05-22-2025 - On This Day in Insane History Podcast Por  arte de portada

05-22-2025 - On This Day in Insane History

05-22-2025 - On This Day in Insane History

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On May 22, 1856, the United States Senate descended into chaos when Senator Preston Brooks of South Carolina brutally attacked Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts with a gold-headed cane on the Senate floor. This wasn't just a heated political disagreement—it was a violent assault that would become a stark symbol of the rising tensions leading to the Civil War.

Sumner had recently delivered a scathing speech condemning slavery, during which he specifically and harshly criticized Senator Andrew Butler, a relative of Brooks. Feeling his family's honor had been besmirched, Brooks approached Sumner's desk and began repeatedly striking him with his heavy walking stick, beating him so severely that Sumner was left bleeding and unconscious.

The attack was so savage that Sumner's legs were pinned under the desk, allowing Brooks to continue his assault unimpeded. Other senators were so stunned that they initially did nothing to intervene. When Sumner finally broke free, he collapsed, covered in blood.

Remarkably, Brooks was celebrated as a hero in the South, receiving numerous replacement canes and congratulatory letters. He was fined $300 and briefly expelled from Congress, only to be immediately re-elected by his constituents. Sumner would take three years to recover and return to the Senate, becoming an even more vocal abolitionist.

This violent episode dramatically illustrated the deep, irreconcilable divide between North and South, serving as a chilling prelude to the impending Civil War.
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