A historical analysis of how James Polk influenced the authority and
importance of the role of the U.S. presidency for future incumbents.
“Who is James K. Polk?” was a rallying cry of the Whigs during the
campaign of 1844. Polk answered that question adequately by winning
the election against his Whig opponent, Henry Clay. Today the question
might be recast—respectfully, not derisively—“Who was James K.
Polk?” Few persons could give more than a perfunctory answer, even
though when he left office the United States was half again larger
than it was when he became president. Polk, unlike his close friend
Andrew Jackson, has been the subject of but few books. Stern and
serious-minded, intent upon his work, he never caught the public’s
imagination as did some of the more magnetic personalities who filled
the office of president. His lack of personal charm, however, should
not hide from generations of Americans the great benefit he brought
their country and his key role in developing the powers of the
presidency. This book assumes that the presidential power-role, though
expressed in the Constitution and prescribed by law, is not a static
role but a dynamic one, shaped and developed by a president’s
personal reaction to the crises and circumstances of the times during
which he serves. And Polk faced many crises, among them the Mexican
War, the Oregon boundary dispute, the tariff question, Texas’s
admission to the Union, and the establishment by the United States of
a more stable and respected position in the world of nations. Based on
the dynamic power-role theory, the book analyzes its theme of how and
why James K. Polk, the eleventh president of the United States,
responded to the challenges of his times and thereby increased the
authority and importance of the presidential role for future
incumbents. Charles McCoy became interested in writing this book after
two of his friends, both informed historians, pointed out to him that
James K. Polk was a neglected figure in American history. Preliminary
research showed this to be true, but without reason—for, as the
eminent historian George Bancroft said, “viewed from the standpoint
of results, [Polk’s administration] was perhaps the greatest in our
national history, certainly one of the greatest.” For his own astute
appraisal of the Polk administration, McCoy emphasized the use of
firsthand sources of information: the Polk Diary; newspapers of the
period; the unpublished papers of Polk, Jackson, Trist, Marcy, and Van
Buren; and congressional documents and reports.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780292749689
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter