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Mark Field's avatar

Hogeland wrote a very sympathetic history of the Whiskey Rebellion which I've read. Many of the themes you mention here are in that book as well. But while those frontier settlers at that time deserve some sympathy, it's pretty hard to agree that we should prefer those who favored the extermination of Native Americans, used violent tactics in opposition to the whiskey tax, and had, well, unsophisticated notions of how an economy works over Hamilton or even Jefferson.

Peter Lerner's avatar

I thought Hogeland's book every bit as good as you say. Of course, I'm not qualified to comment on his use of the primary sources, but his book seems solid in its scholarship and story-telling, and is altogether consistent with another fine Hamilton biography, by the conservative historian Forrest McDonald (1979), which Hogeland cites in several places. Forrest McDonald, by the way, co-wrote a wonderful high school textbook on American History with Eugene Genovese ... and I'm messaging here to suggest to you, Brad, that you consider doing something in your field of Political Economy/History (or whatever you call it) ... perhaps a collaboration with Steve Teles, with whom you have been having such a nice exchange, just today, on the Political Science Department at Harvard. Cheers

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