The great abolitionist Charles Sumner and the fight for a more perfect union

Stephen Puleo

Book - 2024

"The groundbreaking biography of a forgotten civil rights hero. In the tempestuous mid-19th century, as slavery consumed Congressional debate and America careened toward civil war and split apart--when the very future of the nation hung in the balance--Charles Sumner's voice rang strongest, bravest, and most unwavering. Where others preached compromise and moderation, he denounced slavery's evils to all who would listen and demanded that it be wiped out of existence. More than any other person of his era, he blazed the trail on the country's long, uneven, and ongoing journey toward realizing its full promise to become a more perfect union. Before and during the Civil War, at great personal sacrifice, Sumner was the consc...ience of the North and the most influential politician fighting for abolition. Throughout Reconstruction, no one championed the rights of emancipated people more than he did. Through the force of his words and his will, he moved America toward the twin goals of abolitionism and equal rights, which he fought for literally until the day he died. He laid the cornerstone arguments that civil rights advocates would build upon over the next century as the country strove to achieve equality among the races. The Great Abolitionist is the first major biography of Charles Sumner to be published in over 50 years. Acclaimed historian Stephen Puleo relates the story of one of the most influential non-presidents in American history with evocative and accessible prose, transporting readers back to an era when our leaders exhibited true courage and authenticity in the face of unprecedented challenges"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biography
Biographies
History
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Stephen Puleo (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 449 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 409-433) and index.
ISBN
9781250276278
  • Author's Note on Usage
  • Prologue
  • Part 1. "Equality Before the Law"
  • Chapter 1. "We Are Becoming Abolitionists … Fast"
  • Chapter 2. "It Touched Me to the Soul"
  • Chapter 3. Texas Thunder
  • Chapter 4. A Daring Escape Attempt
  • Chapter 5. A New Doctrine Is Born
  • Chapter 6. Separate Is Inherently Unequal
  • Chapter 7. "Truth in the End Must Prevail"
  • Part 2. Unstoppable Peril
  • Chapter 8. Preserve the Union at Any Cost?
  • Chapter 9. "You Have Whipped Webster!"
  • Chapter 10. A Fugitive Slave Returned, a New Senator Elected
  • Chapter 11. "Slavery Is the Source of All Meanness Here"
  • Chapter 12. The Fugitive Slave Law Assailed
  • Chapter 13. Kansas and Nebraska-"At the Very Grave of Freedom"
  • Chapter 14. Bleeding Kansas
  • Chapter 15. The Crime Against Kansas
  • Chapter 16. Bleeding Sumner
  • Part 3. A Nation Split Asunder
  • Chapter 17. The Vacant Chair
  • Chapter 18. A Reelection and a Shocking Death
  • Chapter 19. The Dred Scott Decision and Trial by Fire
  • Chapter 20. Return from Exile
  • Chapter 21. "The Barbarism of Slavery"
  • Chapter 22. Lincoln's Election and Southern Secession
  • Chapter 23. "At Last the War Has Come"
  • Chapter 24. "Elevate the Condition of Men"
  • Chapter 25. "The Rebellion Is Slavery Itself!"
  • Chapter 26. British Treachery
  • Part 4. Death of Slavery, Death of a Rebellion, Death of a President
  • Chapter 27. Emancipation in the Nation's Capital
  • Chapter 28. "At Last, the Proclamation Has Come"
  • Chapter 29. "The Result Is Certain-Sooner or Later"
  • Chapter 30. The Thirteenth Amendment and the End of the Fugitive Slave Law
  • Chapter 31. "Are You for Your Country, or Are You for the Rebellion?"
  • Chapter 32. With Malice Toward None?
  • Chapter 33. Richmond Has Fallen
  • Chapter 34. "We Are Near the End at Last"
  • Part 5. "For All Everywhere Who Suffer from Tyranny and Wrong"
  • Chapter 35. Andrew Johnson's Betrayal
  • Chapter 36. The Fourteenth Amendment: "Freedom Without Suffrage Is Still Slavery"
  • Chapter 37. "I Begin to Live!"
  • Chapter 38. "My Home Was Hell …"
  • Chapter 39. "Guilty of All and Infinitely More!"
  • Chapter 40. "There Can Be No Backward Step"
  • Chapter 41. "Good-Bye and God Bless You!"
  • Epilogue: "Great Champion of Liberty"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliographic Essay
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Historian Puleo chronicles the life and times of Charles Sumner, a Bostonian who campaigned for human rights as an attorney and then as a U.S. senator, in what he asserts is the first detailed Sumner biography in 50 years. Readers may be familiar with an historic illustration showing South Carolina congressman Preston Brooks beating Sumner with a cane. Brooks' attack took Sumner out of public life for three years and prematurely aged him. Puleo vividly describes Sumner's two-day long antislavery speech, which incited Brooks, and the atmosphere in the Senate during the speech. Puleo portrays Sumner as a major force in three important American eras, antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction. Sumner was often abrasive and held grudges, expressing his dislike of Grant after the president didn't appoint him to his cabinet and staying mad at Grant even after he intervened to stop racial violence in the South. As shown in Puleo's riveting account of the aftermath of the largest attempted escape of enslaved people in American history on the schooner Pearl, Sumner was at his best when displaying deft leadership.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Massachusetts senator Charles Sumner's lifelong devotion to equal rights was akin to "digging a deep well with nothing more than a spoon... yet he never stopped digging," according to this rousing biography from historian Puleo (Voyage of Mercy). As a young lawyer in 1849, Sumner coined the phrase "equality before the law," a concept that rapidly propelled universal suffrage to the forefront of abolitionism. Elected senator in 1852, for the next 23 years Sumner was "the nation's most passionate and inexhaustible" antislavery and equality advocate--someone who not only embraced controversy but would "grab it around the waist, and dance it across speaker platforms." Sumner's antagonism of pro-slavery colleagues--he often got "personal"--came to a head in 1856, when enraged South Carolina representative Preston Brooks famously attacked the abolitionist with a cane. A painful and lonely three-year recovery followed, during which Sumner's vacant Senate chair, an ever-present reminder of the assault, catalyzed the nation's political polarization. As a trusted wartime adviser to Abraham Lincoln, it was Sumner, according to Puleo, who ultimately guided the president toward emancipation. Postwar, Sumner championed universal suffrage as a pillar of Reconstruction. Puleo's easygoing narrative style ("The people couldn't get enough of Sumner") is peppered with insight, including into how the "personality difficulties" that made empathizing with others impossible for Sumner contributed to his relentless, fact-based argumentativeness. Readers won't be able to get enough of Puleo's indomitable Sumner. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The story of a haughty and courageous senator who was dedicated to racial equality and the extinction of slavery. Boston-based historian and teacher Puleo, author of Voyage of Mercy and American Treasures, presents the first serious treatment in over 50 years of Charles Sumner (1811-1874), one of America's most influential abolitionists and legislators, now vaguely remembered from textbook images as cowering on the Senate floor when he was nearly caned to death by a fellow legislator for insulting his cousin. As the author reminds us, Sumner was a man of firsts: the first American to employ the phrase "equality before the law," a member of the first integrated legal counsel in the U.S., and the first to deconstruct the principle of separate but equal. Puleo's vast knowledge of 19th-century Boston and its diffident attitude toward slavery and integration--due in no small part to textile merchants and financiers who relied on Southern cotton for their prosperity--adds tremendous value to his account of Sumner's transformation from depressed and sullen Harvard-educated lawyer to uncompromising and unrelenting civil rights champion, orator, and senator. Evenhandedly and adroitly, the author describes the intense sectional and political strife that accompanied the debate about the extension of slavery in the U.S., the role of Sumner's unsparingly effective rhetoric in moving the republic toward civil war, and the many personal foibles that accompanied the better attributes that won Sumner renown that, at the time, rivaled that of Lincoln. So great was his fame that the base of a statue of him that stands in Boston's Public Garden is inscribed simply with his surname. Puleo cogently and vividly demonstrates why, and his book is required reading for anyone with even a slight interest in Civil War--era U.S. history. A wonderfully written book about a true American freedom fighter. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.