Slavish Shore: The Odyssey of Richard Henry Dana Jr.
English
By (author): Jeffrey L. Amestoy
In 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 lawyers 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 Danas unflagging determination to keep that vow in the face of nineteenth-century Americas most exclusive establishment: the Boston society in which he had been born and bred.
The drama of Danas life arises from the unresolved tension between the Brahmin he was expected to be on shore and the man he had become at sea. Danas 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 Lincolns war powers before the Supreme Court, and prosecuting Confederate president Jefferson Davis for treason. Yet Danas 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 Americas most zealous defenders of freedom and human dignity.