201 62 62MB
English Pages [1266] Year 1981
L.
THE
• •*
NATION
GOMES OF AGE A ftople's History of the
Ante-BeUum\iears
MJE SMITH VOLIMKRHK S
UNITED STATES Paul
J.
Puglicse
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1858
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PENNSYLVANIA ^j^~^o S^f^
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\ Harrison, 182-183, 200 disavowal of annexation ol Texas, 200 elected President. 130 election of 1840, 182
election
t
184
1.
-'110-201
1228
/
INDEX
Van Buren, Martin fails to first
(cont.):
get nomination,
203-204
annual message to Congress, 171-172
fiscal affairs,
leadership, 405-406 oxen for drawing wagons, 432, 467
167-168
inauguration of, 163-168 Jacksonian Democrat, 8-10
125-216 panic of 1837, 166-167 political tactics and organization,
Peoria Train, 461-463 rules and regulations, 436 Santa Fe trade, 404-418
letters to Vatican,
9,
124-125, 128 Presidential candidate (1836), 123-126 resignation of, 42 secretary of state, 23-24 Van Rensselaer brothers, 792-793, 801-802 revolt of tenants, 801-802
Vancouver Island, 495-497 trade with Indians, 497-498 Vanderbilt, Cornelius, 780, 1048 Vanderlyn, John, 922, 925
Vann, Joseph, 96-97 Vegetarianism, 686-687, 882, 1102 Venezuela, 1065 Veracruz, 213-214
American
seizure,
219-222, 230-231
Vethake, Henry, 843 Vice President, selection process, 1071 Vicksburg, Mississippi, slave revolt, 119 Victoria, Queen of England, 818, 945 Vigilante groups, 314-317, 908
Henry, 1148-1149 Vincenne Indians, 310 Violence, 116, 256 (See also Riots and violence) Virgin River, 368-369 Virginia Establishment, 24-25 Virginia Resolution, 35, 39 Villard,
Vision of Columbus, Visitors:
guns and ammunition, 407 hunters and trappers, 432, 460 Indians and, 398-418, 433-440, 461-463
The (Barlow), 834
impressions of America, 242-267 writers interested in republican
government, 260-261 Votes and voting: election of 1828, 13 rights of immigrants, 189-190 universal suffrage, 253 (See also Electoral votes)
Wages and hours, 798, 801-802, 805, 843-845 Wagon trains or caravans, 373-374, 432-435 buffalo hunts, 408
cargoes, 405
Conestoga wagons, 460 custom duties, 411-412 dust on the trail, 490-491 electing captain and lieutenants, 433-434 fording rivers, 406-407 guides, 460, 463
survival
on
trail,
433, 435, 438-442
teamsters, 432
Walden (Thoreau), 993, 995, 1026 Walker, Joseph, 426, 438-439 Walker, Dr. Mary, 881 Walker, William, 1048 Walker's Pass, 441 Wall Street, 164, 177, 199, 842 depression of 1837, 178 financial crises, 837, 840 War of 1812, 27, 35, 217, 231, 340 Battle of the Thames, 123 effect on fur trade, 340 Ward, Henry Dana, 56 Ward, Julia (see Julia Ward Howe) Warsaw, Missouri, 313-314 schoolteacher driven out, 318, 32U slaveowners and slaves in, 317
Washington, George, 113, 1044, 1064, 1188 Bingham's painting of Washington crossing the Delaware, 951-952 corruption and political favoritism, 9 fiftieth anniversary of inauguration,
179-180
member of Freemasons,
3
officers serving with, 18
Washington, Lewis, 1157 Washington, D.C. (see District of Columbia) Washington Globe, 79, 203 Washington Territory, Union sentiment, 1153
Water cures (hydropathy), 865-866 Waterhouse, Dr. Benjamin, 77-78 Watts, Isaac, 544 Wayland, Francis, 844, 856-857 Wealth and money-making, 827-828 accumulation of, 827, 843-844 pursuit of, 259, 264 (See also Money and power) Webb, James Watson, 187, 905-906, 1123 Weber, Max, 844, 918 Webster, Daniel, 944, 947, 969, 985, 1094 Bank of the U.S., 28 on California annexation, 427 censure of Jackson, 138 Clay and, 180 death and funeral, 1086-1088 death of son, 236 debates with Hayne, 32-48, 56 defense of the "Union," 37-39, 70,
1068-1070, 1086-1087
INDEX election of 1836, 124, 130 flashy manner of dressing, 881 Fugitive Slave Law, 982
"South" West, 283 Southern, 302-305
on Jackson's inauguration, 17 on Kossuth, 1043
to Texas,
leader of Whigs, 1058 Mexican War, 229, 236
visitors' interest in,
strains
wagon
278, 903, 988 popularity of, 1085 presidential ambitions, 123-124, 129,
1080-1088 on Revenue Bill, 69-70 secretary of state, 184, 1048-1049, 1072
and accomplishments, 1086-1088
tariff issue, 5,
68
Webster, Edward, 236 Webster, Noah, 248, 252 Webster- Ashburton Treatv (1842), 188 Weed, Thurlow, 55, 129, 130, 1081, 1120,
1164-1165 Weld, Theodore, 195, 607-608, 610, 612, 618-621, 627, 633, 716, 718 Welles, Gideon, 1181, 1186 Wells, Horace, 861 West, Benjamin, 813, 921-922
Westward migration, books about, 431 characteristics, 284,
cost of land,
114, 172, 261,
283-499
330-344
and
trains (see
244
Wagon
trains)
Western lobby, 421, 424, 427 Yellowstone Expedition, 324-330, 345-354 West Point, officers in Mexican War, 217-218, 223-224, 236 Whales and whaling, 181, 496 Wheat, 414, 442 transportation by rails, 276 Whig politics, xii, 115, 123-126, 129, 772 aligned with British against French, 243 alliance with Republican Partv, 182, 1116-1117 antislavery wing, 1081, 1116, 1122 Baltimore convention (1844), 1083-1084 Baltimore convention (1848), 1061-1062 coalition, 187,
207-208
conservative coalition, 197, 240 death of, 1090, 1096, 1121, 1167 effect of Taylor's victory, 224-225 election of 1836, 124, 130 election of 1837, 169
176-177
950 202-203, 205 election of 1852, 1080-1081, 1090 election of 1840, 180-185, election of 1844, 105,
63
"Fur" West, 283, 323-344 free-states
436-437
stresses,
election of 1838,
300-302, 916, 918
deplored in New England, 32, 34, 1153 Emancipation issue, 1153 exploring expeditions, 323 Far West, 283 fur traders,
1229
133 Union sentiment, 1150-1154
oratorical ability, 164, 168, 170-171, 246,
talents
and
/
slave-states,
285
gold rush and, 486 Great Basin region, 283 for health reasons, 433 Indians destroyed by, 394-396 interest in Wild West, 244 investments in Western lands, 63, 301-302
on road to Pacific, 431-437 Mormons, 556-558, 562 Near West, 283-305 New England's anxiety over, 33-34
life
established in West,
289-290
nominate Clay, 180 Free Soil, 1085, 1090, 1116 membership, 207-208 merchants and business men, 186-188 opposition to Mexican War, 215, 225 Oregon question, 210-211 failure to
principles, 171
170 Southern, 1 167 rise of,
strategy,
125-126
use of political svmbolism, 181-182 White, Hugh. 76. 124 White House, 113 inauguration of Gen. Harrison, 184 Jackson's inauguration, 18-19
North-South differences, 1154 "North" West, 283-284 Old or Near West, 283-284 Pacific Coast West, 283 Prairie Plains and Lake Plains, 284
social life, 26 White River, 347, 365 Whitehead, Alfred North, 990
prejudices against, 1 143 public lands grab, 15 relationships of ideas to geography, 284
489-490, 531, 541 massacre bv Indians, 490, 492 Whitman, Walt. xii. 810-811, 822, 996-1007, 1026-1028. 1041-1042, 1187
settlement of, 265, 284 slave versus free states, 33 Smith's, Jedediah, expedition, 355-374
Whiting,
Anne
Beverly,
Whitman, Marcus and
early
life.
419-420
Narcissa, 381,
996-997
Emerson's influence, 985, 997-1007
I23O
/
INDEX
Whitman, Walt
treatment in India, 548
(cont.):
907 Leaves of Grass, 998-1007, 1022, 1026 Whitney, Eli, 821, 824, 830 Whittier, John Greenleaf, 108, 561-562, 976-977, 980, 983, 1062 abolition sympathies, 603, 606, 621, 623 Whittling, obsession for, 250, 957 Whittredge, Worthington, 930 Wide Awakes, Republican group, 1168 Wilberforce, William, 1136 Wild West, interest in, 244 (See also Westward migration) Willamette Valley, 370, 391-392, 424, 491 settlements, 492 Frederick Evans,
Williams, David, 44-45 Williams, Isaac, 467-468 Williams, Roger, 806 Wilmot, David, 219, 1121 Wilmot Proviso, 219, 221, 1060, 1064-1065, 1085, 1121 Wilson, Alexander, 937 Wilson, "Blackjack," 314 Wilson, Henry, 1070-1071, 1121
Wind Wind
1103
726 religions and, 508 political action,
right to speak,
617-618
City),
754, 761-764 Woodbury, Levi, 42, 202, 1081 Woodville, Richard Caton, 932
Wool,
372 River Mountains, 350-351, 423, 437 Winnebago Indians, 50, 289, 295 Winthrop, John, 228, 240, 265, 568 Wirt, William, 57, 62, 85 Wisconsin Territory, 291-292
292-300
life,
issue of dress, 722, 881,
Seneca Falls convention, 718-721 temperance reform and, 688 Wood, Fernando (mayor of New York
River,
frontier
unmarried girls, 712 upper middle class, 707, 713, 715 Western women compared to Eastern, 736 writers and reformers, 246 Women's rights movement, 286, 620-621, 717-736,802 abolitionist movement, 120-121 abortions, 755-756 antislavery movement and, 622-623, 718, 726 "Declaration of Sentiments," 719-721 importance of, 736
German and Scandinavian immigrants, 292-300
Ellis,
98
Woolen goods, tariff issue, 6 Worcester, Samuel A., 86-88 Work, 887-900 application of grace and ingenuity, 888-889 North-South attitudes toward, 917 and success, 890 Whittier's poems celebrating, 976 Worker's cooperative workshops, 803, 808 Workingmen, 183 attitudes toward, 116 prejudice against blacks, 641
Indian attacks, 51, 110, 292 pioneer settlements, 285-286 townships, 295 Wise, Henry, 198, 1124 Wiser, Peter, 331
Women: with character and intellect, 708-709,
712-713 college education, 858 colonial period, 707
compliant wife, 707-708
(See also Labor movement) Workingmen's Party, 126, 795-805 issues, 796 significance of, 805 World Anti-Slavery Convention, London, 716, 718 Worth, William, 219, 231, 235-236
feminism, 726-727
Wright, Frances (Fanny), 126, 244, 516, 526, 675, 796-798, 801 Wright, Silas, 200, 203-204, 802 Wyandot Indians, 110 Wyeth, Nathaniel, 375, 381
"feminization of churches," 513-515
Wyoming, 353
freedom, 712
Wyoming
discrimination against, 715-717 effect of capitalism on, 715-716 father-daughter relationships, 712, 722
frontier
Valley Massacre,
939
women, 730-736
health of,
714-715
Yale College, 854-855, 860
Indian squaws, 335, 464-465 observations by foreign visitors, 708-709 prostitutes and mistresses, 713, sexual attitudes, 710, 713-714 shortage in West, 468
stereotypes,
708-710
752-755
Yancey, William, 1168 "Yankees, 261, 314, 824, 888, 915-917
824-826 294 "westernized," 287-288 inventors,
settlers,
Yellowstone basin area, 939, 941
INDEX beaver trapping, 331, 375-393, 432
339 Yellowstone Expedition, 324-330, 345-354 "collections" in Philadelphia Museum, 330 consequences of, 330 Indian attacks, 345-346 membership, 324 object of, 325 visits to Indian tribes, 325-330 Colter's expedition,
/
1231
Yellowstone River, 406-407
Yokut Indians, 361-362 Yorba, Don, 360 Young, Brigham, 555, 557, 559, 562-567, 1097 Young, Joseph, 555 Young Men's Republican Convention, 58 Youth, participation in politics, 912
About the Author
R
age Smith was educated at Dartmouth College and Harvard UniverHe has served as research associate at the Institute of Early American History and Culture and has taught at the University of California at Los Angeles and at Santa Cruz, where he was Provost of Cowell College. He is now Professor Emeritus of that university, as well as co-director of the William James Association. Dr. Smith is the author of The Historian and History; Daughters of the Promised Land: Woman in American History; As a City upon a Hill: The Town in American History; the highly acclaimed twovolume biography John Adams, which was a selection of the Book-of-theMonth Club, a National Book Award Nominee, and a Bancroft winner; A New Age Now Begins and The Shaping ofAmerica, both Main Selections of the Book-of-the-Month Club. The Nation Comes of Age continues Dr. Smith's extensive People's History of the United States, of which A New Age Now Begins and The Shaping of America are the first volumes. Page Smith lives in Santa Cruz, California. sity.
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