The Political Reconstruction of American Tobacco, 1862-1933

Author:   Patrick Mulford O’Connor
Publisher:   Fordham University Press
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9781531510596


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   03 June 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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The Political Reconstruction of American Tobacco, 1862-1933


Overview

A deeply researched and clearly argued account of the mutual growth of the federal government and the modern tobacco Nearly everything about the United States tobacco economy changed in the generation following the American Civil War. From labor to consumption, manufacturing to regulation, tobacco was utterly reconstructed, ""comparatively a new industry,"" as one contemporary wrote. The Political Reconstruction of American Tobacco, 1862–1933 exposes the causes of these changes, and in the process, it reconsiders cornerstones of the American national narrative. Through a detailed rendering of tobacco's late-nineteenth-century political economy, this book argues that the federal state's and American capitalism's development were mutually constitutive—and fundamentally political—processes. From the Civil War to the Progressive Era, diverse political movements across tobacco's commodity chain drove state and market development, creating the immense power and stifling poverty that defined tobacco's reconstruction. The Political Reconstruction of American Tobacco, 1862–1933 emphasizes the significance of the thousands of manufacturers whose interest groups shaped federal tax policy and, in turn, forged a powerful and effective internal revenue system; the increasingly influential fertilizer producers and warehouse operators who determined tobacco's value; and the crop scientists who sought to promote and rationalize US tobacco production. As these actors reshaped tobacco's commodity chain, they missed, and even dismissed, the interests of tobacco growers, especially newly emancipated African Americans and smallholding whites throughout the South. The ruling logic of tobacco's reconstructed political economy rationalized agrarian indebtedness, justified low prices, and intensified labor discipline on thousands of small farms. In emphasizing these exclusions, The Political Reconstruction of American Tobacco, 1862–1933 reveals how nineteenth-century state and economic development coincided with and even created rural poverty.

Full Product Details

Author:   Patrick Mulford O’Connor
Publisher:   Fordham University Press
Imprint:   Fordham University Press
Edition:   New edition
Weight:   0.336kg
ISBN:  

9781531510596


ISBN 10:   1531510590
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   03 June 2025
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Introduction | 1 1 “An Acknowledged Power in the Land”: Tobacconists, Taxation, and the Politics of Market Creation, 1862–1872 | 10 2 “A Hard Law at Best”: The Political Economy of Tobacco Taxation from Depression to Surplus, 1873–1890 | 40 3 Tobacco’s “Imperfect Knowledge”: Governance, Classification, and Conflict in the World Tobacco Market, 1865–1890 | 65 4 “The Road to Prosperity”: Power and the Politics of Quality on the Bright Tobacco Frontier, 1865–1900 | 88 5 The Health of the State: The USDA, Agricultural Hegemony, and the Federal Improvement of Tobacco Quality, 1890–1933 | 113 Conclusion: Revising Tobacco Politics in the Twentieth Century | 144 Acknowledgments | 151 Notes | 153 Bibliography | 203 Index | 219

Reviews

O'Connor's well-written account of the political reconstruction of American tobacco has found a way to infuse what one might think of as a well--studied commodity with insight and nuance. His careful and perceptive analysis of the role of government in promoting and taxing tobacco will be welcomed by a scholars of tobacco but also by those interested in the role of government in other industries and commodities.---Jeannie Whayne, University Professor of History, University of Arkansas


Author Information

Patrick Mulford O'Connor is a history teacher at The Putney School in Putney, Vermont. He earned his doctorate in history at the University of Montana. The Political Reconstruction of American Tobacco, 1862–1933 is his first book.

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