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This challenging book explores the debates over the scope of the
enumerated powers of Congress and the Fourteenth Amendment that
accompanied the expansion of federal authority during the period
between the beginning of the Civil War and the inauguration of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The Rise of the Federal Colossus: The
Growth of Federal Power from Lincoln to F.D.R. offers readers a
front-row seat for the critical phases of a debate that is at the
very center of American history, exploring such controversial
issues as what powers are bestowed on the federal government, what
its role should be, and how the Constitution should be interpreted.
The book argues that the critical period in the growth of federal
power was not the New Deal and the three decades that followed, but
the preceding 72 years when important precedents establishing the
national government's authority to aid citizens in distress,
regulate labor, and take steps to foster economic growth were
established. The author explores newspaper and magazine articles,
as well as congressional debates and court opinions, to determine
how Americans perceived the growing authority of their national
government and examine arguments over whether novel federal
activities had any constitutional basis. Responses of government to
the enormous changes that took place during this period are also
surveyed. Numerous citations of the Congressional Record and
federal court opinions Scores of articles from magazines,
newspapers, and scholarly journals of the period that reveal how
Americans of all walks of life perceived the evolution of federal
authority A select bibliography listing a wide variety of secondary
works ranging from biographies to legal treatises that will aid the
reader in further exploring the evolution of American federalism A
helpful index that provides access to roles and views of critical
figures in the evolution of federal authority during the middle
period
The Age of Strict Construction explores the growth of the federal
government's power and influence between 1789 and 1861, and the
varying reactions of Americans to that growth. The book focuses on
the dispute over the spending power of Congress, the Supreme
Court's expansion of the Contract Clause, and the centralizing
effects of the Jacksonian spoils system. The book also surveys the
conflict over constitutional interpretation--originalism v.
textualism--that has divided Americans from the time of the dispute
over the first Bank of the United States until the present day. The
standard interpretation of American history holds that the federal
government remained a weak and passive creature until the New Deal.
The Age of Strict Construction argues that this interpretation is
not valid--if measured against the original understanding of the
powers of Congress and the Supreme Court, federal authority grew
rapidly during the antebellum period. The most stunning aspect of
centralization occurred with the rise of a party system heavily
dependent on federal largesse for patronage. The book also details
how the federal government quickly came to play an unexpectedly
prominent role in the lives of citizens, as its policies in areas
such as land sales and tariffs had a huge effect on the fortunes of
individual Americans. It also explains how the Founders' classical
ideas of a rural electorate immune to pecuniary considerations
quickly succumbed to the changes brought on by the arrival of a
market economy and the growth of cities. The relationship between
centralization and the sectional crisis of the 1850s is also
explored. The book turns the long-running argument over the cause
of secession--slavery v. the growth of federal power--on its head
by revealing how the two combined to cause southern states to leave
the Union.
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