Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation
Charles Sumner is mainly known as the abolitionist statesman who suffered a brutal caning on the Senate floor by the proslavery congressman Preston Brooks in 1856. This violent episode has obscured Sumner's status as the most passionate champion of equal rights and multiracial democracy of his time. A friend of Alexis de Tocqueville, an ally of Frederick Douglass, and an adviser to Abraham Lincoln, Sumner helped the Union win the Civil War and ordain the Emancipation Proclamation, the Thirteenth Amendment, the Freedmen's Bureau, and the Civil Rights Act of 1875.



In a comprehensive narrative, Zaakir Tameez presents Sumner as one of America's forgotten founding fathers, a constitutional visionary who helped to rewrite the post-Civil War Constitution and give birth to modern civil rights law. He argues that Sumner was a gay man who battled with love and heartbreak at a time when homosexuality wasn't well understood or accepted. And he explores Sumner's critical partnerships with the nation's first generation of Black lawyers and civil rights leaders.



An extraordinary achievement of historical and constitutional scholarship, Charles Sumner brings back to life one of America's most inspiring statesmen, whose formidable ideas remain relevant to a nation still divided over questions of race, democracy, and constitutional law.
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Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation
Charles Sumner is mainly known as the abolitionist statesman who suffered a brutal caning on the Senate floor by the proslavery congressman Preston Brooks in 1856. This violent episode has obscured Sumner's status as the most passionate champion of equal rights and multiracial democracy of his time. A friend of Alexis de Tocqueville, an ally of Frederick Douglass, and an adviser to Abraham Lincoln, Sumner helped the Union win the Civil War and ordain the Emancipation Proclamation, the Thirteenth Amendment, the Freedmen's Bureau, and the Civil Rights Act of 1875.



In a comprehensive narrative, Zaakir Tameez presents Sumner as one of America's forgotten founding fathers, a constitutional visionary who helped to rewrite the post-Civil War Constitution and give birth to modern civil rights law. He argues that Sumner was a gay man who battled with love and heartbreak at a time when homosexuality wasn't well understood or accepted. And he explores Sumner's critical partnerships with the nation's first generation of Black lawyers and civil rights leaders.



An extraordinary achievement of historical and constitutional scholarship, Charles Sumner brings back to life one of America's most inspiring statesmen, whose formidable ideas remain relevant to a nation still divided over questions of race, democracy, and constitutional law.
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Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation

Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation

by Zaakir Tameez

Narrated by David Lee Garver

Unabridged — 26 hours, 20 minutes

Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation

Charles Sumner: Conscience of a Nation

by Zaakir Tameez

Narrated by David Lee Garver

Unabridged — 26 hours, 20 minutes

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Overview

Charles Sumner is mainly known as the abolitionist statesman who suffered a brutal caning on the Senate floor by the proslavery congressman Preston Brooks in 1856. This violent episode has obscured Sumner's status as the most passionate champion of equal rights and multiracial democracy of his time. A friend of Alexis de Tocqueville, an ally of Frederick Douglass, and an adviser to Abraham Lincoln, Sumner helped the Union win the Civil War and ordain the Emancipation Proclamation, the Thirteenth Amendment, the Freedmen's Bureau, and the Civil Rights Act of 1875.



In a comprehensive narrative, Zaakir Tameez presents Sumner as one of America's forgotten founding fathers, a constitutional visionary who helped to rewrite the post-Civil War Constitution and give birth to modern civil rights law. He argues that Sumner was a gay man who battled with love and heartbreak at a time when homosexuality wasn't well understood or accepted. And he explores Sumner's critical partnerships with the nation's first generation of Black lawyers and civil rights leaders.



An extraordinary achievement of historical and constitutional scholarship, Charles Sumner brings back to life one of America's most inspiring statesmen, whose formidable ideas remain relevant to a nation still divided over questions of race, democracy, and constitutional law.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"A thorough recounting of the great legislator’s life and deed... unlikely to be bettered anytime soon... Tameez is expert at explaining Sumner’s legal thought... One cannot help wishing we had a Charles Sumner in Washington today."

—The New York Times

"An excellent book about the courageous Massachusetts senator... Drawing from hundreds of letters, articles and speeches, Mr. Tameez has created a remarkable portrait of a complex man who faced many personal challenges... Charles Sumner is a moving portrayal of a courageous, long-overlooked American who, in the words of one contemporary, 'stood in the vanguard of Freedom.'"

—Wall Street Journal

"Tameez is clear-eyed about Sumner’s foibles, limitations, and missteps. But he makes a persuasive case for Sumner’s heroism, for the brilliance of his moral vision of a multiracial democracy, and for the prescience of his unyielding insistence that the Constitution demanded universal freedom and legal equality... one wonders who the Charles Sumners of this generation will be, and when they will emerge."

Los Angeles Review of Books

"Zaakir Tameez’s sumptuous biography, Charles Sumner, captures, in rich detail, a life that connected the Revolutionary generation with the collapse of Reconstruction.... Only a year out of Yale Law, the mortifyingly gifted Tameez sees in Sumner the modern birth of the constitutional order. Tameez has crafted a propulsive narrative around a visionary who put his stamp on our social compact. Charles Sumner reads like a work from a seasoned biographer rather than a debut—never has a Victorian-era legacy been more vital."

Minnesota Star Tribune

"Thurgood Marshall cited nineteenth-century Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner more than forty times in his brief in Brown v. Board. In this welcome new biography, Zaakir Tameez offers unique insight into Charles Sumner as a pathbreaking constitutional theorist as well as a committed advocate for racial justice and equality under the law. At the same time, Tameez paints a vivid and affecting portrait of a lonely and often tormented man. The book is an all-too-timely reminder of the origins of the freedoms we now have the responsibility to preserve and defend."

—Drew Gilpin Faust, former president of Harvard University, author of This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War

"Zaakir Tameez’s magnificent and definitive biography of Charles Sumner restores him to his rightful place at the center of America’s Second Founding. A towering achievement that will change our understanding of the shining promise, and brutal backlash inspired by Sumner’s vision of an America founded on what he called 'equal rights for all.'"

—Jeffrey Rosen, President & CEO, National Constitution Center

"Zaakir Tameez's compelling portrait of the great radical abolitionist politician, Charles Sumner, a man for all seasons, is a timeless lesson for our fraught present. Sumner's principled commitment to human rights, the American republic, and its constitutional order, are retold here with the flair of a novelist and the astuteness of a scholar. This is biography at its best."

—Manisha Sinha, author of The Rise and Fall of the Second American Republic: Reconstruction, 1860-1920

"We have dozens of great biographies of Abraham Lincoln, and now, at long last, we have a great biography of Lincoln’s partner and prod in the crusade for liberty and equality, Charles Sumner. What Chernow did for Hamilton, Tameez now does for Sumner. Musical, anyone?"

—Akhil Reed Amar, Yale University, author of America's Constitution: A Biography

"With this insightful and original work, Zaakir Tameez gives us a Charles Sumner for our time and for all time, an inspiring fighter for racial justice and a brilliant constitutional theorist. This is a book worthy of its towering subject."

—Jonathan Eig, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of King: A Life

“Zaakir Tameez paints a vivid, layered, textured, compelling, timeless, and topical portrait of Charles Sumner. With the rigor of a historian, the prose of a poet, and the sensitivity of an essayist, Tameez reminds us of the price Sumner paid for the hope of a multiracial democracy, at the hands of white supremacy, on the eve of the Civil War, and reminds us of the price to be paid today.”

—Cornell William Brooks, Harvard Kennedy School, former president and CEO of the NAACP

"Few American lives from the past speak to our present as self-evidently as Charles Sumner’s, which makes Zaakir Tameez’s choice to retrieve him from forgetfulness and misinterpretation so inspired and inspirational. By placing Sumner in its own time, this illuminating portrait is a reminder of the need to grapple with the Constitution and its meaning in our own era."

—Samuel Moyn, Yale University, author of Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World

"The American antislavery movement wrought this country’s greatest political and social revolution. Thanks to Zaakir Tameez, we are reacquainted with one of its leading revolutionaries. This vivid and absorbing biography gives us a Charles Sumner who helped transform his time — and who remains vital to ours."

—Matthew Karp, Princeton University, author of This Vast Southern Empire

"This is a biography for our time. Zaakir Tameez’s smart, well-crafted story of Charles Sumner brings the crux of the American project to life. Sumner battled to advance the radical idea that the Constitution belonged to everyone, and that aggressive federal enforcement of that equality was the only just path forward for the United States. This study of one of the most consequential figures in American history is a masterfully rendered exploration of American constitutional promise and limits."

—Jefferson Cowie, Pulitzer Prize winning author of Freedom’s Dominion: A Saga of White Resistance to Federal Power

"In this masterful and sympathetic account, Zaakir Tameez vividly brings to life one of the greatest champions of civil rights in American history, the great abolitionist Charles Sumner. Far ahead of his time, Sumner was both morally heroic and emotionally fragile, a gifted orator but often deaf to political realities, beloved by countless activists both Black and white, yet deeply, almost cripplingly lonely. He has long deserved a definitive new biography: Tameez has written it."

—Fergus Bordewich, author of Klan War: Ulysses S. Grant and the Battle to Save Reconstruction

"As Zaakir Tameez shows in this compelling biography, Charles Sumner was one of our great speakers of inconvenient truths. Sumner denounced slavery unwaveringly, and with his constant advocacy, human rights began to come into focus, so clearly that many 20th century breakthroughs—the founding of the NAACP, and the Civil Rights movement—owe much to Sumner's example. Thanks to Zaakir Tameez, this powerful story can again be read with the close attention it deserves."

—Ted Widmer, author of Lincoln on the Verge

"In this courageous new book, Zaakir Tameez finally addresses Charles Sumner's sexuality. Derided for his intimacy in the past but then ignored by historians in the present, Sumner's queer identity haunts the detritus of Civil War archives. Tameez reconstructs the untold heartbreaking love story between Sumner and Samuel Gridley Howe with pulsating emotional verve that turns history into cinema. This book foregrounds how a queer person was not hiding in the shadows during one of the most pivotal turning points in U.S. history but was the 'conscience of the nation.'"

—Jim Downs, author of Stand By Me: The Forgotten History of Gay Liberation

Kirkus Reviews

2025-02-15
A life of the great abolitionist, progressive, and anti-imperialist.

Born in 1811, Charles Sumner, writes constitutional scholar Tameez, “worked with a Black lawyer on the first case argued by an interracial legal team in American history”—significantly, a case involving a young Black girl seeking admission into a whites-only Boston school. Sumner is best remembered today for being assaulted on the Senate floor by a southern politician who beat him with a cane, another significant act inasmuch as, Tameez notes, the cane was an instrument by which masters and overseers beat the enslaved, who were forbidden to carry canes themselves. Sumner earned the wrath of the South for having pressed for not just abolition but also civil rights, coining the phrase “equality before the law,” including equality of education. During the run-up to the Civil War, Sumner urged that slavery be prohibited in any of the nation’s territories, which were administered by Congress; during the Civil War itself, he helped Abraham Lincoln draft the Emancipation Proclamation, pressing the president to abandon language allowing any secessionist states that surrendered to immediately establish state governments and rejoin Congress “with no institutions changed.” As Tameez documents, Sumner was skillful in bending public opinion, an accomplished legal mind who kept his eye on the prize. Thwarted by the failure of Reconstruction, he also courted controversy by leaving the Republican Party, of which he was a key founder, and more so by urging Blacks to leave it as well: “Never vote for any man,” he urged, “who is not true to you.” He remained provocative to the last, agitating against Ulysses S. Grant’s plan to annex the Dominican Republic and pressing for a comprehensive civil rights bill that never passed. “Liberty has been won,” he said. “The battle for Equality is still pending.”

A skillful blend of legal history and biography that honors the 19th century’s foremost champion of civil rights.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940195559144
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 07/22/2025
Edition description: Unabridged
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