Charles Sumner House

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Charles Sumner House
Charles Sumner House Boston.jpg
Charles Sumner House is located in Massachusetts
Charles Sumner House
Location Boston, Massachusetts
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Built 1806
Architect Unknown
Architectural style Federal
Part of Beacon Hill Historic District (#66000130)
NRHP Reference # 73001953 [1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP November 7, 1973
Designated NHL November 7, 1973
Designated CP October 15, 1966

The Charles Sumner House is a historic house at 20 Hancock Street on Beacon Hill in Boston, Massachusetts. The brick townhouse, built c. 1806, is notable as the home for many years of the Charles Sumner (1811-1874), an outspoken and aggressive political opponent of slavery, whose beating on the floor of the United States Senate in 1856 was a defining moment of the pre-American Civil War period. The house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1973.

Description and history

The Sumner is a four story townhouse, faced in brick, which was built c. 1806. The interior has a typical side hall plan, with a front parlor, behind which are a sitting room and kitchen. Its upper floors have similar arrangements of rooms. The house was Charles Sumner's home for thirty years.[2]

Charles Sumner was born to abolitionist parents, and was educated at Harvard College, where he studied law under Joseph Story. Sumner became politically active in the fight against slavery in the 1840s, when he also gained a reputation as an orator. He helped found the abolitionist Free Soil Party in 1848, under whose banner he won election to the United States Senate in 1851. This marked the beginning of a more vocal and aggressive opposition to slavery in the political halls of Washington, D. C. His searing verbal reprobation of his opponents escalated into violence when he was beaten unconscious on the floor of the Senate by South Carolina Representative Preston Brooks in 1856, an event that emotionally polarized the country. After Sumner's recovery, he returned to the Senate, where he played a leading role as a Radical Republican during the American Civil War, as an advocate of emancipation. After the war he championed civil rights for free slaves during the Reconstruction Era, and played a role in the impeachment of President Andrew Johnson.[2]

The house was designated a National Historic Landmark and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.[1]

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References

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