"Negro President": Jefferson and the Slave Power by Garry Wills

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(Hardcover - None)

  • Pub. Date: November 2003
  • 288pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2003
    • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    • Format: Hardcover, 288pp

    Synopsis

    In "Negro President," the best-selling historian Garry Wills explores a controversial and neglected aspect of Thomas Jefferson's presidency: it was achieved by virtue of slave "representation," and conducted to preserve that advantage.
    Wills goes far beyond the recent revisionist debate over Jefferson's own slaves and his relationship with Sally Heming to look at the political relationship between the president and slavery. Jefferson won the election of 1800 with Electoral College votes derived from the three-fifths representation of slaves, who could not vote but who were partially counted as citizens. That count was known as "the slave power" granted to southern states, and it made some Federalists call Jefferson the Negro President — one elected only by the slave count's margin.
    Probing the heart of Jefferson's presidency, Wills reveals how the might of the slave states was a concern behind Jefferson's most important decisions and policies, including his strategy to expand the nation west. But the president met with resistance: Timothy Pickering, now largely forgotten, was elected to Congress to wage a fight against Jefferson and the institutions that supported him. Wills restores Pickering and his allies' dramatic struggle to our understanding of Jefferson and the creation of the new nation.
    In "Negro President," Wills offers a bold rethinking of one of American history's greatest icons.

    Publishers Weekly

    While Pulitzer-winner Wills (Lincoln at Gettysburg, etc.) rarely writes a book without a distinctive take on its subject, in this shaggy work he's off his game. Originally a set of lectures, this book is only loosely stitched together. Its author is typically combative, but he doesn't stay on subject long, writing instead about what suddenly strikes him. Not that the work doesn't show Wills's characteristic keen intelligence. He bears down hard, for example, on the permeating consequences of the Constitution's three-fifths clause for pre-Civil War history and raises tough questions about conventional accounts of Jefferson's election in 1800 (which depended partly on the "slave vote") and the selection of a site for the capital in slave-holding country. But he never lingers long on what the book purports to be aboutJefferson's determination to preserve slavery and the South's power in the U.S.nor does it add much to what we already know and think about Jefferson's agonizing, often hypocritical, struggle with race and slavery. Much of what Wills writes about the hold of slave power on the nation has been written before and more extensively by others. What's freshest is his effort to rehabilitate one of Jefferson's arch-opponents, Federalist Timothy Pickering, an attractive if flawed second-rank character of the early nation. Pickering hated slavery and helped lay the groundwork for later abolitionism. But Wills uses him tendentiously as a foil to Jefferson and never brings him fully to life. So what's the book about? About many fascinating issues surrounding the influence of slavery in the U.S. between 1790 and 1848. But don't look here for coherence and sustained history. Agent, Andrew Wylie. (Nov. 1) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    One of our foremost Catholic intellectuals, bestselling author Garry Wills writes thoughtful, provocative nonfiction that roams across history, politics, and religion.

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    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    Imperfect but well worth readingby Anonymous

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    May 23, 2004: While the structure of 'Negro President' is somewhat loose and its contents don't neatly fit its title, Wills nonetheless provides important insights into the motives and dynamics that shaped the not-so-perfect democracy that we still struggle to improve. Wills documents ideologies, antagonisms, and hypocrisies of founding fathers that were often hidden beneath their grand words, but which found expression in the Constitution and partisan positioning for power. Wills' work does not so much tarnish the reputations of Jefferson and others (Wills remains an admirer of Jefferson) as much as it spurs us to examine our sometimes reverential and even sanctimonious view of our national origins. A particular contribution of Wills is his restoration of the role and reputation of a leading Jefferson opponent, the much maligned Timothy Pickering. While a more focused book might fix on the conflicts between these men, Wills at least makes a solid case that Pickering deserves more of our attention. In this and other books, Wills serves us by reminding us that how we view our government and leaders today flows from our view of our past. 'Negro President' reminds us of compromises our founders made that we are still paying for.

    Constirutional Crisisby Anonymous

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    February 11, 2004: While this may be a scholarly work its title is misleading and appears to be a publishers gimmick to entice readers. One would expect to read more about Jefferson. This is less about Jefferson (although he was a benificiary of the conflicts between the north and south) and more about Pickering,Burr and JQ Adams. I learned more about Jefferson in the latest books about Franklin and Adams.