Charles Sumner Conscience of a nation

Zaakir Tameez

Book - 2025

"A landmark biography of Charles Sumner, the unsung hero of the American Civil War and Reconstruction 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 eve...ntually 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. In Charles Sumner, Zaakir Tameez paints a vivid portrait of a civil rights crusader whose story has been overshadowed by the violent caning. 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. An extraordinary achievement of historical and constitutional scholarship, Charles Sumner provides many valuable lessons for an increasingly partisan America divided, once again, over questions of race, democracy, and constitutional law"--

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Review by Library Journal Review

Antitrust and constitutional law scholar Tameez presents a scholarly work on the life of Charles Sumner (1811--74), who he argues was an unsung hero of Reconstruction and helped shaped the Constitution. A U.S. Senator from the commonwealth of Massachusetts before, during, and after the Civil War, Sumner was known as a staunch abolitionist and a Constitutional scholar. Having graduated from Harvard Law School, he became a practicing attorney and sheriff of Suffolk County, wrote on court cases, and ultimately returned to Harvard Law School to teach. Sumner then decided to enter politics and work toward racial justice from the United States Senate. He was involved with many anti-enslavement groups and was elected to the Senate as a member of the Free Soil Party. He later helped establish the Republican Party and, famously, suffered a severe caning by South Carolina Representative Preston Brooks because of his views, but Sumner continued his work for racial justice. VERDICT An exemplary volume, well-researched and well-written and suited for anyone interested in U.S. history, the Civil War, and American jurisprudence.--Jacqueline Parascandola

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A life of the great abolitionist, progressive, and anti-imperialist. Born in 1811, Charles Sumner, writes constitutional scholar Tameez, "worked with a Black lawyer on the first case argued by an interracial legal team in American history"--significantly, a case involving a young Black girl seeking admission into a whites-only Boston school. Sumner is best remembered today for being assaulted on the Senate floor by a southern politician who beat him with a cane, another significant act inasmuch as, Tameez notes, the cane was an instrument by which masters and overseers beat the enslaved, who were forbidden to carry canes themselves. Sumner earned the wrath of the South for having pressed for not just abolition but also civil rights, coining the phrase "equality before the law," including equality of education. During the run-up to the Civil War, Sumner urged that slavery be prohibited in any of the nation's territories, which were administered by Congress; during the Civil War itself, he helped Abraham Lincoln draft the Emancipation Proclamation, pressing the president to abandon language allowing any secessionist states that surrendered to immediately establish state governments and rejoin Congress "with no institutions changed." As Tameez documents, Sumner was skillful in bending public opinion, an accomplished legal mind who kept his eye on the prize. Thwarted by the failure of Reconstruction, he also courted controversy by leaving the Republican Party, of which he was a key founder, and more so by urging Blacks to leave it as well: "Never vote for any man," he urged, "who is not true to you." He remained provocative to the last, agitating against Ulysses S. Grant's plan to annex the Dominican Republic and pressing for a comprehensive civil rights bill that never passed. "Liberty has been won," he said. "The battle for Equality is still pending." A skillful blend of legal history and biography that honors the 19th century's foremost champion of civil rights. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.