Authors:
Historic Era: Era 3: Revolution and the New Nation (1754-1820s)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
February/March 2001 | Volume 52, Issue 1
Authors:
Historic Era: Era 3: Revolution and the New Nation (1754-1820s)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
February/March 2001 | Volume 52, Issue 1
Edward Heath, Britain’s prime minister from 1970 to 1974, recently announced that he intended to retire from the House of Commons after serving there for more than 50 years, half of them after he was prime minister. Such lingering is unheard of these days in the United States, and no doubt the departure of William Jefferson Clinton from the White House will evoke continuing editorial lamentations about how we, as a nation, tend to squander the experience and sagacity of our former Presidents (as well as lamentations from the other side about any political involvement he does maintain). The fact is, though, that men who have run the greatest power in the world like to be in charge, not merely whispering advice.
No, in recent years the accepted procedure for former Presidents has been to retire to the archives their friends, their admirers, and the American taxpayers help them construct and there compose memoirs justifying what they have done in office. We can expect Bill Clinton to do the same—provided, of course, that he escapes indictment.
Presidents writing their memoirs is a relatively new habit. For a Chief Executive to defend himself was long considered unseemly. The first president who tried it was James Buchanan, who in 1866 published an attempt to excuse the unholy mess he had helped make of the nation. The most outstanding presidential memoirs are those of Ulysses S. Grant, who wrote them while he was dying of throat cancer. It was a last, courageous act from a courageous man, designed to leave his family with some money after he had been swindled by an unscrupulous business partner. Even while giving orders during the Civil War, Grant displayed a talent for clear, succinct prose, and it helped that his editor and collaborator was Mark Twain. Few Presidents have been so fortunate.
Of course, many presidents have found things to do in their retirements besides explain themselves. Back when being President was supposed to be an act of selfless public service, several Chief Executives spent their last years fighting off bankruptcy. Thomas Jefferson, for one, left the White House in 1809 some $24,000 in debt, a staggering sum for the time. He was able to recoup for a while by selling his 6487-volume book collection to the nation for nearly that whole amount, to form the core of the new Library of Congress. But the incorrigibly public-minded Jefferson soon returned to philanthropic—and uncompensated—endeavors, founding the University of Virginia a few miles from his estate at Monticello. He not only designed and supervised the construction of the university’s beautiful buildings and campus but also set the curriculum, selected the faculty, and served for a time as rector.
Unfortunately, this relapse into civic-spiritedness left Jefferson deep in debt again. At his death, on July 4, 1826, his estate was some $100,000 in hock, forcing his surviving daughter, Martha, to put Monticello up for sale.
Jefferson’s death, on the fiftieth anniversary of the