Charles Sumner: his complete works, volume 03 (of 20)

audiobook

Charles Sumner: his complete works, volume 03 (of 20)

by Charles Sumner

EN·~10 hours·30 chapters

Chapters

30 total
1

CHARLES SUMNER

0:13
2

CONTENTS OF VOLUME III.

3:32
3

BE TRUE TO THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE.

1:28
4

WHERE LIBERTY IS, THERE IS MY PARTY.

2:16
5

THE FREE-SOIL PARTY EXPLAINED AND VINDICATED.

1:09:33
6

WASHINGTON AN ABOLITIONIST.

9:56
7

EQUALITY BEFORE THE LAW:

1:24:04
8

CHARACTER AND HISTORY OF THE LAW SCHOOL OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY.

27:23
9

STIPULATED ARBITRATION, OR A CONGRESS OF NATIONS, WITH DISARMAMENT.

7:59
10

OUR IMMEDIATE ANTISLAVERY DUTIES.

47:08

Description

This volume gathers a vibrant series of speeches, letters, and legal arguments penned by a leading 19th‑century American statesman during the turbulent years before the Civil War. From heartfelt appeals to public meetings in Ohio to decisive Senate addresses, the texts reveal a relentless drive to align the nation’s policies with the ideals of the Declaration of Independence.

The collection covers a broad spectrum of issues: the formation of the Free‑Soil Party, challenges to segregated schools, proposals for international arbitration, and fierce opposition to the Fugitive Slave Act. Readers will hear the author’s eloquent defenses of equal rights before state courts, his visions for affordable ocean postage, and his reflections on the moral responsibilities of a republic built on liberty.

Presented in the original, unedited form, these writings offer a vivid window into the rhetoric and moral conviction that shaped the era’s reform movements. Listeners gain a deeper appreciation for the passionate advocacy that helped define America’s struggle for freedom and justice.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (629K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2014-05-13

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Charles Sumner

Charles Sumner

1811–1874

A powerful antislavery voice in the U.S. Senate, he became one of the best-known champions of equal rights in the Civil War era. His fierce speeches, reforming spirit, and refusal to compromise made him admired by supporters and bitterly opposed by enemies.

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