Society and Culture in America: 1830-1860…book review

Society and Culture in America: 1830-1860…book review

Three dynamic decades in America…

 

 

Book review:

Society and Culture in America: 1830-1860

 

Russell Blaine Nye (1913-1993)

The New American Nation Series, Henry Steele Commager and Richard B. Morris, eds.

New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1974

432 pages

 

Nye tells a great big story, in sufficient detail for the serious student, and with enough style to satisfy any more casual, interested reader. If you don’t find a lot in this volume that matches and illuminates your interests, then you need to get out more.

In Society and Culture in America: 1830-1860, the decades before the American Civil War are remarkably filled with Americans and American society spreading and maturing in all directions.

Wagon trains were crossing the largely unmapped west (the transcontinental railroad wasn’t completed until May 1869).

European performing artists were getting top billing all over the United States—that is, all 33 of the states—while American musical arts were building up steam.

Education became effectively accessible for quite a few of the 20 million Americans who were eager to learn. “Sunday schools” (based on a British philanthropist’s program to set up schools for poor kids in Britain on Sundays, when the kids weren’t working) started catching on after the turn of the 19th century, and then they blossomed when churches got into the business to teach reading and writing, and, of course, elements of their respective faiths. All kinds of volunteer societies established “institutes” to spread learning. The “lyceum”—a locally sponsored program of uplifting lectures—was popular everywhere. By 1860, every state in the union offered at least elementary and secondary education, funded by tax dollars.

I could go on and on. Nye did so for 432 pages. The life of the nation in three dynamic decades, 1830-1860, is a great big story.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2026 All rights reserved.

 

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