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Richard White
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Breaking the Myth About America’s ‘Great’ Railroad Expansion
Historian Richard White on the greed, ineptitude and economic cost behind the transcontinental railroads, and the implications for infrastructure policy today.
by
Richard White
,
Jake Blumgart
via
Governing
on
November 18, 2021
New Yorker Nation
In Jill Lepore's "These Truths," ideas produce other ideas. But new ideas arise from thinking humans, not from other ideas.
by
Richard White
via
Reviews In American History
on
June 2, 2019
For Tech Giants, a Cautionary Tale from 19th Century Railroads on Competition’s Limits
How much monopoly is too much monopoly?
by
Richard White
via
The Conversation
on
March 6, 2018
Jared Kushner's Business Dealings Evoke the Nepotism and Corruption of the Gilded Age
From fee-based governance to the “friendships” between the rich and public officials, the 19th century practices we once banished are back.
by
Richard White
via
NBC News
on
March 2, 2018
When the Idea of Home Was Key to American Identity
From log cabins to Gilded Age mansions, how you lived determined where you belonged.
by
Richard White
via
What It Means to Be American
on
September 11, 2017
Trump's Jacksonian Moment
A new biography of Andrew Jackson recounts a bloody history, and reveals disturbing parallels between the 1830s and the Trump era.
by
Richard White
via
Boston Review
on
June 7, 2017
One Nation Under Gods
Despite what Steve King says, the U.S. was never a Christian nation.
by
Richard White
via
Boston Review
on
March 22, 2017
Before Greed
There was a time when Americans valued 'competency' over riches and saw wealth as the cause of poverty.
by
Richard White
via
Boston Review
on
June 7, 2013
Book
Who Killed Jane Stanford?
: A Gilded Age Tale of Murder, Deceit, Spirits and the Birth of a University
Richard White
2022
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Related Excerpts
Viewing 1–13 of 13
A Poisonous Legacy
Two new books reveal the story of Stanford University’s early years to be rife with corruption, autocracy, incompetence, white supremacy, and murder.
by
Jessica Riskin
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 1, 2023
The Robber Baroness of Northern California
Authorities who investigated Jane Stanford’s mysterious death said the wealthy widow had no enemies. A new book finds that she had many.
by
Maia Silber
via
The New Yorker
on
May 30, 2022
Difficult Topographies
There are whole hidden worlds pressing into this one.
by
Sam Coren
via
Contingent
on
May 5, 2021
How One Robber Baron's Gamble on Railroads Brought Down His Bank
In 1873, greed, speculation and overinvestment in railroads sparked a financial crisis that sank the U.S. into more than five years of misery.
by
Mickey Butts
via
Smithsonian
on
September 18, 2023
Excursus on the History of New York
The machine breaks down: A brief history of Tammany Hall.
by
John Ganz
via
Unpopular Front
on
January 20, 2023
Do We Have the History of Native Americans Backward?
They dominated far longer than they were dominated, and, a new book contends, shaped the United States in profound ways.
by
David Treuer
via
The New Yorker
on
November 7, 2022
As If I Wasn’t There: Writing from a Child’s Memory
The author confronts the daunting task of writing about her childhood memory, both as a memoirist and a historian.
by
Martha Hodes
via
American Historical Review
on
September 19, 2022
Why the History of the Vast Early America Matters Today
There is no American history without the histories of Indigenous and enslaved peoples. And this past has consequences today.
by
Karin Wulf
via
Aeon
on
July 15, 2021
The Radicalism of Thaddeus Stevens
Thaddeus Stevens understood far better than most that fully uprooting slavery meant overthrowing the South’s economic system and challenging property rights.
by
Matthew E. Stanley
via
Jacobin
on
March 1, 2021
The Empire of All Maladies
Indigenous scholars have long contested the “virgin-soil epidemics” thesis. Today, it is clear that the disease thesis simply doesn’t hold up.
by
Nick Estes
via
The Baffler
on
July 6, 2020
The Mild, Mild West
H.W. Brands' new one-volume history of the American West reads too much like a movie we’ve already seen.
by
Karl Jacoby
via
Los Angeles Review of Books
on
October 13, 2019
How the South Won the Civil War
During Reconstruction, true citizenship finally seemed in reach for black Americans. Then their dreams were dismantled.
by
Adam Gopnik
via
The New Yorker
on
April 1, 2019
The First Midterm ‘Wave’ Election That Ended Total Republican Control of Government
In 1874, Democrats picked up an astounding 94 seats in the 293-seat House.
by
Robert B. Mitchell
via
Retropolis
on
November 4, 2018