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Star Spangled Scandal

Sex, Murder, and the Trial That Changed America

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The year is 1859, and Congressman Daniel Sickles and his beautiful wife Teresa are the toast of Washington society. President James Buchanan is godfather to their daughter. Philip Barton Key, US Attorney for the District of Columbia (and the son of Francis Scott Key), is one of the couple's closest friends—so close, in fact, that he often escorts the beautiful Mrs. Sickles to social events when the congressman is too busy. Revelers in DC are accustomed to the sight of the congressman's wife with the tall, Apollo-like Philip Barton Key, who is considered "the handsomest man in all Washington society ... foremost among the popular men of the capital." Then one day Congressman Daniel Sickles receives an anonymous note about his wife and Key, setting into motion a tragic course of events that culminates in a bloody confrontation in the street that leaves one man dead and the other charged with murder. This is the riveting true story of the murder and historic trial that shocked nineteenth-century America, now brought to vivid life by historian Chris DeRose with the help of Mrs. Sickles' writings and other primary sources.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 2019
      DeRose (The Presidents’ War: Six American Presidents and the Civil War That Divided Them) provides a comprehensive look at a sensational but forgotten cause célèbre—the fatal 1859 shooting of United States Attorney Philip Barton Key in Washington, D.C., by New York Congressman Daniel Sickles. Shortly before Sickles fired several shots, in broad daylight and in front of witnesses, at Key—the son of the composer of “The Star-Spangled Banner”—Sickles received an anonymous letter. The unnamed correspondent warned the well-connected legislator, whose six-year-old daughter was President James Buchanan’s goddaughter, that Key was having an affair with Sickles’s wife. The pioneering use of telegraphs to rapidly share news stories around the country made the killing the subject of national interest. The trial centered on Sickles’s mental state at the time. His defense team maintained that Sickles fired his weapon while Key was essentially still in the “act of adultery” with Sickles’s wife. Sickles was acquitted. While readers may not be convinced that the case merits the gravity of the subtitle’s claim, true crime fans will relish this thoughtful look at a murder and its aftermath that riveted a nation.

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  • English

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