Alexis De Tocqueville Essay, Research Paper
Robert Friedman
Criminology 360
Dr. Crisp
February 02, 2000
Alexis de Tocqueville
Alexis de Tocqueville was born in Paris on July 24, 1805. He was born into an
aristocratic family and enjoyed a privileged upbringing. In his younger years he had a private
tutor. As a young adult, de Tocqueville studied law in Paris. After studying law, de Tocqueville
served as a substitute judge in Versailles. At the age of twenty five, de Tocqueville decided to
visit the United States and study the American people and their political institutions. The main
reason de Tocqueville wanted to leave France was that he disliked the government of Louis
Philippe. On May 9, 1831, de Tocqueville and his friend, Gustave de Beaumont, arrived in
America. De Tocqueville traveled through seventeen of the twenty four states. In each state he
studied and observed many components of the United States? political system including the
prison system. De Tocqueville wrote many books that discussed his findings while in America.
Two of these books are The U.S. Penitentiary System and its Application in France and
Democracy in America. After returning to France, de Tocqueville held many government
positions. He was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, Constituent Assembly, Legislative
Assembly, and briefly served as the minister of foreign affairs.
On May 9, 1831 de Tocqueville and de Beaumont arrive in Newp
immediately begin traveling and investigating the U.S. penal System. De Tocqueville first
travels to New York. He receives a warm welcome by the newspapers and the governor of New
York. He describes the authorities in all of the states he visits as ?very approachable? and says
that he feels welcomed wherever he goes. He immediately observes and writes that equality
between different social classes within the U.S. is amazing. While in New York, de Tocqueville
visits Sing-Sing prison. He praises the penal system of New York.
De Tocqueville and de Beaumont also traveled to southern states. De Tocqueville
describes a similar feeling of being welcome, but his evaluation of the penitentiary system is
different than his evaluation in the North. He begins by stating that the judicial process in the
South is very fair and logical, but he also finds one major problem. De Tocqueville observes that
there are very few white criminals. He says the reason for this is that most crimes are punished
within the community and, more specifically, the family. For this reason, de Tocqueville
concludes that the penal system in the South cannot be compared to that of the North.
De Tocqueville?s visit to America is a very important event in history. His writings and
books in which he discusses his observations of the political systems within the United States,
are still studied by politicians as major sources of information about the American political
system.