Governor Henry Horner, Chicago Politics, and the Great Depression
$24.50
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
Many have never heard of Governor Henry Horner of Illinois, yet his story is remarkable. Governor Henry Horner, Chicago Politics, and the Great Depression focuses on Horner’s career in law and politics from 1915 to 1940, while examining the economic and political dynamics of Illinois during the darkest period in American history. This principled governor managed to maintain his political integrity in a climate where honesty was a liability, says author Charles J. Masters, but the few historians who include Horner in their narratives offer contradictory and dismissive characterizations of him. Masters corrects the public record and reintroduces Horner to political lore as a man who brazenly fought both the Chicago Democratic machine that worked to plot his downfall and Roosevelt’s White House to steadfastly do right by the people of Illinois.
In this first book-length treatment of Horner in over thirty-five years, Masters traces the politician’s career, the history and politics of Chicago, and the effects of the Great Depression in Illinois. The volume details Horner’s life as a lawyer, probate judge, and two-term Democratic governor of Illinois. Horner’s relationships with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and such political players as Michael “Hinky Dink” Kenna, “Bathhouse” John Coughlin, and Chicago mayors Carter Harrison, Anton Cermak, and Ed Kelly are set against a backdrop of assassination, political sniping, court-packing schemes, Prohibition, and the New Deal.
Governor Henry Horner, Chicago Politics, and the Great Depression examines the governor’s management of the political and economic challenges of the state when millions of Americans were jobless, homeless, and hungry. The severely divergent economic and political positions of the state’s northern industrial and southern agrarian interests made the period even darker. Masters shows how Horner stemmed foreclosures, dealt with bank closings, placated unpaid teachers, soothed massive labor unrest, fed the hungry, and confronted the ever-present threat of revolution. While Hitler’s Germany was spreading Nazism throughout Europe, some Americans were questioning the fundamental order of their own political system, suggesting that socialism, communism, or Nazism could offer a better way. Masters addresses how Horner, Illinois’ first Jewish governor, dealt with these challenges to the U.S. political system.
A story long absent from the historical record, GovernorHenry Horner, Chicago Politics, and the Great Depression offers a portrait of the man, his style of governance, his successes, and his failures. The volume, with eight illustrations, effectively reevaluates Horner’s historical reputation and role in Illinois politics in the midst of the worst economic depression in our nation’s history.
In this first book-length treatment of Horner in over thirty-five years, Masters traces the politician’s career, the history and politics of Chicago, and the effects of the Great Depression in Illinois. The volume details Horner’s life as a lawyer, probate judge, and two-term Democratic governor of Illinois. Horner’s relationships with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and such political players as Michael “Hinky Dink” Kenna, “Bathhouse” John Coughlin, and Chicago mayors Carter Harrison, Anton Cermak, and Ed Kelly are set against a backdrop of assassination, political sniping, court-packing schemes, Prohibition, and the New Deal.
Governor Henry Horner, Chicago Politics, and the Great Depression examines the governor’s management of the political and economic challenges of the state when millions of Americans were jobless, homeless, and hungry. The severely divergent economic and political positions of the state’s northern industrial and southern agrarian interests made the period even darker. Masters shows how Horner stemmed foreclosures, dealt with bank closings, placated unpaid teachers, soothed massive labor unrest, fed the hungry, and confronted the ever-present threat of revolution. While Hitler’s Germany was spreading Nazism throughout Europe, some Americans were questioning the fundamental order of their own political system, suggesting that socialism, communism, or Nazism could offer a better way. Masters addresses how Horner, Illinois’ first Jewish governor, dealt with these challenges to the U.S. political system.
A story long absent from the historical record, GovernorHenry Horner, Chicago Politics, and the Great Depression offers a portrait of the man, his style of governance, his successes, and his failures. The volume, with eight illustrations, effectively reevaluates Horner’s historical reputation and role in Illinois politics in the midst of the worst economic depression in our nation’s history.
Charles Masters effectively reevaluates Governor Henry Horner’s historical reputation and role in Illinois politics.
Chicago attorney Charles J. Masters is also the author of Glidermen of Neptune: The American D-Day Glider Attack, which was a featured selection in both the Military Book Club and the Aviators’ Guild Book Club. A recognized authority on World War II, he has been a guest on numerous radio shows and was an adviser and the key speaker on History Channel’s “Silent Wing Warriors.”
The story of Henry Horner, Illinois governor from 1933 until he died in 1940, is one of many contradictions. Horner, who was born into a family of successful Jewish businessmen, managed to straddle the divide between the respectable good-government crowd and the rough and tumble ward politics of Chicago during the Capone years. At various times, Horner found himself an ally of Chicago’s powerful Democratic machine and the object of its wrath. And, while remaining a staunch Democrat, Horner nevertheless found himself at loggerheads with the Roosevelt administration during the Depression.The portrait of Horner that emerges in Charles Masters’ account is that of a deeply principled man, committed to a practical, common-sense politics organized “not in terms of abstract policy, but in terms of people and material conditions.” The book’s first half provides the reader with a good overview of Chicago politics from the city’s founding until the 1930s. But the book begins to really shine with its account of Horner’s 1932 campaign for governor and his ensuing eight years as the state’s chief executive.Masters’ well-written and entertaining popular history captures a unique perspective on the Depression, looking at President Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal from the perspective of Illinois and Chicago politics. In doing so, he has recovered a frequently forgotten strand of opposition to the New Deal, fiscally conservative but nevertheless deeply sympathetic to the plight of the poor and to limited government intervention on their behalf.
“An exciting and intimate portrayal of one of the great governors of Illinois, Charles Masters’s book reads like a political thriller and is sure to please those who love to explore the intersections of Illinois politics and government in the first half of the last century. A real winner.”—James R. Thompson, former governor of Illinois
“Charles Masters captures the essence of a true public service governor.”—Thomas M. Tunney, Alderman of the 44th Ward, Chicago
“Charles Masters fills the [historical] gap with an in-depth look at Governor Henry Horner and how he handled the political intrigues and economic challenges during a dark period in American history.”—Jan Schakowsky, U. S. Representative from Illinois’ Ninth District
“Masters brings a lawyer’s understanding to solving the enigma that was Henry Horner. . . . This is a welcome and revealing account of a complex man.”—Gary T. Johnson, President of the Chicago History Museum
“This is a story that needed to be told. Until now, Henry Horner has been sadly eclipsed in the passionate history of both Chicago and the state of Illinois. . . . [Horner] becomes the reader’s guide through some of the most dramatic episodes in our history.”—Edward M. Burke, Alderman of the 14th Ward and chairman of the Chicago City Council Committee on Finance
“Charles Masters captures the essence of a true public service governor.”—Thomas M. Tunney, Alderman of the 44th Ward, Chicago
“Charles Masters fills the [historical] gap with an in-depth look at Governor Henry Horner and how he handled the political intrigues and economic challenges during a dark period in American history.”—Jan Schakowsky, U. S. Representative from Illinois’ Ninth District
“Masters brings a lawyer’s understanding to solving the enigma that was Henry Horner. . . . This is a welcome and revealing account of a complex man.”—Gary T. Johnson, President of the Chicago History Museum
“This is a story that needed to be told. Until now, Henry Horner has been sadly eclipsed in the passionate history of both Chicago and the state of Illinois. . . . [Horner] becomes the reader’s guide through some of the most dramatic episodes in our history.”—Edward M. Burke, Alderman of the 14th Ward and chairman of the Chicago City Council Committee on Finance
The story of Henry Horner, Illinois governor from 1933 until he died in 1940, is one of many contradictions. Horner, who was born into a family of successful Jewish businessmen, managed to straddle the divide between the respectable good-government crowd and the rough and tumble ward politics of Chicago during the Capone years. At various times, Horner found himself an ally of Chicago’s powerful Democratic machine and the object of its wrath. And, while remaining a staunch Democrat, Horner nevertheless found himself at loggerheads with the Roosevelt administration during the Depression.The portrait of Horner that emerges in Charles Masters’ account is that of a deeply principled man, committed to a practical, common-sense politics organized “not in terms of abstract policy, but in terms of people and material conditions.” The book’s first half provides the reader with a good overview of Chicago politics from the city’s founding until the 1930s. But the book begins to really shine with its account of Horner’s 1932 campaign for governor and his ensuing eight years as the state’s chief executive.Masters’ well-written and entertaining popular history captures a unique perspective on the Depression, looking at President Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal from the perspective of Illinois and Chicago politics. In doing so, he has recovered a frequently forgotten strand of opposition to the New Deal, fiscally conservative but nevertheless deeply sympathetic to the plight of the poor and to limited government intervention on their behalf.
Additional information
Weight | 1 oz |
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Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |