Aaron Burr's Challenge to Jefferson's America
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In early 1800, at the dawn of a new century, Aaron Burr was on every short list of men who could become president of the United States. He was the most prominent Northern leader of the Republican party, which was poised to win the national elections that fall. As an emerging political star, he seemed fated to shape the infant republic as it struggled for its place in a world of warring monarchies and despotisms.
Burr had reached this extraordinarily favorable position by measured steps. From an early age, Burr preferred to advance on his own careful terms, beholden to no one. He had been just old enough to join the fight for independence from Britain. In 1776, when the Continental Congress issued the Declaration of Independence, the twenty-year-old Burr served as a lieutenant colonel in the Continental Army. When General George Washington picked him as a personal aide, Burr swiftly lateraled into another assignment, out from under the great man’s shadow. When the Constitutional Convention met in 1787 to create a new government, Burr avoided the highly charged debates, building his New York law practice and local political standing. When the new Congress convened in 1789 and George Washington assembled the first government under the Constitution, Burr served in the New York State government. Yet by 1800, Burr was a leading contender for the highest national offices.
Writing some years later, former president John Adams struggled to explain Burr’s rise. “There is in some souls a principle of absolute levity that buoys them irresistibly into the clouds,” he wrote grumpily. “This I take to be precisely the genius of Burr.”
There were better explanations for Burr’s success. His family was distinguished. A grandfather, Jonathan Edwards, had been America’s leading divine, famously warning that we are all sinners in the hands of an angry God. Burr’s father was president of the College of New Jersey, the future Princeton University. Orphaned at an early age and raised in an uncle’s family, Burr was kin to prominent Americans from New Jersey through Boston. But his advancement grew from achievement as much as from fortunate birth.
Burr won distinction as a soldier and cut a military figure all his life, though he did not serve in uniform after the age of twenty-five. His intelligence and persuasive powers brought success as a lawyer and a politician: attorney general of New York State, then United States senator, then candidate for vice president in 1800. Burr’s adroit campaign management in the 1800 election marked him as a master of the new art of electioneering. The nation’s first two vice presidents, Adams and Jefferson, used the office as a stepping-stone to the highest office. Burr, whose talents and charisma were acknowledged even by his adversaries, intended to do the same.
From American Emperor by David O. Stewart. Copyright © 2011 by David O. Stewart. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Aaron Burr remains one of the most controversial figures in American history. Brilliant, canny and charismatic, Burr achieved distinction as a soldier, lawyer and politician. He is remembered best for his long list of dishonorable exploits. Burr schemed to cheat Thomas Jefferson in the election of 1800. He ruthlessly and fatally shot Alexander Hamilton in a duel—even though Hamilton had resolved not to fire at him. From 1804 to 1807, Burr conspired to lead a secessionist rebellion of Western states and territories.
Opinions about his intentions have differed over the years. Burr himself offered up various reasons for his actions. At times, he confessed that he wanted to unseat Thomas Jefferson. On other occasions, he said that he wished to separate the Western states from the rest of the country. He frequently expressed his intentions to take control of New Orleans and “revolutionize” Mexico and Spanish America.
In American Emperor, David O. Stewart traces Burr from the threshold of the presidency in the contested 1800 election, through his duel with Alexander Hamilton, and then across the American West as he schemed with foreign ambassadors, the traitorous general-in-chief of the army and future presidents, including Andrew Jackson. Stewart, acclaimed author of The Summer of 1787, presents a gripping narrative of Burr’s life and political adventures.
A rising political star in early 1800, Burr was on the short list of men who could become president of the United States. Yet he never rose beyond vice president. “Rather, he became the greatest problem of America’s founding years, a bright promise tarnished by treason, a traitor never punished, a terror never quite exorcised,” writes Stewart.
During the tumultuous deadlocked election of 1800, Burr failed to step aside in favor of Jefferson, his running mate. His immense ambition was matched only by his undisguised contempt for Jefferson. Burr made it clear that he considered him an ineffective and unwise president. As a result, Jefferson froze out his vice president and dropped him from the party ticket in 1804.
Burr strained to break out of the political corner into which he believed Jefferson had painted him. In his search for glory, he mounted a profound test of the emerging republic. He sought out the country’s most unstable elements—discontented military officers, land-hungry frontiersmen and French-speaking residents—and proposed to transform the continent. Charged with treason, Burr led his own legal defense in a historic trial, winning an acquittal and freedom.
Set against the background of a youthful nation bursting with promise and danger, American Emperor is a fascinating tale of unbridled ambition, pride and treachery.
Hardcover : 352 pages
Publisher: Simon And Schuster, Inc. ( October 25, 2011 )
Item #: 13-372610
ISBN: 9781439157183
Product Dimensions: 6.25 x 9.25 x 1.08inches
Product Weight: 24.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

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