From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Author looks at U.S. history and asks: 'What if?'


From NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG
Date 20 Feb 2001 13:35:16

Feb. 20, 2001   News media contact: Tim Tanton·(615)742-5470·Nashville,
Tenn.  10-71BP{089}

NOTE: Photographs of Steve Tally and the book cover are available.

By Matthew Oates*

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UMNS) - What if the preachers who led America's "Great
Awakening" had been cowed by the government that opposed them? What if
Rutherford B. Hayes had failed to win the presidency?

These are some of the questions that writer Steve Tally explores in Almost
America From the Colonists to Clinton: A "What If" History of the U.S., a
new book published by Quill, a division of HarperCollins Publishers. In 28
chapters, he explores what might have happened if specific events in U.S.
history had turned out differently.

Tally is a science writer at Purdue University and is described in his
publisher's catalog as a "veteran American pop historian." 

A member of West Lafayette St. Andrew United Methodist Church, Tally chose
to begin his book with the Great Awakening because it not only awakened the
colonists to a new view of spirituality but of their government as well.
"Those early events had long-range impact."

Preachers of the time, such as George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards,
awakened people and stirred them to seek independence from the British,
according to Tally. 

And if it weren't for the quick actions of New Light politicians to become
delegates to the 1776 convention, then Tally's picture of a room of
pro-Anglican delegates who remained loyal to the king could have become a
reality. "My view is that we might not have had the Declaration of
Independence for a long time or maybe never," the author says.

The Great Awakening was also important because of the religious impact it
had on the country. "It clearly helped launch the Baptist and Methodist
churches," Tally says. Edwards started the Baptists, while Whitefield was
associted with Methodism's founder, John Wesley.

Whitefield isn't the only Methodist-related personage who finds his way into
Tally's book.

When George W. Bush became president, by most counts he was the third
Methodist to hold the nation's highest elected office. But he was the second
Methodist president to become entangled in the Electoral College.

The first, Republican Rutherford B. Hayes, squeaked by Democrat Samuel
Tilden in 1876. Tilden won the popular vote in election, yet lost the
Electoral College by one vote.

Tally believes that the loss by Tilden - who held racist views - was every
African American's gain. "It's conceivable that some of the rights they just
won would have been overturned," Tally says. "Hayes was a strong defender of
those rights."

While Tally acknowledges the similarities between Bush and Hayes - both had
to have Florida to win - one difference stands out: Hayes didn't run for a
second term, while Bush probably will.

Another president with ties to Methodism - mainly through his United
Methodist wife - is Bill Clinton. In early January, Clinton took the pulpit
at Foundry United Methodist Church in Washington to deliver a guest sermon.

But it wasn't Clinton's preaching that earned him a place in Tally's book.
It was his scandal-plagued second term, rocked by an affair with an intern,
impeachment votes and criticism of fund-raising practices. "That was kind of
fun writing a chapter while the events were happening," Tally recalls.

Tally started with 100 topics or events in American history and ended up
writing about 28. "I wanted the 'what ifs' to be plausible," he says.

Each chapter is different; a few chapters end the way events actually did in
real life. "Different chapters were fun for different reasons. All of them
were hard to write."  

Information on the book is available at www.almostamerica.com.
# # #

*Oates is a correspondent for the Hoosier United Methodist News, the
newspaper of the United Methodist Church's Indiana Area. This story
originally appeared in that publication.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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