No visitor to the United States left a more enduring
record of his travels and observations than the French writer and political
theorist Alexis de Tocqueville, whose Democracy in America, first
published in 1835, remains one of the most trenchant and insightful
analyses of American social and political practices. Tocqueville was
far too shrewd an observer to be uncritical about the United States,
but his verdict was fundamentally positive. "The government of democracy
brings the notion of political rights to the level of the humblest citizens,"
he wrote, "just
as the dissemination of wealth brings the notion of
property within the reach of all the members of the community." Nonetheless,
Tocqueville was only one of the first of a long line of thinkers to
worry whether such rough equality could survive in the face of a growing
factory system that threatened to create divisions between industrial
workers and a new business elite.
Other travelers marveled at the growth and vitality
of the country, where they could see "everywhere the most unequivocal
proofs of prosperity and rapid progress in agriculture, commerce and
great public works." But such optimistic views of the American experiment
were by no means universal. One skeptic was English novelist Charles
Dickens, who first visited the United States in 1841-42. "This is not
the Republic I came to see," he wrote in a letter. "This is not the
Republic of my imagination.... The more I think of its youth and strength,
the poorer and more trifling in a thousand respects, it appears in my
eyes. In everything of which it has made a boast -- excepting its education
of the people, and its care for poor children -- it sinks immeasurably
below the level I had placed it upon."
Dickens was not alone. America in the 19th century,
as throughout its history, generated expectations and passions that
often did not agree with a reality that was both more mundane and more
complex. Already, its size and diversity defied easy generalization
and invited contradiction: America was both a freedom-loving and slave-holding
society, a nation of expansive and primitive frontiers as well as cities
of growing commerce and industrialization.