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In this important and highly readable biography of John C. Calhoun,
Irving Bartlett sees a man almost unique in American history, a
lifelong politician who was also a profound political philosopher.
Born on the South Carolina frontier, Calhoun grew up in a
postrevolutionary culture which valued both African slavery and the
republican ideology of the Founding Fathers. He was orphaned in his
teens and, with almost no formal education, suddenly became a man.
In less than ten years he had become a Yale graduate, a lawyer, a
former state legislator, and a congressman-elect prepared to help
James Madison lead the country into the War of 1812. As a
congressman and later as James Monroe's secretary of war Calhoun
articulated the nationalism of the new nation as cogently as any
other American leader. Calhoun was ambitious beyond his years. He
was an unsuccessful candidate in the disputed presidential election
of 1824 but was easily elected vice president under John Quincy
Adams and Andrew Jackson. Determined to avoid the obscurity of that
office, Calhoun managed to get into monumental public disputes with
both presidents and resigned in the last days of Jackson's first
administration to become senator from South Carolina and champion
his state's right to nullify the Tariff of 1832. Along with his
famous contemporaries Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, Calhoun
dominated the Senate of the United States in the 1830s and 1840s.
Serving briefly as secretary of state in the beleaguered Tyler
administration, he played a key role in the annexation of Texas and
created a furor on both sides of the Atlantic with his strident
defense of American slavery and his denunciation of what he
perceived as thepseudophilanthropy of British abolitionism.
Returning to the Senate, he acted as peacemaker in helping avoid a
near war with Britain over the Oregon boundary dispute, and he
persistently opposed the popular Mexican War. Long before his death
in 1850 Calhoun had become known as the cast-iron leader of the
South, who never curried to popular opinion, spurned party loyalty,
and defended slavery and states' rights with a vigor and
intelligence that even leading abolitionists had to respect. In
this major new biography Irving Bartlett goes behind the cast-iron
image to explain the cultural and psychological forces that shaped
Calhoun's political career and thought; he maintains that however
wrong Calhoun was about slavery, many of his ideas still speak to
us today.
For forty years, until his death in 1852, Daniel Webster played a
dominant national role as a lawyer, orator, congressman, senator,
secretary of state, leader of two major parties, and perennial
presidential candidate. This new biography, drawing on the recently
collected Webster papers, explains the Webster phenomenon in terms
of the powerful positive and negative images he projected for
nineteenth-century Americans.
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