
Charles Sumner - Cambridge, MA
Posted by:
NorStar
N 42° 22.492 W 071° 07.144
19T E 325533 N 4693573
This statue of Senator Charles Sumner is located between the lanes of Massachusetts Avenue, and overlooks the commercial bustle of Harvard Square.
Waymark Code: WM8ATA
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Date Posted: 03/02/2010
Views: 10
In Cambridge, in the section called Harvard Square, is a statue of Charles Sumner, seated in a chair, looking south toward the brick plaza.
The statue is a portrait of former U. S. Senator Charles Sumner. He is depicted sitting on a chair. On his right knee with fingers inserted, is a book. The face is serious. The hair is thick and has grand waves in it.
Charles Sumner is known for being a fierce abolitionist before and during the Civil War. He was the voice of the Radical Republican wing and worked closely with President Abraham Lincoln. One of his detractions, though, is his inability to compromise or at least to hold back in his verbal attacks on his opponents. One time, he attacked a fellow lawmaker, Andrew Butler, of South Carolina, over the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed a territory to decide whether slavery was allowed there. Preston Brooks, a Congressional Representative and relative of Butler, came up to Senator Sumner at his desk and Brooks beat Sumner with a cane to unconciousness. It tooks several years for Sumner to fully recover, but he did return to serve. The episode further ratched up the debate concerning slavery in the country. Sumner lived from 1811 to 1874.
The bronze statue was modeled in 1875, but it took 27 years for it to be cast. According to the art inventory entry, Anne Whitney had won an anonymous contest with her design; however, when it was revealed that Anne was a woman, they revoked her commission and chose Thomas Ball's design for the statue in Boston's Public Garden.
Wikipedia (Charles Sumner):
(
visit link)