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Paperback America 1900: The Sweeping Story of a Pivotal Year in the Life of a Nation Book

ISBN: 0805054359

ISBN13: 9780805054354

America 1900: The Sweeping Story of a Pivotal Year in the Life of a Nation

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Book Overview

This dramatic narrative follows an eclectic group of men and women over the course of one remarkable year. Change had come so fast, there was an almost magical belief in the powers of science and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Related Subjects

19th Century 20th Century History

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

How Good Were The "Good Old Days"?

This book is not heavy-duty history, but Crichton does an elegant job of describing the spirit of the times in America in 1900. Crichton picks out several threads and follows their development throughout the year. She includes, among other interesting stories, the presidential election between President William McKinley and Democratic challenger William Jennings Bryan; the elevation of a reluctant Teddy Roosevelt to the Vice Presidency; the Boxer Rebellion in China; the blossoming literary career and awkward love life of Jack London; the horrible disasters and living conditions that afflicted coal miners; the miners' first major triumph in a long struggle for fair wages and safe working conditions; the quixotic poltical career of Admiral George Dewey, the hero of Manila Bay; the struggles between financier J.P. Morgan, steel magnate Andrew Carnegie and oil baron John D. Rockefeller; the Paris exposition; the accomplishments of black Americans Scott Joplin, W.E.B. Dubois, and Paul Laurence Dunbar; the cruelty of the South's emerging Jim Crow laws; the military entanglement in the Philippines, which foreshadowed America's later experience in Vietnam; the careful research of the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk; and the triumph of Count Zeppelin at Lake Constance.The books is only 305 pages long, and the picture that Crichton paints is somewhat impressionistic. But her prose is highly readable, and the stories that she tells are very engaging, unfolding like the subplots in a complex novel. This is a book that can be read quickly and with pleasure in just a couple of sittings.Although 1900 was clearly a vibrant time, Crichton's book will be a tonic for those who pine for the "good old days" that never really happened. The treatment of workers, blacks, immigrants and others in 1900 was simply appalling. Conditions became so bad in San Francisco's Chinatown that the bubonic plague broke out, killing 32 people and leading to a federal quarantine of the city. Living conditions in America in 1900 must have been similar to those in the Third World today, relieved only by hope for a better future.Each chapter of America 1900 ends with a few clippings from contemporary newspapers. One of the most interesting in light of current events is a March 10, 1900 statement by the Ameer of Afghanistan, who denounced the Russians and proclaimed that "a war with the Afghans would mean a general rising of all Islam . . . . " Sometimes, it seems, the more things change the more they stay the same.For those interested in how the 19th century turned into the 20th in America, I strongly recommend Volume I of Mark Sullivan's Our Times, which was first published in 1926 and covers the same period as Crichton's book in more detail.

Want to take a time trip to America the Great?

Their faces look out at us, without fear, full of hope, confidence, and pride in a new dawn for the greatest nation on earth. We lament the travails of the laboring men and women but rejoice at their new-found strength in union; recoil at the sometimes brutal imperialism in Christian & military guise for civilizing the 'Asiatics'; cheer the jousts of Bryan & TR, while the stolid but comforting McKinley campaigns on his front porch. Everywhere there is a let's-get-on-with-it spirit - the Declaration is read aloud at July 4th picnics,and though there are tragedies such as Galveston and in the Utah mines, we know somehow we'll pull through since this is indeed Our Time. So it was in 1900 and would be so for our century -- See the accompanying video narrated by David McCullough's richly American commentary!

NOW I understand how they felt and how they lived

I've always had a "mental-block" when reading or hearing about history, it just never "seemed real" and was always a series of years and dates and names. I'm 37 years old and this is the FIRST TIME I was "thrown" back to the year 1900, I was absolutely intrigued and fascinated with this book, and I "lived" with the people month by month. It wasn't at all a history book - Judy Crichton brought all the people and events alive for us. On a camping trip this weekend, I just kept telling my friends all the fascinating tidbits of 1900! I just wish she'd write about 1800 & 1700 etc. so I can finally RELATE to that time and people.

Readable, accessible, full of information

America 1900 is a very vivid portrait of the country & the pivotal changes it was undergoing at that time. Shows both famous folks & little people as very real and living, not as rigid, overdressed Victorians posing for formal portraits in their Sunday best. Packed with facts, but the writing is still smooth and accessible--rare to find both in a history book like this.

You'll definitely want "America: 1900" in your library!

"America 1900: The Turning Point by Judy Crichton is a fascinating read!! This is NOT "just another history book" for Crichton is a master of detail and research. As she writes about the events and characters that define the year 1900, even the most avid history buff will be amazed by hitherto unknown facts and tidbits.Ms. Crichton writes about the terrible labor strikes of 1900 - among them the chilling story of the underpaid Italian immigrants, who, when trying to get minimum wage raised from $1.35 to $1.50 found themselves facing the NY State militia at Croton Dam. "There are enough soldiers here now to make a lunch out of all the Italians within two miles of the dam" said one Sargent. The description of this and other events is so vivid that I felt I was part of the scene. This was in America??? At Croton Dam??Ms Crichton writes: "On Fifth Avenue, men and women of what was called the leisure class were studying the shops and studying each other. The success of the walk could be measured by the briefest encounter, a meeting of the eyes, the slightest bow of the head."You read of "Great and ostentatious wealth"; of life in the South where 90 percent of black Americans were in some ways "more limited than it had been in the days of slavery." In 1900, Private Carl Sandburg returned from the Spanish-American War and the reader learns that although less than 2000 Americans were killed during the actual fighting, EIGHT THOUSAND died of terrible tropical diseases! I found myself wondering "Where did she find THAT out" and enjoyed turning to the many footnotes for additional information. I got to know President & Mrs. McKinley, Jack London, Theordore Roosevelt much more intimately than when I met them in college, and until this book, I had no idea how remarkable Lou Hoover (Herbert's wife) was. An amazing woman.The book makes familiar and not-so-familiar names and obscure little facts and observations make events come alive. The writing paints as vivid a picture as the rare photographs that accompany the text. I wondered why I hadn't picked up on some of these events over the years in other books, but I have come to realize that Judy Crichton has the uncanny knack for unearthing the unknown or forgotten. Thank Goodness -- it's what makes this such a readable book!!"America 1900" is insightful and thoughtful. It doesn't draw conclusions, but it does make the reader think, and come to their own conclusions. It also makes one realize that the problems of 1900, are very much the problems that exist as we approach the year 2000....I found out quickly that Judy Crichton is the proverbial "fly on the wall" and the book has made the year 1900 come alive. An added bonus is that I have now discovered a great new book that is reasonably priced to give for presents. Definitely put this one on your list.
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