Modeling his latest book on Richard Hofstadter's 1948 classic The
American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It, the renowned
historian Paul Escott has composed ten concise but deeply learned and
incisive biographies of key Americans in the years leading up to the
Civil War. Escott profiles Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, Harriet Beecher
Stowe, Frederick Douglass, Stephen A. Douglas, Jefferson Davis, Abraham
Lincoln, Horace Greeley, Albion Tourgée, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
illustrating how these men and women established, embodied, and advanced
the opposing political and cultural trends that culminated in the great
crisis of the nineteenth century.
Covering figures from across a wide political spectrum, Escott reveals
numerous streams and facets of nineteenth-century American political
thought to illuminate the forces, from slavery to suffrage, underlying
this greatest of conflicts. Written accessibly and with a magisterial
command of the subject, The Civil War Political Tradition is both a
perfect introduction to this history and a penetrating new meditation on
its players.