Showing posts with label James Polk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Polk. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

My Amazon Review of Robert Elder's "Calhoun: American Heretic"

 

 Slavery’s Theoretician

 

John C. Calhoun was brilliant and was one of America’s most dominant politicians for nearly four decades serving as congressman, senator, vice-president under two presidents, Secretary of War, Secretary of State and sought the presidency on several occasions. Unfortunately, he used much of his brilliance in cause of slavery. Baylor University history professor Robert Elder tells the story of his life with nuance and great detail. Unfortunately for the lay reader it 656-page length is a bit much.

 

Calhoun was born in 1782 in South Carolina’s up-country and was inculcated in his slave-oriented society. Unlike most of his brethren he goes north to Yale for his education and after returning to South Carolina he becomes one of the state’s leading politicians. After his election to Congress in 1810 be joins forces with Henry Clay to become a leader in the war hawk faction that leads the U.S. into the War of 1812.

 

His alliance with Clay continues after the war and he becomes an initial supporter of Clay’s American System. He supports the establishment of a national bank, the tariff, and a program of internal improvements. However, the coming of the Missouri Compromise of 1820 he breaks with Clay as the fight over tariffs becomes a proxy war over slavery. By 1832 he triggers the Nullification Crisis where South Carolina sought to overturn the Tariff of 1828. It almost came to war, but Clay came up with a compromise.

 

Calhoun believed the United States to be a compact of sovereign states with each or with a substantial minority having the right to nullify federal legislation. He called his theory “concurrent majority”. He basically sought a minority veto over policy. To be sure part of it was based in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 authored by Madison and Jefferson in opposition to federal power. That theory was expounded 160 years later by civil rights activist Lani Guinier was nominated to be an assistant attorney general under Bill Clinton. She supported a minority veto over majoritarian rule. Calhoun was pro-union, but only on southern terms.

 

Calhoun viewed slavery as a positive good. To him it guaranteed equality among whites thereby dampening the class struggle between white factory workers and their employers. After all South Carolina was way ahead of the rest of the country in promoting universal suffrage for white males. In a way he was a Jacksonian ahead of his times.

 

To Calhoun America’s original sin was not slavery, but rather the “all men are created equal” line in the Declaration of Independence. This completely undercut his support of slavery and further although Elder does not mention it the preamble to the Constitution begins with “We the people...” not “We the states…”

 

As an international statesman Calhoun had a hand in drafting the Monroe Doctrine in 1820 and avoided war with Great Britain over the Oregon Territory in 1845. He actually opposed the Mexican War because he believed President Polk usurped the power of Congress in declaring a state of war existed between the U.S. and Mexico. Further his free trade ideas became conventional wisdom in the second half of the 20th century.

 

Elder goes into great deal about Calhoun’s family life. His wife Floride and her dozen pregnancies and his relationship with his daughter Anna who became his intellectual confidante. The last a rarity in that era. The reader will learn much about America and Calhoun in this book, but I caution it is long.


For the full Amazon URL see: Slavery's Theoretician (amazon.com)

 

Sunday, January 26, 2020

My Amazon Review of Steve Inskeep's "Imperfect Union: How Jessie and John Fremont Mapped the West, Invented Celebrity and Helped Cause the Civil War"


1840’s Power Couple

NPR host Steve Inskeep records the history of one of America’s first power couples. The western explorer John Fremont then 29 married Jesse Benton, then 17, the daughter of the powerful Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton. Jessie acts as Fremont’s promoter in the press and in the halls of Congress as John explores the west from St. Louis to California and Oregon. His description of the Great Salt Lake basin inspires Brigham Young to uproot his Mormon clan from Illinois to Utah. Why John leaves her so much is a mystery to me. My guess he had ADD and had a wanderlust for the West. Nevertheless Jessie puts up with this and faithfully publicizes his letters. Indeed she takes a hazardous trip to California with her four year old daughter, a trip that involved an overland haul across Panama. She was quite a woman.  

While in California his small band links up with a small detachment of Naval/Marine forces to seize California from Mexico not knowing that the Mexican War had already started. And remember it was the annexation of Texas, the Mexican War and the admission of California that heightens the tensions over slavery. While in California he names the entrance to San Francisco Bay the “Golden Gate.” He also has time to speculate in California real estate and gold mining. His gold mining venture makes him rich for a while.

Inskeep is very good at describing the hardships Fremont’s bands faced while traversing the West especially the snow covered Sierras. One of Fremont guides is Kit Carson, a personage whom Inskeep doesn’t take all that kindly towards as he projects his 21st century sensibilities on to the brutal environment of the mid-19th century west. He is also not all that kind to President James Polk, who in my opinion ranks among the great presidents of the United States as he implemented the policy of manifest destiny by making America a continent spanning nation.

In 1850s America the crisis of slavery comes to a boil. Jessie Fremont from her a youth was strongly anti-slavery and pushes John even more in that direction. In 1856 the newly formed Republican Party chose Fremont as its nominee under the banner of “Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Speech, Fremont.” It is an ugly campaign where the Democrats vilify his illegitimate birth to a presumably Catholic father. It is the anti-Catholicism of the time that weighs heavily on his campaign in his defeat to James Buchanan, a former neighbor of the Benton’s.

After the campaign the Fremont’s gradually disappear from history and their money runs out as they age, a real shame. Inskeep tells a great story and it is well worth the read.