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Senate Years of Service: 1851-1874 Party: Free Soil; Opposition; Republican; Liberal Republican
SUMNER, Charles, a Senator from Massachusetts; born in Boston, Mass., January 6,
1811; attended the Boston Latin School; graduated from Harvard University in
1830 and from the Harvard Law School in 1833; admitted to the bar the following
year and commenced the practice of law in Boston, Mass.; lectured at the
Harvard Law School 1836-1837; traveled extensively in Europe 1837-1840;
declined the Whig nomination in 1846 for election to the Thirtieth Congress;
one of the founders of the Free Soil Party in 1848; unsuccessful candidate for
election in 1848 on the Free Soil ticket to the Thirty-first Congress; elected
to the United States Senate in 1851 as a Free Soiler; reelected as a Republican
in 1857, 1863, and 1869 and served from April 24, 1851, until his death;
chairman, Committee on Foreign Relations (Thirty-seventh through Forty-first
Congresses); removed as chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations in 1871
as a result of differences with President Ulysses S. Grant over policy in Santo
Domingo; chairman, Committee on Privileges and Elections (Forty-second
Congress); was assaulted in the Senate chamber by Representative Preston Brooks
of South Carolina on May 22, 1856, and due to injuries received did not resume
full Senate duties until December 1859; died in Washington, D.C., March 11,
1874; lay in state in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol, March 13, 1874;
interment in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law; Donald,
David Herbert.
Charles Sumner and the Coming of the Civil War. New York:
Knopf, 1960; Donald, David Herbert.
Charles Sumner and the Rights of Man. New York: Knopf, 1970.
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