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The Washington Century: Three Families and the Shaping of the Nation's Capital
 
 
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The Washington Century: Three Families and the Shaping of the Nation's Capital [Hardcover]

Burt Solomon (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

November 9, 2004
An epic work of history ... the story of the American capital told through the lives of three families that each symbolize a different aspect of the city and the nation it embodies

The Washington Century tells the captivating history of the nation's capital during the last century, made vivid through the struggles of three very different families, each representing an essential aspect of Washington. Veteran journalist Burt Solomon uses these families to explore everything from the customs of Washington's grand hostesses to the surge in the federal bureaucracy to the critical roles that politicking and lobbying have played as the capital has grown more truly democratic.

  • The Boggs family came to Washington during the age of political giants. Hale Boggs, a prominent congressman from Louisiana, was the prot#233;g#233; of Sam Rayburn and close friends with John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. When Boggs died in a plane crash, he was succeeded by his widow, Lindy, a political power in her own right. Their son, Tommy Boggs, is one of the capital's most influential lobbyists, and their daughter, Cokie Roberts, is a distinguished member of the Washington press corps.
  • Real-estate developer Morris Cafritz changed the physical face of the city, giving form to Washington's new downtown, centered along K Street, which would become the center of activity for lobbyists and power brokers. His wife, Gwen, a legendary socialite, hosted the city's most exclusive parties, bringing together eminent politicians, jurists, and diplomats into a self-conscious elite.
  • Julius Hobson Sr. was a leading black activist in the first black-majority city in America. A brilliant and imaginative militant during the civil rights era, he served on D.C.'s first elected city council and fought for the capital's autonomy from the federal government before his death in 1977. His son, Julius Hobson Jr., became a political figure of a contrasting sort, an insider instead of an agitator, who worked for Mayor Marion Barry and went on to become the top lobbyist at the American Medical Association.

Each family's story forms a strand of the city's single history. Their lives were entwined with those of other Washington notables -- from Eleanor Roosevelt to Lady Bird Johnson, Perle Mesta, Stokely Carmichael, J. Edgar Hoover, Tip O'Neill, Jesse Jackson, John F. Kennedy, and even a twenty-six-year-old Bill Clinton.

The Washington Century is also the behind-the-scenes biography of an intricate and ever-changing city, once a gracious capital that has become a money-driven and partisan place. Solomon's ingenious narrative, written with the pace and sense of a novel, is full of quirky moments and unforgettable characters, both familiar and unfamiliar to the American public, who made a sleepy, southern town into the soul of a nation. Compulsively readable, as enlightening as it is entertaining, here is a fascinating chapter of living history.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Now a world capital, Washington, D.C., began the 20th century as the "unhurried" capital of a country that had not yet found its place in the world. Solomon, a contributing editor to the National Journal, traces the remarkable evolution of the city through the lives of three insider families whose rise paralleled that of the capital. Washington's foremost industry, government, is represented by the politically potent Boggses, whose patriarch, Hale, began his congressional career in 1941, and whose offspring include journalist Cokie Roberts and influential lobbyist Tommy Boggs. The role of African-Americans in the D.C. establishment is personified by civil rights activist Julius Hobson and his family. The clan of Morris Cafritz, Jewish immigrant turned real estate magnate, and his socialite wife, Gwen, opens the world of Washington's elite social scene. Presidents, politicians, social activists from Stokely Carmichael to Jesse Jackson and other personalities, from J. Edgar Hoover to political columnist Joseph Alsop, move through these pages with dizzying frequency. World events pass by with an equally vertiginous effect, serving as backdrop for the successes and failures of various Boggses, Hobsons and Cafritzes. For the most part, Solomon (Where They Ain't) is generous to his subjects. And though the tale occasionally bogs down in family melodrama, it maintains a generally lively pace. 16 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Solomon focuses on the families of three individuals--black activist Julius Hobson Sr., southern congressman Hale Boggs, and real-estate developer Morris Cafritiz--to reveal various perspectives in our nation's capital during the last century. Solomon juxtaposes the lives of these families with administrations from Roosevelt through Clinton, providing perspectives that allow for a panoramic view of Washington, D.C. The Cafritiz family offers a reflection of the rich and powerful private sector, particularly the real-estate arena, intersecting with the political. The Boggs offer a view of the political interests at play in private Washington. With the Hobson family we see black Washington, with its intragroup color frictions, governmental bureaucracies, employment involvement, and the constricted black political environment in which both Hobson and his son become substantial players. Well-told stories about Washington by those who know the city and its history. Vernon Ford
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 512 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow (November 9, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 006621372X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0066213729
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,982,399 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well-written & hard to put down, mostly an "insiders'" book, December 29, 2004
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This review is from: The Washington Century: Three Families and the Shaping of the Nation's Capital (Hardcover)
This book takes an unusual approach to chronicling the 20th century history of Washington, DC, viewing it through the prism of the lives of three prominent families-the Cafritzes, real estate developers and philanthropists; the Boggses, politicians, lobbyists, and reporters; and the Hobsons, civil rights leaders and activists, both outside and inside "the system." Solomon had access to members of all three families, but the portraits are nonetheless critical, showing "warts and all" as well as intra-family disputes in the case of the Cafritz and Hobson families.

To some extent, this is a book written for Washington "insiders." That is, as I read the book, I wondered whether it would appeal to audiences who are less familiar with the District of Columbia and its environs. (I have lived in the Washington metropolitan area for 25 years and worked in D.C. for 12 years.) The Boggs family portrayal (including Hale and Lindy Boggs, both prominent members of the House of Representatives; Cokie and Steve Roberts, both nationally known reporters; and Tommy Boggs, an influential federal-level lobbyist) is apt to be of interest to the "outside the Beltway" audience, but the depictions of the Cafritz and Hobson families, whose sphere of influence has primarily been "inside the Beltway," may be less interesting to audiences less familiar with local history and geography.

Solomon has truly mined an impressive lode of documents and interviews in assembling this book, which has considerable "human interest" appeal. I found the book so captivating and well written that I had difficulty putting it down, and completed it in three days over the Christmas holiday. It is both well-written and compelling. It presents a useful chronicle of a number of developments-including the decline of bipartisan cooperation, the growing importance of money in Washington politics, and the decline of the middle class as a residential group inside the Beltway.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Before first light, young Morris Kafitz hitched up the horse and wagon and set out along the lanes of Georgetown. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
purple veil, honors track
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
White House, New York, New Orleans, Capitol Hill, Foxhall Road, Morris Cafritz, Pennsylvania Avenue, Tommy Boggs, Connecticut Avenue, Gwen Cafritz, Hale Boggs, Lindy Boggs, Supreme Court, The Evening Star, Bradley Boulevard, Lady Bird, Jim Patton, George Washington, Sam Rayburn, Sixteenth Street, Marion Barry, Rock Creek Park, Ron Brown, United States, Board of Education
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