
Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different by Gordon Wood is a book for fairly serious American Revolutionary era history buffs. If one is indeed such an aficionado, this is a thought provoking and fun read.
Wood’s
book consists of a series of essays, each concerning a different major American
Founder. George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander
Hamilton, James Madison, John Adams, Thomas Paine, and Aaron Burr are all
covered. For the most part, the pieces are not biographical sketches; instead
they are analyses of the public personas of each of the men. Therefore, I would
not recommend this book to readers who have only a cursory interest in the men or
the era. Some of the
essays, particularly the one that covers John Adams and his political theories,
dig into fairly intricate concepts and issues of the time.
In
several linking essays, Wood explains that the public image of these men was of
the utmost importance both to the men themselves as well as the public at large.
All of these men considered themselves enlightened gentleman of their times.
The author argues that in this era, society did not look to or esteem private
personalities. Thus, a “constructed” public personality, as long as it was kept
consistent in public, was not considered disingenuous or undesirable; in fact,
to some degree, private or inner character was disregarded as unimportant.
These
men all spent their early years striving to become part of the enlightened
elite. They rejected what at the time were traditional conceptions of hereditary
elitism of the old aristocracy. Instead, the conception of a “gentleman” involved
reaching, through one’s own devices, a level of education, morality and manors
that placed a man above the masses of society.
Wood
writes,
“To
be a gentleman was to think and act like a gentleman, nothing more, an
immensely radical belief with implications that few foresaw. It meant being
reasonable, tolerant, honest, virtuous, and “candid,” an important
eighteenth-century characteristic that connoted being unbiased and just as well
as frank and sincere. Being a gentleman was the prerequisite to becoming a
political leader. It signified being cosmopolitan, standing on elevated ground
in order to have a large view of human affairs, and being free of the
prejudices, parochialism, and religious enthusiasm of the vulgar and barbaric.
It meant, in short, having all those characteristics that we today sum up in
the idea of a liberal arts education.”
In addition to striving
to attain the status of a gentleman, Wood explains that the Founders highly
valued the concept of “disinterestedness”.
A virtuous leader needed to be wealthy enough that they did not need to
work or even concern themselves with making money. In theory, only a person who
was rich enough not to have interest in the profit motive could be trusted with
the reigns of government. Not all of the Founders disliked mercantilism (some,
like Thomas Jefferson, despised it) but most believed that it was inappropriate
for a businessperson to be a politician.
Wood describes this
concept,
“We today have lost most of this
earlier meaning. Even educated people now use disinterested as a synonym for
uninterested, meaning “indifferent or unconcerned.” It is almost as if we
cannot quite imagine someone who is capable of rising above a pecuniary
interest and being unselfish or impartial where an interest might be present.
In
the eighteenth-century Anglo-American world gentlemen believed that only
independent individuals, free of interested ties and paid by no masters, could
practice such virtue. It was thought that those who had occupations and had to
work strenuously for a living lacked the leisure for virtuous public
leadership.”
Within this framework of a disinterested
gentleman, all of the Founders, either through their own machinations or
through external impositions, had constructed public personas. These
characters, how they came to be, what they represented, how they affected
history, etc. are generally the subjects of Wood’s essays. Each piece digs
fairly deep into the analysis of Wood’s subject. Having read fairly extensively
on these men and the era previously, I feel that Wood’s essays provided depth as
well as both familiar and unique perspectives, though I do not agree with all
of Wood’s conclusions.
One of many interesting points here
was that there were always exceptions to the rules. Wood argues that Paine’s
public persona did not fit that of a gentleman and Burr’s persona did not
appear to be “disinterested.”
As one final irony pointed out by
Wood, the nation and society that these men helped to create, that of powerful
mercantile interests, an economy propelled by the acquisition of material goods
and common people (though only white males) participating in political and
social discussion and debate, had little interest in electing disinterested
gentleman as political leaders. Thus, Wood convincingly argues that all subsequent
generations of American political leaders were of a very different breed from
that of the Founders.
Though not an introduction to the
American Founders, this work provides important and, at least for me,
intriguing information on the personalities, philosophies, perceptions and
accomplishments of these very important people. There are a lot of detailed and
interesting musings within the essays that I cannot come close to delving into within
a single blog post. Highly recommended for those interested in the period as
well as in the history of government.
The Following Posts cover related subjects:
Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow
American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson by Joseph Ellis
Benjamin Franklin: An American Life by Walter Isaacson
Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr by Nancy Isenberg
Thomas Jefferson:The Art of Power by John Meacham
Radicalism and the American Revolution by Gordon Wood
Reading Gordon Wood
The Following Posts cover related subjects:
Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow
American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson by Joseph Ellis
Benjamin Franklin: An American Life by Walter Isaacson
Radicalism and the American Revolution by Gordon Wood
Reading Gordon Wood