Crane Brinton

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(Clarence) Crane Brinton (Winsted, Connecticut 1898Cambridge, Massachusetts, September 7, 1968), was an American historian of France, and historian of ideas. His most famous work, The Anatomy of Revolution, compared the dynamics of revolutionary movements to the progress of fever.

Born in Winsted, Connecticut, his family soon moved to Springfield, Massachusetts, where he grew up. Brinton attended the public schools there before entering Harvard University in 1915. His excellent academic performance enabled him to win a Rhodes Scholarship to attend Oxford University. Receiving a Doctor of Philosophy (D.Phil.) degree there in 1923, Brinton began teaching at Harvard University that same year, becoming full professor in 1942 and remaining at Harvard until his death. He served as president of the American Historical Association, the professional association of historians as well as the Society for French Historical Studies.


For many years he taught a course at Harvard known to his students as "Breakfast with Brinton."

Crane Brinton was witty, convivial, urbane,[citation needed] and fluent in French, during WWII he was for a time Chief of Research and Analysis in London in the Office of Strategic Services. He was also Fire Marshal for St. Paul's Cathedral in London, which withstood the Blitz with minor damages. After the war, he was commended by the United States Army for "Conspicuous Contribution to the Liberation of France" and was Chairman of the Society of Fellows at Harvard in the late 1940s. Among other figures, Fellows during that period included McGeorge Bundy and Ray Cline, who were quite influential in national security and intelligence.

In 1968, Crane Brinton testified at the Fulbright Senate hearings on the Vietnam war as to the nature of the Vietnamese opposition. He died in September 1968.

[edit] Works

His books include:

  • The Jacobins: An Essay in the New History (1930), a detailed account of the political radicals of the French Revolution
  • A Decade of Revolution (1934), a study of the French Revolution
  • The Anatomy of Revolution (1938, revised 1965)
  • Ideas and Men: the Story of Western Thought (1950, 1963), an account of western thought from ancient Greece to the present
  • A History of Western Morals (1959), an account of ethical questions
  • The Shaping of the Modern Mind (1963), an abridged version of his Ideas and Men
  • The Americans and the French (1968), an attempt to explain the often difficult relations between two long-time allies.

[edit] External links

  • "Many Mansions" Brinton's 1963 address to the AHA on desirable diversity in contemporary historical writing.

[edit] External link

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