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Browsing named entities in a specific section of C. Edwards Lester, Life and public services of Charles Sumner: Born Jan. 6, 1811. Died March 11, 1874.. Search the whole document.
Found 11 total hits in 7 results.
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 23
New Hampshire (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): chapter 23
Xix.
In the Senate, Mr. Sumner was to appear in the list as a Free-Soiler.
There were but two others who claimed that distinction—Salmon P. Chase, from Ohio, and John P. Hale, from New Hampshire.
These were but the morning-stars of the great day of emancipation that was so soon to dawn upon a redeemed country, and a disenthralled race.
In his letter to the Legislature of the State, accepting the honor of Senatorship, he speaks of the appointment finding him in a private station, and he accepts the office with a grateful consciousness of personal independence; as an honor that had come to him unsought and undesired.
I accept it, he continued, as the servant of Massachusetts, mindful of the sentiments solemnly uttered by her successive Legislatures, of the genius which inspires her history, and of the men,—her perpetual pride and ornament,—who breathed into her that breath of liberty which early made her an exampie to her sister States.
With me, the union is twice blessed—
Salmon P. Chase (search for this): chapter 23
Xix.
In the Senate, Mr. Sumner was to appear in the list as a Free-Soiler.
There were but two others who claimed that distinction—Salmon P. Chase, from Ohio, and John P. Hale, from New Hampshire.
These were but the morning-stars of the great day of emancipation that was so soon to dawn upon a redeemed country, and a disenthralled race.
In his letter to the Legislature of the State, accepting the honor of Senatorship, he speaks of the appointment finding him in a private station, and he accepts the office with a grateful consciousness of personal independence; as an honor that had come to him unsought and undesired.
I accept it, he continued, as the servant of Massachusetts, mindful of the sentiments solemnly uttered by her successive Legislatures, of the genius which inspires her history, and of the men,—her perpetual pride and ornament,—who breathed into her that breath of liberty which early made her an exampie to her sister States.
With me, the union is twice blessed—
John P. Hale (search for this): chapter 23
Xix.
In the Senate, Mr. Sumner was to appear in the list as a Free-Soiler.
There were but two others who claimed that distinction—Salmon P. Chase, from Ohio, and John P. Hale, from New Hampshire.
These were but the morning-stars of the great day of emancipation that was so soon to dawn upon a redeemed country, and a disenthralled race.
In his letter to the Legislature of the State, accepting the honor of Senatorship, he speaks of the appointment finding him in a private station, and he accepts the office with a grateful consciousness of personal independence; as an honor that had come to him unsought and undesired.
I accept it, he continued, as the servant of Massachusetts, mindful of the sentiments solemnly uttered by her successive Legislatures, of the genius which inspires her history, and of the men,—her perpetual pride and ornament,—who breathed into her that breath of liberty which early made her an exampie to her sister States.
With me, the union is twice blessed—f
Benjamin Franklin (search for this): chapter 23
Charles Sumner (search for this): chapter 23
Xix.
In the Senate, Mr. Sumner was to appear in the list as a Free-Soiler.
There were but two others who claimed that distinction—Salmon P. Chase, from Ohio, and John P. Hale, from New Hampshire.
These were but the morning-stars of the great day of emancipation that was so soon to dawn upon a redeemed country, and a disenthralled race.
In his letter to the Legislature of the State, accepting the honor of Senatorship, he speaks of the appointment finding him in a private station, and he accepts the office with a grateful consciousness of personal independence; as an honor that had come to him unsought and undesired.
I accept it, he continued, as the servant of Massachusetts, mindful of the sentiments solemnly uttered by her successive Legislatures, of the genius which inspires her history, and of the men,—her perpetual pride and ornament,—who breathed into her that breath of liberty which early made her an exampie to her sister States.
With me, the union is twice blessed—f
Thomas Jefferson (search for this): chapter 23