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Authors: Kenneth C. Davis

A Nation Rising

BOOK: A Nation Rising
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A Nation Rising

Untold Tales of Flawed Founders, Fallen Heroes, and Forgotten Fighters from America's Hidden History

Kenneth C. Davis

 

 

For my children, Jenny and Colin Davis

A rising nation, spread over a wide and fruitful land, traversing all the seas with the rich productions of their industry…advancing rapidly to destinies beyond the reach of mortal eye.

—T
HOMAS
J
EFFERSON
,
F
IRST
I
NAUGURAL
A
DDRESS
(M
ARCH
1801)

These were our founders: imperfect men in a less than perfect nation, grasping at opportunities. That they did good for their country is understood, and worth our celebration; that they were also jealous, resentful, self-protective, and covetous politicians should be no less a part of their collective biography. What separates history from myth is that history takes in the whole picture, whereas myth averts our eyes from the truth when it turns men into heroes and gods.

—N
ANCY
I
SENBERG
,
F
ALLEN
F
OUNDER

Contents

Introduction:

“The Dream of Our Founders”

 

I
Burr's Trial

II
Weatherford's War

III
Madison's Mutiny

IV
Dade's Promise

V
Morse's Code

VI
Jessie's Journey

 

I
NTRODUCTION

“The Dream of Our Founders”

I
T WOULD BE
difficult—no, it would be impossible—to have witnessed the events surrounding Election Day 2008 and Inauguration Day 2009, either as a historian, as an interested observer, or simply as an American, and not to have been profoundly struck by their place in our history. The stunning election of Barack Obama has rightfully been judged a transforming moment which historians may someday rank alongside the elections of Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan—fulcrum moments in which the course of American history took a sharp, sudden, and decisive turn. And it would be equally difficult, if not impossible, to continue to write about the shaping of a nation without taking into account this extraordinary milestone in American history.

Obama's election to the nation's highest office marked a profound
reversal of many long-held assumptions about geography, gender, parties, politics, and race relations—indeed, the American character itself—that have been entwined in this nation's fabric since the arrival of Europeans in North America more than 400 years ago.

On the night of his election in 2008, Obama offered a victory speech touching on this upheaval of the American political landscape and its place in the drama of American history. Speaking in Chicago's Grant Park to a throng of deliriously joyful and tearful celebrants, the forty-seven-year-old president-elect opened by saying:

“If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.”

“T
HE
D
REAM OF
O
UR
F
OUNDERS”

G
RANTING THE FUNDAMENTAL
notion that America is a place of great opportunity, it is still nearly impossible to contemplate Obama's phrase, “the dream of our founders,” without pondering its extraordinary and obvious corollary: many of those dreaming founders would have been perfectly at home owning Barack Obama, his wife Michelle, and their two little girls and perhaps selling all or some of them—either for profit or to pay off debts. That august group would include, of course, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, along with many of the Founders who signed the Declaration of Independence and the Framers who wrote the United
States Constitution. At the time of its creation in Philadelphia, the Constitution stated that had Barack Obama then been a “person held in service,” he would have been counted as “three-fifths of a man” for the purposes of allotting seats in Congress.

So the Founders' dream of “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness” is real and possible. But it has always existed uneasily alongside the insidious influence that the legacy of slavery and race has exerted on America's past—the stunning gap between America's ideals and its realities. These two competing visions of
e pluribus unum
lie at the heart of this country's great contradiction, and they frame the moment of Obama's election.

The momentous upheaval brought about by Obama's victory did not wipe the slate clean. For all the distance that America has traveled as a nation since 1776, the country still needs to reconcile the glorious dream with the dark nightmare that haunts America's past. And the sharp contradiction that pits the history of slavery and race against “the dream of our founders” is nowhere more clearly and devastatingly laid bare than in the period covered in this book, the crucial first fifty years of the nineteenth century.

It was a dynamic and dramatic half century during which the United States changed with stunning speed from a tiny, newborn nation, desperately struggling for survival on the Atlantic seaboard, to a near-empire spanning the continent, “from sea to shining sea.” In 1800, according to the census, the United States population stood at 5,308,483, of which 893,602 were slaves. With the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the nation doubled in size geographically. By 1826 and the “Jubilee” celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the
Declaration of Independence, the population, swollen by waves of immigrants, had reached more than 12 million. And by 1850, with an even greater influx of immigrants, it had nearly doubled again, to 23,191,876, with 3,204,313 of them slaves.

It was also a half century of tremendous technological innovation: canals, steamships, railroads, and the telegraph had made for revolutions in travel and communications. The sewing machine and photography changed everyday life. When the nineteenth century began, written messages and armies moved as they had for thousands of years. By the middle of that century, information was sent over telegraph lines in minutes. Steam revolutionized the movement of people, armies, and goods.

America began to be transformed in other less material, less utilitarian ways as well. This was the era that saw an emergence of “homegrown” American arts and letters. Breaking free from the strictures of British and European convention, a new generation of American writers created a distinctive American voice: Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville, Cooper, Whittier, Longfellow, Washington Irving, Poe, and that most original of voices, Walt Whitman—who even said it outright: “I hear America singing.” All injected vitality into American letters. And many would cross the line between art and politics—actively writing, often in harshly critical terms, about the American scene they observed.

It was a time, in other words, when the “dream of our founders” was realized in ways that few men of the Revolutionary generation could have possibly imagined. And it was an era in which an inexorable succession of events ultimately led to the great, tragic conflagration that followed—the American Civil War.

But for all too many Americans, the events of those fifty-odd years—counting roughly from Thomas Jefferson's controversial election in 1800 to California's statehood in 1850—have fallen into a black hole called “American history.” Even though some of us probably have dim recollections of such household names and phrases as the Non-Intercourse Act (a perennial high school favorite), the War of 1812 (What was
that
about?), Manifest Destiny, the Missouri Compromise, “Tippecanoe and Tyler too,” the Mexican War (What was
that
about?), and the California gold rush, the details are frequently fuzzy. Far too many people skip from 1776 to the Civil War without a clear sense of what happened during a good part of Lincoln's famous “four score and seven years.”

And that's too bad, because this era stands as one of the most extraordinary and tumultuous periods in America's relatively brief history. When we move beyond the nineteenth-century household names and textbook buzzwords such as nullification, states' rights, or manumission, the far-reaching human impact of these crucial decades becomes even more compelling. So I return to America's “hidden history”—the obscure, forgotten or deliberately erased events and people that had a profound impact on the shaping of a nation.

As I attempted to do in
America's Hidden History
, I have set out to distill a segment of American history through six separate narratives, each of which focuses on a largely overlooked or untold incident that helped decide or at least influence the nation's course. Each of these stories provides a portal into the times in which it took place, the issues people faced, the sacrifices that were made, and the blood that was spilled. Again, these pictures of an overlooked America are not always pretty, and often are at odds with the
comfortable notions so many people still cling to about America's pioneering past.

Again, I have chosen to focus on the human side of the story. These events are peopled by both the famous and the forgotten, by many once familiar names. The events highlight the now obscure and the notorious. They are tales of conquest, conspiracy, corruption—and courage. Each played some part in shaping the nation's geography and destiny.

Does the name William Weatherford ring a bell? No? How about Francis Dade? Then there are Madison Washington and Jessie Frémont.

Swept into the dustbin of American history, these names belong to people who occupied, at least for a time, the day's front pages. They were involved in crises and controversies that affected the direction taken by the new nation. But today they are mostly forgotten—or, like Aaron Burr, reduced to a single note in an encyclopedia: “Jefferson's first vice president. Killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel.”

Each of these stories also explores a vastly more complex path to nationhood than the tidily packaged national myth of rugged individuals setting out for new territory. It is a path of confusing and competing alliances and ambitions—the ambitions of individuals and the ambitions of a nation poised to take its place on a grand world stage.

The story of the “rising nation” described in this book is bracketed by two chapters describing a pair of high-profile trials, both of which featured some of the most prominent men of the nineteenth century. In an era that lacked twenty-four-hour cable television and cameras in courtrooms, both of these “trials of the century” cap
tivated the nation. In the first, Aaron Burr was tried, not for his role in the death of Alexander Hamilton, but for treason. His trial demonstrated that, even in 1807, presidents could be vindictive and were not hesitant about destroying their opponents in the press and using the power of the government and the courts for political ends.

More than 200 years after Burr's trial, the danger of presidential vendettas is still real. Richard Nixon compiled an “enemies list” and used the power of the FBI and the CIA to break people who were perceived as threats, such as Daniel Ellsberg, the defense analyst who leaked the “Pentagon Papers.” More recently, we have witnessed the power of the White House in attacking personal reputations through the use of media “leaks,” as in the case of Ambassador Joseph Wilson, a critic of the Iraq War, and his wife, Valerie Plame, a CIA operative who was “outed” by members of the George W. Bush administration.

My interest in Burr is similar to my fascination with the character and career of Benedict Arnold, whose complex rise and fall I explored in
America's Hidden History
. Arnold and Burr's shared reputation as the “bad boys” of American history is intriguing. Burr's character became even more alluring to me when I learned that, as a nineteen-year-old soldier, Burr had gone off to war with Benedict Arnold, tramping through the Maine woods in 1775. Oh, to be an observer of their exchanges as Arnold led a dreadful forced march during which starvation, disease, and desertion had whittled a force of 1,000 men down to fewer than 700.

In reality, the so-called villains of history often make the most fascinating subjects. Burr's trial for treason also opened the way to many of the larger themes touched upon in this book's other
chapters—the voracious American appetite for land; the conflict with Spain, which still held enormous tracts of what would eventually be American territory; and the powerful forces of greed and ambition that drove so many men at this time.

And just as there was a link between Benedict Arnold and Aaron Burr, I found a connection between Burr and another important character in this book, Andrew Jackson. The future president was cast in a relatively minor part in Burr's trial, but Jackson reappears to play a central role in several of these chapters. And that is why exploring this “hidden history” is so compelling to me.

Over the years, Jackson has received favorable reviews as a president. Frequently ranked among the most influential commanders in chief, he was recently lionized in Jon Meacham's Pulitzer Prizewinning bestseller about his presidency, the aptly titled
American Lion
.

But not everyone admires Andrew Jackson. There is more to the story. In his recent book
Waking Giant
, David S. Reynolds described the seventh president as “a potent killing machine.” And that is where the “hidden history” comes in. There are many people, mostly descendants of Native Americans, who won't accept a $20 bill, because they do not want to use money bearing Andrew Jackson's image. In fact, because of Jackson's draconian policies toward Native Americans and his devotion to the cause of slaveholding, there is a small movement afoot to replace Jackson on the $20 bill.

The second trial, which closes the book, recounts the very public life of John Charles Frémont—soldier, explorer, and relentless self-promoter, once a larger-than-life American hero who was lauded across the land for his pivotal role in opening the American West
to pioneers. He and his extraordinary wife, Jessie Benton Frémont, were once the nation's most famous couple, a nineteenth-century version of “Jack and Jackie.” Set against the drama of Manifest Destiny and California's entry into the Union, Frémont's trial capped a period of political infighting and intrigue during which the man famous as “the great pathfinder” faced a court-martial in what one historian called “a case study in the dynamics of reputation.” A few years later, in 1856, Frémont emerged as the Republican Party's first presidential candidate on an antislavery platform, as America edged precipitously closer to the Civil War.

Between these two very famous Americans are stories of some less familiar names and events. A fitting example is William Weatherford and the massacre at Fort Mims. This incident, which ranks as the worst massacre in American frontier history, was as shocking and devastating an attack in its own time as the terrorist strikes of 9/11 were in ours. And this episode, and the little-known war it sparked, began to form Andrew Jackson's heroic national reputation.

The story of Fort Mims speaks volumes about the tangled politics of the time, the overarching American crusade for more territory to add to the nation's holdings, and the complex web of relationships at the heart of that strife—Americans, British, French, Spanish, Indians, and America's blacks, both slave and free, all in deadly contention for land, freedom, and survival.

BOOK: A Nation Rising
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