University Press of America
Pages: 394
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-0-7618-4124-1 • Paperback • September 2008 • $85.99 • (£66.00)
Now Professor Emeritus, James T. Wall, is an American history veteran having taught at the University of Tennessee, Georgetown University, West Point, Edinburgh University in Scotland, and National University of Costa Rica.
Part 1 SECTION I: RECONSTRUCTION, 1865-18771
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: Death of a President
Chapter 3 Chapter 2: Andrew Johnson on Stage
Chapter 4 Chapter 3: Grant Takes Command Once Again
Part 5 SECTION II: THE BROWN DECADES, 1877-1892
Chapter 6 Chapter 1: Politics as Usual
Chapter 7 Chapter 2: The Cleveland Era
Part 8 SECTION III: CLOSING THE FRONTIER, 1865-1890
Chapter 9 Chapter 1: What the Frontier Was
Chapter 10 Chapter 2: The Indian Frontier
Chapter 11 Chapter 3: The Trappers' Frontier
Chapter 12 Chapter 4: The Miners' Frontier
Chapter 13 Chapter 5: The Cattlemen's Frontier
Chapter 14 Chapter 6: The Farmer's Frontier
Part 15 SECTION IV: INDUSTRY, WEALTH, AND THE CITY, 1865-1901
Chapter 16 Chapter 1: Industry Grows the City
Chapter 17 Chapter 2: The Men Who Made the Era
Chapter 18 Chapter 3: The City
Part 19 SECTION V: THE POPULIST ERA, 1890-1896
Chapter 20 Chapter 1: The Vicious Cycle
Chapter 21 Chapter 2: The Farmers Fight Back
Chapter 22 Chapter 3: Populists Unite
Chapter 23 Chapter 4: Cleveland Makes a Comeback
Part 24 SECTION VI: THE AGE OF IMPERIALISM, 1898-1904
Chapter 25 Chapter 1: The 1896 Election
Chapter 26 Chapter 2: McKinley's Road to War
Chapter 27 Chapter 3: America in Transition: Progressivism
Chapter 28 Chapter 4: Theodore Roosevelt's World
Chapter 29 Chapter 5: The World Seeks a Canal
Chapter 30 Chapter 6: The United States Digs a Canal
James T. Wall's Wall Street and the Fruited Plain offers a conventional overview of American history in the years 1865-1901, the Gilded Age . . . Wall Street and the Fruited Plain is filled with interesting nuggets of facts . . .
— Enterprise & Society, December 2009
Wall provides a very nice historical overview of the period in a style that undergraduate students will find extremely acessible....Recommended. Two-star review.
— Choice Reviews, March 2009