of Midwestern Politic
s, 1850–1900
(New York: Free Press, 1970).
81. Homer E. Socolofsky and Allan B. Spetter, The Presidency of Benjamin Harriso
n (Lawrence,
KS: University Press of Kansas, 1987), 33.
82. In the past twenty years, a number of studies have appeared that question bo
th the efficiency
and the legal basis for antitrust legislation. See James Langefeld and David Sch
effman, “Evolution
or Revolution: What Is the Future of Antitrust?” Antitrust Bulletin, 31, Summer 19
86, 287–99;
Robert H. Bork, The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself (New York: Ba
sic Books,
1978); Harold Demsetz, “Barriers to Entry,” American Economic Review, 72, March 1982
, 47–57;
Yale Brozen, “Concentration and Profits: Does Concentration Matter?” Antitrust Bulle
tin, 19,
1974, 381–99; Franklin M. Fisher and John L. McGowan, “On the Misuse of Accounting R
ates of
Return to Infer Monopoly Profits,” American Economic Review, 73, March 1983, 82–97;
Dominick T. Armentano, Antitrust and Monopoly (New York: Holmes & Meier, 1982).
83. Stuart Bruchey, The Wealth of the Nation: An Economic History of the United
States (New
York: Harper & Row, 1988), 124.
84. Chandler, Visible Hand, 110–18.
85. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 195–97.
86. Naomi Lamoreaux, The Great Merger Movement in American Business, 1895–1904
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985); Louis Galambos and Joseph C. Prat
t, The Rise of
the Corporate Commonwealth: U.S. Business and Public Policy in the Twentieth Cen
tury (New
York: Basic Books, 1988).
87. Brodsky, Grover Cleveland, 356.
88. Ibid., 363.
89. Ibid., 387.
90. Ibid., 422.
Chapter 13. “Building Best, Building Greatly,” 1896–1912
1. “The Average American,” Current Literature, 31, 1901, 421; George E. Mowry, The E
ra of
Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of Modern America, 1900–1912 (New York: Harper To
rchbooks,
1958), 2–3.
2. Scott Derks, The Value of a Dollar: Prices and Incomes in the United States,
1860–1999
(Lakeville, CT: Grey House Publishing, 1999), 74.
3. Ibid., 73.
4. Derks, Working Americans, 57.
5. Ibid., 62.
6. Leon Trotsky, My Life: An Attempt at an Autobiography (New York: Charles Scri
bner’s, 1930),
274.
7. Seymour Martin Lipset and Gary Marks, It Didn’t Happen Here: Why Socialism Fail
ed in the
United States (New York: W. W. Norton, 2000), 16–17.
8. Ibid., 82.
9. Mowry, Era of Theodore Roosevelt, 5.
10. Louis Menand, The Metaphysical Club (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 20
01), 353.
11. Linda Simon, Genuine Reality: A Life of William James (New York: Harcourt, 1
998), xvi–xvii.
12. Ibid., xvii.
13. Ibid., 191.
14. Ibid., 232.
15. Ibid., 234.
16. A good summary of James’s views is found at “William James and Pragmatism,” http:/
/expert.
cc.purdue.edu/-miller91/
17. See Philip Jenkins, Mystics and Messiahs: Cults and New Religions in America
n History (New
York: Oxford, 2000), 46–69.
18. Thomas Kinkade, The Spirit of America (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1998), 32.
19. Rhonda Thomas Tripp, compilers, The International Thesaurus of Quotations (N
ew York:
Thomas Y. Crowll, 1970), 1041.
20. Kinkade, Spirit of America, 109.
21. John. F. Kennedy, from Tripp, Thesaurus, 20.
22. H. Wayne Morgan, William McKinley and His America (Syracuse: Syracuse Univer
sity Press,
1963), 23.
23. Quoted in Morgan, William McKinley, 185.
24. Ibid., 269.
25. Lewis L. Gould, The Presidency of William McKinley (Lawrence, KS: Regents Pr
ess of
Kansas, 1980).
26. Ibid., 49.
27. Morgan, William McKinley, 295.
28. Denis Brian, Pulitzer: A Life (New York: John Wiley, 2001).
29. Morgan, William McKinley, 330.
30. Ibid., 356.
31. Ibid.
32. Frank Friedel, The Splendid Little War (New York: Bramhall House, 1959).
33. Leckie, Wars of America, 351.
34. Friedel, Splendid Little War, 22.
35. Leckie, Wars of America, 349.
36. Ibid., 556.
37. Pershing quoted on the San Juan Hill website, http://www.homeofheroes.com/wa
llofhonor/
spanish_am/11_crowdedhour. html.
38. Leckie, Wars of America, 561.
39. Leon Wolff, Little Brown Brother (London: Longmans, 1961), 231.
40. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1053.
41. Ibid., 2:1052.
42. Morris, Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, 719.
43. Morgan, William McKinley, 508.
44. Ibid., 521.
45. Brian Thornton, “When a Newspaper Was Accused of Killing a President,” Journalis
m History,
26, Autumn 2000, 108–16, quotation on 108.
46. Edmund Morris, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt (New York: Ballantine, 1979),
21.
47. Ibid., 22.
48. Ibid., 20.
49. Ibid., 314.
50. Ibid., 227.
51. Patrick F. Palermo, Lincoln Steffens (New York: Twayne, 1978), 15.
52. Johnson, History of the American People, 617; Theodore Rooseevelt, Works (Ne
w York:
Charles Scribner’s, 1923–1926); H. C. Lodge and Theodore Roosevelt, eds., Selections
from the
Correspondence of Theodore Roosevelt, 2 vols. (New York: Da Capo Press, 1925).
53. Theodore Roosevelt, “Citizenship in a Republic,” Speech at the Sorbonne, Paris,
April 23,
1910, quoted online at http://www.theodoreroosevelt.org/life/quotes. htm.
54. Mowry, Era of Theodore Roosevelt, 113.
55. Ibid.
56. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 257.
57. George Bittlingmayer, “Antitrust and Business Activity: The First Quarter Cent
ury,” Business
History Review, Autumn 1996, available online at http://www. business. ku. edu/h
ome/
gbittlingmayer/research/Antitrustbusiness. pdf.
58. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1086.
59. Ibid., 830.
60. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1086.
61. Boyer, et al., Enduring Vision, 639.
62. Mowry, Era of Theodore Roosevelt, 132.
63. Ibid., 167.
64. Ibid., 205.
65. Roderick Nash, The Wilderness in the American Mind (New Haven: Yale Universi
ty Press,
1967).
66. Shepard Kretch III, The Ecological Indian: Myth and History (New York: Norto
n, 1999), 21.
67. Andrew C. Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, 189; Edmund Contoski, Makers a
nd Takers:
How Wealth and Progress are Made and How They Are Taken Away or Prevented (Minne
apolis:
American Liberty Publishers, 1997).
68. John Shelton Lawrence and Robert Jewett, The Myth of the American Superhero
(Grand
Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2002), 58.
69. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1065; Boyer, et al., Enduring Vision, 614.
70. The Outlook, editorial, 74, 1903, 961.
71. New York Times, March 25, 1911.
72. Quoted online at http://www.smplanet.com/imperialism/joining. html
73. Quoted at http://www. rose_hulman. edu/~delacova/canal/canal_history. htm.
74. Mowry, Era of Theodore Roosevelt, 159.
75. Judy Mohraz, The Separate Problem: Case Studies of Black Education in the No
rth, 1900–1930
(Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1979).
76. Quoted online at http://www.bowdoin.edu/~sbodurt2/court/cases/plessy. html
77. Robert L. Zangrando, The NAACP Crusade Against Lynching, 1909–1950 (Philadelph
ia:
Temple University Press, 1980); Stewart E. Tolnay and E. M. Beck, Festival of Vi
olence: An
Analysis of Southern Lynchings, 1882–1930 (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Pres
s, 1995).
78. Gilbert Osofsky, Harlem: The Making of a Ghetto (New York: Harper Torchbooks
, 1966), 4.
79. Ibid., 14.
80. Johnson, History of the American People, 665.
81. Alexander B. Callow Jr., American Urban History: An Interpretive Reader with
Commentaries
(New York: Oxford, 1969); James W. Johnson, Black Manhattan (New York: Alfred A.
Knopf,
1930); Roi Ottley and William J. Weatherby, eds., The Negro in New York: An Info
rmal Social
History, 1626–1940 (New York: Praeger, 1969).
82. Gilbert Osofsky, “Harlem Tragedy: An Emerging Slum,” in Callow, American Urban H
istory,
240–62.
83. Kathy Russell, Midge Wilson, Ronald Hall, Color Complex: The Politics of Ski
n Color Among
African Americans (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1992).
84. Mowry, Era of Theodore Roosevelt, 220.
85. Ibid., 227.
86. Ibid., 239.
87. Ibid., 244–45.
88. Ibid., 230.
89. Ibid., 259.
90. Michael L. Bromley, William Howard Taft and the First Motoring Presidency, 1
909–1913
(Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2003).
Chapter 14. War, Wilson, and Internationalism, 1912–20
1. Gilbert, History of the Twentieth Century, 185; Norman Angell, The Great Illu
sion: A Study of
the Relation of Military Power in Nations to Their Economic and Social Advantage
, 3rd ed. (New
York: G. P. Putnam, 1911).
2. Ibid., 279.
3. Ibid., 51.
4. Ivan S. Bloch, The Future of War in Its Technical, Economic, and Political Re
lations: Is War
Now Impossible? (New York: Doubleday & McClure, 1899).
5. Larry Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in the
United States
(Fort Worth: Harcourt, 2000), 304–8; Folsom, The Empire Builders: How Michigan Ent
repreneurs
Helped Make America Great, passim; Henry Ford, in Jonathan R. T. Hughes, The Vit
al Few: The
Entrepreneurs and American Economic Progress, exp. ed. (New York: Oxford Univers
ity Press,
1986), 274–356; Allan Nevins and F. E. Hill, Ford: The Times, the Man, the Company
(New York:
Scribner’s, 1954); Allan Nevins, Ford: Expansion and Challenge, 1915–1933 (New York:
Scribner’s, 1957) and his Ford: Decline and Rebirth, 1933–1962 (New York: Scribner’s,
1963);
Keith Sward, The Legend of Henry Ford (New York: Rinehart, 1948).
6. Folsom, Empire Builders, 142 and 171.
7. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 306.
8. Hughes, Vital Few, 292.
9. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 306.
10. Hughes, Vital Few, 306–23; Harold Livesay, American Made: Men Who Shaped the A
merican
Economy (Boston: Little, Brown, 1979), 159–72; David E. Kyvig and Myron A. Marty,
Nearby
History: Exploring the Past Around You (Nashville: American Association for Stat
e and Local
History, 1982), 1–2; W. A. Simonds, Henry Ford (Los Angeles: F. Clymer, 1946).
11. Tom D. Crouch, The Bishop’s Boys: A Life of Wilbur and Orville Wright (New Yor
k: W. W.
Norton, 1989), 268.
12. Ibid., 368.
13. Robert R. Owens, Speak to the Rock: The Azusa Street Revival: Its Roots and
Its Message
(Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1998), 53.
14. Rauedenbusch, Christianity and the Social Crisis (New York: Macmillan, 1907)
and his
Christianity and the Social Order (New York: Macmillan, 1915).
15. Goldfield, et al., American Journey, 673.
16. George Kibbe Turner, “The City of Chicago: A Study in Great Immoralities,” McClu
re’s
Magazine, 30, April 1907, 575–92; Vice Commission of Chicago, The Social Evil in C
hicago
(Chicago: Vice Commission of Chicago, 1912).
17. Jane Addams, A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil (New York: Macmillan, 1912
) and her
Twenty Years at Hull-House: With Autobiographical Notes (New York: Macmillan, 19
10) and
Peace and Bread in Time of War (New York: Macmillan, 1922); John C. Farell, Belo
ved Lady: A
History of Jane Addams’ Ideas on Reform and Peace (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univer
sity Press,
1967); James W. Linn, Jane Addams: A Biography (New York: Appleton-Century, 1935
).
18. Alan Brinkley, American History: A Survey Since 1865, 2 vols. (New York: McG
raw-Hill,
1999), 2:723.
19. Edmund Morris, Theodore Rex (New York: Random House, 2001).
20. John Morton Blum, Woodrow Wilson and the Politics of Morality (Boston: Littl
e, Brown,
1956); Arthur S. Link, Woodrow Wilson: A Brief Biography (Cleveland: World Publi
shing, 1963);
Edwin A. Weinstein, Woodrow Wilson: A Medical and Psychological Biography (Princ
eton:
Princeton University Press, 1981).
21. George Grant, Killer Angel (Nashville: Cumberland House, 2001), 38.
22. Woodrow Wilson, The State (Boston: D. C. Heath, 1889), 638–40, 651–52, 656–61.
23. Johnson, History of the American People, 640.
24. Fred Greenbaum, “William Gibbs McAdoo: Business Promoter as Politician” in Men A
gainst
Myths: The Progressive Response (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2000), 131–52; John J. Bro
esamle,
William Gibbs McAdoo: A Passion for Change, 1863–1917 (Port Washington, NY: Kennik
at
Press, 1973).
25. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 279–82 and his Introduction in Larry Sc
hweikart, ed.,
Encyclopedia of American Business History and Biography: Banking and Finance in
1913, xi–
xxxi; Lynne Doti and Larry Schweikart, Banking in the American West from Gold Ru
sh to
Deregula- tion; Larry Schweikart, “U.S. Commercial Banking: A Historiographical Su
rvey,”
Business History Review, Autumn 1991, 606–61.
26. Charles W. Calomiris and Carolos D. Ramirez, “The Role of Financial Relationsh
ips in the
History of American Corporate Finance,” Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 9, S
ummer 1996,
32–72.
27. Eugene N. White, Regulation and Reform of the American Banking System, 1900–19
29
(Princeton: Princeton University Press 1983); James Livingston, Origins of the F
ederal Reserve
System (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1986); Richard H. Timberlake, The
Origins of
Central Banking in the United States (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978)
.
28. W. Elliot Brownlee, Federal Taxation in America: A Short History (Cambridge:
Cambridge
University Press and the Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1996), and W. Elliot Brown
lee, ed.,
Funding the Modern American State, 1941–1945: The Rise and Fall of the Era of Easy
Finance
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press and the Woodrow Wilson Center, 1996).
29. Stanley Lebergott, The Americans: An Economic Record (New York: W. W. Norton
, 1984),
407.
30. Gerald Eggert, “Richard Olney and the Income Tax,” Mississippi Valley Historical
Review,
June 1961, 24–25.
31. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 277.
32. Robert Stanley, Dimensions of Law in the Service of Order: Origins of the Fe
deral Income Tax,
1861–1913 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).
33. Robert Higgs, Crisis and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of Ameri
can Government
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1987).
34. George Bittlingmayer, “Antitrust and Business Activity: The First Quarter Cent
ury,” Business
History Review, 70, Autumn 1996, 363–401.
35. James Langefeld and David Scheffman, “Evolution or Revolution: What Is the Fut
ure of
Antitrust?” Antitrust Bulletin, 31, Summer 1986, 287–99; Harold Demsetz, “Barriers to
Entry,”
American Economic Review, 72, March 1982, 47–57; Yale Brozen, “Concentration and Pro
fits:
Does Concentration Matter?” Antitrust Bulletin, 19, 1974, 351–99; George Bittlingmay
er and
Thomas Hazlett, “DOS Kapital: Has Antitrust Action against Microsoft Created Value
in the
Computer Industry?” Journal of Financial Economics, March 2000, 329–59.
36. Brinkley, American History, 769.
37. McClellan, Historical Moments, 2:201–2.
38. Gilbert, History of the Twentieth Century, I:419.
39. Ibid., I:422.
40. Faragher, Out of Many, 652.
41. Murrin, Liberty, Equality, Power, 788.
42. Leckie, Wars of America, 631.
43. Thomas Kincade, The Spirit of America (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1998), 107.
44. Max Boas and Steve Chain, Big Mac: The Unauthorized Story of McDonald’s (New Y
ork:
New American Library, 1976), 3.
45. Leckie, Wars of America, 633.
46. Gilbert, History of the Twentieth Century, I:500.
47. Ibid., I:498.
48. Ibid., I:503.
49. Ibid., I:507.
50. Murrin, Liberty, Equality, Power, 794.
51. Gilbert, History of the Twentieth Century, I:531.
52. Paul Hollander, Political Will and Personal Belief: The Decline and Fall of
Soviet Communism
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), 29.
53. T. Arthur Herman, Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of Americ
a’s Most
Hated Senator (New York: Free Press, 2000), 69.
54. Ibid., 64.
55. Brinkley, American History, 792.
56. Johnson, History of the American People, 648.
57. Dick Morris, Power Plays: Win or Lose—How History’s Great Political Leaders Play
the Game
(New York: ReganBooks, 2002), 68.
58. Davidson, et al., Nation of Nations, 760.
59. Frederick Allen, Secret Formula (New York: Harper Business, 1994), 28–66.
60. Jack High and Clayton A. Coppin, “Wiley and the Whiskey Industry: Strategic Be
havior in the
Passage of the Pure Food Act,” Business History Review, 62, Summer 1988, 286–309.
61. James H. Timberlake, Prohibition and the Progressive Movement, 1900–1920 (Camb
ridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1963); Norman H. Clark, The Dry Years: Prohibition
and Social
Change in Washington (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1965); John C. Bu
rnham, “New
Perspectives on the Prohibition Experiment of the 1920s,” Journal of Social Histor
y, 2, 1968, 51–
68, quotation on 51.
62. Johnson, History of the American People, 679.
63. Prince A. Morrow, “Report of the Committee of Seven on the Prophylaxis of Vene
real Disease
in New York City,” Medical News, 79, December 21, 1901, 961–70, quotation on 967.
64. J. C. Burnham, “The Progressive Era Revolution in American Attitudes Toward Se
x,” Journal
of American History, 59, March 1973, 885–908.
65. Allan M. Brandt, No Magic Bullet: A Social History of Venereal Disease in th
e United States
Since 1880, exp. ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), 38–39.
66. Jonathan Zimmerman, Distilling Democracy: Alcohol Education in America’s Publi
c Schools,
1880–1925 (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1999).
67. Gillon and Matson, American Experiment, 822.
68. Davidson, et al., Nation of Nations, II:795; Gillon and Matson, American Exp
eriment, 820;
Brinkley, American History, II:827.
69. Norman H. Clark, Deliver Us from Evil: An Interpretation of Prohibition (New
York: Norton,
1976), 10, 83.
70. Mencken quoted in Johnson, History of the American People, 681.
71. Clark, Deliver Us from Evil, 9.
72. Johnson, History of the American People, 680.
73. Harry Elmer Barnes, Society in Transition: Problems of a Changing Age (New Y
ork: Prentice-
Hall, 1939), 455.
74. Daniel J. Kelves, In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Use of Human Her
edity (New
York: Knopf, 1985).
75. H. C. Sharp, “The Indiana Plan,” in Proceedings of the National Prison Associati
on (Pittsburgh:
National Prison Association, 1909).
76. Clark, Deliver Us from Evil, 65; David Pivar, Purity Crusade: Sexual Moralit
y and Social
Control, 1868–1900 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1973).
77. Berkin, et al., Making America, 606.
78. John R. Lott and Larry Kenny, “How Dramatically Did Women’s Suffrage Change the
Size and
Scope of Government?” University of Chicago, John M. Olin Law and Economics Workin
g Paper
No. 60, 2nd series; John E. Filer, Lawrence W. Kenny, and Rebecca B. Morton, “Redi
stribution,
Income, and Voting,” American Journal of Political Science, 37, February 1993, 63–87
; Charles
Colson and Nancy Pearcy, “Why Women Like Big Government,” Christianity Today, Novemb
er
11, 1996; Joel H. Goldstein, The Effects of the Adoption of Woman Suffrage: Sex
Differences in
Voting Behavior—Illinois, 1914–1921 (New York: Praeger Special Studies, 1984); Jody
Newman,
“The Gender Gap: Do Women Vote for Women?” The Public Perspective, 7, February/March
1996.
79. Grant, Killer Angel, 38.
80. Ibid.
81. Albert Gringer, The Sanger Corpus: A Study in Militancy (Lakeland, AL: Lakel
and Christian
College, 1974), 473–88; Grant, Killer Angel, 63.
82. Margaret Sanger, The Pivot of Civilization (New York: Brentanos, 1922).
83. Ibid., 108.
84. Ibid., 123.
85. Stephen Mosher, “The Repackaging of Margaret Sanger,” Wall Street Journal, May 5
, 1997.
86. Ibid.
Chapter 15. The Roaring Twenties and the Great Crash, 1920–32
1. David Burner, et al., An American Portrait (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1985)
; John Kenneth
Galbraith, The Great Crash of 1929, 3rd ed., (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1972 [19
55]); David
Goldfield, et al., The American Journey, combined ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: P
rentice Hall,
1998); John Mack Faragher, et al., Out of Many: A History of the American People
, combined ed.,
3rd ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1999). Typical statements are as
follows: “Business
had done all too well. Corporations had boosted their profits…by keeping the cost
of labor low….
People made up the difference between earnings and purchases by borrowing….1 perce
nt of the
population owned 36 percent of all personal wealth…. The wealthy saved too much…huge
corporations ruled the economy…flooding the stock market with call money; manipula
ting stocks
and bonds; and failing to distribute enough in wages to sustain consumer purchas
ing power.”
(James West Davidson, et al., Nation of Nations: A Narrative History of the Amer
ican Republic,
vol. 2: since 1865, 3rd edition [Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998], 873–74); “In the twenti
es, the uneven
distribution of income should have suggested that the nation was risking economi
c disaster. The
slowly rising real wages of industrial workers were outdistanced by the salaries
, savings, and
profits of those higher on the economic ladder…. Forty percent of all families had
incomes under
$1,500…. Those who were getting rich, meanwhile, found their savings piled up out
of all
proportion to need [and] they turned to speculation in real estate and securitie
s, both blown up into
a bubble sure to burst…. Tax policies favored the rich, making even more unequal t
he distribution
of income.” (Winthrop Jordan and Leon F. Litwack, The United States, combined ed.,
7th ed.
[Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1991], 664–65); “The most important weakness i
n the
economy was the extremely unequal distribution of income and wealth…. the top 0.1
percent of
American fami lies…had an agregate income equal to that of the bottom 42 percent…. (
Faragher,
Out of Many, 719); “In 1929, nearly a third of the country’s income was going to a t
wentieth of the
population…. [overproduction of consumer goods] not only preceded the stock market
crash: [17]
helped cause it…. Speculation in stock prices had begun on the solid basis of prof
its…. But in time
it turned to sheer gambling….” (David Burner, Elizabeth Genove Eugene D. Genovese, F
orrest
McDonald, An American Portrait: A History of the United States combined ed., 2nd
ed. [New
York: Charles Scribner’s, 1985], 614–15). John D. Hicks, in his textbook of the age,
Republican
Ascendancy, 1921–1933 (New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1960), contended that “money had
flowed in from all over the world to support the wild American speculation,” and n
oted the
observation, later used by Paul Johnson, that “many stocks that had never paid a d
ividend brought
fantastic figures, and soared ever upward,” History of the American People [New Yo
rk:
HarperCollins, 1997], 277).
2. Robert Sobel, The Great Bull Market: Wall Street in the 1920s (New York: W. W
. Norton,
1968). For the debate over stock valuations, see Eugene N. White, “The Stock Marke
t Boom and
the Crash of 1929 Revisited,” Journal of Economic History, 4 (Spring 1990), 67–83; a
nd his “When
the Ticker Ran Late: The Stock Market Boom and the Crash of 1929,” in Eugene N. Wh
ite, ed.,
Crashes and Panics (Homewood, IL: Dow Jones/Irwin, 1990); Gary Santoni and Geral
d Dwyer,
“Bubbles vs. Fundamentals: New Evidence from the Great Bull Markets,” in ibid., 188–21
0; J.
Bradford De Long and Andre Shleifer, “The Stock Market Bubble of 1929: Evidence fr
om Closedend
Mutual Funds,” Journal of Economic History, 51 (September 1991), 675–700; Peter Rapp
aport
and Eugene N. White, “Was the Crash of 1929 Expected?” American Economic Review, 84
(March 1994), 271–81; Gene Smiley and Richard H. Keehn, “Margin Purchases, Brokers’ Lo
ans,
and the Bull Market of the Twenties,” Business and Economic History, 17 (1988), 12
9–42.
3. Edwin J. Perkins, “Charles E. Merrill,” in Larry Schweikart, ed., Encyclopedia of
American
Business and Economic History: Banking and Finance, 1913–1989 (New York: Facts on
File,
1990), 283–90.
4. John A. Morello, Selling the President, 1920: Albert D. Lasker, Advertising,
and the Election of
Warren G. Harding (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2001).
5. Burt Noggle, “The Origins of the Teapot Dome Investigation,” Mississippi Valley H
istorical
Review, 44 (June 1957–March 1958), 237–66.
6. Robert James Maddox, “Keeping Cool with Coolidge,” Journal of American History, 5
3 (June
1966–March 1967), 772–80, quotation on 779.
7. Burner, et al., An American Portrait, II:607; Gene Smith, The Shattered Dream
: Herbert Hoover
and the Great Depression (New York: William Morrow & Company, 1970), 47.
8. Donald R. McCoy, Calvin Coolidge: The Quiet President (New York: Macmillan, 1
967).
9. Randall G. Holcombe, “The Growth of the Federal Government in the 1920s,” Cato Jo
urnal, 16,
Fall 1996, http://www.cato.org/pubs/journal/cj16n2_2.html, table 1.
10. Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns, Baseball: An Illustrated History (New York:
Borzoi, 1994),
209–10.
11. Jordan and Litwack, The United States, 645.
12. David Robinson, From Peep Show to Palace: The Birth of American Film (New Yo
rk:
Columbia University Press, 1996); Jack C. Ellis, A History of Film, 2nd ed. (Eng
lewood Cliffs, NJ:
Prentice-Hall, 1985), chap. 8; Tino Valio, “Grand Design,” vol. 5, in Charles Harpol
e, ed., History
of the American Cinema (Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 19
95).
13. Robert W. Garnet, The Telephone Enterprise: The Evolution of the Bell System’s
Horizontal
Structure, 1876–1909 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985); John Brook
s, Telephone
(New York: Harper & Row, 1975).
14. Charles Merz, The Dry Decade (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1969)
; The
Prohibition Amendment: Hearings Before the Committee of the Judiciary, Seventy-f
ifth Congress,
Second Session (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1931); Herbert Asb
ury, The Great
Illusion: An Informal History of Prohibition (New York: Greenwood Press, 1950);
Mark Moore
and Dean Gerstein, eds., Alcohol and Public Policy: Beyond the Shadow of Prohibi
tion
(Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1981); W. J. Rorabaugh, The Alcoholic
Republic: An
American Tradition (New York: Oxford, 1979).
15. John C. Burnham, “New Perspectives on the Prohibition ‘Experiment’ of the 1920s,” Jo
urnal of
Social History 2, 1968, 51–68, quotation on 66.
16. Ibid.; John C. Burnham, “The New Psychology: From Narcissism to Social Control
,” in John
Braeman, Robert Bremmer, and David Brody, eds., Change and Continuity in Twentie
th-Century
America (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1968), 351–97, quotation on 375.
17. Norman H. Clark, Deliver Us from Evil: An Interpretation of Prohibition (New
York: W. W.
Norton, 1976), 146.
18. Burnham, “New Perspectives on the Prohibition ‘Experiment,’ passim; “The Progressive
Era
Revolution in American Attitudes Toward Sex,” Journal of American History, 8, 1973
, 885–908;
and “The New Psychology: From Narcissism to Social Control,” in John Braeman, Robert
H.
Bremer, and David Brody, eds., Change and Continuity in Twentieth-Century Americ
a: The 1920’s
(Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Press, 1965).
19. Clark, Deliver Us from Evil, 146–47. Also see Martha Bensley Bruere, Does Proh
ibition Work?
A Study of the Operation of the Eighteenth Amendment Made by the National Federa
tion of
Settlements, Assisted by Social Workers in Different Parts of the United States
(New York: Harper
and Brothers, 1927).
20. Holcombe, “Growth of the Federal Government in the 1920s,” table 4.
21. Mark Mazower, Dark Continent: Europe’s Twentieth Century (New York: Alfred A.
Knopf,
1999), 109.
22. Ibid.
23. Robert Sklar, ed., The Plastic Age, 1917–1930 (New York: George Braziller, 197
0), 93.
24. Thomas B. Silver, Coolidge and the Historians (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic
Press, 1982),
20; Howard H. Quint and Robert H. Ferrell, eds., The Talkative President: The Of
f-the-Record
Press Conferences of Calvin Coolidge (Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts P
ress, 1964).
25. Silver, Coolidge, 26.
26. Stephen A. Schuker, “Charles G. Dawes,” in Schweikart, Encyclopedia of American
Business
History and Biography: Banking and Finance, 1913–1989, 68–77, quotation on 72.
27. Ibid., 74.
28. Stephen A. Schuker, The End of French Predominance in Europe: The Financial
Crisis of 1924
and the Adoption of the Dawes Plan (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolin
a Press, 1986).
29. Davidson, Nation of Nations, 863.
30. McCoy, Calvin Coolidge, 367.
31. Johnson, History of the American People, 721.
32. McCoy, Calvin Coolidge, 384.
33. Joan Hoff Wilson, Herbert Hoover: Forgotten Progressive (Boston: Little, Bro
wn, 1975).
34. David Burner, Herbert Hoover (New York: Afred A. Knopf, 1979), 234, 237.
35. Letter from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Hugh Gibson, in the Hoover Papers, Hoov
er Library,
Stanford University, quoted in Martin L. Fausold, The Presidency of Herbert C. H
oover (Lawrence,
KS: University of Kansas Press, 1985), 13.
36. William Allen White, A Puritan in Babylon, the Story of Calvin Coolidge (New
York:
Macmillan, 1938), 400.
37. Ibid. recorded the reaction in the White House to Hoover’s nomination as “dismay…s
adness,
disappointment, regrets” (402).
38. Burner, Herbert Hoover, 180.
39. Fausold, Presidency of Herbert C. Hoover, 18.
40. Herbert Hoover, American Individualism (West Branch, Iowa: Herbert Hoover Pr
esidential
Library Association, 1971 [1922]).
41. Fausold, Presidency of Herbert C. Hoover, 24; Johnson, History of the Americ
an People, 737–
39.
42. James Bovard, The Farm Fiasco (San Francisco, California: Institute for Cont
emporary Studies
Press, 1989), 16.
43. Joseph S. David, On Agricultural Policy (Palo Alto, California: Stanford Uni
versity, 1938),
435.
44. Johnson, A History of the American People, 733.
45. Larry Schweikart, “U.S. Commercial Banking: A Historiographical Survey,” Busines
s History
Review, 65, Autumn 1991, 606–61; Gene Smiley, The American Economy in the Twentiet
h
Century (Cincinnati, Ohio: South-Western Publishing Co., 1994), chap. 6; Peter T
emin, Did
Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression? (New York: W. W. Norton, 1976) and h
is Lessons
from the Great Depression (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989); Richa
rd H. Keehn
and Gene Smiley, “U.S. Bank Failures, 1932–1933: A Provisional Analysis,” Essays in Ec
onomic
History: Selected Papers from the Business and Economic Historical Society Meeti
ngs, 1987, 6
(1988), 136–56.
46. Jude Wanniski, The Way the World Works: How Economics Fail—and Succeed (New Yo
rk:
Basic Books, 1978).
47. Robert B. Archibald and David H. Feldman, “Investment During the Great Depress
ion:
Uncertainty and the Role of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff,” Southern Economic Journal, 6
4 (1998):4,
857–79.
48. Douglas A. Irwin, “The Smoot-Hawley Tariff: A Quantitative Assessment,” Review o
f
Economics and Statistics, 80 (May 1998), 326–34; “Changes in U.S. Tariffs: The Role
of Import
Prices and Commercial Policies,” American Economic Review, 88 (September 1998), 10
15–26;
and “From Smoot-Hawley to Reciprocal Trade Agreements: Changing the Course of U.S.
Trade
Policy in the 1930s,” in Michael D. Bordo, Claudia Goldin, and Eugene N. White, Th
e Defining
Moment: The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century (
Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1998), 325–52. See also Barry Eichengreen, “The Politic
al Economy
of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff,” in Roger L. Ransom, ed., Research in Economic History
, vol. 12
(Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1989), 1–43.
49. Mario J. Crucini and James Kahn, “Tariffs and Aggregate Economic Activity: Les
sons from the
Great Depression,” Journal of Monetary Economics, 38 (1996), 427–67, quotation on 45
8; Mario J.
Crucini, “Sources of Variation in Real Tariff Rates: The United States, 1900–1940,” Am
erican
Economic Review, 84 (June 1994), 732–43.
50. Milton Friedman and Anna Jacobson Schwartz, Monetary History of the United S
tates, 1867–
1960 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1963), versus Paul Kubic, “Federa
l Reserve
Policy During the Great Depression: the Impact of Interwar Attitudes Regarding C
onsumption and
Consumer Credit,” Journal of Economic Issues, 30 (September 1996), 829–42.
51. William D. Lastrapes and George Selgin, “The Check Tax: Fiscal Folly and the G
reat Monetary
Contraction,” Journal of Economic History, 57, December 1997, 859–78.
52. Fausold, Presidency of Herbert Hoover, 160–61.
53. W. Elliot Brownlee, Dynamics of Ascent: A History of the American Economy, 2
nd ed. (New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1979), 409.
54. Ted Morgan, FDR: A Biography (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985), 39. See a
lso John T.
Flynn, The Roosevelt Myth (New York: Devin-Adair Company, 1956).
55. Marvin Olasky, The American Leadership Tradition: Moral Vision from Washingt
on to Clinton
(New York: Free Press, 1999), 210.
56. Ibid., 215.
57. Dick Morris, Power Plays: Win or Lose—How History’s Great Political Leaders Play
the Game
(New York: ReganBooks, 2002), 260.
58. Ibid.
59. Olasky, American Leadership Tradition, 222.
60. Roosevelt’s speech in Sioux City, Iowa, September 1932, quoted in William E. L
eucthtenburg,
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal (New York: Harper and Row, 1963), 11.
61. Johnson, History of the American People, 741.
Chapter 16. Enlarging the Public Sector, 1932–40
1. The “two New Deals” theory includes Faragher, et al., Out of Many, 451–52; Johnson,
History
of the American People, 760.
2. Rexford Tugwell, “The Superpolitical,” Journal of Social Philosophy, October 1939–J
uly 1940,
107, quoted in Bernard Sternsher, Rexford Tugwell and the New Deal (New Brunswic
k, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1964), 13.
3. Johnson, History of the American People, 756.
4. Henry Morgenthau Jr., “The Morgenthau Diaries, II, The Struggle for a Program,” C
olliers,
October 4, 1947, 20–21, 45–47, quotation on 21.
5. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., The Politics of Upheaval (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
, 1960), 379.
6. Raymond Moley’s “Journal, 1936–1940,” 3, in Box 1, Raymond Moley Collection, Hoover
Institution Archives, Stanford, California.
7. Ibid., 5.
8. Ibid., 7.
9. Leuchtenberg, Franklin D. Roosevelt, 33.
10. Rexford Tugwell, The Democratic Roosevelt (Garden City, New York: Doubleday,
1957),
220–21.
11. James R. McGovern, And a Time for Hope: Americans in the Great Depression (W
estport, CT:
Praeger, 2000), xi.
12. Raymond Moley, After Seven Years (New York: Harper, 1939), 155.
13. Davidson et al., Nation of Nations, 929; Faragher et al., Out of Many, 451–52;
Burner et al.,
American Portrait, 629–30.
14. Samuel Rosenman, ed., The Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Rooseve
lt (New York:
Random House, 1938–50), 5:19–21.
15. Willson Whitman, Bread and Circuses: A Study of Federal Theater (New York: O
xford, 1937);
Grant Code, “Dance Theater of the WPA: A Record of National Accomplishment,” Dance
Observer, November 1939, 280–81, 290; “Footlights, Federal Style,” Harper’s, 123 (1936),
626;
Mabel Ulrich, “Salvaging Culture for the WPA,” Harper’s, 78 (1939); “Work of the Federal
Writers’ Project of the WPA,” Publishers Weekly, 135 (1939), 1130–35; Time, 31 (Januar
y 3,
1938), 55–56; Robert Binkley, “The Cultural Program of the W.P.A.,” Harvard Educationa
l
Review, 9 (March 1939), 156–74; Willard Hogan, “The WPA Research and Records Program
,”
Harvard Educational Review, 13 (1943), 52–62.
16. John T. Flynn, The Roosevelt Myth (New York: Devin-Adair Company, 1956), 46.
17. Harvey Klehr and Earl Haynes, The American Communist Movement: Storming Heav
en Itself
(New York: Twayne, 1992).
18. Goldfield, American Journey, 830.
19. Marc Weiss, Rise of the Community Builders: The American Real Estate Industr
y and Urban
Land Planning (New York: Columbia, 1987).
20. Michael J. Webber, New Deal Fat Cats: Business, Labor, and Campaign Finance
in the 1936
Presidential Election (New York: Fordham University Press, 2000), 15.
21. Leuchtenberg, Franklin D. Roosevelt, 152.
22. Eugene Gerhart, America’s Advocate: Robert H. Jackson (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Mer
rill, 1958),
125–27; Ickes, Diary, 2:282–83.
23. New York Times, October 24, 1935.
24. Leuchtenberg, Franklin D. Roosevelt, 273; Robert and Helen Lynd, Middletown
in Transition
(New York: Harcourt, 1937), 489.
25. J. E. Kaufmann and W. H. Kaufmann, The Sleeping Giant: American Armed Forces
Between
the Wars (Westport, CT: Praeger Press, 1996), 12.
26. Paul Johnson, Modern Times: A History of the World from the Twenties to the
Nineties, rev.
ed. (New York: HarperCollins, 1991), 97.
27. Arthur D. Morse, While Six Million Died: A Chronicle of American Apathy (New
York: Ace,
1968), 38.
28. Ibid.
29. Mark Mazower, Dark Continent: Europe’s Twentieth Century (New York: Knopf, 199
9), 27.
30. Harold Ickes, The Secret Diary of Harold Ickes, 3 vols. (New York: Simon & S
chuster, 1954),
2:274.
31. Julius W. Pratt, The American Secretaries of State and Their Diplomacy, vol.
XII, Cordell Hull,
1933–44, vol. I (New York: Cooper Square Publishers, 1964), 311.
32. Guenther Lewy, The Cause That Failed: Communism in American Political Life (
New York:
Oxford University Press, 1990), 179.
33. Joseph E. Davies, “What We Didn’t Know About Russia,” Reader’s Digest, 40 (March 194
2),
45–50, which was taken from his Mission to Moscow (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1
941) and
is quoted in Filene, American Views of Soviet Russia, 145.
34. Davies, “What We Didn’t Know,” 145.
35. Henry Morgenthau Jr., “The Morgenthau Diaries, IV: The Story of Lend Lease,” Col
liers,
October 18, 1947, 16–17, 71–74.
36. New York Times, April 29, 1939; Norman Baynes, The Speeches of Adolf Hitler,
2 vols.
(London: Oxford, 1942), 2:1605–56.
37. Johnson, Modern Times, 370–71.
38. James F. Dunnigan and Albert A. Nofi, Dirty Little Secrets of World War II:
Military
Information No One Told You About the Greatest, Most Terrible War in History (Ne
w York:
Quill/William Morrow, 1994), 46–47; John Ruggiero, Neville Chamberlain and British
Rearmament: Pride, Prejudice, and Politics (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1999)
.
39. FDR quoted in Morgenthau, “Morgenthau Diaries, IV,” 72.
40. Wayne S. Cole, Roosevelt and the Isolationists, 1932–45 (Lincoln, NB: Universi
ty of Nebraska
Press, 1983).
41. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1311.
42. Thomas E. Mahl, Desperate Deception: British Covert Operations in the United
States
(Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s, 1998), 44.
43. Ibid., 74.
44. Ibid., 77.
45. J. Garry Clifford, “Grenville Clark and the Origins of Selective Service,” Revie
w of Politics 35
(January 1973), 33.
46. Arthur Herman, Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America’s M
ost Hated
Senator (New York: Free Press, 2000), 73.
47. Vandenberg, quoted in Cole, Roosevelt and the Isolationists, 328.
48. Walter L. Hixson, Charles Lindbergh: Lone Eagle (New York: HarperCollins, 19
96), 105.
49. Mazower, Dark Continent, 141.
50. Leuchtenberg, Franklin D. Roosevelt, 312.
Chapter 17. Democracy’s Finest Hour, 1941–45
1. L. Mosely, Hirohito: Emperor of Japan (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1
966), 207;
Nagano, speaking to Prime Minister Konoe Fumimaro, on September 27, 1940, quoted
in Edwin T.
Layton, with Roger Pineau and John Costello, And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and M
idway—
Breaking the Secrets (New York: Morrow, 1985), 72.
2. Mosely, Hirohito, 208.
3. Courtney Browne, Tojo: The Last Banzai (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
1967), 116.
4. Ibid., 110.
5. H. P. Willmott, with Tohmatsu Haruo and W. Spencer Johnson, Pearl Harbor (Lon
don: Cassell
& Co., 2001), 47.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid., 40.
8. Robert B. Stinnett, Day of Deception: The Truth About FDR and Pearl Harbor (N
ew York: Free
Press, 2000), 19.
9. James F. Dunnigan and Albert Nofi, Dirty Little Secrets of World War II: Mili
tary Information
No One Told You About the Greatest, Most Terrible War in History (New York: Quil
l, 1994), 288.
10. John F. Bratzel and Leslie B. Rout Jr., “Pearl Harbor, Microdots, and J. Edgar
Hoover,”
American Historical Review, December 1982, 1346–47.
11. Gordon Prange, with Donald M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon, Pearl Harbo
r: The Verdict
of History (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1986), 308.
12. Gerhard Weinberg, Germany, Hitler, and World War II (Cambridge: Cambridge Un
iversity
Press, 1955).
13. Patrick J. Buchanan, A Republic, Not an Empire (Washington: Regnery, 1999).
14. Paul Johnson, Modern Times: A History of the World, from the Twenties to the
Nineties (New
York: HarperCollins, 1991), 410.
15. J. E. Kaufmann and W. H. Kaufmann, The Sleeping Giant: American Armed Forces
Between
the Wars (Westport, CT: Praeger Press, 1996), 174.
16. Hanson, Carnage and Culture, 366.
17. Frank Matthias, The GI Generation: A Memoir (Lexington: University of Kentuc
ky Press,
2000).
18. Dunnigan and Nofi, Dirty Little Secrets, 26.
19. Mark Harrison, ed., The Economics of World War II: Six Great Powers in Inter
national
Comparison (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), fig. 1.6, 15–16.
20. David M. Glanz and Jonathan M. House, The Battle of Kursk (Lawrence, KS: Uni
versity of
Kansas Press, 1999), 39.
21. Ibid., 37.
22. Ibid., 37–38.
23. Dunnigan and Nofi, Dirty Little Secrets, 162–63.
24. Roper Poll done for Fortune magazine, 1941, cited in The American Enterprise
, January/
February 2003, 60.
25. Gallup Polls done in 1945, 1943, cited in The American Enterprise, 62.
26. Davidson, et al., Nation of Nations, 956.
27. Burton Folsom, “What’s Wrong with the Progressive Income Tax?” Viewpoint on the Pu
blic
Issues, May 3, 1999.
28. Davidson, et al., Nation of Nations, 958.
29. Larry Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in th
e United States
(Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt, 2000), 545.
30. Wayne S. Cole, Roosevelt and the Isolationists, 1932–45 (Lincoln, NB: Universi
ty of Nebraska
Press, 1983), 14, 26, 99.
31. Johnson, Modern Times, 407–08.
32. Ronald W. Clark, Einstein: The Life and Times (New York: Avon, 1999), chap.
20, passim;
Albert Einstein, Out of My Later Years (Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press, 1956).
33. Clark, Einstein, 682–83.
34. Quoted in Johnson, Modern Times, 408.
35. See Michael Beschloss, The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction
of Hitler’s
Germany, 1941–1945 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2002).
36. Ironically, as Ladislas Farago discovered, the Germans actually had obtained
a Norden
bombsight earlier through spies, but then forgot about it. See The Game of the F
oxes: The Untold
Story of German Espionage in the United States and Great Britain During World Wa
r II (New
York: D. McKay, 1972 [1971]).
37. William Green, Famous Bombers of the Second World War (Garden City, NY: Hano
ver House,
1959), 24–36.
38. Mark Clodfelter, The Limits of Air Power: The American Bombing of North Viet
nam (New
York: Free Press, 1989), 9; Everest E. Riccioni, “Strategic Bombing: Always a Myth
,” U.S Naval
Institute Proceedings, November 1996, 49–53; Melden E. Smith Jr., “The Strategic Bom
bing
Debate: The Second World War and Vietnam,” Journal of Contemporary History, 12 (19
77), 175–
91.
39. Cornelius Ryan, The Longest Day (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1959).
40. Dunnigan and Nofi, Dirty Little Secrets, 284.
41. Roger Daniels, Concentration Camps, USA: Japanese Americans and World War II
(Malabar,
Florida: Kruger Publishing Co., 1981).
42. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 708.
43. Ibid.
44. Ted Lawson, Thirty Seconds over Tokyo, ed. Robert Considine (New York: Rando
m House,
1943).
45. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1347.
46. Leckie, Wars of America, 797.
47. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1349.
48. Ibid., 2:1350; Stephen E. Ambrose, D-Day, June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle
of World War II
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994).
49. Ambrose, D-Day, 190.
50. Ibid., 583.
51. Leckie, Wars of America, 804.
52. Stephen E. Ambrose, Band of Brothers (New York: Pocketbooks, 1992), 233.
53. Robert E. Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins: An Intimate History, 2 vols. (New
York:
Putnam’s, 1950), I:387–423; Johnson, History of the American People, 790.
54. Terry Anderson, The United States, Great Britain, and the Cold War, 1944–1947
(Columbia,
MO: University of Missouri Press, 1981), 4.
55. Andrew, Sword and the Shield, 133.
56. Victor Davis Hanson, The Soul of Battle: From Ancient Times to Present Day,
How Three
Great Liberators Vanquished Tyranny (New York: Free Press, 1999), 275.
57. Johnson, Modern Times, 414.
58. Ron Rosenbaum, Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil (Ne
w York:
Random House, 1998), 211.
59. Roger Manvell and Heinrich Fraenkel, Heinrich Himmler (New York: Putnam, 196
5), 118–19.
60. Arthur D. Morse, While Six Million Died: A Chronicle of Apathy (New York: Ac
e, 1968), 14.
61. Ibid., 25.
62. Johnson, Modern Times, 420.
63. David S. Wyman, The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust, 1941–1
945
(New York: Pantheon, 1984) and his Paper Walls: America and the Refugee Crisis,
1938–1941
(Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1968).
64. Morse, While Six Million Died, 48.
65. Wyman, Abandonment of the Jews, x.
66. Ibid., xi.
67. Alfred Steinberg, The Man from Missouri: The Life and Times of Harry S. Trum
an (New York:
Putnam, 1952), 301.
68. James Forrestal, The Forrestal Diaries, ed. Walter Millis with the collabora
tion of E. S. Duffield
(New York: Viking, 1951), 344, 346, 348.
69. Richard B. Frank, Downfall: The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire (New Yor
k: Penguin
Books, 1999), 131.
70. Frank, Downfall, 132.
71. Akira Iriye, Power and Culture: The Japanese-American War, 1941–1945 (Cambridg
e, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1981).
72. Robert Leckie, Strong Men Armed: The United States Marines Against Japan (Ne
w York:
Random House, 1962), 189.
73. Alan Axelrod, America’s Wars (New York: John Wiley, 2002), 411.
74. Leckie, Wars of America, 775.
75. Victor Davis Hanson, Ripples of Battle: How Wars of the Past Still Determine
How We Fight,
How We Live, and How We Think (New York: Doubleday, 2003), 19–60.
76. Sadao Asada, “The Shock of the Atomic Bomb and Japan’s Decision to Surrender—a
Reconsideration,” Pacific Historical Review, 67 (November 1998), 477–512.
77. Ibid., 511.
78. Frank, Downfall, 161.
79. Ibid., 261.
80. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 724.
81. John Toland, The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire (Ne
w York:
Bantam, 1970), 862fn.
82. Ambrose, Band of Brothers, 387.
83. Robert A. Pape, “Why Japan Surrendered,” International Security, Fall 1993, 154–20
1.
84. Barton J. Bernstein, “A Postwar Myth: 500,000 U.S. Lives Saved,” Bulletin of Ato
mic
Scientists, 42, June/July 1986, 38–40, referring to JWPC 369/1 “Details of the Campa
ign against
Japan,” June 15, 1945, ABC File 384, RG 319, National Archives.
85. Robert James Maddox, “The ‘Postwar Creation’ Myth,” Continuity, 24 (Fall 2000), 11–29.
86. Edward J. Dreas, MacArthur’s Ultra: Codebreaking and the War Against Japan (La
wrence, KS:
University of Kansas Press, 1992), 222.
87. Frank, Downfall, 29.
88. Asada, “The Shock of the Atomic Bomb,” passim.
89. John Toland, The Rising Sun (New York: Bantam, 1970), 894–95.
90. Johnson, Modern Times, 426.
91. Frank, Downfall, 296.
92. William Verity, interview with the author, quoted for inclusion in Marriage
of Steel: The Life
and Times of William and Peggy Verity (Indianapolis, IN: Pearson Custom Publishi
ng, 2000).
93. Paul Boyer, By the Bomb’s Early Light: American Thought and Culture at the Daw
n of the
Atomic Age (New York: Pantheon, 1985), 23.
94. Merle Miller, Plain Speaking: An Oral Biography of Harry S. Truman (New York
: Berkeley,
1974), 248; Peter Goodchild, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Shatterer of Worlds (Boston:
Houghton
Mifflin, 1981), 180.
95. Boyer, By the Bomb’s Early Light, 193.
96. Edward F. L. Russell, The Knights of Bushido: The Shocking History of Japane
se War
Atrocities (New York: Berkeley, 1959 [1958]).
Chapter 18. America’s “Happy Days,” 1946–59
1. Arthur Herman, Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America’s Mo
st Hated
Senator (New York: Free Press, 1990), 39.
2. U.S. News & World Report, November 15, 1946, 34.
3. Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin
Archive and the
Secret History of the KGB (New York: Basic Books, 1999), 111.
4. Joseph W. Martin, My First Fifty Years in Politics, as told to Robert J. Dono
van (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1960), 190.
5. Salvador de Madriaga, The Anatomy of the Cold War (Belfast, Ireland: M. Boyd,
1955); Gunter
Lewy, The Cause That Failed: Communism in American Political Life (New York: Oxf
ord, 1990).
6. Richard J. Walton, Henry Wallace, Harry Truman, and the Cold War (New York: V
iking, 1976),
63–64.
7. Ibid; Robert James Maddox, From War to Cold War (Boulder, CO: Westview Press,
1989).
8. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 114.
9. Robert Higgs, analysis online at http://www. independent. org/tii/content/pub
s/review/
TIR14higgs. html.
10. Harry R. Borowski, A Hollow Threat: Strategic Air Power and Containment Befo
re Korea
(Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982).
11. Timothy Botti, Ace in the Hole: Why the United States Did Not Use Nuclear We
apons in the
Cold War, 1945–1965 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996).
12. Leckie, Wars of America, 837; Samuel Eliot Morison, The Two-Ocean War (Bosto
n: Little,
Brown, 1963), 1046.
13. Johnson, Modern Times, 434.
14. Ibid., 438.
15. Daniel Yergin, The Shattered Peace: The Origins of the Cold War and the Nati
onal Security
State (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1978), 247.
16. Johnson, History of the American People, 797.
17. Yergin, Shattered Peace, 188.
18. Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage
in America,
the Stalin Era (New York: Random House, 1999); Harvey Klehr and John Earl Haynes
, The
American Communist Movement: Storming Heaven Itself (New York: Twayne, 1992).
19. John C. Culver and John Hyde, American Dreamer: A Life of Henry A. Wallace (
Boston: W.
W. Norton, 2000).
20. Yergin, Shattered Peace, 245.
21. Ibid., 246.
22. John Morton Blum, The Price of Vision: The Diary of Henry A. Wallace (Boston
: Houghton-
Mifflin, 1973), 589–601; Yergin, Shattered Peace, 253–54.
23. Herman, Joseph McCarthy, 80.
24. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 106–9.
25. Martin Weil, A Pretty Good Club: The Founding Fathers of the U.S. Foreign Se
rvice (New
York: Norton, 1978), 171.
26. George F. Kennan (“Mr. X”), “Sources of Soviet Conduct,” Foreign Affairs, July 1947,
566–
82.
27. Yergin, Shattered Peace, 323.
28. Divine, et al., America: Past and Present, 877.
29. Jeffrey Hart, When the Going Was Good! American Life in the Fifties (New Yor
k: Crown,
1982), 63.
30. Johnson, History of the American People, 817.
31. Divine, America: Past and Present, 881.
32. Paul K. Davis, 100 Decisive Battles from Ancient Times to the Present (New Y
ork: Oxford,
1999), 420–24.
33. Michael Langley, Inchon Landing (New York: Times Books, 1979); Max Hastings,
The Korean
War (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987).
34. Johnson, History of the American People, 823.
35. Ibid., 824.
36. Leckie, Wars of America, 909.
37. Gregg Herken, Brotherhood of the Bomb: The Tangled Lives and Loyalties of Ro
bert
Oppenheimer, Ernest Lawrence, and Edward Teller (New York: Henry Holt, 2002).
38. Weinstein and Vassiliev, Haunted Wood, 343; Robbie Lieberman, The Strangest
Dream.
Anticommunism and the U.S. Peace Movement, 1945–1963 (Syracuse: Syracuse Universit
y Press,
2000).
39. Richard Rovere, Senator Joe McCarthy (New York: Harcourt, 1959).
40. Herman, Joseph McCarthy, 3–4; Ellen Schrecker, The Age of McCarthyism: A Brief
History
with Documents (Boston: Bedford Books, 1994).
41. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 106 and passim.
42. Anthony Summers, Official and Confidential: The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoov
er (New York:
G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1993), 191.
43. Guenter Lewy, The Cause That Failed: Communism in American Political Life (N
ew York:
Oxford University Press, 1990), 101.
44. Klehr and Haynes, American Communist Movement, 181.
45. Robbie Lieberman, Strangest Dream, xv.
46. Ibid., 2.
47. As Rebecca West explained, “Everyone knew there were Communists, but very few
people
really believed it” (Rebecca West, The New Meaning of Treason [New York: Viking, 1
964], 236–
37), and as Leslie Fiedler put it, liberals seemed to think that Communists “were,
despite their
shrillness and bad manners, fundamentally on the side of justice” (Leslie Fiedler,
“Hiss, Chambers,
and the Age of Innocence,” Commentary, August 1951, 119).
48. Michael Beschloss, “How Well Read Should a President Be?” New York Times, June 1
1, 2000.
49. Stephen E. Ambrose, Eisenhower: Soldier General of the Army President Elect,
1890–1952
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1983), I:178.
50. Johnson, History of the American People, 829; George F. Kennan, Memoirs, 192
5–50 (Boston:
Little, Brown, 1967), 196, quoted in Johnson, History of the American People, 82
9; Robert R.
Bowie and Richard H. Immerman, Waging Peace: How Eisenhower Shaped an Enduring C
old War
Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).
51. Hart, When the Going Was Good!, 67–68.
52. Ibid., 68.
53. Campbell Craig, Destroying the Village: Eisenhower and Thermonuclear War (Ne
w York:
Columbia University Press, 1998), 22.
54. Fred Kaplan, The Wizards of Armageddon (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1983).
55. Craig, Destroying the Village, 51.
56. Robert Russo, Bourque News Watch (Canada), October 20, 1999.
57. Jack M. Holl, Roger M. Anders, and Alice L. Buck, United States Civilian Nuc
lear Power
Policy, 1954–1984: A Summary History (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Energy,
1986).
58. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1487.
59. George Lardner Jr. and Walter Pincus, “Military had Plan to Blame Cuba if Glen
n’s Space
Mission Failed,” Washington Post, November 19, 1997.
60. William Strauss and Neil Howe, Generations: The History of America’s Future, 1
584–2069
(New York: William Morrow, 1991), 261.
61. “America’s Mood Today,” Look, June 29, 1965.
62. William Strauss and Neil Howe, The Fourth Turning: A Prophecy (New York: Bro
adway
Books, 1997), 166.
63. Ibid., 167.
64. Kenneth T. Jackson, Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United St
ates (New York:
Oxford, 1985).
65. Nicholas Dagen Bloom, Suburban Alchemy: 1960s New Towns and the Transformati
on of the
American Dream (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2001).
66. Larry Schweikart, The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in th
e United States
(Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt, 2000), 375.
67. Scott Derks, The Value of a Dollar: Prices and Incomes in the United States,
1860–1999
(Lakeville, CT: Grey House Publishing, 1999), 299–300.
68. See the official Rockwell Museum Web site, http://www. nrm. org/norman/.
69. Laura Claridge, Norman Rockwell: A Life (New York: Random House, 2001).
70. Mark Tooley, “Madness in Their Methodism: The Religious Left Has a Summit,” Hete
rodoxy,
May 1995, 6.
71. John A. Jakle and Keith A. Sculle, Fast Food: Roadside Restaurants in the Au
tomobile Age
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999); John A. Jakle, Keith A. Scull
e and Jefferson S.
Rogers, The Motel in America (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996);
John A. Jakle
and Keith A. Sculle, The Gas Station in America (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univer
sity Press,
1994).
72. Ray Kroc and Robert Anderson, Grinding It Out: The Making of McDonald’s (Chica
go:
Contemporary Books, 1977).
73. Richard Kluger, Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education a
nd Black
America’s Struggle for Equality (New York: Norton, 1990).
74. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1495.
75. Goldfield, et al., American Journey, 931.
76. Taylor Branch, Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954–63 (New Yor
k: Simon &
Schuster, 1988); Robert Weisbrot, Freedom Bound: A History of America’s Civil Righ
ts
Movement (New York: Norton, 1990).
77. Aldon D. Morris, The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement: Black Communities
Organizing
for Change (New York: Free Press, 1984); David Chappell, Inside Agitators: White
Southerners in
the Civil Rights Movement (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994).
Chapter 19. The Age of Upheaval, 1960–74
1. Howard Brick, Age of Contradiction: American Thought and Culture in the 1960s
(New York:
Twayne, 1998).
2. John A. Andrew III, The Other Side of the Sixties: The Young Americans for Fr
eedom and the
Rise of Conservative Politics (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1997
).
3. Christopher Matthews, Kennedy and Nixon: The Rivalry That Shaped Postwar Amer
ica (New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1996).
4. Brian J. Gaines, “Popular Myths About Popular Vote-Electoral College Splits,” PS:
Political
Science and Politics, March 2001, 71–75.
5. Jeffrey Hart, When the Going Was Good!: American Life in the Fifties (New Yor
k: Crown,
1982), 156.
6. Thomas C. Reeves, A Question of Character: A Life of John F. Kennedy (New Yor
k: Free Press,
1991), chap. 3, passim.
7. Reeves, Question of Character, Forum, paperback ed. (Rocklin, CA: Forum, 1997
), 68.
8. Herbert S. Parmet, Jack (New York: Dial Press, 1980), 320–33.
9. Reeves, Question of Character, 256.
10. Arthur Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and His Times (Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1978), 517–37;
Reeves, Question of Character, 261.
11. Mark J. White, ed., The Kennedys and Cuba: The Declassified Documentary Hist
ory (Chicago:
Ivan R. Dee, 1999), quotation on 26, and “Notes on a White House Meeting, April 6,
1961.”
12. Reeves, Question of Character, 262.
13. Ibid., 261.
14. John H. Davis, The Kennedys: Dynasty and Disaster (New York: SPI, 1992 [1984
]), 247.
15. Paul Johnson, Modern Times: A History of the World from the Twenties to the
Nineties, rev.
ed. (New York: HarperCollins, 1991), 624.
16. Johnson, Modern Times, 624.
17. White, The Kennedys and Cuba, 220–25.
18. Ibid., 226–29.
19. Hugh Sidey, John F. Kennedy: Portrait of a President (Harmondsworth, England
: Penguin
Books, 1965 [1964]).
20. Fred Weir, “USSR ‘Kept Secret the Deaths of First Cosmonauts,’” The Independent (Lon
don),
April 14, 2001.
21. Scott W. Palmer, “Soviet Air-Mindedness as an Ideology of Dominance,” Technology
&
Culture, 41, January 2000, 1–26.
22. Andrew Chaikin, “White House Tapes Shed Light on JFK Space Race Legend,” www. sp
ace.
com, August 22, 2001.
23. Ibid.
24. Walter A. McDougall, The Heavens and the Earth: A Political History of the S
pace Age (New
York: Basic Books, 1985).
25. Dennis R. Jenkins, Space Shuttle: The History of the National Space Transpor
tation System, the
First 100 Missions (Cape Canaveral: Dennis Jenkins, 1992–2001).
26. Roger D. Launius, “NASA and the Decision to Build the Space Shuttle, 1969–1972,” T
he
Historian, Autumn 1994, 17–34; Richard P. Hallion, The Hypersonic Revolution, vols
. 1–3
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Air Force History Office, 1987, 1998); Larry Schweikart,
“Hypersonic
Hopes: Planning for NASP, 1982–1990,” Air Power History, Spring 1994, 36–48.
27. Orley Ashenfelter, “Estimating the Effects of Training Programs on Earning,” Rev
iew of
Economics and Statistics, February 1978, 47–57.
28. Warren Brookes, The Economy in Mind (New York: Universe Books, 1982), 56; Ne
w York
Commerce and Finance Chronicle, December 20, 1962.
29. Brookes, Economy in Mind, 58.
30. John Mueller, The Classical Economic Case for Cutting Marginal Income Tax Ra
tes, House
Republican Conference, Washington, D.C., February 1981. See Kennedy’s speech to th
e New York
Economic Club, December 14, 1962.
31. Johnson, Modern Times, 631.
32. William J. Duiker, Ho Chi Minh (New York: Hyperion, 2000).
33. Mark Haefele, “John F. Kennedy, USIA and World Opinion,” Diplomatic History, 25,
Winter
2001.
34. Reporting Vietnam, Part One: American Journalism, 1959–1969 (New York: Library
of
America, 1998), 56.
35. John P. Roche, “The Demise of Liberal Internationalism,” National Review, May 3,
1985, 26–
44.
36. Ibid., 40.
37. John Newman, JFK and Vietnam (New York: Warner Books, 1992); David Kaiser, A
merican
Tragedy: Kennedy, Johnson and the Origins of the Vietnam War (Cambridge, MA: Bel
knap, 2000).
38. Lawrence S. Wittner, Cold War America from Hiroshima to Watergate (New York:
Praeger,
1974), 226–227.
39. Kennedy quoted in Wittner, Cold War America, 229.
40. Ellen J. Hammer, A Death in November (New York: Oxford, 1987), 197.
41. Stanley Karnow, “The Fall of the House of Ngo Dinh,” Reporting Vietnam, 94.
42. William Colby with James McCargor, Lost Victory: A Firsthand Account of Amer
ica’s
Sixteen-Year Involvement in Vietnam (Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1989), 158.
43. See Henry Trewhitt, McNamara (New York: Harper & Row, 1971); Robert McNamara
, The
Essence of Security (New York: Prager, 1968); William W. Kaufman, The McNamara S
trategy
(New York: Harper & Row, 1964); Larry Schweikart, “Robert McNamara,” in Larry Schwei
kart,
ed., The Encyclopedia of American Business History and Biography: Banking and Fi
nance Since
1913 (New York: Facts on File, 1990), 251–67.
44. H. R. McMaster, Dereliction of Duty: Johnson, McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and the
Lies That Led to Vietnam (New York: HarperPerennial Library, 1998 [1997]).
45. Gerald Posner, Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK (
New York:
Random House, 1993). The literature on the Kennedy assassination is vast. For on
ly a small
sample, see Josiah Thompson, Six Seconds in Dallas: A Micro-Study of the Kennedy
Assassination
(New York: Bernard Greis, 1967); Sylvia Meagher, Accessories After the Fact: The
Warren
Commission, the Authorities, and the Report (New York: Vintage, 1976); Mark Lane
, Rush to
Judgment (New York: Holt, Rinehart 1966); Edward Jay Epstein, Inquest: The Warre
n
Commission and the Establishment of Truth (New York: Viking, 1966); Harold Weisb
erg,
Whitewash, 4 vols. (Hyattstown-Frederick, Maryland: H. Weisberg, 1965–1975); Rober
t G. Blakey
and Richard N. Billings, Fatal Hour: The Assassination of President Kennedy by O
rganized Crime
(New York: Berkeley, 1992); John H. Davis, Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and t
he
Assassination of John F. Kennedy, 2d ed. (New York: Signet, 1989); Jim Garrison,
On the Trail of
the Assassins: My Investigation and Prosecution of the Murder of President Kenne
dy (New York:
Sheridan Square Press, 1988); Robert J. Groden and Harrison Edward Livingstone,
High Treason:
The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, What Really Happened (Baltimore:
Conservatory,
1989); Bonar Menninger, Mortal Error: The Shot That Killed JFK (New York: St. Ma
rtin’s, 1992);
David Lifton, Best Evidence: Disguise and Deception in the Assassination of John
F. Kennedy
(New York: Carroll & Graf, 1992). The first historian to examine the evidence wa
s Michael L.
Kurtz, Crime of the Century: The Kennedy Assassination from a Historian’s Perspect
ive, 2d ed.
(Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 1993).
46. Doris Kearns Goodwin, Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream (New York: Harpe
r & Row,
1976), 177–78.
47. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1520; Robert Caro, The Years of Lyndon Johnson:
The Path to
Power (New York: Knopf, 1982) and his The Years of Lyndon Johnson: Means of Asce
nt (New
York: Knopf, 1990 [1989]); Paul Conkin, Big Daddy from the Pedernales: Lyndon Ba
ines Johnson
(Boston: Twayne, 1986); Joseph Califano Jr., The Triumph and Tragedy of Lyndon J
ohnson: The
White House Years (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2000).
48. Paul F. Boller Jr., Presidential Wives (New York: Oxford, 1988), 387.
49. Johnson, History of the American People, 872.
50. Rick Perlstein, Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of Americ
an Consensus
(New York: Hill and Wang, 2000).
51. See the reprints of news clippings from Greensboro papers in “A Sit-Down Becom
es a
Standoff,” in McClellan, Historical Moments, 2:394–99.
52. Dick Cluster, ed., They Should Have Served That Cup of Coffee: Seven Radical
s Remember
the’ 60s (Boston: South End Press, 1979).
53. Diane McWhorter, Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of
the Civil
Rights Revolution (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2001); Robert Weems, Desegregat
ing the
Dollar: African-American Consumerism in the Twentieth Century (New York: New Yor
k
University Press, 1998).
54. Lee S. Duemer, “Balancing the Books: Economic Incentives for Integration in th
e 1960s,”
Southern Studies, New Series, 7, Summer/Fall 1996, 79–90.
55. Goldfield, et al., American Journey, 932.
56. Martin Luther King Jr., “I Have a Dream,” August 18, 1963, in McClellan, Changin
g
Interpretations, 399–402.
57. Ibid.
58. Martin Luther King Jr., “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” available online at http:
//almaz.com/
nobel/peace/MLKjail. html.
59. Despite the fact that King was probably the only prominent American to be un
der surveillance
by the KGB and the FBI simultaneously, Soviet records produced no evidence of co
mmunist
influence on him. See Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 290.
60. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1513.
61. D. L. Lewis, King: A Critical Biography (New York: Praeger, 1970); Michael W
. Miles, The
Radical Probe: The Logic of Student Rebellion (New York: Atheneum, 1971).
62. Daniel Pipes, “How Elijah Muhammad Won,” online at http://www.danielpipes.org/ar
ticle/341.
63. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 724.
64. Hugh Davis Graham, The Civil Rights Era: Origins and Development of National
Policy (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1990).
65. Stephen F. Lawson, Running for Freedom: Civil Rights and Black Politics in A
merica Since
1941 (New York: McGraw-Hill, 191).
66. Goldfield, American Journey, 951.
67. Ibid., 961.
68. Jonathan J. Bean, “‘Burn, Baby, Burn’: Small Business in the Urban Riots of the 19
60s,”
Independent Review, 5, Fall 2000, 165–88.
69. Spencer Crump, Black Riot in Los Angeles: The Story of the Watts Tragedy (Lo
s Angeles:
Trans-Anglo Books, 1966), 21.
70. Martin Luther King, Strength to Love (New York: Harper and Row, 1963); the “Mo
untaintop”
sermon appears in American Sermons: The Pilgrims to Martin Luther King Jr. (New
York: Library
of America, 1999).
71. Charles Murray, Losing Ground: American Social Policy, 1950–1980 (New York: Ba
sic Books,
1984), 24.
72. Wittner, Cold War America, 239.
73. Ibid.
74. Murray, Losing Ground, 129.
75. See Murray’s figures 9.2 and 9.3, Losing Ground, 130–31.
76. Patrick F. Fagan and Robert Rector, “The Effects of Divorce on America,” Heritag
e Foundation
Backgrounder, #1373, June 5, 2000, chart 3, “Divorces per 100 Marriages,” 3; George
Gilder,
Sexual Suicide (New York: Quadrangle, 1973).
77. Murray, Losing Ground, passim.
78. Irwin Garfinkle and Robert Haveman, with the assistance of David Betson, U.S
. Department of
Health, Education and Welfare, “Earnings Capacity, Poverty, and Inequality,” Institu
te for
Research on Poverty Monograph Series (New York: Academic Press, 1977); George Gi
lder,
Wealth and Poverty (New York: Basic Books, 1981).
79. Mary E. Corcoran and Ajay Chaudry, “The Dynamics of Childhood Poverty,” The Futu
re of
Children, 7, no. 2, 1997, 40–54; Fagan and Rector, “Effects of Divorce,” chart 9, “Media
n Income
of Families with Children by Family Structure,” 11.
80. Alan C. Acock and K. Hill Kiecolt, “Is It Family Structure or Socioeconomic St
atus? Family
Structure During Adolescence and Adult Adjustment,” Social Forces, 68, 1989, 553–71.
81. Judith Wallerstein, “The Long-Term Effects of Divorce on Children: A Review,” Jo
urnal of the
American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry, 30, 1991, 349–60; Michael Workman
and
John Beer, “Aggression, Alcohol Dependency, and Self-Consciousness Among High Scho
ol
Students of Divorced and Non-Divorced Parents,” Psychological Reports, 71, 1992, 2
79–86; David
Popenoe, Life Without Father (New York: Martin Kessler Books, 1995).
82. John P. Hoffman and Robert A. Johnson, “A National Portrait of Family Structur
e and
Adolescent Drug Use,” Journal of Marriage and the Family, 60, 1998, 633–45; Robert L
. Flewing
and K. E. Baumann, “Family Structure as a Predictor of Initial Substance Use and S
exual
Intercourse in Early Adolescence,” ibid., 52, 1990, 171–81.
83. David Blankenhorn, Fatherless America: Confronting Our Most Urgent Social Pr
oblem (New
York: HarperPerennial, 1996).
84. Norman Podhoretz, Why We Were in Vietnam (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1982),
80.
85. Richard H. Shultz Jr, The Secret War Against Hanoi (New York: HarperCollins,
1999), 205.
86. A. L. Gropman, “The Air War in Vietnam, 1961–73,” in R. A. Mason, ed., War in the
Third
Dimension (London: Brassey’s, 1986), 33–58, quotation on 34.
87. Kocher, “John Kennedy, Playing in the Sandbox,” in his zolatimes Web article, “Vie
t Nam.”
88. James and Sybil Stockdale, In Love and War: The Story of a Family’s Ordeal and
Sacrifice
During the Vietnam Years (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1990), see the appen
dix.
89. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 812.
90. “Gulf of Tonkin Resolution,” in McClellan, Historical Moments, 2:434.
91. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 812.
92. Benjamin S. Lambeth, The Transformation of American Air Power (Ithaca, NY: C
ornell
University Press, 2000).
93. Robert Leckie, The Wars of America, rev. ed. (New York: Harper & Row, 1981 [
1968]), 987.
94. Lambeth, Transformation, 17.
95. Ibid.
96. U.S. Air Force, Air War—Vietnam (New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1978), 214.
97. Lambeth, Transformation, 18.
98. Ho quoted in Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1540.
99. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1539.
100. Hanson, Carnage and Culture, 400.
101. Phillip B. Davidson, Vietnam at War: The History, 1946–1975 (New York: Oxford
University
Press, 1988), 552.
102. Lambeth, Transformation, 23.
103. Leckie, Wars of America, 1006–7.
104. R. F. Ford, Tet 1968: Understanding the Surprise (Essex, England: Cass, 199
0), 139, quoted in
Hanson, Carnage and Culture, 404.
105. William Lunch and Peter Sperlich, “American Public Opinion and the War in Vie
tnam,”
Western Political Quarterly, March 1979, 21–24; John Mueller, War, Presidents and
Public
Opinion (New York: John Wiley, 1973); Leslie H. Gelb and Richard K. Betts, The I
rony of
Vietnam: The System Worked (Washington, D.C.: Brookings, 1979).
106. Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and
Class Structure in
American Life (New York: Free Press, 1994), 32.
107. William Strauss and Neil Howe, Generations: The History of America’s Future,
1584–2069
(New York: William Morrow and Company, 1991), 199–316.
108. Ibid., 305.
109. Lewis B. Mayhew, ed., Higher Education in the Revolutionary Decades (Berkel
ey, CA:
McCutchan Publishing, 1967).
110. Chester E. Finn Jr., Scholars, Dollars, and Bureaucrats (Washington, D.C.:
Brookings
Institution, 1978), 21.
111. Fritz Machlup, The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United S
tates (Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 1962), 374.
112. Edward F. Denison, Sources of Economic Growth and the Alternatives Before U
s (New York:
Committee for Economic Development, 1962); C. P. Snow, The Two Cultures and the
Scientific
Revolution (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1959); and Clark Kerr, The Use
s of the
University, 3rd ed. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982), 88.
113. Rex Jackson, Appendix to On Further Examination, “ Comparison of SAT Score Tr
ends in
Selected Schools Judged to Have Traditional or Experimental Orientations” (Princet
on, NJ: College
Entrance Examination Board, 1977).
114. Elchanan Cohn, The Economics of Education, rev. ed. (Cambridge, MA: Balling
er, 1979), 49,
tables 3–4; Herrnstein and Murray, Bell Curve, 95; L. F. Katz and K. M. Murphy, Ch
anges in
Relative Wages, 1963–198 (Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 199
0), table
1.
115. Johnson, Modern Times, 641.
116. David Krech, Robert S. Crutchfield, and Edgerton L. Bellachey, Individual i
n Society: A
Textbook of Social Psychology (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1962).
117. Richard Gid Powers, Not Without Honor: The History of American Anticommunis
m (New
York: Free Press, 1995), 306.
118. Roger Kimball, Tenured Radicals: How Politics Has Corrupted Our Higher Educ
ation (New
York: Harper & Row, 1990).
119. Ellen Schrecker, No Ivory Tower: McCarthyism and the Universities (New York
: Oxford,
1986).
120. Tindall and Shi, America 2:1551.
121. David Steigerwald, The Sixties and the End of Modern America (New York: St.
Martin’s,
1995), 127–28, quotation on 127.
122. Harvey Klehr and John Earl Haynes, The American Communist Movement: Stormin
g Heaven
Itself (New York: Twayne, 1992), 151.
123. Klehr and Haynes, American Communist Movement, 159; Dohrn quoted in Peter C
ollier and
David Horowitz, Destructive Generation (New York: Summit, 1989), 74; Thomas S. P
owers, The
War at Home: Vietnam and the American People, 1964–1968 (New York: Grossman, 1973)
, 75–
76.
124. Kirkpatrick Sale, SDS (New York: Random House, 1973), 466.
125. Guenter Lewy, The Cause That Failed: Communism in American Political Life (
New York:
Oxford University Press, 1990), 250–76.
126. Bruce J. Schulman, “Out of the Streets and into the Classroom? The New Left a
nd the
Counterculture in United States History Textbooks,” Journal of American History, 8
5 (March
1999), 1527–34, quotation on 1529. See also Allan Matusow, The Unraveling of Ameri
ca: A
History of Liberalism in the 1960s (New York: Harper & Row, 1984); William O’Neill
, Coming
Apart: An Informal History of America in the 1960s (Chicago: Quadrangle, 1971).
127. Paul Hollander, Political Pilgrims: Travels of Western Intellectuals to the
Soviet Union,
China, and Cuba, 1928–1978 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981), 181.
128. Jerry Rubin, Do It: Scenarios of the Revolution (New York: Simon and Schust
er, 1970), 57.
129. Susan Stern, With the Weathermen: The Personal Journal of a Revolutionary W
oman (New
York: Doubleday, 1975), 142–45, 201.
130. Rubin, Do It, 169.
131. Ibid., 125.
132. Collier and Horowitz, Destructive Generation: Second Thoughts About the Six
ties, 264.
133. Christopher P. Anderson, Citizen Jane: The Turbulent Life of Jane Fonda (Ne
w York: Holt,
1990).
134. Martin Lee and Bruce Shlain, Acid Dreams (New York: Grove Press, 1992 [1985
]), 29.
135. Ginsburg quoted in Lee and Shlain, Acid Dreams, 111.
136. Lee and Shlain, Acid Dreams, 129.
137. Ibid.
138. Steigerwald, The Sixties, 169.
139. Claudia Goldin and Lawrence F. Katz, “On the Pill: Changing the Course of Wom
en’s
Education,” Milken Institute Review, Second Quarter, 2001, 12–21.
140. Beverly Gordon, “American Denim: Blue Jeans and Their Multiple Layers of Mean
ing,” in
George O. Carney, ed., Fast Food, Stock Cars, and Rock ‘n’ Roll: Place and Space in
American
Pop Culture (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 1995), 77–117.
141. David Dalton, “Finally, the Shocking Truth about Woodstock Can Be Told, or Ki
ll It Before It
Clones Itself,” The Gadfly, August 1999, taken from The Gadfly online, http://gadf
ly.org/ 1999–
08/toc. asp. Other comments and quotations are from the author’s conversations wit
h Dalton.
142. Dalton, “Finally, the Shocking Truth,” author’s conversations with Dalton.
143. Ibid.
144. Ibid.
145. Rubin and Dorn quoted in Lee and Schlain, Acid Dreams, 257.
146. Lewy, The Cause That Failed, 270.
147. Adam Cohen and Elizabeth Taylor, American Pharaoh: Mayor Richard Daley: His
Battle for
Chicago and the Nation (Boston: Little, Brown 2000), 462–63.
148. Ibid., 473.
149. The commission’s report is quoted in Joseph C. Keeley, The Left-Leaning Anten
na: Political
Bias in Television (New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1971), 109.
150. Cohen and Taylor, American Pharaoh, 474, 478.
151. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 816.
152. Wittner, Cold War America, 300–301.
153. William Safire, Before the Fall: An Insider’s View of the Pre-Watergate House
(Garden City,
NY:Doubleday, 1975), 171.
154. Ibid., 70, 75.
155. Kevin Phillips, The Emerging Republican Majority (New York: Arlington House
, 1969).
156. Wittner, Cold War America, 338.
157. Brookes, Economy in Mind, 150, and table 1.3.
158. Thomas C. Reeves, Twentieth-Century America: A Brief History (New York: Oxf
ord, 2000),
215.
159. James Bovard, Lost Rights: The Destruction of American Liberty (New York: S
t. Martin’s,
1994), 33–43 passim.
160. Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (New York: Ballantine, 1968).
161. Ehrlich’s 1971 edition of The Population Bomb, xi, quoted by Brian Carnell, “Pa
ul Ehrlich,”
at www. overpopulation.com/faq/People/paulehrlich. html.
162. Thomas Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population (London: Reeves and
Turner,
1878).
163. Julian Simon and Herman Kahn, The Resourceful Earth: A Response to Global 2
000 (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1984).
164. Greg Easterbrook, “The Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity,” reprinted in Larry Sc
hweikart,
ed., Readings in Western Civilization, 2nd ed. (Boston: Pearson Custom Publishin
g, 2000), 23–30.
165. “The Development of the White House Staff,” Congressional Record, June 20, 1972
; Arthur
Schlesinger Jr, The Imperial Presidency (Boston: Hougton Mifflin, 1973).
166. Podhoretz, Why We Were in Vietnam, 156; Martin F. Herz, The Prestige Press
and the
Christmas Bombing, 1972 (Washington, DC: Ethics and Public Policy Center, 1980).
167. Leckie, Wars of America, 1018.
168. New York Times, May 5, 1970, and June 21, 1970.
169. Major A.J.C. Lavalle, ed., Air Power and the 1972 Spring Invasion (Washingt
on, D.C.: USAF
Southeast Asia Monograph Series, 1985), 57.
170. Lambeth, Transformation, 29.
171. Colonel Alan Gropman, USAF, “The Air War in Vietnam, 1961–73,” in Air Vice Marsha
l R.
A. Mason, RAF, ed., War in the Third Dimension: Essays in Contemporary Air Power
(London:
Brassey’s, 1986), 57.
172. Wittner, Cold War America, 283.
173. John Mack Faragher, et al, Out of Many: A History of the American People, c
ombined ed.,
brief 2nd ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1999), 567.
174. Douglas Dalgleish and Larry Schweikart, Trident (Carbondale, IL: Southern I
llinois
University Press, 1984).
175. Johnson, Modern Times, 649.
176. Bernard Goldberg, Bias: A CBS Insider Exposes How the Media Distort the New
s
(Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, 2002), 24. 177. Len Colodny and Robert Ge
tlin, Silent
Coup: The Removal of a President (New York: St. Martin’s, 1991); Joan Hoff, Nixon
Reconsidered
(New York: Basic Books, 1994).
178. “Liddy Gains Mistrial in Defame Suit,” New York Post, February 2, 2001.
179. Wittner, Cold War America, 380.
180. Jordan and Litwack, United States, 844.
181. David Frum, How We Got Here: The 70’s: The Decade That Brought You Modern Lif
e (for
Better or Worse) (New York: Basic Books, 2000), 26.
182. Barbara Olson, Hell to Pay: The Unfolding Story of Hillary Rodham Clinton (
Washington:
Regnery, 1999), 122.
183. Ibid., 124.
184. “Articles of Impeachment of Richard M. Nixon,” August 20, 1974.
185. Stanley J. Kutler, The Wars of Watergate: The Last Crisis of Richard Nixon
(New York:
Knopf, 1990); Maurice Stans, The Terrors of Justice: The Untold Side of Watergat
e (New York:
Everest House, 1978); H. R. Haldeman, The Ends of Power (New York: Times Books,
1978);
Charles W. Colson, Born Again Old Tappan, NJ: Chosen Books, 1976); John Dean, Bl
ind
Ambition: The White House Years (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1976).
186. Stephen E. Ambrose, Nixon: Ruin and Recovery (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1
991).
Chapter 20. Retreat and Resurrection, 1974–88
1. Richard Reeves, A Ford, Not a Lincoln (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1975); Edwar
d L.
Schapsmeier and Frederick H. Schapsmeier, Gerald R. Ford’s Date with Destiny: A Po
litical
Biography (New York: P. Lang, 1989); Gerald Ford, A Time to Heal: The Autobiogra
phy of
Gerald R. Ford (New York: Reader’s Digest, 1979).
2. Johnson, History of the American People, 906.
3. Anthony Lukas, Nightmare: The Underside of the Nixon Years (New York: Viking,
1976).
4. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1593.
5. John Barron and Anthony Paul, Peace with Horror (London: Hodder and Stoughton
, 1977), 136–
49.
6. Yehuda Bauer, From Diplomacy to Resistance: A History of Jewish Palestine, 19
39–1945
(Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1970); Nicholas Bethell, T
he Palestine
Triangle: The Struggle Between the British, the Jews and the Arabs (London: Andr
e Deutsch,
1979).
7. Joseph Schechtman, The United States and the Jewish State Movement (New York:
Herzl Press,
1966).
8. Oil Weekly, March 6, 1944.
9. Paul Johnson, Modern Times: A History of the World from the Twenties to the N
ineties (New
York: HarperCollins, 1991), 666.
10. Scott Derks, The Value of a Dollar: Prices and Incomes in the United States,
1860–1899
(Lakeville, CT: Grey House, 1999), 381.
11. Ralph Nader, Unsafe at Any Speed (New York: Grossman, 1965).
12. B. Bruce Briggs, The War Against the Automobile (New York: E. P. Dutton, 197
7), 83.
13. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1594.
14. Gene Smiley, The American Economy in the Twentieth Century (Cincinnati, OH:
College
Division, South-Western Publishing Company, 1994), 381.
15. Robert Crandall, Why Is the Cost of Environmental Regulation So High? (St. L
ouis: Center for
the Study of American Business, Washington University, February 1992), 3.
16. Brookes, Economy in Mind, 111.
17. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, chap. 11.
18. Ibid., 415.
19. Burton H. Klein, Dynamic Economics (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,
1977).
20. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, passim.
21. Paul Ingrassia and Joseph B. White, Comeback: The Fall and Rise of the Ameri
can Automobile
Industry (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994); Lee Iaccoca with William Novak, Iac
coca: A
Biography (New York: Bantam, 1984).
22. Derks, Working Class Americans, passim.
23. Derks, ed., The Value of a Dollar, 1860–1899, passim.
24. Kenneth Warren, Big Steel: The First Century of the United States Steel Corp
oration, 1901–
2001 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001).
25. John P. Hoerr, And the Wolf Finally Came: The Decline of the American Steel
Industry
(Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1988); Hans G. Mueller, “The Steel In
dustry,” in J.
Michael Finger and Thomas D. Willett, eds., The Internationalization of the Amer
ican Economy,
the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 460, March 1
982, 73–82.
26. Goldfield et al., American Journey, 987.
27. Claudia Goldin and Lawrence F. Katz, “On the Pill: Changing the Course of Wome
n’s
Education,” Milken Institute Review, Spring Quarter 2001, 12–21.
28. Thomas C. Reeves, Twentieth-Century America: A Brief History (New York: Oxfo
rd
University Press, 2000), 193.
29. Stephen W. Tweedie, “Viewing the Bible Belt,” Journal of Popular Culture, 11, 19
78, 865–76.
30. Ibid., 875–76.
31. Thomas C. Reeves, The Empty Church: The Suicide of Liberal Christianity (New
York: Free
Press, 1996), 126.
32. Laurence R. Innaccone, Roger Finke, and Rodney Stark, “Deregulating Religion:
The
Economics of Church and State,” Economic Inquiry, 35, April 1997, 350–64.
33. Ibid., 361.
34. Reeves, Empty Church, 146.
35. “Ecumenical War over Abortion,” Time, January 29, 1979, 62–63.
36. David Garrow, Liberty and Sexuality: The Right to Privacy and the Making of
Roe v. Wade
(New York: Macmillan, 1994).
37. Erica Scharrer, “From Wise to Foolish: The Portrayal of the Sitcom Father, 195
0s–1990s,”
Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 45, Winter 2001, 23–40.
38. Robert Locke, “Why No-Fault Divorce Is the Key to Abortion,” Front Page Magazine
, March
26, 2001, at frontpagemag.com/archives/feminism/locke03–26–01p.htm.
39. Barbara DaFoe Whitehead, “Dan Qualye Was Right,” The Atlantic, April 1993, and m
ore
broadly explained in her book The Divorce Culture (New York: Random House, 1996)
.
40. George Gilder, Men and Marriage (Gretna, LA: Pelican Publishing, 1986).
41. Barbara Gordon, Jennifer Fever: Older Men/Younger Women (New York: Harper &
Row,
1988).
42. “Day Care Linked to Aggression in Kids,” CBS News, April 19, 2001, citing a larg
e study
(1,300 children) by Martha Cox of the University of North Carolina.
43. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 204.
44. Ibid., 206.
45. Richard L. Tedrow and Thomas Tedrow, Death at Chappaquiddick (Ottawa: Green
Hill
Publishers, 1976), is typical of most of the books looking at the incident.
46. Martin Gilbert, A History of the Twentieth Century: 1952–1999 vol. 3 (New York
: William
Morrow, 1999), 3:544.
47. Cited in Garry Wills, The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power (Bosto
n: Little,
Brown 1982), 195.
48. Edmund Morris, Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan (New York: HarperCollins, 19
99), 228.
49. Matthew Dallek, The Right Moment: Ronald Reagan’s First Victory and the Decisi
ve Turning
Point in American Politics (New York: Free Press, 2000).
50. Kiron K. Skinner, Martin Anderson, and Annelise Anderson, eds. Reagan, In Hi
s Own Hand:
The Writings of Ronald Reagan That Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America (
New York:
Free Press, 2001).
51. Derks, Value of a Dollar, 405–11.
52. Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1610.
53. Goldfield, et al., American Journey, 1011, photo.
54. Thomas A. Bailey, et al., The American Pageant, 11th ed. (Boston: Houghton M
ifflin, 1998),
2:993.
55. George Gilder, Wealth and Poverty (New York: Basic Books, 1981).
56. Kenneth S. Baer, Reinventing Democrats: The Politics of Liberalism from Reag
an to Clinton
(Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2000), passim.
57. Johnson, History of the American People, 921.
58. Ronald Reagan, An American Life (New York: Pocket Books, 1990), 259–63.
59. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 338–40, 542–46.
60. Warren Brookes, “The Silent Boom,” The American Spectator, August 1988, 16–19, and
his
“The Media vs. the Economy,” in the Detroit News, December 29, 1988.
61. Reagan, An American Life, 315–17.
62. Thomas K. McCraw, Prophets of Regulation: Charles Francis Adams, Louis D. Br
andeis,
James M. Landis, Alfred E. Kahn (Cambridge: Belknap Press, 1984).
63. Ibid., 268; David Field, “Big Airlines Pack in Passengers, Profit,” USA Today, A
pril 1, 1997;
Larry Schweikart interview with Tonya Wagner, Federal Aviation Administration, J
uly 5, 1995.
64. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 439–40.
65. Paul Teske, Samuel Best, and Michael Mintrom, Deregulating Freight Transport
ation:
Delivering the Goods (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 1995); James Bovard, “The Great T
ruck
Robbery,” Wall Street Journal, November 3, 1993; Glenn Yago, “The Regulatory Reign o
f
Terror,”Wall Street Journal, March 4, 1992.
66. Typical of this approach is Tindall and Shi, America, 2:1612: “Reaganomics dep
arted from the
Coolidge record mainly in the mounting deficits of the 1980s and in their major
cause—growing
expenditures for the armed forces.” There is simply no evidence that the military
budget grew in
total dollars relative to the expenditures on “social spending” that accounted for t
he deficit.
67. Peter Sperry, “The Real Reagan Economic Record: Responsible and Successful Fis
cal Policy,”
Heritage Foundation Backgrounder, #1414, March 1, 2001, chart 1, “Federal Revenues
and
Expenditures, 1980–1993,” 3.
68. Gilder, Wealth and Poverty, passim, and his Recapturing the Spirit of Enterp
rise (San
Francisco: ICS Press, 1992); W. Michael Cox and Richard Alm, Myths of Rich & Poo
r: Why
We’re Better Off Than We Think (New York: Basic Books, 1999).
69. Bruce Bartlett, “Tariffs and Alloy of Errors,” Washington Times, April 1, 2002.
70. Steven F. Hayward, The Age of Reagan: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order (Bos
eville, CA:
Prima Publishing, 2001).
71. Bernard Schafer, “The US Air Raid on Libya in April 1986: A Confidential Sovie
t Account
from the Stasi Archives,” Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Cold W
ar
International History Project, 2001.
72. Reagan, An American Life, 466.
73. Ibid., 556.
74. Michael Moritz, The Little Kingdom: The Private Story of Apple Computer (New
York:
William Morrow and Co., 1984).
75. Schweikart, Entrepreneurial Adventure, 435.
76. Joel Kotkin and Ross C. DeVol, “Knowledge-Value Cities in the Digital Age,” rese
arch paper
from the Milken Institute, February 13, 2001, 2, available at http://www.milkeni
nst.org.
77. William T. Youngs, “Bill Gates and Microsoft,” in Youngs, ed., American Realitie
s: Historical
Episodes, From Reconstruction to the Present, vol. 2, 3d ed. (New York: HarperCo
llins, 1993);
James Wallace and Jim Erickson, Hard Drive: Bill Gates and the Making of the Mic
rosoft Empire
(New York: Wiley, 1992).
78. See Adam D. Thierer, “How Free Computers are Filling the Digital Divide,” Herita
ge
Foundation Backgrounder, #1361, April 20, 2000.
79. Stephen Moore and Julian L. Simon, “The Greatest Century that Ever Was: 25 Mir
aculous
Trends of the Past 100 Years,” CATO Institute Policy Analysis, #364, December 15,
1999, Fig. 21,
“Patents Granted by the United States,” 23.
80. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 243.
81. Jacques Gansler, Affording Defense (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1989); Fens Osler
Hampson,
Unguided Missiles: How America Buys Its Weapons (New York: W. W. Norton, 1989);
Thomas
McNaugher, New Weapons, Old Politics: America’s Military Procurement Muddle (Washi
ngton,
DC: Brookings Institution, 1989); Michael E. Brown, Flying Blind (Ithaca, NY: Co
rnell University
Press, 1992); Jacob Goodwin, Brotherhood of Arms: Geneva Dynamics and the Busine
ss of
Defending America (New York: Times Books, 1985).
82. Matthew Evangelista, Innovation and the Arms Race (Ithaca: Cornell Universit
y Press, 1988),
27–28; Peter J. Katzenstein, “International Relations and Domestic Structures: Forei
gn Economic
Policies of Advanced Industrial States,” International Organization, 30, Winter 19
76, 1–45.
83. Gilbert, History of the Twentieth Century, 596, but the entire “evil empire” spe
ech appears in
An American Life, 369–70.
84. Paul Hollander, Political Will and Personal Belief: The Decline and Fall of
Soviet Communism
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), 11.
85. Lou Cannon, “Reagan’s Big Idea—How the Gipper Conceived Star Wars,” National Review,
February 22, 1999, 40–42, quotation on 40.
86. Ibid.
87. For typical college-level textbook assessments of Star Wars, see Bailey, et
al., American
Pageant, 998 (“Those who did not dismiss it as ludicrous feared that [it] might be
ruinously costly,
ultimately unworkable, and fatally destabilizing….”); Brinkley, et al., American His
tory, II:966,
which emphasizes the Soviet reaction (“The Soviet Union reacted with anger and ala
rm and
insisted the new program would elevate the arms race to new and more dangerous l
evels.”);
Goldfield, et al., American Journey, 1017, which questioned the feasibility of t
he technology, while
still stressing the “destabilization” aspects (“All of the technologies were untested
[which was
completely untrue—they had almost all been tested for years, both in the U.S. and
the USSR, and
tested successfully]; some existed only in the imagination. Few scientists thoug
ht that SDI could
work.”) Other texts had similar comments. Davidson, et al., Nation of Nations, 117
7, said, “Most
scientists contended that the project was as fantastic as the movie [ Star Wars
].” Faragher, et al.,
Out of Many, 953, stated Reagan “claimed, though few scientists agreed, that satel
lites and lasers
could create an impregnable shield—” (in fact, Reagan claimed no such thing). Surpri
singly, one of
the most otherwise liberal texts, Jordan and Litwack’s United States, is fairly ob
jective in its
treatment—less than twenty words for the most important weapons proposal, arguably
, in
American history. What is astounding is how the technological questions and the
destabilization
questions, even when contained in the same paragraph, never raised the most obvi
ous question by
any of the authors: if the technology for Star Wars could not work, how could it
possibly be
destabilizing?
88. Johnson, History of the American People, 927.
89. Cannon, “Reagan’s Big Idea,” 40–42.
90. Hollander, Personal Will, 5.
91. Ibid., 100.
92. Ibid., 98.
93. Seweryn Bailer, “The Soviet Union and the West: Security and Foreign Policy,” in
Seweryn
Bailer, et al., eds., Gorbachev’s Russia and American Foreign Policy (Boulder, CO:
Westview
Press, 1988), 457–91, especially 458.
94. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 484.
95. Ibid., 220; Barbara von der Heydt, Candles Behind the Wall: Heroes of the Pe
aceful Revolution
That Shattered Communism (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.,
1993), 124.
96. Von der Heydt, Candles Behind the Wall, 124.
97. Reagan, An American Life, 11–15.
98. “Study Reveals ‘Politicization’ of Intelligence,” Washington Times, October 9, 2000.
99. Reagan, An American Life, 606.
100. Ibid., 402.
Chapter 21. The Moral Crossroads, 1989–2000
1. John Robert Greene, The Presidency of George Bush (Lawrence, KS: University o
f Kansas
Press, 2000); George Bush, All the Best: My Life in Letters and Other Writings (
New York:
Scribner, 1999); George Bush and Brent Scowcroft, A World Transformed (New York:
Knopf,
1998).
2. Kenneth S. Baer, Reinventing Democrats: The Politics of Liberalism from Clint
on to Reagan
(Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Press, 2000), 12.
3. Steven M. Gillon and Cathy D. Matson, The American Experiment, 1265.
4. Paul Hollander, Political Will and Personal Belief: The Decline and Fall of S
oviet Communism
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), 22.
5. Ibid., 3.
6. Ibid., 7.
7. Andrew and Mitrokhin, Sword and the Shield, 548.
8. Ibid.
9. Ibid.
10. Curtis Peebles, Dark Eagles (Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1995), 183.
11. Williamson Murray, Air War in the Persian Gulf (Baltimore: Nautical and Avia
tion Publishing
Company of America, 1995), 26.
12. Rick Atkinson, Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War (Boston: Ho
ughton Mifflin,
1993); Michael Gordon and Bernard Trainor, The General’s War (Boston: Little, Brow
n, 1995);
Tom Clancy and Chuck Horner, Every Man a Tiger (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 199
9); Frank
N. Schubert and Theresa L. Kraus, eds., The Whirlwind War: The United States Arm
y in
Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm (Washington, DC: Center of Military Hi
story, U.S.
Army, 1994).
13. Tom Keaney and Eliot Cohen, Revolution in Warfare? (Annapolis, MD: Naval Ins
titute Press,
1995); Richard Reynolds, Heart of the Storm: The Genesis of the Air Power in the
Persian Gulf Air
Campaign Against Iraq (Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University Press, 1995).
14. Benjamin S. Lambeth, The Transformation of American Air Power (Ithaca, NY: C
ornell
University Press, 2000), 112.; Jeffrey Record, Hollow Victory (Washington, D.C.:
Brassey’s,
1993).
15. Peebles, Dark Eagles, 188.
16. Majors Michael J. Bodner and William W. Bruner III, “Tank Plinking,” Air Force M
agazine,
October 1993, 31; Lambeth, Transformation, 123.
17. Tony Cappacio, “Air Force’s Eyes in the Sky Alerted Marines at Khafji, Targeted
Convoys,”
Defense Week, March 18, 1991, 7.
18. Barry D. Watts, letter to the editor, Foreign Affairs, November/December 199
7, 180.
19. Keaney and Cohen, Revolution in Warfare?, 91–92.
20. Lambeth, Transformation, 128.
21. Atkinson, Crusade, 342.
22. Victor Davis Hanson, Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of We
stern Power,
(New York: Doubleday, 2001), 364–65.
23. Jonathan Rauch, “Why Bush (Senior) Didn’t Blow It in the Gulf War,” Jewish World R
eview
(online edition), November 5, 2001.
24. Gillon and Matson, American Experience, 1270.
25. Gerald Posner, Citizen Perot: His Life and Times (New York: Random House, 19
96).
26. George Stephanopoulos, All Too Human: A Political Education (Boston: Little,
Brown, 1999),
82.
27. Rhodes Cook, “Arkansan Travels Well Nationally as Campaign Heads for Test,” Cong
ressional
Quarterly Weekly Report, January 11, 1992.
28. David Maraniss, First in His Class: A Biography of Bill Clinton (New York: S
imon & Schuster,
1995).
29. Murrin, et al., Liberty, Equality, Power, 1103.
30. Woodward, The Agenda (New York: Pocket Books, 1995), 122.
31. Gillon and Matson, American Experience, 1275; Brinkley, Unfinished Nation, 1
014. The
phrase used most by textbook authors is that the plan “pleased…virtually no one” (Murr
in, et al.,
Liberty, Equality, Power, 1104). A similar phrase appears in Goldfield et al., A
merican Journey,
1001, “something for everyone to dislike.” This implied that it was a solid concept
so cutting-edge
that it would offend because of its revolutionary nature. None of these sources
come close to
delineating the vast aggrandizement of power in the federal government that the
plan represented,
or the intrusion into personal liberties as basic as choosing one’s own doctor and
pursuing the
profession of one’s choice. They are not even considered as possible sources of th
e widespread
opposition.
32. Woodward, The Agenda, 84.
33. Robert “Buzz” Patterson, Dereliction of Duty (Washington, DC: Regnery, 2003), 5.
34. Woodward, The Agenda, 125.
35. Stephanopoulos, All Too Human, 416.
36. Murrin, et al., Liberty, Equality, and Power, 1105.
37. Brinkley, Unfinished Nation, 1019.
38. Once again, typical college textbooks seek to downplay the impact of the Con
tract or
mischaracterize it entirely. Alan Brinkley, in The Unfinished Nation, claimed “Opi
nion polls
suggested that few voters in 1994 were aware of the ‘Contract’ at the time they vote
d” (1015).
Gillon and Matson, predictably, refer to the Contract as “a political wish list po
lished by
consultants and tested in focus groups” ( American Experiment, 1276), and Goldfiel
d’s American
Journey portrayed the campaign’s success as emanating from “personal animosity” (1001)
. Thomas
Bailey et al. characterized the Contract as an “all-out assault on budget deficits
and radical
reductions in welfare programs,” and succeeded because Democrats’ arguments were “drow
ned in
the right-wing tornado that roared across the land….” ( American Pageant, 1002). Ins
tead, at the
time, many analysts on both the left and right viewed this as a watershed electi
on about serious
issues. See Michael Tomasky, “Why They Won: The Left Lost Touch,” Village Voice, Nov
ember
22, 1994; Al From, “Can Clinton Recover? Or Will GOP Prevail?” USA Today, November 1
0,
1994; Gary C. Jacobson, “The 1994 House Elections in Perspective,” in Philip A. Klin
kner, ed.,
The Elections of 1994 in Context (Boulder: Westview Press, 1996); and Franco Mat
tei, “Eight
More in ’94: The Republican Takeover of the Senate,” in Philip A. Klinkner, ed., Mid
term
(Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1996). Although Clinton’s approval rating in the Nor
theast was 51
percent—hardly stellar for a liberal—in the rest of the country it averaged 45 perce
nt.
39. Dick Morris, Behind the Oval Office: Winning the Presidency in the Nineties
(New York:
Random House, 1997), 100; Elizabeth Drew, Showdown: The Struggle Between the Gin
grich
Congress and the Clinton White House (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), 63.
40. See the PBS “Scorecard” on “Contract with America” items, available online at
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/congress/scorecard.html.
41. Morris, Behind the Oval Office, passim.
42. See Dick J. Reavis, The Ashes of Waco: An Investigation (Syracuse, NY: Syrac
use University
Press, 1998); “Waco—Rules of Engagement,” Fifth Estate Productions, Director William G
azecki,
1997.
43. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, The Secret Life of Bill Clinton: The Unreported Sto
ries
(Washington, DC: Regnery, 1997), 5.
44. Brandon Stickney, All-American Monster: The Unauthorized Biography of Timoth
y McVeigh
(Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 1996).
45. Jayna Davis, The Third Terrorist: The Middle East Connection to the Oklahoma
City Bombing
(Nashville, TN: WND Books, 2004); Peter Lance, 1000 Years for Revenge: Internati
onal Terrorism
and the FBI (New York: Regan Books, 2003). Lance is unconvinced of a connection,
but admits
there are numerous suspicious links between McVeigh, Nichols, Ramzi Yousef, Iraq
, and Al
Qaeda. He relies extensively on the word of Yousef’s lawyer that there was no dire
ct Al Qaeda
support (308–18).
46. Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck, American Terrorist (New York: Regan Books, 2001)
.
47. Drew, Showdown, passim.
48. Evan Thomas, et al., Back from the Dead: How Clinton Survived the Republican
Revolution
(New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1997).
49. George Gilder, Telecosm: How Infinite Bandwidth Will Revolutionize Our World
(New York:
Free Press, 2000), 7.
50. Joel Kotkin and Ross C. DeVol, “Knowledge-Value Cities in the Digital Age,” Milk
en Institute
Study, February 13, 2001, 2.
51. Ibid.
52. George Bittlingmayer and Thomas W. Hazlett, “DOS Kapital: Has Antitrust Action
Against
Microsoft Created Value in the Computer Industry?” Journal of Financial Economics,
55 (2000),
329–359; Donald J. Boudreaux and Burton W. Folsom, “Microsoft and Standard Oil: Radi
cal
Lessons for Antitrust Action,” The Antitrust Bulletin, Fall 1999, 555–76. Also see B
ittlingmayer’s
“Antitrust and Business Activity: The First Quarter Century,” Business History Revie
w, Autumn
1996, 363–401.
53. Gary Quinlivan, “Multinational Corporations: Myths and Facts,” Religion and Libe
rty,
November/December 2000, 8–10.
54. James Rolph Edwards, “The Myth of Corporate Domination,” Liberty, January 2001,
41–42.
55. Jeffrey A. Frankel and Peter R. Orszag, eds., American Economic Policy in th
e 1990s
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 2002).
56. Solomon Moore, “Census’ Multiracial Option Overturns Traditional Views,” Los Angel
es
Times, March 5, 2001.
57. Dinesh D’Souza, The End of Racism (New York: Free Press, 1995).
58. “BATF Referrals for Prosecution Peak in 1992,” The American Guardian, January 20
00, 7.
59. FBI uniform crime rate data at www.guncite.com.
60. The Pew results appear online at http://www.publicagenda.org/specials/religi
on/religion.htm.
61. Thomas C. Reeves, The Empty Church: The Suicide of Liberal Christianity (New
York: Free
Press, 1996), 51–52.
62. Gallup cited in Reeves, Empty Church, 52.
63. The Starr Report: The Official Report of the Independent Counsel’s Investigati
on of the
President (Rocklin, CA: FORUM, 1998), n.3, 50.
64. Jones v. Clinton, 117 S. Ct. 1636, 1652 (1997).
65. Roger Morris, Partners in Power: The Clintons and Their America (New York: R
egnery, 1999);
Barbara Olson, Hell to Pay: The Unfolding Story of Hillary Rodham Clinton (New Y
ork: Regnery,
1999).
66. Matt Drudge, The Drudge Manifesto (New York: New American Library, 2000).
67. Steven M. Gillon, The American Paradox: A History of the United States Since
1945 (Boston:
Hougton-Mifflin, 2003), 444.
68. David Schippers, Sell Out: The Inside Story of Clinton’s Impeachment (Washingt
on: Regnery,
2000).
69. Mark Bowden, Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War (New York: Signet, 2000)
.
70. General Merrill A. McPeak, “The Kosovo Result: The Facts Speak for Themselves,”
Armed
Forces Journal International, September 1999, 64.
71. Khidr Hamzah and Jeff Stein, Saddam’s Bomb Maker: The Terrifying Inside Story
of the Iraqi
Nuclear and Biological Weapons Agenda (New York: Scribner, 2000).
72. Martin Gilbert, History of the Twentieth Century, 866.
73. “US missed three chances to seize Bin Laden,” Sunday Times (UK), January 6, 2002
.
74. An extensive review of the failures of the Clinton administration to pursue
bin Laden appears in
Richard Minitier, Losing Bin Laden: How Bill Clinton’s Failures Unleashed Global T
error
(Washington, DC: Regnery, 2003); Gerald Posner, Why America Slept: The Failure t
o Prevent 9/11
(New York: Random House, 2003); Bill Gertz, Breakdown: How America’s Intelligence
Failures
Led to September 11 (Washington, DC: Regnery, 2002).
Chapter 22. America, World Leader, 2000 and Beyond
1. Tom Brokaw, The Greatest Generation (New York: Random House, 1998).
2. Department of Commerce report in August 2002, discussed in Robert Novak, “Clint
on-Cooked
Books?” www.cnn.com/insidepolitics, August 9, 2002.
3. Bob Woodward, The Agenda: Inside the Clinton White House (New York: Pocket Bo
oks, 1995).
4. J. H. Hatfield and Mark Crispin Miller, Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the
Making of an
American President (New York: St. Martin’s, 1999); George W. Bush and Karen Hughes
, A
Charge to Keep (New York: William Morrow and Co., 1999); Bill Minutaglio, First
Son: George
W. Bush and the Bush Family Dynasty (New York: Times, 1999); Frank Bruni, Amblin
g into
History: The Unlikely Odyssey of George W. Bush (New York: HarperCollins, 2002).
On the first
two and a half years of the Bush presidency, see David Frum, The Right Man (New
York: Random
House, 2003).
5. “Five Weeks of History,” USA Today, December 14, 2000.
6. Bill Sammon, At Any Cost: How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election (Washington
, DC:
Regnery, 2001), 78.
7. Howard Kurtz, “Feeding the Media Beast: Leaks, Rats, and Black Berrys,” Washingto
n Post,
December 17, 2000; George Bennett, “LePore: Ballot ‘Probably Not the Wisest Thing,’” Pal
m
Beach Post, December 16, 2000.
8. James V. Grimaldi and Soberto Suro, “Risky Bush Strategy Paid Off,” Washington Po
st,
December 17, 2000.
9. Sammon, At Any Cost, 181–200.
10. Grimaldi and Suro, “Risky Bush Strategy Paid Off.”
11. USA Today, “Five Weeks of History.”
12. “Florida Voter Errors Cost Gore the Election,” USA Today, May 11–13, 2001.
13. Maureen Dowd, “Hillary’s Stocking Stuffer,” New York Times, February 21, 2001.
14. Barbara Olson, The Final Days (Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, 2001).
15. See George Lardner Jr., “Clinton Shipped Furniture a Year Ago,” Washington Post,
February
10, 2001; “Hey, Wait a Minute,” The Hotline (Washington), February 12, 2001.
16. John McLaughlin, John McLaughlin’s One on One, January 26, 2001.
17. Olson, Final Days, chap. 10 details the Rich saga.
18. Dan Balz and Bob Woodward, “America’s Chaotic Road to War,” www.washingtonpost.com
,
January 27, 2002.
19. Alan Levin, Marilyn Adams, and Blake Morrison, “Amid Terror, a Drastic Decisio
n: Clear the
Skies,” USA Today, August 12, 2002.
20. Interview with Charles Calomiris, September 18, 2001.
21. Balz and Woodward, “America’s Chaotic Road to War.”
22. Ibid.
23. Ibid.
24. Ibid.
25. Owen Moritz, “Chilling Tapes of Bravest in WTC,” New York Daily News, November 1
6,
2002.
26. Bill Sammon, Fighting Back (Washington, DC: Regnery, 2002), 106.
27. Benjamin Kline, “No One Could Have Planned for This,” Dayton Daily News, Septemb
er 12,
2000.
28. Lisa Beamer, Let’s Roll! Ordinary People, Extraordinary Courage (Wheaton, IL:
Tyndale
House, 2002).
29. Quoted in Nancy Gibbs, “Special Report: The Day of the Attack,” Time, September
12, 2001,
located at http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,174655–1,00.html.
30. Balz and Woodward, “America’s Chaotic Road to War.”
31. Quoted in Sammon, Fighting Back, 131.
32. Posner, Why America Slept, 30; Minitier, Losing bin Laden, 6–15.
33. Sammon, Fighting Back, 138.
34. Glenn Kessler, “Riding to the Economy’s Rescue,” Washington Post, September 25, 20
01.
35. Peter Navarro and Aron Spencer, “September 11, 2001: Assessing the Costs of Te
rrorism,”
Milken Institute Review, Fourth Quarter, 2001, 17–31; Steven Brill, After (New Yor
k: Simon &
Schuster, 2003).
36. Sammon, Fighting Back, 163–65. See also Larry Schweikart, “The Weight of the Wor
ld and the
Responsibility of a Generation,” http://ashbrook.org/publicat/guest/01/schweikart/
weightofworld.html.
37. Ibid., 189.
38. Bob Woodward and Dan Balz, “Combating Terrorism: It Starts Today,” Washington Po
st,
February 1, 2002.
39. Ibid.
40. Ben Fenton, “1,300 Enemy Men Killed by Handful of Green Berets,” London (UK) Tel
egraph,
January 9, 2002.
41. Sammon, Fighting Back, 263.
42. Ibid., 262.
43. Fareed Zakaria, “Face the Facts: Bombing Works,” Newsweek, November 26, 2001, on
line
edition quoted, http://www.msnbc.com/news/662668. asp.
44. Sammon, Fighting Back, 308.
45. Ibid., 274.
46. Martin, “9/11 Bombshell: New Evidence of Iraq-Al Qaeda Ties?”
47. Howard Fineman, “How Bush Did It,” www.msnbc.com/news/832464.asp.
48. James Carney and John F. Dickerson, “W. and the ‘Boy Genius,’” Time magazine, online
edition, www. time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,388904,00html.
49. David S. Broder, “Radical Conservatism,” Washington Post, September 25, 2002.
50. Evan Thomas and Martha Brant, “The Secret War,” Newsweek, April 14, 2003, at htt
p://www.
msnbc.com/news/899657.asp?0sl=-32.
51. Chris Matthews, writing in the San Francisco Chronicle, said the “invasion of
Iraq…will join
the Bay of Pigs, Vietnam…and Somalia in the history of military catastrophe.” (“To Ira
q and
Ruin,” August 25, 2002). R. W. Apple of the New York Times, even as American force
s were
annihilating enemy resistance, warned, “With every passing day, it is more evident
that the allies
made two gross military misjudgments in concluding that coalition forces could s
afely bypass
Basra and Nasiriya.” (“Bush Peril: Shifting Sand and Fickle Opinion,” March 30, 2003).
Former
CNN correspondent Peter Arnett, in a widely publicized interview on Iraqi TV the
same day said,
“The first war plan has failed because of Iraqi resistance”—this about a war plan that
had moved
farther, faster, and more decisively (with fewer casualties) than any military c
ampaign in human
history. Maureen Dowd complained that the ground troops were left “exposed and ins
ufficiently
briefed on the fedayeen [Saddam’s suicide squads].” (“Back Off, Syria and Iran,” New Yor
k
Times, March 30, 2003). Barry McCaffrey, a retired general, was one of many form
er military
types whose assessment of the operations was completely adrift from reality. Sai
d McCaffrey on
the BBC, the United States “could take, bluntly, a couple to 3,000 casualties” (Reut
ers, March 24,
2003). As of 2004, with coalition forces still supporting the Iraqi interim gove
rnment, U.S. deaths
in the campaign surpassed 1,000—a fraction of what it cost to take a single small
island called Iwo
Jima from Japan in World War II. For a summary of these and other egregiously wr
ong predictions,
see “Hall of Shame,” National Review Online, April 10, 2003.
52. David Zucchino, Thunder Run: The Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad (New York
: Atlantic
Monthly Press, 2004); Colonel Gregory Fontenot, et al., On Point: The United Sta
tes Army in
Operation Iraqi Freedom (Fort Leavenworth, KA: Combat Studies Institute Press, 2
003); Bing
West and Ray L. Smith, The March Up: Taking Baghdad with the 1st Marine Division
(New York:
Bantam Books, 2003); Williamson Murray and Robert H. Scales Jr., The Iraq War: A
Military
History (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2003); Rick Atkinson, In the Company of S
oldiers: A
Chronicle of Combat (New York: Henry Holt, 2004); Karl Zinsmeister, Boots on the
Ground: A
Month with the 82nd Airborne in the Battle for Iraq (New York: Truman Talley Boo
ks, 2003).
SELECTED READING
Below is only a partial listing of the sources cited most often in the endnotes.
Andrew, Christopher M. and Vasili Mitrokhin. The Sword and the Shield: Mitrokhin
Archive and
the Secret History of the KGB. New York: Basic Books, 1999.
Atack, Jeremy and Peter Passell. A New Economic View of American History, 2nd ed
. New York:
W. W. Norton, 1994.
Bailey, Thomas A. et al. The American Pageant, vol. 2, 11th ed. Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1998).
Beliles, Mark A. and Stephen K. McDowell. America’s Providential History. Charlott
esville, VA:
Providence Foundation, 1991.
Berkin, Carol et al. Making America: A History of the United States, 2nd ed. Bos
ton: Houghton
Mifflin, 1999.
Boyer, Paul S. et al. The Enduring Vision: A History of the American People. Lex
ington, MA: D.
C. Heath, 1993.
Brinkley, Alan. American History: A Survey, 9th ed., 2 vols. New York: McGraw-Hi
ll, 1999.——
—. The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People, 3rd ed. Boston
: McGraw-
Hill, 2000.
Burner, David, Robert Marcus, and Emily S. Rosenberg. An American Portrait, 2nd
ed., 2 vols.
New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1985.
Davidson, James West et al. Nation of Nations: A Narrative History of the Americ
an Republic, 2
vols., 3rd ed. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2001.
Davis, Paul K. 100 Decisive Battles: From Ancient Times to the Present. Oxford:
Oxford
University Press, 1999.
Derks, Scott. Working Americans, 1880–1999: Volume I: The Working Class. Lakeville
, CT: Grey
House Publishers, 2000.
Divine, Robert A. et al. America, Past and Present, 5th ed. New York: Longman, 1
999.
Faragher, John Mack et al. Out of Many: A History of the American People, combin
ed ed., 3rd ed.
Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2000.
Gilbert, Martin. History of the Twentieth Century, Volume One: 1900–1933. New York
: Avon,
1977.———. History of the Twentieth Century, Volume Three: 1959–1999. New York: William
Morrow, 1999.
Gillon, Steven M. and Cathy D. Matson. The American Experiment: A History of the
United
States. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2002.
Goldfield, David et al. The American Journey: A History of the United States, co
mbined ed. Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1998.
Hanson, Victor Davis. Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Weste
rn Civilization.
New York: Doubleday, 2001.
Johnson, Paul. A History of the American People. New York: HarperCollins, 1997.
Jordan, Winthrop and Leon Litwack. The United States, 7th ed., combined ed. Engl
ewood Cliffs,
NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1991.
Leckie, Robert. The Wars of America: A Comprehensive Narrative from Champlain’s Fi
rst
Campaign Against the Iroquois Through the End of the Vietnam War, revised and up
dated ed. New
York: Harper and Row, 1981.
McClellan, Jim R. Historical Moments: Changing Interpretations of America’s Past,
2nd ed., 2
vols., Volume 1: The Pre-Colonial Period Through the Civil War and Volume 2: The
Civil War
Through the Twentieth Century. Guilford, CT: McGraw-Hill, 2000.
Murrin, John M. et al. Liberty, Equality, Power: A History of the American Peopl
e, 3rd ed. Fort
Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace, 2002.
Randall, James G. The Civil War and Reconstruction. Boston: D. C. Heath and Comp
any, 1937.
Schweikart, Larry. The Entrepreneurial Adventure: A History of Business in the U
nited States. Fort
Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace, 2000.
Tindall, George Brown and David Shi. America: A Narrative History, 5th ed., 2 vo
ls. New York:
W. W. Norton, 1999.
INDEX
ABM (antiballistic missile system)
Abolition
adverse reaction to
economics and
sentiment toward
of slavery
Abortion
clinic
Acadians
Acheson, Dean
Adams, John
in 1796 election
in 1800 election
foreign policy of
on government
life of
oath of office of
on revolution
Adams, John Quincy
in 1824 election
in 1828 election
economic policy of
as president
Adams-Onis Treaty
Adams, Samuel
Addams, Jane
Adid, Mohammed
Adkins v. Children’s Hospital,
Afghanistan
Africa
African Americans. See also Black Muslims; Emancipation Proclamation; Slavery
in America
black nationalism of
in Carolinas
as chattels, personal
in Civil War
freed, during slavery
in Harlem
Jim Crow laws relating to
leadership of
new class of
philosophies of
politics and
in positions of power
post-Reconstruction
progress of
during Reconstruction
rights of
schools built by
votes of
African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME)
Afro-American Realty Corporation
Agnew, Spiro
Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
Agriculture
technology in
Agriculture Marketing Act
Aguinaldo, Emilio
Ahuitzotl
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC)
Air travel, deregulation of
Alamo
Alaska
Albany Regency
Alcott, Bronson
Aldrich, Nelson
Aldrin, Edwin
Alfred A. Murrah Federal
Building
Alien and Sedition Acts
Allen, Ethan
Allen, Paul
Allison, William
Altgeld, John Peter
Amalgamated Clothing Workers
Amendatory Act
Amendments. See Constitution
America Coming of Age
American Anti-Slavery
Society
American Bankers’
Association
American Communist Party
American Conference for the Prevention of Infant Mortality
American Eugenics Society
American Expeditionary
Force
American Express
American Federation of Labor (AFL) See also Labor unions
American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
American Fur Company
American imperialism, era of
American Individualism,
American life during 1950s
achievers in
baby boomers in
growth of
travel in
American Marconi Company
American Peace Mobilization Committee
American Slavery, American Freedom (Morgan)
American Social Hygiene Association
American Tobacco Company
American Union Against Militarism
American Wire Company
Amherst, Jeffrey
Anaconda Plan
Anarchists
André, John
Andrew, A. Piatt
Andrews, Samuel
Andropov, Yuri
Andros, Edmund
Angell, Norman
Anne, Queen
Annexation, of Hawaii
Anthony, Susan B.
Anti-Comintern pact
Antietam Creek
Anti-Federalists
achievements of
beliefs of
on Constitution
demographics of
Federalists v.
on Hamilton’s reports
support for
Anti-Imperialist League
Antinomianism
Anti-Saloon League. See also Prohibition
Anti-Semitism
Antitrust suits
Antituberculosis league
Antiwar groups
Apollo space program
Apple Computers, Inc.
Appleton, Nathan
Arbuthnot, Alexander
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Arista, Mariano
Armbrister, Robert
Armistead, Lewis
Armistice, of 1918
Armstrong, Louis “Satchmo,”
Armstrong, Neil
Army. See also Continental Army; Draft; Militias
Bonus
Confederate
Union
volunteer
Arnold, Benedict
Washington and
Arrears of Pension Act
Arthur, Chester A.
as president
Articles of Confederation
amendments to
Constitution v.
ratification of
weaknesses of
Art, in Colonial America
Assassination
attempt on Reagan
of Franz Ferdinand
of Garfield
of Kennedy, J.F.
of Kennedy, R.F.
of King
of McKinley
Assumption of debt program
Atchison, David
Atlantic trade
Atomic bomb. See also Manhattan Project
Atomic Energy
Commission
Atomic energy/weapons
Atta, Mohammad
Attack and Die (McWhiney and Jamieson)
Autobiography (Franklin)
Automobiles
business spurred by
impact of
production of
Awful Disclosures of the Hotel Dieu in Montreal (Monk)
“Axis of evil,” 821
Aztecs
culture of
fall of
Azusa Street revival
Babbitt, Bruce
Baby boomers
Bacon, Nathaniel
rebellion of
Baer, George F.
Baghdad
Bailey v. Drexel Furniture Company
Baker, James
Balance of powers
Balboa, Vasco Nuñez de
Baldwin, Matthias
Balfour Declaration
Balkans, conflict in
Ballinger, Richard
Ballinger-Pinochet controversy
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (B&O)
Bank of America
Banking and Currency Committee
Banking system. See also Federal Reserve
branching privileges of
crisis of
as gold based
during Hundred Days
reform of
Bank of United States (BUS)
establishment of
Jackson and
legality of
opposition to
second
Barbed wire
Baruch, Bernard
Bataan, Death March
Batista, Fulgencio
Battle of Antietam
Battle of Chippewa
Battle of Horseshoe Bend
Battle of New Orleans
Battle of Tippecanoe
Bay of Pigs. See Cuba “Bayonet constitution,” of Hawaii
Beamer, Todd
Beard, Andrew Jackson
Beard, Charles
Bear Flag Revolt
Beauregard, P.G.T.
Bebel, August
Beecher, Henry Ward
Beecher, Lyman
Begin, Menachem
Belknap, William W.
Bell, Alexander Graham
Bell, John
Benét, Stephen Vincent
Ben-Gurion, David
Benjamin, Judah P.
Benteen, Frederick
Benton, Thomas Hart
Bentsen, Lloyd
Berkeley, William
Berlin
Berlin, Irving
Bernhardt, Sarah
Berry, Harrison
Berthier, Louis
Biddle, Nicholas
Bierce, Ambrose
Bill of Rights
Bingham, George Caleb
Birmingham, Alabama
Birney, James G.
Birth control. See also “The Pill”
Birth Control Review
Birth of a Nation, The
Bitlingmayer, George
Black Friday
Black Hawk
Black Hawk’s War
Black Muslims
Black nationalism
Black Niagara Movement
Black Panthers
Black Republicans
Blacks. See African
Americans
Blaine, James G.
in 1884 election
Blair, Francis Preston
Blair, Frank P., Jr.
Blair, Montgomery
Blair, Tony
Bland, Richard
Bland-Allison Act
Blitzkrieg, during World War II
Bloch, Ivan S.
Board of Trade
Boer War
Boies, David
Boldin, Valery
Bolsheviks
Bomb. See Time Line; World War II
Bonds
Bonus Army
Boone, Daniel
background of
expeditions of
Booth, John Wilkes
Borah, William
Borden, Gail
Bork, Robert
Bosnia/Kosovo
Boston
Boston Tea Party
Bowie, Jim
Boyce, Ed
Bozeman Trail
Braddock, Edward
Bradford, David
Bradford, William
Bradley, Joseph P.
Bradley, Omar
Bradstreet, Anne
Brady, Jim and Sarah
Brady Bill/Act
Branch Davidians
Breckinridge, John
in 1860 election
Brezhnev, Leonid
Britain. See also Great Britain
Broaddrick, Juanita
Brooks, Preston
Brown, Albert
Brown, H. Rap
Brown, Jacob
Brown, Joe
Brown, John
Brown, Ron
Brown v. Board of Education
Brownlow, Parson
Bruce, Blanche Kelso
Bryan, William Jennings
Brzezinski, Zbigniew
Buchanan, Franklin
Buchanan, James
Buchanan v. Worley,
Buell, Don Carlos
Buffalo
Bull Run
Bunau-Varilla, Philippe 81
Burbank, Luther
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF)
Bureau of Corporations
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
Burger, Warren
Burgoyne, John
forces of
Burke, Edmund
Burnside, Ambrose
Burr, Aaron
in 1800 election
career of
Hamilton, Alexander, and
Burroughs, Edgar Rice
Bush, George H.W.
communism and
economic policies of
Iraq and
as president
as vice president
Bush, George W.
and 2000 election
“axis of evil” and
Bush Doctrine of
career of
Department of Homeland Security and
economic policies of
Hussein and
9/11 relating to
Operation Enduring Freedom and
Operation Iraqi Freedom and
war on terrorism and
Bush Doctrine
Butler, Andrew
Butler, Benjamin
Butterfield, John
Byrd II, William
Cabot, John
Cajuns
Calhoun, John C.
in 1828 election
doctrine of nullification
on slavery
California
settlement of
California Stage Company
Calley, William
Calvert, Cecilius
Calvert, George
Calvert, James I.
Cambodia
Campbell, Ben Nighthorse
Campbell, Joseph
Camp David
accords of
Campus violence
Canada, trade with
Canning, George
Cannon, Joe
Capitalism
during New Deal
welfare
Capone, Al
Card, Andrew
Caribbean, piracy in
Carleton, Guy
Carmichael, Stokely
Carnegie, Andrew
business strategies of
life of
Carnegie Steel
Carolinas
Carpetbaggers
Carranza, Venustiano
Carter, Jimmy
and 1976 election
Afghanistan and
economic policies of
foreign policies of
as president
Cartier, Jacques
Carville, James
Cass, Lewis
Castro, Fidel
Catholics/Catholic Church
in Maryland
Cato Conspiracy
Cattle
Cayce, Edgar
Celtic Thesis
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
Century
Cervera, Pascual
Chamberlain, Daniel
Chamberlain, Joshua
Chamberlain, Neville
Champlain, Samuel de
Chancellorsville
Channing, William Ellery
Character
Charles I
execution of
Charles II
Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge
Charleston Plot
Charles Town
Charter of Liberties
Chase, Salmon P.
background of
political strategies of
Chase, Samuel
Cheney, Richard
Chernenko, Konstantin
Cherokee
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia
Cheves, Langdon
Chiang Kai-shek
Chicago Metropolitan Vice
Commission
Child care
China
empire of Japan and
Korea and
Chinese Exclusion Act
Chisholm, Jesse
Choctaw
Christ
Christianity
evangelism’s impact on
sex relating to
Christian Science
Christian Science Monitor
Church
autonomy of
separation of, from state
sex, marriage and
Church, James Robb
Churchill, Winston
iron curtain relating to
Roosevelt, F.D. and
Circular Order No. 13
Cisneros, Henry
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
Civil libertarianism
Civil rights
Civil Rights Act of 1866
Civil Rights Act of 1875
Civil Rights Act of 1957
Civil Rights Act of 1964
Civil rights movement
Civil service, reform of
Civil Service Commission
Civil War
advantages in
African Americans in
battles of, described
casualties in
Cold Harbor
emancipation and
end of
food supplies in
forces in
foreign powers and
historiographic debate over
Indians in
liberty during
militia units in
motives in
naval battles in
naval strategy in
poverty during
railroads in
resolving
secession in
start of
strategies in
taxation during
Union destabilization in
Civil Works Administration
Clark, William
Class struggle, Constitution and
Clay, Henry
in 1824 election
in 1832 election
in 1844 election
in 1848 election
political goals of
Clayton Antitrust Act
Cleaver, Eldridge
Clemenceau, Georges
Clemens, Samuel Langhorne. See Twain, Mark
Cleveland, Grover
in 1884 election
in 1888 election
in 1892 election
economic policy under
political beliefs of
as president
Clinton, Bill
and 1992 election
bin Laden and
corruption of
economic policies of
foreign policy of
Hussein and
impeachment hearings on
as president
scandals of
Clinton, De Witt
Clinton, George
in 1808 election
in 1812 election
Clinton, Hillary Rodham
Cobb, Howell
Cobb, T.R.
Coca-Cola, and cocaine
Cohen, Lionel
Cohens v. Virginia
Cold war
Berlin during
containment policy during
end of
ICBMs during
jazz musicians during
space program during
sputnik during
Cole, Thomas
Colleges
Collins, Neil
Colonial America
Great Britain and
health in
life in
science, education, and music in
Colson, Chuck
Columbus, Christopher
first voyage of
Indians and
second voyage of
Comity
Command of the Army Act
Commerce and Labor, department of
Committee on Public Information
Common Sense (Paine)
Declaration of and
Commonwealth v. Hunt
Communalism
Communism. See also Marxism
American Communist Party and
Bush, G.H.W. and
collapse of
containment policy and
iron curtain relating to
McCarthy and
Marshall Plan and
movement of
Truman Doctrine and
Communist Manifesto (Marx)
Communist party
Compromise of 1850
Compromise of 1877
Computer industry
Comstock Laws
Comstock Lode
Concord, MA, and Revolution
Condit, Gary
Confederate Army
Confederation Congress
powers of
views of, on Great Migration
Congress
Roosevelt, F.D. and
Roosevelt, T. and
Congress
Congress of Industrial Organizations
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
Conkling, Roscoe
Connecticut Compromise
Conquest, European attitudes on
Conscience of a Conservative (Goldwater)
Conscription Act. See Draft
Conservation
Ballinger-Pinchot controversy about
buffalo’s fate depending on
Roosevelt, T., and
Conspiracies
Constitution.
See also State
constitutions
First Amendment
Second Amendment
Third Amendment
Fourth Amendment
Fifth Amendment
Sixth Amendment
Seventh Amendment
Eighth Amendment
Ninth Amendment
Tenth Amendment
Thirteenth Amendment
Fourteenth Amendment
Fifteenth Amendment
Sixteenth Amendment
Eighteenth Amendment
Nineteenth Amendment
Twenty-first Amendment
Anti-Federalist attacks on
Articles of Confederationv.
class struggle behind
law and
Necessary and proper clause
ratifying
slavery referenced in
Teller
Constitutional Convention
slavery issues at
Constitutional Convention of 1821
Containment policy
Continental Army
Continental Congress
Adams, John, in
operation of
Contract with America
Contrast, The,
Cook, N.D.
Cooke, Jay
Coolidge, Calvin
and 1924 election
foreign policies of
low unemployment under
as president
welfare capitalism under
Cooper, James Fenimore
Copley, John Singleton
Copperheads
Corbin, Abel
Cornbury, Lord
Cornell, Alonzo
Cornwallis, Lord
Coronado, Francisco Vásquez de
Corporate money, during New Deal
Corporate regulation
Corruption
of Clinton, Bill
freedom and
Cortelyou, George
Cortés, Hernando
in Tenochtitlán
Cotton, John
Cotton diplomacy
Cotton gin
Courts. See Federal courts
Cowboys
Cowpens
Cox, Archibald
Cox, James M.
Coxey, Jacob “Crackers,” 158
Crane, Stephen
Crawford, William
in 1816 election
in 1824 election
Crazy Horse
Crédit Mobilier
Creek Indians
Creel, George
Crime. See also Organized crime
Crittenden, John J.
Crittenden-Johnson Resolutions
Croatia
Crockett, Davy
Cronkite, Walter
Crook, George
Crook, William
“Cross of Gold” speech
Crowley, Aleister
Cuba
American concerns for
Bay of Pigs in
Castro and
Hearst and
humanitarian relief for
IRBMs in
Kettle Hill in
McKinley and
missile crisis of
revolts in
Roosevelt, T., and
San Juan Heights in
Spanish-American War relating to
as Spanish possession
Cumberland
Cumberland Gap
Cumming, Alfred
Currency Act of 1764
Current Literature
Curtiss, Glen
Cushing, Caleb
Custer, George
Czolgosz, Leon
Dale, Billy
Dale, Thomas
Damaged
Dane, Nathan
Dare, Virginia
Darrow, Clarence
Dartmouth College
Darwin, Charles
Darwinism
Daschle, Tom
Daugherty, Harry
Davenport, Charles
Davis, David
Davis, Henry W.
Davis, Jefferson
background of
Davison, Henry
Dawes, Charles G.
Dawes, William
Dawes Plan
Dawes Severality Act
D-Day
Dean, John
Deane, Silas
Debs, Eugene V.
Debt
Hamilton on
Jefferson on
national
war, of Germany
Decatur, Stephen
December 7
Declaration of Independence
adoption of
Christianity and
Common Sense and
drafts of
indictment of slavery in
Declaration of Rights
of English Protestants
Declaration of Rights and Grievances (1774)
Declaration of the United Nations
Deere, John
Delaware River
Delaware Tea Party
De La Warr, Lord Thomas West,18
Delta Force
DeMille, Cecil B.
Democracy, development of
Democracy in America (Tocqueville)
Democratic National
Committee
Democratic party
in 1860 election
founding of
goals of
Irish in
and labor unions
structure of
Demographics, of America in 1800
Department of Agriculture
Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW)
Department of Homeland Security
Department of War
Desegregation. See Race relations; Segregation
De Smet, Pierre
Dewey, George
Dewey, Thomas A.
Dias, Bartholomeu
Díaz, Porfirio
Dickinson, John
Dingley Tariff
Dinwiddie, Robert
Direct representation
Direct Tax of 1798 Discourse to Prove a Passage by the North-West to Cathaia and
the East Indies
(Gilbert)
Discourse on Western Planting (Hakluyt)
Disease
Disney, Walt
Divorce
Dobyns, Henry
Doctrine of Nullification
Dodd, S.C.T.
Dole, Robert
Doolittle, Jimmy
Douglas, Lewis
Douglas, Stephen
in 1860 election
Lincoln and
Douglass, Frederick
Doyle, John
Draft
Drake, Francis
Dred Scot ruling of 1857
Drew, Daniel
Drexel, Anthony
Drift and Mastery (Lippmann)
Drudge, Matt
Drugs
Duane, William J.
Du Bois, W.E.B.
Duels
Due process
Dukakis, Michael
Duke, James B.
Duke of York. See James II
Dunmore, Lord
Durant, Thomas
Durant, William
Dutch, in America
Early, Jubal
East India Company
Eastman, George
Eaton, Peggy
Eaton, William
Economic crisis
Economic policy
of Adams, John Quincy
of Bush, G.H.W.
of Bush, G.W.
of Carter
of Cleveland
of Clinton
of Eisenhower
of Ford
of Grant
of Hamilton
of Harrison
of Jackson
of Jefferson
of Madison
of Nixon
of Reagan
of Roosevelt, F.D.
of Roosevelt, T.
of Sherman
of Tyler
of Van Buren
Economic progress
Economic Recovery Act
Economy
Germany’s impact on
Japan’s impact on
Eddy, Mary Baker
Edison, Thomas
Edison Electric
Edmunds Act of1882
Education. See also Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) during 196
0–1974
in Colonial America
policies of Progressive reformers
religion in
Edward, of Portugal
Edwards, Dan
Edwards, Jonathan
Egypt
Eighteenth Amendment
Eighth Amendment
Einstein, Albert
Eisenhower, Dwight D.
election of 1952
election of 1956
foreign policies of
New Deal policies of
as president
race relations and
Elders, Jocelyn
Election of 1796
of 1800
of 1808
of 1812
of 1816
of 1824
of 1828
of 1832
of 1836
of 1840
of 1848
of 1852
of 1856
of 1860
of 1864
of 1868
of 1872
of 1876
of 1880
of 1884
of 1888
of 1892
of 1896
of 1900
of 1904
of 1908
of 1912
of 1916
of 1920
of 1924
of 1928
of 1932
of 1936
of 1940
of 1944
of 1948
of 1952
of 1956
of 1960
of 1964
of 1968
of 1972
of 1976
of 1980
of 1984
of 1988
of 1992
of 1996
of 2000
rate of occurrence of
Electricity
Electronic Data Systems
Elizabeth I, of England
Elkins Act
Ellsberg, Daniel
Emancipation, Civil War and
Emancipation
Proclamation
Embargo, of Japan
Embargo Act
Emergency Peace Mobilization
Emergency Relief Appropriation Act
Emerson, Harriet
Emerson, John
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Empire of Japan
China and
embargo of
U.S. and
World War II and
Endicott, John
England. See Great Britain
English, William
English Magna Charta
Enola Gay
Enrollment Act
Entrepreneurs
Environmental policies, of Nixon
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Epidemics
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
Erickson, Leif
Ericsson, John
Erie Canal
Erlichman, John
Espionage, Sabotage, and Sedition Acts, of 1917 and 1918
Espy, Mike
Europe, age of discovery in
Europe, war in
Europe’s Optical Illusion (Angell)
Evangelism
Christianity affected by
on television
Evers, Medgar
Executive branch
authority of
power of
Expansionism
Ex parte Milligan
Expedition Act, of 1903
Export Control Act
Fair Deal
Fair Labor Standards Act
Fall, Albert
Fargo, William
Farming
Farm Security Administration
Farragut, David
Fascists
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
Federal courts
Federal Express
Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
Federalist Papers
Federalists. See also Nationalism in 1790s
acts passed by
advantages of
Anti-Federalists v.
death of
defining
demographics of
on frontier states
redefining
Republicans v.
support for
Federal Reserve
act
board
district
system
Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
Feminism
Fenno, John
Ferdinand, Franz, assassination of
Fessenden, W.P.
Fetterman, William J.
Fifteenth Amendment
Fifth Amendment
Fight for Freedom Committee
Le Figaro
Fillmore, Millard
Fink, Mike
Finney, Charles Grandison
Fire
Firearms
ownership of
Fireside chats
First Amendment
First Church of Christ Scientist. See also Christian Science
First Confiscation Act
First Great Awakening
First Neutrality Act
Fischer, David
Fish, Hamilton
Fish trade
Fisk, Jim
Fiske, John
Fiske, Robert
Fitzgerald, F. Scott
Fitzhugh, George
Five Power Pact
Flagler, Henry
Fleischer, Ari
Fletcher v. Peck
Florida
Jackson in
Flowers, Gennifer
Foch, Field Marshall
Food and Drug Act
Foot, Samuel
Forbes, Charles
Force Act
Ford, Gerald
economic policies of
as president
as vice president
Ford, Henry
anti-Semitism of
automobiles produced by
Ford Motor Company
Fordney-McCumber Tariff
Foreign policy
of Adams, John
of Bush, G.H.W.
of Bush, G.W.
of Carter
of Clinton
of Coolidge
developing
of Eisenhower
of Ford
of Jefferson
of Johnson
of Kennedy
of McKinley
of Madison
of Polk
of Reagan
of Roosevelt, F.D.
of Roosevelt, T.
of Taft
of Washington
of Wilson
Forrest, Bedford
Forrestal, James
Foster, Vincent
Fourier, Charles
Fourteen Points
at Versailles
of Wilson
Fourteenth Amendment
Fourth Amendment
France. as allies in Revolutionary War
colonies of
Jefferson and
in Revolutionary War
Franklin, Benjamin
in France
at Philadelphia convention
Fredericksburg
Freedmans Bureau
Freedom, corruption and
Free markets
Free and open trade
Freeport Doctrine
Free Soil Party
Free speech
Frémont, John C.
French Canal Company
French and Indian War
French Revolution
Freneau, Philip
Freud, Sigmund
Frick, Henry Clay
Fries’s Rebellion
Fuchs, Claus
Fugitive Slave Law
reaction to
Fuller, Margaret
Fur trade
Gabriel’s Uprising
Gadsden, James
Gadsden Purchase
Gagarin, Yuri
Gage, Thomas
Gag rule
Galbraith, John Kenneth
Gallatin, Albert
Galloway, Joseph
Galloway Plan
Gama, Vasco da
Gangs
Gardoqui, Don Diego de
Garfield, James
Garfield, James A.
in 1880 election
assassination of
Garrison, William Lloyd
Garvey, Marcus Gaspee, burning of
Gates, Bill
Gates, Horatio
Gates, John Warne
Gaulle, Charles de
General Court
General Motors
General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (Keynes)
Genet, Edmund
George II, of England
George III, of England
Georgia
secession of
Germans, as immigrants
Germany
economic impact of
Hitler in
Nazis in
North African defeat of
Poland invaded by
Russia invaded by
Schlieffen Plan of
submarine warfare and
war debts of
World War I and
World War II and
Gerry, Elbridge
Gettysburg
Ghost Dance
Giannini, A.P.
Gibbon, John
Gibbons, Thomas
Gibbons v. Ogden
Giddings, Joshua
Gilbert, Humphrey
Gilded Age
excesses of
immigration in
industry in
labor in
life in
money in
politics in
reform in
Gingrich, Newt
Ginsburg, Allen
Girard, Stephen
Giuliani, Rudolph
Glavis, Louis
Glenn, John
Glorious Revolution
God
Americans and
Godet, Jean Pierre
Godkin, E.L.
Goethals, George
Gold
Gold rush
Gold standard
Goldstone, Jack
Goldwater, Barry
Gompers, Samuel
Gorbachev, Mikhail
Gore, Al
Gorgas, William
Gorges, Ferdinando
Gouge, William
Gould, Jay
Government
New Deal and
reform
Gradual Manumission Act of 1799
Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)
Grange Party
Granger Laws
Grant, Ulysses S.
in 1868 election
in 1872 election
background of
economic policy under
Lincoln and
as politician
strategies of
tactics of
at Vicksburg
Grasse, Françoise Joseph de
Gray, Simon
Great Awakening. See First Great Awakening; Second Great Awakening
second
Great Britain
civil war in
colonial management of
colonies of
Jay negotiating with
military forces of
navy of
Spain competing with
success of, in New World
trade policies of
in War of 1812
Great Bull Market
Great Compromise. See Connecticut Compromise
Great Crash, The (Galbraith)
Great Depression
Great Migration
Confederation Congress’s views on
Great Society
Great Train Robbery, The
Greeley, Horace
in 1872 election
Greenbacker Party
Green Berets
Greene, Catherine
Greene, Nathaniel
Green Mountain Boys
Greenspan, Alan
Grenada
Grenville, George
Grimké, Angelina
Grimké, Sarah
Ground Zero
Guadalcanal
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba
Guinn v. United States
Guiteau, Charles
Gulf of Tonkin
Gun control
Gurley, Phineas
Hakluyt, Richard
Haldeman, H.R.
Half Breeds
Halleck, Henry
Halsey, William “Bull”
Hamilton, Alexander
beliefs of
Burr and
death of
economic policy of
financial legacy of
first report of
Jefferson and
Madison and
as nationalist
political career
second report of
tax policies of
third report of
Hamilton, James
Hamlin, Hannibal
Hammond, James
Hancock, John
Hancock, Winfield Scott
Hanoi
Hanseatic League
Happy Days,
Harding, Warren
Harding, Warren G.
and 1920 election
scandals under
Harlem
Harlem Property Owners’ Improvement Corporation
Harlem Railroad
Harper’s Ferry
Harriman, Edward H.
Harris, Katherine
Harrison, Benjamin
in 1888 election
economic policy of
navy built by
as president
Harrison, William Henry
in 1840 election
death of
on slavery
Hartford Convention
Harvard, John
Harvard Socialist Club
Harvey, William
Hatch Act
Havana
Hawaii
American business interests in
annexation of
“bayonet constitution” of
Japan and
Liliuokalani of
McKinley and
Pearl Harbor
rebellion in
Roosevelt, T., and
tariff favors extended to
Hawkins, John
Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Hay, John
Hayden, Tom
Hayes, “Lemonade Lucy”
Hayes, Rutherford B.
in 1876 election
background of
civil service reform of
political views of
Haymarket Riot
Hayne, Robert Y.
Haywood, Bill
Health, in American colonies
Hearst, George
Hearst, William Randolph
Heinz, Henry J.
Hell’s Kitchen
Helper, Hinton Rowan
Henry the Navigator, of Portugal
Henry, Patrick
Hepburn Act
Herndon, William
Highways
Hill, Anita
Hill, James J.
“Hillarycare,”
Hinckley, John
Hirohito (emperor)
Hiroshima
Hiss, Alger
Hitler, Adolf
Britain attacked by
France invaded by
in power
Hobart, Garret A.
Hobbes, Thomas
Ho Chi Minh Trail
Hoffa, Jimmy
Holladay, Ben
Holocaust
Home Owners’ Loan Act of June 1933
Homestead Act
Homestead bill
Homestead Strike
Homicides
Hong Kong
Hood, John Bell
Hooker, Joe
Hooker, Thomas
Hoover, Herbert
and 1928 election
background of
Bonus Army relating to
presidency of
“rugged individualism” of
stock market crash under
Hoover, J. Edgar
Hopkins, Harry
House, Edward
House of Commons
House International Relations Committee
House Judiciary Committee
House of Representatives
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
Housing, lack of
Housing and Urban
Development (HUD)
Houston, Sam
Howard, O.O.
Howe, William
Howell, David
Huang, John
Hubbell, Webster
Hudson, Henry
Hudson Valley School
Huerta, Victoriano
Hughes, Charles Evans
Hughes, J.R.T.
Huguenots
Hull, Cordell
Hull, William
Humanitarian relief, for Cuba
Humphrey, Hubert H.
Humphreys, Benjamin
Hundred Days, of Roosevelt, F.D.
banking system during
gold standard during
optimism during
Tennessee Valley Authority during
wages/jobs increasing during
Hunley, 319
Hunt, E. Howard
Hunt, Mary
Hunting Trips (Roosevelt)
Hussein, Saddam
Hutchinson, Ann
Hutchinson, Thomas
Iacocca, Lee, xiii
IBM (International Business Machines)
ICBMs, during cold war
Ickes, Harold
Immigration
German
in Gilded Age
Irish
Jewish
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
Immigration Restriction Act, of 1917
Impeachment process of Clinton
of Johnson, Andrew
of Nixon
Implied powers
Income tax
Indentured servitude
Independent Treasury
Indian Ordinance of 1786
Indians. See also Iroquois Confederacy
alliances with
American colonists and
assimilation of
in Carolinas
in Civil War
Congress dealing with
cultural influence of
disease and
fur trade and
interactions with
Jackson and
policy on
populations of
reservations
warfare with
in West
Individual Retirement
Accounts (IRAs)
Industrial Revolution
Industry
in South
technology in
Infant mortality, in American colonies
Inflation
In His Steps (Sheldon)
Innes, George
Intermarriage, of Spanish settlers
Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty
International Economic Conference, in Geneva
Internet
Interstate Commerce Act
Intolerable Acts of 1774
Iran
Iraq
Bush, G.H.W. and
Bush, G.W. and
Kuwait invaded by
IRBMs (intermediate range ballistic missiles)
Irish in Democratic party
in draft riots
famine and
Iron curtain
Churchill relating to
communism and
Roosevelt, F.D. relating to
Soviet Union and
of Stalin
Iroquois Confederacy
in Revolutionary War
Isolationism
Israel
Isthmus of Panama
Italy
Iwo Jima
Jackson, Andrew
in 1824 election
in 1828 election
in 1832 election
BUS and
economic policy of
in Florida
impact of
Indians and
on money
at New Orleans
in office
as president
Jackson, Caleb
Jackson, Helen Hunt
Jackson, Jesse
Jackson, Thomas J.
Jacksonian period/Jacksonianism
James I
James II
James, William
Jamestown
disease in
Jamieson, Perry
Japan. See also Empire of Japan
economic impact of
and Hawaii
Philippines’ occupation by
Japanese-Americans
Jay, John
treaty of
on Virginia Plan
Jay-Gardoqui Treaty
Jay’s Treaty
Jazz musicians Jazz Singer, The
Jefferson, Thomas
in 1796 election
in 1800 election
BUS opposition of
children of
on common sense
on debt
Declaration of
Independence drafts by
description of
in drafting Ordinance of 1784
economic policy of
eloquence of
foreign policy of
Hamilton and
inaugural address of
on Louisiana Purchase
Madison and
military and
political career of
as president
on religion
on slavery
support for
Virginia sabbath law written by
at war
Jeffords, Jim
Jehovah’s Witnesses
Jekyll Island proposal
Jellicoe, Sir John
Jenny couplers
Jensen, Merrill
Jesus
Jewish immigrants
Jim Crow laws
Jobs. See Wages/jobs, increase in
Jobs, Steve
John II
John Paul II
Johnson, Andrew
impeachment process for
life of
Johnson, Hiram
Johnson, Hugh
Johnson, Jack
Johnson, Lyndon B. and 1964 election
background of
federal programs of
Great Society of
as president
Vietnam War relating to
Johnson, Paul
Johnson, Reverdy
Johnson, Robert
Johnson, Robert
Underwood
Johnston, Albert Sidney
Johnston, Joseph E.
Joint Chiefs of Staff
Joint Committee on Reconstruction
Jolson, Al
Jones, Paula Corbin
Jones, William
Jones Act
Journalistic Progressives
Judaism
Judges, Federal
Judiciary Act of 1789
Judiciary Act of 1801 Jungle, The (Sinclair)
Justice Department
Kahn, Alfred
Kaiser, Henry
Kalakaua, David
Kamehameha III
Kansas
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Kansas Pacific Railroad
Kansas Territorial Legislature
Kellogg-Briand pact
Kemp, Jack
Kemper, James L.
Kendall, Amos
Kennan, George
Kennealy, Mary
Kennedy, Edward “Ted”
Kennedy, John F. and 1960 election
assassination of
background of
presidency of
Vietnam War relating to
Kennedy, Joseph
Kennedy, Julian
Kennedy, Robert F.
Kent State University
Kentucky, secession of
Kentucky Resolution
Kerensky, Alexander
Kerry, John
Kettell, Thomas
Kettle Hill
Keynes, John Maynard
Keynesian policies
Keystone Bridge Company
Khobar Towers
Khomeini, Ruhollah
Khrushchev, Nikita
Kim Il Sung
Kimmel, Husband
King, Ernest
King, Martin Luther, Jr.
King, Rodney
King, Rufus
in 1808 election
King George’s War
King of Kings
King Philip’s War
Kissinger, Henry
Kitty Hawk, N.C.
Kleindienst, Richard
Knickerbocker Trust Company
Knight, E.C.
Knights of Labor
Know-Nothings
Knox, Henry
Knox, Philander, C.
Korea, war in
Koresh, David
Kosovo/Bosnia
Kosovo Liberation Army
Kroc, Ray
Ku Klux Klan
Labor
Labor unions
Democratic party and
strikes by
Ladies Garment Workers
Laden, Osama bin
Lafayette, Marquis de
LaFollette, Robert
Lakota Sioux
Lamar, Charles A.L.
Lamar, Lucius Quincy
Land
availability of
policy on
during Reconstruction
tariffs and
technology and
Tocqueville on
Landon, Alf
Land Ordinance of 1785
Lane, Charles
Langley, Samuel P.
Lansing-Ishii Agreement
Laos
La Salle, René de
Las Casas, Bartolomé de
Last of the Mohicans, The (Cooper)
Latin America
Law, constitutional
Lawrence, Charles
Lawrence, James
Lazio, Rick
League of Armed Neutrality
League of Nations
League of United Southerners
Leary, Timothy
Lease, Mary Elizabeth
Lecompton Constitution
Lee, Ann
Lee, Arthur
Lee, Fitzhugh
Lee, Jason
Lee, Richard Henry
Lee, Robert E.
strategies of
tactics of
Legal Tender Act of February 1862
Legislative system
Leisler, Jacob
Lend-Lease Act
Lenin, Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov
León, Juan Ponce de
Lesseps, Ferdinand de
Levant Company Leviathan, The (Hobbes)
Levin, Carl
Levy, Chandra
Lewinsky, Monica.
See also Monicagate Lewis, John L.
Lewis, Meriwether
Lewis, Sinclair
Lewis, Terry
Lexington, MA, and Revolution
Liberal Republicans
Liberty
in Confederacy
right to
Liberty Party
Liberty Ships
Libya
Liddy, G. Gordon
Liliuokalani
Limbaugh, Rush
Lincoln, Abraham
in 1860 election
in 1864 election
appearance of
assassination of
in Civil War
criticism of
Douglas and
Fort Sumter and
Grant and
life of
Lyceum Address
McClellan and
marriage of
on racial issues
in Reconstruction
Reconstruction speech of
religious beliefs of
in response to Bull Run
on slavery
speeches of
Lincoln, Mary Todd
Lindbergh, Charles
Lippmann, Walter
Little Bighorn
Little Rock, AR
Livingston, Robert
Livingstone, David
Lloyd, Henry Demarest
Lochner v. New York
Locke, John
Lodge, Henry Cabot
Logan, George
Logan Act of 1799
Lome, Dupuy de
London, Jack
London Company
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth
Lost cause theory
Louisiana
secession of
Louisiana Purchase
exploring
results of
slavery in
Louis XVI
Lovecraft, H.P.
Lovejoy, Elijah P.
Lowell, Francis Cabot
Lucy furnace
Ludendorff, Erich
Luhan, Mabel Dodge
Lusitania, sinking of
Lyceum Address
Macabees
McAdoo, William Gibbs
MacArthur, Douglas
McAuliffe, Anthony
McCarthy, Eugene
McCarthy, Joseph
McClellan, George B.
in 1864 election
background of
Lincoln and
McClernand, John
McCormick, Cyrus
McCoy, Joseph G.
McCulloch v. Maryland
Macdonough, Thomas
McDougal, James
McDougal, Susan
McDowell, Irwin
McFadden Act
McFarlane, Robert S.
McGee, John S.
McGovern, George
McKinley, Ida
McKinley Tariff
McKinley, William
and 1896 election
and 1900 election
assassination of
Cuba and
foreign policies of
Hawaii and
Philippines and
Spanish-American War and
tariffs relating to
McLane, Louis
McLean, Wilmer
McNamara, Robert
McNary-Haugenism
Macon’s Bill No.
McPherson, Aimee Semple
Macune, Charles W.
McVeigh, Timothy
McWhitney, Grady
Madero, Francisco
Madison, James
in 1808 election
in 1812 election
BUS opposition of
career of
description of
economic policy of
foreign policy of
Hamilton and
Jefferson and
on political parties
on religion
on slavery
success of
at war
Madison Guaranty Savings
& Loan
Magellan, Ferdinand
Mahan, Alfred Thayer
Maine law
Malcolm X
Mallory, Stephen R.
Mangum, W.P.
Manhattan Project. See also Atomic bomb
Manifest destiny
Manila/Manila Bay
Mann, Horace
Mann Act, of 1910
Manson, Charles
Mao Tse-tung
Marbury, William
Market
free
Great Bull
stock
Marquette, Jacques
Marriage
Marshall, David
Marshall, George C.
Marshall, John
appointment of
court of
markets and
Marshall, Thurgood
Marshall Plan
Martel, Charles
Martin, Philip
Marx, Karl
Marxism, civil war and
Mary I
Maryland
politics in 1700s
Protestant revolt in
religion in
Mason, George
Mason, James
Mason, John
Massachusetts
New York and
troops recruited from in Civil War
Massachusetts Bay
Massachusetts Emigrant
Aid Society
Maussoui, Zacarias
Mayflower,
Mayflower Compact
Maysville Road Bill of 1830
Meade, George Gordon
Meany, George
Meat Inspection Act
Medicine, in American colonies
Meese, Edwin
Meggers, Betty
Mein Kampf (Hitler)
Meir, Golda
Mellon, Andrew, tax policies of
Melville, Herman
Memminger, Christopher G.
Mencken, H.L.
Mercantilism
rebirth of
Mercein v. People, 226 Meredith, James
Merrill, Charles E.
Merryman, John
Mestizo populations
Metacomet
Methodists
Mexican Colonization Act of 1830
Mexico
invasion of
Mexican-American War
revolution of
Taft and
Wilson and
Mickey Mouse
Microsoft
Middle East, crisis in
Egypt relating to
Israel relating to
oil’s impact on
war in
Midvale Steel Company
Midway
Military
Jefferson and
during Reconstruction
Military Reconstruction Act
Militia Act of 1862
Militias
in Civil War
Miller, Phineas
Miller, William
Millerites
Milosevic, Slobodan
Mining rush
Minuit, Peter
Minutemen
Missile. See also ABM; IRBMs
crisis of Cuba
Missionary Travels (Livingstone)
Mississippi
Missouri
secession of
statehood of
Missouri Compromise
Mitchell, John
Mitchell, William “Billy”
Mobile Bay
Mogadishu
Mohawk Valley
Molasses Act
Moley, Raymond
Molotov, Vyacheslav
Mondale, Walter
Monetary policy
Monicagate
Monitor,
Monk, Maria
Monroe, James
in 1816 election
background of
political beliefs of
Monroe Doctrine
Montana National Bison
Range
Montcalm, Marquis de
Montesquieu, Charles de
Montezuma
Montgomery, Alabama
Montgomery, Bernard
Morgan, Daniel
Morgan, Edmund
Morgan, Henry
Morgan, J.P.
business strategies of
life of
Morgenthau, Henry
Morill Anti-Bigamy Act
Morison, Samuel Eliot
Mormons
Mormon Trail
Mormon war
Morris, Dick
Morris, Robert
financial reforms suggested by
on slavery
Morrow, Dr. Prince
Mosby, John Singleton
Moscovy Company
Motion pictures
Mott, Lucretia
Mountain men
Moynihan, Patrick
Muhammad, Elijah
Muir, John
Mullan Road
Munich Agreement
Munn, Ira Y.
Munn v. Illinois,
Murray, William Vans
Music, in Colonial America. See also Jazz musicians; Rock and roll
Muslims
Mussolini, Benito
Mutiny Act of 1765 My Bondage, My Freedom (Douglass)
My Lai, massacre of
Nader, Ralph
Nagasaki
Napoléon Bonaparte
Narváez, Pánfilo de
Nasser, Abdel Gamal
Nast, Thomas
Nation, Carry
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
National American Woman
Suffrage Association
National Association for the
Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP)
National Association of Manufacturers
National Bank Act
National capital
National debt
during 1920–1932
during 1945–1960
National Education Association
National Gazette, 147 National Industrial
Recovery Agency (NIRA)
Nationalism. See also Federalists
reforms suggested by
supporters of
National Labor Relations Act
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
National Mental Hygiene Committee
National Reclamation Act of 1902
National Recovery Administration (NRA)
National Security Agency
National Security Council
National Socialist German Workers’ Party
National Society for the Prevention of Blindness
Native Americans. See Indians
Naturalization Act
Natural resources
public control of
Naval Act of 1890
Navigation Acts
Navy
of Great Britain
Nazis
Nebraska National Wildlife Refuge
Necessary and proper clause
Negroes. See African Americans
Neutrality
New Amsterdam
New Deal
capitalism during
corporate money during
Eisenhower and
goals of
government and
Nixon and
policies of
problems with
recession during
Revenue Act and
of Roosevelt, F.D.
New England
New England Anti-Slavery
Society
New Haven, CT
New Jersey plan
Newlands, Francis
New Republic,
New Thought, doctrines of
Newton, Huey
New York
growth of
Massachusetts and
New York Federal Reserve Bank
New York Journal,
New York Manumission Society
New York Stock Exchange
New York Times,
Nicaragua
Nicholas II
Nichols, Terry
Nimitz, Chester
Niña,
9/11
Nineteenth Amendment
Ninth Amendment
Nixon, Richard
and 1968 election
and 1972 election
economic policies of
environmental policies of
impeachment investigation of
New Deal and
presidency of
resignation of
as vice president
Vietnam War relating to
Watergate and
Nobel, Alfred
Nonimportation Act
Nonintercourse Act
Norris, William H.
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Northern Securities
railroads as part of
Sherman antitrust suit and
Standard Oil Company as part of
North Korea
Northrup, Solomon
Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Notes on the State of Virginia (Jefferson)
Noyes, John Humphrey
Occupational Health and Safety Act (OSHA)
O’Connor, Sandra Day
Office of Price Administration
Office of Strategic Services
Office of War Information
Office of War Management (OWM)
Of Plymouth Plantation (Bradford)
Oglethorpe, James
Oil
Okinawa
Oklahoma City bombing
Olympia,
Omaha Beach
O’Neill, Bucky
O’Neill, Paul
Operation Enduring Freedom
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Oppenheimer, J. Robert
Ordinance of 1784
Oregon Steam Navigation Company
Oregon Trail
Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC)
Organized crime
ethnic groups of
spread of
Orr, James
Ortega, Daniel
Osama bin Laden. See Laden, Osama bin
Osborn, Danvers
Osceola
Ostend Manifesto
Oswald, Lee Harvey
Oswald, Richard
Otis, James
Ottoman Empire
Owen, Robert Dale
Pacific Railroad Act of 1862
Packenham, Richard
Packenham-Buchanan Treaty
Packet-steamer trade
Pahlavi, Mohammad Reza
Paige, Rod
Paine, Thomas
Palestine
Panama
isthmus of
revolution in
Panama Canal
acquisition of
construction of
France relating to
Pan American Exposition, in Buffalo
Panic of 1837
Panic of 1873
Panic of 1893
Panic of 1907
Parker, Alton B.
Parks, Rosa
Passaron, Patricio
Paterson, William
Patterson, Robert
Patton, George S.
Paxton Boys
Payne-Aldrich Bill
Payton, Phil
Pearl Harbor
bombing of
in Hawaii
Roosevelt, F.D. and
Pendleton Civil Service Act
Pendleton Plan
Penn, William
Pennsylvania
colony at
state constitution of
Pensions
Pentagon
Pentagon Papers
People’s History of the United States
People’s Republic of China. See China
Pepperrell, William
Pequot War
Perdue, Sally
Perfectionism
Perman, Michael
Perot, Ross
Perry, Oliver Hazard
Pershing, John
Pershing, John J.
Persian Gulf
Personal computer (PC). See Computer industry
Petition of Right
Philadelphia
capital at
trade in
Philadelphia Abolition Society
Philadelphia convention
Philadelphia Patriotic
Society
Philippines as American protectorate
independence of
Japanese occupation of
Jones Act relating to
McKinley and
war of
Phillips, Wendell
Pickett, George
Pierce, Franklin
in 1852 elections
background of
Pike, Zebulon
Pilgrims
at Plymouth
“The Pill,” See also Birth control
Pillsbury, Charles
Pinchot, Gifford
Pinckney, Charles C.
in 1808 election
Pinckney’s Treaty
Pinkerton, Allan
Pinkney, William Pinta, 4
Pioneers Pioneers, The (Cooper)
Piracy, in Caribbean
Pitcairn, John
Pitt, William 5
Planned Parenthood
Pleasants, Henry
Plessy, Homer
Plessy v. Ferguson,
Plymouth, pilgrims at
Plymouth Company
Pocahontas
Poland, invasion of
Political parties. See also specific political parties
Madison on
revolutionary and early national
Political skill, xiii
Polk, James K.
in 1844 election
foreign policy of
in Mexican-American War
Pontiac
Pony Express
Poor Richard’s Almanac (Franklin)
Pope, John
Population
Populism
Porter, David
Porter, John
Portsmouth Treaty
Post office
Potsdam Proclamation
Powderly, Terence V.
Powell, Adam Clayton, Sr.
Powell, Colin
Powhatan
Pragmatism (James)
Pragmatism, philosophy of
Prairie, The (Cooper)
Prescott, William
Prevost, George
Primaries
Principles of Psychology (James)
Principles of Scientific Management (Taylor)
Proclamation Line of 1763
Proclamation of Neutrality
Procter & Gamble
Profiles in Courage (Kennedy)
Progressive movement
Progressive party
Progressive reformers
educational policies
free markets relating to
government reform relating to
ideals of
income tax relating to
organized crime and
Progressive reformers (cont.)
professionalism of politics relating to
prostitution problem and
secularist
social gospel relating to
as social scientists
technology relating to
temperance relating to
Welsh revival’s influence on
women’s suffrage relating to
WWJD (What Would Jesus Do?) movement relating to
Progressives
agenda
journalists allied with
management techniques of
principles
Progressivism
of Roosevelt, T.
of Taft
of Wilson
Prohibition, xiv. See also Temperance
Prohibition Bureau
Property
Prostitution
Protective tariffs
Protestant Reformation
Protestant revolt
Protestants. See also Religion
Protests
Providence, RI
Public Works Administration (PWA)
Pulitzer, Joseph
Puritans
Harvard and
influx of
in Maryland
moral codes of
tolerance of
Putnam, Israel
Qaddafi, Muammar
Al Qaeda
Quaker Anti-Slavery Society
Quakers
Quartering Act
Quayle, Dan
Quebec Act
Queen Anne’s War
Quezon, Manuel
Quids (disaffected Republicans)
Quincy, Josiah
Quitman, John A.
Race relations
in Birmingham, AL
civil rights movement and
CORE working for
Eisenhower and
Evers working for
King working for
Ku Klux Klan and
in Little Rock, AR
in Los Angeles
Meredith and
in Montgomery, AL
Parks and
riots relating to
Roosevelt, T., and
“separate but equal”
Racism
slave trade and
Radical Republicans
Radio, growth of
Radio Corporation of America (RCA)
Railroads
in Civil War
expansion of
slavery and
transcontinental
Rainbow Coalition
Raleigh, Walter
Rankin, Jeannette Pickering
Reading Railroad
Reagan, Ronald W.
and 1980 election
and 1984 election
assassination attempt on
economics of
foreign policies of
as president
Reaganomics of
Reaganophobia and
Soviet Union and
Rebellion, in Hawaii
Recession
during 1973–1987
during New Deal
Panic of 1837 and
Panic of 1873 and
Reconquista, 5
Reconstruction era
African Americans during
economic compensation during
economics during
failure of
first phase
law and order during
military during
politics during
racial attitudes during
second phase
third phase
Reconstruction Finance
Corporation (RFC)
Red Badge of Courage, The (Crane)
Red Cloud
Red Cross
Redeemers
Red October Revolution
Reform. See also New Deal; Progressive reformers
of America’s banking system
of government
in Jacksonian era
secularist
Regan, Donald
Rehnquist, William
Reid, Richard
Religion. See also Catholics/Catholic Church; Christianity; Church; Evangelism
in education
First Great Awakening of
freedom of
in Gilded Age
in Jacksonian era
Lincoln and
Madison on
music and
in Rhode Island
slavery and
toleration of
Remington, Frederic
Removal Bill
Reno, Janet
Reno, Marcus
Republican party (GOP)
in 1860 election
evolution of
formation of
Radical
Republican party (Jeffersonian)
in 1790s
Federalists v.
growth of
Republic of Korea (ROK)
Reuther, Walter
Revels, Hiram
Revenue Act
Revere, Paul
Revolution
American
French
in Panama
Red October
in Russia
Revolutionary War
ending of
France as ally in
opening campaign of
Spain as ally in
R. G. Dun and Co.
Rhett, Robert Barnwell
Rhode Island colony of
religion in
Ribbentrop, Joachim von
Rice, Condoleezza
Rich, Marc
Richards, Ann
Richardson, Elliot
Richmond-Albany axis
Riots
Ripley, George Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy, The (Stoddard
)
Ritchie, Thomas
Road construction
Roaring Twenties
Robber barons
Roberts, Oral
Rock and roll. See also Music
Rockefeller, John D.
business strategies of
life of
Rockefeller, John D., Jr.
Roe v. Wade
Rolfe, John
Rommel, Erwin
Roosevelt, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Franklin D. See also
World War II
and 1932 election
and 1936 election
and 1940 election
and 1944 election
Churchill working with
Congress and
death of
fireside chats of
Holocaust relating to
Hundred Days of
iron curtain and
media and
military upgraded by
New Deal of
Pearl Harbor and
second hundred days of
Roosevelt, Theodore (Teddy)
and 1904 election
aircraft trials and
career of
Roosevelt, Theodore (Teddy) (cont.)
Congress and
conservation relating to
corporate regulation of
Cuba relating to
economic policies of
foreign policies of
Hawaii and
navy relating to
Portsmouth Treaty and
progressivism of
race relations and
as Rough Rider
as social Darwinist
Spanish-American War and
Taft and
tariffs relating to
as trustbuster
Washington meeting with
Roosevelt Corollary to the
Monroe Doctrine
Root, Elihu
Rosecrans, William
Rose law firm
Rosenberg, Julius
Ross, John
Rough Riders
Rove, Karl
Royal African Company
Rubin, Jerry
Rubin, Robert
Ruby, Jack
Ruby Ridge, ID
Ruckelshaus, William
Ruffin, Edmund
Rumsfeld, Donald
Russell, Charles Taze
Russell, W.H.
Russia. See also Soviet Union
communist movement in
German invasion of
revolution in
Russo-Japanese War
Ruth, George Herman (Babe)
Rutledge, Edward
Sacco, Nicola
Sacrifices
Sadat, Anwar
St. Clair, Arthur
Salem, MA
colony at
witch trials
SALT I, SALT II
Sampson, William
Sandy Hook
Sandys, Edwin
Sanger, Margaret
San Jacinto,
San Juan Heights
Santa Anna, Antonio Lopez de
Santa Fe Trail Santa María, 4
Saratoga
Sartori, Joseph
Sauls, N. Sander
Scalawags
Scalia, Antonin
Scandals
of Clinton
under Grant
under Harding, Warren G.
Teapot Dome
Scheer, Reinhard
Schlieffer, Alfred von
Schlieffen Plan, of Germany
Schurz, Carl
Schwab, Charles
Schwartzkopf, Norman
Schwarzenegger, Arnold
Science
Scientific Temperance Instruction
Scott, Dred
Scott, George
Scott, Thomas
Scott, Winfield
tactics of
Scott v. Sandford,
Secession
Second Amendment
Second American Party
System
Second Great Awakening
Second hundred days, of Roosevelt, F.D.
Secularist reformers
Securities and Exchange Commission
Sedition, Alien and, Acts
Segregation. See also Race relations
Selective Service Act
Seminole War
Senate
Senate Armed Forces Committee
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Seneca Women’s Rights Convention
Separation of power
Serbia
Seven Days’ Battle
Seventh Amendment
Seventh-Day Adventists
Seven Years’ War. See French and Indian War
Sewage systems
Seward, William H.
Sex
church, marriage and
drugs, rock and roll and
lies, Monicagate, and
Seymour, Horatio
Shafter, William
Shaker sect
Shanksville, PA
Sharecropping
Sharpsburg. See Antietam Shaw, Nate
Shays, Daniel
Shays’s Rebellion
Sheldon, Charles
Shepard, Alan B., Jr.
Sheridan, Philip
Sherman, John
economic policy of
Sherman, William Tecumseh
life of
Sherman Antitrust Act
Shiloh
Shippen, Peggy
Shirley, William
Short, Walter
Sierra Club
Silent Majority
Silicon Valley
Silver
Silver Purchase Act
Simpson, Jerry
Simpson, O.J.
Sims, William S.
Sinclair, Upton
Sitting Bull
Sixteenth Amendment
Sixth Amendment
Slater, Samuel
Slaughter-House cases
Slave revolts
in Carolinas
Cato conspiracy
Charleston plot
Nat Turner rebellion
Slave runaways
Slavery. See also Emancipation Proclamation
in 1800
abolition of
apportionment establishment and
Calhoun, John C., on
culture in
development of
economics of
Harrison, William Henry, on
issues regarding, at Constitutional Congress
Lincoln on
in Louisiana Purchase
origins of
populations of people in
prevalence of
profitability of
railroads and
rape in
as referenced in Constitution
religion and
Van Buren and
Slave trade
race and
reopening
Slidell, James
Sloan, Alfred P., Jr.
Small bill prohibition
Smith, Adam
Smith, Alfred E.
Smith, Fred
Smith, John
Smith, Joseph
Smoot-Hawley Tariff
Social Gospel
Socialism
Social reform
Social Security
Sons of Liberty
Sons of Neptune
Soto, Hermando de
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
Southwest Ordinance of 1789
Soviet espionage, in America
Soviet Union. See also Russia; Stalin, Joseph
communism’s collapse and
iron curtain of
Khrushchev of
Reagan and
Space program
Apollo in
Armstrong, Collins, Aldrin in
cold war and
Gagarin in
NASA and
Spain
as ally in Revolutionary War
colonies of
conflict with
England competing with
Spanish-American War
as costly
Cuba and
final negotiations of
McKinley and
Roosevelt, T., and
volunteer army in
Special Field Order No. 15
Specie Circular of 1836
Speed, Joshua Spirit of the Laws, The (Montesquieu)
Spiritual renewal
Spreckels, Claus
Sputnik
“Square deal,”
Stagecoaches
Stalin, Joseph
iron curtain and
Stamp Act Congress
Stamp Act of 1765
Standard Oil Company
Stanton, Edwin
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady
Starr, Kenneth
Star Wars
State constitutions
State, The (Wilson)
Steamboats
Steam power
Steel
Steffens, Lincoln
Stephanopoulos, George
Stephens, Alexander H.
Stephens, Ulrich S.
Stephenson, B.F.
Steuben, Baron Friedrich von
Stevens, Isaac Ingalls
Stevens, Thaddeus
Stock market
Stockton, Robert
Stoddard, Lothrop
Stoker, Bram
Stone, Lucy
Stono slave revolt
Stowe, Harriet Beecher
Strategic Arms Reduction Talks
Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)
Strauss, Levi
Strikes. See Labor unions
Strong, Josiah
Stuart, Jeb
“Studies in the Sierra”
Sturgis v. Crowninshield
Stuyvesant, Peter
Suez Canal
Suffolk Resolves
Suffrage, of women
Sugar Act of 1764
Sullivan, Louis
Summer camp movement
Sumner, Charles
Supreme Court
Swift, Gustavus
Swill milk
Syphilis
Taft, William Howard
and 1908 election
Ballinger-Pinochet controversy and
Mexico and
as president
progressivism of
Roosevelt, T., and
tariff revisions of
trust busting continued by
Taliban
Talleyrand, Charles
Tallmadge, James
Taney, Roger B.
Tappan, Arthur
Tappan, Lewis
Tarbell, Ida
Tariff
of 1824
of 1833
Dingley
favoring extended to
Hawaii
Fordney-McCumber
land and
McKinley
protective
Roosevelt, T., and
scientific management of
Smoot-Hawley
Taft and
Wilson and
Tarleton, Banastre
Taxation during
Civil War
cuts
income
increase of
Mellon’s policies of
powers of
slave counting for
withholding
Taylor, Frederick W.
Taylor, John
Taylor, John C.
Taylor, Zachary
in 1848 election
as president
Tea Act of 1773
Teapot Dome scandal
Technology
agricultural
firearms
industrial
land and
shipbuilding
steam
Telephone
Teller Amendment
Temin, Peter
Temperance. See also Prohibition
Ten Commandments Ten Commandments, The
Tenet, George
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
Tenochtitlán
Tenth Amendment
Tenure of Office Act
Terry, Alfred
Tet offensive
Texas
independence of
statehood of
Thanksgiving
Thatcher, Margaret Theory of Moral Sentiments (Smith)
Theory of the Leisure Class, A (Veblen)
Theosophy
Third Amendment
Thirteenth Amendment
Thomas, Clarence
Thomas, Lorenzo
Thomas, Phillip
Thomason, Harry
Thomason, Susan
Thoreau, Henry David
Thorpe, George
Thousand-Year Reich
Three-fifths compromise
Tibbets, Paul
Tilden, Samuel J.
in 1876 election
Timber
Time lines
1492–1692
1707–63
1763–83
1776–89
1789–1815
1815–37
1836–49
1843–96
1848–60
1860–65
1865–77
1877–95
1896–1912
1912–20
1920–32
1932–41
1939–47
1945–60
1973–87
1988–2000
2000–04
Tobacco
Tocqueville, Alexis de
on elections
on land
Tojo, Hideki
Tolerance
Toleration Act of 1649
Tompkins, Daniel D.
Toombs, Robert
Tora Bora
Tourgee, Albion
Townshend, Charles
Townshend Act
Tracy, Benjamin Franklin
Trade
Atlantic
British
with Canada
favorable balance of
free and open
international
routes
slave
Trail of Tears
Transcendentalism
“Travelgate,”
Travis, William B.
Treasury Department
Treaty of Aix-la-Chappelle
Treaty of Brest Litovsk
Treaty of Ghent
Treaty of Greenville
Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo
Treaty of Paris
Treaty of Peace
Treaty of San Ildefonso
Treaty of San Lorenzo. See Pinckney’s Treaty
Treaty of Utrecht
Treaty of Versailles
Trent
Trenton
Tribe, Lawrence
Tripartite Pact
Tripoli
Trist, Nicholas
Trollope, Frances
Trotsky, Leon
Truman, Harry S.
and 1948 election
atomic bomb used by
career of
Korea and
as president
Truman Doctrine
Trust busting
Truth, Sojourner
Tuberculosis
Tubman, Harriet
Tugwell, Rexford
Turner, Frederick Jackson
Turner, Nat
Twain, Mark
Twenty-first Amendment
Tydings-McDuffie Act
Tyler, John C.
in 1840 election
economic policy of
after Harrison’s death
Whigs v.
Tyler, Royall
Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe)
Underground Railroad
Union Army
Union Pacific
Unions. See Labor unions Unitarianism
United Auto Workers (UAW)
United Mine Workers (UMW)
United Nations
General Assembly
Security Council
United Parcel Service
United Steel Workers
Universal Negro Improvement Association
Upshur, Abel Up from Slavery (Washington)
Urban life
Urrea, José deU.S. First Infantry Division
U.S. Forest Service
USS Arizona, 594USS Cole,
USS Dolphin, 508USS Maine, sinking of
USS Nashville, 481U.S. Steel
USS Yorktown, 610–11
Valley Forge
Van Buren, Martin
in 1824 election
in 1836 election
in 1840 election
in 1860 election
during Adams’s administration
Democratic party and
economic policy of
as president
slavery and
Vanderbilt, Cornelius
Vanderlip, Frank
Vanzetti, Bartolomeo
Vatican II
Veblen, Thorsten
Versailles
Fourteen Points of
Treaty of
Vesey, Denmark
Vespucci, Amerigo
Veterans Administration (VA), loans of
Vicksburg, MI
Viet Cong
Vietnam War
end of
Gulf of Tonkin in
Hanoi
Ho Chi Minh Trail
Johnson and
Kennedy and
My Lai massacre in
Nixon and
North Vietnamese in
opponents of
silent majority relating to
Tet offensive in
Viet Cong in
Villa, Francisco (Pancho)
Vinland
Virginia
Declaration of Rights of
politics in 1700s
slavery in
Statute for Religious Freedom
Virginia, 318–19
Virginia Cavaliers
Virginia Company
Virginia Plan
Virginia Resolution
Volcker, Paul
Volstead Act
Volunteer army
Votes
of blacks
of women
Voting Rights Act
Waco, TX
Wade, Ben
Wade-Davis Manifesto
Wages/jobs, increase in
Wagner, Robert
Wagner Act Walden (Thoreau)
Walesa, Lech
Walker, Robert J.
Wallace, George
Wallace, Henry
Wanniski, Jude
War. See also Civil War; Cold war; Revolutionary War; Vietnam War; World War I;
World War II
of the Austrian succession
Black Hawk’s
Boer War
of 1812
in Europe
French and Indian
of Jenkin’s Ear
King George’s
King Philip’s
in Korea
in Middle East
Mormon
Pequot
in Philippines
on poverty
powers of
of the Roses
Russo-Japanese War
Seminole
on terrorism
Warburg, Paul
War Department
Ware, Henry
War of 1812
results of
War Finance Corporation (WFC)
War Hawks
War Industries Board
Warmoth, Henry
Warner Bros.
War Powers Act
War Production Board (WPB)
Warren Commission
Warsaw Pact
Wars of the Roses
Washington, Booker T.
Washington, D.C.
invasion of
Washington, George
Arnold and
cabinet established by
farewell address of
forces of
foreign policy under
life of
military tactics of
nationalism of
oath of office of
Proclamation of
Neutrality of
religious views of
reputation of
at Valley Forge
Washington, Martha
Washington Conference
Washington Pact
Washington Society
Washington Territory
Watch Tower Bible Society
Watergate
Water supplies
Wayne, Anthony Way the World Works, The (Wanniski)
Wealth of Nations (Smith)
Weapons. See also Atomic bomb
of mass destruction (WMD)
Weaver, James B.
in 1892 election
Weaver, James K.
Weaver, Randy
Webster, Daniel
Webster, Noah
Webster-Ashburton Treaty
Weimar Republic
Weizmann, Chaim
Welfare
Wells, Henry
Wells, Madison
Wells Fargo
Welsh revival
Wesley, John
West, Benjamin
Western Federation of Miners (WFM)
Western Hemisphere, unrest in
West India Company
Westinghouse
Westmoreland, William
Weyerhaeuser, Frank
Weyler, Valeriano
What the Social Classes Owe to Each Other (Sumner)
Wheeler, William A.
Wheelock, Eleazar
Whigs, (American) Revolutionary era
Whigs (English)
Whigs
Whiskey Rebellion
White, Ellen G.
White, John
Whitefield, George
Whitehall
Whitewater Development Company
Whitman, Marcus
Whitman, Walt
Whitney, Asa
Whitney, Eli
Wickersham, George
Wildcat banks
Wiley, Harvey
Wilhelm (kaiser)
Wilkes, Charles
Wilkinson, James Will to Believe, The (James)
Willey, Kathleen
William of Orange
Williams, Roger
Willkie, Wendell
Wilmot, David
Wilmot Proviso
Wilson, Henry Lane
Wilson, James
Wilson, Woodrow
and 1912 election
and 1916 election
background of
Darwinian views of
foreign policies of
Fourteen Points of
Wilson, Woodrow (cont.)
income tax relating to
Mexico and
progressivism of
tariffs relating to
Winning of the West, The (Roosevelt)
Winthrop, John
Wirz, Henry
Witherspoon, John
Withholding taxes
Wobblies
Wolfe, James
Women
rights of
suffrage of
in workforce
Women Rebel, The (Sanger)
Women’s Army Corps (WACS)
Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
Women’s Peace Party
Wood, James
Wood, Leonard
Woodstock
Worcester v. Georgia
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
World Trade Center
on 9/11 1993
bombing of
World War I
armistice in
beginning of
British blockade during
end of
Germany and
Lusitania sunk during
U.S. involvement in
U.S. neutrality during
World War II
American industry during
Bataan in
blitzkrieg during
bombing campaign during
celebrities during
costs of
D-Day in
empire of Japan during
Germany during
Holocaust during
intelligence gathering during
Japanese Americans during
Liberty Ships during
Manhattan Project during
Midway during
Omaha Beach during
Pacific and
Russia during
soldiers during
Yalta and
World Wide Web (www)
World Zionist Organization
Wounded Knee
Wozniak, Steve
Wright, Frances
Wright, Susan Webber
Wright Brothers
Writs of Assistance
WWJD movement (What Would Jesus Do?)
X, Y, Z Affair
Yalta
Yamamoto, Isoroku
Yancey, William
Yellowstone National Park
Yeltsin, Boris
York, Alvin
Young, Andrew
Young, Brigham
Yousef, Ramzi
Zimmerman, Alfred
*These are generalizations only; there are exceptions, which nonetheless prove t
he rules.

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