Adams to J. K. Choate, Nov. 2, 1885, UP, PO, OC, vol. 30, ser. 2, r. 26.
This strain is visible beginning with Robert Wiebe, who talked of a "new middle class," and a "revolution in values," which yielded "bureaucratic thought." Jackson Lears, although keeping aspects of Wiebe, emphasizes manliness and militarism.
Deirdre McCloskey, "Bourgeois Virtue and History of P & S," Journal of Economic History 58 (June 1998): 300, 304-5, 311-17.
Wiebe, Search for Order, 147-48.
Adams to S. R. Callaway, June 24, 1885, UP, PO, OC, vol. 31, ser. 2, r. 27.
Adams to Merriman, Jan. 30, 1885, UP, PO, OC, vol. 27, ser. 2, r. 23.
Adams to CPH, Jan. 27, 1886, UP, PO, OC, vol. 33, ser. 2, r. 29.
Adams to Callaway, Dec. 23, 1884, UP, PO, OC, vol. 24, ser. 2, r. 21.
Adams to Poppleton, Feb. 5, 1886, UP, PO, OC, vol. 34, ser. 2 r. 29.
