Introduction: What Is Statesmanship? -- 1 The Statesmanship of George Washington -- 2 Benjamin Franklin, Democratic Statesman -- 3 Publius the Lawgiver : The Statesmanship of The Federalist -- 4 John Adams : Statesmanship and the Limits of Popularity -- 5 Presidential Statesmanship : The Jeffersonian Example -- 6 John Marshall as Constitutional Statesman -- 7 Alexander Hamilton : Democratic Statesmanship, Spiritedness, and Audacity -- 8 Andrew Jackson : One Man's Demagogue, Another Man's Populist 9 Daniel Webster : The Statesman as Constitutional Conservative -- 10 John Calhoun : Statesmanship and Popular Rule -- 11 Henry Clay the Great Compromiser -- 12 Lincoln as Philosopher Statesman -- 13 Frederick Douglass : The Agitator as Statesman -- 14 Elizabeth Cady Stanton -- 15 Susan B. Anthony : The Prophetic Eye Discerns the Woman Politician -- 16 Theodore Roosevelt : Progressive Crusader -- 17 Woodrow Wilson and Modern Leadership -- 18 Franklin Delano Roosevelt -- 19 Harry S. Truman : American Statesmanship in World War and Cold War -- 20 Dwight David Eisenhower's Leadership 21 John F. Kennedy : The Courage of His Convictions -- 22 The Statesmanship of Martin Luther King, Jr. -- 23 Lyndon B. Johnson : The Abuse of Power -- 24 Richard Nixon -- 25 The Statesmanship of Ronald Reagan -- 26 Presidential Statesmanship in the New Media Era.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.