American creation Triumphs and tragedies at the founding of the Republic

Joseph J. Ellis

Large print - 2007

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Published
New York : Random House Large Print c2007.
Language
English
Main Author
Joseph J. Ellis (-)
Edition
1st large print ed
Item Description
Originally published: New York : A.A. Knopf, 2007.
Physical Description
xii, 493 p. (large print) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780739326183
Contents unavailable.
Review by Choice Review

Like its predecessor, this follow-up to Ellis's celebrated Founding Brothers (CH, Feb'01, 38-3494) also focuses on the founders. The seven episodes in American Creation point to the importance of personal conflicts, beliefs, and contingencies and highlight flaws as well as virtues. Unfortunately, the result is still a depiction of the new nation fashioned entirely by a few prominent men. For example, the chapter on Adams's conservative shaping of the Revolution in 1776 ignores the local controversies that drove and fashioned the revolt, and the chapter on why Madison and Jefferson forged the first political party in the early 1790s neglects more general opposition to Hamiltonian policies. The book also suffers from myopic sources: the chapter on how Washington and Henry Knox fashioned US Indian policy, which highlights negotiations by Creek leader Alexander McGillivray, ignores recent literature on Creek culture and politics. The better pieces are those that work as explorations of individuals, particularly the chapters on Madison's struggle to create and then justify a new national government, and Jefferson's failure to ban slavery from the Louisiana Territory despite his initial autocratic control of the region. Summing Up: Recommended. Public libraries and general and undergraduate collections. D. R. Mandell Truman State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review

Joseph Ellis argues that America's founders favored evolution over revolution. A FEW years ago, impressed by the popular success of David McCullough's "John Adams" and of Joseph J. Ellis's "Founding Brothers," I asked my Newsweek colleague Evan Thomas (himself then at work on a biography of John Paul Jones) to write an article for the magazine on what we called "Founders' Chic." Why, we wondered, were so many millennial Americans so intrigued by the stories of dead white men heroic and fascinating dead white men, to be sure, but still dead white men from the late 18th century? The answers we came up with were not particularly surprising. Dissatisfied with contemporary political leaders, many looked back with longing to a time when giants seemed to walk the earth; in those pre9/11, preIraq days, too, the stakes of the Revolutionary generation's struggles seemed epic compared with the squabbles of our own time. They were fighting for the rights of man while we quarreled over a lockbox for Social Security. Perfectly valid thoughts, but Ellis's new book, "American Creation," suggests that the interest in the founders is more perennial than episodic, and that the more important question is not why we are engaged by the founding but what we should make of it. It is tempting to view the events from Lexington and Concord to the Louisiana Purchase as a straightforward story of peril and progress, a time when great men mastered great events. And there is a good deal of truth in such a rendering of our early history. We were lucky; we also got much right. As Ellis points out in this illuminating book, however, we got much wrong, too. If at this point I were to note the familiar contradictions of the birth of the nation chiefly the triumph of liberty, but only for propertied white men and say that Ellis has written an entertaining account of, as his subtitle has it, the "triumphs and tragedies" of the founding, there would not be much new for me to say, or for you to read, either in this review or in Ellis's book. It is difficult to imagine an educated American who does not know that the Revolution was selective and that the Revolutionaries, many of them slaveholders who were complicit in the bloodthirsty treatment of Indians, were flawed and imperfect. The signing of the Constitution; painter unknown. But Ellis rescues his enterprise by going beyond the familiar critique of the founding to explore a point that remains underappreciated: that America was constructed to foster arguments, not to settle them. The observation is especially relevant at the moment, I think, because of the country's evident desperation to move beyond the Bush years into well, into just about anything else. Modern political campaigns talk of revolution when in fact the founding gave us a nation that prefers evolution. Despite the hurlyburly of presidential bids, with their evocations of hope (Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, John Kennedy's New Frontier, Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, Ronald Reagan's Morning in America, Bill Clinton's Bridge to the 21st Century), no single election will lead us through the wilderness to the Promised Land. Short of what William Faulkner called "the last red and dying evening," nothing will ever be finally, fully finished. The poor shall be with us always, and the world will defy our best and most conscientious efforts to eliminate evil, or even to master it for very long. How to live in a tragic milieu and yet strive toward triumph for while perfection may not be possible, progress is was a consuming concern for the founders, who, led by James Madison, made a virtue of creating competing centers of power within the constitutional structure. For the new American Republic, Ellis writes, "government was not about providing answers, but rather about providing a framework in which the salient questions could continue to be debated." To transform disagreement from a natural source of strife into a source of stability was a crucial insight, and is arguably the great achievement of the Constitution. What frustrates the passionate about America its creaky checks and balances, diffuse sovereignties and general aversion to sudden change is, Ellis argues, what makes possible the triumphs we do manage to pull off. Instead of loosely linked portraits in the manner of his "Founding Brothers," Ellis offers loosely linked moments and issues, from Valley Forge to Indian policy to the Louisiana Purchase. "American Creation" is not a seamless narrative; it is allusive rather than immersive. In a way, the fragmentary nature of the book mirrors one of Ellis's key points. The past itself is fragmentary, and the fundamental task for any generation at any given moment is to bring order to intrinsically chaotic forces and events. History is messy because life is messy, and politics is provisional because life is provisional. Ellis shares the founders' tragic sensibility, finding redemption in seeking the good rather than in achieving the perfect. The wisdom of the American founding lies in the recognition that the former is possible, and the latter is not The acknowledgment of limitation and the appreciation that the founders themselves purposely moved with caution is hardly the stuff that emotional Independence Day orations are made of, but they are essential truths about America's beginning, and may help explain why our revolution worked when others failed. As Ellis says, "In my judgment the calculated decision to make the American Revolution happen in slow motion was a creative act of statesmanship that allowed the United States to avoid the bloody and chaotic fate of subsequent revolutionary movements in France, Russia and China." The other issues he takes on slavery, Indian removal, the rise of the party system are handled well, and readers will find Ellis's conversational tone congenial. (One quibble: Ellis's voice is occasionally so informal that it can veer toward the cliché: Robert Livingston's support for the Louisiana Purchase "sealed the deal"; conflicts "heated up"; a British expeditionary force is sent to crush the American rebellion "in the bud." The book would have been better if Ellis had chosen to crush phrases like that in the bud.) In all, however, Ellis has done us a great service by reminding us why America can be so frustrating. For one man's obvious reform is another man's nightmare. "Unlike mathematics, in politics there was no agreedupon solution reached by sheer brainpower and logic," Ellis writes, "but rather an ongoing and neverending struggle between contested versions of the truth." Making it up as one goes along, then, is in the best tradition of the American Revolution. AS the decades passed and the founders died off, John Adams grew amused in a John Adams kind of way by the deification of the Revolutionary generation. "I ought not to object to your reverence for your fathers" he wrote an admiring younger correspondent, "but to tell you a very great secret, as far as I am capable of comparing the merit of different periods, I have no reason to believe that we were better than you are." Perhaps so, but what Adams's generation did with its moment was to create the means by which subsequent generations, including our own, could argue about ends in a largely peaceable way. "It was patched and piebald then," Adams said of the founding, "as it is now, ever was and ever will be, world without end." To which we may, I think, safely add: Amen. The United States was constructed to foster arguments, Ellis explains, not to settle them. Jon Meacham, the editor of Newsweek, is the author of "Franklin and Winston" and "American Gospel." He is at work on a book about Andrew Jackson.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 27, 2009]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* In a structure similar to his Founding Brothers (2000), which examined leading American revolutionaries at critical episodes, Ellis selects certain propitious moments from the American Revolution and early republic, dramatizes them, and analyzes their crucial ramifications for America's future. Those Ellis discusses, such as a sense of nationalism or the Founders' failure to constrain slavery, emerge as contingent developments. What Ellis emphasizes in this set of incisive narratives is the possibility that history could have taken some very different directions and that what occurred is unjustifiably endowed with inevitability. Subjects include the debate preceding the Declaration of Independence; the ordeal of Valley Forge; the beginning of the party system in the 1790s; and the Louisiana Purchase. Collectively they illuminate, argues Ellis, the Founders' anxieties about the constitutional nature, territorial extent, and permanence of the republic they were constructing. All the Founders had reservations about the nation-state that resulted. Their maneuvers to alter it, such as an effort by Washington's secretary of war to change Indian policy from dispossession to accommodation, crystallize in Ellis' outstanding acuity about the successes and failures of the Founders. A history bound for phenomenal popularity.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2007 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This subtle, brilliant examination of the period between the War of Independence and the Louisiana Purchase puts Pulitzer-winner Ellis (Founding Brothers) among the finest of America's narrative historians. Six stories, each centering on a significant creative achievement or failure, combine to portray often flawed men and their efforts to lay the republic's foundation. Set against the extraordinary establishment of "the most liberal nation-state in the history of Western Civilization... in the most extensive and richly endowed plot of ground on the planet" are the terrible costs of victory, including the perpetuation of slavery and the cruel oppression of Native Americans. Ellis blames the founders' failures on their decision to opt for an evolutionary revolution, not a risky severance with tradition (as would happen, murderously, in France, which necessitated compromises, like retaining slavery). Despite the injustices and brutalities that resulted, Ellis argues, "this deferral strategy" was "a profound insight rooted in a realistic appraisal of how enduring social change best happens." Ellis's lucid, illuminating and ironic prose will make this a holiday season hit. (Nov. 5) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

A Pulitzer Prize winner looks back at the Founding Fathers' less-than-complete success; they created a republic but left slavery and hostilities with Native Americans intact. With a 12-city tour. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Pulitzer-winner Ellis (History/Mt. Holyoke Coll.; His Excellency: George Washington, 2004, etc.) tells six stories, each revealing the genius and the shortcomings of the Founders. Though he covers roughly the same historical period as Jay Winik's recent, magisterial The Great Upheaval (2007), Ellis focuses almost exclusively on Americans, highlighting select issues and events that shaped the young republic and continue to inform its character today. Rejecting caricatures of the Founders as either demigods or demons, he presents them as talented but flawed, enmeshed in and attempting desperately to control difficulties where their blindspots sometimes proved greater than their brilliance. They knew, for example, that the policy of removing Indians from their lands and the institution of African slavery were incompatible with the revolution's republican values, but they were unable to summon the will and the courage required to put a stop to either. Ellis examines both failures in chapters devoted to the doomed 1789 treaty with the Creek Nation and an especially thought-provoking discussion of the Louisiana Purchase, where, he maintains, the United States missed the last, best opportunity to resolve the slavery issue peacefully. Other passages deal with the Founders' high achievement: how ardent separationists shrewdly prepared the country for a slow-motion revolution, how they diplomatically and militarily prosecuted the first successful colonial war for independence in modern times, how they ingeniously constructed a government that located sovereignty in multiple, overlapping sources, how they--even against the noble conventions of the 18th century--absorbed the emergence of political parties to channel the ongoing debate about the country's future. Through these stories, each tied to a roughly specific moment in time (e.g., the Valley Forge winter, the 1788 Virginia Ratifying Convention), Ellis examines a well-known--but rarely better understood--cast of characters (Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Hamilton, Paine, Franklin and others), shuffling them to the back or foreground, demonstrating how their varied talents came into play for good or ill depending on the issue at hand. Sharply conceived and smoothly executed--a worthy addition to Ellis's already well-advanced project of lucidly explaining the nation's early history to his countrymen. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One: The Year If permitted the historical license to stretch the definition of a year, then the fifteen months between the shots fired at Lexington and Concord in April of 1775 and the adoption of the Declaration of Independence in July of 1776 can justifiably claim to be both the most consequential and the strangest year in American history. It was consequential because the rationale for American independence and the political agenda for an independent American republic first became explicit at this time. It was strange because while men were dying, whole towns being burned to the ground, women being raped, captured spies and traitors being executed, the official posture of what called itself "The United Colonies of North America" remained abiding loyalty to the British Crown.[1] Whether the American colonists were living a lie, an illusion, or a calculated procrastination is a good question. But when Thomas Jefferson finally got around to drafting the Declaration of Independence in June of 1776, one sentence enjoyed special resonance as an accurate characterization of the past year: "Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed." This was Jefferson's lyrical way of describing the quite remarkable feat of making an explosion happen in slow motion. After all, prudence does not ordinarily make its way onto any list of revolutionary virtues. The very idea of a cautious revolutionary would seem, on the face of it, a contradiction in terms. The standard story of most revolutions features a cast of desperate characters with impulsive temperaments, utopian visions, a surefire sense of where history is headed, and an unquenchable urge to get there fast. Indeed, tarrying along the way is usually regarded as counterrevolutionary. If that is what the standard story of a revolution requires, then one of two conclusions about the American Revolution follows naturally: either it was not really a revolution at all but merely (or perhaps not so merely) a war for colonial independence, the first of its kind in the modern world, to be sure, but not a fundamental shift in the social order that left the world changed forever. Or else it was a strange kind of revolution that did not fit the standard pattern because many of its most prominent leaders were convinced that the pace of change must be slowed down and the most radical of the revolutionary promises deferred. The result is another contradiction, or perhaps a paradox: namely, an evolutionary revolution. In short, the decision to secede from the British Empire was accompanied by a truly revolutionary agenda for the infant American republic. But the most prominent leaders, John Adams chief among them, insisted on the deferral of the revolutionary agenda and, in some instances, its postponement into the distant future. Instead of regarding this gradualist approach as a moral and political failure, a conclusion that historians on the left regard as, shall we say, self-evident, the argument offered here is just the opposite. In my judgment the calculated decision to make the American Revolution happen in slow motion was a creative act of statesmanship that allowed the United States to avoid the bloody and chaotic fate of subsequent revolutionary movements in France, Russia, and China. And so, within a very strange year of full-scale war occurring alongside political reticence, we find an equally strange pattern emerging that will establish the uniquely judicious framework within which the American Revolution proceeded. John Adams, the major figure in the Continental Congress, and George Washington, the commander in chief of the Continental Army, are the chief players in this unusual story. Thomas Paine, who fits the more conventional revolutionary pattern perfectly, turns out to be the exception rather than the rule, temporarily indispensable but ultimately disposable. The great creative achievement embodied in the leadership of Adams and Washington at this propitious moment was to assure that the American Revolution moved forward, to borrow a modern phrase, with all deliberate speed. HINDSIGHTS When John Adams looked back from retirement on his experience thirty years earlier in the Second Continental Congress, two recollections nudged out all the other memories. The first was a bit awkward to acknowledge publicly, but since Adams believed that truth should always trump modesty (especially false modesty), he laid down his personal marker on the proceedings: "I was incessantly employed through the Whole Fall, Winter and Spring of 1775 and 1776 during their Sittings and on Committees on mornings and Evenings," he recalled, "and unquestionably did more business than any other Member of that house."[2] The second recollection had the effect of making the first impossible to verify. No true history of that fateful time would ever be written, Adams insisted, because the most important conversations occurred "out of doors" in local taverns and coffeehouses. What's more, the official record of the deliberations imposed a misleading gloss of coherence over the congressional proceedings, concealing the messy confusion that reigned supreme for all the delegates, himself included. Any coherent narrative of the deliberations must necessarily falsify the way it really was for all the participants, who were improvising without a script in a historical drama without a known conclusion.[3] Adams was making a serious, perhaps even a profound, point: namely, that retrospective history--that is, history viewed with the benefit of hindsight--is invariably neater and tidier than history as experienced by those making it. But since hindsight is the only interpretive tool historians have at their disposal, we must run the risk of deploying it here, enjoying the clairvoyance that Adams and his fellow delegates were denied in order to establish the political context of the imperial crisis that they, albeit lacking our prescient perch, were confronting in the late spring and summer of 1775. Why was there an imperial crisis? The answer of the moment was that British troops had gunned down ninety-five American patriots at Lexington and Concord. Adams was not sure whether this blood-letting would become the opening shot in a war for American independence. He was sure that it represented another escalation in what had become a twelve-year argument about the proper place of the American colonies within a reconfigured British Empire. The Adams version of that dispute was highly partisan. In effect, a corrupt British government had arbitrarily decided to impose new taxes and political restrictions on its loyal American subjects as part of a conspiratorial plot to deprive them of their traditional rights as Englishmen. The carnage at Lexington and Concord, then, was the logical and inevitable culmination of a conscious British scheme to transform loyal subjects into abject slaves.[4] Hindsight permits a more detached and ultimately ironic version of the imperial story. In 1763, as a result of its stupendous victory in the French and Indian War, Great Britain found itself a newly arrived world power with a vast empire in the eastern third of North America. Previously, British governance of their thirteen coastal colonies had been a lackadaisical affair, with royal governors largely beholden to local legislatures, which controlled the power of the purse. Enforcement of the trade regulations purportedly required by the Navigation Acts was equally blithe in spirit. Now, however, the sheer scale of its recently acquired American empire, plus the sudden recognition that governance of its expanded domain required more management than a few secretaries and clerks in Whitehall could muster, forced a major overhaul of this accidental empire into something more appropriately imperial. What looked to Adams like a sinister plot to enslave the American colonists was viewed from London as a sensible plan to make the British Empire worthy of its name.[5] There then ensued a decade of parliamentary legislation--the Sugar Act, the Stamp Act, the Townshend Acts, the Coercive Acts--all designed to fold the colonies into the empire by placing them within the authority of Parliament, which represented the collective interests of all British citizens everywhere. The colonists, of course, contested that claim, Adams leading the way by arguing that American interests were not represented in Parliament, but rather in the respective colonial legislatures, which alone could justifiably speak for American interests because they alone were duly elected to do so.[6] Knowing as we do the world-changing events about to transpire--a seven-and-a-half-year war in which more Americans were killed or wounded proportionally than in any subsequent conflict save the Civil War, in which the British lost their entire empire in North America except for Canada--it seems strange that such a massive movement of the historical templates could be caused by such a minor, merely constitutional, difference of opinion. In retrospect, the core problem blocking a sensible resolution was the British presumption--fully as self-evident to them as the truths that Jefferson was soon to hurl at "a candid world"--that imperial sovereignty must be singular. For George III and his chief minister, Lord North, it was akin to an axiom of political physics, a veritable Newtonian principle of political theory, that there must be one sovereign source of governance. To suggest otherwise was tantamount to arguing there was not one but many gods. If they could only have jettisoned that assumption, a workable solution to the imperial crisis was staring them right in the face. Indeed it was proposed by the First Continental Congress in 1774 and would be proposed several times again by the Second Continental Congress throughout 1775 and up to July of 1776. The solution was shared sovereignty, whereby the American colonies remained within the British Empire as loyal subjects of the Crown but retained control over their own domestic affairs. A version of this creative solution, called federalism, became the basis for the American constitutional settlement in 1787-88. A century later the same principle became the organizing feature of the British Commonwealth. Our dalliance with hindsight, then, ends with two overlapping conclusions: first, the American Revolution was eminently avoidable; second, the imaginative failure of the British ministry in 1775-76 constitutes perhaps the greatest blunder in the history of British statecraft.[7] NOTES [1] Three previous studies of this awkward year that strike me as first rate are Allen French, The First Year of the American Revolution (Boston, 1934); Thomas Fleming, 1776: Year of Illusions (New York, 1975); and, more recently, David McCullough, 1776 (New York, 2005). [2] AD 3:355. [3] The quotation is from Adams to Benjamin Rush, 17 August 1812, in John A. Schutz and Douglass Adair, eds., The Spur of Fame: Dialogues of John Adams and Benjamin Rush, 1805-1813 (San Marino, Calif.: 1966). I have assessed the Adams posture toward all straight-line narratives of the American Revolution in Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation (New York: 2001), 215-81. On Adams's role in the Continental Congress, the semifictional account by Catherine Drinker Bowen, John Adams and the American Revolution (Boston, 1950), still manages to capture the context most imaginatively. [4] Adams is almost a textbook example of the revolutionary mentality first identified by Bernard Bailyn in Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Cambridge, Mass., 1967). [5] The first historian to insist on viewing the American Revolution from the British perspective was Lawrence H. Gipson, who summarized his multivolume account in The Coming of the Revolution, 1763-1775 (New York, 1954). The most recent version of this imperial interpretation is Theodore Draper, A Struggle for Power: The American Revolution (New York, 1996). [6] On the role of the colonial assemblies, the authoritative work is Jack P. Greene, The Quest for Power: The Lower Houses of Assembly in Southern Royal Colonies, 1689-1776 (Chapel Hill, 1963). [7] My conclusion here is harsh, but I find it inescapable. See, for example, Robert W. Tucker and David C. Hendrickson, The Fall of the First British Empire (Baltimore, 1982). On the British side of the story, equally derogatory, see Stanley Weintraub, Iron Tears: America's Battle for Freedom, Britain's Quagmire, 1775-83 (New York, 2005). From the Hardcover edition. Excerpted from American Creation: Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the Republic by Joseph J. Ellis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.