

Editor’s Note – Submission Going Down, Down, Dragging me Down*
Joshua R. Greenberg
Happy New Year!

Did the Election of Andrew Jackson Usher in the ‘Age of the Common Man’?
Andrew W. Robertson
One of the most persistent myths in American history is the idea that the election of Andrew Jackson in 1828 […]

Was Andrew Jackson Really the People’s Choice in 1824?
Donald J. Ratcliffe
Well, of course he was. American historical narratives have always told us so, and recent prize-winning tomes that agree on […]

Were Jeffersonian Charges of Monarchism Really Just Sleazy, Hysterical Smears?
Andrew Shankman
Every recent presidential election cycle, about the time a campaign goes negative, newspapers run a story like the one in the […]

Myths of Lost Atlantis: An Introduction
Jeffrey Pasley
Myths about early American politics certainly abound, but different ones operate in different quarters of the culture.

The Art of Condescension: Postbellum Caricature and Woman Suffrage
Gary L. Bunker
: Graphics in Nineteenth-Century America”
Cartoonists manipulated the meaning of the revolution metaphor for their own mischievous designs.

On Voter Fraud and the Petticoat Electors of New Jersey
Rosemarie Zagarri
WERE EARLY AMERICAN ELECTIONS FOR WHITE MEN ONLY?

“Great Questions of National Morality”
Jonathan D. Sassi
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
Whatever the first amendment may say about the separation of church and state, religion has had a place in American politics, for better or worse, since the very founding of the nation.

“Ho for Salt River!”
Liz Hutter
: Graphics in Nineteenth-Century America”
Several cartoons from the presidential campaign of 1848 show Salt River as a foreboding obstacle for all who seek the nation’s highest office.

Electoral College: Nearly Impossible to Repeal
James M. Banner Jr.
“Impracticable the electoral college surely is. And it is precisely because of its improbable construction that today’s electoral college remains one of the least altered institutions established by the Constitution of 1787. . .”

“The Almighty Dollar”: 2016 and the Long History of Lobbying
Daniel Peart
2016 will mark not just the election of the forty-fifth president of the United States, but also the 200th anniversary of the creation of the first ever lobbying agency in the national capital, an agency that was founded by a Delaware factory manager named Isaac Briggs.

Strange Bedfellows: The Politics of Race in Antebellum Rhode Island
Erik J. Chaput and Russell J. DeSimone
When the ballots were certified on January 13, 1842, the people of Rhode Island found themselves with two constitutions.

The Manly Sport of American Politics: Or, How We Came to Call Elections “Races”
Kenneth Cohen
Nineteenth-century Americans abandoned the traditional English phrasing of “standing” for election and begin to describe candidates who “run” for office. The race was on.

Faith in the Ballot
Richard S. Newman
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
Early northern black church voting may be the missing link in our understanding of black political consciousness and civic mindedness.

The Politics of Martial Manhood
Amy S. Greenberg
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
There were far more Democrats in the 1850s who still supported the antiquated honor code that justified dueling than there were Whigs.

Beards, Bachelors, and Brides: The Surprisingly Spicy Politics of the Presidential Election of 1856
Thomas J. Balcerski
Across the pantheon of presidential elections in early America, few have stressed the themes of sex and gender so spicily as the heated contest of 1856. It was a year of many firsts.

A Not-So-Corrupt Bargain
Sharon Ann Murphy
As I read this book in the midst of yet another presidential election cycle, it was nearly impossible not to find strong parallels between these figures and our own presidential candidates.

Mr. Owen Goes to Washington
Eric R. Schlereth
Indiana’s Infidel Congressman Locals refer to southwestern Indiana as “The Pocket,” but politicians know this region by a more ominous […]

What We Talk about When We Talk about Democracy
Reeve Huston
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
We ought to be asking ourselves what kind of democracy we want and what kind of democracy a particular leader or movement is offering.

#FeelTheBirney
Caleb McDaniel
For Brooks, antebellum political abolitionists—not the Populists, not the Progressives—deserve to be remembered as “the most important third-party movement in American history.”

Black Work at the Polling Place
Laura Rigal
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
[The County Election] also parodies the men in the crowd, who are divided…by the moral valence of their characters…

The Glass Ballot Box and Political Transparency
Ellery Foutch
In an election year where claims to transparency seem deeply opaque, Foutch recalls the moment when the way to save democracy was clear as glass.

Finding a Lost Election
Erik Beck
Almost every child in the United States learns who John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, and Andrew Jackson […]

Outsourced History
Patrick Spero
It is fair to say that had the election in Virginia’s Fifth District gone the other way, the nation’s early political history would have been considerably altered.

Creating Two Nations
Daniel W. Crofts
“As matters now stand,” he sadly concluded, “there is a United North against a United South, and both marching to the field of blood.”

The Dorr Rebellion Website
Mary Babson Fuhrer
More than two centuries into our national experiment, it is still a vexing question: What is popular sovereignty? Who are […]

Suffrage and Citizenship
Richard D. Brown
U.S. citizenship and suffrage have not always been two sides of the American coin. . . . the voters who elected presidents from George Washington to Abraham Lincoln included many thousands who were not United States citizens.

The Technology of Democracy
Caroline F. Sloat
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
The disputed result of the 2000 election brought questions of materiality and meaning, which are frequently studied in academic settings, to the streets and the courts.

Welcome to our 2016 Special Issue on Politics!
Anna Mae Duane
Common-place injects a new issue into the political campaign as the 2016 presidential race enters its final stage.

Publick Occurrences 2.0 May 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
May 27, 2008 Are You Smarter Than an Eighth Grader? No, you’re not. Here are the questions Isaac had to […]

Publick Occurrences 2.0 September 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
Historians, find the pattern Assuming there is one, besides electoral fear. Any thoughts? Any other maps this resembles? September […]

Potent Papers
Patricia Crain
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
Before the secret ballot became the national standard, election ballots were a vivid genre of print ephemera.

Publick Occurrences 2.0 April 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
April 28, 2008 End-of-the-semester blues Travel and end-of-the-semester workload issues have kept me off of here a little longer than […]

Freedom from High Federalism
J. M. Opal
We learn how, when, and where High Federalism began to alienate Americans with its disturbing encroachments on the most basic forms of democracy and dissent.

Fun with Political Geography
Jeffrey Pasley
My students and I had fun discussing political geography today. For instance, take a look at these two maps side […]

Introducing the Commonplace politics issue
Jeffrey L. Pasley
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
The emphasis of our special issue is two-fold: scholarly perspectives on political phenomena that connect the early American republic with the present, on the one hand; on the other […] an expansion of readers’ definition of what counts as “political history.”

Publick Occurrences 2.0 March 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
March 31, 2008 Barack Obama, Glenn Loury, and the American Historical Narrative Over at TPM Cafe, former black conservative Glenn […]

Publick Occurrences 2.0 February 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
February 29, 2008 Seems Like Old Times, I: Nationalizing the state militias One of the features I have planned for […]

Wyoming Caucuses Primary Source Special: Gore ‘88
Jeffrey Pasley
<<One of many glamorous moments of the 1988 Al Gore campaign that I did not see. Scene of […]

Voting Machines and the Voters They Represent
Lisa Gitelman
Presented as part of the special Politics Issue
The layout of a voting machine harbors implications about meaning, about what is and what is important, and therefore harbors politics in its broadest sense.


Grow Up, America: Choose Our Better History
Jeffrey Pasley
I have long thought that now-President Obama’s reputation as an orator was little inflated, more by a media and public […]

Publick Occurrences 2.0 July 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
July 29, 2008 Tennessee church shooter targets conservative historical fiction It appears that the angry white guy who shot up […]

Publick Occurrences 2.0 August 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
August 29, 2008 Vice Grip . . . on the media’s imagination, blogosphere included. Finally, we come to the sense-shattering […]

Lampi’s Election Notes
Philip Lampi
The 1824 Presidential Election is one of the most well remembered, primarily because it is the only election ever forced into the House of Representatives because no candidate succeeded in getting a majority of electoral votes (different from the 1800 Presidential Election in which two candidates got a majority, thus forcing the passing of the 12th Amendment).

Publick Occurrences 2.0 January 2008
Jeffrey Pasley
January 31, 2008 Goody Bags Bad The eloquently nasty James Wolcott made a sharp comment on the historical contribution to […]

The Online Writings of Jeffrey L. Pasley — UPDATED
Jeffrey Pasley
This page presents some of the same links that appear on my original home page, along with some new ones, […]

The Politics Issue Cometh
Jeffrey Pasley
Things have not been as active as they might have been around here because we are busy are completing what […]

Hillary Clinton’s “Experience”: A Double-Edged Sword
Jeffrey Pasley
Hillary Clinton’s opponents really need to hold her to her claims about her experience, and make sure she owns up […]

Creative Writing
Reviews


Expanding the Boundaries of Reconstruction: Abolitionist Democracy from 1865-1919
Erik J. Chaput and Russell J. DeSimone