Populism, Its Rise and Fall
William A. Peffer
Edited and with an Introduction by Peter H. Argersinger
216 pages, 1 photograph, 7 cartoons, 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0509-5, $25.00
Before it was "Populism,"
the great reform movement of the 1890s was often called "Pefferism"
after its most prominent leader, Kansas editor William Peffer.
Peffer's Populism, Its Rise and Fall is the only significant
memoir by a major Populist figure.
The Populist movement arose as a revolt against the special
privileges of industrialism and the American banking system.
It spread quickly throughout the Midwest and South and reached
its zenith with the founding of the People's party in the early
1890s. William Peffer chaired the national conference that organized
the People's party and was the party's first U.S. senator and
president of its National Reform Press Association.
Peffer's memoir, written in 1899 but discovered decades later,
offers a unique insider's view of the Populist movement. Peffer
describes the development of Populism, the political maneuverings
and campaign practices of the People's party, the effect of the
famous silver movement on the critical election of 1896, and
the behind-the-scenes conflicts and disagreements that ultimately
led to the dissolution of America's last great third party.
Populism, Its Rise and Fall includes the complete text
of this singular memoir, transcribed, edited, and annotated by
Peter H. Argersinger, a leading scholar of the Populist movement.
Argersinger's introductory essay and extensive annotation evoke
America at the turn of the century and place Peffer's memoir
in the context of the times, at the vortex of the forces that
shaped and ultimately destroyed Populism.
"There are other Populist memoirs, but none from such
a central figure as Peffer, and none from a key Kansas Populist.
This book will be of note to scholars with general interests
in the Gilded Age, as well as to specialists in Populism and
farm activism."--Tom Isern, author of Bull Threshers
and Bindlestiffs: Harvesting and Threshing on the North American
Plains and coauthor of Plainsfolk: A Commonplace of the
Great Plains
"Beyond doubt, Peffer was one of the more significant
leaders produced by the Populist movement. This memoir is useful
in helping us to understand the course he followed, which has
remained something of an enigma."--Gene Clanton,
author of Kansas Populism: Ideas and Men
PETER H. ARGERSINGER, professor of history at the University
of Maryland, Baltimore County Campus, is currently a Woodrow
Wilson Fellow in the Program in American Society and Politics
at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. He is
author of Populism and Politics; Structure, Process, and Party;
and articles on the political and social history of the Gilded
Age.
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