
Prepared by Brett Fishburne (bfish@atlantech.net)
Chapter I. Youth.
Chapter II. Apprenticeship.
Chapter III. Member of Congress.
Chapter IV. The Compromise of 1850.
Chapter V. Results of the Fugitive Slave Law.
Chapter VI. The Repeal of the Missouri Compromise.
Chapter VII. The Brewing Storm.
Chapter VIII. Decline of Popular Sovereignty.
Chapter IX. The Conventions of 1856.
Step into the turbulent world of mid‑19th‑century America through the life of Stephen A. Douglas, a statesman whose reputation has been split by partisan memory. This biography offers a balanced look at his ideas, ambitions, and the fierce political battles that shaped the nation on the brink of civil war. Listeners will hear how Douglas navigated the fierce debates over expansion, slavery, and the Union, all while striving to leave his mark on a rapidly changing country.
Drawing on contemporary letters, congressional records, and memoirs from friends and rivals, the author traces Douglas’s humble beginnings in rural Vermont, his self‑made journey to the legal profession, and his rise to national prominence. The narrative captures his restless energy, his talent for debate, and the personal convictions that guided him through the era’s most contentious issues. As the story unfolds, you’ll gain insight into the complexities of a man often painted as either hero or villain, and why understanding his perspective matters today.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (324K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2001-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1861
Known today for a 1905 biography of Stephen A. Douglas, this little-documented writer left behind a work aimed at judging a major American political figure with distance and fairness. Even though biographical details are scarce, the surviving record points to an author active in the early 20th century and interested in U.S. political history.
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