America’s First Great Global Warming Debate
Thomas Jefferson and Noah Webster argue over conventional wisdom that lasted thousands of years
- By Joshua Kendall
- Smithsonian.com, July 15, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
To settle the scientific debate, Webster offered more than just literary exegesis. In examining “the cold of American winters,” Webster focused on the numbers—and his opponents’ lack of hard data (Jeffersons recorded his own temperature readings in a private diary). “Mr. Jefferson,” Webster stated, “seems to have no authority for his opinions but the observations of elderly and middle-aged people.” Webster saved most of his ammunition for Williams, who had written the more extensive brief, replete with an array of temperature readings. Williams’ central contention, that America’s temperature had risen by 10 or 12 degrees in the prior century and a half, Webster asserted, just doesn’t make any sense. “The mean temperature of Vermont,” he writes, “is now 43 degrees…If we suppose the winter only to have changed, and deduct one half the supposed abatement, still the result forbids us to believe the hypothesis. If we suppose the heat of summer to have lessened in the same proportion…the summers formerly must have been intolerable; no animal could have subsisted under ten degrees of heat beyond our present summer temperature. On whichever side we turn our eyes, we meet with insurmountable difficulties.”
Webster concluded by rejecting the crude warming theory of Jefferson and Williams in favor of a more subtle rendering of the data. The conversion of forests to fields, he acknowledged, has led to some microclimatic changes—namely, more windiness and more variation in winter conditions. But while snow doesn’t stay on the ground as long, that doesn’t necessarily mean the country as a whole gets less snowfall each winter: “We have, in the cultivated districts, deep snow today, and none tomorrow; but the same quantity of snow falling in the woods, lies there till spring….This will explain all the appearances of the seasons without resorting to the unphilosophical hypothesis of a general increase in heat.”
Webster’s words essentially ended the controversy. While Jefferson continued to compile and crunch temperature data after his retirement from the presidency, he never again made the case for global warming. Neither did Williams, who died a few years after the publication of Webster’s article. Webster’s position was considered unimpeachable. In 1850, the acclaimed German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt declared that “statements frequently advanced, although unsupported by measurements, that…the destruction of many forests on both sides of the Alleghenys has rendered the climate more equable…are now generally discredited.”
And there the matter rested until the second half of the 20th century, when scientists began to understand the impact of greenhouse gases on the environment. The second great global warming debate poses a different set of scientific questions from those raised in the late 18th century, and this time the science clearly supports the idea that human activity (including clearing and burning forests) can increase temperatures. But it is Webster’s papers, with their careful analysis of the data, that have stood the test of time. Kenneth Thompson, a modern environmental scientist from the University of California at Davis, praises “the force and erudition” of Webster’s arguments and labels his contribution to climatology “a tour de force.”
Joshua Kendall is the author of The Forgotten Founding Father: Noah Webster’s Obsession and the Creation of an American Culture (Putnam, 2011).
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Comments (11)
I had this as an assignment for a class. During my research, I came across the information about the debate between Thomas Jefferson and Noah Webster. I am grateful that the Smithsonian magazine keeps such great records! I became fascinated in the topic, to the point that I just want to know more.
Posted by Bonita Webster on November 11,2012 | 06:24 PM
It seems as if Jefferson may have been one of the first people to record the UHI (Urban Heat Island) effect. Webster's comparison of snow in urban areas versus rural gives further credibility to UHI effect on snow cover.
Posted by D Bonson on September 20,2012 | 01:29 AM
Oxygen 150,000 ppm (parts per million)
Nitrogen 850,000 ppm
carbon dioxide 375 ppm
Give me a break. An increase in co2 is causing the ice caps to melt?
Posted by Kerry S on November 15,2011 | 09:37 AM
The debate covered in this article underlines the fact that as long as we adhere to a Patriarchal Warrior culture we will continue with the terrible results that it produces.It's an unbalanced destructive culture that sees everything in the world as an opportunity to own, conquer,control and exploit.Most of the debates that occur never touch the root causes. This culture came into place via physical violence ,which continues. And it is kept in place via the violent economic system.
Posted by ann du bois on August 31,2011 | 06:30 PM
I personally believe that Jefferson was on the right track. My argument is that nobody can refute the statement that burning fossils generated noxious fumes, and solid waste, not to mention the mess that is generated in extracting the stuff. And, treating the global warming issue as moot. Why not move on to cleaner energy? What do we have to lose?
Posted by hebintn on August 25,2011 | 01:05 PM
Google the phrase "The mean temperature of Vermont", and see what you find. It would appear that Vermont has managed to avoid any global warming over the last 212 years.
Posted by Edward M. on August 23,2011 | 10:37 PM
How fortunate we are that man has, through his industrious efforts, staved off the terrifying global cooling that threatened us all in the mid-1970's. I am so thankful our climate is warming, given the utter devastation the impending 20th century ice age would have caused.
Posted by D Peck on August 10,2011 | 11:33 PM
We are still haveing the same debate but with 200 years more hard data. And the real answer is we STILL don't know. We don't know how much global tempeture change is being caused by human activity and how much is just part of the cycle of nature.
Even if we were to use the Bible to establish our base line tempetures as Mr. Williams did in the late 1700's we only have about 300 years of direct measurement against 12,000 to 15,000 years of history based a Creationist model. Now if you want to argue the case from an Evolutionary model your time scales are vastly bigger for trying to compare against a short period of direct measurement.
With out having a long period of direct measurement of climate data to stand on we could be missing one very important issue climate change may happen faster than we currently grasp reguardless of scienctific model used evolutionary or creationist.
Two hard facts we do have in hand the polar ice caps are melting and urban heat islands do have a measurable effect on local tempetures. The first may be beyond our control. All we can do is observe it, make pridections about it's effect on current human activity and take defensive measures. The second while unavoidable could be moderated by encouraging building owners to impliment green roofs into their building design.
Finnaly the push to reduce everyone's carbon foot print make not impact climate change in the way it's bigges proponets want but the need to develop technologies to replace finite sources of fossil fuels is very real.
Posted by Don H on August 9,2011 | 04:50 PM
Bill OB,
"BULL! is not a credible counter argument. Jefferson may not have had the science we do, but he was on the right track. A vigorously growing tree can absorb 2.47 pounds of carbon dioxide per pound of wood per day. And it will put off about a pound of oxygen per pound of wood per day.
When you burn a tree (or a forest), not only do you eliminate a carbon sink and an oxygen generator, but you release all the carbon dioxide stored during the life of the tree. Burning trees is a "double whammy." Unfortunately the value of this natural service is very often limited to the price of the lumber the tree would yield. What would it cost to build and run a machine 24/7 that would provide this service?
Posted by Richard Sumpter on July 27,2011 | 11:04 AM
In retrospect, Jefferson was correct. At that time, the so-called "Little Ice Age" (c. 1300-1800) was ending, so the overall climate was warming.
Posted by S. Wyatt on July 26,2011 | 01:08 PM
". . . and this time the science clearly supports the idea that human activity (including clearing and burning forests) can increase temperatures." On a global basis? BULL!
Posted by Bill OB on July 21,2011 | 06:24 PM