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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Description
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
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

