Fears of a setting sun The disillusionment of America's founders

Dennis C. Rasmussen, 1978-

Book - 2021

"Whatever sense of hope the Founder Fathers may have felt at the new government's birth, almost none of them carried that optimism to their graves. Franklin survived to see the Constitution in action for only a single year, but most of the founders who lived into the nineteenth century came to feel deep anxiety, disappointment, and even despair about the government and the nation that they had helped to create. Indeed, by the end of their lives many of the founders judged the Constitution that we now venerate to be an utter failure that was unlikely to last beyond their own generation. This book tells the story of their disillusionment. The book focuses principally on four of the preeminent figures of the period (1787): George Was...hington, Alexander Hamilton, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson. These four lost their faith in the American experiment at different times and for different reasons, and each has his own unique story. As Rasmussen shows in a series of three chapters on each figure, Washington became disillusioned above all because of the rise of parties and partisanship, Hamilton because he felt that the federal government was not sufficiently vigorous or energetic, Adams because he believed that the American people lacked the requisite civic virtue for republican government, and Jefferson because of sectional divisions brought on (as he saw it) by Northern attempts to restrict slavery and consolidate power in the federal government. Washington, Hamilton, Adams, and Jefferson were the most prominent of the founders who grew disappointed in what America became, but they were certainly not the only ones. In a final chapter Rasmussen shows that most of the other leading founders-including figures such as Samuel Adams, John Jay, James Monroe, and Thomas Paine-fell in the same camp. The most notable founder who did not come to despair for his country was the one who outlived them all, James Madison. Madison did harbor some real worries but a final chapter also explores why Madison largely kept the republican faith when so many of his compatriots did not"--

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Subjects
Published
Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Dennis C. Rasmussen, 1978- (author)
Physical Description
x, 277 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-265) and index.
ISBN
9780691210230
  • Acknowledgments
  • Prologue. A Rising or a Setting Sun
  • Washington
  • 1. The Demon of Party Spirit
  • 2. Farewell to All That
  • 3. Set Up a Broomstick
  • Hamilton
  • 4. No Man's Ideas
  • 5. Struggling to Add Energy
  • 6. The Frail and Worthless Fabric
  • Adams
  • 7. Such Selfishness and Littleness
  • 8. His Rotundity
  • 9. The Brightest or the Blackest Page
  • Jefferson
  • 10. Weathering the Storm
  • 11. The Knell of the Union
  • 12. A Consolidation or Dissolution of the States
  • Interlude. The Other Founders
  • 13. No Cheering Prospect
  • Madison
  • 14. Far from Desponding
  • 15. Grounds for Hope
  • Epilogue. A Very Great Secret
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Four of the most illustrious of our country's Founding Fathers--Washington, Hamilton, Adams, and Jefferson-- spent many of their later years writing letters of lamentation over the future of the country. Rasmussen (Syracuse Univ.) traces Washington's increasing misgivings over the rise of partisanship; Hamilton's deepening fears that states and parties were sapping the authority of the national government; Adams's jeremiads bemoaning the erosion of personal morality and civic virtue; and Jefferson's fears that the Missouri crisis of 1819--21 would prevent the diffusion and later extinction of slavery, resulting in either the dissolution or consolidation of the national government. The only outlier was Madison, whose equanimity regarding the country's prospects was reinforced as he prepared his extensive notes on the Constitutional Convention for publication, to be prefaced by a short narrative history that he began writing in the 1830s, with its four-sentence classically and biblically infused "Advice to My Country." Rasmussen's artfully constructed and accessible recounting concludes with a kind of homily in praise of both psychological and political realism intended to sustain us in today's troubled waters--reflecting the kind of realism that marked the earlier public lives of these five founders. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. --Eldon John Eisenach, emeritus, University of Tulsa

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Political scientist Rasmussen (The Infidel and the Professor) delivers an illuminating account of how the founding fathers worried about the future of America. With the notable exception of James Madison, Rasmussen writes, the country's early leaders, including George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and Alexander Hamilton, were pessimistic that the American experiment in republican democracy would endure. Washington's fears stemmed from concerns that political partisanship would inevitably tear the country "asunder." Adams distrusted the people's ability to put aside their self-interest in favor of the greater public good, according to Rasmussen, while Jefferson anticipated that regional divisions--exemplified in differing attitudes toward slavery--would doom the American enterprise. Hamilton, meanwhile, worried that the federal government lacked the energy or authority to successfully govern the states. One factor behind Madison's relative optimism, Rasmussen notes, was his lower expectations for how the new country would operate. Rasmussen lends weight to his arguments with revealing--and often sobering--quotes from primary sources (Hamilton, for instance, called the Constitution "a frail and worthless fabric"), and enlivens the proceedings with flashes of wit ("with enemies like Jefferson, slavery hardly needed friends"). This standout history provides useful context for understanding the roots of contemporary political turmoils and may comfort those who fear that American democracy is in dire peril. (Mar.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Why the Founding Fathers believed the political system they created was "an utter failure that was unlikely to last beyond their own generation." Making the striking argument that all but one of the major founders of the U.S. died disillusioned with their creation, Rasmussen nevertheless offers hope for our current predicaments. Focusing on George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison, the author scrutinizes their surviving papers for a single element of their thought: their confidence in the future of the federal republic. His distinctive approach yields something overlooked by historians. All of them--and there were others--save Madison died pessimistic about their country's future. The partisanship that broke out during Washington's presidency deeply troubled him. Hamilton's dark mood arose from what he saw as the government's feebleness. Adams was forever despondent about his fellow citizens' lack of virtue. Jefferson became deeply anxious about disunion; he went to his death "riddled with doubts" about the young nation's survival. Only Madison--a man less troubled by partisanship, weak government, and the union's breakup and more confident that institutions could offset a lack of public virtue--escaped the other founders' dark forebodings. But should we see their misgivings as the realism of mature reflection or as an indication of an inability to adjust to changes in a distinctive nation whose future has never been foreseeable? While offering an authoritative and convincing argument in disarmingly artful prose, Rasmussen doesn't answer that question. However, while emphasizing the founder's "late-life despair," he ends on a hopeful note. Despite systemic problems that have existed since the nation's founding, our current woes "are less likely to ultimately doom the republic than we often fear"--as long as we follow these great men who, despite their fears, forged ahead until their deaths with "steadfast resolve" to strengthen the nation they'd established and led in its infancy. A relevant history suggesting that the U.S. may be stronger than many of its citizens believe. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.