This Week's Suggested Book from the Ashbrook Center
(Week of May 28, 2001)
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America's Jubilee: How in 1826 a Generation Remembered Fifty Years of Independence
by: Andrew Burstein
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Knopf
361 pages, 2001
$24.00 (Hardcover)
ISBN: 0375410333
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the Ashbrook Center.
On July 4, 1826, the United States celebrated its fiftieth birthday with parades and speeches across the country. But what ultimately sanctified the national jubilee in the minds of the celebrants was an extraordinary coincidence: the nearly simultaneous deaths of Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, the last pillars of the original republic, already venerated as legends in their own time. It was a watershed in the nation's history, a bright moment when the successors to the Revolutionary dream examined their own lives as they took inspiration from and found nostalgia in the accomplishments of the founders.
In this fascinating book, the distinguished historian Andrew Burstein explores what it was to be an American in 1826. Drawing on private diaries and letters, daily newspapers, and long-buried publications, he shows us the personal lives behind the pageantry and reveals an acutely self-conscious nationanxiously optimistic about its future, eager to romanticize the Revolutionary past.
We follow the Marquis de Lafayette, the only surviving general of the War of Independence, on his triumphant 1825 tour of all twenty-four states. We visit an Ohio boomtown on the edge of the "new West," a region influenced by the Erie Canal and the commercialism that canal culture brought with it. We see through the eyes of ordinary citizensthe wife of a Massachusetts minister, the author of a popular novel of the day, the family of a prominent statesmanand learn about their gritty understanding of life and death, the nuances of contemporary sexual politics, and the sometimes treacherous drama of public debate. And we meet headline-makers such as the ornery President John Quincy Adams, the controversial Secretary of State Henry Clay, and the notoriously hot-tempered General Andrew Jackson, struggling to act in a statesmanlike way as he waits to be swept into the White House.
In this evocative portrait of the United States in its jubilee year, Burstein shows how 1826 marked an unforgettable time in the republic's history, when a generation embraced the legacy of its predecessors and sought to enlarge its role in America's story.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. And Esteemed Friend Twice Touches Hearts
2. The Benevolently Disposed Mr. Wirt Sends Kisses
3. Eliza Foster Courts a Chivalrous Spirit
4. Mrs. Bascom Takes the Late Mr. Wallis's Profile
5. Old Cheese Goes up for Sale in Chillicothe
6. President J. Q. Adams Swims against the Current
7. Congressman McDuffie Proposes an Amendment
8. The Secretary of State Fires Twice
9. General Jackson Leisurely Views the Passing Scenes
10. The People Salute Their First Fifty Years
11. Adams and Jefferson Have the Last Word
Epilogue
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