Presidents Above Party: The First American Presidency, 1789-1829George Washington's vision was a presidency free of party, a republican, national office that would transcend faction. That vision would remain strong in the administrations of John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, and John Quincy Adams, yet largely disappear under Andrew Jackson and his successors. This book is a comprehensive and pathbreaking study of the early presidency and the ideals behind it. Ralph Ketcham examines the roots of nonpartisan leadership in Western thought and the particular influences on the founding fathers. Intellectual and political profiles of the first six presidents and their administrations emphasize the construction each put on the office, the challenges he faced, and the compromises he did and did not make. The erosion of nonpartisanship under Andrew Jackson is presented as a counterpoint that helps define the early presidency and the permanent transition from it. Addressing the thoughtful citizen as well as the scholar, the author poses the fundamental questions about presidential leadership, then and now. The best study of the early presidency, this book is an intellectual portrait of the age that will challenge received notions of American history. |
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Page viii
... ( Leadership , 1978 ) has empha- sized the difference between a " negative liberty , " important in the seven- teenth and eighteenth centuries when the need in religion , politics , and economics was for freedom from " the authority of ...
... ( Leadership , 1978 ) has empha- sized the difference between a " negative liberty , " important in the seven- teenth and eighteenth centuries when the need in religion , politics , and economics was for freedom from " the authority of ...
Page ix
... leader of his party " ? Should the common judgment that it is impractical for an effective presi- dent to be , even in the Oval Office , anything other than a zealous party leader , go unchallenged ? Do we need to accept it as natural ...
... leader of his party " ? Should the common judgment that it is impractical for an effective presi- dent to be , even in the Oval Office , anything other than a zealous party leader , go unchallenged ? Do we need to accept it as natural ...
Page x
... leadership almost ax- iomatic in the twentieth century and the earnest , often - expressed views of the early presidents suggests that another viewpoint might be useful : What did the first six presidents intend to be in their unformed ...
... leadership almost ax- iomatic in the twentieth century and the earnest , often - expressed views of the early presidents suggests that another viewpoint might be useful : What did the first six presidents intend to be in their unformed ...
Page xiii
... Leadership in Anglo- America , 1600-1789 1. Morality , Commerce , and Leadership in Seventeenth- Century England / 13 Puritan Ideas of Leadership / 14 John Winthrop , Nehemias Americanus / 18 John Dryden : " Kings are the public pillars ...
... Leadership in Anglo- America , 1600-1789 1. Morality , Commerce , and Leadership in Seventeenth- Century England / 13 Puritan Ideas of Leadership / 14 John Winthrop , Nehemias Americanus / 18 John Dryden : " Kings are the public pillars ...
Page xiv
... Leadership and Party 9. Jefferson , Franklin , and the Commonness of Virtue / 167 Jefferson and the Problem of Virtue in a Republic / 167 Republican Leadership / 171 Franklin , Commerce , and Virtue / 176 Antiliberalism among the Common ...
... Leadership and Party 9. Jefferson , Franklin , and the Commonness of Virtue / 167 Jefferson and the Problem of Virtue in a Republic / 167 Republican Leadership / 171 Franklin , Commerce , and Virtue / 176 Antiliberalism among the Common ...
Contents
3 | |
11 | |
The American Presidency 17891837 | 87 |
Republican Dilemmas Virtue and Commerce Leadership and Party | 163 |
Notes | 237 |
Index | 261 |
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Abigail Adams accepted Adams's administration admired Alexander Pope American Revolution ancient Augustan Bernard Mandeville Bolingbroke Britain British Buren Cato century Charles Francis Adams Classical colonies commercial common conception Congress Constitution Convention corruption cultural Daniel Defoe defended Defoe democratic Dunciad early presidents economic eighteenth eighteenth-century election England English ethic executive power faction Federal Federalist Franklin George Hamilton ibid idea ideal ideology insisted J. Q. Adams Jackson Jacksonian James Madison Jeffersonian John Adams John Quincy Adams John Winthrop Jonathan Swift legislative legislature liberty Mandeville ment modern monarch Monroe moral nation Number opposition Parliament partisan partisanship patriot king patriot leader Pitt Plutarch political parties president's principles prosperity public philosophy Puritan quoted radical Whig republic republican Revolutionary role rulers scorned self-interest sense six presidents society sought spirit Thomas Jefferson thought tion Tory trade traditional United virtue virtuous Walpole Walpole's Walpolean Washington wealth Wilson Writings wrote York