Maps
Editor's Introduction
Abbreviations Used in Citations
Introduction
Prologue: The Defeat of the Past
1. The Continental Setting
2. From the Jaws of Defeat
3. An Era of Good and Bad Feelings
4. The World That Cotton Made
5. Awakenings of Religion
6. Overthrowing the Tyranny of Distance
7. The Improvers
8. Pursuing the Millennium
9. Andrew Jackson and His Age
10. Battles over Sovereignty
11. Jacksonian Democracy and the Rule of Law
12. Reason and Revelation
13. Jackson's Third Term
14. The New Economy
15. The Whigs and Their Age
16. American Renaissance
17. Texas, Tyler, and the Telegraph
18. Westward the Star of Empire
19. The War Against Mexico
20. The Revolutions of 1848
Finale: A Vision of the Future
Bibliographical Essay
Index
Daniel Walker Howe is Rhodes Professor of American History Emeritus, Oxford University and Professor of History Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author of The Political Culture of the American Whigs and Making the American Self: Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln. He lives in Los Angeles.
"What Daniel Walker Howe hath wrought is a wonderfully mind-opening
interpretation of America on the cusp of modernity and
might."--George F. Will, National Review Online
"What Hath God Wrought is the dazzling culmination of the author's
lifetime of distinguished scholarship.... The sustained quality of
Howe's prose makes it even harder to put down a volume whose sheer
weight makes it hard to pick up.... What Hath God Wrought lays
powerful claim to being the best work ever written on this period
of the American past."--Richard Carwardine, The Journal of Southern
History
"Howe knows his era as well as any historian living, and he
generously instructs his readers with detailed expertise and crisp
generalizations."--John Lauritz Larson, The Journal of American
History
"What Hath God Wrought is a feat worth applauding no matter what
omissions will occur to every specialist in any facet of early
national America."--Scott E. Casper, Reviews in American
History
"Howe is a skillful storyteller who knows how to choose relevant
anecdotes and revealing quotations. Both general readers and
professional historians can benefit from the book. It can be read
with pleasure from cover to cover."--Thomas Tandy Lewis, Magill's
Literary Annual
"One of the best lessons offered by Howe's book comes in his
refusal to view the period of 1815 to 1848 in anything other than
its own terms. He never reduces the early part of the book to an
analysis of how developments succeeded or failed the hopes of the
'founders.' Nor does he ever treat political and social
developments as though they launched the United States on a high
road to the Civil War.... Precisely because of this clear-eyed
vision of the
antebellum period, Civil War historians will want to take a fresh
look back at howe's picture of the United States in a constant
state of change."--Sarah J. Purcell, Civil War Book Review
"I like to have a heavy tome to calm me down at the end of the day.
This is almost as big as a pathology book, but really well
written."--Robin Cook
"A comprehensive, richly detailed, and elegantly written account of
the republic between the War of 1812 and the American victory in
Mexico a generation later...a masterpiece."--The Atlantic
"How's Pulitzer Prize-winning addition to the mulitvolume Oxford
History of the United States is excellent in many ways, not least
in the full attention it gives to the religious dynamics of
American history in this period.... a very satisfying read."--The
Christian Century
"Exemplary addition to the Oxford History of the United States...
He is a genuine rarity...extraordinary."--Washington Post Book
World
"One of the most outstanding syntheses of U.S. history published
this decade."--Publishers Weekley starred review
"What Hath God Wrought is both a capacious narrative of a
tumultuous era in American history and a heroic attempt at
synthesizing a century and a half of historical writing about
Jacksonian democracy, antebellum reform, and American
expansion."--The New Yorker
"This extraordinary contribution to the Oxford History of the
United States series is a great accomplishment by one of the United
States' most distinguished historians.... It is, in short,
everything a work of historical scholarship should be."--Foreign
Affairs
"The book is a sweeping and monumental achievement that no student
of American history should let go unread. Attentive to
historiography yet writing accessible and engaging prose, Howe has
produced the perfect introduction or reintroduction to an
enormously important period in American national
development."--American Heritage
"The best book on Jackson today."--Gordon Wood, Salt Lake Deseret
Morning News
"Howe's book is the most comprehensive and persuasive modern
account of America in what we might prefer hereafter to call the
Age of Clay. It should be the standard work on the subject for many
years to come."--American Nineteenth Century History
"Comprehensive and detailed... an excellent narrative
history."--The California Territorial Quarterly
"There is simply too much of value in Howe's book to be even listed
in the longest of reviews. The serious student of American history
will want to read this book...This is a book worthy of a master of
American history." --History News Network
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