On March 1, 1855, a letter from Charles Sumner dated February 19 and addressed 'Dear Doctor' was published in the
New-York Daily Times (originally published in the
Boston Telegraph on February 27) that had accompanied a daguerreotype of Mary Williams. In the letter, Sumner says: In a subsequent article dated March 9, 1855, reporters of the
New-York Daily Times expressed "astonishment" that the girl was "ever held a slave". In early 1855, articles were published about Mary Williams in the
Boston Telegraph and the
New York Times, and copies of her photograph were widely publicized. After her photograph was published, she accompanied Senator
Charles Sumner on a publicity tour to raise awareness and funds for the abolitionist cause. The photo and tour made Williams famous. She was compared to fictional character Ida May, heroine of a popular novel about a white girl kidnapped into slavery,
Ida May: a Story of Things Actual and Possible by
Mary Hayden Pike (1854). A columnist in ''Frederick Douglass' Paper'' described her as: Abolitionists emphasized Williams's perceived whiteness to enlist sympathy, and to suggest to Northerners that any child, regardless of appearance, might be snatched and made a slave. On May 19 and 20, 1856, Sumner spoke in the Senate comparing Southern political positions to the sexual exploitation of slaves then taking place in the South. Two days later Representative
Preston Brooks (D-SC),
nearly beat Sumner to death with a cane on the floor of the Senate in the
Capitol. == Adulthood and death ==