The political home of Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, Horace Greeley, and the young Abraham Lincoln, the American Whig Party was involved at every level of American politics--local, state, and federal--in the years before the Civil War, and controlled the White House for eight of the twenty-two years that it existed. Now, in The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party, Michael F. Holt gives us the only comprehensive history of the Whigs ever written--a monumental history covering in rich detail the American political landscape from the Age of Jackson to impending disunion.
In Michael Holt's hands, the history of the Whig Party becomes a political history of the United States during the tumultuous Antebellum period. He offers a panoramic account of a time when a welter of parties (Whig, Democratic, Anti-Mason, Know Nothing, Free Soil, Republican) and many extraordinary political statesmen (including Andrew Jackson, John C. Calhoun, William Seward, Daniel Webster, Martin Van Buren, and Henry Clay) struggled to control the national agenda as the U.S. inched towards secession. It was an era when Americans were passionately involved in politics, when local concerns drove national policy, and when momentous political events rocked the country, including the Nullification Controversy, the Panic of 1837, the Annexation of Texas, the Compromise of 1850, and the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Holt captures all of this as he shows that, amid this contentious political activity, the Whig Party continuously strove to unite North and South, repeatedly trying to find a compromise position. Indeed, the Whig Party emerges as the nation's last great hope to prevent secession and civil war.
The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party is a magisterial work of history, one that has already been hailed by William Gienapp of Harvard as "one of the most important books on nineteenth-century politics ever written."
This title chronologically tells the birth, life and death of the Whigs, a major American political party that was the country's last and best hope to avert secession. The chain of political developments is reconstructed for the reader.
Other solid recent studies include Joseph F. Kett, Merit: The History of a Founding Ideal from the American Revolution to the Twenty-First Century (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2013); Lawrence R. Samuel, The American Dream: A ...
1 ( Washington , 1903 ) ; Bertram Wyatt - Brown , " Prelude to Abolitionism : Sabbatarian Politics and the Rise of the Second Party System , " Journal of American History , 58 ( 1971 ) , 316-341 ; and Michael F. Holt , " The Antimasonic ...
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Detective-like, she discloses the origins of key ideas and phrases in the Declaration and unravels the complex story of its drafting and of the group-editing job which angered Thomas Jefferson.
Howe studies the American Whigs with the thoroughness so often devoted their party rivals, the Jacksonian Democrats.
Smith, Nanette Price, 282,322, 402,412,417 Smith, Perry, 337 Smith, Samuel, 240–41,253 South Carolina elections in 208,288, 307, 378 nullification in, 227–28, 238,240,242, 251-56, 257 secessionists im, 482 and tariffs, 227–28, ...
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Shares the story of the Constitutional Convention in 1787 Philadelphia, detailing the human side of the considerable ideas, arguments, issues, and compromises that shaped the formation of the U.S. Constitution and government.