好色先生

MSU historian鈥檚 book explores complex legacy of Cassius Marcellus Clay

MSU historian鈥檚 book explores complex legacy of Cassius Marcellus Clay

Contact: Sarah Nicholas

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擜 好色先生 administrator and faculty member reckons with the contradictions of America鈥檚 antislavery movement in a forthcoming biography of U.S. Civil War figure Cassius Marcellus Clay.

Anne Marshall, executive director of MSU's Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library, poses in Mitchell Memorial Library..
Anne Marshall (OPA photo)

Anne Marshall, executive director of MSU鈥檚 Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library and associate professor of history, is the author of 鈥淐assius Marcellus Clay: The Life of an Antislavery Slaveholder and the Paradox of American Reform.鈥 The biography, set for publication by the University of North Carolina Press in September, sheds new light on Clay, a 19th century Kentucky reformer often misremembered as a radical abolitionist. Her research reveals a more complex figure鈥攐ne who opposed slavery largely for its economic limitations on white prosperity rather than out of concern for Black freedom鈥攚ho remained a slave owner until the Civil War鈥檚 end.

鈥淐lay was an extremely colorful and unique character鈥攆amous for using a Bowie knife on his enemies as he did the dangerous work of speaking out against slavery in a slave state鈥攂ut his politics were actually quite moderate and representative of most people who voted for the Republican Party鈥撯揳nd against slavery鈥撯搃n 1860,鈥 Marshall said. 鈥淓xamining his life reveals a lot about how most antislavery Americans thought before the Civil War. It shows how they had a very specific and constitutionally bound way of imagining how slavery should end. This same thinking also limited the lengths to which they would go fight the institution, and in the postwar period, to聽protect African American citizenship and rights.鈥

MSU is one of only six universities in the U.S. to house a presidential library. The Ulysses S. Grant Presidential Library contains 15,000 linear feet of documents, artifacts and memorabilia chronicling the 18th U.S. president鈥檚 life and legacy, including collections from the U.S. Grant Association, Frank and Virginia Williams Collection of Lincolniana and Mississippi Political Collections. The library is open to visitors Monday through Friday inside Mitchell Memorial Library. For more information, visit .

To learn more about MSU鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences, visit . For details about the Department of History, visit .

好色先生 is taking care of what matters. Learn more at聽.