The Founders at Home: The Building of America, 1735-1817
Through the Founders' own voices--and in the homes they designed and built to embody the ideal of domestic happiness they fought to achieve--we come to understand why the American Revolution, of all great revolutions, was the only enduring success.
The Founders were vivid, energetic men, with sophisticated worldviews, and this magnificent reckoning of their successes draws liberally from their own eloquent writings on their actions and well-considered intentions. Richly illustrated with America's historical and architectural treasures, this volume also considers the houses the Founders built with such care and money to reflect their vision for the fledgling nation. That so many great thinkers--Washington, Madison, Hamilton, Jefferson, John Jay, the Lees of Stratford Hall, and polemicist William Livingston--came together to accomplish what rightly seemed to them almost a miracle is a standing historical mystery, best understood by pondering the men themselves and their profound and world-changing ideas.
Through impressive research and an intimate understanding of these iconic patriots, award-winning author Myron Magnet offers fresh insight into why the American experiment resulted in over two centuries of unexampled freedom and prosperity.
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Become an affiliateMyron Magnet has produced an excellent book from this excellent idea: We can better understand the Founders, who shaped how we live, if we better understand how they lived in the homes they designed and social circles that radiated from those homes. The American Revolution, he argues, was a success because of its moderation, and this virtue suffused the Founders' lives.--George F. Will, author of One Man's America: The Pleasures and Provocations of Our Singular Nation
Americans have long admired our Founders from a respectful distance. Now author Myron Magnet pulls us closer, into the framers' homes and minds, so that we suddenly see not only what drove them but also how very much we share with those first Americans. Accurate, skillful, and utterly charming.--Amity Shlaes, author of The Forgotten Man
Masterful...a work of scholarship and a labor of love.--Michael Goodwin
Does the world need yet another book on the American Founders? Yes, indeed: this one.... Mr. Magnet is an accomplished member of the cast of amateurs who have picked up the popular-history franchise that the American academic community tossed away...his book is a labor of love.--James Grant
Entertaining and illuminating... Myron Magnet has done an exemplary job of portraying our fascinating founders both as remarkable individuals and as members of a flawed and quarrelsome team that still somehow managed to give life and meaning to the America we are blessed with today.--Aram Bakshian Jr.
The Founders at Home is rich in insight, wit, and wisdom about the men who created America. It's superb--a pleasure to read on every page.--Thomas Fleming, author of The Intimate Lives of the Founding Fathers
The Founders at Home is a fascinating exploration of America's Founding Fathers at the most intimate level. Highly original and intensely absorbing--Myron Magnet has produced an outstanding work of historical research.--Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
The Founders at Home is subtitled "The Building of America, 1735-1817." "Building" is a pun: All the men he writes about left homes that, centuries later, are still intact and visitable. But, by a shrewd selection of subjects, Magnet also covers the construction of a country, from first thoughts to finishing touches--from the Zenger trial to the Battle of New Orleans. His cast of characters allows him to erase the dichotomy between overexposure and obscurity. The heavyweights are well represented: Washington, Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison. But joining them are Founders most of us have barely or never heard of: William Livingston, the Lees of Stratford Hall, sober John Jay. The Founders at Home gives the pleasures of biography, while putting us back in the texture and complexity of a world.--Richard Brookhiser