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Power Tends To Corrupt: Lord Acton's Study of Liberty, by Christopher Lazarski



Power Tends To Corrupt: Lord Acton's Study of Liberty, by Christopher Lazarski

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Power Tends To Corrupt: Lord Acton's Study of Liberty, by Christopher Lazarski


Lord Acton (1834–1902) is often called a historian of liberty. A great historian and political thinker, he had a rare talent to reach beneath the surface and reveal the hidden springs that move the world. While endeavoring to understand the components of a truly free society, Acton attempted to see how the principles of self-determination and freedom worked in practice, from antiquity to his own time. But though he penned hundreds of papers, essays, reviews, letters and ephemera, the ultimate book of his findings and views on the history of liberty remained unwritten. Reading a book a day for years he still could not keep pace with the output of his time, and finally, dejected, he gave up. Today, Acton is mainly known for a single maxim, “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”



In Power Tends to Corrupt, Christopher Lazarski presents the first in-depth consideration of Acton’s thought in more than fifty years. Lazarski brings Acton’s work to light in accessible language, with a focus on his understanding of liberty and its development in Western history. A work akin to Acton’s overall account of the history of liberty, with a secondary look at his political theory, this book is an outstanding exegesis of the theories and findings of one of the nineteenth century’s keenest minds.


  • Sales Rank: #534937 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2012-11-15
  • Released on: 2012-11-15
  • Format: Kindle eBook

Review
“Lazarski has given us a very helpful discussion of Acton’s ideas contextualized within a broader current of religious, political and philosophical reflection. Especially illuminating is the exploration of Acton’s ideas vis-�-vis those of Tocqueville, Burke, and Dollinger. To this extent, Lazarski advances our understanding of Catholic and liberal political thought in the 19th century.”
—Samuel Gregg, Director of Research at the Acton Institute and author, most recently, of Wilhelm Ropke's Political Economy�“What is particularly unique about this book is Lazarski’s very detailed analysis of Acton’s historical thinking. Although Acton was an historian, who worked on the Cambridge historical studies, no other work to my knowledge examines as thoroughly as this one Acton’s view of the past in terms of the goal that he saw as operative in human events.”
—Paul Gottfried, Professor of Humanities, Raffensperger Chair of the Political Science Department at Elizabethtown College, and author, most recently, of Leo Strauss and the Conservative Movement in America�
"Especially illuminating is the exploration of Acton's ideas vis-a-vis those of Tocqueville, Burke, and Dollinger."
—Samuel Gregg, Acton Institute

"...[I]t should be noted that the book demonstrates an impressive synthesis of a great variety of material from the Acton archives and thus represents a serious academic achievement within the field of Acton studies."
––Kenneth B. McIntyre, The Journal of Modern History

"Christopher Lazarski of Warsaw University has put together a superb book on Lord Actons history of liberty.... We are treated to a deep look into the conditions of liberty within Western civilization and its polities as these have thrived or decomposed under authoritarian weight."
––The University Bookman

About the Author

Christopher Lazarski is associate dean in the School of International Relations at Lazarski University, Warsaw, and author of The Lost Opportunity: Attempts at Unification of the Anti-Bolsheviks.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
A Reputation-Making Book
By Anthony Flood
This is, or at least ought to be, a reputation-making book. It is the best extended discussion of Lord Acton's political ideas in sixty years, that is, since Gertrude Himmelfarb's ground-breaking study. Christopher Lazarski achieves this in about the same number of pages (at least, apart from the pages of reference notes) but, more importantly, it does so with equal readability, a remarkable accomplishment since English is not his mother tongue.

After having immersed himself in the geopolitical events of early 20th-century Russia, the fruit of which being his 2008 The Lost Opportunity: Attempts at Unification of the Anti-Bolsheviks: 1917-1919, Lazarski shifts gears to the political thought of a 19th-century European who, while not predicting the Bolshevik Revolution, identified the spiritual fault lines that help explain such an anti-libertarian rupture with the past.

Currently Associate Dean in Warsaw's School of International Relations at Lazarski University (founded by a distant relative), our author draws upon Roland Hill's 2000 life of Acton for frame and meat, but does not minutely track that monumental biography. What he does track are the contours of Acton's prodigious learning. He divides his terrain into four parts, three devoted to Acton's areas of research interest--the ancient world (ancient Jerusalem and Athens), the modern alternative (especially the Anglo-American tradition), and the revolutionary crisis to which that alternative succumbed (the French Revolution). A fourth part expounds and interprets Acton's view of the best regime, a question hardly absent from Lazarski's neat encapsulations of the master's texts.

The seamless way Lazarski moves between those summaries and the logic of political ideas is a tour de force of which only a few academics are capable. I felt no mechanical pivoting between exposition and interpretation, but neither was I confused as to voice: without interrupting his narrative flow to hold up a cue card to the reader, Lazarski skillfully makes it clear when he is commenting upon and when paraphrasing Acton.

This book has brought home to me in a new way that "democratism" is the political presupposition of our age. Its presumptive absolute value so informs the popular consciousness that it rarely occurs to anyone to question it. And therefore since "democratic" is a term of uncritical popular approbation, every criticism of democracy, however gentle, must be framed as a reform of what is essentially right. (Any more severe criticism, it is presumed, can only arise from a mind less favorably disposed toward freedom, never from a libertarian perspective.) In the current atmosphere, therefore, one cannot reasonably hope to broaden the readership of a writer who wrote extensively about democracy unless one can show that he at least generally favored it. Lazarski's book is no exception to this rule.

Acton's warnings about democracy's potential for evil--a moral hazard, "prone to degeneration" (266)--all documented here, are not as specific to democracy as this reviewer would like. Tyranny is a human potential, and democracy one possible avenue to it. It can also light the way out of tyranny. As Murray Rothbard argued in Power & Market, democracy has little ethical content: it is either negatively libertarian (favoring the people against its rulers) or positively rights-violating (coercively redistributive). This raises a basic philosophical question, an answer to which Acton tacitly presupposed but rarely addressed explicitly: just what is "rule," what is its object (who is the agent, who the patient)? What do the demos have right to deliberate about?

The democratist presupposes that A must rule not only A (genuine self-rule: the attempt to lead a good life and suppress the libido dominandi in one's own heart), but also may rule B (even when B is not A's child or other dependent). Further, A and B may combine to tell C what to do with C's person and property and back up their will by force. We may find this way of putting the question intolerably abstract, but that is because we are always in the middle of the muddle of our predecessors' making and sometimes it takes an astringent abstraction to untangle the knot. We are never faced with the "state of nature" (an abstraction Acton rejected, but which one might charitably interpret as a thought experiment). Rather, each of us is always situated in the context produced by the millions of actions of our fellows--who also seem to presuppose that we may all rule one another. And so I was less interested in learning that Acton was "a democrat at heart"--why not simply a libertarian at heart?--or that there might be such a thing as "libertarian democracy," than why such a description would be significant in the first place.

The leviathan state of Acton's nightmares is alive and well, and while it is not called "totalitarian," nothing in principle is admitted to be beyond its range of possible action. How much terror it must resort to (often, with obscene irony, while prosecuting a "war on terror") is a tactical matter. The "ethical" question is considered settled. Hobbes has won. It is not clear to me what intellectual ammunition Acton the "idealist" libertarian had to discredit Hobbes the "realist" statist besides erudite warnings; but perhaps the job of discrediting the thought of one philosopher falls to another. Other books on Acton have failed to shed light on this point, and I have also come away from Power Tends to Corrupt no less empty-handed. I lay this fault at the feet, not of our author, but of his subject.

Acton referred to a "higher law" and by that term he may very well have meant the law of God, whom he worshipped at Mass, but he didn't spell that out. "Higher law" is as inoffensive to the modern ear--and about as content-free--as the "higher power" of the Alcoholics Anonymous pledge. It is God "at a distance," to recall a song popular during the first Gulf War. (At a safe distance, one might add.) If God is there, it is only as adjunctive and auxiliary to our pursuits. God has certainly not, according to the modern mind, spoken plainly about what he has done, is doing, and intends to do. Modernity uninstalled the theism program in Euro-American self-consciousness. Acton did not engineer a replacement.

Acton wrote as the seeds of this cultural sea-change were embedding themselves in academia. He had many battles to fight, however, not the least of which was the emancipation of Catholics in the realm. He paid some attention to Darwin, but never seems to have commented directly on the then-new biblical criticism. If Acton the Catholic historian was a modernist on this front (he died before Pope Saint Pius X formally condemned it), then he would not turn to the Bible as a source of instruction on the nature of political rule. Acton believed in conscience as "God's voice," Lazarski records, but conscience apparently untutored by verbal revelation. He believed in divine providence, but only as assisting men in the achievement of their goals, especially preventing the derailing of their humanistic train but, again, not as assuring the accomplishment of God's purposes. Acton famously opposed infallibility as a charism of the pope, but did he not withhold it from Scripture as well? What, for example, was Acton's view of his contemporary Bruno Bauer--who both befriended and tangled with Marx? Pursuing such questions may have impractically lengthened the book, but they also, in my opinion, would have enriched Lazarski's exploration of Acton's answer to the question of the "best regime."

The Bible might have been for Acton something to be reverenced, but not consulted, a worthy object of scholarly investigation and defense by competent Church scholars. He apparently saw no need, however, for his getting involved in that battle. Acton contented himself with general principles, like "liberty," which in his case it functioned as the "transcendental" that harmonized history's multitude of otherwise cacophonous facts. Only in Christianity, however, is liberty, like life, like truth, divinely personified. In Acton, as Lazarski reads him (and as I read him independently), liberty has a wraith-like existence that migrates from culture to culture, age to age, e.g., "departing" from Jerusalem for Athens (40), a substance that acquires new accidents, and accents, as it matures. But in what impersonal cosmos is this impersonal "growth" happening? Unfortunately, I see scant evidence, including all that Lazarski has marshaled and arranged, for the proposition that Christ himself functioned as more than a general principle in Acton's historiography (whatever may have been his religious devotion). We may have in Acton an early exemplar of the modern failure of integration of what a Catholic "personally believes" and what he is prepared to affirm and defend publicly.

All the many facts that Acton had at his command never could be enough for him to write his History of Liberty. That insufficiency might lie in the encyclopedic nature of his plan, and not necessarily in any psychological blocks to his "getting on with it." His insights into the facts pertinent to that history were fatally qualified by the limits of his grasp which, unlike Christ's, never comprehended the whole. Acton must have at least implicitly assented to the proposition that in Christ all wisdom is deposited (Colossians 2:3). Christ understands the whole and all its constituent "facts," and in Him they all cohere (Colossians 1:17), and has revealed the framework for interpreting them. Whatever we learn, Christ knew first. Reason is a tool, however, not a principle on a par with faith: the power to draw inferences confers no power to generate true propositions from which to draw them. Left to itself, reason cannot supply one universal truth as the ground of deduction or induction, but God can do so by his revelation in nature and Scripture. The believing Christian holds that God has actually done so. Now following Catholic tradition, Acton held that all roads of human reasoning, regardless of their objects, lead to God. But from what do they lead thence? The Catholic preferential option for "natural theology" is revealed at this point. If the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom as well as its end, its alpha as well as its omega, then reason must start, and not just end, with God.

Any interest in Acton's famous rejection of Pius IX's claim of papal infallibility can divert attention from the more general skepticism he may have felt toward any claim of infallible divine revelation. Lazarski does not ignore Acton's struggles within the Church, but our author's political focus understandably limited the attention he could pay to it, which strife most probably, as he notes, contribute to Acton's failure to complete his "Madonna of the future." It took all Acton had to get on paper what little he did. He had no talent for, or apparently even interest in, explaining what he was doing in terms that would satisfy a philosopher.

In contrast to Scripture's concreteness, Acton waxed platonic about liberty. Although he warned against reification (which occupational hazard of the intellectual Whitehead called "misplaced concreteness"), he himself seems to have committed that offense against clear thought when it came to his key term. For "liberty" refers to personal agency, but is not itself the agent. It is an idea that concrete individuals, who have and create histories, may think about; the idea itself, however, does not, cannot, have a history. (Realizing this, Eric Voegelin altered the course of his research in the 1940s.)

Papal support for arts bolstered Rome's prestige, making it the "metropolis of the Renaissance," but for Acton, the indulging of clerical senses and the Reformation-provoking indulgence racket were not the worst things about pre-Reformation Catholicism. The cardinal sin was rather the Church's abandoning her critical role in counterbalancing royal power, reminding it of its limits under God. There was instead a desire to achieve unlimited political authority for the papacy, making it a supreme global power, attracting in due course the admiration of the first utilitarian and proto-Social Darwinist, Machiavelli. If I may quote the words of Acton's on this point (referenced and paraphrased, but not quoted verbatim, by Lazarski):

"Times had greatly changed when a Pope [Innocent IV] declared his amazement at a nation which bore in silence the tyranny of their king. In modern times the absolute monarchy in Catholic countries has been, next to the Reformation, the greatest and most formidable enemy of the Church, for here she again lost in great measure her natural influence. In France, Spain, and Germany, by Gallicanism, Josephinism, and the Inquisition, she came to be reduced to a state of dependence, the more fatal and deplorable that the clergy were often instrumental in maintaining it. All these phenomena were simply an adaptation of Catholicism to a political system incompatible with it in its integrity; an artifice to accommodate the Church to the requirements of absolute government, and to furnish absolute princes with a resource which was elsewhere supplied by Protestantism. The consequence has been, that the Church is at this day [1859] more free under Protestant than under Catholic governments--in Prussia or England than in France or Piedmont, Naples or Bavaria." ("Political Thoughts on the Church," Selected Writings of Lord Acton, ed. J. F. Fears, Volume III, 32.)

The denouement of the Church's centuries-long support of state absolutism was her subordination to the modern state, however unwilling. This new settlement put the Church in her place, as it were, as soon as it was politically opportune. What is called "Catholic Social Teaching," whose articulation is historically a matter of yesterday's labors, amounts to the Church's changing of her tune from absolutist statist blues to social democratic rhapsody--which does not comport well with her conceit that she speaks with divinely protected authority, yesterday, today, and forever.

At the end of Part One, Lazarski asks: "Are not current Western governments aspiring to display the same fondness for specialist, experts, and jurists; a similar faith in rational schemes; and a corresponding disregard for moral considerations, much as did the enlightened government of ancient regime" that Acton excoriated (102)? To ask this rhetorical question is to answer it. The theoreticians of the modern welfare-warfare state do not recognize any limits to their scope of action. They are all Machiavellians now, out or closeted. But while this may make Acton a prophet, it does not recommend him as a political pathfinder, an estate to which he did not in any case aspire. Power is a moral hazard, he warned in so many words, so let's limit it. Let's try to have a "mature democracy," as they do in America. Easier said than done, for as Acton well knew, the battle is primarily against the libido dominandi, the insidious "enemy within."

On a more personal note. Power Tends to Corrupt has not forced me to discard my view of Acton as a "libertarian hero" (expressed in 2006 on LewRockwell.com): his lifelong focus on the struggle for liberty in history entitles him to that designation regardless of what more rigorous anarcho-capitalist libertarians have written. Not that I claimed consistency for Acton, especially on the question of socialism. (But Lazarski's book has reminded me that I prefer Acton inconsistent to any libertarian pamphleteer consistent.) In the light of Lazarski's documentation of Acton's less than hardcore view of free markets, however, I have concluded that the use of "libertarian" to describe him at the very least risks equivocation or anachronism. Kelly Creed's insinuation, however, that I propagandistically cast Acton in the role of "classical liberal stuntman" depends for its force on her reader's ignorance of my earlier essay and the pains I took there to qualify locating him within the libertarian tradition. Hers was an inexcusable misreading, but as both essays are available on line, interested readers should ignore my protest and decide for themselves.

But my esteem for Professor Lazarski's achievement in Power Tends to Corrupt, to whose rich canvas I have not done justice, does not depend on settling that difference of opinion: I unreservedly recommend it to every student of Acton, novice, apprentice, or master.

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Sabtu, 20 April 2013

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This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. This text refers to the Bibliobazaar edition.

  • Published on: 2008-11-13
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 10.00" h x 1.23" w x 7.50" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 544 pages

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Offers practical tips for making sauces, as well as hundreds of recipes for stocks, glac
Title: Sauces
Author: Peterson, James
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
Publication Date: 2008/09/22
Number of Pages: 612
Binding Type: HARDCOVER
Library of Congress: 2007046546

  • Sales Rank: #7278901 in Books
  • Published on: 2011-09-30
  • Binding: Hardcover

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Breathtakingly thorough
By Stephen Sykes
"Sauces" is a book for professionals and serious home chefs and is the first book I've seen that compares and contrasts both classical and modern sauce-making methods. The author emphasizes the importance of quality stocks in sauce-making and points out that a stock appropriate for older, roux-based techniques is often inappropriate for more modern, reduction techniques. This explains why the stocks formulated in, say, the French Culinary Institute's "Salute to Healthy Cooking" are so much more concentrated than those in Julia Child's "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" and other classic French cooking texts. Peterson also includes methods for pan-prepared (integral) sauces that offer the professional and home cook alike a rapid way to prepare an impressive array of fine foods.

93 of 95 people found the following review helpful.
Easily the most important recipe reference for your kitchen
By B. Marold
`Sauces, 2nd Edition ' by leading food teacher and writer James Peterson is high on my list of important, valuable single subject cookbooks which should be in the kitchen library of any serious amateur chef or professional chef in training.

The very first impression is the very large number of named sauces listed in the table of contents. And, it should be no surprise at all that almost every one of these sauces has a French name, even if the sauce is based on a non-French ingredient such as Sauce Hongroise based on paprika and Sauce Porto based on Port (originating in Portugal). Of the chapters covering eighteen different kinds of sauce, only one, the chapter on `Salad Sauces, Vinaigrettes, Salsas, and Relishes' has even the slimmest majority of recipes with a non-French cant, with its large selection of Spanish and New World salsas, south Asian chutneys, Greek mint lamb sauce, and American cranberry sauce.

The book opens with a short history of sauces, which becomes more interesting the more you know about Medieval and Renaissance cooking. The book even gives something missing from books on medieval cooking, the outline of an actual recipe for the ubiquitous verjuice, which was the Medieval and Renaissance source for sour tastes, which could be prepared from either grapes or apples. Just for fun, Peterson gives a few samples of Medieval and Renaissance recipes. The most interesting observation I found for culinary history was the statement that in the Middle Ages, sauces were thickened by pureeing meat, which is not at all surprising, as Medieval nobility looked down on all vegetable products (such as flour?) and preferred animal ingredients and spices in their dishes. The high point of the last three centuries for sauce making was the advent of more broadly based cookbooks for regional and bourgeois cooking and the systemization of classic sauce making by Antonin Careme, the `father of modern French cooking' (See Ian Kelly's biography of Careme, `Cooking for Kings').

After the historical chapter and two better than average chapters on equipment and ingredients come the fifteen (15) chapters of recipes on:

Stocks, glaces, and essences

Liaisons: An Overview

White Sauces for Meat and Vegetables

Brown Sauces

Stock-Based and NonIntegral Fish Sauces

Integral Meat Sauces

Integral Fish and Shellfish Sauces

Crustacean Sauces

Jellies and Chauds-Froids

Hot Emulsified Egg Yolk Sauces

Mayonnaise Based Sauces

Butter Sauces

Salad Sauces, Vinaigrettes, Salsas, and Relishes

Purees and Puree Thickened Sauces

Dessert Sauces

The quality and authority of this book, especially with the added weight of a second enlarged and corrected edition is such that it is much more useful to state why you need this book rather than try to criticize it or find improvements.

First, this book is the very best reference I can think of when you need a sauce and don't remember how to make it or want to improve on the last time you made it. This use is valuable even if you never make any sauces other than vinaigrettes, marinara sauce, gravies, and bechamel sauces for Mac and cheese or creamed chipped beef. This book is my standard reference for all such purposes and it has NEVER let me down! The existence of this book always makes me wonder why restaurant chefs always include a chapter of pantry recipes for stocks and sauces. Except for the really finicky writers such as Judy Rodgers (Zuni Caf�) and Thomas Keller (French Laundry, Bouchon), Peterson's recipes will be about as good as you will find in any restaurant chef's book. So, you may prefer coming to this book even when an author gives us his version, as this will mean that all your stocks and sauces will be made from a common point of view and a common palate. This book is better than any other source in that it simply has everything you can possibly need.

Second, this book gives excellent recipes for sauce-based dishes, especially for seafood such as lobster, shrimp, salmon, clams, and scallops. For many fish dishes, the sauce is the dish, as cooking the fish is usually no more than the ten minutes it takes to poach, broil, bake, sautee, or fry the little critter(s).

Third, the book is an excellent source when you need alternatives. You need a fancy sauce for lobster, but you don't have time to create a stock from lobster shells and go through all the other steps needed for a good shellfish sauce. If you really need to impress, consider a homemade remoulade or aioli (variations on mayonnaise), which can be done in a few minutes in a food processor with eggs, oil, and a little mustard, plus flavorings.

Fourth, this book is simply the very best source I can think of to enlarge your repertoire of basic dishes and elements of dishes which can be swapped in to change a simple steamed vegetable into an elegant side dish. I am constantly pleased with the power of serendipity, that chance encounter with a great, easy recipe which enables you to cook up a yummy dish without having to consult a cookbook, let alone remember in which book the recipe was. My very first use of this book produced such an encounter when I was looking up the recipe for beurre blanc and discovered beurre citron (lemon butter sauce). This encounter also revealed that there is a considerable mystique connected with beurre blanc, as it is considered difficult to make. As I make it regularly as a dressing for fish, I can assure you that it is relatively easy and worth the small difficulty involved. It is also interesting to learn from this book that beurre blanc was also one of the sharpest weapons of Nouvelle Cuisine in banishing flour based sauces from restaurant sauces. So, with one fell swoop, you can be trendy, healthy, and haute cuisine with a single recipe. Wow!

If you wish to be a serious cook, you need this book!

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[Q433.Ebook] Download Washington and Hamilton: The Alliance That Forged America, by Stephen F. Knott, Tony Williams

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Washington and Hamilton: The Alliance That Forged America, by Stephen F. Knott, Tony Williams

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Washington and Hamilton: The Alliance That Forged America, by Stephen F. Knott, Tony Williams

The Untold Story of the Extraordinary Alliance That Forged Our Nation and the Unlikely Duo Behind It: George Washington & Alexander Hamilton

In the wake of the American Revolution, the Founding Fathers faced a daunting task: overcome their competing visions to build a new nation, the likes of which the world had never seen. As hostile debates raged over how to protect their new hard-won freedoms, two men formed an improbable partnership that would launch the fledgling United States: George Washington and Alexander Hamilton.

Washington and Hamilton chronicles the unlikely collaboration between these two conflicting characters at the heart of our national narrative: Washington, the indispensable general devoted to classical virtues, and Hamilton, an ambitious officer and lawyer eager for fame of the noblest kind.

Working together, they laid the groundwork for the institutions that govern the United States to this day and protected each other from bitter attacks from Jefferson and Madison, who considered their policies a betrayal of the republican ideals they had fought for.

Yet while Washington and Hamilton's different personalities often led to fruitful collaboration, their conflicting ideals also tested the boundaries of their relationship―and threatened the future of the new republic.

From the rumblings of the American Revolution through the fractious Constitutional Convention and America's turbulent first years, this captivating history reveals the stunning impact of this unlikely duo that set the United States on the path to becoming a superpower.

  • Sales Rank: #93419 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-09-15
  • Released on: 2015-09-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.10" h x 1.30" w x 6.20" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 352 pages

Review
"An elegant dual study resurrects Alexander Hamilton as one of George Washington's most valued advisers...Knott and Williams expertly show how Hamilton was often attacked because Washington was untouchable. " - Kirkus

"Williams and Knott's thesis-that Washington and Hamilton built the institutions that led to the United States emerging as a superpower in the 20th century-adds a new angle to the enduring public fascination with the founding fathers." - Publishers Weekly

"This readable narrative successfully describes the ways in which the 'indispensable alliance' between Washington and Hamilton was a significant factor in America's founding." - Library Journal

A splendid joint biography of America's founding statesmen...studies the volatile but ultimately durable alliance of George Washington and Alexander Hamilton, showing that constitutional statesmanship is not some mythical creature.

"The authors themselves collaborate well in Washington and Hamilton. Their clear and consistent prose, coupled with a heavy reliance on primary sources and wide range of carefully chosen secondary ones, dispel any notion that a work of history must trade off scholarship for accessibility...the result is a book well suited to both novices needing sufficient background to gain a full understanding and academics in need of an authoritatively referenced, thoughtfully analytical account." - Journal of the American Revolution

"There is much good sense in the authors' concluding opinion, that Americans would do well to rediscover the role that the team of Washington and Hamilton played in creating "a strong union." " - The Weekly Standard

""Washington and Hamilton: The Alliance that Forged America" is not yet another life of Hamilton, nor is it a joint biography of Washington and Hamilton. Instead, it is the history of a remarkable collaboration between two very different individuals - part odd couple, part dynamic duo - that resulted in a joint achievement neither the senior partner (Washington) nor the junior partner (Hamilton) could have accomplished alone." - The Washington Times

"The musical's game-changing, sometimes fraught father-son relationship fires up "Washington & Hamilton: The Alliance That Forged America." Two historians, Canton resident Stephen F. Knott and Tony Williams, cover the pair's shared depths of ambition and honor, plus their battlefield-deepened bond. " - Boston Globe

About the Author
Stephen Knott is a Professor of National Security Affairs at the United States Naval War College in Newport, RI. Prior to accepting his position at the Naval War College, Knott was Co-Chair of the Presidential Oral History Program at the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia.�Tony Williams taught history and literature for ten years, and has a Master's in American History from Ohio State University. He is currently a full-time author who lives in Williamsburg, Virginia, with his wife and children.

Excerpt. � Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

INTRODUCTION

Americans have perennially been fascinated with our Founding Fathers. For example, the amicable relationship between Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, or the volatile relationship of Jefferson and John Adams, has captured the American imagination for almost two hundred years. Many excellent books about these partnerships have been written in addition to individual biographies of each and practically every Founding Father himself.

But one of the more important founding collaborations has been overlooked by readers: the unlikely partnership of George Washington and Alexander Hamilton. This extraordinary alliance between a wealthy Virginia planter and a brash immigrant from the Caribbean helped to win the Revolutionary War and establish a "new order for the ages." These men fought together for the better part of twenty-five years to win independence and forge a new nation. Indeed, no other founding collaboration was as important to achieving victory and nationhood as Washington and Hamilton's.

Theirs was an unlikely alliance, for George Washington and Alexander Hamilton could not have been more different. Washington was a gentleman farmer from the patrician colony of Virginia and the owner of a great estate enriched by the labor of African slavery. As a rising member of the Virginia gentry, he satisfied the expectations of his station by entering into public service. Hamilton, on the other hand, was an illegitimate child-the "bastard brat of a Scotch peddler," as John Adams brusquely put it once-and an immigrant from the West Indies. A self-made man, he made his way to America on his own and earned his positions in the army and the government. Despite their differences, Washington and Hamilton shared a lot of common ground. They collaboratively pursued their vision of a continental republic throughout the Revolutionary War and through the founding of the nation. They both embraced the revolutionary ideals of the era, though with Hamilton usually playing a subordinate role to Washington, who was seen as essential to the successful creation of America.

If George Washington was the "indispensable man" of the American founding, then Washington and Hamilton's collaboration was the "indispensable alliance" that determined the outcome of the fight for (and founding of) the United States. This is not to diminish the other important relationships that reveal much about the American founding: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson crafted the Declaration of Independence, suffered a partisan rupture, and wrote a famous exchange of letters discussing the nature of the Revolution. Hamilton and Jefferson feuded heatedly for years over how best to preserve republican principles and offered contrasting visions of American institutions. Fellow Virginians James Madison and Jefferson struggled for liberty in Virginia and then bolstered each other as they fought what they perceived to be dark forces that threatened the republican principles of the new nation.

What makes Washington and Hamilton unique from these other founding collaborations was that their bond was forged in the crucible of the Revolutionary War. Unlike their great contemporaries, Washington and Hamilton saw war up close and personal; they were brothers in arms in a sense, and as any combat veteran will attest, battle is a bonding experience like no other. Their mutual experiences helped them form the core cadre of leadership in the struggle for independence from Great Britain and win the war against overwhelming odds. They drove the nationalist forces that would culminate in a more perfect union formed at the Constitutional Convention and ratified in 1788. They breathed life into the institutions of the early republic while setting important precedents as president and secretary of the treasury. Thus, their joint efforts can be seen as the "indispensable alliance" of the founding. Their story has all the elements of a Shakespearean drama-war, the quest for fame, scandal, the birth of a new nation. Additionally, Washington and Hamilton's story bolsters the somewhat unfashionable notion that the actions of great individuals can influence the course of history.

The months in which they first met remain shrouded in mystery, and little of what they wrote, especially in the early years of their relationship, reveals anything beyond a professional collaboration. How then can we describe their relationship? The word "friendship" does not seem to apply. Indeed, one wonders whether Washington can accurately be described as having any friends. He was purposefully distant and aloof as he jealously guarded his reputation, rarely letting his guard down, even with those who were considered intimates. He constantly warned others about the dangers of familiarity and scrupulously kept his relations formal. Hamilton, for his part, had some very close friends, such as John Laurens, and often gushed with emotions characteristic of eighteenth-century romanticism. But he never expressed himself in that way with Washington.

Washington and Hamilton may not have been best friends for the entire time they knew each other, but they shared a strong and lasting admiration, trust, and even affection for each other that had a significant impact upon the country. Some have described the childless Washington as playing the role of a surrogate father to the illegitimate Hamilton. Richard Brookhiser, in his excellent study of George Washington and fatherhood, notes the "group of surrogate children was his staff during the Revolutionary War, which he called ‘his family.'" This view probably comes closest to the mark, since Hamilton and the other staff members deferred to their "father" with respect and admiration for his virtue, though at times engaging in youthful rebellion. Many interpretations related to Washington's surrogate fatherhood for Hamilton border on the Freudian and offer little insight; for instance, Pulitzer Prize–winning author Ron Chernow argued that Hamilton had "suppressed Oedipal rage" toward Washington. Hamilton may have been driven incessantly by the desire for honor and glory, and this may have impeded his relationship with Washington, but Hamilton (unlike John Adams and others) was not competitive with Washington.

Perhaps it would be best to leave the term describing Washington and Hamilton's collaboration inexact. We might revel in the mystery. In the end, the story of their collaboration is what matters: it is not only interesting and dramatic, it is also essential to understanding how America came to be the great nation it is today. Their characters were animated by different qualities, they often reached conflicting conclusions, and they lent different abilities in the service of the republic. Nevertheless, they were both guided by a sense of American nationalism, working closely together to create an enduring republic that guaranteed liberty to its citizens. Thus, as we explore their special collaboration here, we will use the terms "friendship" and "partnership" interchangeably throughout the book, while recognizing the limitations of both terms in providing a precise understanding of their relationship. In the end, it is clear there was a genuine bond between the pair, and together they defeated the superpower of their day and founded a nation that became the superpower of our time.

Most helpful customer reviews

30 of 31 people found the following review helpful.
THE key relationship among the Founding Fathers
By H. P.
Of the many, many books that have been written on George Washington, the American Revolution, and the founding of our nation, as far as I know this is the first to focus on the relationship between Washington and Alexander Hamilton. Such a book is long overdue—Hamilton remains our most underappreciated Founding Father and his career almost entirely involved working with the Father of our Country. And that is perhaps the book’s greatest weakness—that relationship was so integral to Hamilton’s career that the best book on the relationship is still probably Ron Chernow’s biography of Hamilton. Chernow’s biography of Washington, on the other hand, curiously has little to say about Hamilton (Knott and Williams reference Chernow often). That is a mistake, I think. Hamilton was just as important to Washington as Washington was to Hamilton.

Washington and Hamilton starts with short biographies of each leading up to the beginning of their relationship during the Revolutionary War. Knott and Williams are highly critical of Hamilton for breaking off the relationship, how he treated (or didn’t treat) Washington after that, and for his role in the Newburgh Conspiracy. Their criticism is somewhat misplaced in my opinion. The relationship between the two was simply not that important at that point.

After both playing prominent roles in bringing about a new constitutional order, Washington and Hamilton’s renewed relationship really began to blossom when Hamilton joined Washington’s cabinet as Secretary of the Treasury. Here I think Knott and Williams make their biggest mistake by omitted most of the work that rightly earned Hamilton the title Father of our Government (Chernow’s term, I believe). Instead they choose to focus more on his role after leaving the government, when the Federalists were feuding with what became the Democratic-Republican Party. Knott and Williams harshly criticize Jefferson here, not unfairly. Monroe and Adams are also targets of their scorn, with Madison escaping largely unscathed. It’s one of the great ironies of that period that Jefferson won the battle, Hamilton won the war, but Jefferson won the press conference. So to speak.

It’s a well written, solid work, although again a reader is probably better off starting with Chernow’s biography of Hamilton. Knott and Williams are very much pro-Federalist/anti-Democratic-Republican, but that’s fair and now you know it going in. They correctly see the importance of the war to Washington and Hamilton’s views and understand Washington’s brilliance was his judgment in leveraging Hamilton’s brilliance. They also appreciate that brilliance, although it doesn’t get its full desserts without a focus on his tenure as Secretary of the Treasury and only limited space devoted to the Federalist Papers. Ultimately, that’s its greatest failing. 352 pages doesn’t do its subject matter justice.

Disclosure: I received a copy of Washington and Hamilton through NetGalley.

23 of 25 people found the following review helpful.
The coalition that formed America
By Agent 355
Over the centuries there have been hundreds of books written on George Washington, “Father of His Country” and Alexander Hamilton, "Father of the Constitution," so what is left to say on this subject. But what I found riveting about Stephen F. Knott & Tony Williams book “Washington & Hamilton” is how they are shown individually and together struggled with victory and defeat in both their military and personal lives. And how even though George and Alexander had two very different personalities, came together as one alliance to make sure that the independence they fought for in the American Revolution would continue in the vision of The United States of America.
During the beginning chapters the authors beautifully show how Washington & Hamilton filled with enormous ambitions for their lives, but through very different upbringings, those parallel aspirations would not come to fruition until they were on the battlefield fighting on the same side. The details of how each man ended up in their rightful places during the war brilliantly written with the authors describing in detail George and Alexander’s life up to that point. Like all great battles the two men had their fair share of ups and downs, at times having limited troops to fight off the British, but in the end, America came out the victor. It was during this time that Washington & Hamilton had a falling out over a misinterpreted situation. After the war Washington decided to retire from public service, believing he would quietly retire in Virginia on his plantation for the remaining of her life. While Alexander much younger at only thirty years old figured his future was just beginning, so he opened a law practice in New York City. Little did either man know that their country would need them during the defining moment that would forever propel America from obscurity to the highest power of the world. The authors again weave brilliantly the process that created the Constitution of the United States. Leading the reader through the Articles of Confederation, the Delegates, Federalists & Anti- Federalists, Ratification and the Bill of Rights. During the creation of the Constitution, the "Founding Fathers" did not always see eye to eye on the outline of the document, but they all knew that the country needed such a governing document to protect the freedoms of the American people from future tyranny.
As the birth of a new nation formed, the Founding Fathers could entirely agree though on the fact that George Washington was the "indispensable man." Known to his fellow citizens as a national figure, it seemed only fitting to make him the first commander in chief. The final chapters of the book, construct the bitter relationship between President Washington and Vice President Adams and continued difficulty with the Secretary of State, Thomas Jefferson. Washington must also maneuver as the first President of the U.S.A. while continuing to remember the future of this new nation. While Alexander Hamilton would become the first Secretary of the Treasury, forming the first bank of the United States, allowing the country to have finally financial stability.
As the book ends with the timeline of the deaths of both Washington and Hamilton, the reader is shown how each man indeed was thought of by his fellow countrymen. Washington, through Hamilton's help, gives the great General Washington the send off a right," Father of his Country", deserves. Hamilton killed in a duel by Aaron Burr and unfortunately seems to be the only real fact most Americans know about him. But the policies and decisions Washington & Hamilton made during the establishment of America have forever impacted this great country. Giving us as Americans a lasting government, and a nation that has prospered because of the sacrifice of both Washington & Hamilton to make the United States of America a perfect union.

18 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
The volatile yet brilliant Hamilton and the steady
By John Ericson
You can't find two more disparate personalities than these two Founding Fathers. The volatile yet brilliant Hamilton and the steady, deliberate, extraordinary leader in Washington. It is a testament to the first President and Commander of the Continental forces that he could discern the genius of those around him and maximize their benefits and limit their risks. Washington and Hamilton, the Alliance that Forged America, brilliantly analyzes this key relationship and how it shaped a nation. This is the best work by Tony Williams and Co-Author Stephen Knott thus far. It's rare that you can take two well known figures and find some depths to plumb that we haven't already heard. This book adds to our understanding of these two pivotal figures in a compelling way. Don't miss it.

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