Ulysses Grant
The Life of Ulysses Grant
For a period in the second half of the 19th Century, Ulysses Grant was consistently hailed as not only one of the heroes of his generation but also as one of the greatest Americans of all time. His portrait shared banners with the likes of Washington and Lincoln, standing together as the most revered individuals the United States had yet produced. After all, Grant was the general Abraham Lincoln had long been searching for to lead the Union to victory, the one man who fought relentlessly, no matter the odds, to defeat the secessionists and ultimately win the Civil War. After Lincoln’s assassination, it was Grant to whom the country looked for stability in the chaos of the Andrew Johnson administration. And it was Grant that the nation’s electorate sent to the presidency with two landslide victories. Ulysses Grant was the leader the nation craved, on the battlefield and in the White House, earning widespread approbation for the services he provided.
Over time, however, Grant’s star faded as historians (many emanating from the South) began to take a more critical view of the activities and behaviors surrounding his life’s story. Rather than a strong, determined leader who outgeneraled the Confederates, Grant was the Northern butcher who simply sent endless supplies of Union soldiers to their deaths in his successful yet horrific approach to ultimately overwhelm his smaller Southern foe. Rather than a steady hand at the till when the country needed him most, Grant was a drunk who allowed his attraction to the bottle to drive reckless behavior and embarrassing results. Rather than an honest President who put the people first, Grant was the head of the most corrupt Cabinet in the history of the Republic. While there are elements of truth in each of these characterizations, they are far too simplistic to characterize the overall impact Ulysses Grant had on the country that called him into the highest levels of service. Ulysses Grant was an American hero, the kind the country needed in some of its most desperate hours. The fact that he wasn’t perfect simply makes him human, and an impressive one at that in the patriotic service to his nation.
Volume IV: War and its Aftermath
Full Volume
The fourth volume of Presidential Chronicles tells the life stories of the following five American Presidents who saw the country through Civil War and beyond in the second half of the 19th Century:
Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Johnson
Ulysses Grant
Rutherford Hayes
James Garfield
Fisher delves deeply into a nation divided over slavery and states’ rights, beginning with the most extensive contribution of the biographical series with his focus on the nation’s 16th President, Abraham Lincoln. Fisher makes extensive use of Lincoln’s own words to understand the growth of his political ideology, the endless string of difficult choices he faced, his unwavering commitment to preserving the Union, and his transition from slavery opponent to outright abolitionist – all in the context of a Constitutional interpretation that stretched the bounds of the founding document. The Civil War is explored from the view of a President, a wartime Governor, a Commanding General, and a pair of colonels/brigadiers who fought the battles that helped preserve the Union. War and Its Aftermath further gives life to the nation’s struggles in the Reconstruction era as these leaders tried to balance the competing sectional interests on how to reunify despite the inherent divides that continued to persist.
The Life of Ulysses Grant
Video
The following Grant videos have been released (10 of 10)
Grant #1: My Ulysses (1822-1844)
Grant #2: One of the Most Unjust Wars ever Waged (1844-1848)
Grant #3: Vagabond Years (1848-1861)
Grant #4: "Unconditional Surrender" Grant (1861-1862)
Grant #5: Grant Fights, Grant Wins (1862-1864)
Grant #6: Commanding General and Victory (1864-1865)
Grant #7: The Miseries of the Johnson Administration (1865-1869)
Grant #8: Commanding General to Commander in Chief (1869-1873)
Grant #9: Cabinet Corruption (1873-1877)
Grant #10: World Traveler, Bankruptcy, and Memoirs (1877-1885)