Charles Sumner
Charles Sumner grew up and lived for many years on the “back side” of Beacon Hill, home to many former and fugitive slaves and free blacks, who formed a supportive community. Sumner knew this community well and became close friends with a number of the leading black abolitionists in Boston. After the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 and because of his activity in the anti-slavery movement, many wealthy Boston families turned against him, including Longfellow’s father-in-law, the textile-manufacturing magnate Nathan Appleton. In 1848 Sumner denounced, in his often-quoted words, the “unhallowed union” between “the lords of the lash and the lords of the loom.” Sumner was Longfellow’s closest friend and most frequent visitor to the Longfellow House for almost thirty-five years. He was first elected to the U.S. Senate from Massachusetts in 1851 and remained there until 1874. Sumner and other friends sat in Longfellow’s study to hear the announcement of his election as the abolitionist candidate. Longfellow recorded in his journal: “The papers are all ringing with Sumner, Sumner!... Meanwhile the hero of the strife is sitting quietly here, more saddened than exalted.”When not in Washington, D.C., Sumner spent most Sundays or entire weekends with the Longfellow family.
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Did You Know?
Charles Longfellow was one of the first westerners to travel and live in Japan where he spent almost two years, from 1871 to 1873.