The
Mississippi: and the Making of a Nation
By Stephen Ambrose and
Douglas Brinkley
National Geographic, 2002
"Stephen Ambrose and Doug Brinkley have done
what many of us dream of doing. They have traveled the length of the Mississippi,
the most important river in the world, taking their time, wading into the lives
of people along the river, , replacing myth with history, and sharing the stories
with us. And what stories why are, touching on everything from America’s
soul to American industry to American hubris, from W.C. Handy and the birth of
the blues in the delta to St. Louis-born T.S. Eliot’s "strong brown
god," from John Deere and the agricultural revolution he brought to
the Midwest to the engineering feats that try to keep the Mississippi in
its place." – John
Barry
 
Publishers
Weekly Reviews
| September 30,
2002
Monday
THE
MISSISSIPPI
AND
THE
MAKING
OF
A
NATION;
From
the
Louisiana
Purchase
to
Today
"The
Mississippi
River
alone
represents
more
than
2,350
miles
of
America's
lifeblood,
write
Ambrose
and
Brinkley
of
the
waterway
known
as
Old
Man
River
and
America's
River.
This
lively
narrative
is
built
around
the
authors'
trip
up
the
Mississippi
-
from
New
Orleans
to
Minnesota
-
on
the
19th-century
steamboat
Delta
Queen
in
celebration
of
the
Lewis
and
Clark
bicentennial.
Ambrose,
bestselling
author
of
Nothing
Like
It
in
the
World,
and
noted
historian
Brinkley
(The
Unfinished
Presidency),
weave
regional
history
with
their
personal
account
of
the
sights,
from
the
intersection
of
Highways
61
and
49
near
Clarksdale,
Miss.,
where
legend
has
it
that
musician
Robert
Johnson "sold
his...
soul
to
the
devil
to
play
the
meanest
blues
guitar
in
the
region,to
their
encounter
with
a
domesticated
bald
eagle
at
a
sanctuary
near
the
Twin
Cities.
They
stress
the
economic
and
cultural
importance
of
the
river
valley
to
the
nation,
recount
quirky
regional "firsts(such
as
the
debut
of
peanut
butter
at
the
1904
St.
Louis
World's
Fair)
and
focus
above
all
on
the
machinations
that
led
to
Jefferson's
1803
purchase
of
the
territory
from
France.
Combining
an
impressively
broad
overview
of
the
region
with
a
detailed
account
of
the
Louisiana
Purchase,
this
absorbing
book
should
please
any
lay
enthusiast
of
American
history.
150
pages
of
photos
and
maps.(Oct.)
Forecast:Given
the
eminence
of
the
authors,
the
beauty
of
the
photos,
and
the
coming
bicentennial
of
the
Lewis & Clark
expedition,
this
should
see
very
handsome
sales.
DesertBook
Review 
From
northern
Minnesota
to
the
Gulf
of
Mexico,
the
Mississippi
River
runs
its
course
along
the
borders
of
ten
states
and
cleanly
bisects
the
nation.
But
the
Mississippi
is
more
than
an
imposing
natural
landmark;
it
is
embedded
in
every
facet
of
America's
national
identity.
Stephen
E.
Ambrose,
renowned
author
of
Undaunted
Courage,
historian
Douglas
G.
Brinkley,
author
of
The
Unfinished
Presidency,
and
award-winning
National
Geographic
photographer
Sam
Abell
traveled
the
entire
length
of
the
Mississippi--from
its
mouth
at
Delacroix
Island,
Louisiana,
to
its
source
at
Itasca,
Minnesota--to
bring
readers
the
full,
rich
history
of
America's
great
river.
In
11
chapters,
each
covering
a
length
of
the
river,
readers
will
witness
the
early
explorations
of
DeSoto
and
the
momentous
signing
of
the
Louisiana
Purchase;
they
will
meet
Jim
Bowie,
Ulysses
S.
Grant,
and
Robert
Johnson;
they
will
relive
the
Civil
War
and
the
Great
Flood,
the
Underground
Railroad
and
the
Trail
of
Tears;
and
they
will
discover
the
immense
impact
of
the
Mississippi
on
American
arts,
from
the
birth
of
the
Blues
to
the
literature
of
Mark
Twain
and
T.S.
Eliot.
To
expand
the
book's
visual
dimension,
each
chapter
of
The
Mississippi
and
the
Making
of
a
Nation
is
illustrated
with
period
paintings,
lithographs,
artifacts,
and
maps,
and
features
unique
photographic
essays
by
Sam
Abell.
The
result
is
a
lively,
comprehensive,
and
beautiful
work
that
panoramically
explores
and
celebrates
the
American
icon
that
is
the
Mighty
Mississippi
as
it
celebrates
America
itself.
 
WAS
BORN ON THE SANGAMON RIVER in Illinois, grew
up on the Rock River in Wisconsin, went to school
on the banks of the Mississippi River, and spent
most of my career at the mouth of the Mississippi.
On these rivers I swam, canoed, hunted deer in
Wisconsin and ducks in Louisiana. With my family
I've camped on islands in the Mississippi. We
walked across it at Lake Itasca. In New Orleans,
we cross by ferry. I've driven Hwy. 61 many times,
up- or downriver and on the east side, Wisconsin
to Louisiana or reverse. This was before the
Interstate, so I got to know the towns along
the river. The river is in my blood. Wherever,
whenever, it is a source of delight. More, it
is the river that draws us together as a nation.
Tex
McCrary
said
on
June
6,
2000,
that
he
was
pleased
to
see
the
National
D-Day
Museum
opening
in
New
Orleans "on
the
river
that
was
Mark
Twain's
heart
of
America." It
is
our
lifeblood.
Whenever
it
was
blocked
or
threatened
by
an
enemy,
Americans
kept
it
open.
To
do
that,
my
great-grandfather,
Sgt.
Pleasant
Bishop,
actually
fought
with
Gen.
Ulysses
S.
Grant
at
the
battle
of
Vicksburg
during
the
Civil
War.
The
river
has
always
drawn
me
in
with
its
history.
I
became
a
Civil
War
historian
because
I
wanted
to
know
how
the
Union
opened
the
river.
Thomas
Jefferson's
Louisiana
Purchase,
agreed
to
by
Napoleon
in
1803
when
he
realized
that
Jefferson
would
fight
for
New
Orleans
if
necessary,
did
not
settle
the
question
of
who
would
control
the
river.
In
the
War
of
1812
the
British
and
their
Indian
allies,
including
the
Sauk
war
leader
Black
Hawk,
tried
to
take
control
of
the
upper
river.
They
were
stopped
at
Fort
Madison,
Iowa.
In
1815
the
British
attacked
New
Orleans,
but
were
defeated
by
Gen.
Andrew
Jackson
and
his
American
frontiersmen.
In
1832
Black
Hawk
and
the
Sauk
and
Fox,
called
the "British
Band," tried
again
to
drive
back
American
settlers
on
the
Illinois
and
Wisconsin
banks
of
the
river,
with
the
by-then
President
Jackson
to
stop
them.
In
the
Civil
War
it
was
the
Confederates
who
attempted
to
wrest
control
of
the
river,
only
to
lose
to
Ulysses
Grant's
Union
forces.
In
World
War
I,
President
Woodrow
Wilson
made
New
Orleans
a
naval
base.
In
World
War
II,
the
Germans
tried
with
submarines
to
close
down
the
river.
President
Franklin
Roosevelt
sent
anti-submarine
patrols
to
the
Gulf
of
Mexico
to
end
the
threat.
In
that
war,
Andrew
Higgins
built
in
New
Orleans
the
landing
craft
that
helped
win
victory
in
the
Atlantic
and
Pacific.
St.
Louis
built
airplanes.
The
Rock
Island
Arsenal
in
Illinois
made
mortars
and
howitzers.
Minneapolis
packaged
rations
that
fed
the
troops
overseas.
My
life
on
the
Mississippi
had
included
a
fine
moment:
I
was
23.
I
was
duck
hunting
at
Pass?
Loutre,
one
of
the
three
mouths
of
the
river.
The
pirogue
tipped.
I
was
standing
in
much
almost
up
to
my
knees
-
with
no
other
boat
nearby.
Rather
than
think
of
my
predicament,
I
exulted
at
the
thought
of
being
at
the
spot
where
earth
meets
sea
and
life
began.
I
was
on
the
last
deposit
of
sediment
from
the
topsoils
of
every
state
between
the
Appalachian
and
the
Rocky
Mountains.
To
my
right,
the
open
Gulf
of
Mexico.
To
my
left,
Head
of
Passes,
where
the
river
divides
into
its
three
main
channels.
I
thought
of
Abraham
Lincoln
and
his
love
for
the
river.
And
the
love
of
all
those
who
have
lived
in
the
valley
from
ancient
times,
including
Native
Americans,
Spanish,
French,
Asians,
African-Americans.
All
around
me
were
raccoons,
water
snakes,
rabbits,
and
turtles,
egrets,
ibis,
ducks,
hawks,
osprey,
herons,
and
more.
This
primeval
spot
was
bursting
with
life
eons
ago
and
still
is
today.
It
is
America's
opening
to
the
world,
and
its
welcoming
to
ships
from
around
the
world.
It
seemed
to
me
that
the
Mississippi
River
does
not
divide
the
United
States
in
half
but
rather
draws
the
country
together,
that
it
is
the
spine
of
America.
In
December
1956,
at
age
20,
I
did
for
the
first
time
something
nearly
everyone
living
in
the
Mississippi
Valley
wants
to
do-go
to
New
Orleans.
Sin,
fun,
commerce,
a
conglomeration
of
races-all
this
and
more
at
the
port
city.
When
I
left
Madison,
Wisconsin,
hitchhiking,
it
was
below-zero
weather.
Two
days
later,
New
Orleans
had
bright
sunlight
and
70
degrees.
They
let
you
live
here?
I
thought.
Where
do
I
sign?
I
fell
in
love
with
the
city
on
my
first
day
in
the
French
Quarter.
I
have
spent
much
of
my
working
life
there
and
still
love
it
more
than
four
decades
later.
Among
many
other
attractions,
New
Orleans
offers
food,
music,
Mardi
Gras.
It
is
America's
favorite
party
city.
But
above
all
else
it
has
the
river-relatively
narrow,
deep
and
fast.
It
is
always
in
your
mind;
directions
given
in
New
Orleans
are "upriver" or "downriver" or "away
from
the
river." Working
boats
of
all
types
are
on
it.
Walking
on
the
levee
gazing
at
the
river
on
one
side
and
the
French
Quarter
on
the
other
is
what
I
do
for
pleasure.
New
Orleans's
love
affair
with
its
own
history
draws
me
there,
especially
to
Jackson
Square,
where
Gen.
Andrew
Jackson
sits
on
his
rearing
horse.
Inscribed
on
the
monument
had
been
his
words
from
the
Nullification
Crisis
of
1832,
when
at
a
banquet
South
Carolina
Senator
John
C.
Calhoun
gave
the
toast, "The
Union:
next
to
our
liberties,
the
most
dear." Jackson
followed
with: "The
Union:
it
must
be
preserved." When
the
Confederates
took
New
Orleans
in
1861
they
scratched
out
Jackson's
words.
When
Union
Gen.
Benjamin
Butler
regained
command,
he
replaced
and
added
to
them: "The
Union:
it
must
and
shall
be
preserved"
Perfect,
I
thought
in
1956
and
still
do.
In
1957
I
went
to
Baton
Rouge
to
study
under
Dr.
Harry
T.
Williams
at
L.S.U.
For
my
M.A.
degree.
That
summer,
before
school,
I
got
a
job
at
the
Dow
Chemical
Plant
on
the
river's
West
Bank.
For
two
months
I
rode
the
ferry,
twice
a
day.
I
learned
something
about
that
stretch
of
the
river-where
the
whirlpools
were,
low
water
or
high,
and
more.
When
working
on
this
book
with
my
friend
Doug
Brinkley,
I
traveled
upriver
on
the
Delta
Queen.
Being
on
a
steam-powered
vessel
designed
in
the
19th
century
along
the
river
at
the
beginning
of
the
21st
century
is
a
reminder
that,
in
human
terms,
the
Mississippi
is
timeless.
Much
of
what
Doug
and
I
saw
as
we
traveled
is
what
the
French
explorers
Jacques
Marquette
and
Louis
Joliet
saw
in
1673
when
they
came
from
Green
Bay
down
the
Fox
and
Wisconsin
rivers,
then
took
the
Mississippi
to
the
mouth
of
the
Arkansas.
We
saw
what
Robert
de
La
Salle
saw
in
1682
when
he
traveled
from
Illinois
to
New
Orleans,
except
that
the
Indians
are
gone.
Their
homes
are
replaced
by
cities,
bridges,
power
plants,
their
canoes
by
barges
carrying
coal,
grain,
and
fertilizers.
Yet
many
stretches
of
the
river
are
unchanged.
The
banks
are
tree-lined.
The
islands
are
numerous
and
teem
with
hawks,
eagles,
osprey,
and
deer.
As
we
rode
the
Delta
Queen,
a
storm
drove
us.
It
was
followed
by
a
clearing
sky
and
gorgeous
light
that
revealed
blue,
some
clouds,
a
white
wake
from
a
paddleboat,
and
all
shades
of
green.
Sam
Abell,
a
National
Geographic
photographer,
accompanied
us.
He
took
scores
of
pictures,
which
appear
in
portfolios
throughout
the
book.
He
called
parts
of
the
river
an
island
paradise.
We
saw
what
then-farmer
Abraham
Lincoln
saw
when
he
descended
the
Mississippi
by
raft
with
cargo
in
1828,
when
he
was
19,
and
again
in
1831.
On
the
second
trip,
to
the
port
of
New
Orleans,
he
saw
a
slave
auction
and
vowed
that
if
he
could,
he
would
strike
those
shackles
forever.
Huck
Finn
and
his
slave
companion,
Jim,
descended
the
river
on
a
raft
in
the
most
famous
journey
in
American
literature.
They
ran
past
the
islands
we
passed.
You
don't
see
rafts
nowadays,
but
close
your
eyes
and
you
will.
History
is
about
people.
Characters
sparkle
from
the
Mississippi
River
from
its
source
to
its
mouth.
In
this
book,
Doug
Brinkley
and
I
attempt
to
describe
some
of
them,
what
they
did
on,
or
to,
or
in
defense
of
the
river.
This
is
not
a
travelogue,
which
we
wouldn't
know
how
to
do
anyway,
and
we
decided
early
on
that
we
couldn't
possibly
write
a
history
of
the
river-that
would
mean
volumes.
Instead
we
concern
ourselves
with
the
people
who
lived
along
it.
We
look
at
warriors
and
what
they
did,
musicians
and
what
they
produced,
authors
and
their
writings,
explorers
and
adventurers
and
their
accomplishments.
We
have
traveled
the
length
of
the
river,
Doug
and
I,
by
boat
and
helicopter
and
car.
What
follows
is
what
two
historians
talk
about
when
they
are
on
the
river,
discovering
new
things
about
their
nation's
heritage.
Stephen
Ambrose
New
Orleans,
April
12,
2002
The
Mississippi
River
never
ran
through
my
boyhood-but
it
did
course
through
my
imagination.
The
first
time
I
saw
the
river
was
from
the
back
seat
of
a
Pontiac
station
wagon
on
a
summer
family
vacation.
We
had
left
our
home
in
Perrysburg,
Ohio,
for
Disneyland.
With
great
fanfare
my
mother,
a
high
school
English
teacher,
pointed
out
to
my
sister
and
me
the
generic
highway
sign: "The
Mississippi
River" as
we
crossed
the
I-55
bridge
that
connects
Illinois
to
Missouri.
From
an
automobile
zooming
55
miles
an
hour
beside
rattling
semi-trucks,
the
Mississippi
looked
muddy
and
polluted.
With
the
Jefferson
Memorial
Expansion
Arch
looming
before
us,
and
the
impressive
St.
Louis
skyline,
the
river
offered
the
excitement
of
a
sewage
canal.
My
imagination
had
been
spoiled
by
Walt
Disney:
In
his
theme
park
I
could
hear
the
calliope
on
the
wedding-cake-like
steamboat "Mark
Twain," explore "Tom
Sawyer's
Island," hide
in
Huck
Finn's
caves,
and
ride
on
Mike
Fink's
keelboat.
It
was "one-stop
shopping," as
Wal-Mart's
Sam
Walton
used
to
say:
the
entire
Mississippi
River
romance
experience
for
a
C,
D,
and
E
ticket.
By
comparison
climbing
the
Cahokia
Mounds
near
St.
Louis,
once
home
to
the
largest
pre-Columbian
settlement
north
of
the
Valley
of
Mexico,
was
dullsville.
In
school
I
did
learn
that
the
Mississippi
River
constantly
flooded
and
abruptly
changed
direction.
Mark
Twain
used
to
tell
the
story
of
being
unnerved
as
an
apprentice
river
pilot
on
in
1857.
His
teacher
explained
that
even
if
he
memorized
every
detail
of
the
1,200
miles
of
river
between
New
Orleans
and
St.
Louis,
he
might
have
to "learn
it
all
again
in
a
different
way
every
twenty-four
hours." The
river
was
a
living
entity
running
through
the
heartland
of
America.
My
interest
in
the
Mississippi
matured
dramatically
when
as
a
high
school
senior
I
read
Richard "Dick" Bissell's
A
Stretch
of
River
(1950),
about
a
roguish
deckhand
working
on
a
towboat
on
the
upper
Mississippi.
Brimming
with
real-life
misadventures,
the
book
made
the
Mississippi
both
awesome
and
tangible,
a
wild
waterway
I
wanted
to
explore.
But
it
was
New
Orleans
that
made
me
fall
in
love
with
the
Mississippi
River.
I'll
never
forget
the
first
time
I
took
the
free
ferry
which
has
run
between
New
Orleans
(east
bank)
to
Old
Algiers
(west
bank)
without
interruption
since
1827.
Gazing
down
at
the
turbulent
current,
I
felt
the
river's
awesome
power.
It
is
nearly
300
feet
deep
at
Algiers
Bend,
a
treacherous
spot.
Ships
round
this
hairpin
turn
every
15
minutes,
sometimes
lose
power,
then
twirl
sideways,
spinning
like
an
unleashed
top.
The
danger
is
palatable.
In
December
1996,
a
70,000-ton
bulk-carrier
named
the
Bright
Field
acidentally
rammed
into
One
River
Place,
a
high-rise
condominium
on
the
east
bank,
causing
millions
of
dollars
in
damage.
Teenagers
have
made
bets,
boasting
they
can
swim
from
New
Orleans
to
Old
Algiers-the
Times-Picayune
obituary
page
tells
their
final
stories.
The
Mississippi
River
bridges,
near
the
ferry
crossing,
have
a
strange
history
of
being
a
suicide
jump-off
site.
There,
renegade
logs
sometimes
course
down
the
river
at
30
miles
an
hour.
If
hit
in
the
head
by
one,
death
is
almost
certain.
In
his
unpublished "On
the
Road" journals,
novelist
Jack
Kerouac
recalled
the
first
time
he
crossed
the
river
on
the
Old
Algiers
ferry.
It
was
dusk,
and
a
fallen
tree
passed
him.
He
studied
the "Odyssiac
log," imagining
it
hailed
from
lonely
Montana
and
slipped
by
Hannibal
and
Cairo
and
Greenville
and
Natchez
at
night
undetected.
He
imagined
that
this
log,
serenely
turning
over
and
over,
would
end
up
in
the
Gulf
of
Mexico,
then
pass
around
the
Florida
Keys,
and
eventually
be
found
by
a
sad
fisherman
in
Senegal
or
Ghana.
Rivers,
he
mused,
were
the
great
connectors
of
people
and
nature
and
earth. "And
what
is
the
Mississippi
River?" he
asked. "It
is
the
movement
of
the
night
and
the
secret
of
sleep
and
the
emptier
of
American
Streams
which
bear
(as
the
log
is
borne)
the
story
of
our
truer
fury."

|