What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848 (Oxford History of the United States) | Daniel Walker Howe | History really this good? Yes.
books:
What Hath God Wrou...
What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848 (Oxford History of the United States)
Daniel Walker Howe
Oxford University Press, USA
, 2007 - 928 pages
average customer review:
based on 15 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
The
Oxford
History
of the
United
States
is by far the most respected multi-volume history of our nation. The series includes two Pulitzer Prize winners, a INew York Times bestseller, and winners of the Bancroft and Parkman Prizes. Now, in
What
Hath
God
Wrought
, historian Daniel Walker Howe
illuminates the period from the battle of New Orleans to the end of the Mexican-
America
n War, an era when the United States expanded to the Pacific and won control over the richest part of the North American continent.
Howe's panoramic narrative portrays revolutionary improvements in transportation and communications that accelerated the extension of the American empire. Railroads, canals, newspapers, and the telegraph dramatically lowered travel times and spurred the spread of information. These innovations
prompted the emergence of mass political parties and stimulated America's economic development from an overwhelmingly rural country to a diversified economy in which commerce and industry took their place alongside agriculture. In his story, the author weaves together political and military events
with social, economic, and cultural history. He examines the rise of Andrew Jackson and his Democratic party, but contends that John Quincy Adams and other Whigs--advocates of public education and economic integration, defenders of the rights of Indians, women, and African-Americans--were the true
prophets of America's future. He reveals the power of religion to shape many aspects of American life during this period, including slavery and antislavery, women's rights and other reform movements, politics, education, and literature. Howe's story of American expansion culminates in the bitterly
controversial but brilliantly executed war waged against Mexico to gain California and Texas for the United States.
By
1848
America had been transformed. What Hath God Wrought provides a monumental narrative of this formative period in United States history.
for more information click here
An excellent addition to the Family
The books in
Oxford
History
of the
United
States
, as a family, have identifying traits. All are detailed, informative and very readable. In addition, they stay within the modern sensibilities and views on history, for some this is a good thing and for others a problem. I have never found that this approach distracts from the good solid political and social history the series presents.
What
Hath
God
Wrought
: The
Transformation
of
America
,
1815
-
1848
is an excellent addition to this series and contains all the family traits we expect. This is a big book with over 800 pages of text. The book covers the politics of the two party system, how they came into being, their appeal and platforms. The questions on what a weak Federal Government could do and what was needed are well developed. The author is able to cover these issues in a logical manner while making clear the parties platforms and the questions involved. Government policy created a chaotic economic system of boom and bust that plays on politics. Once again, the author keeps us clearly in the picture showing real skill in making the issues understandable.
The best part of the book is the social history. This was a rich and complex time or immigration, religious revival, expansion to the Mississippi River and the growth of cities. This complex society is the heart of the book. The author's straightforward reporting allows the reader to understand life as it was not as we wish to see it. The California Gold Rush, Irish and German immigration, Texas and the war with Mexico sit on a firm foundation established in early chapters. This allows us to understand how these events built the America that went into the Civil War. Every person interested in the Civil War should read this book! It greatly increased my understanding of how the war started and was fought.
I recommend all the books in this series. This is one of the best and is very close to a must read for anyone with an interest in American History.
for more information click here
History really this good? Yes.
I've not read a better
America
n
history
book since The Metaphysical Club. It's the best synthesis of this difficult period in American history I've ever read. Far less politically driven than Schlesinger's The Age of Jackson, Howe carries us through these 33 years as if he lived them. The quality of his scholarship is nothing short of world class, exhaustive and analytical, subtle and insightful. This is one of the very few books I've ever read that brings history into the realm of art. It's a masterpiece, right up there with Robert Hughes' The Fatal Shore and Wood's The Radicalism of the American Revolution.
Now, some details. This book is largely a political, economic and military history, but Howe is far too skilled a scholar to ignore the cultural developments of the young country. While not an intellectual history in the spirit of Menand, Howe interweaves important cultural products and events into their political, religious and economic contexts. His separate treatments of the development of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and (ironically) gender equality are particularly sensitive and enlightening. There's so much good stuff here that it reminds one of shopping at the local whole foods market: There are tasty discoveries around every corner.
Howe's primary thesis is about how the legacy of the Federalists, the Whigs, in response to Jeffersonian (and Jacksonian) democracy run amok, did more to create the modern
United
States
than historians have previously understood. Howe illuminates topics that, at first, seem to offer little hope for exciting history - internal improvements, the development of higher education, transportation and communication, religious revival - but he does it with such narrative skill as to emphasize their importance while encouraging you to consider their subsequent impact on the development of the greatly enlarged United States. Of course, the author then goes on to give us penetrating narrative studies of important political and military events that have been told before, but rarely with such keen insight, or from this subtle and critical perspective. The author leaves us in
1848
to contemplate
what
the enormous changes of the previous 30 years (and the previous five years, in particular) did, and did not do, to our national consciousness.
This is a long book, but you'll not notice. I'm raving about this one because I'm just so excited to see that there are people out there willing to write (and read) good, scholarly, narrative histories of the United States. An essential read for anyone, anywhere in the world, with a keen interest in American history. This book further enhanced my understanding of what it means to be American.
for more information click here
Read Like a Novel
I enjoyed this book immensely, reading it cover-to-cover like a novel. For those who tend to think that
America
went from Revolution to Civil War without much happening in between, it's a real eye-opener. I already shared Howe's respect for Henry Clay and John Q. Adams, and his seeming dislike of Andrew Jackson, based on the little I knew of them. After reading "WHGW", I respect my instincts, and understand them much better.
An articulate, scholarly, well-rounded period US history work highly readable for the lay person and with relevance for today
Being retired and with a particular interest in this period of US
history
(for reasons disclosed below), I possessed both adequate time and motivation to undertake the reading of this voluminous work, hoping that it wouldn't bog down into a pedantic recitation by page 200. Far beyond my most optimistic expectations, it turned out to be a real "page turner", not like one of those Grisham novels, but rather a work that kept opening my eyes to
what
the reality of this country was back then, and how that past still bears witness to what we are experiencing today. It is nothing less than astonishing for the author to attempt and succeed in combining so many disciplines of knowledge into such a lucid, comprehensive portrayal of what our forefathers did, recorded, and left as a legacy for us today.
As a lay reader with great interest in, but only a relatively superficial understanding of what went on during the
1815
-
1848
period, the book offeres innumerous facts and subsequent interpretations by the author, as footnoted and sourced from hundreds of secondary, scholarly works. This academic format, however, never slowed down my understanding of and appreciation for what was going on. If one has some interest in our Presidents of that period (i.e. Madison, Monroe, Adams, Jackson, Van Buren, Harrison, Tyler and Polk) the narrative covers most of them in detail and offers many startling (at least to this lay person) revelations which, in hindsight, has me scratching my head as to why certain of these gentlemen have such a high positive profile today. Mr. Howe definitely has his biases in appreciation of these men, but supports his interpretations with scholarly attention to factual details about their personalities, politics, and policies.
Andrew Jackson, the well-coiffured fellow we see on the face of the $20 bill at every ATM visit, and who we know as the military hero of the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812, comes off as a protector of the union, but otherwise a rather bullying, temper prone imperialist, and with few exceptions, having little concern or care for the well being of any but the caucasian male race. As Mr. Howe points out, the supreme irony of his continued appearance on the $20 dollar bill, despite being both against an independent national bank (i.e. akin to today's federal reserve bank) and the use of paper money, is something one can only sit back and be befuddled by (the reasoning for this decision made by our government back in 1928 is not available for public scrutiny).
The view towards John Quincy Adams - the curmudgeonly old man portrayed so well by Anthony Hopkins in Steven Spielberg's Amistad movie - is much more positive and forgiving, as Howe details his rather enlightened approach (for that day) to social classes other than the white male, economic development using federal funds, and foreign policy. Finally, the portrayal of James K. Polk as the scheming, secretive President who plotted and waged an aggressive war on Mexico during 1846-48 while all the time keeping Congress off stride with his manipulations, surely brings to mind both the thinking behind and execution of today's war in Iraq by Messrs. Bush and Cheney. Substitute "soil" for "oil" and you pretty much understand what was going on then and now.
Knowing that the inspiration for the book's title and its central figure representative of the themed importance of communications and transportation in the progress of our nation at that time was Samuel F.B. Morse (also a noted historical artist and leader of the arts community of that period), I was hoping that the contribution of visual arts to this period would be recognized, at least in some ancillary way. However, despite including a well chosen series of reproduced portraits and genre paintings, prints and sculpture representative of personalities and events of this period, the text itself completely ignores the topic. While some attention is paid to music, the theatre, and literature of the time, in particular in relation to ties to slavery and its themes, apparently the visual arts represented too "highbrow" of a topic for inclusion.
As I see it though, there could have been - especially as part of the chapters on the "New Economy" and/or "
America
n Renaissance" - an effort to tie in the seemingly disparate, but actually connected topics of the deity/millenialism, nature, transcendentalism, urbanism, book and serial illustrations, the first original american school of landscape painting (later dubbed the Hudson River School), and the beginnings of travel and tourism by the emerging middle class of the period. As there were many strong ties between writers and artists during this time, this would not have been a difficult thing to do, and because of its absence, I can only give a four star rating to the book. Notwithstanding, if you have a few weeks of leisure time to devote to understanding in detail how we evolved into what we have become as a nation, I can't think of a more productive use of ones time. Thanks Dr. Howe for your wonderful contribution.
for more information click here
What hath Howe wrought?
The latest volume of the
Oxford
History
of the
United
States
is
What
Hath
God
Wrought
which covers
1815
-
1848
. The series is overall outstanding, McPherson's Battle Cry of Freedom is one of the volumes and likely the most well known. Each are great general histories which not only use primary sources but comment on the changes in the given era's interpretation by historians. The bibliographies are worth the price of book. If I were to teach U.S. history I'd use these in lieu of a traditional text book (which are generally poor).
However, this latest volume is striking in the amount of editorializing going on. Granted I'm an Andrew Jackson fan so am sensitive to criticism but here's an example:
In attempting to show that AJ's 1828 presidential victory was sectional and southern he recounts that Jackson won 178 to 83 in the Electoral college but the election would have gone to Adams had electoral votes been apportioned without use of the 3/5 rule for slaves. Fine, that is likely true. But what he fails to explain is how Jackson won the popular vote 647,286 (56%) to 508,064 (44%). 3/5 effects representation and electoral votes, not popular votes. Think about that- in essentially condemning the 3/5 rule the author has made the case for it- had it not existed Adams would have been elected despite an overwhelming popular vote against him. Does the author then take the old Federalist perspective that the people cannot be trusted and thus the EC's job to correct them? The author further fails to point out in this section (but does so later in a single sentence) that Jackson tired to abolish the EC in favor of a straight popular election for president. It would seem to me this is quite fitting for an era where differing view of nationalism had completely buried all Federalist opposition.
Also note that in 1824 AJ won the popular vote (41%) and had the most EC votes (99) but since there was no majority winner the election went to the house and to Adams. In 1832 AJ again won the popular vote w/ 56%.
Also, Howe seems to use the (to me) charged statement "white supremacy" with great frequency in regards to Indian removal. The implication of this phrase to my mind is that the motivation was based on race. In my readings I feel that this is a simple, modern and unrealistic interpretation. I believe that Jackson would have been adamant (and was) about removal of ANY threat to U.S. expansion, be it Indian, Spanish, English, free blacks or martians. The drive to expand more than racism was the primary motivation for removal. Jackson hated any who stood in the way of U.S. expansion- his earlier actions in Florida against the Spanish and English are proof of this.
Howe claims Jackosn was an Anglophoe and thus a hypocrite when he later treats with them. Again, Jackson was much more a Nationalist and would do anything to further U.S. interest as he saw it, even compromising other of his beliefs which were not as high a priority.
It seems like the author is not a fan of Jackson personally and thus is overly critical of him to the point of bias as noted by the above examples. I am surprised this made it past the series editor. In fact I found the volumes which cover the most recent U.S. eras- Grand Expectations (1945-1974) Restless Giant (1974-2000) to be very even handed in their analysis. Which actually surprised me in that more recent history tends to be more divisive to me as a reader since I lived through some of it and therefore have an ingrained point of view, have not had enough time to see its effects and thus am more skeptical and likely to disagree with any analysis.
This volume's other sections are on par with the rest of the series but Howe seems to have a personal affinity for Adams (as did George Dangerfield and historians before him), a person I suspect Howe sees as a kindred spirit and fellow intellectual. Howe seems to nurse a deep dislike for Jackson, the "man's man" as Howe puts it. Almost as if the historian sees Jackson as one of his own childhood tormentors- a tough guy with no philosophical basis for his actions. I had high hopes for this volume after reading that Howe rejected the conclusions of both Charles Sellers's The Market Revolution (which argued that market capitalism was forced on the people from the top down) and The Jacksonian Era by Schlesinger (which was a very far left leaning interpretation).
Despite that, however, Howe's main thesis of a communication & transportation revolution which facilitated ideas of nationalism was intriguing. Would be nice to see this idea explored in a smaller more focused work.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
,
3
products you might be interested in
recommendations
Essential History of the Early American Republic, 1789-1848.
Essential 19th Century American History *under construction*
Oxford History of the United States (so far in print)
What it means to be American
Books I Have Read in 2008
transformation
Living a Life of Inner Peace
Jack Canfield's Key to Living the Law of Attraction: A Simple Guide ...
A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose
The Secret
The Age of Miracles: Embracing the New Midlife
1815-1848
Napoleonic Art: Nationalism and the Spirit of Rebellion in France ...
Frontiersmen in Blue: The United States Army and the Indian, 1848-1865
Biedermeier: Art and Culture in Central Europe, 1815-1848
Art in an Age of Counterrevolution (1815-1848) (A Social History of ...
Modern Austria: Empire and Republic, 1815-1986
wrought
The Smithy's Craft & Tools (Werk und Werkzeug des Kunstschmieds)
The Well Wrought Urn: Studies in the Structure of Poetry
Decorative Ironwork: Wrought Iron Gratings, Gates and Railings
Classic Wrought Ironwork Patterns and Designs (Pictorial Archive ...
Decorative Wrought Ironwork Projects for Beginners (Dover Craft Books)
search for books
what hath
,
1815-1848
,
america
,
history
,
transformation
,
wrought
randomly chosen
book:
Eventide: Instrumental Piano Worship