CCNY Historian Explores Dependency Among Americans

Post-Civil War Pleas for Relief Sound More Like 鈥楽ubjects of the Crown鈥 than Self-Reliant Citizens, Says New Book by Dr. Greg Downs

Americans like to envision themselves as self-reliant.  We cherish our freedom, and calls to limit government鈥檚 role in our lives resonate with a large segment of the electorate.  However, perceptions and reality often divulge; many people鈥檚 perceptions of 鈥 and relationships with 鈥 their leaders reflect how well government is doing by them.  Recognizing this can shed insight into their political behavior.  

A new book by City College of New York historian Dr. Greg Downs explores this phenomenon in the post-Civil War South.  鈥淒eclarations of Dependence: The Long Reconstruction of Popular Politics in the South, 1861 鈥 1908,鈥 delves into the often eloquent and intimate pleas from North Carolinians of all races and genders to their elected representatives in Washington.  The book will be released this month by University of North Carolina Press. 

鈥淲e tend to think of people as individualists, but at times they wrote more like subjects of the crown,鈥 says Dr. Downs, an assistant professor at CCNY, who came upon hundreds of similarly written letters while he was researching the Tar Heel State鈥檚 political history.  鈥淚t was surprising to see how many there were and how intensely they begged.鈥

In the aftermath of the Civil War, the people of North Carolina and the other southern states were thrust into great financial and social need, and many thought government might be able to help them.  鈥淭heir approach was idiosyncratic: they thought individuals would be helped not entire groups,鈥 Professor Downs says. 

鈥淭he pleas were very personalized.  People asked for concrete needs like food, money or firewood.鈥  Many of the pleas were intimate with people pledging unwavering devotion and loyalty in exchange for help, he notes.

Demand for relief was greater than late 19th century government could meet, and categories of need were established during the Progressive Era as criteria for providing assistance.  鈥淭he Progressive Era set up government to say 鈥渘o,鈥濃 Professor Downs explains.  鈥淗aving criteria enabled government to tell large numbers of people they couldn鈥檛 have help.鈥

This changed somewhat during the New Deal Era, when the federal government provided massive assistance to help pull the country out of the Great Depression.  However, while people were enamored with President Franklin D. Roosevelt, they thought less of the maze of agencies he established to carry out New Deal programs. 

鈥淧eople fear they will lose when a program is run by a bureaucrat,鈥 Professor Downs maintains.  鈥淥n the other hand, many people during the New Deal Era viewed Roosevelt as 鈥榯he last good king.鈥  They also had an emotional connection with him partly because his fireside chats conveyed the sense that he was accessible.鈥

Beginning with John F. Kennedy, however, most presidents, Barack Obama and George W. Bush among them, have conveyed, instead, a sense of coolness in part to come across well on television.  鈥淥bama鈥檚 response has been an emphasis on policy through a liberalism borne on impossible hopes from government, but he has left out the emotional side,鈥 he continues.  

On the other hand, Sarah Palin, the former Alaska governor popular among many conservatives, 鈥渉as the effect of a 19th century politician,鈥 Professor Downs says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 mean, nasty and insulting, but she conveys a message that if you鈥檙e mine I鈥檒l fight for you.鈥  Many of her fans post very personal messages on her Facebook page that are similar in tone to the 19th century letters from North Carolina, he notes.

Ms. Palin is closely identified with the Tea Party movement, which helped the Republican Party recapture the U.S. House of Representatives in the November 2010 election with its anti-big government rhetoric.  However, Professor Downs contends that Tea Party language does not necessarily reflect its members鈥 actual views.
   
Many Tea Party leaders receive government payments in the form of farm subsidies, disability payments and social security, he says.  鈥淭here is nothing more common than people who have access to government not wanting others to have it.  If you presume there is a limited pool of resources and you are getting a lot from government, then if others want more you think it will come out of your pocket.鈥

This is nothing new, Professor Downs continues.  In the 1830s, Alexis de Tocqueville pointed out that Americans fought less over the size of government and more over what it was doing for them.  Except for the 30-year period after World War II, this has been the norm in American politics, he adds.

鈥淲e have returned to normalcy.  The (political) parties are more organized and ideologically different because the stakes are higher.  People are not used to this, but this is the intense personal nature of politics in a democracy.  The politics will be more personal and vicious because that鈥檚 the way the parties are.鈥

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Ellis Simon
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