Robert V. Remini
What They're Famous For
Robert V. Remini is professor emeritus of history and the humanities at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
He is currently at work on a narrative history of the U.S. House of Representatives, and has been named House Historian. Remini has written a three-volume biography of Andrew Jackson, the third volume of the series, Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy, 1833-1845
won the National Book Award for nonfiction in 1984. He is also the author of biographies of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, as well as a dozen other books on Jacksonian America, and is considered the most preeminent scholar on Andrew Jackson and his times.
Personal Anecdote
To a very large extent my career as an historian, such as it is, was determined by
events over which I had little control. For example, when I graduated from college
I fully intended to become a lawyer. Not because I was intrigued by the law but because
it seemed like a worthy profession then for a child of the Great Depression. Fortunately
World War II came along and I found myself aboard a ship plying the Atlantic and reading
histories of the United States. I even read all nine volumes of Henry Adams's History of
the United States During the Administrations of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison and
I loved every page. After three years in the service I realized I wanted to spend the
rest of my life reading and writing and teaching history. I got so worked up that I
even had the audacity of writing an article and submitting it for publication to the
American Historical Association. It wasn't a very good article and was based solely on
secondary sources. Graciously, the AHA rejected it, but it was not many years later
when they did publish an article I wrote.
So as soon as I was discharged I enrolled in the graduate school of Columbia University
and began my newly discovered career. I was particularly anxious to study 20th century,
urban, New York, political history. I'm not sure why, except that I was born and raised
a New Yorker, as were both my parents. I signed up for an MA seminar conducted by
Richard Hofstadter. He had arrived at Columbia about the same time I did. The class
was packed with about 40 students, most of them returning veterans. Can you imagine a
seminar of 40? I don't think I ever said a word in the seminar. I just enjoyed every
word Hofstadter spoke, for he spoke like he wrote, in complete sentences and paragraphs,
every one a delight to hear. I wrote my master's essay on John Purroy Mitchel, the
reform mayor of New York City just prior to World War I and fully intended to
continue with this topic for my doctorate.
Then one day Hofstadter approached me and suggested that I consider doing my PhD
dissertation on Martin Van Buren since the Mitchel papers were locked up for 50 years
which would prevent any further work on that topic. It seems that Columbia had
received a grant that would permit the University to purchase microfilm copies of
presidential papers held in the Library of Congress and the library people at Columbia
were anxious to begin with copies of the Van Buren papers. Apparently the grant also
stipulated that a graduate student begin working on them after their arrival. Now
Van Buren was a New Yorker, said Hofstadter, and an important political figure. Granted
he was not urban or twentieth century, but if I accepted his suggestion it would mean
that I could do my basic research at Columbia and not have to travel to Washington or
any other remote repository. Now if you think a graduate student cannot be influenced by
such a proposal you are very mistaken.
I was gratified that Hofstadter had suggested me for this work and I agreed to switch
to the nineteenth century. I did my doctoral dissertation on the early political career
of Martin Van Buren under the direction of Dumas Malone, since Hofstadter did not give a
PhD seminar at that time. That dissertation when published as a book argued that Van
Buren was central to the formation of the Democratic party and the revival of the two
party system. I fully expected to continue that work and write a full biography of
Van Buren but Andrew Jackson intervened and changed all my plans. But that's another and
longer story.
Quotes
By Robert V. Remini
At length one sovereign artist found the language to express what Andrew Jackson
had meant to his generation. In Moby Dick, Herman Melvile paid everlasting tribute to the
fallen hero:
"Men may seem detestable... but man, in ideal, is so noble and so sparkling...
that over any ignomininous blemish in him all his fellows should run to throw their
costliest robes.... But this august dignity I treat of, is not the dignity of kings and
robes, but that abounding dignity which has no robed investiture. Thou shall see it
shining in the arm that wields a pick or drives a spike; that democratic dignity which,
on all hands, radiates without end from God; Himself! The great God absolute!
The centre and circumference of all democracy! His omnipresence, our divine equality!
"If, then, to meanest mariners, and renegades ands castaways, I shall hereafter
ascribe high qualities, though dark; weave round them tragic graces;...if I shall touch
that workman's arm, with some etheral light...then against all moral critics bear
me out in it, thou just Spirit of Equality, which hast spread one royal mantle of
humanity over all my kind! Bear me out in it, thou great democratic God!...Thou who
didst pick up Andrew Jackson from the pebbles; who didst hurl him upon a warhorse;
who didst thunder him higher than a throne! Thou who, in all Thy mighty earthly
marchings, ever cullest Thy selectest champions from the kingly commons; bear me
out in it, O God!"
To such an invocation of Jackson on behalf of the democratic ideal, one can only say,
Amen, O God, Amen. -- Robert Remini in the conclusion of
"Andrew Jackson : The Course of American Democracy, 1833-1845"
I have been invited to speak on Heroes of History, a subject about which it is
very easy for professional historians to be cynical. And that is a great mistake because
there are a great many genuine heroes in American history, starting at the very beginning
and coming down to the present. I am thinking in particular of the heroes of 9/11, the
astronauts of the space ship, Columbia, and the soldiers who fought and are fighting in
Iraq.
The question immediately arises as to what constitutes heroism. How can a hero be defined?
Each person will have his or her own definition, but to me heroes are those who have
performed extraordinary sacrifices for the benefit of others, and most especially for
their country.
This past year I was fortunate to be invited by the Library of Congress to undertake
the writing of the history of the United States House of Representatives. I will start
with the First Congress and continue to the present 108th. In researching and writing
that book, I have been amazed by what the members of the First Congress accomplished,
not only by the fact that they were mostly "ordinary" men, most of whom are obscure
today, but how through heroic efforts they breathed life into the Constitution and
helped create a republic that has not only survived, but prospered to an extraordinary
extent.
-- Robert V. Remini "Ordinary heroes: Founders of our republic," July 2003
The House really needs somebody who can remind them of all of the great
traditions, the history of the institution. This is how you come to really love
the place, by knowing more about it and how it evolved. -- Robert Remini on his
commission by the Library of Congress to write history of the House.
About Robert V. Remini
"Robert Remini, the Jackson biographer who has also turned out works on John Quincy Adams, Daniel Webster and Henry Clay, said that only recently had he realized that he's never written history, just biographies. Even his newest project, a history of the Congress, is really a "series of biographies." He said he finds it easy to write. It's the rewriting that's hard. 'I was trained by Jesuits and you were rewarded if you did good and punished if you did bad. I decided that I had to write nine pages a day. And if I did I got a martini. If not, I didn't. Now I take a martini whether I've written or not' (laughter).
Remini, who by now had the crowd in stitches, said there's one chief advantage of
biographies. 'For one thing there's a beginning and an end. He dies.'
-- Rick Shenkman in HNN's "Reporter's Notebook: Highlights from the 2004 Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association"
"The appointment of professor Robert Remini to the House Historian position is a
magnificent choice. From my experience as House Historian, I know that the Representatives
themselves and the public at large, not to mention historians in particular,
believe that the person with the title of historian should be someone who has
devoted his life to history, not to the study of politics and political institutions.
In Robert Remini the House not only has a Historian, but a great historian. In fact,
Remini is one of our greatest living American historians. He is one of the legends.
He is author of a monumental biography of Andrew Jackson, and for years has been
widely considered our most accomplished Jackson scholar. Furthermore, Remini has written
numerous books on the Jackson period and on the fundamental issues and questions of
American history. He is beyond question superbly qualified to be Historian of the
House of Representatives." -- Christina Jeffrey, Visiting Professor of Politics,
Coastal Carolina University in Roll Call
"In introducing his magisterial biography of Daniel Webster, Robert Remini
laments the creeping historical illiteracy that threatens to engulf Webster and
his contemporaries. All the more reason, then, to be grateful to Professor Remini,
the nation's leading Jacksonian scholar, for reminding us of a time when eminent
historians still wrote for the general educated reader. Remini's research is
impeccable, his storytelling on a par with his outsized subject.
And what a story he has to tell." -- Richard Norton Smith on "Daniel Webster:
The Man and His Time"
"With this book, Robert V. Remini has completed his trio of biographies of the
great political leaders of the Middle Period: Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay,
and now Daniel Webster. Remini seems never to have met an anecdote he didn't like.
Alas, a good many of dubious authenticity found their way into this volume. The story of
how Webster demanded an apology from the eminent lawyer William Pinckney for insulting
him during arguments before the Supreme Court, for example, does not ring true.
'Now I am here to say to you, once for all, that you must ask my pardon, and go into
court tomorrow morning and repeat the apology,' Webster supposedly told Pinckney, 'or
else either you or I will go out of this room in a different condition from that in
which we entered it,' at which Pinckney 'trembled like an aspen leaf.' It also seems
hard to believe that after Webster's notable reply to Hayne, another Southern senator
said to him, 'Mr. Webster, I think you had better die now, and rest your fame on that
speech,' whereupon Hayne himself declared: 'You ought not to die: a man who can make
such speeches as that ought never to die.' Still, such tales enrich the narrative,
and perhaps they illustrate a deeper truth. This life of Black Dan the Godlike
Daniel is undoubtedly the fullest and the best that we will have for a long time to come."
-- James McPherson, Princeton University on "Daniel Webster: The Man and His Time"
Basic Facts
Teaching Positions:
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, Chicago, professor of history, 1965-91,
research professor of humanities, 1985-91, professor of history emeritus and
research professor of humanities emeritus, 1991--;
chairman of department, 1965-66 and 1967-71, director of Institute for the Humanities, 1981-87.
Wofford College, 1998.
University of Notre Dame, 1995-96.
Douglas Southall Freeman Professor of History, University of Richmond, 1992.
Jilin University of Technology, China, 1986.
Fordham University, New York City, instructor, 1947-51,
assistant professor, 1951-59, associate professor of American history, 1959-65.
Visiting lecturer, Columbia University, 1959-60.
Area of Research: 19th century U.S. History; Presidential History;
American statesmen; including John Quincy Adams, Daniel Webster, Martin Van Buren
and Henry Clay. He is especially well known for his works about
Andrew Jackson and Jacksonian America.
Education: Fordham University, B.S., 1943;
Columbia University, M.A., 1947, Ph.D., 1951.
Major Publications:
Sole Author:
Martin Van Buren and the Making of the Democratic Party,
(Columbia University Press, 1959).
The Election of Andrew Jackson, (Lippincott, 1963).
Andrew Jackson, (Twayne, 1966).
Andrew Jackson and the Bank War: A Study in the Growth of Presidential
Power, (Norton, 1968).
The Revolutionary Age of Andrew Jackson, (Harper, 1977).
Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Empire, 1767-1821,
(Harper, 1977).
Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 1822-1832, (Harper, 1981).
Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy,
1833-1845, (Harper, 1984).
The Life of Andrew Jackson
(includes 1767-1821, 1822-1832, and 1833-1845), Harper, 1988, published as
Andrew Jackson, (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998).
The Legacy of Andrew Jackson: Essays in Democracy, Indian Removal and
Slavery, (Louisiana State University Press, 1988).
The Jacksonian Era, (Harlan Davidson, 1989),
second edition, 1997).
The Legacy of Andrew Jackson: Essays on Democracy, Indian Removal
and Slavery (Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History),
(Louisiana State University Press, 1990)
Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union, (Norton, 1991).
Daniel Webster: The Man and His Time ,(Norton, 1997), also published
as Daniel Webster: A Conservative in a Democratic Age, (Norton, 1997).
The Battle of New Orleans: Andrew Jackson and America's First
Military Victory, (Viking, 1999).
Andrew Jackson & His Indian Wars, (Viking, 2001).
John Quincy Adams, (Times Books, 2002).
Joseph Smith, (Viking, 2002).
The House : The History of the House of Representatives, (Collins, May 2006)
Editor, Contributor, Joint Author:
(Editor and author of introduction and notes) Dixon Ryan Fox, The Decline of
Aristocracy in the Politics of New York, 1801-1840, (Harper, 1965).
(Editor and author of introduction and notes) James Parton, The Presidency of
Andrew Jackson, (Harper, 1966).
(Contributor) Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and Fred L. Israel, editors,
History of American Presidential Elections, 1789-1968, Volume I, (McGraw, 1971).
(Editor) The Age of Jackson, (University of South Carolina Press, 1972).
(With James I. Clark) Freedom's Frontiers: The Story of The
American People, Benzinger (Beverly Hills, CA), 1975.
(With Clark) We the People: A History of the United States, Glencoe
(Beverly Hills, CA), 1975.
(Compiler with Edwin A. Miles) The Era of Good Feelings and the
Age of Jackson, (AHM, 1979).
(With Robert O. Rupp) Andrew Jackson: A Bibliography, (Meckler, 1991).
(Author of historical overview) Sara Day, editor, Gathering History:
The Marian S. Carson Collection of Americana, (Library of Congress, 1999).
(With Fred W. Beuttler, Melvin G. Holli),
University of Illinois at Chicago (The College History Series),
(Arcadia Publishing, 2000)
Consulting editor, The Papers of Andrew Jackson.
Additionally, Contributor to Encyclopaedia Britannica, and to
professional journals. Member of editorial board, Journal of American
History, 1969-72.
Awards:
The Freedom Award, The U.S. Capitol Historical Society (2004),
Remini was honored for his lifelong work in historical scholarship and
his current efforts in writing a narrative history of the House of Representatives.
the American Historical Association's Award for Scholarly Distinction
Commissioned aide-de-camp and Tennessee Colonel by governor of Tennessee, 1992.
Society of Midland Authors Award, 1992, for Henry Clay: Statesman
for the Union; commissioned Kentucky Colonel by governor of Kentucky, 1992.
Honorary degrees from Governor's State University, 1989,
Eastern Kentucky University, 1992, and Fordham University, 1993.
Lyndon Baines Johnson Foundation Award.
Carl Sandburg Award, 1989, for The Life of Andrew Jackson.
University Scholar Award, University of Illinois, 1986.
Friends of Literature Award, 1985.
National Book Award in nonfiction, 1984, for Andrew Jackson
and the Course of American Democracy, 1833-1845.
Guggenheim fellow, 1978-79.
Huntington Library fellowship, 1978.
Friends of American Writers Award of Merit, 1977.
Encaenia Award, Fordham University, 1963.
Grant-in-aid, American Council of Learned Societies, 1960,
and American Philosophical Society, 1964.
Additional Info:
In May 2005 named House historian.
In September 2002 named Distinguished Visiting Scholar of
American History in the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress;
Remini will research and write a narrative history of the U.S. House of Representatives.
(The project was authorized by Congress in 1999 under the House Awareness and
Preservation Act (P.L. 106-99))
Remini is a much sought after speaker and is hailed for his ability to make history "come alive."
Honorary historian of Thirteen-Fifty Foundation.
Remini was named to the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels.
Remini has served as a review board member for the National Endowment for the
Humanities since 1974.
He was selected by President George Bush in 1991 to speak at the White House as
part of the Presidential Lecture Series on the Presidency and has been invited
by President George W. Bush as well.
Special editor, Crowell-Collier Educational Corp.
Military service: U.S. Navy, 1943-46; became lieutenant.
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