Harry S. Stout is the Jonathan Edwards Professor of American Religious History at Yale University and lives in Branford, Connecticut.
New Criterion, Editor's Pick
"Tackling social, economic, cultural, and religious issues, Stout's
book provides a fresh counterpoint to the often undue focus on the
Eastern seaboard by historians of our nation's birth and first
century."
Kirkus
"A family's history reveals the roots of America's 'capitalist
ethos.' Drawing on abundant archival sources, Stout presents a
detailed history of the fortunes and aspirations of a single
American family, the Andersons of Kentucky, from 1750 to
1888..."
Wall Street Journal
"Mr. Stout writes so revealingly about the upper class on the
frontier that one longs for a deeper look into the members of the
other social strata that took the young United States
westward."
"American Aristocrats is the unforgettable story of the Anderson
clan of Kentucky, who spent their lives in avid pursuit of land and
wealth, written by a brilliant historian. Reading this haunting
book will make you ask yourself what it means to be an American,
and how much you are willing to sacrifice for the American
Dream."--Catherine Brekus, Harvard University
"American Aristocrats introduces the absorbing family story of the
Andersons and their westward movement. More than that, it
illuminates the centrality of land acquisition and capital to the
development of the nation, focusing on the winners and losers, the
patriarchs and the women who kept families intact across distances.
In sparkling and elegant prose, Harry S. Stout prompts us to sober
reflection on the greatest land grab in U.S. history."
--Laurie Maffly-Kipp, Washington University in St. Louis
"As in a sweeping, multi-generational historical novel, in American
Aristocrats, characters the reader comes to know intimately brush
up against famous historical figures-George Washington, Henry Clay,
Robert E. Lee, and many more. The Andersons are not fictional
creations, however, but real people who left an extraordinary
collection of letters and diaries that Harry S. Stout exploits with
rare skill. In this intertwined history of family and nation, we
see the Andersons trying to make sense of their lives as they
experience the great events of the age, from the Revolution through
the collapse of Reconstruction. Through the Andersons, who built
their fortune primarily through the anxious acquisition of land,
Stout explores the personal dynamics of American expansion and how
middling white men experienced the rise to wealth and power."
--Christopher Grasso, Professor, Department of History, College of
William and Mary
"Harry S. Stout offers a fresh perspective on the first century of
our national history in his account of how the Andersons of
Kentucky and Ohio achieved and perpetuated wealth and prominence
across three generations. Deeply researched and engagingly written,
American Aristocrats illuminates the crucial role families have
played in shaping our collective experience. It is a most welcome
addition to the literature."--Peter S. Onuf, Thomas Jefferson
Professor of History, Emeritus, University of Virginia
"Harry S. Stout's account of one family's ups and downs provides an
intimate perspective on America's territorial expansion and
economic development during the first century of independence."
--Daniel Walker Howe, author of Pulitzer-Prize-winning What Hath
God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848
"Harry S. Stout's chronicle of an extended family's rise to wealth
and influence documents the innumerable ways American prosperity
was rooted in native dispossession and African American
enslavement. This compelling history reminds us once again that the
personal has always been political." -John Mack Faragher, Howard R.
Lamar Professor of American History Emeritus, Yale University
"Harry S. Stout's insightful story of the Andersons and their times
illuminates the very personal ways privilege and acquisitiveness
have operated in the capitalist United States. American Aristocrats
is an important work that enables readers to understand how the
past shapes the present."
--Richard D. Brown, author of Self-Evident Truths: Contesting Equal
Rights from the Revolution to the Civil War
"Harry S. Stout's story of the Anderson family provokes a new
understanding of American social life from the War for Independence
through Reconstruction. Avoiding simplistic moralization, he
reveals a family history shot through with ambiguity as its members
seek land and more land on the frontiers of Kentucky and Ohio:
democratic aspirations and disregard for the lives of native
inhabitants, heroic successes and speculative failures, family
tenderness and constant warfare, capitalist opportunities and
crushing anxieties. This account of American, land-based capitalism
offers marvelous insights given through a compelling
narrative."--Mark Valeri, John C. Danforth Center on Religion and
Politics, Washington University in St. Louis
"Using the story of one multi-generational family as the narrative
thread, Harry S. Stout weaves the economic, social, and cultural
history of 19th century America into a saga of relentless quest for
land. Stout is a master stylist, and his prose is crisp, elegant,
and, often enough, both witty and poignant. American Aristocrats
gives erudition new dimensions of meaning. It draws readers not
only to think about, but also to wrestle with the moral
complexities of the building of the nation."
--Grant Wacker, author of America's Pastor: Billy Graham and the
Shaping of a Nation
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