Everything about Henry Brooks Adams totally explained
Henry Brooks Adams (
February 16 1838 –
March 27 1918) was an
American novelist,
journalist,
historian and
academic. He is best-known for his
autobiographical book,
The Education of Henry Adams. He was a member of the
Adams political family.
Early life
He was born in
Boston, Massachusetts, the son of
Charles Francis Adams, Sr. (1807-1886) and Abigail Brooks (1808-1889). He was born into one of the country's most prominent families; both his grandfather,
John Quincy Adams, and his great grandfather,
John Adams, had been
U.S. Presidents, his grandfather was a millionaire, and his great grandfather,
Nathaniel Gorham, signed the
Constitution.
After his graduation from
Harvard University in 1858, he embarked on a
Grand Tour of
Europe, during which he also attended lectures in
civil law at the
University of Berlin.
Civil War years
Adams returned home in the midst of the heated presidential election of 1860, which also was the year his father,
Charles Francis Adams, Sr., sought reelection to the US House of Representatives. He tried his hand again at law, taking employment with Judge
Horace Gray's Boston firm, but this was short-lived. After his successful reelection, Charles Francis asked Henry to be his private secretary, continuing a father-son pattern set by John and John Quincy, and suggesting that Charles Francis had chosen Henry as the political scion of the Adams family. But Henry himself shouldered the responsibility reluctantly and with much self-doubt. "[I] had little to do," he reflected later, "and knew not how to do it rightly." During this time, Adams was the anonymous Washington Correspondent for
Charles Hale's Boston
Advertiser.
On
March 19,
1861,
Abraham Lincoln appointed Charles Francis Adams, Sr.
United States Minister (ambassador) to the
United Kingdom. Henry Adams accompanied him to London as his private secretary. Henry also became the anonymous London correspondent for the
New York Times. The two Adamses were kept very busy, monitoring Confederate diplomatic intrigues, and trying to obstruct the construction of Confederate
commerce raiders by British shipyards (see
Alabama Claims). Henry's writings for the
New York Times argued that Americans should be patient with the British. While in Britain, Adams befriended many noted men including
Charles Lyell,
Francis T. Palgrave,
Richard Monckton Milnes,
James Milnes Gaskell, and
Charles Milnes Gaskell.
While in Britain, Henry read and was taken with the works of
John Stuart Mill. For Adams, Mill's
Consideration on Representative Government showed the necessity of an enlightened, moral, and intelligent elite to provide leadership to a government elected by the masses and subject to demagoguery, ignorance, and corruption. Henry wrote to his brother Charles that Mill demonstrated to him that "democracy is still capable of rewarding a conscientious servant." His years in London led Adams to conclude that he could best provide that knowledgeable and conscientious leadership by working as a correspondent and journalist.
Historian and intellectual
In 1868, Henry Adams returned to the United States and settled down in
Washington, D.C., where he started working as a
journalist. Adams saw himself as a traditionalist longing for the democratic ideal of the 17th and 18th centuries. Accordingly, he was keen on exposing
political corruption in his journalistic pieces.
In 1870, Adams was appointed
Professor of Medieval History at Harvard, a position he held until his early retirement in 1877 at 39. As an academic
historian, Adams is considered to have been the first (in 1874–1876) to conduct historical
seminar work in the United States. Included among his students were
Henry Cabot Lodge, who worked closely with Adams as a graduate student.
On
June 27 1872, he and
Clover Hooper were married in Boston, and spent their honeymoon in
Europe. Upon their return, he went back to his position at Harvard and their home at 91 Marlborough Street, Boston, became a gathering place for a lively circle of
intellectuals. In 1877, he and his wife moved to Washington, D.C., where their home on
Lafayette Square, across from the
White House, again became a dazzling and witty center of social life. He worked as a journalist and continued working as an historian.
Adams's
magnum opus is
The History of the United States of America (1801 to 1817) (9 vols., 1889–1891). It is particularly notable for its account of the diplomatic relations of the United States during this period, and for its essential impartiality.
Garry Wills's book
Henry Adams and the Making of America (2005) examines Adams's
History, and proclaims it a neglected masterpiece. The first six chapters of the Adams's "History" are often republished as "The United States in 1800," and constitute an early examination of American cultural history.
In the 1880s, Adams also wrote two novels. He is credited as the author of, which was published anonymously in 1880 and immediately became popular. (Only after Adams's death did his publisher reveal Adams's authorship.) His other novel, published under the
nom de plume of Frances Snow Compton, was
Esther, whose eponymous heroine was believed to be modeled after his wife.
Adams was a member of an exclusive club, a group of friends called the "Five of Hearts" that consisted of Henry, his wife Clover, mountaineer
Clarence King,
John Hay (assistant to Lincoln and later Secretary of State), and Hay's wife Clara. One of Adams's frequent travel companions was the artist
John La Farge, with whom he journeyed to Japan and the South Seas. A long-time, intimate correspondent of Adams's was Elizabeth Cameron, wife of Senator
J. Donald Cameron.
On
December 6 1885, his wife, Clover, committed
suicide. Following her death Adams took up a restless life as a globetrotter, traveling extensively, spending summers in
Paris and winters in Washington, where he erected an
elaborate memorial at her grave site in
Rock Creek Cemetery.
In 1894, Adams was elected president of the
American Historical Association. His address, entitled "The Tendency of History," was delivered in absentia. The essay predicted the development of a scientific approach to history, but was somewhat ambiguous as to what this achievement might mean.
In 1904, Adams privately published a copy of his "Mont Saint Michel and Chartres," a pastiche of history, travel, and poetry, that celebrated the unity of medieval society, especially as represented in the great cathedrals of France. Originally meant as a diversion for his nieces and "nieces-in-wish," it was publicly released in 1913 at the request of
Ralph Adams Cram, an important American architect, and published with support of the
American Institute of Architects.
He published
The Education of Henry Adams in 1907, in a small private edition for selected friends, which curiously omitted the years 1872-
'91 and his entire marriage. The work concerned the birth of forces Adams saw as replacing Christianity. For Adams, the
Virgin Mary had shaped the old world, as the
dynamo represented modernity. It was only following Adams's death that
The Education was made available to the general public, in an edition issued by the
Massachusetts Historical Society. It ranked first on the
Modern Library's
1998 list of 100 Best Nonfiction Books and was named the
best book of the twentieth century
by the
Intercollegiate Studies Institute, a
conservative organization that promotes
classical education. It was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize in 1919.
In 1912, Adams suffered a stroke, perhaps brought on by news of the sinking of the
Titanic, for which he'd return tickets to Europe. After the stroke, his scholarly output diminished, but he continued to travel, write letters, and host dignitaries and friends at his Washington, D.C., home. Henry Adams died at age 80 in Washington, D.C. He is interred beside his wife in
Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington.
Second Law of Thermodynamics
In 1910, Adams printed and distributed to university libraries and history professors the small volume
A Letter to American Teachers of History proposing a "theory of history" based on the
second law of thermodynamics and the principle of
entropy. This, essentially, is the use of the
arrow of time in history. In short, he applied the physics of dynamical systems of
Rudolf Clausius,
Hermann von Helmholtz, and
William Thomson to the modeling of human history.
In his manuscript
The Rule of Phase Applied to History, Adams attempted to use
Maxwell's demon as an historical
metaphor, though he seems to have misunderstood and misapplied the principle. Adams interpreted
history as a process moving towards "equilibrium," but he saw
militaristic nations (he felt
Germany pre-eminent in this class) as tending to reverse this process, a "Maxwell's Demon of history."
Adams made many attempts to respond to the criticism of his formulation from his scientific colleagues, but the work remained incomplete at Adams' death in 1918. It was only published posthumously.
Antisemitism
Adams had a great deal of antipathy for Jews and Judaism, blaming them for his own feelings of alienation from modern American capitalism. He believed that Jews controlled politics, the financial world, and the newspapers. "With communism I'd exist tolerably well... but in a society of Jews and brokers, a world made up of maniacs wild for gold, I've no place."
Adams's attitude towards Jews has been described as one of loathing. John Hay, remarking on Adams's
antisemitism, said that when Adams "saw
Vesuvius reddening... [he] searched for a Jew stoking the fire.
However, Adams's antisemitism is complicated by occasional statements in his letters defending Jews or protesting unfair or harsh treatment against Jews. Moreover, the harshest phase of his critique of Jews was during the last decade of the nineteenth century and the first decade of the twentieth, mostly during the wake of the Panic of 1893. Antisemitism, while present in the whole sweep of Adams's work, was mostly confined to his private letters and never constituted a central place in his published work, although there are several antisemitic comments in
The Education of Henry Adams.
Brothers
His elder brother,
John Quincy Adams (1833-94), a graduate of Harvard in 1853, was a lawyer. He was active in politics as a Democrat, serving several terms in the Massachusetts general court, and receiving the vice-presidential nomination in 1872 by a faction of the
Democratic Party faction that refused to support
Horace Greeley.
Charles Francis Adams, Jr. (1835– 1915), an 1856 graduate of Harvard, fought with the Union in the Civil War, receiving in 1865 the
brevet of brigadier-general in the regular army. He became an authority on railway management as the author of
Railroads, Their Origin and Problems (1878), and as president of the
Union Pacific Railroad from 1884 to 1890.
Brooks Adams (1848–1927), practiced law and became an intellectual of wide interests. His books include
The Law of Civilization and Decay (1895),
America's Economic Supremacy (1900), and
The New Empire (1902).
Further Information
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