Charles Sumner: his complete works, volume 11 (of 20)

audiobook

Charles Sumner: his complete works, volume 11 (of 20)

by Charles Sumner

EN·~13 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

CONTENTS OF VOLUME XI.

3:51
2

EXCLUSION OF WITNESSES ON ACCOUNT OF COLOR.

1:05:39
3

THE MISSION TO BELGIUM.

9:59
4

CONSULAR PUPILS.

7:51
5

THE LATE HON. OWEN LOVEJOY, OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.

12:50
6

COLORED SUFFRAGE IN THE TERRITORY OF MONTANA.

16:05
7

CLAIMS ON FRANCE FOR SPOLIATIONS OF AMERICAN COMMERCE PRIOR TO JULY 31, 1801.

2:51:50
8

NO PROPERTY IN MAN: UNIVERSAL EMANCIPATION WITHOUT COMPENSATION.

1:34:55
9

CASTE AND PREJUDICE OF COLOR.

1:01
10

FINAL REPEAL OF ALL FUGITIVE SLAVE ACTS.

34:10

Description

This volume gathers a remarkable series of speeches and reports delivered by a leading senator during the turbulent years of the Civil War and its aftermath. Within its pages you will hear arguments for extending courtroom rights to Black witnesses, proposals for universal emancipation without compensation, and detailed debates on the creation of the Freedmen’s Bureau. The collection also touches on foreign policy, monetary reform, and the push for universal education, illustrating the breadth of his legislative agenda.

In each address, the orator blends moral conviction with meticulous legal reasoning, offering a vivid portrait of the political battles that shaped Reconstruction. Listeners gain direct access to the rhetoric that helped drive the abolition of the fugitive‑slave laws and the push for colored suffrage in territories like Montana and Washington. The work serves as both a historical record and a study in persuasive advocacy, inviting you to experience the urgency and hope of a nation striving to redefine liberty.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~13 hours (787K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2015-02-28

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Charles Sumner

Charles Sumner

1811–1874

A towering voice against slavery, he became one of the most outspoken senators of the Civil War era and later pushed hard for equal rights during Reconstruction. His fierce principles made him admired, feared, and impossible to ignore.

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