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1831: Year of Eclipse » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of 1831: Year of Eclipse by Louis P. Masur

Authors: Louis P. Masur
ISBN-13: 9780809041190, ISBN-10: 0809041197
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Date Published: February 2002
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: Louis P. Masur



Louis P. Masur is the William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of American I nstitutions and Values at T rinity College in Hartford. He is the editor of Reviews in American History, one of the most widely read journals in its field. His books include 1831: Year of Eclipse and Autumn Glory: Baseball’s First World Series.

Book Synopsis

1776, 1861, 1929. Any high-school student should know what these years meant to American history. But wars and economic disasters are not our only pivotal events, and other years have, in a quieter way, swayed the course of our nation. 1831 was one of them, and in this striking new work, Louis Masur shows us exactly how.

The year began with a solar eclipse, for many an omen of mighty changes — and for once, such predictions held true. Nat Turner's rebellion soon followed, then ever-more violent congressional arguments over slavery and tarrifs. Religious revivalism swept the North, and important observers (including Tocqueville) traveled the land, forming the opinions that would shape the world's view of America for generations to come. New technologies, meanwhile, were dramatically changing Americans' relationship with the land, and Andrew Jackson's harsh policies toward the Cherokee erased most Indians' last hopes of autonomy. As Masur's analysis makes clear, by 1831 it was becoming all too certain that political rancor, the struggle over slavery, the pursuit of individualism, and technological development might eclipse the glorious potential of the early republic—and lead the nation to secession and civil war. This is an innovative and challenging interpretation of a key moment in antibellum America.

Joseph J. Ellis

Louis Masur has set himself up in a propitious perch astride the end of republican America . . .

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