Revisiting Samuel Eliot Morison's Landmark History
The famous historian's eyewitness accounts of the Navy during World War II—now being reissued—won't be surpassed
- By James D. Hornfischer
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
For more than two generations since, our wars have been less conclusive and more divisive. They tend to lack the large-scale set-piece dramas that characterized wars between similarly armed nations. They no longer conclude with treaties and victory parades. But the American experience in World War II still inspires readers. Several authoritative writers—including Richard Frank, Rick Atkinson and Ian W. Toll—are at work on trilogies about that war. But only Morison will ever be, in Baldwin’s words, “a modern Thucydides.” Like the great Greek historian who chronicled the Peloponnesian War from living witness, Morison explored the whole turning world at war and made it his own.
James D. Hornfischer is the author of a new World War II history, Neptune’s Inferno: The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal.
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Comments (4)
Morison was a commanding presence in the lecture hall. I was privileged to take the last course he taught at Harvard, on Colonial History. I saw him dress down a student for not wearing a tie. A few years later it would be hard to find a Harvard student in coat and tie. Morison brought a colonial era musket to class and exhibited the period method of presenting arms. At the conclusion, he shot the musket off. Even though we had been forewarned he would do this, the window-rattling roar was something we never forgot. Morison's main contention in the Colonial History course was that George Washington was a naval genius as well as a great soldier. Washington knew the war could not be won without the help of the French navy. Morison described with great enthusiasm the arrival of Comte de Grasse and the French fleet at Chesepeake Bay, sealing the fate of the English army at Yorktown. My favorite Morison story involved his being the last person to appear at an opening night of the opera in Boston wearing top hat and tails. A Boston Globe reporter had the temerity to ask Morison if he didn’t feel a little foolish dressed like that. “Not at all,” Morison replied, “It’s all these other people who should feel foolish!”
Posted by The Rev. Fred Fenton on June 11,2012 | 11:58 AM
14 down 1 more to go. It has taken several years, but I am proudly nearing completion. An excellent read for anyone interested in the big picture of naval operations in WWII. Make the committment and then get to it! Buy them used on the web. Note that the orignals have better/bigger maps than the re-issues.
Posted by christo pinks on December 27,2011 | 08:54 PM
When will the books be reissued?
Posted by Bob Loving on July 27,2011 | 09:04 PM
Morison’s work succeeds because it is an easily read comprehensive reference work. It succeeds for its publisher because it is reasonably priced and there are those, such as myself, who retain an interest in the subject matter. I can find my relatives within the pages. There is plenty to criticize in his work beyond the obvious xenophobia. There is more than a little of “Hurray for our side,” too. He sometimes puts more than a little “art” in writing his history. For example, in Volume 5 we learn on page 280 that the battleship Washington avoided torpedo hits because “… Captain Davis’s clever maneuvering dodged their embarrassing caresses as nimbly as a young girl eluding a sailor on a park bench.” Maybe Morison knows about how this might be as a result of his “deep living,” but I do not find the simile helpful to understanding. I should not be surprised to learn there are former young girls of that era who wished they knew how to elude such caresses, let alone doing it with ease.
For applying art to history, I prefer things more along the lines of Mari Sandoz in her book, Crazy Horse, The Strange Man of the Oglalas. For example, in her opening paragraphs of the Chapter Many Things Thrown Away, we read about the lack of open trade in 1864 that “… the lodges were swelled with fine robes and furs, the women complaining loudly that they had no vermilion, no color for the quills and parfleches, no beads, no cloth or awls or scissors and none of the other white-man goods to use or eat. Even the butcher knives were worn thin as grass blades.” There is a lot of information in these words and the meaning is clear, even if I have to consult a dictionary to find out about a parflech. This manner of polish is missing from Morison’s work. It might be too much to expect that in a 15 volume opus. But, oh, what it would be, if it were there to savor.
Posted by Charles Widger on January 26,2011 | 02:16 PM