Yahoo Web Search

  1. Thaddeus Stevens

    Thaddeus Stevens

    American statesman

Search results

    • Non-profit group

      • The Thaddeus Stevens Society is a non-profit group started in 1999 to promote, preserve and protect the legacy of Thaddeus Stevens, the most powerful congressman during and after the Civil War and a champion of freedom and equality.
      www.thaddeusstevenssociety.com › projects
  1. People also ask

  2. The Thaddeus Stevens Society is a non-profit group started in 1999 to promote, preserve and protect the legacy of Thaddeus Stevens, the most powerful congressman during and after the Civil War and a champion of freedom and equality.

    • Events

      The Thaddeus Stevens Society will meet Sunday, November 5,...

    • Stevens Stamp Campaign

      "The Great Commoner" -- Thaddeus Stevens -- was a guiding...

    • Books

      Books - Home | Thaddeus Stevens

    • Shop

      Visit our shop on Zazzle to buy Thaddeus Stevens t-shirts,...

    • Newsletter

      Ross Hetrick portraying Thaddeus Stevens and Gettysburg...

  3. Thaddeus Stevens (April 4, 1792 – August 11, 1868) was an American politician and lawyer who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, being one of the leaders of the Radical Republican faction of the Republican Party during the 1860s.

  4. Library of Congress. Arguably the most important opponent of slavery in American history, Thaddeus Stevens is also the most forgotten. If the abolitionist Pennsylvania congressman is known at...

    • Tracy Schorn
  5. We know Thaddeus Stevens as an ardent abolitionist who championed the rights of blacks for decades—up to, during, and after the Civil War. With other Radical Republicans, he agitated for emancipation, black fighting units, and black suffrage.

  6. May 14, 2024 · Thaddeus Stevens was a U.S. Radical Republican congressional leader during Reconstruction (1865–77) who battled for freedmen’s rights and insisted on stern requirements for readmission of Southern states into the Union after the Civil War (1861–65). Admitted to the Maryland bar, he moved to.

  1. People also search for