The Republic for which it stands The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896

Richard White, 1947-

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Oxford University Press [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Richard White, 1947- (author)
Physical Description
xx, 941 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 873-901) and index.
ISBN
9780199735815
  • Maps
  • Editor's Introduction
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Reconstructing the Nation
  • Prologue: Mourning Lincoln
  • 1. In the Wake of War
  • 2. Radical Reconstruction
  • 3. The Greater Reconstruction
  • 4. Home
  • 5. Gilded Liberals
  • 6. Triumph of Wage Labor
  • 7. Panic
  • 8. Beginning a Second Century
  • Part II. The Quest for Prosperity
  • 9. Years of Violence
  • 10. The Party of Prosperity
  • 11. People in Motion
  • 12. Liberal Orthodoxy and Radical Opinions
  • 13. Dying for Progress
  • 14. The Great Upheaval
  • 15. Reform
  • 16. Westward the Course of Reform
  • 17. The Center Fails to Hold
  • 18. The Poetry of a Pound of Steel
  • Part III. The Crisis Arrives
  • 19. The Other Half
  • 20. Dystopian and Utopian America
  • 21. The Great Depression
  • 22. Things Fall Apart
  • 23. An Era Ends
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliographical Essay
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

The conclusion of the Civil War through the 1890s marked the transformation of the US from a rural and agrarian society of free laborers to a modern, urban, industrial nation where wages and possessions replaced liberty and individualism. White's rich, sweeping history chronicles the divide between the Radical Republicans (today's Libertarians) and those who saw the need for governmental protection of individual rights. Race and economic status divided the public. While land redistribution in the West provided opportunities for white settlers, it put Native Americans in a compromised position; the lack of such distribution in the South left African Americans in a poor, disadvantaged position. Throughout the US, the home, provided by men's labor and cared for by women, remained the sacred center of the developing American Dream. Due to expansion, urbanization, and industrialization brought about by population growth fueled by immigration between 1865 and the end of the century, the religiously homogeneous white US transformed into a nation of Protestants, Catholics, and Jews. White (Stanford) seamlessly incorporates political, economic, social, and legal history to show the birth of the modern US. Throughout, he includes fascinating anecdotes that captivate readers. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. --Duncan R. Jamieson, Ashland University

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

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Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 16, 2018]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* After the Civil War, war-weary Americans were ready to move on. They had banished slavery and longed for peace, but instead they got chaos and change. Consolidation and industrialization upended the work world. The South fought to rob blacks of their hard-won freedoms. Land-hungry citizens moved west, stripping Native Americans of their homelands and herding them into reservations. Stanford historian White (Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America, 2011) tells this tumultuous story with authority, an eye for detail, and a dash of moral outrage. A noted historian of the West, he covers monetary policy, land use, social history, literature, and biography as he examines America from 1865 to 1896. His theme is home, the place Americans longed for, headed by a man and run by a woman, a refuge for children and center of all that was good. Perceived threats to this vision spawned waves of counter-reaction the murder of blacks in the Reconstruction South, the temperance movement, fear of immigrants, and mistrust of labor unions as industrialization and mechanization leached independence from workers and consolidated power in the hands of business titans. By the end of the era, these forces had created a more complicated world. Contemporary readers will find that this era casts a long shadow over the present.--Gwinn, Mary Ann Copyright 2017 Booklist

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

This splendid history from White (Railroaded), professor of American history at Stanford, reveals why the 30 years after the Civil War do not readily draw historians to them. These decades are marked by racial violence, bitter labor strikes, political corruption, and abject poverty, and were filled with loutish, mean-spirited men. Measured by intellectual achievement and reformist zeal, the period was also comparatively drab and unproductive. Yet White manages to imbue these ignoble years with the importance that they're due. His account's central focus is public affairs and he foregrounds the West and its native tribes, farmers, workers, and cities; his astute examination of the "Greater Reconstruction of the West" works as a counterpoint to the failures of Southern Reconstruction after 1865. But White covers the whole country, opening with Lincoln and closing with William McKinley's 1896 election as president. He offers a brilliant chapter on the meaning of home, and though the book generally pays greater attention to the on-the-ground facts of the era than on its intellectual or cultural shifts, that's a small matter measured against the book's strengths. White's great achievement is to capture the drabbest, least-redeeming three decades of American history with unimpeachable authority. Illus. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

Preeminent scholar White (Margaret Byrne Professor of American History, Stanford Univ.; The Middle Ground) authors the latest volume in the "History of the United States" series. He begins by examining the idyllic vision of the United States promulgated by the Radical Republicans at the onset of Reconstruction in which the civil rights of all individuals were respected. That dream was supplanted as the populace raced to seize economic opportunity in the West. Vast fortunes were made, often aided by corrupt politicians. As the nation's wealth became concentrated in the hands of the elite, the impoverished saw their opportunities decline and oppression increase. Prosperity proved fleeting for the middle class, as the nation was roiled economically by boom and bust cycles. American Indians fought desperately to cling to their homelands as interlopers abounded, supported by the might of the U.S. military. Immigrants provided essential labor for the expansion westward yet experienced extreme discrimination. In the midst of this chaos, Americans came to forge an optimistic worldview that saw the United States as a unified and diverse country that should share its values beyond its continental borders. VERDICT This seminal work is essential reading on the history of the United States.-John R. Burch, Univ. of -Tennessee at Martin © Copyright 2017. 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

A massive history of the striving, riven new nation that emerged from the Civil War, extending to the turn of the century.As an integral piece of Oxford's History of the United States series, this comprehensive volume by distinguished scholar White (American History/Stanford Univ.; Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America, 2012, etc.), a MacArthur and Guggenheim Fellow, portrays the United States at a significant crossroads. Would Americans embrace the common ideals of the recently deceased president, Abraham Lincoln, which formed a moral foundation for the future, or would the nation descend into political corruption, avaricious corporations, backlash against immigrants, and increasing class conflict? White delineates how both occurred. Lincoln's Republican Party was transformed during these years of Reconstruction, splitting between the Radicals and laissez-faire liberals, essentially divided over how overbearing the federal government would beyet all were committed to larger goals of nationalism, free labor, and contract freedom. While the Radicals were pushing for vigorous federal powers in the protection of freedmen's rights, President Andrew Johnson, and the recalcitrant South, pushed back to maintain "a white man's republic." Meanwhile, the nation was exploding with the innovations of "tinkerers" and mass immigration into the country. The conquest of Native Americans was completed by their acculturation and assimilation, with the reservations governed by religious leaders who knew no more about administration than the military did. As an astute historian of the American West, White offers important scholarship on the "Greater Reconstruction"i.e., conquering the West by bold federal policies like the railway acts and land grant legislation that created new infrastructure and schools and offered free farms for those able to work the land. At the same time, reformers pushed for enormously important social changes. Wage labor, wealth inequality, and immigration created class conflict that erupted in strikes in the late 1880s, while the concept of "home" took on new significance for whites and blacks alike. A highly qualified historian offers a dense, sweeping history of a nation on the move. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.