1 option
Charles Sumner : conscience of a nation / Zaakir Tameez.
Van Pelt Library E415.9.S9 T36 2025
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Tameez, Zaakir, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Sumner, Charles, 1811-1874.
- Sumner, Charles.
- United States. Congress. Senate--Biography.
- United States.
- Free Soil Party (U.S.).
- Legislators--United States--Biography.
- Legislators.
- Slavery--Political aspects--United States--History--19th century.
- Slavery.
- Antislavery movements--United States--History--19th century.
- Antislavery movements.
- Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877).
- United States--Politics and government--1849-1877.
- Boston (Mass.)--Biography.
- Boston (Mass.).
- Genre:
- Biographies.
- Physical Description:
- x, 629 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
- Edition:
- First edition.
- Other Title:
- Conscience of a nation
- Place of Publication:
- New York, New York : Henry Holt and Company, 2025.
- Summary:
- "Charles Sumner is mainly known as the statesman who barely survived a brutal caning on the Senate floor by the slaveholder Preston Brooks in 1856. This violent episode has obscured Sumner's epic life as one of America's most visionary constitutional thinkers, a man who advocated for multiracial democracy and championed equal rights more than one hundred years before the civil rights movement. A friend of Alexis de Tocqueville, an ally of Frederick Douglass, and an adviser to Abraham Lincoln, Sumner helped devise the Emancipation Proclamation, the Thirteenth Amendment, the Freedmen's Bureau, and the blueprint for what eventually became the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He valued principles above politics and was prepared to put his life on the line for the sake of racial justice... With fresh research and lucid prose, Tameez chronicles Sumner's childhood upbringing--only decades after the American Revolution--in a poor white family that lived in a free Black neighborhood in Boston. He argues that Sumner was likely a gay man who struggled with love and heartbreak at a time when homosexuality wasn't well understood. And he depicts Sumner as a towering intellectual, one of the legal masterminds behind Reconstruction, and one of the founding fathers of the postwar Constitution premised on equality for all."-- Provided by publisher.
- Contents:
- Introduction
- Brahmin Outcast
- The Slave Power
- The War Power
- The Republican Guarantee
- Equality Before the Law
- Epilogue.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 9781250362551
- 1250362555
- OCLC:
- 1493522237
The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.