The Presidency of John Quincy Adams
Mary W. M. Hargreaves
416 pages, 6 x 9
American Presidency Series
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0272-8, $29.95
Historians have not been generous
in judging the presidency of John Quincy Adams. Those who have
most conspicuously upheld Adams's fame have, at the same time,
virtually ignored his service in the White House. Critics, on
the other hand, have described his administration as a failure,
founded upon "bargain and corruption" and marked by
exclusion of the United States from the British West Indian trade,
the ineffectiveness of its efforts to promote strong Pan-American
relationships, and the enactment of the "tariff of abominations."
Some analysts have even argued that it generated the sectionalism
which terminated the "Era of Good Feelings."
Mary Hargreaves contends, instead, that the basic effort of
Adams's presidency was to harmonize divergent sectional interests.
To ignore the Adams administration's commitment to nationalism,
she argues, is to overlook a fundamental stage in the establishment
of the federal government as guardian of the general interest.
The volume contains new information on the development of
United States commercial policy, the nation's early relationships
with Latin America, and difficulties of local and regional adjustment
to the growth of the national economy. It will be of keen interest
to all students of the economic and political history of the
early national period.
"An illuminating study that undoubtedly will become the
standard account of John Quincy Adams's presidency. . . . Judicious
and thorough."--Choice
"Adams was one of America's greatest statesmen, yet one
of its least effective presidents. Hargreaves explains why in
a solid and dispassionate account. Excellent documentation and
comprehensive analysis will make this book the standard study,
definitive in its treatment of public policy."--Library
Journal
"This volume could not be more welcome. It is far and
away the best account we have of the unlucky but honorable administration
of John Quincy Adams."--American Historical Review
"Should be read and used by all scholars interested in
the period."--Journal of American History
MARY W. M. HARGREAVES is professor emerita of history
at the University of Kentucky.
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