Adams, Henry (1838–1918)

AuthorRobert Dawidoff
Pages26

Page 26

Born to a family whose service to the Constitution was matched by a reverence for it "this side of idolatry," Henry Brooks Adams served the Constitution as a historian of the nation it established. His great History of the United States during the Administrations of Jefferson and Madison as well as his biographies of JOHN RANDOLPH and ALBERT GALLATIN and his Documents Relating to New England Federalism remain standard sources for the events and characters of the early republican years during which the Constitution was being worked out in practice. Among the highlights of these works are Adams's ironic account of THOMAS JEFFERSON'S exercise of his constitutional powers in the face of his particularist scruples, the Republican hostility to the federal judiciary, and the fate of STATES ' RIGHTS views. In reply to HERMANN VON HOLST'S criticism of the Constitution, Adams wrote in 1876, "the Constitution has done its work. It has made a nation." Adams's own disillusion with this nation affected his writings. Like others of his generation, he became more determinist as he became less sanguine, and the History shows this shift in his view as the Constitution is described becoming an engine of American nationalism, democracy, expansion, and centralization. In his novels, historical theory...

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