Dylan Matthews

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For a quarter of a century, including twenty-three consecutive years in the Senate from 1851 until his death (which encompassed a three-year absence as he recovered from his caning injuries), it was Charles Sumner—not Lincoln, William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, Lydia Maria Child, or anyone else—who was the nation’s most passionate and inexhaustible antislavery and equal rights champion.
The Great Abolitionist: Charles Sumner and the Fight for a More Perfect Union
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