
audiobook
by George S. (George Sewall) Boutwell
Spanning six decades, this memoir follows a man who rose from a modest store‑boy in New England to the highest echelons of state and national government. His early chapters describe the rhythm of village life, the challenges of a fledgling business, and the first stirrings of political ambition that led him into local office. Readers get a vivid sense of the ordinary world that shaped his character before the corridors of power opened.
The narrative then turns to the tumultuous years of mid‑nineteenth‑century America, offering firsthand accounts of the birth of the Republican Party, the heated debates that preceded the Civil War, and the inner workings of the Treasury during Reconstruction. Interwoven with personal anecdotes about fellow statesmen and pivotal events, the author reflects on how memory and experience inform historical judgment. The result is a thoughtful portrait of a public servant who witnessed, and at times helped steer, moments that reshaped the nation.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (584K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-11-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1818–1905
A self-made Massachusetts reformer, he rose from clerk and teacher to governor, senator, and U.S. Treasury secretary. His long public career stretched from the antislavery era through Reconstruction, putting him close to some of the biggest political struggles of 19th-century America.
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