The most famous man in America : the biography of Henry Ward Beecher / Debby Applegate.

By: Material type: TextPublication details: New York : Three Leaves Press, c2006.Edition: 1st pbk edDescription: xi, 527 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., map ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780385513975
  • 0385513976
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BX 7260 .B3 A67 2006
Contents:
"He was the Favorite by all odds; the best Loved Man in Sumter That Day" -- "Damned if you do, damned if you don't" -- "I Shall have the boy in the Ministry yet" -- " If you wish true, unalloyed, genuine delight, fall in love with some amiable girl" -- "It was a fearful thing to pull up a New England Oak by the roots at a ripened age and transplant it to the soil of the west" -- "Humph! Pretty Business! Son of Lyman Beecher, President of a theological Seminary, in this miserable hole" -- " I am a Western Man" -- "A peculiar Minister was needed for so peculiar a Church" -- "Politics in the pulpit" -- "Courage Today or carnage tomorrow" -- "Give me war redder than Blood and Fiercer than fire" -- "My heart is with the radicals, but my emotions are with the Orthodox" -- "I am reliably assured that Beecher preaches to seven or eight mistresses every Sunday night" -- "It is the letters- the letters, Only the letters" -- "What a pity, that so insignificant a matter as the chastity or unchastity of an Elizabeth Tilton could clip the locks of this Samson".
Awards:
  • Pulitzer Prize for Biography, 2007.
Summary: Presents the life of the nineteenth century orator, noted for his support of the abolition of slavery and the suffrage of women, as well as his friendships with some of the century's most famous writers, including Henry Thoreau, Mark Twain, and Walt Whitman.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Book Storms Research Center Main Collection BX 7260 .B3 A67 2006 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 98647822

Includes bibliographical references (p. 495-503) and index.

Presents the life of the nineteenth century orator, noted for his support of the abolition of slavery and the suffrage of women, as well as his friendships with some of the century's most famous writers, including Henry Thoreau, Mark Twain, and Walt Whitman.

"He was the Favorite by all odds; the best Loved Man in Sumter That Day" -- "Damned if you do, damned if you don't" -- "I Shall have the boy in the Ministry yet" -- " If you wish true, unalloyed, genuine delight, fall in love with some amiable girl" -- "It was a fearful thing to pull up a New England Oak by the roots at a ripened age and transplant it to the soil of the west" -- "Humph! Pretty Business! Son of Lyman Beecher, President of a theological Seminary, in this miserable hole" -- " I am a Western Man" -- "A peculiar Minister was needed for so peculiar a Church" -- "Politics in the pulpit" -- "Courage Today or carnage tomorrow" -- "Give me war redder than Blood and Fiercer than fire" -- "My heart is with the radicals, but my emotions are with the Orthodox" -- "I am reliably assured that Beecher preaches to seven or eight mistresses every Sunday night" -- "It is the letters- the letters, Only the letters" -- "What a pity, that so insignificant a matter as the chastity or unchastity of an Elizabeth Tilton could clip the locks of this Samson".

Pulitzer Prize for Biography, 2007.

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