72 pages • 2 hours read
Ron Chernow’s presentation of Ulysses S. Grant is of an important historical figure who was in life an accomplished, moral person. Also, Chernow argues that Grant had been unfairly maligned by many historians. Rather than being an ineffective president mired in scandal and alcoholism, “In truth, Grant was instrumental in helping to vanquish the Confederacy and in realizing the wartime ideals enshrined in the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments […] He was the single most important figure behind Reconstruction” (xxii). In the introduction, Chernow further argues that Grant did not receive enough credit for his leadership during his presidency. He disputes the concept that Grant’s presidency was an “embarrassing coda to wartime heroism” (xxi), as Chernow describes one traditional historical interpretation of Grant’s presidency. Instead, Chernow asserts that Grant does not receive enough credit for his support of African American rights and for combatting the Ku Klux Klan. Contrary to the traditional historical view, which praises Grant’s military leadership but not his political leadership, Chernow suggests Grant was nearly as successful a president as he was a Civil War general.
Besides Grant’s actions and behavior as a general and a president, Chernow also describes how his resilience could be seen in how he handled his alcoholism.
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