Missouri
A History
Paul C. Nagel
xiv, 210 pages, 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0386-2, $9.95
Missourians could hardly have
made a more appropriate decision than to name their capital after
Thomas Jefferson. A meeting place of major rivers, Missouri became
a gateway to the beckoning West opened up to Americans by Jefferson's
Louisiana Purchase. In the era of overland traders and steamboat
pilots, of Thomas Hart Benton and Mark Twain, life in Missouri
was strongly flavored by the Jeffersonian spirit--expressed in
a suspicion of large cities, a belief that mankind flourished
best in a rural setting, a faith in the free individual as the
guardian of liberty, and a steady insistence that the powers
granted to government must be limited.
The Civil War and the century that followed it brought Missouri
a time of tribulation. Machines mastered nature, and new forces
prepared the way for a society of giant cities, business goliaths,
and expanding government. Skeptical Missourians nonetheless challenged
Americans to rediscover their heritage, and into the era of Harry
Truman they stood fast by their "Show Me" attitude,
questioning much of what passed for progress in the fast-changing
nation.
Missouri is still profoundly shaped by its cherished Jeffersonian
legacy, Nagel argues. St. Louis and Kansas City, major metropolitan
areas on the east and the west, vie for power with the state's
rural areas in a continuing struggle between city and country.
First published in 1977 as part of the Norton bicentennial
series on The States and the Nation, a project of the American
Association for State and Local History, Missouri appears
now for the first time in paperback.
"Nagel admirably suggests the values, ambiance, and character
of the state from an historical perspective."--Journal
of American History
"A sprightly volume written for a popular audience."--Choice
PAUL C. NAGEL brings to this portrait of Missouri's
past the perspective of a native. Born in Independence, the descendant
of German immigrants, he is a former professor of history at
the University of Missouri, Columbia, and a former vice president
for academic affairs in the University of Missouri system. Among
his most important books are Descent from Glory: Four Generations
of the John Adams Family, The Adams Women: Abigail and Louisa
Adams, Their Sisters and Daughters, and Extraordinary
Lives: The Art and Craft of American Biography, all three
Book-of-the-Month Club selections.
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