W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. • www.NortonEbooks.com
FOURTH EDITION
GIVE ME LIBERTY!
Eric Foner
AN AMERICAN HISTORY
PRAISE FOR ERIC FONER’S GIVE ME LIBERTY!
“The book is inviting to students . . . well-organized and easy to read . . . I love the way Dr. Foner writes! The textbook comes alive with his scholarship and teaching experience.” —Marianne Leeper, Trinity Valley Community College
“I find that Foner strikes the perfect balance between political, legal, social, and cultural history. . . . [Give Me Liberty!] includes the most current or most relevant scholarship.” —David Anderson, Louisiana Tech University
“Often, history textbooks can seem to be disjointed retellings of facts and concepts that remind one of an encyclopedia. [Foner’s] freedom theme ties the material together well, which isn’t always easy with this kind of broad textbook. I do think it’s effective in tying the social and political together.” —James Karmel, Harford Community College
“Foner’s textbook is superb. It is well informed, elegantly written, and offers a kind of narrative and interpretive coherence that is rare among textbooks.” —Jeffrey Adler, University of Florida
“The theme of freedom is very clearly and adeptly integrated. . . . Give Me Liberty! provides a good model for students on how to investigate and carry through a theme in their own writings.” —Jim Dudlo, Brookhaven College, Dallas Community College District
“Give Me Liberty! offers a nice, comprehensive coverage of American history. I feel that equal weight is given to various topics. ‘Voices of Freedom’ is actually one of the major features of the book that prompted me to adopt the text. I am not aware of any other text on the market that has this superb feature. . . . [A] splendid approach.” —Jonathan A. Noyalas, Lord Fairfax Community College
“I’ve had a number of students in the last year comment on how easy the text is to use with the integrated focus questions and terms.” —Lauren Braun-Strumfels, Raritan Valley Community College
“Give Me Liberty! is visually appealing in many different ways. The manner in which the illustrations, maps, and pedagogical components are incorporated . . . makes the text more accessible and much less intimidating.” —Kent McGaughy, Houston Community College–NW Campus
“I appreciate the book’s terrifically accessible writing as well as its clear statement of themes. It has a wonderfully seamless and authoritative quality to its writing. I plan to continue to offer it to my students for many years to come.” —Beverly Gage, Yale University
G I V E M E
L I B E R T Y ! A N A M E R I C A N H I S T O R Y
Fo u r t h E d i t i o n
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B W . W . N O R T O N & C O M P A N Y
N E W Y O R K . L O N D O N
E R I C F O N E R
Fo u r t h E d i t i o n
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G I V E M E
L I B E R T Y ! A N A M E R I C A N H I S T O R Y
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Fourth Edition
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Foner, Eric.
Give me liberty! : An American history / Eric Foner.—Fourth edition.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-393-92026-0 (hardcover)
1. United States—History. 2. United States—Politics and government. 3. Democracy—United States—
History. 4. Liberty—History. I. Title.
E178.F66 2014
973—dc23
ISBN: 978-0-393-92026-0 2013029664
W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10110
www.wwnorton.com
W. W. Norton & Company Ltd., Castle House, 75/76 Wells Street, London W1T 3QT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
E R I C F O N E R is DeWitt Clinton Professor of History at Columbia University, where he earned his B.A. and Ph.D. In his teaching and scholarship, he focuses on the Civil War and Reconstruction, slavery, and nineteenth-century America. Professor Foner’s publications include Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War; Tom Paine and Revolutionary America; Nothing but Freedom: Emancipation and Its Legacy; Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877; The Story of American Freedom; and Forever Free: The Story of Emancipation and Reconstruction. His history of Reconstruction won the Los Angeles Times Book Award for History, the Bancroft Prize, and the Parkman Prize. He has served as president of the Organization of American Historians and the American Historical Association. In 2006 he received the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching from Columbia University. His most recent book is The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery, winner of the Bancroft and Lincoln Prizes and the Pulitzer Prize for History.
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A B O U T T H E A U T H O R
Contents
ix
ABOUT THE AUTHOR ... vii LIST OF MAPS, TABLES, AND FIGURES ... xxxiii DEDICATION ... xxxvii PREFACE ... xxxix ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ... xlv
PA R T 1: A M E R ICA N COL ON I ES T O 17 6 3
1. A N E W W O R L D . . . 4 THE FIRST AMERICANS ... 6
The Settling of the Americas ... 6 ★ Indian Societies of the
Americas ... 8 ★ Mound Builders of the Mississippi River Valley ... 9 ★
Western Indians ... 10 ★ Indians of Eastern North America ... 10 ★ Native
American Religion ... 12 ★ Land and Property ... 12 ★ Gender
Relations ... 14 ★ European Views of the Indians ... 14
INDIAN FREEDOM, EUROPEAN FREEDOM ... 15 Indian Freedom ... 15 ★ Christian Liberty ... 16 ★ Freedom and
Authority ... 17 ★ Liberty and Liberties ... 17
THE EXPANSION OF EUROPE ... 18 Chinese and Portuguese Navigation ... 18 ★ Portugal and West
Africa ... 19 ★ Freedom and Slavery in Africa ... 20 ★ The Voyages of
Columbus ... 20
CONTACT ... 21 Columbus in the New World ... 21 ★ Exploration and Conquest ... 23 ★
The Demographic Disaster ... 24
THE SPANISH EMPIRE ... 24 Governing Spanish America ... 25 ★ Colonists in Spanish
America ... 25 ★ Colonists and Indians ... 26 ★ Justifications for
Conquest ... 27 ★ Spreading the Faith ... 28 ★ Piety and Profit ... 29 ★
Las Casas’s Complaint ... 29 ★ Reforming the Empire ... 30 ★ Exploring
North America ... 31 ★ Spanish Florida ... 33 ★ Spain in the
Southwest ... 33 ★ The Pueblo Revolt ... 34
THE FRENCH AND DUTCH EMPIRES ... 35 French Colonization ... 35
Voices of Freedom: From Bartolomé de las Casas, History of the Indies
(1528), and From “Declaration of Josephe” (December 19, 1681) ... 36
C O N T E N T S
x
Contents
New France and the Indians ... 38 ★ The Dutch Empire ... 41 ★ Dutch
Freedom ... 41 ★ Freedom in New Netherland ... 41 ★ The Dutch and
Religious Toleration ... 42 ★ Settling New Netherland ... 43 ★ New
Netherland and the Indians ... 44
REVIEW ... 47
2 . B E G I N N I N G S O F E N G L I S H A M E R I C A , 16 0 7–16 6 0 . . . 4 8
ENGLAND AND THE NEW WORLD ... 50 Unifying the English Nation ... 50 ★ England and Ireland ... 50 ★ England
and North America ... 51 ★ Spreading Protestantism ... 52 ★ The Social
Crisis ... 52 ★ Masterless Men ... 53
THE COMING OF THE ENGLISH ... 54 English Emigrants ... 54 ★ Indentured Servants ... 55 ★ Land and
Liberty ... 55 ★ Englishmen and Indians ... 56 ★ The Transformation of
Indian Life ... 57 ★ Changes in the Land ... 58
SETTLING THE CHESAPEAKE ... 58 The Jamestown Colony ... 58 ★ From Company to Society ... 59 ★
Powhatan and Pocahontas ... 59 ★ The Uprising of 1622 ... 60 ★
A Tobacco Colony ... 61 ★ Women and the Family ... 62 ★
The Maryland Experiment ... 63 ★ Religion in Maryland ... 64
THE NEW ENGLAND WAY ... 64 The Rise of Puritanism ... 64 ★ Moral Liberty ... 65 ★ The Pilgrims at
Plymouth ... 66 ★ The Great Migration ... 67 ★ The Puritan Family ... 68 ★
Government and Society in Massachusetts ... 68 ★ Church and State in
Puritan Massachusetts ... 70
NEW ENGLANDERS DIVIDED ... 70 Roger Williams ... 71 ★ Rhode Island and Connecticut ... 71 ★ The Trials
of Anne Hutchinson ... 72 ★ Puritans and Indians ... 73
Voices of Freedom: From “The Trial of Anne Hutchinson” (1637),
and From John Winthrop, Speech to the Massachusetts General Court
(July 3, 1645) ... 74
The Pequot War ... 76 ★ The New England Economy ... 77 ★
The Merchant Elite ... 78 ★ The Half-Way Covenant ... 78
RELIGION, POLITICS, AND FREEDOM ... 79 The Rights of Englishmen ... 79 ★ The English Civil War ... 80 ★
England’s Debate over Freedom ... 80 ★ English Liberty ... 81 ★
The Civil War and English America ... 82 ★ The Crisis in Maryland ... 82 ★
Cromwell and the Empire ... 83
REVIEW ... 85
Contents
xi
3 . C R E A T I N G A N G L O - A M E R I C A , 16 6 0 –17 5 0 . . . 8 6 GLOBAL COMPETITION AND THE EXPANSION OF ENGLAND’S EMPIRE ... 88
The Mercantilist System ... 88 ★ The Conquest of New
Netherland ... 88 ★ New York and the Rights of Englishmen and
Englishwomen ... 90 ★ New York and the Indians ... 90 ★ The Charter
of Liberties ... 91 ★ The Founding of Carolina ... 91 ★ The Holy
Experiment ... 92 ★ Quaker Liberty ... 93 ★ Land in Pennsylvania ... 94
ORIGINS OF AMERICAN SLAVERY ... 94 Englishmen and Africans ... 94 ★ Slavery in History ... 95 ★ Slavery in the
West Indies ... 95 ★ Slavery and the Law ... 97 ★ The Rise of Chesapeake
Slavery ... 98 ★ Bacon’s Rebellion: Land and Labor in Virginia ... 99 ★
The End of the Rebellion, and Its Consequences ... 100 ★ A Slave
Society ... 100 ★ Notions of Freedom ... 101
COLONIES IN CRISIS ... 101 The Glorious Revolution ... 102 ★ The Glorious Revolution in
America ... 103 ★ The Maryland Uprising ... 103 ★ Leisler’s
Rebellion ... 104 ★ Changes in New England ... 104 ★ The Prosecution
of Witches ... 105 ★ The Salem Witch Trials ... 105
THE GROWTH OF COLONIAL AMERICA ... 106 A Diverse Population ... 107 ★ Attracting Settlers ... 107 ★ The
German Migration ... 109 ★ Religious Diversity ... 110 ★ Indian Life in
Transition ... 111
Voices of Freedom: From Letter by a Swiss-German Immigrant to
Pennsylvania (August 23, 1769), and From Memorial against
Non-English Immigration (December 1727) ... 112
Regional Diversity ... 114 ★ The Consumer Revolution ... 115 ★ Colonial
Cities ... 115 ★ Colonial Artisans ... 116 ★ An Atlantic World ... 116
SOCIAL CLASSES IN THE COLONIES ... 118 The Colonial Elite ... 118 ★ Anglicization ... 119 ★ The South Carolina
Aristocracy ... 119 ★ Poverty in the Colonies ... 120 ★ The Middle
Ranks ... 121 ★ Women and the Household Economy ... 122 ★ North
America at Mid-Century ... 123
REVIEW ... 125
4 . S L A V E R Y, F R E E D O M , A N D T H E S T R U G G L E F O R E M P I R E T O 17 6 3 . . . 1 2 6
SLAVERY AND EMPIRE ... 128 Atlantic Trade ... 128 ★ Africa and the Slave Trade ... 130 ★ The Middle
Passage ... 130 ★ Chesapeake Slavery ... 132 ★ Freedom and Slavery in
the Chesapeake ... 133 ★ Indian Slavery in Early Carolina ... 133 ★ The
xii
Contents
Rice Kingdom ... 134 ★ The Georgia Experiment ... 134 ★ Slavery in
the North ... 135
SLAVE CULTURES AND SLAVE RESISTANCE ... 136 Becoming African-American ... 136 ★ African Religion in Colonial
America ... 136 ★ African-American Cultures ... 137 ★ Resistance to
Slavery ... 138 ★ The Crisis of 1739–1741 ... 139
AN EMPIRE OF FREEDOM ... 140 British Patriotism ... 140 ★ The British Constitution ... 140 ★ The
Language of Liberty ... 141 ★ Republican Liberty ... 141 ★ Liberal
Freedom ... 142
THE PUBLIC SPHERE ... 143 The Right to Vote ... 144 ★ Political Cultures ... 144 ★ Colonial
Government ... 145 ★ The Rise of the Assemblies ... 146 ★ Politics in
Public ... 146 ★ The Colonial Press ... 147 ★ Freedom of Expression
and Its Limits ... 148 ★ The Trial of Zenger ... 148 ★ The American
Enlightenment ... 149
THE GREAT AWAKENING ... 150 Religious Revivals ... 150 ★ The Preaching of Whitefield ... 151 ★
The Awakening’s Impact ... 151
IMPERIAL RIVALRIES ... 152 Spanish North America ... 152 ★ The Spanish in California ... 154 ★
The French Empire ... 155
BATTLE FOR THE CONTINENT ... 156 The Middle Ground ... 156 ★ The Seven Years’ War ... 157 ★ A World
Transformed ... 158 ★ Pontiac’s Rebellion ... 160 ★ The Proclamation Line
... 160 ★ Pennsylvania and the Indians ... 161
Voices of Freedom: From Pontiac, Speeches (1762 and 1763), and From
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus
Vassa, the African (1789) ... 162
Colonial Identities ... 164
REVIEW ... 166
PA R T 2 : A N E W N AT ION, 17 6 3 –18 4 0
5 . T H E A M E R I C A N R E V O L U T I O N , 17 6 3 –17 8 3 . . . 17 0 THE CRISIS BEGINS ... 171
Consolidating the Empire ... 172 ★ Taxing the Colonies ... 173 ★ The
Stamp Act Crisis ... 173 ★ Taxation and Representation ... 174 ★ Liberty
and Resistance ... 175 ★ Politics in the Streets ... 176 ★ The
Regulators ... 176 ★ The Tenant Uprising ... 178
Contents
xiii
THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION ... 178 The Townshend Crisis ... 178 ★ Homespun Virtue ... 179 ★ The Boston
Massacre ... 179 ★ Wilkes and Liberty ... 181 ★ The Tea Act ... 181 ★
The Intolerable Acts ... 181
THE COMING OF INDEPENDENCE ... 182 The Continental Congress ... 182 ★ The Continental Association ...
183 ★ The Sweets of Liberty ... 183 ★ The Outbreak of War ... 184 ★
Independence? ... 185 ★ Common Sense ... 186 ★ Paine’s Impact ... 187 ★
The Declaration of Independence ... 187
Voices of Freedom: From Thomas Paine, Common Sense (1776), and
From Jonathan Boucher, A View of the Causes and Consequences of
the American Revolution (1775) ... 188
The Declaration and American Freedom ... 190 ★ An Asylum for
Mankind ... 191 ★ The Global Declaration of Independence ... 192
SECURING INDEPENDENCE ... 193 The Balance of Power ... 193 ★ Blacks in the Revolution ... 193 ★
The First Years of the War ... 194 ★ The Battle of Saratoga ... 195 ★
The War in the South ... 197 ★ Victory at Last ... 199
REVIEW ... 203
6 . T H E R E V O L U T I O N W I T H I N . . . 2 0 4 DEMOCRATIZING FREEDOM ... 206
The Dream of Equality ... 206 ★ Expanding the Political Nation ... 206 ★
The Revolution in Pennsylvania ... 207 ★ The New Constitutions ... 208 ★
The Right to Vote ... 209 ★ Democratizing Government ... 209
TOWARD RELIGIOUS TOLERATION ... 210 Catholic Americans ... 211 ★ The Founders and Religion ... 211 ★ Separating
Church and State ... 212 ★ Jefferson and Religious Liberty ... 213 ★
The Revolution and the Churches ... 214 ★ Christian Republicanism ... 215
DEFINING ECONOMIC FREEDOM ... 215 Toward Free Labor ... 215 ★ The Soul of a Republic ... 216 ★ The Politics
of Inflation ... 217 ★ The Debate over Free Trade ... 218
THE LIMITS OF LIBERTY ... 218 Colonial Loyalists ... 218 ★ Loyalists’ Plight ... 219 ★ The Indians’
Revolution ... 221 ★ White Freedom, Indian Freedom ... 222
SLAVERY AND THE REVOLUTION ... 223 The Language of Slavery and Freedom ... 223 ★ Obstacles to
Abolition ... 224 ★ The Cause of General Liberty ... 225 ★ Petitions
for Freedom ... 225 ★ British Emancipators ... 226 ★ Voluntary
Emancipations ... 228 ★ Abolition in the North ... 228 ★ Free Black
Communities ... 229
xiv
Contents
Voices of Freedom: From Abigail Adams to John Adams, Braintree,
Mass. (March 31, 1776), and From Petitions of Slaves to the
Massachusetts Legislature (1773 and 1777) ... 230
DAUGHTERS OF LIBERTY ... 232 Revolutionary Women ... 232 ★ Gender and Politics ... 232 ★ Republican
Motherhood ... 234 ★ The Arduous Struggle for Liberty ... 235
REVIEW ... 237
7. F O U N D I N G A N A T I O N , 17 8 3 –17 9 1 . . . 2 3 8 AMERICA UNDER THE CONFEDERATION ... 240
The Articles of Confederation ... 240 ★ Congress and the
West ... 242 ★ Settlers and the West ... 242 ★ The Land
Ordinances ... 243 ★ The Confederation’s Weaknesses ... 245 ★ Shays’s
Rebellion ... 246 ★ Nationalists of the 1780s ... 246
A NEW CONSTITUTION ... 247 The Structure of Government ... 248 ★ The Limits of Democracy ... 249 ★
The Division and Separation of Powers ... 250 ★ The Debate over Slavery
... 251 ★ Slavery in the Constitution ... 251 ★ The Final
Document ... 253
THE RATIFICATION DEBATE AND THE ORIGIN OF THE BILL OF RIGHTS ... 254
The Federalist ... 254 ★ “Extend the Sphere” ... 255 ★ The
Anti-Federalists ... 256 ★ The Bill of Rights ... 257
Voices of Freedom: From David Ramsay, The History of the American
Revolution (1789), and From James Winthrop, Anti-Federalist Essay
Signed “Agrippa” (1787) ... 260
“WE THE PEOPLE” ... 263 National Identity ... 263 ★ Indians in the New Nation ... 263 ★ Blacks and
the Republic ... 266 ★ Jefferson, Slavery, and Race ... 268 ★ Principles of
Freedom ... 269
REVIEW ... 271
8 . S E C U R I N G T H E R E P U B L I C , 17 9 1–18 15 . . . 2 7 2 POLITICS IN AN AGE OF PASSION ... 273
Hamilton’s Program ... 274 ★ The Emergence of Opposition ... 274 ★
The Jefferson-Hamilton Bargain ... 275 ★ The Impact of the
French Revolution ... 276 ★ Political Parties ... 277 ★ The Whiskey
Rebellion ... 278 ★ The Republican Party ... 279 ★ An Expanding Political
Sphere ... 279 ★ The Democratic-Republican Societies ... 280 ★ The Rights
of Women ... 281 ★ Women and the Republic ... 281
Contents
xv
Voices of Freedom: From Judith Sargent Murray, “On the Equality of
the Sexes” (1790), and From Address of the Democratic-Republican
Society of Pennsylvania (December 18, 1794) ... 282
THE ADAMS PRESIDENCY ... 284 The Election of 1796 ... 284 ★ The “Reign of Witches” ... 285 ★
The Virginia and Kentucky Revolutions ... 286 ★ The “Revolution of
1800” ... 287 ★ Slavery and Politics ... 288 ★ The Haitian Revolution
... 288 ★ Gabriel’s Rebellion ... 289
JEFFERSON IN POWER ... 290 Judicial Review ... 291 ★ The Louisiana Purchase ... 292 ★ Lewis and
Clark ... 294 ★ Incorporating Louisiana ... 294 ★ The Barbary Wars ... 295 ★
The Embargo ... 296 ★ Madison and Pressure for War ... 297
THE “SECOND WAR OF INDEPENDENCE” ... 297 The Indian Response ... 298 ★ Tecumseh’s Vision ... 298 ★ The War of
1812 ... 299 ★ The War’s Aftermath ... 302 ★ The End of the Federalist
Party ... 303
REVIEW ... 305
9 . T H E M A R K E T R E V O L U T I O N , 18 0 0 –18 4 0 . . . 3 0 6 A NEW ECONOMY ... 308
Roads and Steamboats ... 309 ★ The Erie Canal ... 309 ★ Railroads and
the Telegraph ... 311 ★ The Rise of the West ... 312 ★ The Cotton
Kingdom ... 315 ★ The Unfree Westward Movement ... 317
MARKET SOCIETY ... 318 Commercial Farmers ... 318 ★ The Growth of Cities ... 319 ★ The Factory
System ... 319 ★ The Industrial Worker ... 323 ★ The “Mill Girls” ... 323 ★
The Growth of Immigration ... 324 ★ Irish and German Newcomers ...
324 ★ The Rise of Nativism ... 326 ★ The Transformation of Law ... 327
THE FREE INDIVIDUAL ... 328 The West and Freedom ... 329 ★ The Transcendentalists ... 330 ★
Individualism ... 330
Voices of Freedom: From Ralph Waldo Emerson, “The American Scholar”
(1837), and From “Factory Life as It Is, by an Operative” (1845) ... 332
The Second Great Awakening ... 334 ★ The Awakening’s Impact ... 335 ★
The Emergence of Mormonism ... 336
THE LIMITS OF PROSPERITY ... 337 Liberty and Prosperity ... 337 ★ Race and Opportunity ... 338 ★ The Cult
of Domesticity ... 339 ★ Women and Work ... 340 ★ The Early Labor
Movement ... 341 ★ The “Liberty of Living” ... 342
REVIEW ... 345
xvi
Contents
10 . D E M O C R A C Y I N A M E R I C A , 18 15 –18 4 0 . . . 3 4 6 THE TRIUMPH OF DEMOCRACY ... 348
Property and Democracy ... 348 ★ The Dorr War ... 348 ★ Tocqueville on
Democracy ... 349 ★ The Information Revolution ... 350 ★ The Limits of
Democracy ... 351 ★ A Racial Democracy ... 352 ★ Race and Class ... 353
NATIONALISM AND ITS DISCONTENTS ... 353 The American System ... 353 ★ Banks and Money ... 355 ★ The Panic of ...
1819 ... 355 ★ The Politics of the Panic ... 356 ★ The Missouri Controversy
... 356 ★ The Slavery Question ... 358
NATION, SECTION, AND PARTY ... 359 The United States and the Latin American Wars of Independence ... 359 ★
The Monroe Doctrine ... 360 ★ The Election of 1824 ... 361
Voices of Freedom: From President James Monroe, Annual Message
to Congress (1823), and From John C. Calhoun, “A Disquisition on
Government” (ca. 1845) ... 362
The Nationalism of John Quincy Adams ... 364 ★ “Liberty Is
Power” ... 365 ★ Martin Van Buren and the Democratic Party ... 365 ★
The Election of 1828 ... 366
THE AGE OF JACKSON ... 367 The Party System ... 367 ★ Democrats and Whigs ... 368 ★ Public and
Private Freedom ... 369 ★ Politics and Morality ... 370 ★ South Carolina
and Nullification ... 371 ★ Calhoun’s Political Theory ... 371 ★ The
Nullification Crisis ... 373 ★ Indian Removal ... 374 ★ The Supreme Court
and the Indians ... 374
THE BANK WAR AND AFTER ... 377 Biddle’s Bank ... 377 ★ The Pet Banks and the Economy ... 379 ★
The Panic of 1837 ... 380 ★ Van Buren in Office ... 380 ★ The Election
of 1840 ... 381 ★ His Accidency ... 382
REVIEW ... 384
PA R T 3 : SL AV E RY, F R E E DOM, A N D T H E
CR ISIS OF T H E U N ION, 18 4 0–18 7 7
11. T H E P E C U L I A R I N S T I T U T I O N . . . 3 8 8 THE OLD SOUTH ... 390
Cotton Is King ... 390 ★ The Second Middle Passage ... 391 ★ Slavery and
the Nation ... 391 ★ The Southern Economy ... 393 ★ Plain Folk of the Old
South ... 394 ★ The Planter Class ... 395 ★ The Paternalist Ethos ... 396 ★
Contents
xvii
The Code of Honor ... 396 ★ The Proslavery Argument ... 398 ★ Abolition
in the Americas ... 399 ★ Slavery and Liberty ... 400 ★ Slavery and
Civilization ... 400
LIFE UNDER SLAVERY ... 401 Slaves and the Law ... 401 ★ Conditions of Slave Life ... 402 ★ Free Blacks
in the Old South ... 403
Voices of Freedom: From Letter by Joseph Taper to Joseph Long
(1840), and From “Slavery and the Bible” (1850) ... 404
The Upper and Lower South ... 407 ★ Slave Labor ... 408 ★ Gang Labor and
Task Labor ... 408 ★ Slavery in the Cities ... 410 ★ Maintaining Order ... 410
SLAVE CULTURE ... 411 The Slave Family ... 412 ★ The Threat of Sale ... 412 ★ Gender Roles
among Slaves ... 413 ★ Slave Religion ... 413 ★ The Gospel of Freedom ...
414 ★ The Desire for Liberty ... 415
RESISTANCE TO SLAVERY ... 416 Forms of Resistance ... 416 ★ Fugitive Slaves ... 418 ★ The Amistad ... 419 ★
Slave Revolts ... 419 ★ Nat Turner’s Rebellion ... 420
REVIEW ... 423
12 . A N A G E O F R E F O R M , 18 2 0 –18 4 0 . . . 4 2 4 THE REFORM IMPULSE ... 425
Utopian Communities ... 426 ★ The Shakers ... 426 ★ Oneida ... 427 ★
Worldly Communities ... 428 ★ The Owenites ... 429 ★ Religion and
Reform ... 430 ★ The Temperance Movement ... 431 ★ Critics of
Reform ... 431 ★ Reformers and Freedom ... 432 ★ The Invention of the
Asylum ... 433 ★ The Common School ... 433
THE CRUSADE AGAINST SLAVERY ... 435 Colonization ... 435 ★ Blacks and Colonization ... 435 ★ Militant Abolitionism
... 436 ★ The Emergence of Garrison ... 437 ★ Spreading the Abolitionist
Message ... 437 ★ Slavery and Moral Suasion ... 439 ★ Abolitionists and the
Idea of Freedom ... 439 ★ A New Vision of America ... 440
BLACK AND WHITE ABOLITIONISM ... 441 Black Abolitionists ... 441 ★ Abolitionism and Race ... 442 ★ Slavery and
American Freedom ... 443 ★ Gentlemen of Property and Standing ... 443 ★
Slavery and Civil Liberties ... 445
THE ORIGINS OF FEMINISM ... 446 The Rise of the Public Woman ... 446 ★ Women and Free Speech ... 447 ★
Women’s Rights ... 448 ★ Feminism and Freedom ... 449
Voices of Freedom: From Angelina Grimké, Letter in The Liberator
(August 2, 1837), and From Frederick Douglass, Speech on July 5, 1852,
Rochester, New York ... 450
xviii
Contents
Women and Work ... 452 ★ The Slavery of Sex ... 453 ★ “Social
Freedom” ... 453 ★ The Abolitionist Schism ... 454
REVIEW ... 457
13 . A H O U S E D I V I D E D , 18 4 0 –18 6 1 . . . 4 5 8 FRUITS OF MANIFEST DESTINY ... 459
Continental Expansion ... 459 ★ The Mexican Frontier: New Mexico and
California ... 460 ★ The Texas Revolt ... 460 ★ The Election of 1844 ...
463 ★ The Road to War ... 464 ★ The War and Its Critics ... 465 ★ Combat
in Mexico ... 466 ★ Race and Manifest Destiny ... 468 ★ Redefining Race
... 469 ★ Gold-Rush California ... 469 ★ California and the Boundaries of
Freedom ... 470 ★ The Other Gold Rush ... 471 ★ Opening Japan ... 471
A DOSE OF ARSENIC ... 473 The Wilmot Proviso ... 473 ★ The Free Soil Appeal ... 474 ★ Crisis and
Compromise ... 474 ★ The Great Debate ... 475 ★ The Fugitive Slave
Issue ... 475 ★ Douglas and Popular Sovereignty ... 477 ★ The Kansas-
Nebraska Act ... 478
THE RISE OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY ... 479 The Northern Economy ... 479 ★ The Rise and Fall of the
Know-Nothings ... 481 ★ The Free Labor Ideology ... 483 ★ Bleeding
Kansas and the Election of 1856 ... 484
THE EMERGENCE OF LINCOLN ... 485 The Dred Scott Decision ... 485 ★ The Decision’s Aftermath ... 486 ★
Lincoln and Slavery ... 486 ★ The Lincoln-Douglas Campaign ... 487 ★
John Brown at Harpers Ferry ... 489
Voices of Freedom: From The Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858) ... 490
The Rise of Southern Nationalism ... 492 ★ The Democratic Split ... 493 ★
The Nomination of Lincoln ... 494 ★ The Election of 1860 ... 494
THE IMPENDING CRISIS ... 495 The Secession Movement ... 495 ★ The Secession Crisis ... 496 ★ And the
War Came ... 497
REVIEW ... 501
14 . A N E W B I R T H O F F R E E D O M : T H E C I V I L W A R , 18 6 1–18 6 5 . . . 5 0 2
THE FIRST MODERN WAR ... 503 The Two Combatants ... 504 ★ The Technology of War ... 504 ★ The
Public and the War ... 506 ★ Mobilizing Resources ... 507 ★ Military
Contents
xix
Strategies ... 508 ★ The War Begins ... 509 ★ The War in the East,
1862 ... 509 ★ The War in the West ... 511
THE COMING OF EMANCIPATION ... 511 Slavery and the War ... 511 ★ The Unraveling of Slavery ... 513 ★
Steps toward Emancipation ... 513 ★ Lincoln’s Decision ... 514 ★
The Emancipation Proclamation ... 516 ★ Enlisting Black Troops ... 517 ★
The Black Soldier ... 518
THE SECOND AMERICAN REVOLUTION ... 519 Liberty and Union ... 520 ★ Lincoln’s Vision ... 520 ★ From Union to
Nation ... 521 ★ The War and American Religion ... 522 ★ Liberty in
Wartime ... 523 ★ The North’s Transformation ... 524 ★ Government and
the Economy ... 524 ★ The War and Native Americans ... 525
Voices of Freedom: From Letter of Thomas F. Drayton (April 17, 1861),
and From Abraham Lincoln, Address at Sanitary Fair, Baltimore
(April 18, 1864) ... 526
A New Financial System ... 528 ★ Women and the War ... 528 ★
The Divided North ... 530
THE CONFEDERATE NATION ... 531 Leadership and Government ... 531 ★ The Inner Civil War ... 532 ★
Economic Problems ... 533 ★ Southern Unionists ... 534 ★ Women and the
Confederacy ... 535 ★ Black Soldiers for the Confederacy ... 535
TURNING POINTS ... 536 Gettysburg and Vicksburg ... 536 ★ 1864 ... 537
REHEARSALS FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND THE END OF THE WAR ... 539
The Sea Islands Experiment ... 539 ★ Wartime Reconstruction in the
West ... 540 ★ The Politics of Wartime Reconstruction ... 541 ★ Victory
at Last ... 541 ★ The War and the World ... 543 ★ The War in American
History ... 544
REVIEW ... 547
15 . “ W H A T I S F R E E D O M ? ”: R E C O N S T R U C T I O N , 18 6 5 –18 7 7 . . . 5 4 8
THE MEANING OF FREEDOM ... 550 Blacks and the Meaning of Freedom ... 550 ★ Families in Freedom ... 550 ★
Church and School ... 551 ★ Political Freedom ... 551 ★ Land, Labor, and
Freedom ... 552 ★ Masters without Slaves ... 553 ★ The Free Labor Vision
... 554 ★ The Freedmen’s Bureau ... 555 ★ The Failure of Land Reform
... 556 ★ Toward a New South ... 556 ★ The White Farmer ... 557 ★
The Urban South ... 558 ★ The Aftermath of Slavery ... 559
xx
Contents
Voices of Freedom: From Petition of Committee in Behalf of the
Freedmen to Andrew Johnson (1865), and From A Sharecropping
Contract (1866) ... 560
THE MAKING OF RADICAL RECONSTRUCTION ... 562 Andrew Johnson ... 562 ★ The Failure of Presidential Reconstruction ...
563 ★ The Black Codes ... 563 ★ The Radical Republicans ... 564 ★ The
Origins of Civil Rights ... 565 ★ The Fourteenth Amendment ... 566 ★
The Reconstruction Act ... 566 ★ Impeachment and the Election of Grant
... 567 ★ The Fifteenth Amendment ... 568 ★ The “Great Constitutional
Revolution” ... 569 ★ Boundaries of Freedom ... 570 ★ The Rights of
Women ... 570 ★ Feminists and Radicals ... 571
RADICAL RECONSTRUCTION IN THE SOUTH ... 572 “The Tocsin of Freedom” ... 572 ★ The Black Officeholder ... 573 ★
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags ... 574 ★ Southern Republicans in Power
... 575 ★ The Quest for Prosperity ... 576
THE OVERTHROW OF RECONSTRUCTION ... 577 Reconstruction’s Opponents ... 577 ★ “A Reign of Terror” ... 577 ★ The
Liberal Republicans ... 579 ★ The North’s Retreat ... 580 ★ The Triumph of
the Redeemers ... 582 ★ The Disputed Election and Bargain of
1877 ... 582 ★ The End of Reconstruction ... 583
REVIEW ... 585
PA R T 4: T OWA R D A G L OBA L PR ESE NCE ,
18 7 0–19 2 0
16 . A M E R I C A’ S G I L D E D A G E , 18 7 0 –18 9 0 . . . 5 8 8 THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION ... 589
The Industrial Economy ... 590 ★ Railroads and the National Market ...
591 ★ The Spirit of Innovation ... 592 ★ Competition and Consolidation
... 593 ★ The Rise of Andrew Carnegie ... 594 ★ The Triumph of John D.
Rockefeller ... 597 ★ Workers’ Freedom in an Industrial Age ... 598 ★
Sunshine and Shadow: Increasing Wealth and Poverty ... 599
THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE WEST ... 600 A Diverse Region ... 601 ★ Farming on the Middle Border ... 602 ★
Bonanza Farms ... 603 ★ The Cowboy and the Corporate West ... 604 ★
Conflict on the Mormon Frontier ... 605 ★ The Subjugation of the Plains
Indians ... 605
Voices of Freedom: From Ira Steward, “A Second Declaration of
Independence” (1879), and From Andrew Carnegie, “Wealth”
(1889) ... 606
Contents
xxi
“Let Me Be a Free Man” ... 608 ★ Remaking Indian Life ... 610 ★ The
Dawes Act ... 611 ★ Indian Citizenship ... 612 ★ The Ghost Dance and
Wounded Knee ... 613 ★ Settler Societies and Global Wests ... 614
POLITICS IN A GILDED AGE ... 615 The Corruption of Politics ... 615 ★ The Politics of Dead Center ... 616 ★
Government and the Economy ... 617 ★ Reform Legislation ... 618 ★
Political Conflict in the States ... 619
FREEDOM IN THE GILDED AGE ... 620 The Social Problem ... 620 ★ Freedom, Inequality, and Democracy ... 620 ★
Social Darwinism in America ... 621 ★ Liberty of Contract ... 622 ★ The
Courts and Freedom ... 623
LABOR AND THE REPUBLIC ... 624 “The Overwhelming Labor Question” ... 624 ★ The Knights of Labor and the
“Conditions Essential to Liberty” ... 625 ★ Middle-Class Reformers ... 626 ★
Progress and Poverty ... 627 ★ The Cooperative Commonwealth ... 627 ★
Bellamy’s Utopia ... 627 ★ Protestants and Moral Reform ... 628 ★ A Social
Gospel ... 629 ★ The Haymarket Affair ... 629 ★ Labor and Politics ... 631
REVIEW ... 633
17. F R E E D O M ’ S B O U N D A R I E S , A T H O M E A N D A B R O A D , 18 9 0 –19 0 0 . . . 6 3 4
THE POPULIST CHALLENGE ... 636 The Farmers’ Revolt ... 636 ★ The People’s Party ... 637 ★ The Populist
Platform ... 638 ★ The Populist Coalition ... 638 ★ The Government and
Labor ... 641 ★ Populism and Labor ... 642 ★ Bryan and Free Silver ... 642 ★
The Campaign of 1896 ... 643
THE SEGREGATED SOUTH ... 645 The Redeemers in Power ... 645 ★ The Failure of the New South
Dream ... 645 ★ Black Life in the South ... 646 ★ The Kansas
Exodus ... 647 ★ The Decline of Black Politics ... 648 ★ The Elimination
of Black Voting ... 648 ★ The Law of Segregation ... 649 ★ Segregation
and White Domination ... 650 ★ The Rise of Lynching ... 651 ★ Politics,
Religion, and Memory ... 652
REDRAWING THE BOUNDARIES ... 653 The New Immigration and the New Nativism ... 654 ★ Chinese Exclusion
and Chinese Rights ... 654 ★ The Emergence of Booker T. Washington ...
656 ★ The Rise of the AFL ... 656 ★ The Women’s Era ... 657
BECOMING A WORLD POWER ... 659 The New Imperialism ... 659 ★ American Expansionism ... 660 ★ The Lure
of Empire ... 660 ★ The “Splendid Little War” ... 661 ★ Roosevelt at San
Juan Hill ... 662 ★ An American Empire ... 664 ★ The Philippine War ... 666
xxii
Contents
Voices of Freedom: From Josiah Strong, Our Country (1885), and From
“Aguinaldo’s Case against the United States” (1899) ... 668
Citizens or Subjects? ... 670 ★ Drawing the Global Color Line ... 671 ★
“Republic or Empire?” ... 671
REVIEW ... 675
18 . T H E P R O G R E S S I V E E R A , 19 0 0 –19 16 . . . 6 7 6 AN URBAN AGE AND A CONSUMER SOCIETY ... 678
Farms and Cities ... 678 ★ The Muckrakers ... 680 ★ Immigration as a
Global Process ... 680 ★ The Immigrant Quest for Freedom ... 682 ★
Consumer Freedom ... 683 ★ The Working Woman ... 684 ★ The Rise
of Fordism ... 685 ★ The Promise of Abundance ... 686 ★ An American
Standard of Living ... 687
VARIETIES OF PROGRESSIVISM ... 688 Industrial Freedom ... 688 ★ The Socialist Presence ... 689 ★ The Gospel of
Debs ... 690 ★ AFL and IWW ... 691 ★ The New Immigrants on Strike ... 691
Voices of Freedom: From Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Women and
Economics (1898), and From John Mitchell, “A Workingman’s
Conception of Industrial Liberty” (1910) ... 692
Labor and Civil Liberties ... 695 ★ The New Feminism ... 695 ★ The Rise
of Personal Freedom ... 696 ★ The Birth-Control Movement ... 697 ★
Native American Progressivism ... 698
THE POLITICS OF PROGRESSIVISM ... 698 Effective Freedom ... 698 ★ State and Local Reforms ... 699 ★ Progressive
Democracy ... 700 ★ Government by Expert ... 701 ★ Jane Addams and
Hull House ... 701 ★ “Spearheads for Reform” ... 702 ★ The Campaign
for Woman Suffrage ... 703 ★ Maternalist Reform ... 704 ★ The Idea of
Economic Citizenship ... 705
THE PROGRESSIVE PRESIDENTS ... 705 Theodore Roosevelt ... 706 ★ Roosevelt and Economic Regulation ... 706 ★
John Muir and the Spirituality of Nature ... 707 ★ The Conservation
Movement ... 707 ★ Taft in Office ... 708 ★ The Election of 1912 ... 709 ★
New Freedom and New Nationalism ... 710 ★ Wilson’s First Term ... 710 ★
The Expanding Role of Government ... 711
REVIEW ... 713
19 . S A F E F O R D E M O C R A C Y : T H E U N I T E D S T A T E S A N D W O R L D W A R I , 19 16 –19 2 0 . . . 7 14
AN ERA OF INTERVENTION ... 716 “I Took the Canal Zone” ... 717 ★ The Roosevelt Corollary ... 718 ★ Moral
Imperialism ... 719 ★ Wilson and Mexico ... 720
Contents
xxiii
AMERICA AND THE GREAT WAR ... 721 Neutrality and Preparedness ... 722 ★ The Road to War ... 723 ★
The Fourteen Points ... 724
THE WAR AT HOME ... 726 The Progressives’ War ... 726 ★ The Wartime State ... 726 ★ The
Propaganda War ... 727 ★ “The Great Cause of Freedom” ... 728 ★
The Coming of Woman Suffrage ... 728 ★ Prohibition ... 730 ★ Liberty in
Wartime ... 731 ★ The Espionage Act ... 732 ★ Coercive Patriotism ... 733
WHO IS AN AMERICAN? ... 734 The “Race Problem” ... 734 ★ Americanization and Pluralism ... 734
Voices of Freedom: From Eugene V. Debs, Speech to the Jury before
Sentencing under the Espionage Act (1918), and From W. E. B. Du Bois,
“Returning Soldiers,” The Crisis (1919) ... 736
The Anti-German Crusade ... 738 ★ Toward Immigration Restriction ... 739 ★
Groups Apart: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and Asian-Americans ... 739 ★ The
Color Line ... 740 ★ Roosevelt, Wilson, and Race ... 741 ★ W. E. B. Du Bois
and the Revival of Black Protest ... 742 ★ Closing Ranks ... 743 ★ The Great
Migration and the “Promised Land” ... 743 ★ Racial Violence, North and
South ... 744 ★ The Rise of Garveyism ... 745
1919 ... 746 A Worldwide Upsurge ... 746 ★ Upheaval in America ... 746 ★ The Great
Steel Strike ... 747 ★ The Red Scare ... 748 ★ Wilson at Versailles ... 748 ★
The Wilsonian Moment ... 749 ★ The Seeds of Wars to Come ... 752 ★
The Treaty Debate ... 753
REVIEW ... 755
PA R T 5 : DE PR ESSION A N D WA RS,
19 2 0–19 5 3
2 0 . F R O M B U S I N E S S C U L T U R E T O G R E A T D E P R E S S I O N : T H E T W E N T I E S , 19 2 0 –19 3 2 . . . 7 5 8
THE BUSINESS OF AMERICA ... 760 A Decade of Prosperity ... 760 ★ A New Society ... 761 ★ The Limits of
Prosperity ... 762 ★ The Farmers’ Plight ... 763 ★ The Image of Business ...
764 ★ The Decline of Labor ... 765 ★ The Equal Rights Amendment ... 766 ★
Women’s Freedom ... 767
BUSINESS AND GOVERNMENT ... 769 The Retreat from Progressivism ... 769 ★ The Republican Era ... 769 ★
Corruption in Government ... 770 ★ The Election of 1924 ... 770 ★
Economic Diplomacy ... 771
xxiv
Contents
Voices of Freedom: From André Siegfried, “The Gulf Between,”
Atlantic Monthly (March 1928), and From Majority Opinion, Justice
James C. McReynolds, in Meyer v. Nebraska (1923) ... 772
THE BIRTH OF CIVIL LIBERTIES ... 774 The “Free Mob” ... 775 ★ A “Clear and Present Danger” ... 776 ★
The Court and Civil Liberties ... 776
THE CULTURE WARS ... 777 The Fundamentalist Revolt ... 777 ★ The Scopes Trial ... 779 ★ The
Second Klan ... 780 ★ Closing the Golden Door ... 781 ★ Race and the Law
... 783 ★ Pluralism and Liberty ... 784 ★ Promoting Tolerance ... 785 ★
The Emergence of Harlem ... 786 ★ The Harlem Renaissance ... 787
THE GREAT DEPRESSION ... 788 The Election of 1928 ... 788 ★ The Coming of the Depression ... 789 ★
Americans and the Depression ... 791 ★ Resignation and Protest ... 792 ★
Hoover’s Response ... 792 ★ The Worsening Economic Outlook ... 794 ★
Freedom in the Modern World ... 795
REVIEW ... 797
2 1. T H E N E W D E A L , 19 3 2 –19 4 0 . . . 7 9 8 THE FIRST NEW DEAL ... 800
FDR and the Election of 1932 ... 800 ★ The Coming of the New
Deal ... 802 ★ The Banking Crisis ... 803 ★ The NRA ... 804 ★ Government
Jobs ... 805 ★ Public-Works Projects ... 806 ★ The New Deal and
Agriculture ... 807 ★ The New Deal and Housing ... 808 ★ The Court and
the New Deal ... 810
THE GRASSROOTS REVOLT ... 810 Labor’s Great Upheaval ... 810 ★ The Rise of the CIO ... 812 ★ Labor and
Politics ... 813 ★ Voices of Protest ... 814 ★ Religion on the Radio ... 815
THE SECOND NEW DEAL ... 815 The WPA and the Wagner Act ... 816 ★ The American Welfare State ...
817 ★ The Social Security System ... 818
A RECKONING WITH LIBERTY ... 818 FDR and the Idea of Freedom ... 819
Voices of Freedom: From Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Fireside Chat”
(1934), and From John Steinbeck, The Harvest Gypsies: On the Road to
the Grapes of Wrath (1938) ... 820
The Election of 1936 ... 822 ★ The Court Fight ... 823 ★ The End of the
Second New Deal ... 824
THE LIMITS OF CHANGE ... 824 The New Deal and American Women ... 825 ★ The Southern Veto ... 826 ★
The Stigma of Welfare ... 827 ★ The Indian New Deal ... 827 ★ The New
Contents
xxv
Deal and Mexican-Americans ... 828 ★ Last Hired, First Fired ... 829 ★
A New Deal for Blacks ... 829 ★ Federal Discrimination ... 830
A NEW CONCEPTION OF AMERICA ... 831 The Heyday of American Communism ... 831 ★ Redefining the People ...
832 ★ Promoting Diversity ... 833 ★ Challenging the Color Line ... 834 ★
Labor and Civil Liberties ... 835 ★ The End of the New Deal ... 836 ★
The New Deal in American History ... 837
REVIEW ... 839
2 2 . F I G H T I N G F O R T H E F O U R F R E E D O M S : W O R L D W A R I I , 19 4 1–19 4 5 . . . 8 4 0
FIGHTING WORLD WAR II ... 842 Good Neighbors ... 842 ★ The Road to War ... 844 ★ Isolationism ... 844 ★
War in Europe ... 845 ★ Toward Intervention ... 846 ★ Pearl Harbor ... 847 ★
The War in the Pacific ... 848 ★ The War in Europe ... 849
THE HOME FRONT ... 852 Mobilizing for War ... 852 ★ Business and the War ... 853 ★ Labor in
Wartime ... 855 ★ Fighting for the Four Freedoms ... 855 ★ Freedom
from Want ... 856 ★ The Office of War Information ... 857 ★ The Fifth
Freedom ... 858 ★ Women at Work ... 859 ★ The Pull of Tradition ... 860
VISIONS OF POSTWAR FREEDOM ... 860 Toward an American Century ... 860 ★ “The Way of Life of Free Men” ...
861 ★ An Economic Bill of Rights ... 862 ★ The Road to Serfdom ... 863
THE AMERICAN DILEMMA ... 863 Patriotic Assimilation ... 864 ★ The Bracero Program ... 865 ★ Mexican-
American Rights ... 865 ★ Indians during the War ... 866 ★ Asian-
Americans in Wartime ... 866 ★ Japanese-American Internment ... 867 ★
Blacks and the War ... 869 ★ Blacks and Military Service ... 869 ★ Birth
of the Civil Rights Movement ... 870 ★ The Double-V ... 871 ★ What the
Negro Wants ... 871
Voices of Freedom: From Henry R. Luce, The American Century
(1941), and From Charles H. Wesley, “The Negro Has Always Wanted
the Four Freedoms,” in What the Negro Wants (1944) ... 872
An American Dilemma ... 874 ★ Black Internationalism ... 875
THE END OF THE WAR ... 876 “The Most Terrible Weapon” ... 876 ★ The Dawn of the Atomic Age ...
877 ★ The Nature of the War ... 878 ★ Planning the Postwar World ... 878 ★
Yalta and Bretton Woods ... 879 ★ The United Nations ... 880 ★ Peace, but
Not Harmony ... 880
REVIEW ... 883
xxvi
Contents
2 3 . T H E U N I T E D S T A T E S A N D T H E C O L D W A R , 19 4 5 –19 5 3 . . . 8 8 4
ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR ... 886 The Two Powers ... 886 ★ The Roots of Containment ... 887 ★ The Iron
Curtain ... 887 ★ The Truman Doctrine ... 887 ★ The Marshall Plan ... 889 ★
The Reconstruction of Japan ... 890 ★ The Berlin Blockade and NATO ...
890 ★ The Growing Communist Challenge ... 891 ★ The Korean War ...
891 ★ Cold War Critics ... 895 ★ Imperialism and Decolonization ... 896
THE COLD WAR AND THE IDEA OF FREEDOM ... 896 The Cultural Cold War ... 897 ★ Freedom and Totalitarianism ... 897 ★
The Rise of Human Rights ... 898 ★ Ambiguities of Human Rights ... 899
THE TRUMAN PRESIDENCY ... 901 The Fair Deal ... 901 ★ The Postwar Strike Wave ... 901 ★ The Republican
Resurgence ... 902 ★ Postwar Civil Rights ... 902 ★ To Secure These
Rights ... 904 ★ The Dixiecrat and Wallace Revolts ... 904 ★ The 1948
Campaign ... 905
THE ANTICOMMUNIST CRUSADE ... 906 Loyalty and Disloyalty ... 907 ★ The Spy Trials ... 908 ★ McCarthy and
McCarthyism ... 909 ★ An Atmosphere of Fear ... 909 ★ The Uses of
Anticommunism ... 910 ★ Anticommunist Policies ... 911
Voices of Freedom: From Will Herberg, Protestant, Catholic, Jew
(1955), and From Henry Steele Commager, “Who Is Loyal to America?”
in Harper’s (September 1947) ... 912
The Cold War and Organized Labor ... 914 ★ Cold War Civil Rights ... 914
REVIEW ... 917
PA R T 6 : W H AT K I N D OF N AT ION?
19 5 3–20 12
2 4 . A N A F F L U E N T S O C I E T Y, 19 5 3 –19 6 0 . . . 9 2 2
THE GOLDEN AGE ... 924 A Changing Economy ... 924 ★ A Suburban Nation ... 925 ★ The Growth
of the West ... 926 ★ A Consumer Culture ... 927 ★ The TV World ... 928 ★
A New Ford ... 929 ★ Women at Work and at Home ... 931 ★
A Segregated Landscape ... 932 ★ Public Housing and Urban Renewal
... 933 ★ The Divided Society ... 933 ★ Religion and Anticommunism ...
934 ★ Selling Free Enterprise ... 935 ★ People’s Capitalism ... 936 ★
The Libertarian Conservatives ... 937 ★ The New Conservatism ... 937
Contents
xxvii
THE EISENHOWER ERA ... 938 Ike and Nixon ... 938 ★ The 1952 Campaign ... 939 ★ Modern
Republicanism ... 940 ★ The Social Contract ... 941 ★ Massive Retaliation
... 941 ★ Ike and the Russians ... 942 ★ The Emergence of the Third World
... 943 ★ The Cold War in the Third World ... 944 ★ Origins of the Vietnam
War ... 945 ★ Mass Society and Its Critics ... 946 ★ Rebels without a
Cause ... 947 ★ The Beats ... 948
THE FREEDOM MOVEMENT ... 949 Origins of the Movement ... 949
Voices of Freedom: From Martin Luther King Jr., Speech at
Montgomery, Alabama (December 5, 1955), and From The Southern
Manifesto (1956) ... 950
The Legal Assault on Segregation ... 952 ★ The Brown Case ... 953 ★
The Montgomery Bus Boycott ... 954 ★ The Daybreak of Freedom ... 955 ★
The Leadership of King ... 956 ★ Massive Resistance ... 956 ★ Eisenhower
and Civil Rights ... 957 ★ The World Views the United States ... 958
THE ELECTION OF 1960 ... 959 Kennedy and Nixon ... 959 ★ The End of the 1950s ... 960
REVIEW ... 963
2 5 . T H E S I X T I E S , 19 6 0 –19 6 8 . . . 9 6 4 THE CIVIL RIGHTS REVOLUTION ... 966
The Rising Tide of Protest ... 966 ★ Birmingham ... 966 ★ The March on
Washington ... 968
THE KENNEDY YEARS ... 969 Kennedy and the World ... 969 ★ The Missile Crisis ... 970 ★ Kennedy and
Civil Rights ... 971
LYNDON JOHNSON’S PRESIDENCY ... 972 The Civil Rights Act of 1964 ... 972 ★ Freedom Summer ... 973 ★ The
1964 Election ... 974 ★ The Conservative Sixties ... 975 ★ The Voting
Rights Act ... 976 ★ Immigration Reform ... 976 ★ The Great Society ... 977 ★
The War on Poverty ... 977 ★ Freedom and Equality ... 978
THE CHANGING BLACK MOVEMENT ... 979 The Ghetto Uprisings ... 979 ★ Malcolm X ... 981 ★ The Rise of Black
Power ... 981
VIETNAM AND THE NEW LEFT ... 982 Old and New Lefts ... 982 ★ The Fading Consensus ... 983 ★ The Rise of the
SDS ... 984 ★ America and Vietnam ... 985 ★ Lyndon Johnson’s War ... 986
Voices of Freedom: From Young Americans for Freedom, The Sharon
Statement (September 1960), and From Tom Hayden and Others,
The Port Huron Statement (June 1962) ... 988
xxviii
Contents
The Antiwar Movement ... 990 ★ The Counterculture ... 991 ★
Personal Liberation and the Free Individual ... 992 ★ Faith and the
Counterculture ... 992
THE NEW MOVEMENTS AND THE RIGHTS REVOLUTION ... 994
The Feminine Mystique ... 994 ★ Women’s Liberation ... 995 ★ Personal
Freedom ... 996 ★ Gay Liberation ... 997 ★ Latino Activism ... 997 ★ Red
Power ... 998 ★ Silent Spring ... 998 ★ The New Environmentalism ... 999 ★
The Rights Revolution ... 1000 ★ Policing the States ... 1001 ★ The Right
to Privacy ... 1002
1968 ... 1002 A Year of Turmoil ... 1002 ★ The Global 1968 ... 1004 ★ Nixon’s
Comeback ... 1005 ★ The Legacy of the Sixties ... 1005
REVIEW ... 1007
2 6 . T H E T R I U M P H O F C O N S E R V A T I S M , 19 6 9 –19 8 8 . . . 10 0 8
PRESIDENT NIXON ... 1009 Nixon’s Domestic Policies ... 1010 ★ Nixon and Welfare ... 1010 ★
Nixon and Race ... 1011 ★ The Burger Court ... 1012 ★ The Court and
Affirmative Action ... 1013 ★ The Continuing Sexual Revolution ... 1013 ★
Nixon and Détente ... 1014
VIETNAM AND WATERGATE ... 1016 Nixon and Vietnam ... 1016 ★ The End of the Vietnam War ... 1017 ★
Watergate ... 1018 ★ Nixon’s Fall ... 1019
THE END OF THE GOLDEN AGE ... 1020 The Decline of Manufacturing ... 1020 ★ Stagflation ... 1020 ★ The
Beleaguered Social Compact ... 1021 ★ Labor on the Defensive ... 1022 ★
Ford as President ... 1023 ★ The Carter Administration ... 1023 ★ Carter
and the Economic Crisis ... 1024 ★ The Emergence of Human Rights
Politics ... 1025 ★ The Iran Crisis and Afghanistan ... 1026
THE RISING TIDE OF CONSERVATISM ... 1028 The Religious Right ... 1028 ★ The Battle over the Equal Rights
Amendment ... 1029 ★ The Abortion Controversy ... 1030 ★ The Tax
Revolt ... 1031 ★ The Election of 1980 ... 1032
THE REAGAN REVOLUTION ... 1033 Reagan and American Freedom ... 1033
Voices of Freedom: From Redstockings Manifesto (1969), and From
Jerry Falwell, Listen, America! (1980) ... 1034
Reaganomics ... 1036 ★ Reagan and Labor ... 1037 ★ The Problem of
Inequality ... 1037 ★ The Second Gilded Age ... 1038 ★ Conservatives
Contents
xxix
and Reagan ... 1039 ★ Reagan and the Cold War ... 1040 ★ The Iran-
Contra Affair ... 1042 ★ Reagan and Gorbachev ... 1042 ★ Reagan’s
Legacy ... 1042 ★ The Election of 1988 ... 1043
REVIEW ... 1045
2 7. G L O B A L I Z A T I O N A N D I T S D I S C O N T E N T S , 19 8 9 – 2 0 0 0 . . . 10 4 6
THE POST-COLD WAR WORLD ... 1048 The Crisis of Communism ... 1048 ★ A New World Order? ... 1049 ★
The Gulf War ... 1050 ★ Visions of America’s Role ... 1051 ★ The Election
of Clinton ... 1051 ★ Clinton in Office ... 1052 ★ The “Freedom Revolution”
... 1053 ★ Clinton’s Political Strategy ... 1053 ★ Clinton and World Affairs
... 1055 ★ The Balkan Crisis ... 1055 ★ Human Rights ... 1056
A NEW ECONOMY? ... 1056 The Computer Revolution ... 1057 ★ The Stock Market Boom and Bust
... 1058 ★ The Enron Syndrome ... 1059 ★ Fruits of Deregulation ... 1060 ★
Rising Inequality ... 1060
Voices of Freedom: From Bill Clinton, Speech on Signing of NAFTA
(1993), and From Global Exchange, Seattle, Declaration for Global
Democracy (December 1999) ... 1062
CULTURE WARS ... 1064 The Newest Immigrants ... 1065 ★ The New Diversity ... 1067 ★ African-
Americans in the 1990s ... 1070 ★ The Role of the Courts ... 1071 ★ The
Spread of Imprisonment ... 1071 ★ The Burden of Imprisonment ... 1072 ★
The Continuing Rights Revolution ... 1073 ★ Native Americans in 2000
... 1073 ★ Multiculturalism ... 1074 ★ The Identity Debate ... 1074 ★
Cultural Conservatism ... 1075 ★ “Family Values” in Retreat ... 1076 ★
The Antigovernment Extreme ... 1077
IMPEACHMENT AND THE ELECTION OF 2000 ... 1078 The Impeachment of Clinton ... 1078 ★ The Disputed Election ... 1079 ★
The 2000 Result ... 1080 ★ A Challenged Democracy ... 1080
FREEDOM AND THE NEW CENTURY ... 1081 Exceptional America ... 1081 ★ Varieties of Freedom ... 1083
REVIEW ... 1085
2 8 . A N E W C E N T U R Y A N D N E W C R I S E S . . . 10 8 6 THE WAR ON TERRORISM ... 1088
Bush before September 11 ... 1088 ★ “They Hate Freedom” ... 1089 ★
The Bush Doctrine ... 1090 ★ The “Axis of Evil” ... 1091 ★ The National
Security Strategy ... 1091
xxx
Contents
AN AMERICAN EMPIRE? ... 1092 Confronting Iraq ... 1092 ★ The Iraq War ... 1093
Voices of Freedom: From The National Security Strategy of the United
States (September 2002), and From President Barack Obama, Speech on
the Middle East (2011) ... 1094
Another Vietnam? ... 1096 ★ The World and the War ... 1096
THE AFTERMATH OF SEPTEMBER 11 AT HOME ... 1097
Security and Liberty ... 1097 ★ The Power of the President ... 1099 ★
The Torture Controversy ... 1100 ★ The Economy under Bush ... 1101
THE WINDS OF CHANGE ... 1102 The 2004 Election ... 1102 ★ Bush’s Second Term ... 1103 ★ Hurricane
Katrina ... 1103 ★ The New Orleans Disaster ... 1104 ★ The Immigration
Debate ... 1105 ★ Islam, America, and the “Clash of Civilizations”
... 1106 ★ The Constitution and Liberty ... 1107 ★ The Court and the
President ... 1108 ★ The Midterm Elections of 2006 ... 1110 ★
The Housing Bubble ... 1111 ★ The Great Recession ... 1112 ★
“A Conspiracy against the Public” ... 1113 ★ The Collapse of Market
Fundamentalism ... 1114 ★ Bush and the Crisis ... 1115
THE RISE OF OBAMA ... 1116 The 2008 Campaign ... 1117 ★ Obama’s First Inauguration ... 1118 ★
Obama in Office ... 1118
OBAMA’S FIRST TERM ... 1120 The Continuing Economic Crisis ... 1120 ★ Obama and the World ... 1121 ★
The Republican Resurgence ... 1122 ★ The Occupy Movement ... 1123 ★
The 2012 Campaign ... 1124
LEARNING FROM HISTORY ... 1126
REVIEW ... 1129
A P P E N D I X DOCUMENTS
The Declaration of Independence (1776)...A-2 ★ The Constitution of
the United States (1787)...A-5 ★ From George Washington’s Farewell
Address (1796)...A-16 ★ The Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments and
Resolutions (1848)...A-21 ★ From Frederick Douglass’s “What, to the
Slave, Is the Fourth of July?” Speech (1852)...A-24 ★ The Gettysburg
Address (1863)...A-27 ★ Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address
(1865)...A-28 ★ The Populist Platform of 1892...A-29 ★ Franklin D.
Roosevelt’s First Inaugural Address (1933)...A-32 ★ From The
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Program for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom
(1963)...A-35 ★ Ronald Reagan’s First Inaugural Address (1981)...A-36 ★
Barack Obama’s First Inaugural Address (2009)...A-39
TABLES AND FIGURES Presidential Elections...A-42 ★ Admission of States...A-50 ★ Population
of the United States...A-51 ★ Historical Statistics of the United States:
Labor Force—Selected Characteristics Expressed as a Percentage
of the Labor Force, 1800–2010...A-52 ★ Immigration, by Origin...A-52 ★ Unemployment Rate, 1890–2013...A-53 ★ Union Membership as a
Percentage of Nonagricultural Employment, 1880–2012...A-53 ★ Voter
Participation in Presidential Elections 1824–2012...A-53 ★ Birthrate,
1820–2011...A-53
GLOSSARY ★ ... A-55
CREDITS ★ ... A-79
INDEX ★ ... A-85
List of Maps, Tables, and Figures
xxxiii
M A P S CHAPTER 1 The First Americans...7 Native Ways of Life, ca. 1500...11 The Old World on the Eve of American Colonization,
ca. 1500...19 Voyages of Discovery...22 Early Spanish Conquests and Explorations in the
New World...32 The New World—New France and New Netherland,
ca. 1650...39
CHAPTER 2 English Settlement in the Chesapeake, ca. 1650...58 English Settlement in New England, ca. 1640...72
CHAPTER 3 Eastern North America in the Seventeenth and Early
Eighteenth Centuries...89 European Settlement and Ethnic Diversity on the
Atlantic Coast of North America, 1760...108
CHAPTER 4 Atlantic Trading Routes...129 The Slave Trade in the Atlantic World,
1460–1770...131 European Empires in North America, ca. 1750...153 Eastern North America after the Peace of Paris,
1763...159
CHAPTER 5 The Revolutionary War in the North, 1775–1781...196 The Revolutionary War in the South, 1775–1781...198 North America, 1783...201
CHAPTER 6 Loyalism in the American Revolution...220
CHAPTER 7 Western Lands, 1782–1802...241 Western Ordinances, 1784–1787...244 Ratification of the Constitution...262 Indian Tribes, 1790...264
CHAPTER 8 The Presidential Election of 1800...287 The Louisiana Purchase...293 The War of 1812...301
CHAPTER 9 The Market Revolution: Roads and Canals, 1840...310 The Market Revolution: Western Settlement,
1800–1820...313 Travel Times from New York City in 1800 and
1830...314
The Market Revolution: The Spread of Cotton Cultivation, 1820–1840...316
Major Cities, 1840...320 Cotton Mills, 1820s...321
CHAPTER 10 The Missouri Compromise, 1820...357 The Americas, 1830...360 The Presidential Election of 1824...364 The Presidential Election of 1828...366 Indian Removals, 1830–1840...375 The Presidential Election of 1840...382
CHAPTER 11 Slave Population, 1860...392 Size of Slaveholdings, 1860...397 Distribution of Free Blacks, 1860...406 Major Crops of the South, 1860...409 Slave Resistance in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic
World...417
CHAPTER 12 Utopian Communities, Mid-Nineteenth
Century...428
CHAPTER 13 The Trans-Mississippi West, 1830s–1840s...462 The Mexican War, 1846–1848...467 Gold-Rush California...470 Continental Expansion through 1853...472 The Compromise of 1850...476 The Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854...478 The Railroad Network, 1850s...480 The Presidential Election of 1856...485 The Presidential Election of 1860...494
CHAPTER 14 The Secession of Southern States, 1860–1861...505 The Civil War in the East, 1861–1862...510 The Civil War in the West, 1861–1862...512 The Emancipation Proclamation...515 The Civil War, 1863...536 The Civil War, Late 1864–1865...542
CHAPTER 15 The Barrow Plantation...553 Sharecropping in the South, 1880...557 The Presidential Election of 1868...568 Reconstruction in the South, 1867–1877...581 The Presidential Election of 1876...582
CHAPTER 16 The Railroad Network, 1880...592 U.S. Steel: A Vertically Integrated Corporation...596 Indian Reservations, ca. 1890...611 Political Stalemate, 1876–1892...617
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List of Maps, Tables, and Figures
CHAPTER 17 Populist Strength, 1892...640 The Presidential Election of 1896...644 The Spanish-American War: The Pacific...663 The Spanish-American War: The Caribbean...663 American Empire, 1898...665
CHAPTER 18 The World on the Move, World Migration
1815–1914...682 Socialist Towns and Cities, 1900–1920...690 The Presidential Election of 1912...710
CHAPTER 19 The Panama Canal Zone...717 The United States in the Caribbean,
1898–1941...718 Colonial Possessions, 1900...720 World War I: The Western Front...725 Prohibition, 1915: Counties and States That Banned
Liquor before the Eighteenth Amendment (Ratified 1919, Repealed 1933)...731
Europe in 1914...750 Europe in 1919...751
CHAPTER 20 The Presidential Election of 1928...790
CHAPTER 21 Columbia River Basin Project, 1949...801 The Presidential Election of 1932...802 The Tennessee Valley Authority...807 The Dust Bowl, 1935–1940...808
CHAPTER 22 World War II in the Pacific, 1941–1945...849 World War II in Europe, 1942–1945...851 Wartime Army and Navy Bases and
Airfields...854 Japanese-American Internment, 1942–1945...868
CHAPTER 23 Cold War Europe, 1956...892 The Korean War, 1950–1953...894 The Presidential Election of 1948...905
CHAPTER 24 The Interstate Highway System...930 The Presidential Election of 1952...939 The Presidential Election of 1960...960
CHAPTER 25 The Presidential Election of 1964...974 The Vietnam War, 1964–1975...987 The Presidential Election of 1968...1004
CHAPTER 26 Center of Population, 1790–2010...1011 The Presidential Election of 1976...1023 The Presidential Election of 1980...1032 The United States in the Caribbean and Central
America, 1954–2004...1041
CHAPTER 27 Eastern Europe after the Cold War...1050 The Presidential Election of 1992...1052 Maps of Diversity, 2000...1066 The Presidential Election of 2000...1080
CHAPTER 28 U.S. Presence in the Middle East, 1947–2012...1098 Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza Strip...1099 The Presidential Election of 2008...1117 The Presidential Election of 2012...1126
T A B L E S A N D F I G U R E S CHAPTER 1 Table 1.1 Estimated Regional Populations:
The Americas, ca. 1500...31 Table 1.2 Estimated Regional Populations:
The World, ca. 1500...31
CHAPTER 3 Table 3.1 Origins and Status of Migrants to British
North American Colonies, 1700–1775...107
CHAPTER 4 Table 4.1 Slave Population as Percentage of Total
Population of Original Thirteen Colonies, 1770...135
CHAPTER 7 Table 7.1 Total Population and Black Population of
the United States, 1790...267
CHAPTER 9 Table 9.1 Population Growth of Selected Western
States, 1800–1850...315 Table 9.2 Total Number of Immigrants by Five-Year
Period...324 Figure 9.1 Sources of Immigration, 1850...326
CHAPTER 11 Table 11.1 Growth of the Slave Population...393 Table 11.2 Slaveholding, 1850...394 Table 11.3 Free Black Population, 1860...407
CHAPTER 14 Figure 14.1 Resources for War: Union versus
Confederacy...506
List of Maps, Tables, and Figures
xxxv
CHAPTER 16 Table 16.1 Indicators of Economic Change,
1870–1920...590 Figure 16.1 Railroad Mileage Built, 1830–1975...591
CHAPTER 17 Table 17.1 States with over 200 Lynchings,
1889–1918...652
CHAPTER 18 Table 18.1 Rise of the City, 1880–1920...681 Table 18.2 Immigrants and Their Children as Percentage
of Population, Ten Major Cities, 1920...683 Table 18.3 Percentage of Women 14 Years and Older
in the Labor Force, 1900–1930...684 Table 18.4 Percentage of Women Workers in Various
Occupations, 1900–1920...685 Table 18.5 Sales of Passenger Cars, 1900–1925...686
CHAPTER 19 Table 19.1 The Great Migration...744
CHAPTER 20 Figure 20.1 Household Appliances,
1900–1930...762 Figure 20.2 The Stock Market, 1919–1939...765 Table 20.1 Selected Annual Immigration Quotas
under the 1924 Immigration Act...782
CHAPTER 21 Figure 21.1 The Building Boom and Its Collapse,
1919–1939...809 Figure 21.2 Unemployment, 1925–1945...824
CHAPTER 22 Table 22.1 Labor Union Membership...855
CHAPTER 24 Figure 24.1 Real Gross Domestic Product per Capita,
1790–2000...925 Figure 24.2 Average Daily Television Viewing...929 Figure 24.3 The Baby Boom and Its Decline...931
CHAPTER 25 Figure 25.1 Percentage of Population below Poverty
Level, by Race, 1959–1969...978
CHAPTER 26 Figure 26.1 Median Age at First Marriage,
1947–1981...1013 Table 26.1 Rate of Divorce: Divorces of Existing
Marriages per 1,000 New Marriages, 1950–1980...1014
Table 26.2 The Misery Index, 1970–1980...1021 Figure 26.2 Real Average Weekly Wages,
1955–1990...1022 Figure 26.3 Changes in Families’ Real Income,
1980–1990...1038
CHAPTER 27 Figure 27.1 U.S. Income Inequality,
1913–2003...1060 Table 27.1 Immigration to the United States,
1960–2010...1065 Figure 27.2 Birthplace of Immigrants,
1990–2000...1067 Figure 27.3 The Projected Non-White Majority:
Racial and Ethnic Breakdown...1069 Figure 27.4 Unemployment Rate by Sex and Race,
1954–2000...1070 Table 27.2 Home Ownership Rates by Group,
1970–2000...1070 Figure 27.5 Institutional Inmates as a Percentage of
the Population by Sex and Race, 1850–2010...1072
Figure 27.6 Change in Family Structure, 1970–2010...1076
Figure 27.7 Women in the Paid Workforce, 1940–2010...1077
CHAPTER 28 Figure 28.1 The Housing Bubble...1111 Figure 28.2 Portrait of a Recession...1112 Figure 28.3 Income Gains, 1947–2009...1121
For my mother,
Liza Foner (1909–2005),
an accomplished artist
who lived through
most of the twentieth century
and into the twenty-first
�
�
Preface
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P R E F A C E
Give Me Liberty! An American History is a survey of American history from the earliest days of European exploration and conquest of the New World to the first decades of the twenty-first century. It offers students a clear, con- cise narrative whose central theme is the changing contours of American freedom.
I am extremely gratified by the response to the first three editions of Give Me Liberty!, which have been used in survey courses at many hundreds of two- and four-year colleges and universities throughout the country. The comments I have received from instructors and students encourage me to think that Give Me Liberty! has worked well in their classrooms. Their comments have also included many valuable suggestions for revisions, which I greatly appreciate. These have ranged from corrections of typographical and factual errors to thoughts about subjects that needed more extensive treatment. In making revisions for this Fourth Edition, I have tried to take these suggestions into account. I have also incorporated the find- ings and insights of new scholarship that has appeared since the original edition was written.
The most significant changes in this Fourth Edition reflect my desire to inte- grate the history of American religion more fully into the narrative. Today, this is
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a thriving subfield of American historical writing, partly because of the increased prominence in our own time of debates over the relations between government and religion and over the definition of religious liberty—issues that are deeply rooted in the American experience. Changes relating to this theme may be found through- out the book, but some of the major additions seeking to illuminate the history of American religion are as follows:
Chapter 1 includes a new discussion of religious toleration and its limits in the seventeenth-century Dutch colony of New Netherland, which became New York after being seized by Great Britain in 1664. Chapter 2 expands the previous discus- sion of the complex relationship between church and state in Puritan New England. Chapter 4 examines the religious traditions brought to the American colonies by enslaved Africans. In Chapter 6, I have added a discussion of the Christian Repub- licanism of the era of the American Revolution, a set of ideas that linked public virtue in the new nation with religious conviction despite the separation of church and state. Chapter 9 now includes an extended discussion of the emergence of the Church of Latter-Day Saints (or the Mormon Church) and their experience of perse- cution, despite which they’ve become one of the largest and most rapidly growing denominations in the United States.
A further discussion of conflict between Mormons and other settlers in the West occurs in Chapter 16. That chapter also includes an expanded discussion of the Ghost Dance, an Indian religious movement of the late nineteenth century, and a new section on the role of Protestant leaders in the era’s moral reform campaigns. In Chapter 17, a new section discusses the religious dimensions of the revised “mem- ory” of the Civil War that rose to prominence in the 1890s. In Chapter 18, I have added a discussion of the spiritual elements in the early environmental movement, especially in relation to the career of the pioneer conservationist John Muir. The rise of religious fundamentalism, and its use of modern media like the radio to spread its message, is examined in Chapter 21. In Chapter 24, there is a new section on reli- gion and the anticommunist crusade of the 1950s. Chapter 25 now contains a sec- tion on religious movements that arose in connection with the counterculture of the 1960s. Finally, I have added to Chapter 28, the book’s final chapter, a new section on how the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, led to profound controversy over the role of Islam in American life, a debate that continues to this day.
As in the Second and Third Editions, the Voices of Freedom sections in each chapter include two documents illustrating the contested history of freedom in the United States. I have changed a number of them to reflect the new emphasis on the history of American religion. I have also revised the end-of-chapter bibliographies to reflect current scholarship.
The Fourth Edition sports a bright, award-winning design featuring enhanced pedagogy to give students more guidance as they move through chapters. New topic flags function as chapter outlines on the page. They provide easy visual cues that correspond to major points in the narrative and are handy tools for review. The chronology at the beginning of the chapter and the end-of-chapter review pages, including review questions and key terms with page references, have been revisited
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for the Fourth Edition. The aim of the pedagogy, as always, is to offer students guid- ance through the material without getting in the way of the presentation.
I have also added new images in each chapter to expand the visual represen- tation of key ideas and personalities in the text. Taken together, I believe these changes enhance the purpose of Give Me Liberty!: to offer students a clear, concise, and thematically enriched introduction to American history.
Americans have always had a divided attitude toward history. On the one hand, they tend to be remarkably future-oriented, dismissing events of even the recent past as “ancient history” and sometimes seeing history as a burden to be overcome, a prison from which to escape. On the other hand, like many other peoples, Ameri- cans have always looked to history for a sense of personal or group identity and of national cohesiveness. This is why so many Americans devote time and energy to tracing their family trees and why they visit historical museums and National Park Service historical sites in ever-increasing numbers. My hope is that this book will convince readers with all degrees of interest that history does matter to them.
The novelist and essayist James Baldwin once observed that history “does not refer merely, or even principally, to the past. On the contrary, the great force of his- tory comes from the fact that we carry it within us, . . . . [that] history is literally pres- ent in all that we do.” As Baldwin recognized, the force of history is evident in our own world. Especially in a political democracy like the United States, whose govern- ment is designed to rest on the consent of informed citizens, knowledge of the past is essential—not only for those of us whose profession is the teaching and writing of history, but for everyone. History, to be sure, does not offer simple lessons or immedi- ate answers to current questions. Knowing the history of immigration to the United States, and all of the tensions, turmoil, and aspirations associated with it, for exam- ple, does not tell us what current immigration policy ought to be. But without that knowledge, we have no way of understanding which approaches have worked and which have not—essential information for the formulation of future public policy.
History, it has been said, is what the present chooses to remember about the past. Rather than a fixed collection of facts, or a group of interpretations that cannot be challenged, our understanding of history is constantly changing. There is noth- ing unusual in the fact that each generation rewrites history to meet its own needs, or that scholars disagree among themselves on basic questions like the causes of the Civil War or the reasons for the Great Depression. Precisely because each gen- eration asks different questions of the past, each generation formulates different answers. The past thirty years have witnessed a remarkable expansion of the scope of historical study. The experiences of groups neglected by earlier scholars, includ- ing women, African-Americans, working people, and others, have received unprec- edented attention from historians. New subfields—social history, cultural history, and family history among them—have taken their place alongside traditional politi- cal and diplomatic history.
Give Me Liberty! draws on this voluminous historical literature to present an up-to-date and inclusive account of the American past, paying due attention to the
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experience of diverse groups of Americans while in no way neglecting the events and processes Americans have experienced in common. It devotes serious atten- tion to political, social, cultural, and economic history, and to their interconnec- tions. The narrative brings together major events and prominent leaders with the many groups of ordinary people who make up American society. Give Me Liberty! has a rich cast of characters, from Thomas Jefferson to campaigners for woman suf- frage, from Franklin D. Roosevelt to former slaves seeking to breathe meaning into emancipation during and after the Civil War.
Aimed at an audience of undergraduate students with little or no detailed knowledge of American history, Give Me Liberty! guides readers through the com- plexities of the subject without overwhelming them with excessive detail. The unifying theme of freedom that runs through the text gives shape to the narrative and integrates the numerous strands that make up the American experience. This approach builds on that of my earlier book, The Story of American Freedom (1998), although Give Me Liberty! places events and personalities in the foreground and is more geared to the structure of the introductory survey course.
Freedom, and the battles to define its meaning, has long been central to my own scholarship and undergraduate teaching, which focuses on the nineteenth century and especially the era of the Civil War and Reconstruction (1850–1877). This was a time when the future of slavery tore the nation apart and emancipation produced a national debate over what rights the former slaves, and all Americans, should enjoy as free citizens. I have found that attention to clashing definitions of freedom and the struggles of different groups to achieve freedom as they understood it offers a way of making sense of the bitter battles and vast transformations of that pivotal era. I believe that the same is true for American history as a whole.
No idea is more fundamental to Americans’ sense of themselves as individuals and as a nation than freedom. The central term in our political language, freedom— or liberty, with which it is almost always used interchangeably—is deeply embed- ded in the record of our history and the language of everyday life. The Declaration of Independence lists liberty among mankind’s inalienable rights; the Constitution announces its purpose as securing liberty’s blessings. The United States fought the Civil War to bring about a new birth of freedom, World War II for the Four Free- doms, and the Cold War to defend the Free World. Americans’ love of liberty has been represented by liberty poles, liberty caps, and statues of liberty, and acted out by burning stamps and burning draft cards, by running away from slavery, and by demonstrating for the right to vote. “Every man in the street, white, black, red, or yellow,” wrote the educator and statesman Ralph Bunche in 1940, “knows that this is ‘the land of the free’ . . . ‘the cradle of liberty.’ ”
The very universality of the idea of freedom, however, can be misleading. Free- dom is not a fixed, timeless category with a single unchanging definition. Indeed, the history of the United States is, in part, a story of debates, disagreements, and struggles over freedom. Crises like the American Revolution, the Civil War, and the Cold War have permanently transformed the idea of freedom. So too have demands by various groups of Americans to enjoy greater freedom. The meaning of freedom
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has been constructed not only in congressional debates and political treatises, but on plantations and picket lines, in parlors and even bedrooms.
Over the course of our history, American freedom has been both a reality and a mythic ideal—a living truth for millions of Americans, a cruel mockery for others. For some, freedom has been what some scholars call a “habit of the heart,” an ideal so taken for granted that it is lived out but rarely analyzed. For others, freedom is not a birthright but a distant goal that has inspired great sacrifice.
Give Me Liberty! draws attention to three dimensions of freedom that have been critical in American history: (1) the meanings of freedom; (2) the social conditions that make freedom possible; and (3) the boundaries of freedom that determine who is enti- tled to enjoy freedom and who is not. All have changed over time.
In the era of the American Revolution, for example, freedom was primarily a set of rights enjoyed in public activity—the right of a community to be governed by laws to which its representatives had consented and of individuals to engage in religious worship without governmental interference. In the nineteenth century, freedom came to be closely identified with each person’s opportunity to develop to the fullest his or her innate talents. In the twentieth, the “ability to choose,” in both public and private life, became perhaps the dominant understanding of freedom. This devel- opment was encouraged by the explosive growth of the consumer marketplace (a development that receives considerable attention in Give Me Liberty!), which offered Americans an unprecedented array of goods with which to satisfy their needs and desires. During the 1960s, a crucial chapter in the history of American freedom, the idea of personal freedom was extended into virtually every realm, from attire and “lifestyle” to relations between the sexes. Thus, over time, more and more areas of life have been drawn into Americans’ debates about the meaning of freedom.
A second important dimension of freedom focuses on the social conditions nec- essary to allow freedom to flourish. What kinds of economic institutions and rela- tionships best encourage individual freedom? In the colonial era and for more than a century after independence, the answer centered on economic autonomy, enshrined in the glorification of the independent small producer—the farmer, skilled craftsman, or shopkeeper—who did not have to depend on another person for his livelihood. As the industrial economy matured, new conceptions of economic freedom came to the fore: “liberty of contract” in the Gilded Age, “industrial freedom” (a say in corporate decision-making) in the Progressive era, economic security during the New Deal, and, more recently, the ability to enjoy mass consumption within a market economy.
The boundaries of freedom, the third dimension of this theme, have inspired some of the most intense struggles in American history. Although founded on the premise that liberty is an entitlement of all humanity, the United States for much of its history deprived many of its own people of freedom. Non-whites have rarely enjoyed the same access to freedom as white Americans. The belief in equal oppor- tunity as the birthright of all Americans has coexisted with persistent efforts to limit freedom by race, gender, class, and in other ways.
Less obvious, perhaps, is the fact that one person’s freedom has frequently been linked to another’s servitude. In the colonial era and nineteenth century, expanding
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freedom for many Americans rested on the lack of freedom—slavery, indentured servitude, the subordinate position of women—for others. By the same token, it has been through battles at the boundaries—the efforts of racial minorities, women, and others to secure greater freedom—that the meaning and experience of freedom have been deepened and the concept extended into new realms.
Time and again in American history, freedom has been transformed by the demands of excluded groups for inclusion. The idea of freedom as a universal birth- right owes much both to abolitionists who sought to extend the blessings of liberty to blacks and to immigrant groups who insisted on full recognition as American citizens. The principle of equal protection of the law without regard to race, which became a central element of American freedom, arose from the antislavery struggle and the Civil War and was reinvigorated by the civil rights revolution of the 1960s, which called itself the “freedom movement.” The battle for the right of free speech by labor radicals and birth-control advocates in the first part of the twentieth century helped to make civil liberties an essential element of freedom for all Americans.
Although concentrating on events within the United States, Give Me Liberty! also, as indicated above, situates American history in the context of developments in other parts of the world. Many of the forces that shaped American history, includ- ing the international migration of peoples, the development of slavery, the spread of democracy, and the expansion of capitalism, were worldwide processes not con- fined to the United States. Today, American ideas, culture, and economic and mili- tary power exert unprecedented influence throughout the world. But beginning with the earliest days of settlement, when European empires competed to colonize North America and enrich themselves from its trade, American history cannot be understood in isolation from its global setting.
Freedom is the oldest of clichés and the most modern of aspirations. At various times in our history, it has served as the rallying cry of the powerless and as a jus- tification of the status quo. Freedom helps to bind our culture together and exposes the contradictions between what America claims to be and what it sometimes has been. American history is not a narrative of continual progress toward greater and greater freedom. As the abolitionist Thomas Wentworth Higginson noted after the Civil War, “revolutions may go backward.” Though freedom can be achieved, it may also be taken away. This happened, for example, when the equal rights granted to former slaves immediately after the Civil War were essentially nullified during the era of segregation. As was said in the eighteenth century, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.
In the early twenty-first century, freedom continues to play a central role in American political and social life and thought. It is invoked by individuals and groups of all kinds, from critics of economic globalization to those who seek to secure American freedom at home and export it abroad. I hope that Give Me Liberty! will offer beginning students a clear account of the course of American history, and of its central theme, freedom, which today remains as varied, contentious, and ever- changing as America itself.
Acknowledgments
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A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S
All works of history are, to a considerable extent, collaborative books, in that every writer builds on the research and writing of previous scholars. This is especially true of a textbook that covers the entire American experience, over more than five centuries. My greatest debt is to the innumerable historians on whose work I have drawn in preparing this volume. The Suggested Reading list at the end of each chap- ter offers only a brief introduction to the vast body of historical scholarship that has influenced and informed this book. More specifically, however, I wish to thank the following scholars, who generously read portions of this work and offered valuable comments, criticisms, and suggestions:
Wayne Ackerson, Salisbury University Mary E. Adams, City College of San Francisco Jeff Adler, University of Florida David Anderson, Louisiana Tech University John Barr, Lone Star College, Kingwood Lauren Braun-Strumfels, Raritan Valley Community College James Broussard, Lebanon Valley College Michael Bryan, Greenville Technical College Stephanie Cole, The University of Texas at Arlington Ashley Cruseturner, McLennan Community College Jim Dudlo, Brookhaven College Beverly Gage, Yale University Monica Gisolfi, University of North Carolina, Wilmington Adam Goudsouzian, University of Memphis Mike Green, Community College of Southern Nevada Vanessa Gunther, California State University, Fullerton David E. Hamilton, University of Kentucky Brian Harding, Mott Community College Sandra Harvey, Lone Star College–Cy Fair David Hsiung, Juniata College James Karmel, Harford Community College Kelly Knight, Penn State University Marianne Leeper, Trinity Valley Community College Jeffrey K. Lucas, University of North Carolina at Pembroke Lillian E. Marrujo-Duck, City College of San Francisco Kent McGaughy, HCC Northwest College James Mills, University of Texas, Brownsville Gil Montemayor, McLennan Community College Jonathan Noyalas, Lord Fairfax Community College Robert M. O’Brien, Lone Star College–Cy Fair
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Acknowledgments
Joseph Palermo, California State University, Sacramento Ann Plane, University of California, Santa Barbara Nancy Marie Robertson, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis Esther Robinson, Lone Star College–Cy Fair Richard Samuelson, California State University, San Bernadino Diane Sager, Maple Woods Community College John Shaw, Portland Community College Mark Spencer, Brock University David Stebenne, Ohio State University Judith Stein, City College, City University of New York George Stevens, Duchess Community College Robert Tinkler, California State University, Chico Elaine Thompson, Louisiana Tech University David Weiman, Barnard College William Young, Maple Woods Community College
I am particularly grateful to my colleagues in the Columbia University Department of History: Pablo Piccato, for his advice on Latin American history; Evan Haefeli and Ellen Baker, who read and made many suggestions for improve- ments in their areas of expertise (colonial America and the history of the West, respectively); and Sarah Phillips, who offered advice on treating the history of the environment.
I am also deeply indebted to the graduate students at Columbia University’s Department of History who helped with this project. Theresa Ventura offered invaluable assistance in gathering material for the new sections placing American history in a global context. April Holm provided similar assistance for new cover- age in this edition of the history of American religion and debates over religious freedom. James Delbourgo conducted research for the chapters on the colonial era. Beverly Gage did the same for the twentieth century. Daniel Freund provided all- round research assistance. Victoria Cain did a superb job of locating images. I also want to thank my colleagues Elizabeth Blackmar and Alan Brinkley for offering advice and encouragement throughout the writing of this book.
Many thanks to Joshua Brown, director of the American Social History Project, whose website, History Matters, lists innumerable online resources for the study of American history. Nancy Robertson at IUIPUI did a superb job revising and enhancing the in-book pedagogy. Monica Gisolfi (University of North Carolina, Wilmington) and Robert Tinkler (California State University, Chico) did excel- lent work on the Instructor’s Manual and Test Bank. Kathleen Thomas (Univer- sity of Wisconsin, Stout) helped greatly in the revisions of the companion media packages.
At W. W. Norton & Company, Steve Forman was an ideal editor—patient, encouraging, and always ready to offer sage advice. I would also like to thank Steve’s assistant, Justin Cahill, for his indispensable and always cheerful help on all aspects of the project; Ellen Lohman and Debbie Nichols for their careful
Acknowledgments
xlvii
copyediting and proof reading work. Stephanie Romeo and Donna Ranieri for their resourceful attention to the illustrations program; Hope Miller Goodell and Chin- Yee Lai for their refinements of the book design; Mike Fodera and Debra Morton- Hoyt for splendid work on the covers for the Fourth Edition; Kim Yi for keeping the many threads of the project aligned and then tying them together; Sean Mintus for his efficiency and care in book production; Steve Hoge for orchestrating the rich media package that accompanies the textbook; Jessica Brannon-Wranowsky for the terrific new web quizzes and outlines; Nicole Netherton, Steve Dunn, and Mike Wright for their alert reads of the U.S. survey market and their hard work in help- ing establish Give Me Liberty! within it; and Drake McFeely, Roby Harrington, and Julia Reidhead for maintaining Norton as an independent, employee-owned pub- lisher dedicated to excellence in its work.
Many students may have heard stories of how publishing companies alter the language and content of textbooks in an attempt to maximize sales and avoid alien- ating any potential reader. In this case, I can honestly say that W. W. Norton allowed me a free hand in writing the book and, apart from the usual editorial corrections, did not try to influence its content at all. For this I thank them, while I accept full responsibility for the interpretations presented and for any errors the book may contain. Since no book of this length can be entirely free of mistakes, I welcome readers to send me corrections at ef17@columbia.edu.
My greatest debt, as always, is to my family—my wife, Lynn Garafola, for her good-natured support while I was preoccupied by a project that consumed more than its fair share of my time and energy, and my daughter, Daria, who while a ninth and tenth grader read every chapter as it was written and offered invaluable suggestions about improving the book’s clarity, logic, and grammar.
Eric Foner New York City
July 2013
G I V E M E
L I B E R T Y ! A N A M E R I C A N H I S T O R Y
Fo u r t h E d i t i o n
�
A M E R I C A N C O L O N I E S
T O 1 7 6 3
T he colonial period of American history was a time of enormous change, as the people of four continents—North America, South America, Europe, and Africa—were suddenly and unexpectedly thrown into contact with one another. The period also initiated a new era in the history of freedom. It was not, however, a desire for freedom that drove early European explorations of North and South America. Contact between Europe and the Americas began as a by-product of the quest for a sea route for trade with Asia. But it quickly became a contest for power between rival empires, who moved to conquer, colonize, and exploit the resources of the New World.
At the time of European contact, the Western Hemisphere was home to tens of millions of people. Within the present border of the United States there existed Indian societies based on agriculture, hunting, or fishing, with their own languages, religious practices, and forms of government. All experienced wrenching changes after Europeans arrived, including incorporation into the world market and epidemics of disease that devastated many native groups.
The colonies that eventually came to form the United States originated in very different ways. Virginia, the first permanent colony to be established, was created by a private company that sought to earn profits through exploration for gold and the development of transatlantic trade. Individual proprietors— well-connected Englishmen given large grants of land by the king—established Maryland and Pennsylvania. New York, which had been founded by the Dutch, came into British hands as the result of a war. Religious groups seek- ing escape from persecution in England and hoping to establish communities rooted in their understanding of the principles of the Bible founded colonies in New England.
In the seventeenth century, all the British colonies experienced wrenching social conflicts as groups within them battled for control. Relations with Indi- ans remained tense and sometimes violent. Religious and political divisions in England, which experienced a civil war in the 1640s and the ouster of the king in 1688, reverberated in the colonies. So did wars between European powers, which spilled over into North America. Nonetheless, after difficult begin- nings, Britain’s mainland colonies experienced years of remarkable growth in
P A R T 1
population and economic activity. By the eighteenth century, the non-Indian population of Britain’s North American colonies had far outstripped that of the colonies of France and Spain.
In every colony in British America, well-to-do landowners and merchants dominated economic and political life. Nonetheless, emigration to the colonies offered numerous settlers opportunities they had not enjoyed at home, includ- ing access to land, the freedom to worship as they pleased, and the right to vote. Every British colony had an elected assembly that shared power with a governor, who was usually appointed from London. Even this limited degree of self-government contrasted sharply with the lack of representative institu- tions in the Spanish and French empires. All these circumstances drew thou- sands of English emigrants to North America in the seventeenth century, and thousands more from Ireland, Scotland, and the European continent in the eighteenth century.
Yet the conditions that allowed colonists to enjoy such freedoms were made possible by lack of freedom for millions of others. For the native inhabit- ants of the Western Hemisphere, European colonization brought the spread of devastating epidemics and either dispossession from the land or forced labor for the colonizers. Millions of Africans were uprooted from their homes and transported to the New World to labor on the plantations of Brazil, the Caribbean, and England’s North American colonies. Even among European immigrants, the majority arrived not as completely free individuals but as indentured servants who owed a prearranged number of years of labor to those who paid their passage.
In colonial America, many modern ideas of freedom did not exist, or existed in very different forms than today. Equality before the law was unknown—women, non-whites, and propertyless men enjoyed far fewer rights than landowning white male citizens. Economic freedom, today widely identified with participation in an unregulated market, meant independence— owning land or a shop and not relying on another person for a livelihood. Most colonies had official churches, and many colonists who sought religious liberty for themselves refused to extend it to others. Speaking or writing critically of public authorities could land a person in jail.
Nonetheless, ideas about freedom played a major role in justifying Euro- pean colonization. The Spanish and French claimed to be liberating Native Americans by bringing them advanced civilization and Roman Catholicism. England insisted that true freedom for Indians meant adopting English ways, including Protestantism. Moreover, the expansion of England’s empire occurred at a time when freedom came to be seen as the defining characteristic of the English nation. Slavery existed in every New World colony. In many, it became the basis of economic life. Yet most Britons, including colonists, prided themselves on enjoying “British liberty,” a common set of rights that included protection from the arbitrary exercise of governmental power.
Thus, freedom and lack of freedom expanded together in the colonies of British North America that would eventually form the United States.
A N E W W O R L D
�
C H A P T E R 1
T he discovery of America,” the British writer Adam Smith announced in his celebrated work The Wealth of Nations (1776), was one of “the two greatest and most important events recorded in the history of mankind.” Historians no longer use the word “discovery” to describe the European exploration, conquest, and colonization of a hemi- sphere already home to millions of people. But there can be no doubt that when Christopher Columbus made landfall in the West Indian islands in 1492, he set in motion some of the most pivotal developments in human history. Immense changes soon followed in both the Old and New Worlds; the consequences of these changes are still with us today.
The peoples of the American continents and Europe, previously unaware of each other’s existence, were thrown into continuous interaction. Crops new to each hemisphere crossed the Atlantic, reshaping diets and transforming the natural environment. Because of their long isolation, the inhabitants of North and South America had developed no immunity to the germs that also accom- panied the colonizers. As a result, they suffered a series of devastating epidem- ics, the greatest population catastrophe in human history. Within a decade of Columbus’s voyage, a fourth continent—Africa—found itself drawn into the new Atlantic system of trade and population movement. In Africa, Europeans found a supply of unfree labor that enabled them to exploit the fertile lands of the Western Hemisphere. Indeed, of approximately 10 million men, women, and children who crossed from the Old World to the New between 1492 and 1820, the vast majority, about 7.7 million, were African slaves.
From the vantage point of 1776, the year the United States declared itself an independent nation, it seemed to Adam Smith that the “discovery” of America had produced both great “benefits” and great “misfortunes.” To the nations of western Europe, the development of American colonies brought an era of “splen- dor and glory.” The emergence of the Atlantic as the world’s major avenue for trade and population movement, Smith noted, enabled millions of Europeans to increase the “enjoyments” of life. To the “natives” of the Americas, however, Smith went on, the years since 1492 had been ones of “dreadful misfortunes” and “every sort of injustice.” And for millions of Africans, the settlement of America meant a descent into the abyss of slavery.
Long before Columbus sailed, Europeans had dreamed of a land of abun- dance, riches, and ease beyond the western horizon. Once the “discovery” of this New World had taken place, they invented an America of the imagination, projecting onto it their hopes for a better life. Here, many believed, would arise unparalleled opportunities for riches, or at least liberation from poverty. Euro- peans envisioned America as a religious refuge, a society of equals, a source of power and glory. They searched the New World for golden cities and fountains of eternal youth. Some sought to establish ideal communities based on the lives of the early Christian saints or other blueprints for social justice.
Some of these dreams of riches and opportunity would indeed be fulfilled. To many European settlers, America offered a far greater chance to own land and worship as they pleased than existed in Europe, with its rigid, unequal
5
France Bringing the Faith to the Indians
of New France. European nations justified
colonization, in part, with the argument
that they were bringing Christianity—
without which true freedom was
impossible—to Native Americans. In this
painting from the 1670s, attributed to a
Franciscan missionary, an Indian kneels
before a female representation of France.
Both hold a painting of the Trinity.
F O C U S Q U E S T I O N S What were the major patterns of Native American life in North America before Europeans arrived? –p. 7
How did Indian and European ideas of freedom differ on the eve of contact? –p. 15
What impelled European explorers to look west across the Atlantic? –p. 19
What happened when the peoples of the Americas came in contact with Europeans? –p. 21
What were the chief features of the Spanish empire in America? –p. 25
What were the chief features of the French and Dutch empires in North America? –p. 35
“
social order and official churches. Yet the conditions that enabled millions of settlers to take control of their own destinies were made possible by the debase- ment of millions of others. The New World became the site of many forms of unfree labor, including indentured servitude, forced labor, and one of the most brutal and unjust systems ever devised by man, plantation slavery. The con- quest and settlement of the Western Hemisphere opened new chapters in the long histories of both freedom and slavery.
There was a vast human diversity among the peoples thrown into contact with one another in the New World. Exploration and settlement took place in an era of almost constant warfare among European nations, each racked by internal religious, political, and regional conflicts. Native Americans and Africans con- sisted of numerous groups with their own languages and cultures. They were as likely to fight one another as to unite against the European newcomers. All these peoples were changed by their integration into the new Atlantic economy. The complex interactions of Europeans, American Indians, and Africans would shape American history during the colonial era.
T H E F I R S T A M E R I C A N S The Settling of the Americas The residents of the Americas were no more a single group than Europeans or Africans. They spoke hundreds of different languages and lived in numerous kinds of societies. Most, however, were descended from bands of hunters and fish- ers who had crossed the Bering Strait via a land bridge at various times between 15,000 and 60,000 years ago—the exact dates are hotly debated by archaeolo- gists. Others may have arrived by sea from Asia or Pacific islands. Around 14,000 years ago, when glaciers began to melt at the end of the last Ice Age, the land link became submerged under water, once again separating the Western Hemisphere from Asia.
History in North and South America did not begin with the coming of Euro- peans. The New World was new to Europeans but an ancient homeland to those who already lived there. The hemisphere had witnessed many changes during its human history. First, the early inhabitants and their descendants spread across the two continents, reaching the tip of South America perhaps 11,000 years ago. As the climate warmed, they faced a food crisis as the immense ani- mals they hunted, including woolly mammoths and giant bison, became extinct. Around 9,000 years ago, at the same time that agriculture was being developed in the Near East, it also emerged in modern-day Mexico and the Andes, and then spread to other parts of the Americas, making settled civilizations possible. Throughout the hemisphere, maize (corn), squash, and beans formed the basis of agriculture. The absence of livestock in the Western Hemisphere, however, limited farming by preventing the plowing of fields and the application of natural fertilizer.
6
Chapter 1 ★ A New World
7000 BC Agriculture developed in Mexico and Andes
900– Hopi and Zuni tribes 1200 AD build planned towns
1200 Cahokia city-empire along the Mississippi
1400s Iroquois League established
1434 Portuguese explore sub- Saharan African Coast
1487 Bartolomeu Dias reaches the Cape of Good Hope
1492 Reconquista of Spain
Columbus’s first voyage to the Americas
1498 Vasco da Gama sails to the Indian Ocean
1500 Pedro Cabral claims Brazil for Portugal
1502 First African slaves transported to Caribbean islands
1517 Martin Luther’s Ninety- Five Theses
1519 Hernán Cortés arrives in Mexico
1528 Las Casas’s History of the Indies
1530s Pizarro’s conquest of Peru
1542 Spain promulgates the New Laws
1608 Champlain establishes Quebec
1609 Hudson claims New Netherland
1610 Santa Fe established
1680 Pueblo Revolt
7T H E F I R S T A M E R I C A N S
What were the major patterns of Native American life in North America before Europeans arrived?
A map illustrating the probable routes by which the first Americans settled the Western Hemisphere at various times between 15,000 and 60,000
years ago.
Tenochtitlán
Monte Alban
Poverty Point
Chichen Itzá
Chaco Canyon
Cahokia
Palenque
NORTH AMERICA
SOUTH AMERICA
CENTRAL AMERICA
C h ukch i Pen ins u la
Yucatán Pen insu la
Aleut ian I s lands INC
MAY ANS
MOHAWK ONEIDA
CAYUGA SENECA
ONONDAGA
CHEROKEE
HOPI ZUNI
PUEBLO CHICKASAW
CHOCTAW
AZTECS
Be rin
g St rait
Gulf of Mexico
Caribbean Sea
A tlantic Ocean
Pa c i f i c Ocean
0
0
500
500
1,000 miles
1,000 kilometers
Possible migration routes
Oh io Ri
ve r
M ississippi R.
THE FIRST AMERICANS
8
Chapter 1 ★ A New World
Indian Societies of the Americas North and South America were hardly an empty wilderness when Europeans arrived. The hemisphere contained cities, roads, irrigation systems, extensive trade networks, and large structures such as the pyramid-temples, whose beauty still inspires wonder. With a population close to 250,000, Tenochtitlán, the capital of the Aztec empire in what is now Mexico, was one of the world’s largest cities. Its great temple, splendid royal palace, and a central market comparable to that of European capitals made the city seem “like an enchanted vision,” according to one of the first Europeans to encounter it. Farther south lay the Inca kingdom, centered in modern-day Peru. Its population of perhaps 12 million was linked by a complex system of roads and bridges that extended 2,000 miles along the Andes mountain chain.
When Europeans arrived, a wide variety of native peoples lived within the present borders of the United States. Indian civilizations in North America had not developed the scale, grandeur, or centralized organization of the Aztec and Inca societies to their south. North American Indians lacked the technologies Europeans had mastered, such as metal tools and machines, gunpowder, and the scientific knowledge necessary for long-distance navigation. No society north of Mexico had achieved literacy (although some made maps on bark and animal hides). They also lacked wheeled vehicles, since they had no domestic animals like horses or oxen to pull them. Their “backwardness” became a central jus- tification for European conquest. But, over time, Indian societies had perfected
This world map, produced in 1507 by the
German map-maker Martin Waldseemüller,
was the first to depict the full Western
Hemisphere and the first to include the
name “America” (on the lower part of
South America) for part of the New World.
It also seems to indicate the Pacific
Ocean, but no European encountered that
ocean until the Spanish explorer Balboa
in 1513.
Roads, irrigation systems, and trade networks
9T H E F I R S T A M E R I C A N S
techniques of farming, hunting, and fishing, developed structures of political power and religious belief, and engaged in far-reaching networks of trade and communication.
Mound Builders of the Mississippi River Valley Remarkable physical remains still exist from some of the early civilizations in North America. Around 3,500 years ago, before Egyptians built the pyramids, Native Americans constructed a large community centered on a series of giant semicircular mounds on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi River in present-day Louisiana. Known today as Poverty Point, it was a commercial and governmental center whose residents established trade routes throughout the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys. Archaeologists have found there copper from present-day Min- nesota and Canada, and flint mined in Indiana.
More than a thousand years before Columbus sailed, Indians of the Ohio River valley, called “mound builders” by eighteenth-century settlers who encoun- tered the large earthen burial mounds they created, had traded across half the continent. After their decline, another culture flourished in the Mississippi River valley, centered on the city of Cahokia near present-day St. Louis, a fortified community with between 10,000 and 30,000 inhabitants in the year 1200. Its
Map of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlán and
the Gulf of Mexico, probably produced by
a Spanish conquistador and published in
1524 in an edition of the letters of Hernán
Cortés. The map shows the city’s complex
system of canals, bridges, and dams, with
the Great Temple at the center. Gardens
and a zoo are also visible.
What were the major patterns of Native American life in North America before Europeans arrived?
Cahokia
10
Chapter 1 ★ A New World
residents, too, built giant mounds, the largest of which stood 100 feet high and was topped by a temple. Little is known of Cahokia’s political and economic structure. But it stood as the largest settled community in what is now the United States until surpassed in population by New York and Philadelphia around 1800.
Western Indians In the arid northeastern area of present-day Arizona, the Hopi and Zuni and their ances- tors engaged in settled village life for over 3,000 years. During the peak of the region’s culture, between the years 900 and 1200, these peoples built great planned towns with large multiple-family dwellings in local can- yons, constructed dams and canals to gather and distribute water, and conducted trade
with groups as far away as central Mexico and the Mississippi River valley. The largest of their structures, Pueblo Bonita, in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, stood five stories high and had more than 600 rooms. Not until the 1880s was a dwelling of comparable size constructed in the United States.
After the decline of these communities, probably because of drought, survivors moved to the south and east, where they established villages and perfected the techniques of desert farming, complete with irrigation systems to provide water for crops of corn, beans, and cotton. These were the people Spanish explorers called the Pueblo Indians (because they lived in small villages, or pueblos, when the Spanish first encountered them in the sixteenth century).
On the Pacific coast, another densely populated region, hundreds of distinct groups resided in independent villages and lived primarily by fishing, hunting sea mammals, and gathering wild plants and nuts. As many as 25 million salmon swam up the Columbia River each year, providing Indians with abundant food. On the Great Plains, with its herds of buffalo—descendants of the prehistoric giant bison—many Indians were hunters (who tracked animals on foot before the arrival of horses with the Spanish), but others lived in agricultural communities.
Indians of Eastern North America In eastern North America, hundreds of tribes inhabited towns and villages scat- tered from the Gulf of Mexico to present-day Canada. They lived on corn, squash, and beans, supplemented by fishing and hunting deer, turkeys, and other animals. Indian trade routes crisscrossed the eastern part of the continent. Tribes frequently warred with one another to obtain goods, seize captives, or take revenge for the killing of relatives. They conducted diplomacy and made peace. Little in the way of centralized authority existed until, in the fifteenth century, various leagues or con- federations emerged in an effort to bring order to local regions. In the Southeast, the
A modern aerial photograph of the ruins
of Pueblo Bonita, in Chaco Canyon in
present-day New Mexico. The rectangular
structures are the foundations of dwell-
ings, and the circular ones are kivas, or
places of religious worship.
Cliff dwellings in Cañon de Chelly, in
the area of modern-day Arizona, built
sometime between 300 and 1300 and
photographed in 1873.
11T H E F I R S T A M E R I C A N S
What were the major patterns of Native American life in North America before Europeans arrived?
The native population of North America at the time of first contact with Europeans consisted of numerous tribes with their own languages,
religious beliefs, and economic and social structures. This map suggests the numerous ways of life existing at the time.
NATIVE WAYS OF LIFE, ca. 1500
INUIT
INUIT
ALGONQUIAN
MICMAC PENOBSCOT
ABENAKI
HURON
NEUTRAL
ERIE
IROQUOIS
SUSQUEHANNOCK NARRAGANSETT
WAMPANOAG
PEQUOT MOHEGAN
CREE
CHIPPEWA
CHIPPEWA
OTTOWAMENOMINEE
WINNEBAGO
POTAWATOMI
ASSINIBOINE CHEYENNE SIOUX
TLINGIT
TSHIMSHIAN
KWAKIUTLS
NOOTKIN SHUSWAP
KOOTENAY BLACKFEET
SHOSHONE
FLATHEAD HIDATSA
MANDAN
KIOWA
SIOUX
ARAPAHO
PAWNEE IOWA
CHUMASH
LUISENO
DIEGUENO
COSTANO
POMO
TILLAMOOK
CHINOOK
SKAGIT WALLA WALLA
CAYUSE NEZ
PERCE
KLAMATH MODOC
MAIDU
SOUTHERN PAIUTE
HOPI
UTE
CHEMEHUEVI
SERRANO
CAHUILLA ZUNI TEWA
JUMANO
YACHI CONCHO
LAGUERNO
COAHUILTEC
KABANKAWA
NATCHEZ APALACHEE
CALUSA
ARAWAK
CHOCTAW
YAMASEE
TIMUCUA
CREEK
CHEROKEE
CHICKASAW
PAMLICO
TUSCARORA
MOSOPELEA
SHAWNEESAUK KICKAPOO
ILLINOIS KASKASKIA
MESCALERO
COMANCHE
WICHITA
CADDO
t h i n l y p o p u l a t e d
th i n
l y p o p u l a t e d
L. Sup erior
L. M
ic hi
ga n
L. Huron
L. E rie
L. O ntar
io
Gulf of Mexico
Hudson Bay
Paci f ic Ocean
0
0
250
250
500 miles
500 kilometers
Arctic hunter-gatherers Subarctic hunter-fisher-gatherers Northwest coast marine economy Plains hunter-gatherers Plains horticulturalists
Non-horticultural rancherian peoples Rancherian peoples with low-intensity horticulture Rancherian peoples with intensive horticulture Pueblos with intensive horticulture Seacoast foragers
Ways of Life in North America, AD 1515 Marginal horticultural hunters River-based horticultural chiefdoms Orchard-growing alligator hunters Tidewater horticulturalists Fishers and wild-rice gatherers
12
Chapter 1 ★ A New World
Rituals
Choctaw, Cherokee, and Chickasaw each united dozens of towns in loose alliances. In present-day New York and Pennsylvania, five Iroquois peoples—the Mohawk, Oneida, Cayuga, Seneca, and Onondaga—formed a Great League of Peace, bringing a period of stability to the area. Each year a Great Council, with representatives from the five groupings, met to coordinate behavior toward outsiders.
The most striking feature of Native American society at the time Europeans arrived was its sheer diversity. Each group had its own political system and set of religious beliefs, and North America was home to literally hundreds of mutually unintelligible languages. Indians had no sense of “America” as a continent or hemisphere. They did not think of themselves as a single unified people, an idea invented by Europeans and only many years later adopted by Indians themselves. Indian identity centered on the immediate social group—a tribe, village, chiefdom, or confederacy. When Europeans first arrived, many Indians saw them as simply one group among many. Their first thought was how to use the newcomers to enhance their standing in relation to other native peoples, rather than to unite against them. The sharp dichotomy between Indians and “white” persons did not emerge until later in the colonial era.
Native American Religion Nonetheless, the diverse Indian societies of North America did share certain common characteristics. Their lives were steeped in religious ceremonies often directly related to farming and hunting. Spiritual power, they believed, suffused the world, and sacred spirits could be found in all kinds of living and inanimate things—animals, plants, trees, water, and wind—an idea known as “animism.” Through religious ceremonies, they aimed to harness the aid of powerful supernatural forces to serve the interests of man. In some tribes, hunters performed rituals to placate the spirits of animals they had killed. Other religious ceremonies sought to engage the spiritual power of nature to secure abundant crops or fend off evil spirits. Indian villages also held elaborate religious rites, participation in which helped to define the boundaries of community membership. In all Indian societies, those who seemed to possess special abilities to invoke supernatural powers—shamans, medicine men, and other religious leaders—held positions of respect and authority.
Indian religion did not pose a sharp distinction between the natural and the supernatural, or secular and religious activities. In some respects, however, Indian religion was not that different from popular spiritual beliefs in Europe. Most Indians held that a single Creator stood atop the spiritual hierarchy. Nonetheless, nearly all Europeans arriving in the New World quickly concluded that Indians were in dire need of being converted to a true, Christian faith.
Land and Property Equally alien in European eyes were Indian attitudes toward property. Numerous land systems existed among Native Americans. Generally, however, village leaders assigned plots of land to individual families to use for a season or more, and tribes claimed specific areas for hunting. Unclaimed land remained free for anyone to use. Families “owned” the right to use land, but they did not own the land itself. Indians saw land, the basis of economic life for both hunting and farming societies, as a common resource, not an economic commodity. In the nineteenth century, the
The Village of Secoton, by John White,
an English artist who spent a year on the
Outer Banks of North Carolina in 1585–
1586 as part of an expedition sponsored
by Sir Walter Raleigh. A central street links
houses surrounded by fields of corn. In the
lower part, dancing Indians take part in a
religious ceremony.
13T H E F I R S T A M E R I C A N S
Indian leader Black Hawk would explain why, in his view, land could not be bought and sold: “The Great Spirit gave it to his children to live upon, and cultivate as far as necessary for their subsistence; and so long as they occupy and cultivate it, they have a right to the soil.” Few if any Indian societies were familiar with the idea of a fenced-off piece of land belonging forever to a single individual or family. There was no market in real estate before the coming of Europeans.
Nor were Indians devoted to the accumulation of wealth and material goods. Especially east of the Mississippi River, where villages moved every few years when soil or game became depleted, acquiring numerous possessions made little sense. However, status certainly mattered in Indian societies. Tribal leaders tended to come from a small number of families, and chiefs lived more splendidly than average members of society. But their reputation often rested on their willingness to share goods with others rather than hoarding them for themselves.
A few Indian societies had rigid social distinctions. Among the Natchez, descendants of the mound-building Mississippian culture, a chief, or “Great Sun,” occupied the top of the social order, with nobles, or “lesser suns,” below him, and below them, the common people. In general, however, wealth mattered far less in Indian society than in European society at the time. Generosity was among the most valued social qualities, and gift giving was essential to Indian society. Trade, for example, meant more than a commercial transaction—it was accompanied by elaborate ceremonies of gift exchange. A central part of Indian economies, gift giving bound different groups in webs of mutual obligation. Although Indians had no experience of the wealth enjoyed at the top of European society, under normal circumstances no one in Indian societies went hungry or experienced the extreme inequalities of Europe. “There are no beggars among them,” reported the English colonial leader Roger Williams of New England’s Indians.
What were the major patterns of Native American life in North America before Europeans arrived?
Land as a common resource
A Catawba map illustrates the differences
between Indian and European conceptions
of landed property. The map depicts not
possession of a specific territory, but trade
and diplomatic connections between
various native groups and with the colony
of Virginia, represented by the rectangle
on the lower right. The map, inscribed
on deerskin, was originally presented
by Indian chiefs to Governor Francis
Nicholson of South Carolina in 1721. This
copy, the only version that survives, was
made by the governor for the authorities
in London. It added English labels that
conveyed what the Indians had related
orally with the gift.
Gift giving
14
Chapter 1 ★ A New World
Gender Relations The system of gender relations in most Indian societies also differed markedly from that of Europe. Membership in a family defined women’s lives, but they openly engaged in premarital sexual relations and could even choose to divorce their husbands. Most, although not all, Indian societies were matrilineal—that is, centered on clans or kinship groups in which children became members of the mother’s family, not the father’s. Tribal leaders were almost always men, but women played an important role in certain religious ceremonies, and female elders often helped to select male village leaders and took part in tribal meetings. Under English law, a married man controlled the family’s property and a wife had no independent legal identity. In contrast, Indian women owned dwellings and tools, and a husband generally moved to live with the family of his wife. In Indian societies, men contributed to the community’s well-being and demonstrated their masculinity by success in hunting or, in the Pacific Northwest, by catching fish with nets and harpoons. Because men were frequently away on the hunt, women took responsibility not only for household duties but for most agricultural work as well. Among the Pueblo of the Southwest, however, where there was less hunting than in the East, men were the primary cultivators.
European Views of the Indians Europeans tended to view Indians in extreme terms. They were regarded either as “noble savages,” gentle, friendly, and superior in some ways to Europeans, or as uncivilized and brutal savages. Giovanni da Verrazano, a Florentine navigator who sailed up and down the eastern coast of North America in 1524, described Indians he encountered as “beautiful of stature and build.” (For their part, many Indians, whose diet was probably more nutritious than that of most Europeans, initially found the newcomers weak and ugly.)
Indians fishing, in a 1585 drawing by John
White. The canoe is filled with fish, while
two men harpoon others in the back-
ground. Among the wildlife illustrated are
hammerhead sharks and catfish.
Matrilineal societies
15I N D I A N F R E E D O M , E U R O P E A N F R E E D O M
Over time, however, negative images of Indians came to overshadow posi- tive ones. Early European descriptions of North American Indians as barbaric centered on three areas—religion, land use, and gender relations. Whatever their country of origin, European newcomers concluded that Indians lacked genuine religion, or in fact worshiped the devil. Their shamans and herb healers were called “witch doctors,” their numerous ceremonies and rituals at best a form of superstition, their belief in a world alive with spiritual power a worship of “false gods.” Christianity presented no obstacle to the commercial use of the land, and indeed in some ways encouraged it, since true religion was thought to promote the progress of civilization. Whereas the Indians saw nature as a world of spirits and souls, the Europeans viewed it as a collection of potential commodities, a source of economic opportunity.
Europeans invoked the Indians’ distinctive pattern of land use and ideas about property to answer the awkward question raised by a British minister at an early stage of England’s colonization: “By what right or warrant can we enter into the land of these Savages, take away their rightful inheritance from them, and plant ourselves in their places?” While the Spanish claimed title to land in America by right of con- quest and papal authority, the English, French, and Dutch came to rely on the idea that Indians had not actually “used” the land and thus had no claim to it. Despite the Indians’ highly developed agriculture and well-established towns, Europeans frequently described them as nomads without settled communities. The land was thus deemed to be a vacant wilderness ready to be claimed by newcomers who would cultivate and improve it. European settlers believed that mixing one’s labor with the earth, which Indians supposedly had failed to do, gave one title to the soil.
In the Indians’ gender division of labor and matrilineal family structures, Europeans saw weak men and mistreated women. Hunting and fishing, the primary occupations of Indian men, were considered leisure activities in much of Europe, not “real” work. Because Indian women worked in the fields, Europeans often described them as lacking freedom. They were “not much better than slaves,” in the words of one English commentator. Europeans considered Indian men “unmanly”—too weak to exercise authority within their families and restrain their wives’ open sexuality, and so lazy that they forced their wives to do most of the productive labor. Through- out North America, Europeans promoted the ideas that women should confine themselves to household work and that men ought to exercise greater authority within their families. Europeans insisted that by subduing the Indians, they were actually bringing them freedom—the freedom of true religion, private property, and the liberation of both men and women from uncivilized and unchristian gender roles.
I N D I A N F R E E D O M , E U R O P E A N F R E E D O M Indian Freedom And what of liberty as the native inhabitants of the New World understood it? Many Europeans saw Indians as embodying freedom. The Iroquois, wrote one colonial official, held “such absolute notions of liberty that they allow of no kind of superiority of one over another, and banish all servitude from their territories.” But
How did Indian and European ideas of freedom differ on the eve of contact?
A seventeenth-century engraving by
a French Jesuit priest illustrates many
Europeans’ view of Indian religion.
A demon hovers over an Iroquois long-
house, suggesting that Indians worship
the devil.
Indian women planting crops while men
break the sod. An engraving by Theodor
de Bry, based on a painting by Jacques
Le Moyne de Morgues. Morgues was part
of an expedition of French Huguenots
to Florida in 1564; he escaped when the
Spanish destroyed the outpost in the
following year.
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Chapter 1 ★ A New World
most colonizers quickly concluded that the notion of “freedom” was alien to Indian societies. Early English and French dictionaries of Indian languages contained no entry for “freedom” or liberté. Nor, wrote one early trader, did Indians have “words to express despotic power, arbitrary kings, oppressed or obedient subjects.”
Indeed, Europeans considered Indians barbaric in part because they did not appear to live under established governments or fixed laws, and had no respect for authority. “They are born, live, and die in a liberty without restraint,” wrote one religious missionary. In a sense, they were too free, lacking the order and discipline that Europeans considered the hallmarks of civilization. Even slavery, wrote Richard Eden, an English writer of the mid-sixteenth century, was preferable to the Indians’ condition before European contact, which he described as “rather a horrible licentiousness than a liberty.” When Giovanni da Verrazano described the Indians as living in “absolute freedom,” he did not intend this as a compliment.