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The Colliers explain the birth of big government in the U.S.

Puss and Boots is a collectors item, beautiful!

Good Variety and 100% Documented Quotes

Wanda Lincoln

How Jim Crow came to rule the Reconstructed SouthThis volume is divided into six chapter, each focusing on a key element in the Reconstruction struggle: (1) A Great War Ends and a New Conflict Begins defines the twin problems of how to treat the freedmen and how the Southern states should be readmitted to the Union. On both these topics there were wide ranges of opinion, from the radical Republicans who wanted to punish the South for the Civil War to common citizens who wanted to see the freed slaves shipped back to Africa. What would become important would be which political faction controlled the government. (2) A New President Tries to Reconstruct the South makes it very clear that Andrew Johnson's political motivation was not to give black Americans the vote but rather to bring down the aristocratic plantation owners he had hated most of his life. Consequently, he allowed the Southern states to adopt Black Codes that under cut the end of slavery. This was what galvanized the radical Republicans in Congress to go after Johnson himself. (3) The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson takes the position that the president was going out of the way to antagonize his congressional opponents and that the basis for the impeachment was obviously unconstitutional. However, they clearly dismiss the idea of Johnson being heroic or worthy of praise for his efforts. (4) The Tide Turns when the Republicans gained firm control of the Congress, because of the votes of not only blacks in the South but "scalawags" (poor farmers who felt the Civil War had been fought to preserve the power of the wealthy planters). (5) The South Strikes Back focuses primarily on the rise of the Ku Klux Klan as a reaction to the Northern attempt to promote black equality and the end of Reconstruction with the election of Rutherford B. Hayes, who had promised to give the South a free hand in dealing with the freedmen and other political issues. (6) The South Redeemed looks at how white supremacy was entrenched by the end of the 19th-century and officially endorsed by the Supreme Court's 1896 ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson.
The specific breakdown of chapters in "Reconstruction and the Rise of Jim Crow" certainly gives the big picture of what happened in the South after the Civil War. Rather than being tangled up with the scandalous woes of the Grant administration, the focus is simply on what the North tried to do to the South and how the South responded. Given that the issue of voting and other civil rights for blacks in the South would not be "settled" (for lack of a better word), until the 1960s it is important for students of American history to know that the system of what we now call the Jim Crow South was in place before the end of the 19th century. The book is illustrated with historic etchings and photographs, as well as some choice political cartoons (of which you can never have too many in a history book). This particular volume shows the strength of this series in focusing on a key issue, such as Reconstruction, within a specific time frame, to wit 1864 to 1896, which overlaps other volumes look at concurrent issues (e.g., the rise of industry, the settlement of the west). I know this series is designed for secondary students, but I think this approach to learning about American history would be useful at any level of study.


Silkscreen the Revolution!The book itself is simply beautiful -- with scores of pictures representing each of the major poster styles produced in Cuba since the Revolution. There is sympathy for the Revolution, but no preachyness about the glory of equally available state-rationed asprin or the easy equality of justice in the tropical gulags.
But the book is only about the revolution to give these art works context. It is a book about the brilliant visual artists who provided the color and design splash to their Communist revolution. Each of the posters is a visual treat -- I especially like the Army Chess Tournament poster (a hand-grenade forming the body of a Knight) and a few of the abstract Vietnamese-solidarity posters.
Mr Cushing has done a fabulous job learning about the authors of the posters and he has made a brilliant first effort to understand and celebrate communist poster art in an increasingly non-communist world.
Once you get beyond the tedious and slavish devotion to French Belle Epoch posters among the poster art chattering class, there are too few great poster books as it is -- even of WW2 propaganda posters -- this clearly ranks among them. And to have it be about such a great and underrepresented area of poster knowledge is doubly terrific.
This is a first rate art book and a first rate history book. And if you like poster art at all, this ought to be on your shelf.
Viva Cushing!


From a nation of farmers to industrialization in 30 years(1) The Power of Technology is one of the most impressive chapters in this entire series, laying out how American industrialization begins with the creation of the textile industry, which benefited from the invention of the steam engine, which meant factories no longer had to rely on waterpower and could now be located in cities. The Colliers make it clear that in the creation of the American industrial system everything was tied to everything else. Steam-powered factories meant more coal, better railroads and stronger locomotives, more high-quality steel, more oil, better communication system, so on and so forth. Students will certainly get a sense for how this radically transformed the country within the lives of two generations. (2) The Coming of the Railroad looks at the transportation system as setting the pattern for other industries. The railroad system was built haphazardly, by people looking for quick profits, with widespread abuses. Eventually, as this book illustrates, the Federal government would have to step in and begin regulating businesses. (3) The Rise of the Large Corporations attempts to explain the economic principles at play during Industrialization. Here students learn about fun concepts like limited liability, liquidity, corporation as artificial (but immortal) persons, competition, pools and trusts. Although the chapter touches on several of the "robber barons," it is John D. Rockefeller who's business career is presented as the exemplar of his kind.
If the first three chapters of this volume deal with the economic upside of Industrialization, the last three deal with the problematic aspects: (4) The Problems With Industrialization basically comes down to the fact that the captains of industry were treating human beings the same way they did raw materials and railroad cars. One mill in Waterbury, Connecticut had 16,000 accidents, 11,287 casualties, and 60,000 surgical dressings given to workers in one year. This chapter documents the plight of American workers during the last half of the 19th-century and adds insult to injury by looking at the popularity of Herbert Spencer's theory of Social Darwinism, which effectively endorsed this treatment. The government's policy of laissze-faire and the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Lochner v. New York makes it clear the government favored the corporations over the workers. (5) The Workers Fight Back details some of the most notable attempts (and failures) by workers to improve their pay and conditions. If the previous chapter detailed the problems with industrialization, then this chapter looks at the first failures to find a solution. (6) Government Starts to Regulate Industry tells young readers of the first chink in the armor of what we would now call Big Business. Somewhat ironically, it was the farmers and not the factory workers who were able to affect the first government regulations by having their congressmen take advantage of the Constitutional provision that required the government to regulate commerce among the states. With that opening the first minor regulatory reforms of the nation's railroads could be advanced along with the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. By the close of this volume the lot of industrial workers has not improved substantially, the precedent has been set.
The organizational structure of the chapters in "The Rise of Industry" works extremely well and young students should have no problem picking up the logical development of this topic. The book is illustrated with historic photographs, etchings, and paintings, depicting the key figures and important events being discussed. The use of specific case studies, such as the railroads and Rockefeller, is quite effective. Even if teachers are using a different textbook for their secondary school history classes, they can still find in value in using not only this book but also this approach to American history. The result would be a much better understanding of the industrialization of the nation than they are likely to get from a standard textbook.


Meridel Le Sueur tells the story of Lincoln on the RiverIn 1828 Abraham Lincoln took a flatboat from Indiana, down the Mississippi River to New Orleans. La Sueur takes that journey and makes it a crucible in Lincoln's life. The boy in this story is seventeen years old, chaffing at having to live in a crowded cabin, eager to find out what there is to learn in books and from talking to other men, and eager to get out into the word and make something of himself. This is also the Lincoln coming to terms with deep thoughts on the subject of slavery.
"The River Road" is told in a style that can only be characterized as poetic prose, which rings true even more than Sandberg's celebrated biography. The effect is a portrait of the raw Lincoln who has more in common with the trees he chops down with his ax than with the eloquent orator of Gettysburg. "Much of his history you know," La Sueur tells us, "but you can always as you grow have more knowing, see this great live oak of our history more clearly." I have read dozens of books about Lincoln, and he has never felt more real to me than he does in this compelling wilderness tale. "River Road" was originally published in 1954 and was reprinted by Holy Cow! Press with 1991 woodcuts by Susan Kiefer Hughes.


Down-to-earth, practical advice on gardening

The Rock Star
This book covers this broad area in seven chapters: (1) The Struggle to Come establishes how bad the Great Depression was and then lays out the key causes of the economic collapse, including the laissez-faire attitude government took towards business; (2) The Progressive Era looks at T.R. as a social reformer and the efforts of Taft and Wilson in that regard; (3) The Roaring Twenties looks not at the glamour of the decade but at the changes in economic and social conditions (there is a nice side bar on the failed Prohibition experiment as well); (4) The Incredible Bull Market of the 1920s explains in clear and simple terms the big boom that came right before the big bust; (5) The Hardest Times tries to quantify exactly how bad the situation was during the Great Depression; (6) The Hundred Days looks at the vigorous start of FDR's administration, as well as the limited efforts of Hoover in trying to mitigate the harms of the economic collapse; and (7) The Depression Rolls On looks at the political assault on Roosevelt's New Deal from both sides of the political spectrum and how, in the end, it was the war time economy that finally ended the Depression.
Without the, shall I say, distraction of World War I (which is dealt with in the volume "The United States Enters the World Stage," which also covers the Spanish-American War), the Colliers are able to keep the focus on the economic causes of political reform in the United States during the first half of the 20th century. The volume is illustrated with historic pictures and etchings, although there are not as many of those wonderful editorial cartoons from this period as I like to find in these volumes. The "problem," of course, is how to use this approach in a traditional American history course, which does not readily allow for this type of approach. But if the result is that students can get a much better understanding of how the Depression was caused and what massive political changes came in its wake, then that is certainly worth pursuing. The Great Depression is one of two cataclysmic events in the history of the United States, the other being the Civil War, where the course of the nation was radically changed. Understanding the relationship between what came before and what came afterwards is of no small importance.