ABOUT THIS BOOKIn 1834 Harvard dropout Richard Henry Dana Jr. sailed to California as a common seaman. His account of the voyage, Two Years Before the Mast, quickly became an American classic. But literary acclaim could not erase the young lawyer’s memory of the brutal floggings he had witnessed aboard ship or undermine the vow he had made to combat injustice. In Slavish Shore, Jeffrey Amestoy tells the story of Dana’s unflagging determination to keep that vow in the face of nineteenth-century America’s most exclusive establishment: the Boston society in which he had been born and bred.
The drama of Dana’s life arises from the unresolved tension between the Brahmin he was expected to be on shore and the man he had become at sea. Dana’s sense of justice made him a lawyer who championed sailors and slaves, and his extraordinary advocacy put him at the center of some of the most consequential cases in American history: defending fugitive slave Anthony Burns, justifying President Lincoln’s war powers before the Supreme Court, and prosecuting Confederate president Jefferson Davis for treason. Yet Dana’s own promising political career remained unfulfilled as he struggled to reconcile his rigorous conscience with his restless spirit in public controversy and private life.
The first full-length biography of Dana in more than half a century, Slavish Shore reintroduces readers to one of America’s most zealous defenders of freedom and human dignity.
REVIEWSSlavish Shore is the first new biography of Richard Henry Dana in over fifty years, and rigorous attention to Dana is long overdue. Amestoy is an excellent writer who takes us gracefully through Dana’s fascinating life, providing much new insight into his defense of fugitive slaves and his work on the treason case against Jefferson Davis. It is an important story, very well told.
-- Steven Lubet, author of Fugitive Justice: Runaways, Rescuers, and Slavery on Trial
Both a richly detailed biography of Richard Henry Dana and a snapshot of American life at the end of the age of sail, Amestoy’s Slavish Shore is the perfect companion volume for anyone who has been captivated by Two Years Before the Mast. Amestoy’s book follows Dana as he carries home the lessons he learned at sea and shocks the hidebound world of upper-crust Boston by standing up for the rights of seamen and fugitive slaves. But Slavish Shore also gives us the story of a private man caught in the sometimes suffocating atmosphere of family life, charting a haphazard course between independence and duty, ambition and disappointment.
-- Wes Davis, editor of An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry
The strongest element of Amestoy’s treatment in Slavish Shore is his dramatization of the intricacies and personalities of the growing Abolitionist fervor of Boston in the years of Dana’s flourishing…A fine new biography.
-- Steve Donoghue Open Letters Monthly
Excellently reveals how Dana wrested from the text of the U.S. Constitution the acknowledgment that the African-American slave, a kind of property as far as the traditional reading went, also had rights.
-- Carol Bundy Wall Street Journal
[Slavish Shore] is a meticulous, engaging, and informative study of Dana’s life, which unequivocally defends its portrait of this significant American man of letters as an equally significant man of the law that will be of particular interest to both literary scholars and historians concerned with the intersections of maritime law, slavery, and aristocratic New England culture in the turbulent decades leading up to the Civil War.
-- Dan Walden American Literary History
Slavish Shore, Jeffrey Amestoy’s superb new biography of Dana—the first in more than 50 years—should make many more people familiar with him…Slavish Shore presents an insightful portrait of Dana as a man as well as a lawyer…An excellent book—never tedious and often gripping—and Dana deserves our renewed attention.
-- Henry Cohen Federal Lawyer
Amestoy’s biography is excellent: well written, comprehensive, empathetic, and well researched…Amestoy is at his best, better than any other biographer, when narrating Dana’s role in several of America’s crucial cases in which human rights were at risk and a moral compass was needed.
-- Rick Kennedy New England Quarterly
How appropriate that the year 2015, the bicentennial of Richard Henry Dana Jr.’s birth, ushered in the publication of what will be considered for quite some time the definitive biography of the famed sailor, author, lawyer, and activist.
-- Brian Rouleau Journal of the Early Republic
How appropriate that the year 2015, the bicentennial of Richard Henry Dana Jr.’s birth, ushered in the publication of what will be considered for quite some time the definitive biography of the famed sailor, author, lawyer, and activist.
-- Brian Rouleau Journal of the Early Republic
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1. True Spirit
Chapter 2. Pilgrim
Chapter 3. Alert
Chapter 4. The Vow
Chapter 5. The Book
Chapter 6. Boston, Brahmins, and the Business of Law
Chapter 7. The Masquerade
Chapter 8. The Great Man of the Age
Chapter 9. The Inheritance
Chapter 10. A Monstrous Thing
Chapter 11. Chains
Chapter 12. Boycott
Chapter 13. The Little Darky Lawyer
Illustrations
Chapter 14. The Club
Chapter 15. The Presumption of Freedom
Chapter 16. Who Can Tell What a Day May Bring Forth
Chapter 17. Duty
Chapter 18. Breakdown
Chapter 19. Around the World
Chapter 20. The Supreme Court Argument That Saved the Union
Chapter 21. The Duke of Cambridge
Chapter 22. Treason
Chapter 23. The Rating
Chapter 24. One of Them Damn Literary Fellers
Chapter 25. Last Voyage
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index