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25 Remote Warehouse Politics- General

When Bosses Ruled Philadelphia: The Emergence of the Republican Machine, 1867-1933

by Peter Mccaffery

When Bosses Ruled Philadelphia: The Emergence of the Republican Machine, 1867-1933 Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

This is the most thoughtful and intensive analysis of the emergence of a political machine of any written in recent years. McCaffery has mastered the theory and historiography of the political machine in general and applied this to a wealth of sources in Philadelphia. His questions are rigorously formulated, exhaustively researched, and convincingly stated.-Terrence J. McDonald, University of Michigan In 1903, Muckraker Lincoln Steffens brought the city of Philadelphia lasting notoriety as the most corrupt and the most contented urban center in the nation. Famous for its colorful feudal barons, from King James McManes and his Gas Ring to Iz Durham and Sunny Jim McNichol, Philadelphia offers the historian a classic case of the duel between bosses and reformers for control of the American city. But, strangely enough, Philadelphia's Republican machine has not been subject to critical examination until now. When Bosses Ruled Philadelphia challenges conventional wisdom on the political machine, which has it that party bosses controlled Philadelphia as early as the 1850s and maintained that control, with little change, until the Great Depression. According to Peter McCaffery, however, all bosses were not alike, and political power came only gradually over time. McManes's Gas Ring in the 1870s was not as powerful as the well-oiled machine ushered in by Matt Quay in the late 1880s. Through a careful analysis of city records, McCaffery identifies the beneficiaries of the emerging Republican Organization, which sections of the local electorate supported it, and why. He concludes that genuine boss rule did not emerge as the dominant institution in Philadelphia politics until justbefore the turn of the century. McCaffery considers the function that the machine filled in the life of the city. Did it ultimately serve its supporters and the community as a whole, as Steffens and recent commentators have suggested? No, says McCaffery. The romantic image of the boss as good guy of the urban drama is wholly undeserved.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780271034300
Subtitle:
The Emergence of the Republican Machine, 1867-1933
Author:
Mccaffery, Peter
Author:
McCaffery, Peter
Publisher:
Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject:
Political Process - Political Parties
Subject:
United States - State & Local - Middle Atlantic
Subject:
United States - 19th Century
Publication Date:
January 2008
Binding:
Paperback
Language:
English
Pages:
288
Dimensions:
900x600x65 94

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