Ohio History Journal




Book Reviews

Book Reviews

 

 

 

Teach the Freeman: The Correspondence of Rutherford B. Hayes and

the Slater Fund for Negro Education, 1881-1887. Edited by Louis

D. Rubin, Jr. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959.

Two volumes. lv??236??302p.; index. $10.00.)

Through the philanthropy of a textile manufacturer of Norwich,

Connecticut, the John F. Slater Fund for the Education of Freedmen

was established for the purpose of "uplifting the lately emancipated

population of the Southern States, and their posterity, by conferring

upon them the blessings of Christian education." Incorporated in 1882,

the fund carried on its work until 1937, when it was merged with the

Southern Education Foundation.

From the establishment of the fund until his death in 1893, Ruther-

ford B. Hayes served as president of its board of trustees. Other dis-

tinguished persons from both North and South served on the board in

this period, including Morison R. Waite, who served as vice president,

and Daniel Coit Gilman, who served as secretary and later as president

after the death of Hayes. From papers in the Rutherford B. Hayes

Library at Fremont, Ohio, Louis D. Rubin, Jr., has selected and edited

correspondence pertaining to the Slater Fund now published in these two

volumes.

A large part of this correspondence consists of letters written to

Hayes by Atticus G. Haygood, the first general agent of the fund. A

southerner and a Methodist minister, Haygood had resigned from the

presidency of Emory College to work for the fund because of his intense

interest in Negro education. He determined in large measure where

and for what purposes income from the fund was to be spent. The

letters show that Hayes loyally supported Haygood and protected him

from intervention by other trustees who disagreed with his methods.

Haygood was a supporter of the vogue for "industrial" or manual

training in institutions of higher learning for Negroes, and in order to

qualify for aid from the Slater Fund a school had at least to give the

appearance of offering such training. Haygood also believed that the

greatest good could be accomplished by making small grants to a large



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BOOK REVIEWS          79

number of schools. His method was described by one recipient as

"dropping nest eggs of a few hundred dollars each in many places."

By 1891 no less than thirty-six institutions were receiving annual

grants ranging from $600 to $5,000. The following year, when J. L. M.

Curry, who was already general agent for the Peabody Fund, suc-

ceeded Haygood, a change in policy was begun. Curry believed, "Diffu-

sion is weakness; concentration on selected schools and objects is

strength."

Most of the published correspondence deals with routine matters

connected with the operation of the fund. There is relatively little

about Negroes or the schools for them. Mr. Rubin has written an

informative introduction, which he concludes with an evaluation. The

Slater Fund was established in a period when the civil rights of Negroes

were deteriorating and when there was generally indifference or hos-

tility toward educational opportunities for Negroes. The work of Hay-

good and Curry could not reverse this trend, but Rubin concludes that

the Slater Fund and the men associated with it did help "to make the

cause of Negro higher education respectable." And such Negro leaders

of the twentieth century as James Weldon Johnson, Benjamin Brawley,

Channing Tobias, Kelly Miller, and W. E. B. DuBois secured their

education in part in schools which the Slater Fund helped to keep

alive in the 1880's and 1890's.

Butler University                   EMMA LOU THORNBROUGH

 

Cattle Kingdom in the Ohio Valley, 1783-1860. By Paul C. Henlein.

(Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1959. x??198p.; map,

bibliographical note, and index. $6.50.)

This study, in its original form a doctoral dissertation at the Uni-

versity of Wisconsin, is an important contribution to the history of

American agriculture. In addition, it develops more fully than any

other published account a significant chapter in the history of the

Ohio Valley.

Professor Henlein's "Cattle Kingdom" does not encompass the entire

valley but is limited to an area included in the states of Kentucky, Ohio,

Indiana, and Illinois. Here emerged a beef cattle industry, which

spanned the region by 1830, based on practices that had already proven

successful in older settled areas and that in many respects eventually

were transferred to a cow country more familiar to modern readers and

television viewers.



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Pioneers who moved into the valley sought self-sufficiency and more.

They, as well as those who followed them, practiced diversified farm-

ing. Soil and climate were conducive to the production of grain, par-

ticularly of corn, which grew in great abundance. The most feasible

method of disposing profitably of large crops of corn, other than using

it in the manufacture of whisky, was to convert it into meat which could

be packed and shipped or driven on the hoof to distant markets.

Admitting some doubt as to "whether the Ohio Valley was more a

beef-cattle empire than a hog empire," the author chooses to devote

his attention mainly to factors that place it in the former category.

Methodically he examines the successive stages in the history of the

cattle kingdom as it developed in the Kentucky Bluegrass, the middle

Scioto Valley, and the Miami Valley, expanded to the Wabash Valley,

and spread on into the Sangamon Valley of Illinois. He calls attention

to the specialization in agriculture whereby thin animals were trans-

ferred from range lands to feeding areas, where corn was plentiful,

for fattening before being driven to the seaboard markets.

The work of the Pattons, Renicks, Clays, Goffs, and others in

improving beef cattle is discussed in connection with breeding prac-

tices, importations, and changing fashions with regard to types of

animals. The story of the "Seventeens," an importation by Lewis

Sanders which became the subject of controversy, is handled judi-

ciously. The vicissitudes faced on the drive to market and the un-

certainty of profits at the end of the long trail are outlined in

considerable detail. The final chapter describes the movement of the

cattle kingdom westward beyond the valley of the Ohio.

The book is based on an impressive array of sources, including

manuscripts, newspapers, the contemporary agricultural press, govern-

ment documents, travel accounts, and specialized works. Most notable

are the papers of some of the cattle barons themselves which the author

searched out and was the first to use. Less trustworthy, of course, is

the information based on tradition and that obtained in personal inter-

views with descendants of the cattlemen.

A few, rather obvious errors (that have little bearing on the story)

should have been eliminated. For example, Green Clay was not "the

uncle of Henry Clay" (p. 8), nor was James B. Clay "Henry Clay's

eldest son" (p. 181). The occasional use of such terms as "squirrel

headed lawyer" and "fancy-dan lawyer" does little to enliven the style.

Professor Henlein gives a straightforward account in which a great

many facts are presented. The book is readable and informative, and it



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BOOK REVIEWS          81

fills a need. The University of Kentucky Press deserves commendation

for placing footnotes at the bottom of the page, where they should be.

University of Kentucky                     JAMES F. HOPKINS

 

George Croghan: Wilderness Diplomat. By Nicholas B. Wainwright.

(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press for the Institute

of Early American History and Culture, 1959. x??334p.; maps,

bibliographical essay, and index. $6.00.)

The doughty Pennsylvanians who crossed the Alleghenies in the

middle decades of the eighteenth century to tap the rich fur trade with

the Ohio Indians wrote the first chapter in the story of the Old North-

west. No character was more central in that story than George Croghan,

the leading figure in western Indian affairs for more than a quarter of a

century. Publication of Nicholas Wainwright's full-scale biography of

Croghan is therefore a welcome event. Wainwright's readable volume

is not the first scholarly treatment of Croghan. In 1926 the late Albert

T. Volwiler published George Croghan and the Westward Movement,

1741-1782--a reliable study of Croghan's public life and his role in

westward expansion. But the wealth of material that has since become

available, including Croghan's personal papers among the manuscripts

of the Cadwallader family of Philadelphia, has enabled Wainwright to

write a more detailed and intimate biography.

A biographer could scarcely have chosen a more colorful subject.

In 1741 Croghan came out of Ireland equipped with a flair for shrewd

business manipulations and a genial, generous temperament to seek

his fortune in the Indian trade. Within a decade he had become the

leading Pennsylvania trader. Spearheading the English advance into

the Ohio country, he developed a vast trading empire that stretched

north to the mouth of the Cuyahoga on Lake Erie and west to Pick-

awillany on the Great Miami. His success among the Ohio Indians

alarmed the French and constituted perhaps the major consideration

in prompting them to increase their activities in that region after King

George's War. The resumption of hostilities in 1754 resulted in the

collapse of Croghan's trading operations, and during the war Croghan

acted first as Indian agent for Pennsylvania and then after 1756 as Sir

William Johnson's principal deputy in the Northern Indian Department.

It was in the field of Indian diplomacy that he made his most significant

contributions. In the postwar years his capacity to win the trust and



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82 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

respect of the Indians and his dexterity in handling critical situations

enabled him to maintain a precarious peace in the West. After fifteen

years of service he resigned his agency in 1771 to devote full time to

his land interests. Indeed, land speculations and empire building had

fired Croghan's imagination for over twenty years. From the Indians

he had acquired over two million acres near Pittsburgh and in western

New York for speculative purposes. In the 1760's he had authored

an unsuccessful project to found a colony in the Illinois country and

had been the chief promoter behind the abortive Indiana and Vandalia

companies. But his land schemes, like his earlier trading ventures, all

failed to measure up to his expectations and ended in disaster. In the

early 1770's he began to fade into the background. The early years of

the Revolution found him serving as chairman of Pittsburgh's commit-

tee of correspondence, but congress twice ignored him in selecting an

agent to handle Indian affairs. He spent the last five years of his life

in Philadelphia distrusted by both British and Americans and plagued

by creditors. He died in 1782 with few tangible resources and no public

acclaim.

Croghan's many-sided story is not an easy one to tell, but Wain-

wright has proved more than equal to the task. In what will surely

stand as the definitive biography of Croghan, the author presents a com-

pletely candid account of Croghan's exciting and devious career. He

shows quite conclusively that in the late colonial period Croghan "was

unequalled in the field of western Indian diplomacy," but, after un-

raveling the tangled threads of Croghan's business activities, he does

not hesitate to conclude that Croghan simply "could not play the game

straight." Best of all, Wainwright achieves a vivid and lifelike portrait

of Croghan. Moreover, in this portrait one can see the unfolding pano-

rama of the early stages of the development of the Old Northwest in

the descriptions of the inner workings of the Indian trade and Indian

diplomacy, the economics and psychology of frontier business enter-

prises, and the machinations of early western land speculators. In

short, this volume is so completely satisfying that would-be biographers

of colonial Americans might well adopt it as their vade mecum.

There are maps, a good index, and a splendid bibliographical essay

that offers a convenient guide to the literature of the western frontier

in the decades immediately preceding the Revolution.

Western Reserve University                    JACK P. GREENE



BOOK REVIEWS 83

BOOK REVIEWS          83

Army Life on the Western Frontier: Selections from the Official

Reports Made Between 1826 and 1845 by Colonel George Croghan.

Edited by Francis Paul Prucha. (Norman: University of Oklahoma

Press, 1958. xxxvi??187p.; map, illustrations, bibliography, appendix,

and index. $4.00.)

George Croghan rose to fame in 1813 when, as a young army captain

in command of Fort Stephenson at Lower Sandusky (Fremont, Ohio),

he and his small group of men repulsed the British led by General

Proctor. The country was in sore need of a victory, even one of minor

importance, and Croghan immediately won nation-wide acclaim.

At the end of the war, Croghan left the service for private life. He

returned to active duty in 1825 when he was appointed an inspector

general, a position he held for over twenty years. In 1826 he was

assigned to inspect the forts along the western frontier.

Croghan faced an arduous task. He had to inspect the forts that

were strung along a more than 2000-mile frontier: from Fort Brady

at Sault Ste. Marie to Fort Jackson below New Orleans, as well as

stations on the Missouri River and on other tributaries of the Missis-

sippi. At each post he noted conditions and submitted a report to the

general-in-chief at the end of his yearly tour.

Croghan was often disturbed by the conditions he found in the West.

At times he found posts such as Fort Brady and Fort Jessup that were

poorly located. The garrison at New Orleans, he believed, was un-

necessary as the citizens of that city could defend themselves. He was

angered when the important post at Fort Towson on the Red River

in Indian Territory was temporarily abandoned because of the high cost

of provisioning it. The forts, he noted, were often poorly designed,

constructed of inferior materials, and inadequately supplied. He often

condemned the excessive construction costs. He was especially critical

of the crude barracks he found at many posts and of the bedbug-infested

bunks.

Following his orders, Croghan attempted to check on all aspects of

military life on the frontier. He examined the food supplies, reported on

the sutlers who ran the post stores, studied the medical facilities, and

inspected the arms and equipment of the men.

At most of the posts that he inspected, Croghan found that good

discipline prevailed. But there were certain obstacles to proper military

order. Croghan worried about the large number of immigrants entering

the army in the 1830's and 1840's because many of these recruits did



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not understand enough English to comprehend the commands of their

superiors. He frequently mentioned the increased drunkenness among

the soldiery which he blamed on off-post drinking due to the army's

decision in 1830 to halt the daily ration of liquor. He also observed that

many of the soldiers spent more time growing vegetables or cutting

wood than they spent on military affairs.

Croghan's frank reports also contain some information on general

frontier conditions and on the Indian problem. He emphasized the need

for the army to impress the Indians with its military strength. He noted

that the Indians were not always responsible for the unsettled frontier

conditions. Half of the Indian troubles, he believed, were due to the

actions of white men. Many of the difficulties with the Indians could

be removed if the red men were treated in a fair but forceful manner.

Father Prucha has taken selections from Croghan's reports and

arranged them in chronological order under topics such as military

policy, administration and services, the forts, and the men. Although the

reports are not complete, the editor has chosen the more informative

passages. The introduction contains a brief sketch of Croghan's life.

A map of the forts is included as well as a series of illustrations. An

appendix contains a list of the forts visited on each of Croghan's tours.

The nature of his assignment makes Croghan's reports somewhat repe-

titious, but his perceptive views and forthright statements make them

interesting. The volume is well edited and, although not for the general

reader, will be of interest to the student of military history and western

Americana.

Central Michigan University            WILLIAM T. BULGER, JR.

 

General Sherman's Son: The Life of Thomas Ewing Sherman, S. J.

By Joseph T. Durkin, S.J. (New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy,

1959. ix??276p.; illustrations, appendices, list of sources, and index.

$4.50.)

"Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in

its own way," said Tolstoy. The family of General William Tecumseh

Sherman, though loyally and affectionately devoted to one another, had

their own breed of unhappiness. The father, though a man of rare

intelligence, great energy, and complete honesty and integrity, was at

times violent and rude and nearly always hypersensitive, haughtily

aristocratic, and restless. The mother, Ellen Ewing, was loyal to her

husband, proud of her family, and devoted to her Roman Catholic



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BOOK REVIEWS          85

 

religion to the point of fanaticism. The general was not a Catholic and

never became one, but he agreed that his children--seven in all--should

be raised in that faith. The death of the eldest son during the Civil War,

the pressures of fame and family tradition, intense differences of tem-

perament, and differences on religion produced a particular brand of

unhappiness for the Shermans.

The tragic life of the second son, Thomas Ewing, was partly the result

and partly the cause of some of this unhappiness. With the death of the

eldest son both parents looked to Tom to carry on the fame and fortune

of the family. As a youth, Tom seemed to measure up to his parents

highest expectations: he was dutiful, studious, attentive, and morally

straight. Graduating from Yale at twenty the young man went to St.

Louis, the family home, to read law and to help manage business inter-

ests of the family. After a year, out of a blue sky, he announced his

firm resolve to enter the Jesuit order and to become a priest. The

stunned father never quite reconciled himself to this decision.

The novitiate accepted the discipline of his faith without question,

breezed through his theological studies, and in due time was ordained a

priest. Within a short time he became one of the most sought-after

preachers of the day. For approximately fifteen years he traveled the

length and breadth of the land thundering against the evils of the day:

materialism, modernism, and socialism. He was said to be responsible

for explaining the true nature of Catholicism to hostile critics and to

have converted many souls. During the Spanish-American War he

served as a chaplain in Puerto Rico and wrote some reports that for

their perceptiveness, clarity, and cogency suggest the father's operational

reports at their best. But that he also shared some of his father's blind

spots is illustrated by an incident occurring in 1906. He was invited to

dinner at the White House. President Roosevelt suggested that Father

Sherman ride through Georgia along the route of General Sherman's

march to the sea. This invitation was accepted with alacrity along with

a large escort of United States cavalry. When an outcry arose in both

the southern and northern press against the reenactment of that epic

of murder, pillage, and plunder, Father Sherman was surprised and

hurt. The second march to the sea had to be abandoned amid much

chagrin.

Not long after this extraordinary episode there was a physical and

mental breakdown from which Father Sherman never fully recovered.

There were quarrels with his superiors, feuds with the family, and

finally a repudiation of the Jesuit order. Long months spent in sani-



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86     THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

toriums scattered over the country failed to restore health of mind. Out

of Christian charity, and to avoid scandal, both the family and the

Jesuits humored their brother and supported him as best they could.

After numerous trips across the continent and to Europe the more

violent resentments were calmed. Most of the declining years were spent

in a humble dwelling in Santa Barbara, California, where the old priest

continued to say mass in his private chapel. In the spring of 1933 Father

Sherman became deathly ill and was taken to a hospital in New Orleans.

There was a massive hemorrhage of the stomach, the shock of which

apparently cleared for a few moments a long troubled mind. "Call

Father Provincial," he said, "I wish to renew my vows as a Jesuit."

The author of this sad story is a Jesuit and a trained historian.

Making extensive use of private family papers, he has treated his sub-

ject with sympathy and understanding.

Ohio State University                          HARRY L. COLES

 

The Making of an American Community: A Case Study of Democracy

in a Frontier County. By Merle Curti with the assistance of Robert

Daniel and others. (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press,

1959. vii??483p.; maps, appendices, and index. $8.50.)

All science and scholarship meet in historiography, and all disciplines

can contribute to the arsenal of skills and techniques which the historian

has at his command. For the record of all human thought and action

is the stuff of which history is made, and the totality of life itself is the

historian's universe. But traditionally the historian, though he has

drawn freely from a wide circle of auxiliary sciences, has avoided the

methods of his colleagues in the other social sciences. In part, but only

in part, is this rejection inherent in the indirect nature of the historical

method itself. To be sure, the historian cannot poll the framers of the

Declaration of Independence or interrogate Hannibal respecting his

strategic decision not to march directly on Rome. Despite the interest

of early twentieth-century historians in the "common man," his-

torians generally have been relatively uninterested in the behavior of

people in the mass, or in statistics of human thought and action.

The volume here being reviewed, then, is something of a pioneering

attempt to determine whether, by applying the case study method to his-

torical research and by analyzing the interrelationships of data respecting

economic, social, political, educational, and other factors, it is possible to

write history that is really objective. A correlative purpose was to test,



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BOOK REVIEWS          87

 

by the use of this method, the validity of one aspect of the frontier

theory of Frederick Jackson Turner--the influence of the frontier upon

democracy.

The plan adopted by Professor Curti was to study an actual frontier,

Trempealeau County in Wisconsin, and to examine in so far as possible

all surviving records for evidences of democratic practices, for example,

the extent of individual participation in the making of decisions respect-

ing the common life, the equality of economic and cultural opportunity,

and the degree of individualism enjoyed by the inhabitants. To this end

he set out to examine microscopically, through the quantitative tech-

niques of the social scientist, the transition from a pioneer to a settle-

ment community to discover the amount of democracy, in Turner's sense,

that existed initially, developed during the processes of settlement, and

was present during the period following settlement. (Curti presented

his method in a paper, "Democracy in a Wisconsin Frontier Commu-

nity," presented before the Sixth Newberry Library Conference on

American Studies, Chicago, May 21, 1955.) Thus he hoped not only to

present additional evidence in support of the Turner thesis, but also to

test the applicability of these social science techniques to historiography.

As a control Curti used eleven contiguous and predominantly rural coun-

ties in northern Vermont from which many Trempealeaunians had

migrated. Using unpublished census data from 1850 to 1880, respecting

all householders and gainfully employed persons, and a wide variety of

other sources--diaries, local records, correspondence, newspapers, and

even interviews--the investigators found that political democracy was

mainly derived from the tailor-made county government imposed by

the state of Wisconsin, rather than from any particular frontier attitudes.

Equality of economic opportunity was inherent in the fact that the

agricultural life was not dominated by a few men, and progression up

the "economic ladder" from farm hand to farm owner was relatively

easy for those who remained in the county. But loans and mortgages

were not concentrated in the hands of a few, and were common and

usually negotiated with neighbors and business associates. Further-

more they were small and quickly liquidated.

As to education, the foreign-born were not hampered by anti-

democratic or other hostile attitudes. Cultural opportunities on the

frontier were limited generally by geographic dispersion of the popu-

lation, relative poverty, a general absence of family traditions favorable

to intellectual pursuits, and language barriers for the foreign-born.

Trempealeau County, however, quickly borrowed from other parts of



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the country the means for the dissemination of knowledge which opened

the gates of education to the settlers and their children.

Incidence of leadership, an important characteristic of democracy,

was higher during the early frontier period than later. This may in part

be explained by the fact that, as a community becomes more settled,

specialization of function increases and tends to diminish versatility of

leadership, or that the greater ethnic homogeneity of the frontier con-

tributes to an early incidence of leadership. But it certainly seems to be

true that the individual had a greater chance of becoming an office

holder before 1860 than he had in 1880.

In the opinion of the present reviewer, however, one of the most

important results of this study is the light its method throws on the

acculturation of the immigrant. Immigrant populations, for example,

were found to be more mobile than the native born. Immigrant repre-

sentation in the labor force was less and foreign-born percentages in

business and the professions were higher than is usually assumed. On

the other hand, mobility of the immigrant is not necessarily symptomatic

of economic insecurity; certain groups traditionally considered to be

very poor, notably the Irish and the Poles, made excellent economic

adjustments. The non-English-speaking groups tended to acquire as

much land as their more-favored native-born neighbors, and there was

a resultant increase in the participation of the foreign-born in politics.

But further case studies of this type are needed before valid judgments

can be made respecting the political behavior, cultural participation,

and extent of intermarriage among the foreign-born. Particularly are

these studies needed for the older rural and urban communities of the

eastern regions of the country.

The study can be criticized for not testing the Turner thesis, but only

the authors' interpretation of Turner's theory that the ready availability

of free, or virtually free, land promoted economic equality which, in turn,

fostered political equality. One can also question whether the county

studied was typical of the frontier. To both of these limitations the

authors readily confess. One may even go so far as to question the

importance of their conclusion that their investigation, both in its quanti-

tative and qualitative aspects, supports, in general, the Turner thesis

concerning the influence of the frontier upon democracy. In certain

important respects the inquiry showed that there was more democracy

in Trempealeau County in the 1870's than in the 1850's and early

1860's. What is important, however, is that the procedure, by giving

more precise information than hitherto has been available on such subjects



BOOK REVIEWS 89

BOOK REVIEWS          89

as social mobility, economic and occupational status, literacy, and the

acculturation of the immigrant, has made possible a deeper insight into

the Turner theory of frontier democracy than could have been achieved

by the use either of traditional methods or of quantitative methods alone.

This operational approach to specific testable units of larger problems,

that is, the case study method, combines the traditional historical ap-

proach with certain social science research techniques and in consequence

provides a higher degree of objectivity than could otherwise have been

obtained.

Finally, one can criticize this book for the form of its presentation.

Admittedly, statistical tabulations such as Curti uses do not make

inspiring or even pleasurable reading. But this is history for the his-

torian, not history for the general public. This is the data from which

the popularizer, and we use the noun in no derogatory sense, can weave

a more accurate pattern of the historical tapestry. That Merle Curti can

write for "the common man" as well as about him, is amply proved by

the success of his Growth of American Thought. Curti is a man with

more than one string to his bow, and he should be encouraged to use

them all.

Western Reserve University                       JESSE H. SHERA

 

Ordeal of Faith: The Crisis of Church-Going America, 1865-1900. By

Francis P. Weisenburger. (New York: Philosophical Library, 1959.

ix??380p.; index. $6.00.)

In 1835, de Tocqueville emphasized the vital role of religion in the

life of the young American Republic. About a century later, the elder

Schlesinger published an excellent article on "A Critical Period in

American Religion, 1875-1900," in the Proceedings of the Massachusetts

Historical Society. Professor Weisenburger has elaborated on what

de Tocqueville and Schlesinger suggested earlier, but he begins with

1865, presents a wealth of new material, and many penetrating observa-

tions on this significant period in American religious history, which

marked the emergence of many problems that are still with us today.

During the period under discussion, the American people experienced

the impact of science and Darwinism on organized religion; the conflict

between reason and revelation, geology and Genesis, humanism and

supernaturalism; the development of the "higher criticism" which ex-

posed the Bible to the same critical scholarship applied to other historical

sources; an increasing interest in and appreciation of the great religions



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of the world other than Christianity; and the problems of urbanization

and industrialization, especially as they affected the lot of the laboring

classes. Man seemed to be losing, in the opinion of many, his favored

position as the center of the universe, ruled by an anthropomorphic God,

personally concerned with his daily affairs, and the churches had to

redefine their position on these and many other questions. For some it

meant a move toward stricter orthodoxy and evangelical fundamental-

ism; for others, a struggle to reconcile science and philosophy with

theology, or a search for a more humanistic approach toward a social

gospel primarily concerned with establishing the Kingdom on earth.

The church, moreover, was losing its earlier grip on many matters of

custom and conduct; family worship was declining, and many of the

old religious inhibitions, for example on sex, marriage, and divorce,

were no longer as effective as they once were.

Professor Weisenburger has examined the many aspects of this prob-

lem, and the continuing controversies between what have come to be

called the modernists and the fundamentalists. His narrative deals not

only with the whole range of organized religion, from Roman Catholi-

cism and Judaism to Unitarianism and the Ethical Culture movement,

but also includes such organizations as the Salvation Army, Christian

Science, the Swedenborgians, and some of the smaller immigrant

churches which serve a particular ethnic group. None of them were

wholly unaffected by the impact of pragmatism; the effect of science

upon the long-established pattern of thought about man, sin, and salva-

tion; the gulf between empiricism and idealism, and the demand for a

more active social program.

The author has provided us with an excellent synthesis of materials

scattered in many places, which it took years to uncover, and whose

abundance is attested by fifty pages of notes, arranged by chapters, at

the end of the book. The historian and the general reader will be espe-

cially interested in the religious experiences and affiliations of many

prominent public figures, such as Presidents Garfield and Hayes, James

Gordon Bennett, J. P. Morgan, Daniel Willard, Admiral Mahan, the

La Follettes, Joseph B. Eastman, Henry George, Morris R. Cohen,

Mayor Gaynor of New York, Ignatius Donnelly, W. T. Sherman, and

Lyman C. Draper, collector of historical manuscripts and ardent cham-

pion of Spiritualism. Among American religious leaders, one encounters

again such familiar names as Beecher, Gladden, Josiah Strong, Arch-

bishop Ireland, Cardinal Gibbons, and Father McGlynn, but Professor

Weisenburger has also rescued from oblivion many others whose activ-



BOOK REVIEWS 91

BOOK REVIEWS          91

ities were significant in this critical period in American church history.

This is a good and valuable book, from many points of view, but

especially because the author has succeeded in maintaining the historical

objectivity of the scholar in an area of controversy still charged with

considerable emotion.

Western Reserve University                      CARL WITTKE

 

Immigration As a Factor in American History. Edited by Oscar

Handlin. (Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall, 1959. ix??206p.

Paper, $1.75.)

In an effort to acquaint students, even those beginning their college

training, with source materials, books of readings continue to be offered.

The volume here reviewed, prepared by a leading Harvard University

professor, covers the field of immigration from the early nineteenth

century to the present. The selections deal with economic, political,

cultural, and related aspects, as well as topics like the causes of immi-

gration, the perils of the Atlantic voyage, problems of Americanization,

and movements toward restriction. The readings are drawn, not only

from contemporary sources but from standard authorities in the field of

immigration. There are also explanatory comments.

One selection from Marcus Hansen has been included which definitely

gives the erroneous impression that the Finns, Latvians, and Lithuanians

are Slavic peoples (p. 12). Some may conclude, moreover, that Pro-

fessor Handlin, in his salutary revulsion against narrow-minded nativ-

ism, tends to embrace an uncritical sentimentalism when he suggests

that those favoring immigration restriction no longer have the confidence

in the future which characterized their adventurous forefathers "who

had not allowed the environment to dictate to them" (p. 201). In a

time of population problems approaching the explosive stage throughout

the world, Professor Handlin may seem to have ignored the significance

of some of the material presented in this volume. As he notes the prob-

lem of famine and desolation in Ireland during the 1840's, one almost

inevitably must be impressed by the tragic situation of a people who had

lost the battle of trying not to allow the "environment to dictate to

them."

The volume will probably serve a useful purpose for large student

classes, especially where library facilities are limited. For more advanced

groups, the book will hardly meet the needs of students who ought to be

encouraged to read widely from many types of sources. This is espe-



92 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

92 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

cially true because the present volume gives little attention to the years

before 1815.

Ohio State University               FRANCIS P. WEISENBURGER

 

A History of the Newspapers of Ann Arbor, 1829-1920. By Louis W.

Doll. (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1959. viii??174p.;

illustrations, appendices, and index. Paper, $2.50.)

It is impossible to handle old newspapers without getting dirt on the

hands and nuggets of social history firmly imbedded in the memory.

This volume is not, however, intended as social history, although it

does illuminate the Michigan frontier with references to the lost 600-

page Latin St. Augustine which the minister expected that the finder

might want to read, and to the splashing of tobacco juice into the

pews during church services. Dr. Doll had little room for such material,

however, for he found the problem substantial of telling in a limited

space the story of the sixty-nine newspapers which have been published

in Ann Arbor. Because of the thoroughness with which he has worked,

the fact that no copy of a surprising number of these papers has sur-

vived has not reduced his labors, for he has tried to reconstruct the

history of even these.

Dr. Doll has done his work with great thoroughness, and has given

much interesting biographical material on the founders of newspaper

publishing in Ann Arbor, but for their successors he has lacked the

space for such treatment. By necessity much of the material is pri-

marily statistical. There is an appendix listing known copies of Ann

Arbor papers, and another showing the span of life of the principal

papers. No one but an inhabitant of Ann Arbor or a newspaper his-

torian will read through this book for pleasure, but it is an exceedingly

useful repository of facts. When the printing-shop doors of many

other communities are opened by similar books, we shall know much

more about our origins.

American Antiquarian Society             CLIFFORD K. SHIPTON

 

Congress and the American Tradition. By James Burnham. (Chicago:

Henry Regnery Company, 1959. xi??363p.; index. $6.50.)

Much as the scholar gingerly handles the latest volume from a known

propagandist of the far left, any new work by Mr. James Burnham

prompts suspicion as to what the far right is currently up to. In this



BOOK REVIEWS 93

BOOK REVIEWS          93

instance the collapse of congress as a major force in American govern-

ment is predicted unless sudden strong action is taken, and if such

imminent collapse occurs, Mr. Burnham sees an end to American

liberty. "The choice of liberty, made for us at the nation's beginning

by the Founding Fathers, is now up for review on the national as on

the world arena. Is it really true that men can learn the value of liberty

only by losing it?"

In building his case, Mr. Burnham divides his work into three parts.

In the first, which contains the most useful information (scattered, how-

ever, within the guiding assumptions), he discusses the origins of gov-

ernment in general and of the United States government in particular,

and goes on to assess the degree of fulfillment of the American tradition

from the Founding Fathers, prior to the fatal turning point in 1933.

That tradition he sees as one devoted to a distrust of all power and

therefore such a careful division as to block its concentration in any

single governmental agency. Within it, however, is included the con-

cept that government does have some positive obligations, principally

to improve and expand the opportunities for successful private enter-

prise. As to congress, Mr. Burnham stresses that although power was

initially divided, it was never meant to be divided equally. Legislative

supremacy was the starting assumption of the Fathers, and congress

was given a set of power tools with which it could preserve that

supremacy. Prior to the attrition of the Roosevelt-Truman administra-

tions--as continued by the Eisenhower administration--that supremacy

was respected by the executive department. As to the courts, "cer-

tainly up through 1933 'judicial supremacy' was more a polemical meta-

phor than a historical description of the American system."

The latter two parts of the work bemoan the post-1933 breakdown

of the tradition. In a pell-mell rush to gain political direction, the execu-

tive and judicial branches have taken over, and congress instead of

holding its head up proudly has become a rubber stamp of the executive

will and a plaything of a judiciary which has continually usurped the

legislative power. At the same time these federal agencies have

encroached shamelessly on state sovereignty, and through it all have

been aided and abetted by what Mr. Burnham calls the fourth and fifth

branches of the government, the lobbies and bureaucracy. Thus we

are nearing the "liberal goal" of the all-out coercive state, which the

author believes is not only the equivalent of communist totalitarianism

but counter to what the American people really want.

Ohioans are given short shrift in Mr. Burnham's search for examples.



94 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

94     THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

The Bricker amendment and its background do receive a full chapter

treatment and its failure of passage is lamented as another loss of

congressional power. Robert A. Taft, however, who, of course, is an

embarrassment to the thesis, is mentioned only as a dutiful intermediary

between Eisenhower and congress "urging acceptance of 'What Ike

Wants,'" and thereby helplessly contributing to the further subordination

of that body of which he was so long a member. Warren G. Harding

is, by implication, a partial hero, since under him "the curve of relative

congressional power jumped upward." In fact one gains the general

impression that a return to the Harding era would please Mr. Burnham

immensely.

One can cavil considerably at Mr. Burnham's thesis. His choice of

examples is carefully made so as to avoid contradictory material and

his case is made always in absolutes. But even if one does not share

Mr. Burnham's broad fears of congressional collapse, he can find con-

siderable valuable factual material collected here concerning a variety

of phases of both early and recent constitutional development.

University of Minnesota                      PAUL L. MURPHY

 

The President's Cabinet: An Analysis in the Period from Wilson to

Eisenhower. By Richard F. Fenno, Jr. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard

University Press, 1959. xii??327p.; bibliography and index. $5.50.)

Our president's cabinet is decidedly sui generis and it never seems

to function the same under two different presidents. Sometimes it

declines to near insignificance and scarcely ever rises to great importance.

The executive duties of the department head are prescribed by statute,

but the collective counseling of the cabinet has no basis but custom.

Sometimes a cabinet member is torn between loyalty to the president

or responding to the pressures of congress and his constituency.

Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones did the latter until President

Franklin Roosevelt decided he could get along without him.

Because most cabinet members have constituencies a shrewd presi-

dent uses his cabinet to sound out group sentiment on pending admini-

tration policies. The president's choice of cabinet appointees rather

reflects his social philosophy. Fenno shrewdly observes that "the

forces that interact in comprising the appointment process [of the

cabinet] are the basic forces of the American political system."

President Wilson at first wanted only loyal party men in his cabinet,

but he switched to "good administrators" and was finally interested



BOOK REVIEWS 95

BOOK REVIEWS          95

only in willing followers. Harding was so dependent on Attorney

General Daugherty that he had a private wire to him from the White

House. Franklin Roosevelt's cabinet was a "personal family."

Excepting only the secretary of state, the prestige of a cabinet post

is so low that it is practically impossible to lure a congressman into one.

Most cabinet members are virtually unknown nationally before their

appointment. In contrast with Britain there are few national leaders

available for the cabinet. Business men are usually ill-adapted for the

cabinet, a conspicuous misfit being Charles E. Wilson, who either

would not or could not conform to the political role.

Professor Fenno emphasizes the constituencies of the cabinet mem-

bers. The entire West is the jurisdiction of the interior department and

so a westerner is appointed and the agriculture department calls for a

westerner or a midwesterner. The post office and justice departments

represent the party. Lincoln constructed his cabinet of representatives

of the group-coalition of the new Republican party. The National

Association of Manufacturers and chambers of commerce are repre-

sented in the commerce department, and labor likewise has its depart-

ment. Fenno disproves the old assumption that these departments func-

tion primarily in the public interest.

A product of pure usage, the cabinet is the least stable national poli-

tical institution. While President Eisenhower has created a cabinet

secretariat, it has difficulty constructing an agenda for the meetings,

and complaints of the triviality of cabinet discussions persist. In con-

trast with the British cabinet, collective responsibility does not exist

here. Thus Secretary of War Garrison said to Secretary of the Navy

Daniels, "I don't care a damn about your Navy and you don't care a

damn about my Army" (p. 133). Fenno concludes that "the Cabinet

as it exists today is like the vermiform appendix, a standing refutation

of the axiom that it is usefulness that keeps it alive" (p. 255).

Ohio Northern University                  WILFRED E. BINKLEY

 

Preliminary Inventory of the Records of the United States House of

Representatives, 1789-1946. Compiled by Buford Roland, Handy

B. Fant, and Harold E. Hufford. (Washington: The National Ar-

chives, 1959. Two volumes. vi??587p.; index.)

These two volumes provide ample evidence of the rise and continuing

growth of a problem which concerns every federal, state, and local

governmental agency, plus many private businesses--the preservation



96 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

96    THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

of its official records. The agencies of our federal government are in

the envious position of having the staff and the nation-wide records

storage facilities of the National Archives and Records Service avail-

able to help them solve the problems associated with "records leukemia."

It is to be deplored that more of our states, including Ohio, do not pro-

vide adequate records storage buildings and consulting services to their

public offices.

By reading the brief, but interesting, introduction to this records

inventory one gains an understanding of the trials and tribulations of

those public servants who have been custodians of this record group.

Although many early records were evidently lost in moving from New

York City to Philadelphia and then to Washington, where some docu-

ments were destroyed in the burning of the capitol in 1814, a con-

siderable number still exist. By 1901 the volume of records was so

great that to relieve the overcrowded space conditions the bound vol-

umes of the original house records were deposited in the Library of

Congress. During the years between 1901 and 1946 this agency main-

tained many of the records of the house, but in 1946 the records of the

first through the seventy-sixth congresses, amounting to some 7,500

cubic feet, were transferred to the National Archives. By the end of

1954, the records of the eighty-one congresses, totaling over 10,000 cubic

feet, were on deposit there.

This set describes the records of the first seventy-nine congresses,

1789-1946, consisting of about 9,100 cubic feet. The arrangement of

records is first by congresses and then by the following major func-

tions of the house: (1) legislative proceedings, (2) impeachment pro-

ceedings, and (3) records of the office of the clerk. The first grouping

includes minute books, journals, bills, resolutions, committee proceed-

ings, reports of other agencies, petitions, memorials, and election

returns. Group two consists of those documents which could be used

in drafting articles of impeachment. The clerk's records include bill

books, correspondence, various records of registers, orders of the day,

and printing accounts. Not included are the financial records of the

clerk, with minor exceptions. Volume I contains the years 1789-1899,

and Volume II those from 1899 to 1946. Also in Volume II are the

following appendices: (1) Glossary, (2) Standing Committees, 1789-

1954, (3) List of Speakers, (4) List of Clerks.

Although the National Archives may make available for use only

those records which have been printed, unless otherwise directed by

action of the house or in writing by the clerk, this record group offers



BOOK REVIEWS 97

BOOK REVIEWS          97

tremendous rewards to the researcher willing to utilize the material

which is not restricted.

Ohio Historical Society                    BRUCE C. HARDING

 

Seventeenth-Century America: Essays in Colonial History. Edited by

James Morton Smith. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina

Press for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, 1959.

xv??238p.; index. $5.00.)

This group of nine essays was first presented in April 1957, at a

symposium planned by the Institute of Early American History and

Culture to commemorate the 350th anniversary of the founding of

Jamestown. After a rather long wait, students of colonial history not

present at this conference have been amply rewarded, for this is a gen-

erally excellent volume. Included in the collection are the following

contributions: "The Significance of the Seventeenth Century," by Oscar

Handlin; "The Moral and Legal Justifications for Dispossessing the

Indians," by Wilcomb E. Washburn; "Indian Cultural Adjustment to

European Civilization," by Nancy O. Lurie; "Social Origins of Some

Early Americans," by Mildred Campbell; "Politics and Social Structure

in Virginia," by Bernard Bailyn; "The Anglican Parish in Virginia,"

by William H. Seller; "The Church in New England Society," by

Emil Oberholzer, Jr.; "The Anglican Church in Restoration Colonial

Policy," by Philip S. Haffenden; and "Seventeenth-Century English

Historians of America," by Richard S. Dunn.

Although space does not permit a detailed analysis of each of these

essays, at least four seem especially to merit a closer look. Handlin

packs into ten pages a whole quiverful of points with which he charac-

terizes the century under discussion. He uses his familiarity with the

problems of immigration to explain the disorder which was a common-

place in the lives of the colonists and shows how the hardships of those

first years added to the instability of the period. In conclusion our

attention is called to the colonists' sense of mission wherein, Handlin

feels, lies the significance of the seventeenth century.

Miss Campbell's admirable research into the English origins of seven-

teenth-century colonists makes particular use of two immigrant-ship

passenger lists. Her analysis of both the Bristol and London records

shows that artisans out-numbered laborers about five to one, dealing a

sharp rebuke to those whose reaction to the F.F.V. school had carried

them to the other extreme. The fact that many early colonists had come



98 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

98     THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

from the West Country has led Miss Campbell to the grass-roots level

to learn still more of their origins.

Bailyn's essay traces the gradual separation of social and political

leadership in Virginia through the course of the seventeenth century.

It was the growing divergence between local and central authority, par-

ticularly reflected in Bacon's Rebellion, which so completely altered the

old order. By the century's end, real political power was dispersed

through the many branches of planter families, unchecked by the Old

World institutions of primogeniture and entail, which were ineffective

as centralizing forces in land-rich America.

Oberholzer's examination of the Puritan Church's administration of

ecclesiastical discipline commands attention not only for its originality

but also for its vigorous presentation. The author gives us new insight

into the legal principles and procedures of the Puritans, well illustrated

by cases from local church and county records. But in his conclusion

he goes beyond the narrow bounds of his topic with a challenge to other

historians of American Puritanism to match the scope and excellence

of William Haller's great study of the English movement.

The primary difficulty of any collection of essays is unevenness of

style and subject-matter, and the present volume by no means solves

this problem. But its theme for the most part is faithfully pursued by

each of its parts and the result stands as a valuable presentation of the

fruits of recent scholarship in seventeenth-century colonial history.

Harvard University                         BENJAMIN W. LABAREE

 

American Business Cycles, 1865-1897. By Rendigs Fels. (Chapel Hill:

University of North Carolina Press, 1959. xiv??244p.; illustrations,

appendices, and index. $6.00.)

This important book, written by a specialist in business cycles, gives

us the fullest analytical discussion so far available of business cycles in

the United States in the last third of the nineteenth century. It is both an

analytical history in the light of our present understanding of business

cycles and a consideration of the implications of that period for the gen-

eral nature of business cycles. As such, it covers far more than a mere

factual description of the cycles of that period.

In order to define the analytical tools to be used in such an undertak-

ing, the author considers in detail the principal methodologies of research

in business cycles and some selected theories of present-day economists

mainly the theories of Joseph A. Schumpeter, John R. Hicks, and



BOOK REVIEWS 99

BOOK REVIEWS          99

Robert A. Gordon. Dr. Fels then synthesizes his discussion and applies

the results empirically to the cycles of the period with separate chapters

on 1865-79, 1879-85, 1885-88, 1888-91, 1891-94, and 1894-97. The long-

wave depression of 1873 to 1897 is also treated. Two appendices cover

the Twenty-Year Cycles, and the Month of the 1887 Peak.

Why was the period 1865-1897 chosen for this study? In the author's

own words: "The particular span chosen for study coincides with a period

of falling prices. This makes the period a natural unit. It also embraces

a period in which severe depressions were unusually frequent" (p. 20).

In explaining the declining prices and the frequent depressions during

this period, the author departs from the traditional monetary expla-

nation, which stresses the silver question (from the "crime" of 1873

demonetizing silver to the resumption act of 1875, to the Bland-Allison

act of 1878, to the panic of 1884, to the Sherman silver purchase act

of 1890, to the Baring crisis of 1890, to the panic of 1893, and finally,

to the presidential campaign of 1896) and lack of investors' confidence

in the United States monetary standard as the underlying factors. The

author also expresses some disagreement with Milton Friedman's recent

study which stresses changes in the money supply as the basic cause of

the business cycles of that period (pp. 210-211). Instead, Dr. Fels em-

phasizes the non-monetary or "real" factors of economic growth as the

primary explanation, making use of Schumpeter's innovation theory,

Hicks's development of the acceleration principle and its interaction

with the multiplier, and Gordon's analysis of investment opportunity.

To be more specific, the chronic hard times of the 1880's and 1890's

are attributed mainly to the decline of railroad construction (Schum-

peter and Alvin H. Hansen) and the magnified decline of the demand

for investment goods resulting from a falling rate of growth in the

demand for consumers goods (the acceleration principle).

While this non-monetary explanation adds a valuable, fresh point

of view to the traditional monetary-standard explanation, the book,

nevertheless, neglects to devote due space to recognizing the shortcom-

ings of the national banking system as a very important factor in

causing, or contributing to, the business "panics" of that period. Ad-

mittedly, the author does state that "cyclical weakness was less important

for the panic than structural banking weakness" (p. 100), and yet he

stops short of elaborating upon the "structural banking weakness"

under the national banking system, such as the inelastic money supply,

the fictitious reserve requirements, the lack of a central bank, and so

forth, except to mention briefly these topics in one short paragraph (pp.



100 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

100    THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

100-101). The slight treatment of these topics, however, may be justi-

fied on the ground that this book is a scholarly work addressed to pro-

fessional economists, historians, and economic historians, not to the

general reader uninitiated in basic economic knowledge.

In fine, it is the reviewer's opinion that this book has very well suc-

ceeded in using the present-day theoretical tools to analyze the historical

events of business cycles and also in using that period to test the validity

of current cycle theories. The author shows in his lucid analysis that

changes in the secular growth factors, for example, completion of the

railroad network, could cause cyclical and long-wave depressions even

in the absence of external, disequilibrating forces such as the money

supply or the silver question. Such external forces, in the experience

of that period, served to aggravate the business decline. This may be

called the central theme of the book. It seems to me, however, that the

highly technical Chapter Three on "Price and Wage Flexibility During

Cyclical Contraction" could be omitted without disrupting continuity

on the central theme of the book.

Rendigs Fels is professor of economics at Vanderbilt University

and a member of the editorial board of the American Economic Asso-

ciation.

Marietta College                               WEN-YU CHENG

 

The Army Air Forces in World War II. Edited by Wesley Frank

Craven and James Lea Cate. Vol. VII, Services Around the World.

(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958. lii??667p.; illustra-

tions, maps, appendix, glossary, and index. $8.50.)

This is the final volume of the history of The Army Air Forces in

World War II. As such it serves both as a summary of the preceding

volumes of the series and a catch-all for a discussion of less spectacular

phases of the army air force organization.

More than the other volumes, each of which covered a particular facet

of the army air forces' mission, this one, because of its composition, is

more a series of disconnected essays dealing with such diverse topics as

morale, the air transport services, engineers, and redeployment. As such

it fills in gaps, but likewise varies in quality of presentation; such a chap-

ter as the one on "Aviation Engineers" is an excellent organizatior

study while, on the other hand, the chapter on morale is a strangely

pedantic and detached observation report which, if it really does reflec

the complete story of air force morale, shows that airmen and their



BOOK REVIEWS 101

BOOK REVIEWS           101

officers were a strange lot indeed when compared to servicemen in

other branches of the army. This is all the more extraordinary consid-

ering the background and experience of its author. The other chapters

and sections are ranged in between these extremes.

In spite of the weaknesses above outlined, this volume still carries

forth the same "let the chips fall where they may" objectivity of its

predecessors. This is particularly apparent in the chapters on "The

Medical Service of the AAF" and "Women in the AAF." These point

out clearly the troubles and problems encountered in both these services

and particularly strike at conflicts of policies and attitudes which ad-

versely affected the potential effectiveness in both areas of endeavor.

The final chapter on redeployment and demobilization presents no

new material, but very poignantly reiterates how public opinion, noisily

exercised, had traditionally damaged the military service following our

major wars. That, so far, such wholesale demobilization of men and

the instruments of war has not been disastrous appears to be a matter

of fate being on our side. In the event of future conflicts we may not

be so fortunate.

The sections on air transport, weather, and communications, and

the chapter on air-sea rescue, which comprise the remainder of the

volume, are well-organized and complete (insofar as space has allowed),

if not written in excellent prose. Illustrations are, as usual, well

selected and fine additions to the text. Maps, while satisfactory, might

have been more judiciously placed in relation to the narrative.

All things considered, this volume is a worthy climax to an historical

series, almost monumental in scope, which will serve for many years to

come as a standard reference for students of military history.  Its

editors deserve the highest praise for persevering in this work, and the

numerous authors who have contributed to it also are to be commended

for their expert handling of multitudes of difficult topics with objec-

tivity and scholarly precision. While later efforts along these lines

might alter some interpretations herein included, there is little doubt

but what the basic facts and theses will remain little changed.

Anthony Wayne Parkway Board                 RICHARD C. KNOPF

 

Covered Bridges to Yesterdays. By Hazel and Chalmers Pancoast.

(Newark, Ohio: Chalmers Lowell Pancoast, 1959. 95p.; illustrations.

$5.00.)

As timber covered bridges fade one by one from the scene, there



102 THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

102     THE OHIO HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

seems to be a steadily increasing interest in them. This interest finds

expression in many different ways. It varies from a well-ordered pro-

gram to collect and preserve photographs, anecdotes, and information

of technical and historical significance, and to preserve a few representa-

tive covered bridges themselves; to a doting nostalgia that obscures

their real historical importance and advocates preservation of every cov-

ered timber bridge regardless of restoration cost, traffic safety, or the

plain unfitness of some covered spans.

This interest has spurred much writing on the subject. Several books

and numerous articles on covered bridges have been published recently.

Mr. and Mrs. Pancoast's Covered Bridges to Yesterdays is a bit

difficult to classify. It is not, and is not claimed to be, a definitive history

of covered bridges. It is more in the nature of a scrap-book, including

snapshots, newspaper clippings, letters, poems, cartoons, and casual,

random comment on covered bridges. As such, it lacks continuity.

There is a good bit of repetition and much sentimental reminiscence

with many "bees buzzing in the rafters," many "winded horses resting

in the shade," and "clear, cool streams gurgling over the rocks."

Despite its deficiencies, Covered Bridges to Yesterdays has something

for all devotees of the timber covered bridge. The photographs of the

Newark railroad bridge, the "Moscow" bridge, the Horn's Hill bridge,

and the Black Hand bridge, alone, are well worth the price of the

book.

Cincinnati                                       JOHN A. DIEHL