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1074 pages, Hardcover
First published October 10, 2017
By the end of Grant’s second term, white Democrats, through the “redeemer� movement, had reclaimed control of every southern state, winning in peacetime much of the power lost combat. They promulgated a view of the Civil War as a righteous cause that had nothing to do with slavery but only states� rights—to which an incredulous James Longstreet once replied, “I never heard of any other cause of the quarrel than slavery.�
Like Twain, Walt Whitman was mesmerized by Grant and grouped him with George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Ralph Waldo Emerson in the quartet of greatest Americans. “In all Homer and Shakespeare there is no fortune or personality really more picturesque or rapidly changing, more full of heroism, pathos, contrast,� he wrote...After reading this book I am saddened that Ulysses S. Grant's reputation is as low today as it is. Granted (no pun intended) mid-19th Century Presidents isn't the most widely discussed popular subject, but Grants achievements have really been minimized. What most people probably "know" about Grant is his administration was super corrupt, he was a butcher of his own troops on the battlefield (when he wasn't drunk), and he is on the $50 bill. I blame the assholes from the and the assholes who perpetuate the mountain of bullshit that is the . When viewed in his proper historical place Grant may be one of the greatest Americans in our nation's history. I hope this book is the first of many steps rehabilitating Grant's reputation, both among scholars and the public at large.
Dismissed as a philistine, a boor, a drunk, and an incompetent, Grant has been subjected to pernicious stereotypes that grossly impede our understanding of the man. As a contemporary newspaper sniffed, Grant was “an ignorant soldier, coarse in his taste and blunt in his perceptions, fond of money and material enjoyment and of low company.� In fact, Grant was a sensitive, complex, and misunderstood man with a shrewd mind, a wry wit, a rich fund of anecdotes, wide knowledge, and penetrating insights.
“If I [Grant] could have escaped West Point without bringing myself into disgrace at home, I would have done so,� he reminisced. “I remember about the time I entered the academy there were debates in Congress over a proposal to abolish West Point. I . . . read the Congress reports with eagerness . . . hoping to hear that the school had been abolished, and that I could go home to my father without being in disgrace...When Grant finally found success with the Military, both during the Mexican American War and the Civil War his father was quick to latch on and exploit his relationship to further his own financial position. This became so tiresome and draining to Grant that point where, to forestall his father and his (Jewish) business partners from interfering with an active military campaign he issued one of his worst and quickly regretted orders:
Looking back on his life, Grant declared that his happiest day was his last as president—with the possible exception of graduation day at West Point.�
On December 17, he issued the most egregious decision of his career. “General Orders No. 11� stipulated that “the Jews, as a class, violating every regulation of trade established by the Treasury Department, and also Department orders, are hereby expelled from the Department. Within twenty-four hours from the receipt of this order by Post Commanders, they will see that all of this class of people are furnished with passes and required to leave." It was the most sweeping anti-Semitic action undertaken in American history.Thanksfully Grant quickly rescinded the order and, when Preseident, made great strides in including Jews into the government:
Mortified at memories of General Orders No. 11, Grant compiled an outstanding record of incorporating Jews into his administration, one that far outstripped his predecessors�. The lawyer Simon Wolf estimated that Grant appointed more than fifty Jewish citizens at his request alone, including consuls, district attorneys, and deputy postmasters, with Wolf himself becoming recorder of deeds for the District of Columbia. When Grant made Edward S. Salomon governor of the Washington Territory, it was the first time an American Jew had occupied a gubernatorial post. (When Salomon proved corrupt, Grant handled his case leniently, letting him resign.) Elated at this appointment, Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise said it showed “that President Grant has revoked General Grant’s notorious order No. 11.�His father's selfish antics would hound Grant until the day his father passed. Case in point:
Whenever he visited Galena, his hometiwn, Grant shied away from the leather goods store, which didn’t stop Jesse Root Grant from cashing in on his son’s presence in the most mercenary fashion. He wrote this advertising jingle for the Galena Gazette: “Since Grant has whipped the Rebel Lee / And opened trade from sea to sea / Our goods in price must soon advance / Then don’t neglect the present chance / To Call on GRANT and PERKINS. J.R.G.�During the interwar period, after Grant had resigned his commission to be with his family, Grant tried his hand at a while range of businesses.
After the farming venture backfired, Grant and a partner bought up chickens and shipped them to San Francisco, only to have most perish en route. Then Grant and Rufus Ingalls learned that ice sold for exorbitant prices in San Francisco. To capitalize on this, they packed one hundred tons aboard a sailing vessel only to have headwinds detain the ship and melt the ice...He eventually humbled himself by asking his very disapproving father-in-law for land and some initial capital to operate a farm. It was a very hard life and his family lived in close to squalor. It was his experience with poverty and business failure that had a profound impact on his later political life: he would view rich and successful people in favorable light (regardless of their actual qualities) and he was perpetually in fear of falling back to that level (keep in mind there were no Presidential pensions back then). Hence gifts from wealthy citizens during and after the war, which some might view as corruption, Grant took in stride:
"If the Philadelphia house posed a financial burden for Grant, it never presented an ethical one. Showered with gifts by adoring businessmen, he didn’t question such generosity, accepting it as standard recompense for war heroes...Grant took this largesse without any apparent misgivings. Once again, what looked like patriotic munificence from one standpoint might look like buying future influence from another."This blindness to appearances would cause Grant no end to perceived corruption problem during his presidency.
“Grant’s strategy embraced a continent; Lee’s a small State,� wrote Sherman. “Grant’s ‘logistics� were to supply and transport armies thousands of miles, where Lee was limited to hundreds...Lee, for all his reputation, fought primarily a defensive war in Virginia where his supply lines were short, his knowledge of the local terrain was superior, and military technology favored the defender. His two forays into the north results in a stalemate followed by a retreat (Antietam) and a crushing defeat (Gettysburg) that effectually ended any hope of European powers intervening for the Confederacy.
Adam Badeau marveled at how coolly Grant directed all the moving pieces of the war machinery from City Point. “While here, Grant goes out to the very front, is under fire for hours together, and at the same time he receives despatches from Sherman a thousand miles away, and directs the movements of his army at Atlanta, of another in Louisiana, of the forces at Mobile; and smokes his cigar in calm and quiet...Grant had an astounding grasp of strategy and tactics, an excellent eye for military talent, leadership par excellence, and a firm understanding of the politics of the war. That his military reputation has been degraded by racists and traitors greatly angers me to no end.
Sherman’s march formed only one element of Grant’s multifaceted plan to end the conflict. The latter announced a new Department of North Carolina, with John Schofield in command, its mission to take Wilmington and Goldsboro and create new supply sources for Sherman. Grant secretly dispatched twenty-eight thousand troops to New Bern and the Cape Fear River on the Atlantic coast with orders to get a railroad there in working shape to speed the movement of Union troops. This would enable Schofield’s army to team up with Sherman in case Lee abandoned Richmond and brought the war farther south. On the surface, Grant seemed idle in Virginia when, in reality, he was spinning intricate webs to catch Lee.
A devout believer in the Confederate cause, Lee had braced himself to fight until the last moment: “We had, I was satisfied, sacred principles to maintain and rights to defend, for which we were in duty bound to do our best, even if we perished in the endeavor.� The comment belies the notion that Lee fought simply from loyalty to his home state of Virginia and betokens a more militant attachment to Confederate ideology.In terms of his post war life Grant did some pretty amazing things that tend to get lost in the shuffle of history.
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On October 1, Lee proposed a prisoner exchange of soldiers captured outside Richmond. To his credit, Grant confronted Lee about whether he planned to exchange black troops on the same basis as whites. Lee responded that he had no intention of handing over fugitive slaves turned Union soldiers and said those “belonging to our Citizens are not Considered Subjects of exchange.� Grant rebuffed these obnoxious conditions...)
Segments of the Republican Party pulled away from the idealism of earlier days, and nobody sensed this seismic shift more acutely than Amos Akerman. “The real difficulty is that very many of the Northern Republicans shrink from any further special legislation in regard to the South,� he wrote in December. “Even such atrocities as KuKluxery do not hold their attention as long as we should expect.�His actions did much to carve out space for newly freed African Americans to fully enjoy their rights as citizens and the live in a safe environment.
Despite conspicuous blunders in his first term, notably cronyism and the misbegotten Santo Domingo treaty, Grant had chalked up significant triumphs in suppressing the Klan, reducing debt, trying to clean up Indian trading posts, experimenting with civil service reform, and settling the Alabama claims peacefully. He had appointed a prodigious number of blacks, Jews, Native Americans, and women and delivered on his promise to give the country peace and prosperity.What is that Santo Domingo treaty you ask? Possibly the weirdest (in my opinion) part of Grant's presidency. He was convinced that Sant Domingo, the eastern, Spanish portion of Hispaniola, would be an ideal territory to (peacefully) annex and doggedly (and foolishly) pursued it. "The president didn’t anticipate what a hard sell Santo Domingo annexation would be, involving a tropical, Spanish-speaking, Roman Catholic nation inhabited by dark-skinned people." Yeah, Grant was just spectacularly wrong about this and this event highlighted his political naivety that would cause no end to problems for his administration.
"The mystery of Grant’s presidency is how this upright man tolerated some of the arrant rascals collected around him. Again and again he was stunned by scandals because he could not imagine subordinates guilty of such sleazy behavior. “He thought every man as sincere as himself,� said childhood friend Eliza Shaw."Grant had difficulty judging people once he had formed an opinion of them and it came back to bite him time and time again. The worst being when he entrusted his entire fortune to what amounted to a Ponzi scheme, bankrupting his entire family and driving them to the brink of poverty. It was this financial catastrophe that prompted Grant to pen his famous and critically acclaimed Personal Memoirs to support his wife after the cancer that was ravaging his body finally took him.
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Grant has suffered from a double standard in the eyes of historians. When Lincoln employed patronage for political ends, which he did extensively, they have praised him as a master politician; when Grant catered to the same spoilsmen, they have denigrated him as a corrupt opportunist.
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Grant had succumbed to the curse of second-term presidents: spreading scandal. He himself was never tied to knowledge of the Whiskey Ring. In fact, his administration had brought more than 350 indictments against the whiskey culprits—an astounding feat for which Grant seldom gets credit. His fault was again one of supervisory judgment rather than personal corruption. The world of politics was filled with duplicitous people and Grant was poorly equipped to spot them, remaining an easy victim for crooked men.