Dylan Matthews

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“The city is bigoted, narrow, provincial and selfish,” Charles Sumner would soon write about Boston proper. “The [surrounding] country[side] has more the spirit of the American Revolution.” For Sumner, such a distinction at least partially explained why the nearby communities of Salem, Lowell, New Bedford, and Nantucket had already integrated their schools, while Boston stubbornly refused to do so.
The Great Abolitionist: Charles Sumner and the Fight for a More Perfect Union
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