Texarkana Gazette

TURNING A NEW PAGE

Ron Chernow hopes to retire myths about Ulysses Grant

- By Hillel Italie

NEW YORK—As he began work on what became a thousand-page biography of Ulysses S. Grant, Ron Chernow knew he was joining a very old argument.

“I wanted to retire three chief myths about Grant: that he was a crude and brutal general; that he was a hopeless alcoholic who somehow stumbled through the Civil War in a drunken stupor; and that he oversaw a failed presidency marked by corruption and nepotism,” says Chernow, whose newly released “Grant” is a follow-up to his Pulitzer Prize-winning “George Washington” and to the Alexander Hamilton biography that became the unlikely source of a phenomenon—LinManuel Miranda’s musical “Hamilton.”

Chernow sees Grant as a continuati­on of the military hero-political leader that Washington embodied, but one with a more troubled reputation. For decades Grant was one of the country’s most disparaged presidents. A 1948 poll conducted by Harvard scholar Arthur Schlesinge­r Sr. ranked Grant next to last, just above Warren Harding. As recently as 2002, a Siena College poll placed Grant in the bottom 10, just above William Henry Harrison, who died after a month in office. A National Park Service training supervisor, Liam Strain, says that visitors to Grant’s Tomb in Manhattan often arrive with preconcept­ions of Grant as a drunk who only won the Civil War because the Union had more soldiers.

Even the White House website disparages Grant, a two-term president who served from 1869-77. Capsule biographie­s, some dating back to the 1960s, of all the presidents appear on www.whitehouse.gov. While many are treated favorably to the point of hagiograph­y, Grant is identified as a chief executive who “provided neither vigor nor reform. Looking to Congress for direction, he seemed bewildered.”

But his standing has improved in recent years, thanks to biographie­s by Jean Edward Smith and H.W. Brands, among others. and to the extensive scholarshi­p of Brooks Simpson, a professor at Arizona State University. The Ohio-born Grant has been widely praised as a peerless military leader and strategist, one still studied at his alma mater West Point, and as a determined defender of rights for blacks, whether welcoming them as soldiers in the Union army or using military force to counteract the violent resistance of the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacis­ts to Reconstruc­tion. During a recent appearance to promote his book “We Were Eight Years in Power,” Ta-Nehisi Coates said that he had been reading “Grant,” which he called “exceptiona­l.”

Coates said he was struck by the story of a financiall­y struggling Grant, whose in-laws were slaveholde­rs, emancipati­ng a slave two years before the Civil War.

“Enslaved black people were worth a lot,” said Coates, who called Grant’s decision “the singularly bravest act ever committed by a president in his private life.”

Chernow and many others contend that Grant was the victim of the so-called Dunning School of History, named for Columbia University professor William Archibald Dunning. Beginning at the turn of the 20th century, Dunning advocates claimed that Reconstruc­tion was a disastrous experiment that proved blacks were unfit for equality in civic life.

The Dunning mentality was most famously captured in D.W. Griffith’s “The Birth of a Nation,” the 1915 silent epic that exalted the KKK and demonized blacks.

“The crux of the matter is if you consider Reconstruc­tion a disaster then Grant becomes a symbol of that,” says historian Eric Foner, whose acclaimed 1988 book “Reconstruc­tion” is one of the defining works on the post-Civil War era. “If you see Reconstruc­tion as I do, and as most historians do, as flawed, but honorable and that it’s very unfortunat­e it didn’t succeed, then Grant looks better.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? This April 18, 2011, photo shows author Ron Chernow at his home in the Brooklyn borough of New York. The historian, whose Alexander Hamilton biography was the basis for the Broadway musical “Hamilton,” has a new biography, “Grant,” a thousandbi­ography...
Associated Press This April 18, 2011, photo shows author Ron Chernow at his home in the Brooklyn borough of New York. The historian, whose Alexander Hamilton biography was the basis for the Broadway musical “Hamilton,” has a new biography, “Grant,” a thousandbi­ography...

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