On May 24, 1883, President Chester Arthur stood at the Brooklyn Bridge as 150,300 pedestrians crossed in a single day. The bridge cost $15 million and killed twenty-seven men — including engineer John Roebling, who died of tetanus after a ferry crushed his foot during the survey work. Ten blocks east, families of eight slept in two-room tenements without windows, at densities exceeding 1,000 people per acre. Mark Twain coined the era's name for a reason: not golden, but gilded — brilliant on the surface, corrupt and suffering beneath.
This is the full story of that America — of Cornelius Vanderbilt, John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, J.P. Morgan, Jay Gould, Jacob Riis, Jane Addams, Mary Elizabeth Lease, and William Jennings Bryan — across twenty-four chapters in six parts. Historian Edith Greenleaf Burnham traces the complete arc of the Gilded Age from the end of Reconstruction through the election of Theodore Roosevelt, covering the robber barons, the immigrant city, the Populist revolt, Jim Crow, and the reform movements that shaped the Progressive Era.
The Gilded Age produced Carnegie's libraries and the Homestead dead, the transcontinental railroad and the dispossession that built it. Burnham delivers the complete picture — achievement and exploitation, genius and corruption — and the reform tradition that the era's contradictions made inevitable.
For readers of T.J. Stiles's THE FIRST TYCOON and Ron Chernow's TITAN.
Publication : 2 juin 2026
Intérieur : Noir & blanc
Support(s) : eBook [ePub]
Contenu(s) : ePub
Protection(s) : Aucune (ePub)
Taille(s) : 1,12 Mo (ePub)
Langue(s) : Anglais
EAN13 eBook [ePub] : 9798905168505