AUDIOBOOK

At the Edge of the Precipice

Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union

Robert V. Remini
4.4
(8)
Duration
4h 34m
Year
2010
Language
English

About

A National Book Award-winning historian brilliantly portrays Henry Clay's heroic brokering of the Compromise of 1850 with its timely message about bipartisanship in times of crisis. It has been said that if Henry Clay had been alive in 1860, there would have been no Civil War. Based on his performance in 1850, it may well be true. In that year, the United States faced one of the most dangerous crises in its history, having just acquired a huge parcel of land from the war with Mexico. Northern and Southern politicians fought over whether slavery should be legal on the new American soil. After a Northern congressman introduced a proviso to forbid slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico, Southerners threatened to secede from the Union. Only Henry Clay, America's great compromiser, could keep the Union together, saving it from dissolution for ten crucial years. In this masterful contribution to American history, Remini explores Henry Clay's final and most important act of bipartisanship.

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Reviews

"Clay, who also delivered the 1820 Missouri Compromise, emerges as a complex figure, a slave owner who regarded slavery as an evil that betrayed American values…Remini ably dissects a dangerous moment in the nation's history and the remarkable but flawed man who ushered the nation through it."
Publishers Weekly
"William Hughes reads the book with an air of solemnity but not somnolence. He varies his pacing, especially during quoted material, when he slows down noticeably, offering a kind of aural quotation marks."
AudioFile
"An informed and lively recounting of the (in)famous Compromise of 1850…showing how the 'great men' like Henry Clay tried to manage sectional reconciliation and their own ambitions."
Library Journal

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