DC Public Library System

The birth of empire, DeWitt Clinton and the American experience, 1769-1828, Evan Cornog

Label
The birth of empire, DeWitt Clinton and the American experience, 1769-1828, Evan Cornog
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 211-220) and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The birth of empire
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
38174234
Responsibility statement
Evan Cornog
Sub title
DeWitt Clinton and the American experience, 1769-1828
Summary
The Birth of Empire chronicles not only the life of an important political leader but the accomplishments that underlay his success. As mayor of New York City, for example, Clinton was instrumental in the founding of the public-school system. He sponsored countless measures to promote cultural enrichment as well as educational opportunities for New Yorkers, and helped to establish and lead such institutions as the New-York Historical Society, the American Academy of the Arts, and the Literary and Philosophical Society. As shown here, Clinton's career was marked by frequent attempts to integrate his cultural and scientific interests into his identity as a politician, thus projecting the image of a man of wide learning and broad vision, a scholar-statesman of the new republic. Ironically, the political innovations which Clinton set in motion - the refinement of patronage and the spoils system, appeals to immigrant voters, and the professionalization of politics - were precisely what led to the extinction of the scholar-statesman's natural habitat. DeWitt Clinton was born into the aristocratic culture of the eighteenth century, yet his achievements and ideas crucially influenced (in ways he did not always anticipate) the growth of the mass society of the nineteenth century
Classification
Content
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