Thaddeus Stevens was a 19th century Republican politician who was one of the most powerful members in the U.S
@Former United States Representative, Birthday and Family
Thaddeus Stevens was a 19th century Republican politician who was one of the most powerful members in the U.S
Thaddeus Stevens born at
Thaddeus Stevens never married. It was rumored that he had a long-term relationship with his widowed housekeeper, Lydia Hamilton Smith, who was an African-American. He had adopted two of his nephews after the death of their parents.
He suffered from ill health during his later years but remained active on the political scenario despite his failing health. He died on August 11, 1868. Shortly before his death he had requested to be buried in Shreiner-Concord Cemetery in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, because the state accepted all races.
Thaddeus Stevens was born on April 4, 1792, in Danville, Vermont, U.S. as the second of four children of Joshua Stevens, a farmer and cobbler, and his wife Sarah. Thaddeus was born with a club foot.
His father abandoned the family when the children were quite young, leaving behind his wife to raise the children alone. Even though the family struggled in poverty, Sarah was determined to educate the children so that they could build better lives for themselves.
Thaddeus studied in the Caledonia Grammar School (often called the Peacham Academy) and enrolled at Burlington College of the University of Vermont following his graduation. Then he went to Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire from where he graduated in 1814.
After teaching in a school for a while he began to study law with Judge John Mattocks in Danville and was eventually admitted to the Maryland bar.
In 1816, he moved to Gettysburg to practice law. He was fiercely opposed to slavery and bondage, and defended several fugitives without fee. Eventually his practice became successful and he also ventured into politics.
He began his political career in 1833 by serving for four years in the state legislature as a member of the Anti-Masonic Party. As a politician he became noted for his oratory skills and strong beliefs in opposition of slavery.
In the 1830s, the abolitionist movement was in its nascent stage and there were only a few people such as William Lloyd Garrison who had taken up the cause. Supporting the anti-slavery movement was detrimental to Stevens’ political career but it did not stop him from fighting for the cause.
At the Pennsylvania constitutional convention in 1837, he fought against the disenfranchisement of African-Americans and refused to sign the 1837 constitution because of its discriminatory voting provision.
Stevens ran for election to Congress from Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district in 1848 and narrowly won. He then went on to serve as a Whig in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1849-53. In this position, he opposed the Compromise of 1850 as he felt that it would lead to future rebellion, disunion and civil war.
A radical politician who fought hard to abolish slavery and proposed equal rights for African-Americans, Thaddeus Stevens pushed Congress to pass a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery that resulted in the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution which outlawed slavery. Furthering his efforts, he proceeded to play a major role in the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment which addressed the issues of equal rights and citizenship for the former slaves.