American Experiment (257 page)

Read American Experiment Online

Authors: James MacGregor Burns

BOOK: American Experiment
3.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

160
[Horatio Alger, Jr.]:
John Tebbel,
From Rags to Riches
(Macmillan, 1963); Ralph D. Gardner,
Horatio Alger, or the American Hero Era
(Wayside Press, 1964); Herbert R. Mayes,
Alger
(Macy-Masius, 1928).

[Huber on Alger’s heroes]:
Huber, p. 46.

[Greene on Munsey]:
Greene, quoted at p. 99.

[“Riches power”]:
quoted in
ibid.,
p. 99.

[White on Munsey]: ibid.,
p. 102.

[McGuffey Reader
on trying]:
quoted in Rischin, p. 45.

161
[Carnegie on Spencer]:
quoted in Joseph F. Wall,
Andrew Carnegie
(Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 381.

[Dinner at Delmonico’s]:
Spencer,
Autobiography,
vol. 2, p. 478;
New York Times,
November 10, 1882, p. 5; Carnegie, pp. 335–37; Wall, pp. 387–89; Lately Thomas,
Delmonico’s
(Houghton Mifflin, 1967); Ethel F. Fisk, ed.,
The Letters of John Fiske
(Macmillan, 1940), p. 478.

162
[Wall on other speakers]:
Wall, p. 388.

[Beecher’s qualified endorsement of evolution]:
quoted in
New York Times,
November 10, 1882, p. 5

The Bitch-Goddess Success

[Dinner at Delmonico’s for Henry George]: New York Times,
October 22, 1882, p. 9; Perry Belmont,
An American Democrat
(Columbia University Press, 1940), pp. 296–97.

[Henry George]:
Henry George, Jr.,
The Life of Henry George
(Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1960); Charles Albro Barker,
Henry George
(Oxford University Press, 1955).

163 [Henry George on man’s right to the free gifts of nature]:
quoted in George, Jr., p. 223.

[Bellamy]:
Sylvia E. Bowman,
The Year 2000: A Critical Biography of Edward Bellamy
(Bookman Associates, 1958), esp. pp. 107–52.

[Bellamy on his purpose in writing
Looking Backward]: Edward Bellamy, “How I Wrote
Looking Backward,” Ladies’ Home Journal,
vol. 2, no. 5 (April 1894), quoted in A. E. Morgan,
Edward Bellamy
(Columbia University Press, 1944), pp. 229–30.

[Looking Backward]: Edward Bellamy,
Looking Backward, 2000–1887
(Houghton Mifflin, 1888).

[The metaphor of the coach]: ibid.,
pp. 10–12.

164–5
[Dialogue between Julian West and Edith]:
Edward Bellamy,
Equality
(D. Appleton, 1897), pp. 4–13.

166
[Lloyd]:
Chester McArthur Destler,
Henry Demarest Lloyd and the Empire of Reform
(University of Pennsylvania Press, 1963).

[Destler on Lloyd]: ibid.,
p. 301.

166–7
[George on
Looking Backward]: quoted in Barker, p. 540.

167
[Lloyd on George]:
quoted in Destler, p. 136.

[Bellamy, nationalizing and “Nationalism”]:
Bowman, pp. 122–38, 308–14.

[Bellamy-George exchange]:
quoted in Morgan, pp. 392–93.

[Bellamy on the word
socialist]: quoted in John A. Garraty,
The New Commonwealth, 1877–1890
(Harper & Row, 1968), p. 319; see also, Bellamy,
Looking Backward,
p. 252.

[“Prince of muddleheads”]:
quoted in Garraty, p. 319.

[Marx on George as theorist]:
quoted in Barker, p. 356.

[Lloyd on Marx’s determinism]:
quoted in Destler, pp. 180, 508.

[Gladden]:
see Washington Gladden,
Applied Christianity: Moral Aspects of Social Questions
(Houghton Mifflin, 1886), esp. pp. 103 ff; Washington Gladden,
Tools and the Man
(Houghton Mifflin, 1893).

[Morris on
Looking Backward]: quoted in Parrington,
op. cit.,
vol. 3, pp. 311–12.

167–8
[Post-Civil War New England culture]:
Van Wyck Brooks,
New England: Indian Summer,
1
86
5–1915
(E. P. Dutton, 1940]: Parrington, vol. 3,
passim;
see also F. O. Matthiessen,
American Renaissance
(Oxford University Press, 1941).
[Parrington on nostalgia for Federalism]:
Parrington, vol. 3, p. 50.

[Adams on Boston]:
Henry Adams,
The Life of George Cabot Lodge
(Houghton Mifflin, 1911), quoted in Brooks, p. 199 footnote.

[Twain on his Boston audience]:
quoted in
ibid.,
p. 8.

[Brooks on exhaustion of old reformers]: ibid.,
p. 120.

169
[Henry Adams]:
Ernest Samuels,
Henry Adams,
3 vols. (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1948–64); Henry Adams,
The Education of Henry Adams
(Houghton Mifflin, 1918).

[Adams trying to drive away students]:
quoted in Brooks, p. 254 footnote.

[Mrs. Lightfoot Lee and power]:
Henry Adams,
Democracy
(Farrar, Straus and Young, n.d), p. 10.

[Henry James]:
Leon Edel,
Henry James
(J. B. Lippincolt, 1953–72), vol. 1; Maxwell Geismar,
Henry James and the Jacobites
(Houghton Mifflin, 1963).

170
[James’s alleged lampooning of Peabody]:
Edel, vol. 3, pp. 142–43.

[Parrington on James’s concern only with nuances]:
Parrington, vol. 3, p. 241.

[James as “pragmatizing”]:
quoted in Brooks, p. 228.

[James’s (not necessarily intended) “figure in the carpet”]:
Geismar, pp. 137–39.

[“Best and brightest”]:
quoted in Brooks, p. 188.

[Howells]:
Kenneth S. Lynn,
William Dean Howells: An American Life
(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971).

[Twain]:
Justin Kaplan,
Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain
(Simon and Schuster, 1966); Roger B. Salomon,
Twain and the Image of History
(Yale University Press, 1961); Philip S. Foner,
Mark Twain: Social Critic
(International Publishers, 1958).

171
[Huck on the Mississippi]:
Mark Twain,
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
(American Publishing, 1903), p. 161.

[Huck’s escapism]:
Albert E. Stone, Jr.,
The Innocent Eye: Childhood in Mark Twain’s Imagination
(Yale University Press, 1961), esp. ch. 5.

[Huck on Aunt Sally’s effort to “sivilize” him]:
Twain, p. 375.

[“I’d got to decide, forever”]: ibid.,
p. 279. On Huck’s decision, see also Leo Marx,
The Machine in the Garden
(Oxford University Press, 1964), pp. 337–38.

[“NOTICE” to the reader]:
Twain, p. iii.

[Norris]:
Ernest Marchand,
Frank Norris
(Octagon Books, 1981); William B. Dillingham,
Frank Norris: Instinct and Art
(University of Nebraska Press, 1969).

[McTeague]: Frank Norris,
McTeague: A Story of San Francisco
(Doubleday, Doran, 1928).

172
[The Octopus]: Frank Norris,
The Octopus: The Epic of the Wheat: A Story of California
(P. F. Collier, 1901), quoted at p. 473.

[Huck on the steamboat smashing through the raft]:
Twain, p. 133.

“Toiling Millions Now Are Waking”

173
[De Leon on the Declaration of Independence]:
quoted in David Herreshoff,
American Disciples of Marx
(Wayne State University Press, 1967), pp. 167–68.

[Marx on wages labor as a probational state]:
quoted in Stuart Bruce Kaufman,
Samuel Gompers and the Origins of the American Federation of Labor, 1848–1896
(Greenwood Press, 1973), p. 28.

[Early development of American socialism]:
Howard H. Quint,
The Forging of American Socialism
(University of South Carolina Press, 1953), esp. ch. 1; Herreshoff, chs. 3–4.

174 [Woodhull & Claflin’s Weekly]:
most issues in New-York Historical Society;
Communist Manifesto
in issue of December 30, 1871; see also, Herreshoff, pp. 83–84, 86.

175 [National Labor Union]:
Gerald N. Grob,
Workers and Utopia
(Northwestern University Press, 1961), ch. 2.

[Socialists on letting “wage slavery” go on]:
Kaufman, p. 85.

[Union membership, 1878]:
see Philip S. Foner,
History of the Labor Movement in the United States
(International Publishers, 1947–65), vol. 1, pp. 439–40.

[Labor troubles of 1870s]:
Philip S. Foner,
The Great Labor Uprising of 1877
(Monad Press, 1977); Garraty,
op. cit.,
ch. 4; Jeremy Brecher,
Strike!
(South End Press, 1972), ch. 1; Herbert Gutman,
Work, Culture and Society in Industrializing America
(Alfred A. Knopf, 1976), ch. 6.

[Molly Maguires]:
Louis Adamic,
Dynamite
(Viking Press, 1934), ch. 2.

176
[Adams on railroad strikes]:
Edward Chase Kirkland,
Charles Francis Adams, Jr.
(Harvard University Press, 1965), pp. 54–55.

[National trade unions]:
Norman J. Ware,
The Labor Movement in the United States, 1860–1895
(D. Appleton, 1929); Lloyd Ulman,
The Rise of the National Trade Union
(Harvard University Press, 1955); John Philip Hall, “The Knights of St. Crispin in Massachusetts, 1869–1878,”
Journal of Economic History,
vol. 18, no. 2 (June 1958), pp. 161–75.

[Knights of Labor and the strikes of 1884 and 1886]:
Brecher, ch. 2; Grob, chs. 3. 4; Gerald N. Grob, “The Knights of Labor and the Trade Unions, 1878–1886,
” Journal of Economic History,
vol. 18, no. 2 (June 1958), pp. 176–92; Foner,
History of the Labor Movement,
vol. 1, ch. 21, pp. 504–12 and vol. 2, chs. 3–5; James MacGregor Burns, “Labor’s Drive to Majority Status,” unpub. dissertation, Williams College, 1939.

[Garraty on Powderly]:
Garraty, p. 162.

[Powderly on the word “class “]:
quoted in Harold C. Livesay,
Samuel Gompers and Organized Labor in America
(Little, Brown, 1978), p. 77.

[“Toiling millions now are waking”]:
quoted in Adamic, p. 62.

177
[Haymarket Massacre]:
Henry David,
The History of the Haymarket Affair
(Farrar & Rinehart,1936); Adamic, ch. 6; Philip S. Foner,
The Autobiography of the Haymarket Martyrs
(Humanities Press, 1969).

[Anarchist circular]:
reprinted in Adamic, p. 70.

[“Then we’ll all go home”]:
quoted in
ibid.,
p. 73.

178
[David on the Haymarket “martyrs”]:
David, p. 534.

[The American Federation of Labor]:
Livesay, Kaufman; Foner,
History of the Labor Movement,
vol. 2, chs. 9, 12; Grob,
Workers and Utopia,
chs. 8, 9; John Laslett, “Reflections on the
Failure of Socialism in the American Federation of Labor,”
Mississippi Valley Historical Review,
vol. 50, no. 4 (March 1964), pp. 634–51.

178
[Strasser’s dialogue with the senator]:
quoted in Garraty, p. 170.

[Gompers’s early life and apprenticeship]:
Samuel Gompers,
Seventy Years of Life and Labor
(E. P. Dutton, 1925). vol. 1, book 1; Livesay, chs. 1–3.

[“Study your union card, Sam
”]: Karl Laurrell, quoted in Gompers, vol. 1, p. 75.
[Gompers on improving material conditions]:
quoted in Kaufman, p. 174.

180
[“The only desirable legislation for the workers”]:
Twentieth Century Fund,
Labor and theGovernment
(McGraw-Hill, 1935), pp. 14–15.

[Gompers and Social Darwinism]:
Gompers, vol. 2, ch. 26; George B. Cotkin, “The Spencerian and Comtian Nexus in Gompers’ Labor Philosophy: The Impact of Non-Marxian Evolutionary Thought,”
Labor History,
vol. 20, no. 4 (Fall 1979). pp. 510–23.

The Alliance: A Democracy of Leaders

[“Largest democratic mass movement”]:
Lawrence Goodwyn,
The Populist Moment
(Oxford University Press, 1978), p. vii.

181
[Crop lien system]:
Lawrence Goodwyn,
Democratic Promise: The Populist Moment in America
(Oxford University Press, 1976), pp. 26–31.

[“Laboring men of America”]:
W. Scott Morgan,
History of the Wheel and Alliance and the Impending Revolution
(W. Scott Morgan, 1889), p. 24, quoted in Martha A. Warner,
Kansas Populism: A Sociological Analysis
(M.A. thesis, University of Kansas, 1956), p. 94.

182
[Founding and structure of Farmers’ Alliance]:
Goodwyn,
Democratic Promise,
pp. 33–40; Topeka
Advocate,
July 22, 1891; John D. Hicks,
The Populist Revolt
(University of Nebraska Press, 1961), pp. 128–29; Homer Clevenger, “The Teaching Techniques of the Farmers’ Alliance,”
Journal of Southern History,
vol. 11, no. 4 (November 1945), pp. 504–18.

[Lamb]:
Goodwyn,
Democratic Promise,
pp. 40–41;Roscoe C. Martin,
The People’s Party in Texas: A Study in Third Party Politics
(reprint; University of Texas Press, 1970), pp. 44–45.

[Great Southwest Strike and the Alliance]:
Goodwyn,
Democratic Promise,
pp. 54–65.

[Growth of Alliance membership]: ibid.,
pp. 65, 73.

[Cleburne convention and demands]: ibid,
pp. 77–83, demands quoted at p. 79; Hicks, pp. 105–6.

183
[Macune]:
Hicks, pp. 106–9; Goodwyn,
Democratic Promise,
pp. 83–86; Annie L. Diggs, “The Farmers’ Alliance and Some of Its Leaders,”
The Arena,
no. 29 (April 1892), pp.598–600; C. Vann Woodward,
Origins of the New South, 1877–1913
(Louisiana StateUniversity Press, 1951), p. 190.

[“Freedom from the tyranny of organized capital”]:
quoted in Goodwyn,
Democratic Promise,
p. 90.

[Waco, 1887]: ibid.,
pp. 89–91; Hicks, pp. 107—9.

Other books

Viking Sword by Griff Hosker
Nerds Are From Mars by Vicki Lewis Thompson
Queen of Swords by Sara Donati
Who Are You? by Elizabeth Forbes
Dead Cat Bounce by Nic Bennett