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    American Experiment


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      The American Experiment

      James MacGregor Burns

      Contents

      The Vineyard of Liberty

      PROLOGUE The Vineyard

      PART I • Liberty and Union

      CHAPTER 1 The Strategy of Liberty

      THE GREAT FEAR

      A RAGE FOR LIBERTY

      PHILADELPHIA: THE CONTINENTAL CAUCUS

      CHAPTER 2 The Third Cadre

      THE ANTI-FEDERALISTS

      THE COURSE IS SET

      VICE AND VIRTUE

      CHAPTER 3 The Experiment Begins

      THE FEDERALISTS TAKE COMMAND

      THE NEW YORKERS

      THE FEDERALIST THRUST

      THE DEADLY PATTERN

      DIVISIONS ABROAD AND AT HOME

      CHAPTER 4 The Trial of Liberty

      PHILADELPHIANS: THE EXPERIMENTERS

      QUASI-WAR ABROAD

      SEMI-REPRESSION AT HOME

      THE VENTURES OF THE FIRST DECADE

      SHOWDOWN: THE ELECTION OF 1800

      PART II • Liberty in Arcadia

      CHAPTER 5 Jeffersonian Leadership

      “THE EYES OF HUMANITY ARE FIXED ON US”

      TO LOUISIANA AND BEYOND

      CHECKMATE: THE FEDERALIST BASTION STANDS

      CHAPTER 6 The American Way of War

      “THE HURRICANE …NOW BLASTING THE WORLD”

      THE IRRESISTIBLE WAR

      WATERSIDE YANKEES: THE FEDERALISTS AT EBB TIDE

      FEDERALISTS: THE TIDE RUNS OUT

      CHAPTER 7 The American Way of Peace

      GOOD FEELINGS AND ILL

      ADAMS’ DIPLOMACY AND MONROE’S DICTUM

      VIRGINIANS: THE LAST OF THE GENTLEMEN POLITICIANS

      THE CHECKING AND BALANCING OF JOHN QUINCY ADAMS

      JUBILEE l826: THE PASSING OF THE HEROES

      CHAPTER 8 The Birth of the Machines

      FARMS: THE JACKS-OF-ALL-TRADES

      FACTORIES: THE LOOMS OF LOWELL

      FREIGHT: THE BIG DITCHES

      THE INNOVATING LEADERS

      PART III • Liberty and Equality

      CHAPTER 9 The Wind from the West

      THE REVOLT OF THE OUTS

      THE DANCE OF THE FACTIONS

      JACKSONIAN LEADERSHIP

      CHAPTER 10 Parties: The People’s Constitution

      EQUALITY: THE JACKSONIAN DEMOS

      STATE POLITICS: SEEDBED OF PARTY

      MAJORITIES: THE FLOWERING OF THE PARTIES

      CHAPTER 11 The Majority That Never Was

      BLACKS IN BONDAGE

      WOMEN IN NEED

      MIGRANTS IN POVERTY

      LEADERS WITHOUT FOLLOWERS

      PART IV • The Empire of Liberty

      CHAPTER 12 Whigs: The Business of Politics

      THE WHIG WAY OF GOVERNMENT

      THE ECONOMICS OF WHIGGERY

      EXPERIMENTS IN ESCAPE

      CHAPTER 13 The Empire of Liberty

      TRAILS OF TEARS AND HOPE

      ANNEXATION: POLITICS AND WAR

      THE GEOMETRY OF BALANCE

      CHAPTER 14 The Culture of Liberty

      THE ENGINE IN THE VINEYARD

      RELIGION: FREE EXERCISE

      SCHOOLS: THE “TEMPLES OF FREEDOM”

      LEADERS OF THE PENNY PRESS

      ABOLITIONISTS: BY TONGUE AND PEN

      PART V • Neither Liberty Nor Union

      CHAPTER 15 The Ripening Vineyard

      THE CORNUCOPIA

      THE CORNUCOPIA OVERFLOWS

      “IT WILL RAISE A HELL OF A STORM”

      THE ILLINOIS REPUBLICANS

      CHAPTER 16 The Grapes of Wrath

      SOUTH CAROLINIANS: THE POWER ELITE

      THE GRAND DEBATES

      THE POLITICS OF SLAVERY

      CHAPTER 17 The Blood-Red Wine

      THE FLAG THAT BORE A SINGLE STAR

      MEN IN BLUE AND GRAY

      THE BATTLE CRIES OF FREEDOM

      NOTES

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      INDEX

      The Workshop of Democracy

      PART I • The Crisis of Democracy

      CHAPTER 1 The War of Liberation

      MANNING THE FRONT

      FORGING THE SWORD

      THE SOCIETY OF THE BATTLEFIELD

      “LET US DIE TO MAKE MEN FREE”

      CHAPTER 2 The Reconstruction of Slavery

      BOUND FOR FREEDOM

      A REVOLUTIONARY EXPERIMENT

      “I’SE FREE. AIN’T WUF NUFFIN”

      PART II • The Business of Democracy

      CHAPTER 3 The Forces of Production

      INNOVATORS: THE INGENIOUS YANKEES

      INVESTORS: EASTERN DOLLARS AND WESTERN RISKS

      ENTREPRENEURS: THE CALIFORNIANS

      INDUSTRIALISTS: CARNEGIE, ROCKEFELLER, AND THE TWO CAPITALISMS

      PHILADELPHIA 1876: THE PROUD EXHIBITORS

      CHAPTER 4 The Structure of Classes

      UPPER CLASSES: THE NEW RICH AND THE OLD

      THE MIDDLE CLASSES: A WOMAN’S WORK

      THE FARMER’S LOT

      WORKING CLASSES: THE CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE

      SOCIAL CLASS AND SOCIAL OUTCAST

      CHAPTER 5 The Power of Ideas

      DINNER AT DELMONICO’S

      THE BITCH-GODDESS SUCCESS

      “TOILING MILLIONS NOW ARE WAKING”

      THE ALLIANCE: A DEMOCRACY OF LEADERS

      CHAPTER 6 The Brokers of Politics

      THE OHIOANS: LEADERS AS BROKERS

      POLITICS: THE DANCE OF THE ROPEWALKERS

      THE POVERTY OF POLICY

      SHOWDOWN 1896

      TRIUMPHANT REPUBLICANISM

      PART III • Progressive Democracy?

      CHAPTER 7 The Urban Progressives

      THE SHAPE OF THE CITY

      THE LIFE OF THE CITY

      THE LEADERS OF THE CITY

      THE REFORMATION OF THE CITIES

      WOMEN: THE PROGRESSIVE CADRE

      CHAPTER 8 The Modernizing Mind

      THE PULSE OF THE MACHINE

      THE CRITICS: IDEAS VS. INTERESTS?

      ART: “ALL THAT IS HOLY IS PROFANED”

      WRITING: “VENERABLE IDEAS ARE SWEPT AWAY”

      “ALL THAT IS SOLID MELTS INTO AIR”

      CHAPTER 9 The Reformation of Economic Power

      THE PERSONAL USES OF POWER

      FOREIGN POLICY WITH THE TR BRAND

      REFORM: LEADERSHIP AND POWER

      CHAPTER 10 The Cauldron of Leadership

      TAFT, TR, AND THE TWO REPUBLICAN PARTIES

      WILSON AND THE THREE DEMOCRATIC PARTIES

      ARMAGEDDON

      PART IV • Democracy on Trial

      CHAPTER 11 The New Freedom

      THE ENGINE OF DEMOCRACY

      THE ANATOMY OF PROTEST

      MARKETS, MORALITY, AND THE “STAR OF EMPIRE”

      CHAPTER 12 Over There

      WILSON AND THE ROAD TO WAR

      MOBILIZING THE WORKSHOP

      “NOUS VOILÀ, LAFAYETTE!”

      OVER HERE: LIBERTY AND DEMOCRACY

      CHAPTER 13 The Fight for the League

      THE MIRRORED HALLS OF VERSAILLES

      THE BATTLE FOR THE TREATY

      1920: THE GREAT AND SOLEMN REJECTION

      PART V • The Culture of Democracy

      CHAPTER 14 The Age of Mellon

      “THE BUSINESS OF AMERICA …”

      BANKERS AND BATTLESHIPS

      THE VOICES OF PROTEST

      CHAPTER 15 The Commercialized Culture

      THE WORKSHOP OF EDUCATION

      THE PRESS AS ENTERTAINMENT

      ENTERTAINMENT AS SPECTATORSHIP

      THE WORKSHOP AND THE DEMOS

      CHAPTER 16 The Vacant Workshop

      LIFE IN THE DEPRESSION

      THE CRISIS OF IDEAS

      “ONCE I BUILT A RAILROAD, MADE IT RUN”

      NOTES

      INDEX

    >   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      The Crosswinds of Freedom

      PART I • What Kind of Freedom?

      CHAPTER 1 The Crisis of Leadership

      THE DIVIDED LEGACY

      THE “HUNDRED DAYS” OF ACTION

      “DISCIPLINE AND DIRECTION UNDER LEADERSHIP”?

      CHAPTER 2 The Arc of Conflict

      CLASS WAR IN AMERICA

      “LENIN OR CHRIST” OR A PATH BETWEEN?

      THE POLITICS OF TUMULT

      APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE

      CHAPTER 3 The Crisis of Majority Rule

      COURT-PACKING: THE SWITCH IN TIME

      CONGRESS-PURGING: THE BROKEN SPELL

      DEADLOCK AT THE CENTER

      THE FISSION OF IDEAS

      THE PEOPLE’S ART

      PART II • Strategies of Freedom

      CHAPTER 4 Freedom Under Siege

      THE ZIGZAG ROAD TO WAR

      THE WAR OF TWO WORLDS

      THE PRODUCTION OF WAR

      THE RAINBOW COALITION EMBATTLED

      CHAPTER 5 Cold War: The Fearful Giants

      THE DEATH AND LIFE OF FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

      THE LONG TELEGRAM

      THE SPIRAL OF FEAR

      THE PRICE OF SUSPICION

      CHAPTER 6 The Imperium of Freedom

      THE TECHNOLOGY OF FREEDOM

      THE LANGUAGE OF FREEDOM

      DILEMMAS OF FREEDOM

      CHAPTER 7 The Free and the Unfree

      THE BOSTON IRISH

      THE SOUTHERN POOR

      THE INVISIBLE LATINS

      THE REVOLUTIONARY ASIANS

      PART III • Liberation Struggles

      CHAPTER 8 Striding Toward Freedom

      ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS

      MARCHING TO WAR

      WE SHALL OVERCOME

      CHAPTER 9 The World Turned Upside Down

      PEOPLE OF THIS GENERATION

      ROLLING THUNDER

      INTO THE QUICKSAND

      SONGS OF THE SIXTIES

      CHAPTER 10 Liberty, Equality, Sisterhood

      BREAKING THROUGH THE SILKEN CURTAIN

      THE LIBERATION OF WOMEN

      THE PERSONAL IS POLITICAL

      PART IV • The Crosswinds of Freedom

      CHAPTER 11 Prime Time: Peking and Moscow

      FINDING CHINA

      PEACE WITHOUT PEACE

      FOREIGN POLICY: THE FALTERING EXPERIMENTS

      CHAPTER 12 Vice and Virtue

      WATERGATE: A MORALITY TALE

      CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

      CARTER: THE ARC OF MORALITY

      GUN AND BIBLE

      CHAPTER 13 The Culture of the Workshop

      THE DICING GAME OF SCIENCE

      THE RICH AND THE POOR

      CROSSWAYS, LAND AND SKY

      PART V • The Rebirth of Freedom?

      CHAPTER 14 The Kaleidoscope of Thought

      HABITS OF INDIVIDUALISM

      KINESIS: THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIANS

      SUPERSPECTATORSHIP

      THE NEW YORKERS

      THE CONSERVATIVE MALL

      CHAPTER 15 The Decline of Leadership

      REPUBLICANS: WAITING FOR MR. RIGHT

      THE STRUCTURE OF DISARRAY

      REALIGNMENT? WAITING FOR LEFTY

      A REBIRTH OF LEADERSHIP?

      MEMORIES OF THE FUTURE: A PERSONAL EPILOGUE

      NOTES

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      INDEX

      The American Experiment

      The Vineyard of Liberty

      James MacGregor Burns

      To the vital cadres of history—the archivists, librarians, research assistants, and secretaries—who make possible the writing of history

      I sought in my heart to give myself unto wine; I made me great works; I builded me houses; I planted me vineyards; I made me gardens and orchards, and pools to water them; I got me servants and maidens, and great possessions of cattle; I gathered me also silver and gold, and men singers and women singers, and the delights of the sons of men, and musical instruments of all sorts, and whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept not from them; I withheld not my heart from any joy. Then I looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and behold! all was vanity and vexation of spirit! I saw that wisdom excelleth folly, as light excelleth darkness.

      From Ecclesiastes, as quoted by Thomas Jefferson, 1816

      Contents

      PROLOGUE The Vineyard

      PART I • Liberty and Union

      CHAPTER 1 The Strategy of Liberty

      THE GREAT FEAR

      A RAGE FOR LIBERTY

      PHILADELPHIA: THE CONTINENTAL CAUCUS

      CHAPTER 2 The Third Cadre

      THE ANTI-FEDERALISTS

      THE COURSE IS SET

      VICE AND VIRTUE

      CHAPTER 3 The Experiment Begins

      THE FEDERALISTS TAKE COMMAND

      THE NEW YORKERS

      THE FEDERALIST THRUST

      THE DEADLY PATTERN

      DIVISIONS ABROAD AND AT HOME

      CHAPTER 4 The Trial of Liberty

      PHILADELPHIANS: THE EXPERIMENTERS

      QUASI-WAR ABROAD

      SEMI-REPRESSION AT HOME

      THE VENTURES OF THE FIRST DECADE

      SHOWDOWN: THE ELECTION OF 1800

      PART II • Liberty in Arcadia

      CHAPTER 5 Jeffersonian Leadership

      “THE EYES OF HUMANITY ARE FIXED ON US”

      TO LOUISIANA AND BEYOND

      CHECKMATE: THE FEDERALIST BASTION STANDS

      CHAPTER 6 The American Way of War

      “THE HURRICANE …NOW BLASTING THE WORLD”

      THE IRRESISTIBLE WAR

      WATERSIDE YANKEES: THE FEDERALISTS AT EBB TIDE

      FEDERALISTS: THE TIDE RUNS OUT

      CHAPTER 7 The American Way of Peace

      GOOD FEELINGS AND ILL

      ADAMS’ DIPLOMACY AND MONROE’S DICTUM

      VIRGINIANS: THE LAST OF THE GENTLEMEN POLITICIANS

      THE CHECKING AND BALANCING OF JOHN QUINCY ADAMS

      JUBILEE l826: THE PASSING OF THE HEROES

      CHAPTER 8 The Birth of the Machines

      FARMS: THE JACKS-OF-ALL-TRADES

      FACTORIES: THE LOOMS OF LOWELL

      FREIGHT: THE BIG DITCHES

      THE INNOVATING LEADERS

      PART III • Liberty and Equality

      CHAPTER 9 The Wind from the West

      THE REVOLT OF THE OUTS

      THE DANCE OF THE FACTIONS

      JACKSONIAN LEADERSHIP

      CHAPTER 10 Parties: The People’s Constitution

      EQUALITY: THE JACKSONIAN DEMOS

      STATE POLITICS: SEEDBED OF PARTY

      MAJORITIES: THE FLOWERING OF THE PARTIES

      CHAPTER 11 The Majority That Never Was

      BLACKS IN BONDAGE

      WOMEN IN NEED

      MIGRANTS IN POVERTY

      LEADERS WITHOUT FOLLOWERS

      PART IV • The Empire of Liberty

      CHAPTER 12 Whigs: The Business of Politics

      THE WHIG WAY OF GOVERNMENT

      THE ECONOMICS OF WHIGGERY

      EXPERIMENTS IN ESCAPE

      CHAPTER 13 The Empire of Liberty

      TRAILS OF TEARS AND HOPE

      ANNEXATION: POLITICS AND WAR

      THE GEOMETRY OF BALANCE

      CHAPTER 14 The Culture of Liberty

      THE ENGINE IN THE VINEYARD

      RELIGION: FREE EXERCISE

      SCHOOLS: THE “TEMPLES OF FREEDOM”

      LEADERS OF THE PENNY PRESS

      ABOLITIONISTS: BY TONGUE AND PEN

      PART V • Neither Liberty Nor Union

      CHAPTER 15 The Ripening Vineyard

      THE CORNUCOPIA

      THE CORNUCOPIA OVERFLOWS

      “IT WILL RAISE A HELL OF A STORM”

      THE ILLINOIS REPUBLICANS

      CHAPTER 16 The Grapes of Wrath

      SOUTH CAROLINIANS: THE POWER ELITE

      THE GRAND DEBATES

      THE POLITICS OF SLAVERY

      CHAPTER 17 The Blood-Red Wine

      THE FLAG THAT BORE A SINGLE STAR

      MEN IN BLUE AND GRAY

      THE BATTLE CRIES OF FREEDOM
    <
    br />   NOTES

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      INDEX

      PROLOGUE

      The Vineyard

      AS AMERICANS GAINED THEIR liberty from Britain in the 1780s, they had only the most general idea of the great lands stretching to the west. But the scattered reports from explorers had indicated abundance and diversity: a huge central plain and valley drained by a river four thousand miles long; beyond that, an endless series of mountain ranges rising to rocky peaks and interspersed with burning deserts; and then a final mountain range sloping down to a green coastal fringe on the Pacific. There were stories of boundless physical riches in the bottomlands of the rivers, the herds of buffalo stretching for hundreds of miles, primeval forests so thick that migrating geese could fly over them for a thousand miles and never see a flash of sunlight on the ground below.

      People living in the thirteen states in the east savored these reports, but they savored even more the diversity and abundance of their own regions. They too could boast of lush valleys and lofty mountain ranges, ample farmlands and invigorating climate. New Hampshire farmers could still be battling blizzards while Virginians saw their first tobacco plants breaking through the red soil. And their own explorers spoke of the matchless beauties of the east. One of these was Thomas Pownall, an eminently practical young Englishman who had helped plan the war against the French and Indians, and in the 1750s had been rewarded with the governorship of Massachusetts.

      A tireless traveler along the seaboard and into the mountains, Pownall set about making a map of the “middle British colonies.” A no-nonsense type, he ended his map at the Mississippi and dismissed most of the topography of central Pennsylvania as “Endless Mountains.” But Pownall, in doing his work, was constantly distracted by the charm and luxuriance of the land he charted—the wild vines and cherries and pears and prunes; the “flaunting Blush of Spring, when the Woods glow with a thousand Tints that the flowering Trees and Shrubs throw out”; the wild rye that sprouted in winter and appeared green through the snow; above all, by the autumn leaves: the “Red, the Scarlet, the bright and the deep Yellow, the warm Brown,” so flamboyant that the eye could hardly bear them.

      Pownall was eager for Americans to learn from European experience with the cultivation of crops. But he was cautious about trying to transplant European vines to the American climate, with its extremes of dry and wet, its thunderous showers followed by “Gleams of excessive Heat,” when the skins of “Exotic grapes” might burst. Better, he said, that Americans try to cultivate and meliorate their native vines, small and sour and thick-skinned though the grapes be. Given time and patience, even these vines could grow luxuriant and their grapes delicious.

      Some ten thousand years ago or more, big-game hunters from Siberia crossed over the Bering Strait and pushed down along an ice-free corridor through Canada to the grasslands below. These were the first Americans. As they fanned out to the south and east they hunted down and killed countless bison, mastodons, mammoths, and other game with their grooved spears. It took the descendants of these onetime Mongols about a hundred and fifty years to reach the present-day Mexican border and the Atlantic coast, and another six hundred to cross the Isthmus into South America. By that time, they had killed off almost all the big game and had mainly turned to growing maize and other grains.

     

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