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The Founders and Finance
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Consistently interesting and beautifully written, McCraw's narratives of the careers of Hamilton and Gallatin are simply splendid. We are in the hands of a master storyteller, as well as a master analyst of historical materials. -- Robin Einhorn, University of California, Berkeley A compulsively readable book that is both a dual biography of the two most influential Treasury Secretaries and a study of American exceptionalism-the way in which immigrants played a leading role in building American institutions. -- Harold James, author of Making the European Monetary Union Tom McCraw's new book is a brilliant account of what the great immigrant financiers accomplished and why their wider-world perspectives became crucial to building the American nation and its economy. -- Richard Sylla, New York University McCraw has observed a singular fact about this nation's early history: most of the people who directed its finances were immigrants. From Alexander Hamilton to Albert Gallatin, McCraw traces the influence of these remarkable foreign-born financiers, and reveals how their partly-imported sensibilities averted what seemed to be the fledgling republic's most likely fate: bankruptcy. This is history of the highest order. -- Roger Lowenstein, author of The End of Wall Street and When Genius Failed

About the Author

Thomas K. McCraw was Straus Professor of Business History Emeritus at Harvard Business School and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for History.

Reviews

Well told by McCraw are the familiar stories of Hamilton’s consolidation and funding of the public debt, of his incessant fighting with Thomas Jefferson, and of his final duel with Aaron Burr… McCraw shows just how different was Jefferson’s party from the one doing business under the Republican banner today.
*Wall Street Journal*

As Thomas K. McCraw relates here, America lurched from one financial crisis to another between 1780 and 1840. At many times, it was entirely plausible that the young nation’s financial troubles might disintegrate it… The achievements of Morris, Hamilton, and Gallatin cannot be overstated. They erected America’s ‘basic capitalist framework’ by establishing a steady national currency and loosed gushing wells of both private and public credit. These immigrants also fashioned a system of taxation and collection, tamed the nation’s debt, and fostered the development of a manufacturing economy. And these astonishing achievements came despite ardent political opposition… The lessons of The Founders and Finance are that America’s finances have been far worse than they are today, and that good policies can triumph over political stupidity.
*Weekly Standard*

We may not know what we are doing with our own public finances, but perhaps we may take some comfort in the fact that the Founders, two centuries ago, did not know what they were doing, either.
*New Republic*

A detailed account of the financial negotiations that helped underwrite the United States might not strike some readers as inherently gripping fare, but McCraw has made it every bit as interesting as the more standard accounts of battling redcoats. Men like Morris, Gallatin, and Hamilton had enormous potential to become ‘the most dangerous men in the world’ (in fact they did become so, in the eyes of their many enemies), and The Founders and Finance takes us into the heart of their temptations.
*Open Letters Monthly*

If you think the current system is a mess, consider the national economy after the American Revolution… A welcome addition to business and financial history, illuminating little-known aspects of the early republic.
*Kirkus Reviews*

Only two men are honored with statues outside the U.S. Treasury building: Alexander Hamilton and Albert Gallatin. McCraw explores their qualities, foibles, achievements, and failures in order to show why both deserve credit for laying the foundations of American governmental finance… McCraw is a talented storyteller. His highly readable and fascinating work portrays the brilliance of Hamilton and Gallatin against the difficulty of their time and is strongly recommended to all readers interested in American and financial history.
*Library Journal (starred review)*

McCraw sheds light on personalities and policies in this overview of the development of early American finance. The newly independent United States ‘had long been bankrupt’; both the fledgling national government and the states were in hock for the War of Independence… Hamilton’s decisive advocacy of a national bank and assumption of state war debts laid the basis for economic expansion and cemented the dominance of federal power. McCraw then turns to Gallatin’s ascendancy in Congress, where in 1796 he denounced the growth in the national debt and decried high military spending. Starting with the still-resonant contrast between the ‘big government’ Hamilton and ‘small government’ Gallatin, McCraw’s wealth of historical data should interest any lay historian, particularly when he presents the many ‘what if’s.’
*Publishers Weekly*

Consistently interesting and beautifully written, McCraw’s narratives of the careers of Hamilton and Gallatin are simply splendid. We are in the hands of a master storyteller, as well as a master analyst of historical materials.
*Robin Einhorn, University of California, Berkeley*

A compulsively readable book that is both a dual biography of the two most influential Treasury Secretaries and a study of American exceptionalism—the way in which immigrants played a leading role in building American institutions.
*Harold James, author of Making the European Monetary Union*

McCraw has observed a singular fact about this nation’s early history: most of the people who directed its finances were immigrants. From Alexander Hamilton to Albert Gallatin, McCraw traces the influence of these remarkable foreign-born financiers, and reveals how their partly-imported sensibilities averted what seemed to be the fledgling republic’s most likely fate: bankruptcy. This is history of the highest order.
*Roger Lowenstein, author of The End of Wall Street and When Genius Failed*

Tom McCraw’s new book is a brilliant account of what the great immigrant financiers accomplished and why their wider-world perspectives became crucial to building the American nation and its economy.
*Richard Sylla, New York University*

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