Index
Resources on the History of the Gilded Age
| This page does not focus on scholarly monographs but on
novels, historical sources, film documentaries, and other sources of
special interest for teachers, students, and general readers. For scholarly materials see the "Further Reading"
lists after each chapter of the book New Spirits. A helpful encyclopedia, designed
for high school students but useful for general readers as well, is The Gilded Age and Progressive Era:
A Student Companion by Elisabeth Perry and Karen Smith, recently published by
Oxford University Press. This list by NO means comprehensive. It is a personal, rather idiosyncratic list of materials that are fairly easy to obtain and that I have found engaging and useful. Enjoy! Historical Sources Works of Fiction Documentary Films Web Resources | Image courtesy the Victorian Scrapbook at The Trade Card Place |
Historical Sources
Document collections, autobiographies, and other accounts from the Gilded Age
Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams. A classic autobiography, richly depicting the elite Bostonian's intellectual and social world.
American Social History Project. Freedom's Unfinished Revolution. An Inquiry into the Civil War and Reconstruction.
A collection of images and documents dealing with slavery, the Civil
War, and especially Reconstruction, designed especially for high school
students.
American Social History Project. Who Built America?
A two-volume book and CD-ROM packed with documents, images, and
information about American labor, broadly construed: working
people from all walks of life, their struggles in the workplace and
their involvement in movements for reform. The first 200 pages of
Volume II cover the era 1877-1914.
The Bedford Series in History and Culture,
from Bedford Books, are a great series of primary documents that
average around 100-150 pages each, include superb introductory
materials, and offer a wonderful array of titles on Gilded-Age themes,
including the following (see also Bedford editions of works of fiction
in the next section of this Resource list):
* Jane Addams, Twenty Years at Hull House, ed. Victoria Bissell Brown
* Colin Calloway, ed., Our Hearts Fell to the Ground: Plains Indian Views of How the West Was Lost
* Theresa M. Collins and Lisa Gitelman, eds., Thomas Edison and Modern America: A Brief History with Documents
* Peter Duus, ed., The Japanese Discovery of America: A Brief History with Documents (circa 1840s-1870s)
* William L. Riordan, Plunkitt of Tammany Hall, ed. Terrence J. McDonald.
* Booker T. Washington, Up From Slavery, ed. W. Fitzhugh Brundage. (Note that for those who are struggling to cut textbook costs, this and other primary sources--including fiction
by such writers as Ambrose Bierce, Bret Harte, Mark Twain, and Sarah
Orne Jewett's novel Country of the Pointed Firs--are
available in Dover Thrift Editions for $1 or $2. The excellent
introductions and notes in the Bedford
series, though, are well worth the extra cost.)
* Ida B. Wells, Southern Horrors and Other Writings: The Anti-Lynching Campaign of Ida B. Wells, 1892-1900, ed. Jacqueline Jones Royster
Leon Fink, ed., Major Problems in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era,
an extensive (though pricey) collection of primary documents and
excerpts from major historical writings about the era; 2nd ed. 2001,
available from Houghton Mifflin.
Janette T. Greenwood, ed., The Gilded Age: A History in Documents,
the most recent, affordable general collection of documents from the
era, focused more tightly than Fink's collection on the decades between
Emancipation and 1900 and designed for grades 6-12, though also useful
for general browsing and reading. Available from Oxford University
Press.
Henry James, The American Scene (1907), extended
and sometimes maddening reflections on James' return to
the United States in 1904-1905 for the first time in two
decades. Worth the labor of parsing those Jamesian sentences;
scattered on every page are provocative insights on everything from
immigration to architecture.
John Ise, Sod and Stubble
(originally 1936; available in a reprint from University of Kansas
Press, ed. Von Rothenberger). One of many wonderful records of
frontier life, this is an especially vivid and insightful account of
German-American farm life in western Kansas, circa 1873-1909, sensitive
to the varied roles of women, men, and children, and described by the
author as "the story of my mother's life."
Dorothy Richardson, The Long Day: The Story of a Working Girl (originally 1905; available in reprint from University of Virginia
Press, ed. Cindy Sondik Aron). A classic work of investigative
journalism by a woman who went "undercover" in New York as a female
wage-earner. Makes a wonderful comparative piece with Louisa May
Alcott's novel Work (below).
Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives
(originally 1890; available from Penguin Classics). A classic work of
reform--simultaneously urging the "wealthier half" to get involved in
uplifting the slums, and warning them in racialized terms of the perils
of crime and disease that might spread from the lower classes.
Helpful in discussing the promise and limits of early progressive
reform.
Theodore Rosengarten, All God's Dangers
(1974). A rich life story based on the author's oral interviews
with Ned Cobb, an Alabama sharecropper born in 1885. Part one of
the book, "Youth," is an especially rich evocation of African-American
life in the deep South for the first generations growing up after
Emancipation.
Mari Sandoz, Old Jules (1935). A
biography by a leading writer of the Plains, in which she captures the
fierce, complex, tormented character of her father, who made his mark
in western Nebraska between the 1880s and the 1920s--a book she felt
able to write and publish only after his death. (Sandoz's
biography Crazy Horse: The Strange Man of the Oglalas is also a notable favorite.)
Consuelo Vanderbilt, The Glitter and the Gold
(1952), a tremendously lively and readable account of Consuelo's
upbringing among the nouveau riche and her arranged
marriage to the Sixth Duke of Marlborough.
Works of Fiction
Novels
and story collections written during the Gilded Age or shortly
afterward by those who had lived through it, along with a few recent
works of historical fiction (especially those, like James Welch's Fools
Crow, dealing with material that is difficult to access through
documents or fiction written at the time)
The Bedford Series in History and Culture,
from Bedford Books, includes two excellent works of utopian fiction from this era:
* Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward, 2000-1887, ed. Daniel H. Borus
* William Dean Howells, A Traveler from Altruria, ed. David W. Levy
Henry Adams, Democracy (1876). A bitter satire on Gilded Age political corruption.
Louisa
May Alcott, Work: A Story of Experience (1873). Varieties of work
undertaken by a Northern woman who struggles to earn her own bread.
George Washington Cable, John March, Southerner
(1894). A complex portrait of Reconstruction and the New South by
a white Southerner who was an outspoken critic of lynching and racial
violence.
Willa Cather, A Lost Lady
(1923). A portrait of Westerners adjusting to hardship and change
during the 1890s, capturing some of Cather's own experiences in her
Nebraska youth.
Willa Cather, My Antonia (1918). A beautiful evocation of life on the prairies and relations between Americans and new immigrants.
Charles W. Chesnutt, The House Behind the Cedars (1900). A story of racial "passing" by one of the most talented African-American authors of the era.
Charles W. Chesnutt, The Marrow of Tradition
(1901). Chesnutt's fictional exploration of the impact of a
horrific episode of racial violence in Wilmington, North Carolina, in
1898.
Theodore Dreiser, The Financier
(1912). The first volume of an exhaustive three-volume series,
based on the life of Chicago streetcar magnate Charles Yerkes.
The first volume traces his rise in Philadelphia, with extensive and
thoroughly researched details on the world of investment, speculation,
and urban machines between the end of the Civil War and the 1890s.
Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie
(1900). One of the great works of American realism, tracing a
young woman's journey from rural America to the big city and--depending
on how you look at it--either her rise or her fall.
Harold Frederic, The Damnation of Theron Ware
(1896). A young minister finds himself confused and humbled by
encounters with Catholics, Darwinists, and freethinkers. A lost
classic, full of humor and insight.
Hamlin Garland, Main-Travelled Roads
(1891). A collection of short stories, many based on personal
experience, about the hardships of Midwestern farm life.
Generally considered the best work of this reformer and early realist.
Ellen Glasgow, The Deliverance (1904). Explores the Civil War's legacy, economic and psychological, for a Virginia farm family in the 1880s.
William Dean Howells, The Rise of Silas Lapham
(1885). A gentle satire on money-making and social climbing in late
nineteenth-century Boston, by an author widely regarded at the time as
the dean of American literature.
Helen Hunt Jackson, Ramona
(1884). The mythic romance of an Indian princess, less impressive today
than Jackson's non-fiction indictment of US Indian policy, A Century of Dishonor, but far more popular with readers in her day.
Henry James, The Bostonians
(1886). An ambiguous story, still hotly debated, about reform,
the Boston elite, the North and the South after the Civil War, and
women's position in society.
Ruthanne Lum McCunn, Thousand Pieces of Gold
(1981), based on the true story of Polly Bemis, the daughter of a
poverty-stricken family in northern China who was sold into the
American sex trade and ended up as a prosperous rancher in Idaho.
Also made into a full-length movie by the same title.
Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind
(1936). At 1,037 page this story of the Old South's destruction
and aftermath, reflecting the nostalgia and prejudices that Mitchell
absorbed from her own family as a young girl, definitely deserves the
title "epic." Wonderful as an exploration of both Southern
whites' experiences and their mythologies; different (and much more complex) than the famous movie version.
O. E. Rolvaag, Giants in the Earth
(1927). Originally published in Norway; a grim saga of
immigrant struggles on the Plains, by an immigrant who worked on Dakota farms in the 1870s.
Albion Tourgee, A Fool's Errand, by One of the Fools
(1880). A scathing indictment of the limits of
Reconstruction, based on the experiences of an idealistic white
Republican who went South to work for reform. If your only idea
of Reconstruction remains the old stereotype of "carpetbaggers" and
ignorant freedmen, this is a provocative place to
begin thinking anew.
Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens). Where to begin with Twain? The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) is generally considered his greatest work, but you may prefer such other classics as The Innocents Abroad (1869), A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889), Pudd'nhead Wilson
(1894), or the fierce denunciations of greed, hypocrisy, imperialism,
and organized religion that Twain issued in later life, in a long
series of essays and short stories.
Margaret Walker, Jubilee
(1966). One of the first attempts by a modern African-American
author to write a fictional family saga stretching from slavery through
Emancipation and beyond, based on the true story of her own
great-grandmother who grew up on a Georgia plantation. Dramatic
and readable.
James Welch, Fools Crow
(1986). Recreates the world of the Blackfeet, circa 1870, as
newcomers from the East encroach on their lands in what will become
Montana, and members of the tribe react in radically different ways to
an impossible set of choices. A rich and powerful evocation of
Native American life.
Owen Wister, The Virginian
(1902). Arguably the book that launched "The Western" as a modern
fictional and film genre, though Wister himself was indebted to a long
series of popular dime novels and other treatments of the
frontier. A "Southern" and "Northern" as well as a Western, since
it deals with the legacies of the Civi War and themes of sectional
reconciliation.
Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence (1920). My favorite of Wharton's novels, though others will prefer The House of Mirth (1905), Ethan Frome (1911), the novellas in Old New York (1924), or Wharton's autobiography A Backward Glance (1934). Capturing some of the complexities of the elite New York world in which Wharton grew up, Age of Innocence
is also a great motion picture. (Warning: after watching Scorsese's
meticulous re-creation of a Gilded Age banquet you may find yourself
not wanting to eat much for a couple of days).
Documentary Films
By far the best thing going, in my opinion, is The American Experience
from PBS and WGBH Boston (the link here is to a list of titles relating to the era 1865-1900). Various titles
in this series--notably "Last Stand at Little Big Horn," "Ida B. Wells:
A Passion for Justice," "Jubilee Singers," "The Richest Man in the
World: Andrew Carnegie," and "Edison's Miracle of Light"--have served
me well in the classroom and the PBS website includes
background documents and teacher's guides.
A longer and very valuable entry in this series is Reconstruction: The Second Civil War, which has a large website of accompanying primary materials.
See also the relevant hours of The West, produced by Ken Burns, with a very extensive companion website.
Ken Burns has produced other films for PBS that focus on the post-Civil War era, such as Not for Ourselves Alone,
a treatment of the lives of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady
Stanton. A little long and slow (in the Burnsian style) but
filled with wonderful quotations from the speeches, public
writings, and private correspondence of these women's rights advocates
and their colleagues and friends.
Numerous feature films--like Thousand Pieces of Gold and The Age of Innocence,
above--deal with Gilded Age themes, though all should be treated with
caution as fictional re-creations. One idiosyncratic favorite of
mine is The Ballad of Little Jo, a Western about a woman who is
thrown out by her Boston family and heads west alone, leaving her
illegitimate child with her sister, and makes some surprising choices
on the way. (If you turn the sound off and simply follow the images,
this movie is an extended meditation on gender, identity, and
work.) For historians' angles on some of the most noted, see the
short film-by-film assessments in Past Imperfect, edited by Mark C. Carnes.
Web Resources
An excellent list of weblinks is maintained by The Society for
Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
at H-Net Humanities
Online. H-Net also maintains discussion groups and compiles
bibliographies and book reviews, which is a wonderful entry point for
exploring recent scholarship and historians' debates about this
era. It's a thorough list of links, so the additional sites
listed below are just supplementary personal favorites (links to many
of which also appear on the site above).
The Making of America,
a staggering collection of word-searchable books and journals
from the nineteenth-century, hosted by the University of Michigan
American Memory
at the Library of Congress: an even MORE immense site; the link here is
to collections related to US history between 1850 and
1899. The LOC has cooperated
with an array of state and local history centers, such as the Nebraska
Historical Society, the New York Public Library, and the Rare Books,
Manuscripts, and Special Collections Library at Duke University, to present materials here.
You could browse this site for a lifetime, "attending" a meeting of the National Afro-American Council in 1898 and savoring everything
from sheet music to advertisements to stereographs.
Documenting the American South,
at the University of North Carolina features documents ranging from the
colonial era into the 20th century including a good selection on the
post-Civil War years.
America in the 1890s, at Bowling Green State University, contains an array of materials on that pivotal decade.
For those interested in politics, President Elect
has state-by-state returns and maps. Alas, I believe there is no
equivalent website (yet) for Congressional returns but there IS a
superb reference book that may be at your local library: Kenneth
Martis, The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress, 1898-1989 (Macmillan, 1988).
Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000,
at SUNY Binghamton, has a large collection of documents and teacher's
guides with considerable material on the late 19th century; about
two-thirds of the material is now available only by paid subscription
but the rest is free on the web.
Resources on the Gilded Age at the WWW Virtual Library might possibly have a few things missed by the links above (or not)
A popular brand of rat poison based its ad campaign on extremely widespread
animosity toward Chinese immigrants, borrowing the slogan of San Francisco
anti-immigrant zealot Dennis Kearney, who proclaimed, "The Chinese must go,"
while simultaneously playing on popular beliefs that "sub-human" Chinese ate rats
Image courtesy the Victorian Scrapbook at The Trade Card Place.