Joseph Ellis shares what inspired him to follow his award winning biography of Thomas Jefferson with Founding Brothers and what kind of research went into this Book.
What made you decide to follow your award winning biography of Thomas
Jefferson with Founding Brothers and what kind of research went into this
book?
After I finished my last two books, on John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, I
realized that I had read much of the correspondence produced by the founding
generation. I did have to go through the Washington letters, and read the Burr
correspondence, but otherwise I had pretty much started a new book on the entire
group of founders without quite knowing what I was doing. And throughout those
letters, they kept referring to each other as a "band of brothers." We
think of them as Founding Fathers, but they saw themselves as a fraternity. I
should add that my title fails to include the one sister in the group, Abigail
Adams, whom I think was an equal partner in her husband's political career.
You open the book with the sentence, "No event in American history
which was so improbable at the time has seemed so inevitable in retrospect as
the American Revolution." How so?
We regard the success of the American Revolution as inevitable because we
have lived so long as a nation, over two hundred years, with the consequences of
its success. Looking back over that stretch of time, we can only see the
unfolding of American destiny. But for those involved in making that destiny
happen, everything was contingent, problematic, unclear. After all, before 1776
there had never been a successful war for independence by a colony of a European
power, had never been a nation organized around republican principles, to
include the principle of popular sovereignty. So all the great achievements of
the revolutionary generation were, in fact, unprecedented.
Of the men you write about in Founding Brothers, who do you think was the
most "revolutionary" and who do you think has left the greatest
legacy?
They were all revolutionaries, at least in the sense mentioned above, that is
they were trying to do something that had never been done before in modern
history, and they were bold enough to take on the dominant military and economic
power in the world, Great Britain, fully realizing that if they lost the contest
they would all have been tried and hanged as traitors. Washington was probably
the most indispensable character in the group. Without him, the effort would
have most likely failed. Jefferson's legacy is most lustrous, because of those
magic words he wrote in the Declaration of Independence. Franklin was, in my
judgment, the wisest. Hamilton was the most brilliant, the one who would have
scored the highest on the SAT's. Madison was the sharpest political thinker,
though I think Adams ranks right up there with him. In fact, Adams is probably
the most under-appreciated of them all and the founder whose letters most fully
reveal the hopes and fears and ambitions they all shared. But selecting one
founder over another misses the main point, which is that they succeeded because
they were a collective.
Why did you choose to tell the story of this generation using specific
events (i.e. the duel between Hamilton and Burr; the private dinner for Hamilton
and Madison at Thomas Jefferson's home; the Farewell Address of Washington) as
starting off points?
If there is a method to my madness in the book, it is rooted in the belief
that readers prefer to get their history through stories. Each chapter is a
self-contained story about a propitious moment when big things got decided
(i.e., the location of the nation's capital; the decision to take slavery off
the national agenda). In a sense, I have formed this founding generation into a
kind of repertoire company, then put them into dramatic scenes which, taken
together, allow us to witness that historic production called the founding of
the United States.
How was it that these men, with often bitterly different beliefs and
viewpoints, were able to collaborate in a way that seems almost unimaginable in
today's political arena?
Alfred North Whitehead once said that there were only two occasions in world
history when the political leaders of an emerging nation behaved about as well
as we could possibly expect: Rome under Augustus and the United States under the
American founders. I think there are two reasons why this group managed it so
effectively: First, they all knew each other personally, meaning they broke
bread together, sat in countless meetings together, were forced to interact in
intimate, face-to-face settings; second, they shared the common experience as
revolutionaries who had been "present at the creation," a bonding
process that generated mutual trust and a common sense of purpose. They knew
they were making history. And unlike other revolutionary elites in places like
France, Russia and China, they did not, with one exception, allow their
rivalries to take a violent form. Instead of killing one another off, they
argued endlessly. This is one of the most misunderstood features of the entire
generation; namely, the very human competition among them. We have made them
into statues but statues cannot throb with ambition or shout obscenities at each
other. Here was a case where the best, not the worst, were full of passionate
intensity.
How do you think Jefferson, Hamilton, Franklin, Adams, Burr, Washington,
and Madison would regard politics and politicians today and are there any modern
day political figures who closely resemble any of the Founding Brothers?
Very few, if any, of the founding generation would be willing to run for
political office today, since the democratic political process we have created
during the ensuing two centuries would strike them as demeaning. The present
primary system, the incessant scrutiny of the media, the fund-raising
obligations generated by all national campaigns, the relentless pressure created
by pollsters to shape policies in accord with popular opinion--all these staples
of democratic politics in contemporary America would alienate the founding
generation from public life today. They were a pre-democratic generation,
meaning that they regarded themselves as a political elite whose highest
obligation was the public interest, which is often quite different from the
popular interest at any given moment. The one current political figure who
resembles the vanguard members of the revolutionary era is John McCain, whose
position on campaign finance reform is so obviously driven by a genuine
commitment to the public interest, and yet whose failure also exposes the
suicidal fate awaiting anyone so disposed in our current political culture.
In the presidential election of 1800, Americans chose between Jefferson
and Adams. As you write, "Choosing between them seemed like choosing
between the head and the heart of the American Revolution." In 2000 it's
Bush v. Gore and it is hard to imagine anyone saying the same about this choice.
What has happened?
Comparisons between then and now, say between the election of 1800 and the
current presidential contest between Gore and Bush, are always treacherous. On
one level they call to mind Henry Adams's famous observation: if you look at the
history of the American presidency, you would conclude that Darwin got it
exactly backward. At another level, the comparison is unfair to Gore and Bush,
because we are measuring them, not against the real Adams or Jefferson, but
against our mythological versions of them. That said, I do think the current
generation of political leaders cannot possibly measure up to the founding
generation. It's not that there was something special in the water back then. Or
that God, or the gods, gave this group some special grace. It was that the
crisis we call the American Revolution generated the conditions essential to
call forth heroic acts of leadership. The only analogous crisis in American
history was the Civil War, and that did give us Lincoln. Perhaps the Great
Depression also qualifies. And there we got Franklin Roosevelt. Perhaps we ought
to conclude that our democratic culture really does not want strong leaders
except in national emergencies. Leaders can be dangerous, can do bold things. In
an ironic sense the founders created a system that is designed to function
without strong leaders, to be a machine that runs itself. And in an equally
ironic sense, the current crop of lackluster leaders is symptomatic of the
abiding health and prosperity of the United States as we enter the new
millennium.
There seems to be a renewed interest in the revolutionary generation these
days. The Patriot is shaping up to be one of the summer's biggest movies,
the History Channel has a series planned on the Founding Fathers, HBO is making
a film about the infamous Burr Hamilton Duel. What accounts for all this
attention at this particular moment?
It's true that, until the recent success of The Patriot, there have
been very few Hollywood films about the American Revolution that have enjoyed
critical or commercial acclaim. The only one I can think of is Drums Along
the Mohawk by John Ford in the late 1930s. I think part of the reason for
the failure is that the eighteenth century is pre-photograph. All the visual
renderings we have of that era are stylized portraits. We have no mental
pictures that make the revolutionary generation fully human in ways that link up
with our own time. Another reason, I think, is that these great patriarchs have
become Founding Fathers, and it is psychologically quite difficult for children
to reach a realistic understanding of their parents, who always loom larger than
life as icons we either love or hate. I see a certain connection between the
surge of interest in the World War II generation, what Tom Brokaw has called
"the greatest generation," and the current surge of interest in the
revolutionary generation, which I happen to think wins the election for
"the greatest" hands down. In both instances we are beginning to come
to terms in a deeper and more detached fashion with the role of our ancestors in
making our modern America what it is. If Founding Brothers turns out to
be part of that process of mature appreciation, I would be quite pleased. I
would love some reviewer to say that if you liked Saving Private Ryan,
you will love Founding Brothers.
Unless otherwise stated, this interview was conducted at the time the book was first published, and is reproduced with permission of the publisher. This interview may not be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the copyright holder.
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