The Gilded Age Presidency Reconsidered
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Gilded Age Presidency Reconsidered is a
revisionist account in which the author examines the leadership of Presidents
Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester Arthur, and Grover Cleveland in
dealing with Civil service reform, economic problems such as the tariff, and
civil rights in the South. This work is limited to domestic affairs only, since
the author believes that is the area in which these president
accomplished much needed change.
The work challenges the traditional view that Congress dominated
these weak chief executives who hardly protested its actions. Nothing could be
farther from reality. By taking the actions they did, these presidents not only
helped solve immediate problems for the nation, but they also paved the way for
a significant growth of the president as a leader of the nation in the years
ahead. Without the foundations of these daring men, Theodore Roosevelt and
Woodrow Wilson would have encountered many more difficulties in expanding the
scope of presidential power in the early twentieth century.
About the Author
William Ketchersid has been a
professor of teacher at Bryan College for 28 years. During that time, in
addition to teach an array of survey classes, Dr. Ketchersid
has specialized in American Constitutional history, with a strong emphasis on
the presidency. As a result of his teaching and earlier work on his doctoral
dissertation, he discovered that the chief executives of the Gilded, with the
exception of Benjamin Harrison, have suffered from the standard view that after
Grant Congress dominated the national government until the presidency began to
almost miraculously emerge with intense strength during the terms of Theodore
Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. The author has discovered that Hayes, Garfield,
Arthur, and Cleveland faced economic and reform issues much more boldly than
most historians have been willing to admit. For this reason, he believes a
brief reconsideration of the presidency during the Gilded Age is needed.