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Negro President: Jefferson and the Slave Power
Negro President: Jefferson and the Slave Power
Negro President: Jefferson and the Slave Power
Audiobook8 hours

Negro President: Jefferson and the Slave Power

Written by Garry Wills

Narrated by Garry Wills

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this audiobook

In "Negro President" the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Garry Wills explores a pivotal moment in American history through the lens of Thomas Jefferson and the now largely forgotten Timothy Pickering, and "prods readers to appreciate essential aspects of our distressed but well-intentioned representative democracy" (Chicago Tribune). In 1800 Jefferson won the presidential election with Electoral College votes derived from the three-fifths representation of slaves - slaves who could not vote but were still partially counted as citizens. Moving beyond the recent revisionist debate over Jefferson's own slaves and his relationship with Sally Hemings, Wills instead probes the heart of Jefferson's presidency and political life, revealing how the might of the slave states remained a concern behind his most important policies and decisions. In an eye-opening, ingeniously argued exposE, Wills restores Timothy Pickering and the Federalists' dramatic struggle to our understanding of Jefferson, the creation of the new nation, and the evolution of our representative democracy.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 13, 2012
ISBN9781470324148
Negro President: Jefferson and the Slave Power
Author

Garry Wills

Garry Wills is the author of 21 books, including the bestseller Lincoln at Gettysburg (winner of the 1992 Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award), John Wayne's America, Certain Trumpets, Under God, and Necessary Evil. A frequent contributor to many national publications, including the New York Times Magazine and the New York Review of Books, he is also an adjunct professor of history at Northwestern University and lives in Evanston, Illinois.

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Reviews for Negro President

Rating: 3.968749971875 out of 5 stars
4/5

32 ratings7 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book started off really strong and had me super engaged for the first several chapters, but at some point I found my mind wondering while I was trying to listen even though the book has a lot of really great eye-opening information.

    I purchased a print copy because the beginning was so good but I worry I didn't really read the second half until he mentioned James Hemings. Some slight conflicts with takeaways from the book 'Thomas Jefferson & Sally Hemings: an American controversy' by Annette Gordon Reed.

    I think I would still recommend this book to people.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Interesting take on the long term affects of the 3/5 compromise. Gave the South a political power unwarranted by their free population, the effects which are still seen today...
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Surprisingly good. Wills is much more careful than, say, Joseph Ellis in His Excellency about sticking to facts and avoiding unwarranted speculation as to motives (particularly when it comes to chronology, and not retroactively ascribing later motives to earlier actions), though he does lapse a little in this regard toward the end. He clearly demonstrates that not only does private slave ownership tend to corrupt a man's moral character (as Jefferson himself noted), but political support of slavery corrupts a man's political character; and that the 3/5 compromise (unavoidable as it may have been) ultimately made the Civil War inevitable.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In modern American politics, it has become a common parlor game to speculate -- or even investigate -- the special interests supporting various politicians. The assumption is that various people, including leaders of Congress and the President, are so beholden to certain groups for their power -- or at least the money to finance the campaigns that leads to their power -- that they make self-interested deals that vary from their personal beliefs.Noted, and prolific, author Garry Wills shows that such interests are deeply rooted in the American system. He takes on the biggest of them all, the slave power of the antebellum South, in "'Negro President': Jefferson and the Slave Power." In this, Wills shows not only how the 3/5 compromise in the Constitution (which counted slaves as 3/5 person for purposes of electoral power) led to Jefferson's 1800 victory over the incumbent President John Adams, but how this power demanded Jefferson's deference as he governed.Wills' initial argument, that Jefferson would not have defeated Adams in 1800 without the additional electoral votes given to slave states based on the 3/5 compromise, will likely surprise many readers, long accustomed to the notion of "one person, one vote." The strength of the book, however, is that this is merely the precursor for Wills' focus, detailing how this disproportionate electoral power not only swayed elections, but heavily influenced governing, long before the slavery-tinged debates of the 1850s.To illustrate his argument, Wills gives Jefferson's words and policies a sparring partner, the prickly New England Federalist Timothy Pickering, who served in the Senate during most of Jefferson's presidency. Pickering, perhaps best known (if at all) as Adams' insubordinate Secretary of State. While Pickering was in the minority, his persistent and vocal opposition to Jefferson, particularly on matters touching on slavery, highlights Jefferson's political decisions on such issues. And while Pickering was far from a model statesman, his ongoing debate with Jefferson regarding these issues is rather prescient, voicing issues that will return with a vengeance in the volatile years before the Civil War. As with all intellectual history, Wills is occasionally tedious as he describes the differing points of view, supported with frequent, and sometimes lengthy, quotations. Even with this trading of flowing prose for well-documented accuracy, the book is a pleasant read. It is also another valuable book on American history by Wills, offering a needed reevaluation of Jefferson's contorted, almost schizophrenic, views and policies regarding American slavery.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'd just like to take a moment to disagree slightly with the previous reviewers.If you're looking for a biography of Thomas Jefferson, no, this is not where you want to start. But I believe that those reviewers who say that this book is misleading with its title or otherwise are missing the point. (I've seen similar reviews at Amazon and elsewhere.) I don't believe that Mr. Wills set out to write a biography of Jefferson, per se, but rather his intention was to explore how the Republicans (Jefferson in particular) exploited slavery through the three-fifths compromise in order to gain (and keep) power.Perhaps a more appropriate title would have been something like "Negro Party: Republicans and the Slave Power" as the book is a bit broader than just covering Jefferson. Still, I don't think the title is all that misleading.Oh, and it's a good read!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Several years ago I borrowed Wills' previous book, "Lincoln at Gettysburg" from the library and discovered that Mr. Wills was way smarter than I was - to the point that I couldn't even follow him. Either "Negro President" is simpler or I've gotten smarter, because I found this book to be lucid and comprehensible - and even enjoyable.Point of order, however - despite the picture of Jefferson on the dust jacket and the book's subtitle, "Negro President" is not about Jefferson at all. In fact, discussions of the election of 1800 (which provides the classic illustration of the book's argument) and Jefferson himself make up only a minor portion of the book. Instead, the focus is on the infamous "three fifths" clause of the Constitution, and how it influenced American history and political life prior to the Civil War. Wills' thesis is that much of what we "know" about the early Republic is wrong, because historians have minimized and downplayed the role of the "slave power," that is, the slave holding political elites. Thus, the election of 1800 is not, as it is generally portrayed, a victory of democratic principles over monarchistic tendencies, but the triumph of slaveholders (who had an advantage in the Electoral College due to the three fifths clause) over free voters. Thus, the location of the new capitol next to the Potomac was not to place it in a neutral locale (or even to increase the value of George Washington's personal land holdings), but rather to accommodate slave holding legislators by placing the district within the borders of slave states.Wills argues cogently and effectively for his point of view, and it is not detracting anything from the book to state it clearly has a position it is advancing - one could argue (and many have argued) from a contrary point of view. But Wills is most effective at reminding us that what we believe is "obvious" about our history, e.g., that the Constitution needed to be amended after the near-disaster of 1800 to provide for the President and Vice President tickets we now take for granted, was not necessarily so clear cut to the people who participated in these events. Wills presents his argument so clearly that I guess I'll have to go back to "Lincoln in Gettysburg" now, to see if it's him or me that's changed.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    "Negro President"? Should be Pickering's Challenge instead!Author Wills promised me a book about the 3/5's clause and how it assured Jefferson's climb to the presidency. By the blurbs and advanced notices on this book I expected to find a detailed exposition on the conventions created to cajole the Southern representatives into signing onto the Constitution and how, in turn, it was used to clinch Jefferson's presidential ascension.To date I am still waiting for that book.So, what we got in "Negro President" instead was more like a few short and rather unsatisfying bios on several other Founding era personalities and surprisingly little on Jefferson himself. Wills does remind us that he has written on Jefferson in several other books, and that is well and good, but it seems then that he should have called this "Pickering's Challenge" or at least titled the book closer to the actual subject OF the thing!I do hope Wills takes the time to write on the 3/5's clause like he promised to do. After all, this little known aspect of Constitutional history was so important that it caused a lock for Southern power with those ideas becoming the South's most important power-play all the way until the Civil War. The 3/5's clause caused the Civil War if anything did!So, for a little background on the Founder's era, it is fine, but I can't help but feel this book suffers from a bit of false advertising.