1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910789079003321

Autore

Gatell Frank Otto

Titolo

John Gorham Palfrey and the New England conscience / / Frank Otto Gatell

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cambridge, Massachusetts : , : Harvard University Press, , 1963

©1963

ISBN

0-674-28160-8

Edizione

[Reprint 2014]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (353 pages) : illustrations, portraits

Disciplina

923.273

Soggetti

BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Political

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di contenuto

Front matter -- Preface -- Contents -- Illustrations -- I The Child -- II The Student -- III Liberal Theology -- IV Brattle Street -- V Dean Palfrey -- VI The North American -- VII The State House -- VIII A Practicing Abolitionist -- IX Conscience and Judgment -- X "He Knows Nothing About Politicks" -- XI Down with Old Zack -- XII Trial by Stalemate -- XIII Defeat -- XIV Political Twilight and the Puritan Past -- XV War Against the Slave Power -- XVI The Celebrated New Englander -- Manuscript Collections Cited. Palfrey's Books and Pamphlets. Notes. Index -- Manuscript Collections Cited -- Palfrey's Books and Pamphlets -- Notes -- Index

Sommario/riassunto

The New England of his day regarded John Gorham Palfrey's life as blameless and exemplary, a nineteenth-century "monument to the Puritan ideal of rectitude." Yet he himself once called it "his personal tragicomedy." At least, it was diverse, for Palfrey had been historian, Harvard educator, Unitarian minister, Massachusetts politician, editor of the North American Review, and crusader against slavery, and himself an emancipator. During his lifetime, from 1796 to 1881, Palfrey participated, sometimes reluctantly, in revolutionary changes in the political, economic, and intellectual climate of New England. In his stormy political career, Palfrey not only was Massachusetts Secretary of State, member of Congress, and Postmaster of Boston, but also played a key role in the formation of the Free Soil Party. When the Whigs, in the name of national unity and compromise, seemed to ignore the



moral necessities of the slavery question, he joined with such men as Charles Francis Adams, Charles Sumner and Richard Henry Dana, Jr., to reaffirm traditional moral values. From this struggle, Palfrey emerged a political loser. Hampered by inflexibility, he later retreated to his study to write his massive history of New England, nursing his disappointment and cherishing his sense of rectitude. We are left with the image of a man whose achievements were substantial, perhaps because he insisted upon making his life a Bay State morality play. For this biography of Palfrey, Gatell has used papers of Palfrey's contemporaries and of the Palfrey family manuscripts, among them an unpublished autobiography, itself a search for meaning in a long and perplexing life.