Lincoln,
Abraham (1809-1865), 16th president of the United States (1861-1865)
and one of the great men of history. A humane, far-sighted statesman in
his lifetime, he became a legend and a folk hero after his death.
Lincoln rose from humble backwoods origins to become one of the great
presidents of the United States. In his effort to preserve the Union during
the Civil War, he assumed more power than any preceding president. If necessity
made him almost a dictator, by fervent conviction he was always a democrat.
A superb politician, he persuaded the people with reasoned word and thoughtful
deed to look to him for leadership. He had a lasting influence on American
political institutions, most importantly in setting the precedent of vigorous
executive action in time of national emergency.
Early Life
Abraham Lincoln's ancestry on his father's side has been traced to Samuel
Lincoln, a weaver who emigrated from Hingham, England, to Hingham, Massachusetts,
in 1637. The president's forebears were pioneers who moved west with the
expanding frontier from Massachusetts to Berks County, Pennsylvania, and
then to Virginia. Abraham's father, Thomas Lincoln, was born in Rockingham
County in backcountry Virginia in 1778. In 1781 Thomas Lincoln's father,
who was also named Abraham, took his family to Hughes Station on the Green
River, 32 km (20 mi) east of Louisville, Kentucky. In 1786 a Native American
killed the first Abraham Lincoln while he was at work clearing land for
a farm in the forest.
Thomas Lincoln continued to live in Kentucky. He saw it develop from
a frontier wilderness into a rapidly growing state. But like his ancestors
he preferred the rugged life on the frontier. In a brief autobiography
written for a political campaign, Lincoln said that his father "even in
childhood was a wandering labor boy, and grew up literally without education.
He never did more in the way of writing than to bunglingly sign his own
name."
Despite Thomas Lincoln's apparent shiftlessness, he became a skilled
carpenter, and he never lacked the basic necessities of life. At one time
he owned title to two farms. He always possessed one or more horses. He
paid his taxes, and, like his neighbors, he accepted jury duty and militia
duty when called.
On June 12, 1806, Thomas Lincoln married Nancy Hanks. Little is known
about Abe Lincoln's mother except that she came from a very poor Virginia
family. She was completely illiterate and signed her name with an X. After
their marriage the Lincolns moved from a farm on Mill Creek in Hardin County,
Kentucky, to nearby Elizabethtown. There Thomas Lincoln earned his living
as a carpenter and handyman. In 1807 a daughter, Sarah, was born.
In December 1808 the Lincolns moved to a 141-hectare (348-acre) farm
on the south fork of Nolin Creek near what is now Hodgenville, Kentucky.
On February 12, 1809, in a log cabin that Thomas Lincoln had built, a son,
Abraham, was born. Later the Lincolns had a second son who died in infancy.
When Abraham Lincoln was two, the family moved to another farm on nearby
Knob Creek. Life was lonely and hard. There was little time for play. Most
of the day was spent hunting, farming, fishing, and doing chores. Land
titles in Kentucky were confused and often subject to dispute. Thomas Lincoln
lost his title to the Mill Creek farm, and his claims to both the Nolin
Creek and Knob Creek tracts were challenged in court. In 1816, therefore,
the Lincolns decided to move to Indiana, where the land was surveyed and
sold by the federal government.
In the winter of 1816 the Lincolns took their meager possessions, ferried
across the Ohio River, and settled near Pigeon Creek, close to what is
now Gentryville, Indiana. Because it was winter, Thomas Lincoln immediately
built a crude, three-sided shelter that served as home until he could build
a log cabin. A fire at the open end of the shelter kept the family warm.
At this time southern Indiana was a heavily forested wilderness. Lincoln
described it as a "wild region, with many bears and other wild animals
in the woods." Later some of Nancy Hanks's relatives moved near the site
the Lincolns had chosen, and a thriving frontier community gradually developed.
In 1818 an epidemic of the milk sick broke out. This was not actually
a disease. It was caused by drinking poisoned milk from cows that had eaten
the wild snakeroot plant. One of the first victims of the milk sick was
Nancy Hanks Lincoln. She died October 5, 1818. The next year, Thomas Lincoln
journeyed to Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and married Sarah Bush Johnston,
a widow with three children. Abe Lincoln was very much attached to his
kind stepmother, and he later referred to her as "my angel mother."
One of the most important jobs on a frontier farm was clearing the
forest. Young Abe Lincoln quickly became skilled with an axe. In his autobiographical
sketch written in the third person, Lincoln stated that "the clearing away
of surplus wood was the great task ahead. Abraham, though very young, was
large for his age, and had an axe put in his hands at once. From that till
within his twenty-third year, he was almost constantly handling that most
useful instrument." One of his chores with an axe was to make fence rails
by splitting poles. Later, as a presidential candidate, Lincoln was known
as the Railsplitter.
Education
When his father could spare him from chores, Lincoln attended an ABC
school. Such schools were held in log cabins, and often the teachers were
barely more educated than their pupils. According to Lincoln, "no qualification
was ever required of a teacher beyond readin', writin', and cipherin',
to the Rule of Three." Including a few weeks at a similar school in Kentucky,
Lincoln had less than one full year of formal education in his entire life.
Abe's stepmother encouraged his quest for knowledge. At an early age
he could read, write, and do simple arithmetic. Books were scarce on the
Indiana frontier, but besides the family Bible, which Lincoln knew well,
he was able to read the classical authors Aesop, John Bunyan, and Daniel
Defoe, as well as William Grimshaw's History of the United States (1820)
and Mason Locke Weems's Life and Memorable Actions of George Washington
(about 1800). This biography of George Washington made a lasting impression
on Lincoln, and he made the ideals of Washington and the founding fathers
of the United States his own.
By the time Lincoln was 19 years old, he had reached his full height
of 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in). He was lean and muscular, with long arms and big
hands that gave him an awkward appearance. Although he had remarkable strength,
he never liked farm work. He preferred instead the easy congeniality that
he found at the general store in nearby Gentryville. A neighbor recalled
"Abe was awful lazy, he would laugh and talk and crack jokes and tell stories
all the time."
The Pigeon Creek farm was near the Ohio River, and Lincoln often earned
money ferrying passengers and baggage to riverboats waiting in midstream.
In 1828, when he was 19, he was hired by the local merchant James Gentry
to take a cargo-laden flatboat down the Mississippi River to New Orleans.
Move to Illinois
In 1830 another epidemic of milk sick was rumored to be breaking out
in Indiana. Already the Hanks family had moved west to Illinois, and their
enthusiastic letters describing their new home rekindled the pioneering
spirit in Thomas Lincoln. In March 1830 the Lincoln family set out for
the Illinois country. They settled at the junction of woodland and prairie
on the north bank of the Sangamon River, 16 km (10 mi) west of what is
now Decatur, Illinois. Lincoln helped his father build a log cabin and
fence in 4 hectares (10 acres) to grow corn. Then he hired out to neighbors,
helping them to split rails. That year, Lincoln attended a political rally
and was persuaded to speak on behalf of a local candidate. It was his first
political speech. A witness recalled that Lincoln "was frightened but got
warmed up and made the best speech of the day."
In 1831 Lincoln made a second trip to New Orleans. He was hired, along
with his stepbrother and a cousin, by Denton Offutt, a Kentucky trader
and speculator, to build a flatboat and take it down the Mississippi with
a load of cargo. The pay was 50 cents a day plus a fee of $60. According
to legend, Lincoln saw his first slave auction in New Orleans and said,
"If I ever get a chance to hit that thing, I'll hit it hard."
New Salem
Denton Offutt was impressed with Lincoln's abilities. When they returned
to Illinois, he hired Lincoln as a clerk in a general store in New Salem,
a small community near the growing town of Springfield, Illinois. The pay
was $15 a month, plus the use of the store as sleeping quarters.
Although he was a newcomer in New Salem, Lincoln soon became one of
its most popular citizens. He won the respect and fellowship of the local
ruffians by besting their strong man, Jack Armstrong, in a wrestling match.
And he soon earned the friendship of the more peaceable citizens of the
community by his good humor, intelligence, and integrity. As in all small
towns of the day, the general store was an informal meeting place. Customers
who came to buy at Offutt's store would usually linger to exchange anecdotes
and jokes with his clerk. Lincoln, an avid newspaper reader, enjoyed the
popular frontier pastime of discussing politics. Because he could read
and write, Lincoln was often called on to draw up legal papers for the
less literate citizens of New Salem.
Clerking in a store gave Lincoln time to read all the books, newspapers,
and political tracts that came his way. Always endeavoring to improve his
education, he studied books on grammar and acquired a lifelong taste for
the poetry of English poet and playwright William Shakespeare and Scottish
poet Robert Burns. Novels, however, held little interest for him, and he
later admitted that he never was able to finish one in his entire life.
Lincoln also joined the local debating society. A member had this reaction
to Lincoln's first debate: "A perceptible smile at once lit up the face
of the audience, for all anticipated the relation of some humorous story.
But he opened up discussion in splendid style, to the infinite astonishment
of his friends. . . . He pursued the question with reason and argument
so pithy and forcible that all were amazed."
Early Political Career
In the spring of 1832, Lincoln decided to run for a seat in the Illinois
house of representatives. This was a logical step for Lincoln to take,
for on the frontier a young man with ability and ambition could rise rapidly
in politics.
A month after Lincoln announced his candidacy, Offutt's general store
went bankrupt and Lincoln found himself without a job. But almost immediately,
Governor John Reynolds of Illinois called for volunteers to put down a
rebellion of the Native American Sauk (or Sac) and Fox peoples led by Chief
Black Hawk. Lincoln enlisted at once and, because of his popularity, was
elected captain of his company. When his term expired, he reenlisted as
a private. In all, he served three months, but saw no actual fighting.
However, Lincoln took great pride in this brief military career.
First Campaign
When Lincoln returned to New Salem in 1832, election day was two weeks
away. It was a presidential election year, and political parties had formed
around the contending candidates. Followers of Andrew Jackson, who was
seeking a second term as president, called themselves Democrats. Followers
of U.S. Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky called themselves National Republicans
and later Whigs. Lincoln supported Clay, who had long been his political
idol. He remained a faithful Whig until the party disintegrated over the
question of slavery in the 1850s.
Lincoln's program, as published in the Sangamon, Illinois, Journal,
called for the construction of canals and roads, better schools, and a
low interest rate to stimulate local economic growth. In his brief campaign,
Lincoln spoke from tree stumps in village squares, visited farmers in their
homes and fields, and shook hands and exchanged stories with as many people
as he could meet. Nevertheless, he was defeated. There were 13 county candidates
running for four legislative seats. Lincoln finished eighth. In his own
precinct, however, he got 277 out of 300 votes even though the precinct
voted overwhelmingly to support the Democrat, Jackson, for the presidency.
Postmaster
After his defeat, Lincoln opened a general store in New Salem with William
F. Berry as his partner. But Berry misused the profits, and in a few months
the venture failed. Berry died in 1835, leaving Lincoln responsible for
debts amounting to $1100. It took him several years to pay them off.
After the general store failed, Lincoln was appointed postmaster of
New Salem. The appointment came from Jackson's Democratic administration.
Lincoln's Whig views were well known, but, as Lincoln explained it, the
postmaster's job was "too insignificant to make his politics an objection."
As postmaster, Lincoln earned $60 a year plus a percentage of the receipts
on postage. He ran an informal post office, often doing favors for friends,
such as undercharging them for mailing letters. The job gave him time to
read, and he made a habit of reading all the newspapers that came through
the office. To augment his income, he became the deputy surveyor of Sangamon
County.
Illinois Legislator
In 1834 Lincoln again ran for representative to the Illinois legislature.
By then he was known throughout the county, and many Democrats gave him
their votes. He was elected in 1834 and reelected in 1836, 1838, and 1840.
As a member of the Whig minority he became the protégé of
the Whig floor leader, Representative John T. Stuart of Springfield. When
Stuart ran for a seat in the Congress of the United States in 1836, Lincoln
replaced him as floor leader. Stuart also encouraged Lincoln to study law,
which Lincoln did between legislative sessions.
Lincoln's main achievement as a state legislator was the transfer of
the state capital from Vandalia to Springfield. In this effort he acted
as the leader of Sangamon County's delegation of seven representatives
and two state senators, a group called the Long Nine because they were
all tall men. Lincoln devised a strategy whereby the Sangamon delegation
supported the projects of other legislators in return for their support
of Springfield as the capital city. In American politics this kind of aid
is called logrolling, a term derived from frontier families' tradition
of helping each other to build log cabins.
Lincoln's other votes in the state legislature reflected his Whig background.
He supported the business interests in the state and defended the pro-business
national platform of Henry Clay. Lincoln's experience in the Illinois legislature
sharpened his political skills. He was adept at logrolling, skilled in
debate, and expert in the art of political maneuver.
In 1837 Lincoln took his first public stand on slavery when the Illinois
legislature voted to condemn the activities of the abolition societies
that wanted an immediate end to slavery by any means. Lincoln and a colleague
declared that slavery was "founded on both injustice and bad politics,
but the promulgation of abolitionist doctrine tends rather to increase
than abate its evil." Lincoln was against slavery, but he favored lawful
means of achieving its destruction. Throughout his political career, Lincoln
avoided extreme abolitionist groups.
Early Law Practice
Meanwhile, Lincoln continued his study of law, and in 1836 he became
a licensed attorney. The following year he became a junior partner in John
T. Stuart's law firm and moved from New Salem to Springfield. Lincoln was
extremely poor and arrived in Springfield on a borrowed horse with all
his belongings in two saddlebags. A Springfield storekeeper, Joshua Fry
Speed, whom Lincoln later called "my most intimate friend," gave Lincoln
free lodging.
Courtship and Marriage
According to a now discredited legend, while in New Salem, Lincoln was
said to have been in love with Ann Rutledge, the beautiful young daughter
of a local innkeeper. When she died in 1835, Lincoln was said to be "plunged
in despair." The frequent lapses into melancholy that marked his adult
years were said to be a result of this tragic death. But Lincoln in his
later years never referred to Ann Rutledge, and authorities are unanimous
in agreeing that the Lincoln-Rutledge romance is a myth.
Indeed, less than 18 months after Ann's death, Lincoln proposed marriage
to Mary Owens, a Kentucky girl who also lived in New Salem. Theirs was
not an ardent love affair, but having made his proposal, Lincoln felt he
could not honorably break it off. Much to his relief, Mary turned him down.
Later she explained, "I thought Mr. Lincoln was deficient in those little
links which make up the chain of a woman's happiness."
In 1840, Lincoln met a cultured, high-strung Kentucky woman named Mary
Todd, who was staying with a married sister in Springfield. After a long
courtship, they were married on November 4, 1842. A week later, Lincoln
wrote a fellow lawyer, "Nothing new here, except my marrying, which to
me, is a matter of profound wonder."
Late in 1843 the Lincolns moved from their simple rented quarters to
a modest frame house in Springfield that Lincoln bought for $1500. Of their
four boys, only the eldest, Robert Todd Lincoln, reached adulthood. He
was born in 1843 and died in 1926. Edward Baker Lincoln was born in 1846
and died at the age of four. William Wallace, called Willie, was born in
1850 and died in the White House, the presidential mansion, shortly before
his 12th birthday. Lincoln's favorite son, Thomas, whom he affectionately
called Tad, was born in 1853, grew up in the White House, and died at the
age of 18.
In contrast with the sweet, loving Ann Rutledge of legend, Mary Todd
Lincoln has unfairly been pictured as a shrew who made Lincoln's life miserable.
Certainly she was spoiled, haughty, and temperamental. The death of her
children caused her much anguish, and after Willie's death she was often
hysterical. Lincoln was devoted to her, however, and there is no evidence
that theirs was not a happy marriage. On those occasions when she became
upset, Lincoln treated her with patience and understanding. He, for his
part, was careless in his personal habits and subject to extreme depression.
What he and his wife had in common was ambition. Mary aided her husband's
political career immeasurably.
Frontier Lawyer
At the time of his marriage, Lincoln was earning $1200 to $1500 a year
from his law practice, a good income for the time and place. When the law
firm of Stuart and Lincoln dissolved in 1841, Stephen T. Logan, an able
and experienced lawyer, took Lincoln in as junior partner. In 1844 the
firm of Logan and Lincoln also dissolved, and Lincoln formed a lifelong
partnership with a young lawyer named William H. Herndon.
Lawsuits on the Illinois frontier usually dealt with such trivial matters
as crop damage caused by wandering livestock, ownership of hogs and horses,
small debts, libel, and assault and battery. The Springfield courts were
in session only a small part of the year. For three months each spring
and fall, lawyers and judges rode the circuit, holding court at rural county
seats. Lincoln rode the eighth judicial circuit, the largest in the state,
covering 15 counties and about 12,900 sq km (about 8000 sq mi).
The local sessions of the circuit court were major events on the frontier.
The particulars of each case were well known to the townspeople and were
subject to heated debate. Courtroom conduct was informal, and more often
than not a case was won on a lawyer's speaking ability rather than the
legal merits of his case. The judge and the lawyers were treated as celebrities,
and Lincoln, because of his storytelling abilities and skill as a lawyer,
was popular on the circuit. Ever the politician, he used this opportunity
to meet new people and advance his political career.
Lincoln still had political ambitions, but he now looked beyond the
statehouse to the U.S. Congress. In 1843 he wrote a fellow politician,
"Now if you should hear any one say that Lincoln don't want to go to Congress,
I wish you as a personal friend of mine, would tell him you have reason
to believe he is mistaken. The truth is, I would like to go very much."
The Whigs were a minority party in Illinois, and there was competition
among the Whig politicians over the nomination for U.S. representative
for the Seventh Congressional District, where Whigs were in the majority.
Lincoln sought the nomination in 1842 and 1844 and received it in 1846.
He went on to defeat the Democratic candidate, the Methodist preacher Peter
Cartwright, in the election of November 1846.
United States Congressman
Congressman-elect Lincoln was a popular, masterful politician in Illinois.
Having succeeded in the rough-hewn Illinois legislature, he was confident
that he would make his mark in Congress. Once in Washington, D.C., however,
Lincoln became one of many unknown freshman congressmen. The inner councils
of government were closed to him, as was the Washington social life that
Mary Lincoln was looking forward to. However, Lincoln never lost confidence
in himself. He wrote Herndon, "As you are all so anxious for me to distinguish
myself, I have concluded to do so before long." The Lincolns, with their
two sons, lived quietly in a modest boardinghouse. Lincoln had a small
body of friends with whom he could relax and discuss politics. Among them
was Alexander H. Stephens, the Whig congressman from Georgia, who later
became vice president of the Confederate States of America.
Spot Resolutions
James K. Polk, a Democrat, was president while Lincoln was in Congress.
Lincoln joined other Whigs in attacking Polk for starting the Mexican War.
Congress had declared war against Mexico in May 1846 upon Polk's contention
that Mexicans had fired on American soldiers in U.S. territory.
In December 1847 Lincoln challenged the truth of this contention. He
introduced a resolution questioning whether the spot on which the firing
took place was actually in U.S. territory. In another resolution he claimed
that the American troops were on that spot in violation of the orders of
their commanding officer, General Zachary Taylor. The next month, Lincoln
supported a Whig resolution declaring that the Mexican War had been "unnecessarily
and unconstitutionally . . . begun by the President."
Lincoln's "spot resolutions" made little impression either on Congress
or on the president, but they caused an uproar in Illinois, where the war
was approved of by most voters. Lincoln was denounced as a traitor, and
opposition newspapers gleefully called him Spotty Lincoln. However, despite
his opinion of the war, once war was declared, Lincoln voted for all appropriations
in support of it.
Actions on Slavery
The extension of slavery into the territories was an important question
during Lincoln's term in Congress. He supported the Wilmot Proviso, which
proposed that slavery be prohibited in any territory acquired from Mexico.
Lincoln also put forward a program for the abolition of slavery in Washington,
D.C. Although Lincoln's proposal never came up before Congress, it exemplified
his opposition to slavery and the moderate means by which he wanted to
achieve abolition. The proposal called for the emancipation of children
born into slavery after January 1, 1850. These children would be placed
in apprenticeship programs to learn a trade. The emancipation of other
slaves would be voluntary, and the slaveholders would be compensated for
their loss. Finally, the voters of Washington would have to approve the
plan before it went into effect. Lincoln believed that Congress did not
have the power to abolish slavery in the individual states. But where Congress
did have the power, as in Washington, and where the electorate was agreeable,
Lincoln thought it should abolish slavery.
Whig Politics
In the presidential election of 1848, Lincoln decided to back the popular
war hero Zachary Taylor, rather than his idol Henry Clay, for the Whig
nomination. Lincoln's reasons were wholly practical. "Mr. Clay's chance
for an election is just no chance at all," he wrote. "In my judgement we
can elect nobody but General Taylor." Lincoln campaigned for Taylor in
Massachusetts and Illinois. Taylor won the election, but much to Lincoln's
disappointment, the Democratic presidential candidate, Senator Lewis Cass
of Michigan, carried Illinois.
Lincoln wanted to run for a second term in Congress, but it was traditional
that the Whig candidate from the Seventh Congressional District in Illinois
serve only one term. Further, Lincoln's antiwar position made him unpopular
at home, and his former law partner Stephen Logan, running on Lincoln's
record, was defeated. Lincoln discovered that the incoming Whig administration
had little use for his services. He was offered nothing better than the
governorship of far-off Oregon Territory. Lincoln rejected the appointment,
and, thoroughly dejected and believing that his political career was over,
returned to Springfield to renew his practice of law.
Return to Law Practice
Lincoln's law partner, William Herndon, had kept the firm going while
Lincoln was in Congress. Now the two men built up their practice until
it was one of the largest in Illinois. As senior partner, Lincoln made
frequent appearances before the federal court in Chicago and the state
supreme court in Springfield. He also continued to ride the circuit for
six months each year. From the fall term of 1849 to the fall term of 1860
he missed only two sessions on the circuit, a record no other lawyer matched.
Riding the circuit was an important, if unspectacular, stage in Lincoln's
development from partisan politician to statesman. The long solitary journeys
between county seats, first by horse or buggy and then by train, gave him
opportunity for quiet thought. He reread Shakespeare, and for mental discipline
he studied Euclidean mathematics. Politics, national affairs, and abstract
ideas occupied his mind. Lincoln also enjoyed the companionship of the
other lawyers and of circuit judge David Davis, whom he later appointed
to the Supreme Court of the United States. The migratory life of the circuit
lawyer also enabled Lincoln to renew old acquaintances and make new ones.
Because he did not always have enough time to prepare an adequate case
in the circuit courts, Lincoln often had to depend on his natural shrewdness
and oratorical ability to sway a jury. His most celebrated circuit case
was his defense of Duff Armstrong, the son of his New Salem friend Jack
Armstrong, on a murder charge. When a witness testified that bright moonlight
had enabled him to see Duff commit the murder, Lincoln produced an almanac
and proved that the moon had not been shining brightly at the time. In
summing up the case, Lincoln described with great emotion his friendship
with the boy's father. The jury voted for acquittal.
Lincoln soon became one of the most respected lawyers in the state.
The briefs he presented before the more formal state and federal courts
were carefully documented and marked by unassailable logic. Lincoln argued
many important cases. He often represented the interests of the growing
corporations in Illinois. In Illinois Central Railroad v. County of McLean
he successfully pleaded that a county could not tax a railroad. In another
important case, Hurd v. Rock Island Bridge Company, he argued that a railroad
had the right to build a bridge across a stream used for navigation. Despite
his prominence as a lawyer, however, Lincoln was careless about his dress,
and he sometimes carried important papers inside his battered stovepipe
hat.
Antislavery Leader
Lincoln was losing interest in politics when, in 1854, Congress passed
the Kansas-Nebraska Act. The act aroused Lincoln, in his words, "as he
had never been before." The act created the territories of Kansas and Nebraska,
and stated that each territory could be admitted as a state "with or without
slavery, as their constitution may prescribe at the time of their admission."
The author of the act, Senator Stephen A. Douglas, the leading Democrat
of Illinois, called this program popular sovereignty because it allowed
the voters in these territories to decide for themselves whether slavery
would be allowed. The Kansas-Nebraska Act repealed the old dividing line
between free and slave states as set by the Missouri
Compromise of 1820.
With the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, a new Lincoln emerged into
the world of politics. Although he was as ambitious for political office
as ever, he was now, for the first time in his career, devoted to a cause.
He became a forceful spokesman for the antislavery forces.
Early Contest with Douglas
In 1854 Lincoln campaigned for the election to Congress of Richard Yates,
an antislavery Whig, on a platform of opposition to the Kansas-Nebraska
Act. However, Lincoln was after bigger game. His target was none other
than Douglas himself, whose nickname was "The Little Giant."
In October 1854, Douglas came to Springfield to defend the Kansas-Nebraska
Act. After Douglas spoke, Lincoln mounted the speaker's platform and announced
that he would answer Douglas's speech the next night. For days, Lincoln
had haunted the state library, read congressional documents, and organized
his arguments against slavery. The next night, in his shirtsleeves and
without a collar or tie, Lincoln spoke. Attacking the Kansas-Nebraska Act
itself, he said: "The Missouri Compromise forbade slavery to go north of
36°30'. Our government breaks down that restriction and opens the door
for slavery to enter where it could not go. This is practically legislating
for slavery, recognizing it, extending it."
Douglas had spoken of slavery only as a political issue. The morality
of the institution did not concern him. To Lincoln, however, slavery was
both a political and a moral issue. "It is said," Lincoln continued, "that
the slaveholder has the same political right to take his Negroes to Kansas
that a freeman has to take his hogs or his horses. This would be true if
Negroes were property in the same sense that hogs and horses are. But is
this the case? It is notoriously not so."
To Lincoln, slavery was incompatible with American democracy. "When
the white man governs himself," he said, "that is self-government; but
when he governs himself, and also governs another man-that is despotism.
If the Negro is a man, why then my ancient faith teaches me that 'all men
are created equal,' and that there can be no moral right in connection
with one man's making a slave of another."
Lincoln avoided abolitionist doctrine, taking the view that slavery
was a national problem, not merely a Southern one. "I think," he went on,
"I would not hold one in slavery, at any rate, yet the point is not clear
enough for me to denounce people upon .…It does seem to me that some system
of gradual emancipation might be adopted, but for their tardiness in this,
I will not undertake to judge our brethren of the South." Lincoln repeated
this speech in Peoria, Illinois, 12 days later. It has become known as
his Peoria speech.
Despite his new role as a spokesman for the antislavery forces in Illinois,
Lincoln declined to join the Republican Party, then being formed on an
abolition platform. The Whig Party was in rapid decline, but Lincoln remained
with it until its death. In 1855 he was the Whig candidate for the U.S.
Senate, the upper chamber of Congress. U.S. senators were then elected
by the state legislatures. Lincoln led for seven ballots. Then, seeing
that he could not win, he threw his support to an anti-Douglas Democrat,
Lyman Trumbull, who was elected.
Election of 1856
In 1856 Lincoln publicly identified himself as a Republican, and in
May he attended the Republican state convention at Bloomington. The moderate
antislavery resolutions of this convention were acceptable to Lincoln.
He signified his approval of the new party by giving the main address at
the convention. This speech, considered by many to be his most compelling,
has been lost. At the Republican national convention, John C. Frémont
was nominated for president. The Illinois delegation proposed Lincoln for
vice president, but, although he received 110 convention votes, the nomination
went to William C. Dayton of New Jersey. Lincoln campaigned for the Republican
ticket in Illinois and in Michigan, but Frémont lost Illinois, as
well as the election, to his Democratic opponent, James Buchanan.
Candidate for United States Senate
Agitation over the slavery issue increased in 1856 and 1857. In the
Dred Scott Case the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Congress could not prohibit
slavery in the territories. In Kansas proslavery and antislavery partisans
were engaged in a bloody civil war for control of the territorial government.
Northern abolitionists demanded the immediate destruction of slavery, while
Southern apologists insisted that their "peculiar institution" was beneficial
to both slaveowner and slave.
In 1858 Senator Douglas came up for reelection. The Republican Party
nominated Lincoln to oppose him. In his acceptance speech before the Republican
state convention in Springfield, Lincoln said, "A house divided against
itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently
half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved; I
do not expect the house to fall; but I do expect it will cease to be divided.
It will become all one thing, or all the other." This was Lincoln's most
extreme statement against slavery. Although he returned to his more moderate
position as expressed in the Peoria speech, his opponents used the militant
words of the "house divided" speech against him.
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
Both Lincoln and Douglas were excellent speakers. When Douglas was told
that Lincoln was his opponent, he said, "I shall have my hands full. He
is the strong man of the party-full of wit, facts, dates-and the best stump
speaker, with his droll ways and dry jokes, in the West."
The campaign opened in Chicago. Douglas defended popular sovereignty
and attacked Lincoln for his "house divided" speech. He accused Lincoln
of trying to divide the nation. Lincoln replied by calling for national
unity. Recalling the Declaration of Independence, the document on which
the United States was founded, he said, "Let us discard all this quibbling
about this man and the other man-this race and that race and the other
race, being inferior, and therefore they must be placed in an inferior
position. Let us discard all these things, and unite as one people throughout
the land, until we shall once more stand up declaring that all men are
created equal."
In July, Lincoln challenged Douglas to a series of face-to-face debates.
Douglas accepted. It was arranged that seven three-hour debates would be
held in seven different cities between August and October. In the debates,
both candidates respected each other and kept to the issues. The crux of
the discussion was the morality of slavery.
The debates captivated Illinois. About 10,000 people listened to the
first debate under a blazing hot sun at Ottawa. Over 15,000 listened in
drizzling rain at Freeport. Even in the small towns where the candidates
spoke alone, crowds of as many as 6000 were common. The newspapers carried
the arguments of each candidate throughout the nation.
Freeport Doctrine
In the second debate, at Freeport, Lincoln asked Douglas whether the
people of a territory could lawfully exclude slavery prior to the formation
of a state constitution. Douglas replied that slavery could be excluded
from a territory, despite the Dred Scott decision, if the people refused
to enact the necessary local laws for its protection. This opinion, known
as the Freeport Doctrine, cost Douglas much of his support among Southern
Democrats who were thinking of him as a presidential candidate in 1860.
In the last debate, at Alton, Lincoln said, "The sentiment that contemplates
the institution of slavery in this country as a wrong is the sentiment
of the Republican Party. On the other hand, I have said there is a sentiment
which treats it as not being wrong.…That class will include all men who
positively assert that it is right, and all who like Judge Douglas treat
it as indifferent and do not say it is either right or wrong."
Lincoln believed he had a good chance of defeating Douglas. Indeed,
the Republicans won a majority of the popular votes, but the lame-duck
legislature, which was Democratic, reelected Douglas by a vote of 54 to
46. Lincoln was not too disappointed about the results. He wrote in a letter
to a friend, "I am glad I made the late race. It gave me a hearing on the
great and durable question of the age, which I could have had in no other
way; and though I now sink out of view, and shall be forgotten, I believe
I have made some remarks which will tell for the cause of civil liberty
long after I am gone."
Election of 1860
The Lincoln-Douglas debates brought Lincoln national recognition. He
accepted invitations to speak in Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, Iowa, Wisconsin,
and at the Cooper Union college in New York City.
Cooper Union Speech
On February 27, 1860, at Cooper Union, Lincoln addressed a crowd of
1500 New Yorkers who had braved a snowstorm to hear him speak. The speech
was sponsored by the Young Men's Republican Union, a group opposed to the
radical antislavery views of U.S. Senator William H. Seward of New York.
Seward was then the leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination.
Lincoln made a careful speech, moderate in tone and conciliatory to the
South. He denied that the Republican Party was a Northern party alone,
and he repudiated the violent abolitionist John Brown for his attempt to
start a slave rebellion. He also denied that the Republican Party intended
to interfere with the existing system in the South. "Wrong as we think
slavery is," he said, "we can yet afford to leave it alone where it is."
It was one of his most stirring speeches, and was met with much applause
and cheering. A reporter wrote, "No man ever before made such an impression
on his first appeal to a New York audience." As a result of this speech,
Lincoln became a leading contender for the Republican presidential nomination.
Presidential Nomination
In 1860 the Illinois Republican state convention met and named Lincoln
as its choice for president. In May the Republican national convention
met in Chicago. The chief contenders for the presidential nomination were
Seward, Lincoln, Governor Salmon P. Chase of Ohio, Senator Simon Cameron
of Pennsylvania, and former congressman Edward Bates of Missouri. Because
of their strong positions against slavery and the South, Seward and Chase
did not have the support of the moderates. As a member of the American,
or "Know-Nothing," Party in earlier years, Bates had offended foreign-born
Americans. Cameron was involved with political scandals in his home state.
Only Lincoln was acceptable to all factions of the party.
On the first ballot, Seward led with 173-1/2 votes. Lincoln had 102,
Cameron had 50-1/2, Chase had 49, and Bates had 35. On the second ballot,
Cameron withdrew, and most of the Pennsylvania delegation switched to Lincoln.
Seward now had 184-1/2 votes, Lincoln 181, Chase 42-1/2, and Bates 35.
On the third ballot, four Ohio delegates changed their votes to Lincoln.
This started a stampede on his behalf, and when his nomination was secure,
the convention voted to make him their unanimous choice for president.
To balance the ticket politically and geographically, the convention
chose a former Democrat, Senator Hannibal Hamlin of Maine, as its vice
presidential candidate. The party's policies, or platform, included a moderate
antislavery position designed to appease the South: slavery was not to
be extended, but would not be abolished where it existed. Also included
were a high tariff (tax on imports) to appeal to the industrial North,
and the promise of free land for settlers to satisfy the West. California
and Oregon voters were promised a railroad to the Pacific Coast, and support
for river and harbor projects carried on the Whig tradition of internal
improvements.
Opposing Candidates
At the Democrats' convention, held in Charleston, South Carolina, the
party was split into Northern and Southern factions over the slavery question.
The convention nominated Stephen Douglas for president, and this so incensed
the Southern delegates that many of them walked out. Later they held a
separate convention and nominated John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky. A fourth
party, the Constitutional Union Party, nominated John Bell of Tennessee
on a brief platform calling only for the preservation of the Union.
Election Returns
Following the custom of the day, Lincoln remained in Springfield while
other Republicans campaigned on his behalf. With the Democratic Party split,
his victory was virtually assured. He received 180 electoral votes, a majority.
Breckinridge, who carried the entire Deep South, was second with 72. Bell
received 39 and Douglas 12. However, Lincoln won only 40 percent of the
popular vote. Of the total votes cast, he won 1,865,593, Douglas 1,382,713,
Breckinridge 848,356, and Bell 592,906. Lincoln failed to win a single
electoral vote in ten Southern states.
President of the United States
First Year in Office
Even before election day, Southern militants were threatening to secede
from the Union if Lincoln was elected. In December, with the Republican
victory final, South Carolina seceded. By February, Mississippi, Florida,
Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas had followed. These states joined
together to form the Confederate States of America, also known as the Confederacy.
President Buchanan did nothing to stop the secessionist movement, and President-elect
Lincoln was not yet in a position to intercede. Lincoln remained silent
on the issue, believing that, in time, Union sentiment would reassert itself
in the South and the secession of the seven states would come to an end.
On February 11, 1861, Lincoln bade farewell to his neighbors in Springfield
and set out for Washington, D.C. He now had a beard, which he had grown
at the suggestion of a young girl during the campaign. Alluding to the
troubled days ahead, he told his friends, "Today I leave you; I go to assume
a task more difficult than that which devolved upon General Washington.
Unless the great God who assisted him, shall be with and aid me, I must
fail. But if the same omniscient mind, and almighty arm that directed and
protected him, shall guide and support me, I shall not fail, I shall succeed.
Let us all pray that the God of our fathers may not forsake us now."
On the way to Washington, Lincoln made many short speeches, but he
did not commit himself to a specific policy regarding the South. Because
of a rumor of an assassination plot against him in Baltimore, he was secretly
spirited through that city and into Washington by night. The opposition
press ridiculed this undignified entry of the president-elect into the
capital.
First Inaugural Address
On March 4, 1861, Lincoln was sworn in as the 16th president of the
United States. Ironically, he received the oath of office from Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court Roger B. Taney, whose decision in the Dred Scott Case
was a direct cause of the crisis Lincoln now faced.
Lincoln's inaugural address was aimed at allaying Southern fears. His
opening words were, "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere
with the institution of slavery in the states where it exists. I believe
I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so." But
he flatly rejected the right of any state to secede from the Union, and
he announced that he would "hold, occupy, and possess" the property and
places belonging to the federal government. Such a threat was necessary
because the rebellious states had already seized federal forts, arsenals
and customhouses within their boundaries. Even with this threat, Lincoln's
tone was moderate. "The government will not assail you," he addressed the
South. "You can have no conflict, without being yourselves the aggressors.
You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while
I shall have the most solemn one to 'preserve, protect and defend' it."
Lincoln's Cabinet
To his Cabinet, Lincoln appointed his rivals for the Republican presidential
nomination and other leading Republicans. He made Seward secretary of state,
Chase secretary of the treasury, Cameron secretary of war, and Bates attorney
general. Gideon Welles of Connecticut became secretary of the navy, and
Caleb B. Smith of Indiana became secretary of the interior. Montgomery
Blair of Maryland was named postmaster general.
After one month in office, Lincoln still had not decided on a policy
of action against the secessionist states. Seward, therefore, decided to
supply the president with one. In a memo entitled "Some Thoughts for the
President's Consideration," Seward suggested that the administration should
provoke a war with a foreign nation so as to unite the country in a wave
of patriotism. Seward also suggested that he, rather than Lincoln, might
be better equipped to formulate the administration's policy. Lincoln tactfully
put his presumptuous Secretary of State in his place. Seward knew he had
met his match. "Executive force and vigor are rare qualities," he wrote
his wife. "The President is the best of us." In time, Seward was to become
Lincoln's most trusted aide.
Lincoln also had to contend with Chase's presidential ambitions and
Cameron's inefficiency. He kept Chase in the Cabinet for four years and
then appointed him chief justice of the Supreme Court. But in January 1862
he replaced Cameron with Edwin M. Stanton, who had been Buchanan's attorney
general. With the exception of Cameron, Lincoln's Cabinet appointments
were good. An inefficient administrator himself, he was able to delegate
less important administrative tasks to his Cabinet while he worked on more
important issues.
Fort Sumter
Lincoln feared that taking direct action against the Confederacy would
lead to the secession of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas.
But events at Fort Sumter forced him to act. Fort Sumter was located at
the entrance to the harbor of Charleston and was occupied by a small detachment
of federal troops commanded by Major Robert Anderson. The South demanded
the evacuation of the fort because it was in Confederate territory. Because
Major Anderson was short on supplies and could not get any in Charleston,
a direct confrontation was unavoidable. Early in April, Lincoln decided
to send supplies to the fort by sea. Hoping that the ships would be able
to land at the fort peacefully, he informed the governor of South Carolina
of his intention. The governor notified Confederate President Jefferson
Davis.
The Civil War Begins
Davis and his cabinet instructed Confederate General Pierre Gustave
Toutant Beauregard to demand the fort's surrender. Anderson refused this
ultimatum, and at 4:30 AM on April 12, 1861, Beauregard's guns opened fire
on Fort Sumter. Lincoln's relief party was unable to land supplies, and
two days later Anderson surrendered the fort.
Lincoln reacted promptly. Using the language and authority of a militia
act of 1795, he declared that in seven states the federal laws were being
opposed "by combinations too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary
course of judicial proceedings." To quell this insurrection he asked the
loyal states to provide 75,000 militia for three months' service. He also
called a special session of Congress to convene on July 4. The Civil War
had begun.
The North immediately rallied around its president. His old opponent,
Stephen Douglas, called at the White House and agreed to tour Illinois
to rally public support. Lincoln's call for arms, however, caused Virginia,
North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas to join their sister slave states
in the Confederacy. The border states, Kentucky, Missouri, and Maryland,
remained in the Union, although many of their people sympathized with and
fought for the Confederacy.
Emergency Measures
Lincoln now took decisive measures to win the war. No American president
had ever faced such a crisis, and Lincoln had to find for himself the necessary
powers by which he could pursue the war and uphold his oath to "preserve,
protect and defend" the Constitution of the United States. Recognizing
the problem, Lincoln said, "It became necessary for me to choose whether,
using only the existing means, agencies, and processes which Congress had
provided, I should let the Government fall at once into ruin or whether,
availing myself of the broader powers conferred by the Constitution in
cases of insurrection, I would make an effort to save it." Lincoln found
the necessary powers in the constitutional clause making him "Commander
in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia
of the several states." He told some visitors to the White House, "As commander
in chief in time of war, I suppose I have a right to take any measure which
may subdue the enemy."
Using this power, Lincoln took a number of vital steps before Congress
convened. Besides summoning the militia, he ordered a blockade of the Confederacy's
ports, expanded the regular army beyond its legal limit, directed government
expenditures in advance of congressional appropriations, and suspended
the legal right of habeas corpus. The suspension of this constitutional
guarantee, by which a person could not be imprisoned indefinitely without
being charged with some specific crime, aroused much opposition throughout
the country. Although Lincoln himself made no concentrated effort to suppress
political opposition, which at times was extremely vocal, the repeal of
habeas corpus enabled overzealous civil and military authorities to imprison
thousands of people who were vocal in their opposition to the war against
the South.
During the war, in the case Ex parte Merryman, Chief Justice Taney
ordered Lincoln to grant a writ of habeas corpus to a Southern agitator
who had been arbitrarily jailed by military authorities in Maryland. Lincoln
ignored the order. After the war, in the case Ex parte Milligan, in an
opinion written by David Davis, the Supreme Court ruled that a president
could not suspend habeas corpus without the consent of Congress.
Lincoln and the Union
By his executive orders, Lincoln showed that he was going to be a strong
president. But his executive leadership went far beyond the mere administration
of the war. By word and deed he became, to many people in the North, a
symbol of the Union. Without this strong belief in the Union, the war could
not have been won. Despite the superior manpower and resources of the North,
the Confederacy had one great advantage. This was the same advantage George
Washington had had against the British in the American Revolution. It is
far more expensive and time consuming to invade an area than it is to defend
it. The North had to carry the battle to the South and defeat the rebel
army. This meant that progress in the war was slow at first, and Lincoln
used all the persuasive powers at his command to prevent the North from
becoming disillusioned.
Lincoln never lost sight of his responsibility to preserve the Union.
Even the crusade against slavery remained a secondary purpose of the war.
"What I do about slavery and the colored race," he wrote to newspaper publisher
Horace Greeley, "I do because I believe it helps to save the Union." By
this sentiment, Lincoln was able to sustain the spirit of the North through
numerous defeats and failures in the bloodiest war the world had yet known.
Lincoln never recognized the Confederacy as an independent nation. He considered
the Southern states only to be in rebellion against the federal government.
Beyond preservation of the Union lay an even more profound issue, the
future of democracy throughout the world. The United States had long been
a symbol of hope to democrats the world over, and Lincoln realized that
the future of representative government might depend on the outcome of
the war. "This is essentially a people's contest," Lincoln told Congress.
It was the destiny of the Union "to demonstrate to the world that those
who can fairly carry out an election can also suppress a rebellion; and
ballots are the rightful successors to bullets…"
Wartime President
Lincoln had little military training or experience, but was often called
upon to make decisions that would ordinarily be made by professional military
people. Although the advice he got on military matters was often conflicting,
most of his decisions were good. Political considerations played an important
part in shaping Lincoln's military strategy.
During the spring and summer of 1861 many people in the North called
for military action against the South. The North expected a brief struggle
and an easy victory. But the first Union offensive put an end to this optimism.
In July, Brigadier General Irvin McDowell, leading the federal Army of
the Potomac, was defeated in Virginia in the first Battle of Bull Run,
or First Manassas, as it is called in the South. For the first time the
North realized that it faced a long, hard war. After this defeat, Lincoln
removed McDowell and placed Major General George B. McClellan in command
of the Army of the Potomac. McClellan soon restored the army's morale and
whipped it into a superb fighting force.
Despite his strong distaste for war, Lincoln was not afraid to wage
total war to achieve total victory. Finding a general who was both competent
and willing to carry the fight to the Confederacy was his greatest military
problem. He had to appoint many politicians to important field commands
and, while some made excellent soldiers, others blundered tragically. McClellan
was a capable professional soldier but proved overly cautious after his
strong start. When Lincoln finally settled on General Ulysses S. Grant
as his overall commander in 1864, he never wavered in giving Grant his
complete support, although victory came slowly and the casualties were
appallingly high.
The Jacobins
Early in the war a group of radical Republicans, called the Jacobins,
began to oppose Lincoln's policies. The Jacobins called for immediate action
against the South, freeing of the slaves, and punitive measures against
Southern leaders. Some of them thought the war should be fought as a holy
crusade to destroy the evil, slaveholding South. Others wanted merely to
extend Republican influence into the South by taking political power away
from the white man and giving it to the freed black population. They confidently
expected that blacks would thereafter vote Republican.
The Jacobins also believed that Lincoln had usurped congressional power
in his conduct of the war. They controlled the joint Congressional Committee
on the Conduct of the War, led by the radical Senator Benjamin F. Wade
of Ohio, and used it to try to dictate the direction of the war. The Jacobins
were especially opposed to McClellan, who was a conservative Democrat.
Despite continuous pressure, Lincoln supported the general. He told McClellan,
"…you must not fight till you are ready."
The Trent Affair
In the winter of 1861 the Union became involved with Great Britain in
an incident, known as the Trent Affair, that almost led to war. The Confederacy
had sent James Murray Mason and John Slidell to Britain and France to win
support for the Southern cause. After slipping through the Northern blockade
to Cuba, they boarded the British ship Trent. On its first day at sea the
ship was stopped and searched by a Union naval captain, Charles Wilkes,
and the two Southerners were taken off the ship as prisoners. Wilkes's
act was a violation of the international law over which the United States
had gone to war with Britain in 1812. Britain demanded an apology and the
release of the two prisoners. Wilkes was a hero in the North, and many
Union partisans were demanding war against Britain. Lincoln patiently let
the agitators have their say. Then he released the Southern envoys, and
Britain agreed to accept Lincoln's assurance that Wilkes had acted without
authority. In this way, Lincoln averted what might have been a fatal conflict
with Britain.
Second Year in Office
In the spring of 1862, McClellan began the so-called Peninsular Campaign.
He advanced by way of the peninsula between the James and York rivers in
Virginia, with the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia, as his goal.
Fearing an attack on Washington by Confederate forces led by General Thomas
J. "Stonewall" Jackson, Lincoln diverted 40,000 of McClellan's troops for
the defense of the capital. But the Army of the Potomac was still larger
than its adversary. McClellan advanced on Confederate troops protecting
Richmond, and his army fought well in the resulting Seven Days' Battle.
McClellan, however, was unwilling to commit his troops for a decisive offense,
and he ordered a retreat even though he had suffered fewer casualties than
his opponent. In August the Confederates led by General Robert E. Lee defeated
Major General John Pope's Army of Virginia in the second Battle of Bull
Run. Finally, in September, the Union won a minor victory at the Battle
of Antietam in Maryland. Lincoln chose this opportunity to issue his Emancipation
Proclamation.
Emancipation Proclamation
Lincoln had given much thought to the problem of slavery, and he was
under continual pressure from the Jacobins and the abolitionists to free
the slaves. On April 16, 1862, he signed a bill that abolished slavery
in Washington, D.C., with compensation to the slaveholders and voluntary
colonization in tropical lands for the slaves. This bill was similar to
the one Lincoln proposed in Congress years earlier.
As much as Lincoln abhorred slavery, the political situation prevented
him from freeing the slaves elsewhere. The slaveholding border state of
Kentucky was key to Union policy. Because of its strategic location on
the Ohio River, which would have made an easily defended border for the
South, it had to be kept in the Union. And, in his inaugural address, Lincoln
had promised not to interfere with slavery. To do so would have meant the
loss of Maryland, Missouri, and Kentucky to the Confederacy. Consequently,
in 1861, when Major General John C. Frémont freed the slaves in
his military district in Missouri, and in May 1862, when Major General
David Hunter freed the slaves in his southern military district, Lincoln
rescinded their orders. His patience was rewarded, for the border states
remained loyal.
By July 1862, through a combination of military pressure, arrest of
dissenters, and respect for neutrals, the border states appeared to be
safely in the Union. At this time Lincoln informed the Cabinet of his decision
to emancipate (free) the slaves. On Seward's advice, he withheld the proclamation
until it could be coupled with the announcement of a Union military victory.
On September 22, 1862, immediately after Antietam, Lincoln issued his
preliminary Proclamation of Emancipation. In this document, Lincoln announced
that on January 1, 1863, all slaves residing in a rebellious state would
"be then, thenceforward, and forever free…" With this 100-day warning,
Lincoln gave the rebellious states an opportunity to rejoin the Union with
slavery intact. Lincoln did not have the power to free the slaves except
as a necessity of war. The proclamation was a military decree, directed
only at those states at war with the Union.
The Emancipation Proclamation was formally issued on January 1, 1863.
It did not affect border states in the Union or areas in the rebellious
states under federal control. For these states, Lincoln encouraged voluntary,
compensated emancipation. To assure the legality of emancipation, Lincoln
pressed for the passage of a constitutional amendment that would bar slavery
from the United States forever. Later, acceptance of the 13th Amendment
to the Constitution became a condition whereby Southern states were readmitted
to the Union.
Effects of Emancipation
The Emancipation Proclamation hastened the defeat of the Confederacy
because it deprived the South of much-needed labor. About 3.5 million black
slaves, out of a total population of 9.5 million, had grown the food and
fiber needed by the Confederate Army. They had also dug trenches, built
fortifications and served as teamsters for the army. In the proclamation,
Lincoln invited the blacks to join the Union Army. Almost 186,000 former
slaves did so. Most of them served behind the lines, thus freeing regular
soldiers for active duty. Those who saw action fought bravely.
The Emancipation Proclamation also isolated the Confederacy from potential
allies in Europe. As the North suffered defeat after defeat, France and
Great Britain threatened to recognize the Confederate government and give
it aid. The cause of Union doubtless meant nothing to the people of these
countries, but the cause of freedom did. Freeing the slaves brought them
and their governments over to the Northern side.
A Succession of Defeats
From the high point of Antietam, the political and military situation
worsened. In the autumn elections the Republicans lost control of five
states, including Illinois. The North was becoming tired of the war.
When McClellan refused to take the offensive after Antietam, Lincoln
replaced him with Major General Ambrose E. Burnside. In December 1862,
Burnside was defeated by Lee at Fredericksburg, Virginia. Union casualties
exceeded 12,000, and the cry went up for new political and military leadership.
The war also went badly in the West. Major General Don C. Buell was sent
to take eastern Tennessee, where Union sentiment was strong. Like McClellan,
however, he was too cautious and the Confederate army of General Braxton
Bragg, eluded him. Lincoln then replaced him with Major General William
S. Rosecrans. In December, "Old Rosey" repulsed Bragg at Murfreesboro,
Tennessee, but the battle losses were so great that his army was out of
action for months.
Cabinet Crisis
In December 1862, Lincoln faced a crisis in his Cabinet. Secretary of
the Treasury Chase had sought the support of the Jacobins to strengthen
his chances for the Republican presidential nomination of 1864. These radical
Republicans, looking for an opportunity to discredit Lincoln, turned against
Secretary of State Seward, a former radical who now agreed with the president
on most matters. They demanded that Seward be removed from the Cabinet
and replaced as secretary of state by Chase. Lincoln needed Seward in the
Cabinet, but he also needed Chase and the support of the radical wing of
the party. It took all of Lincoln's great political skill to remain in
control of his Cabinet and party.
Seward, unwilling to embarrass the president, resigned at once. Lincoln
then called a meeting in which the other Cabinet members and the Jacobin
senators were present. Confronted with his fellow Cabinet members, Chase
could not attack Seward and Lincoln as he had done in private with the
senators. Chase offered to resign. Lincoln refused to accept either his
or Seward's resignation, and the two men returned to their posts. Chase
and his allies now knew that in Lincoln they faced a skilled and resolute
politician.
Growth of the Union
The Civil War stimulated industry and agriculture in the North and West.
The Union grew at a rapid rate. Between 1861 and 1865, 800,000 Europeans
immigrated to the North, and 300,000 emigrants traveled west to settle
in California and Oregon. To promote settlement, Lincoln signed three important
acts in 1862. The Homestead Act offered settlers 62 hectares (160 acres)
of Western land each (see Homestead Laws). The settler had only to reside
on and use the land for five years and pay a nominal fee to the government.
The Morrill Act gave the states free land to establish agricultural and
mechanical colleges. The Pacific Railway Act incorporated the Union Pacific
and Central Pacific railroads for the construction of a transcontinental
railroad, which had long been a national goal to speed the development
of the West. During Lincoln's administration, Kansas, Nevada, and West
Virginia (the part of Virginia loyal to the Union) were granted statehood.
Third Year in Office
After Fredericksburg, Lincoln replaced Burnside with Major General Joseph
Hooker, who was promptly defeated at the Battle of Chancellorsville in
Virginia. The soldiers fought bravely, but once again their generals failed
them. Now Lee turned his army north to invade Pennsylvania. Lincoln replaced
Hooker with Major General George G. Meade.
The two armies met at the Battle of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania during
the first days of July 1863. Meade chose to stay on the defensive, and
for three days his Army of the Potomac repulsed Lee's assaults. On July
5, Lee retreated. His army had been beaten badly. Meade's troops had also
suffered heavy casualties, and he let Lee get away. On the day Lee withdrew,
Lincoln received word that General Grant had captured Vicksburg, Mississippi,
the key Confederate fort on the Mississippi River (see Vicksburg, Campaign
of). In November, Grant won a resounding victory at the Battle of Chattanooga,
in Tennessee. Here at last was a general who would fight.
The Draft
In 1862 the Confederacy issued a draft (conscription) call for all men
between the ages of 18 and 45. In March 1863 the North passed a conscription
act of its own. By its terms all men between the ages of 20 and 45 were
liable to military service. However, any man who was called for the draft
could avoid it by hiring a substitute or paying $300 to the government.
Prior to the draft the Union depended on the states to fill assigned
quotas with volunteers. By offering sizable bounties, this system had worked
well. Because of the bounty and a desire "to see this thing through," many
volunteers reenlisted for the duration of the war. These veterans formed
the nucleus of the Union Army. Out of an army of 1.8 million, only 46,347
were draftees. Another 73,607 were substitutes for men who had been called
for the draft. This was only 6 percent of the Union forces. In the South,
the draft system provided 20 percent of the forces: 120,000 draftees and
70,000 substitutes.
Many groups rightfully denounced the conscription act as a rich man's
law. Indeed, many wealthy men were able to bribe poorer men to take their
place in the army. Violent opposition from workingmen and immigrants flared
in many places. Draft riots broke out for five days in New York City, and
troops returning from Gettysburg had to be called in to quell the disturbance.
Although Lincoln was upset by these riots, he dared not suspend the draft.
Reconstruction
Lincoln gave frequent consideration to the problem of reconstructing
the governments of the rebel states and restoring them to their rightful
place in the Union. Whenever Union armies gained control in a rebellious
area, he encouraged the local people to form a government loyal to the
Union. On December 8, 1863, Lincoln offered his Proclamation of Amnesty
and Reconstruction to the Southern people. This is often called Lincoln's
10 percent plan of Reconstruction after one of its provisions.
In this document, Lincoln offered a full pardon, or amnesty, to any
Southerner, with the exception of certain leaders, who would take an oath
to support "the Constitution of the United States and the Union of the
States thereunder." Furthermore, those who took the oath in each state
could vote to form a new state government. Lincoln promised to recognize
the new government if two conditions were met: the new government outlawed
slavery; and the number of those voting for the new government was at least
10 percent of those who had voted in the 1860 presidential election.
Lincoln was convinced that Reconstruction, or restoration, as he preferred
to call it, was for the president to carry out. Congressional leaders thought
otherwise. The Jacobins had a plan of reconstruction all their own, expressed
in the Wade-Davis bill of July 1864. It was designed to punish the South
for past transgressions and to make it subservient to the Republican Party
of the North. The bill limited voting on new state constitutions to those
who had never joined the rebel cause, required a loyalty oath by the majority
of a state's citizens, and permanently deprived former rebel leaders of
the right to vote. Lincoln killed the bill by using his pocket veto, and
as long as he lived this plan made little headway.
Financing the War
The Union was faced with the problem of raising huge sums of money to
fight the war. New federal taxes were levied on legal documents, inheritances,
and personal income, and the tariff was raised. The federal government
also began printing paper money, which people called greenbacks because
of the color of the ink. By 1863, $450 million worth of greenbacks were
in use. The greenbacks' value was based only on the government's declaration
of value. By contrast, the national bank notes that were also in circulation
could be exchanged for their face value in gold. The value of a greenback
varied and was usually lower than that of gold. At one point, $1.00 in
gold was worth $2.85 in greenbacks. The increase in the money supply also
caused prices to rise.
Bonds were another way to raise money. In February 1863, Lincoln signed
the National Banking Act to make it easier to sell government bonds. The
act also provided for a system of federally chartered, privately owned
national banks that could issue notes (the national bank notes) backed
by government bonds. The credit extended by the national banks increased
the money supply while the conditions imposed by their charters created
a safe, uniform national currency. Each bank was required by its charter
to maintain adequate cash reserves, redeem notes issued by any other national
bank, and stay within credit limits set by a federal official, the comptroller
of the currency.
As revised the next year, this act was the basis of the American banking
system until the Federal Reserve System began in 1913. It ended the era
when state-chartered banks issued their own currency, which had been the
system since President Andrew Jackson closed the government's central bank,
the Second Bank of the United States, in 1836. However, instead of returning
to a central bank, the nation now had private banks that were centrally
regulated from Washington.
Gettysburg Address
On November 19, 1863, Lincoln was called upon to deliver a "few appropriate
remarks" at the ceremony dedicating a military cemetery at the Gettysburg
battle site. The distinguished orator Edward Everett made the main address.
It lasted two hours. Then Lincoln spoke. Although his speech was brief,
it was a masterpiece. In it he rededicated the war effort to the principles
of democracy. (For the text of this great speech, see Gettysburg Address).
Fourth Year in Office
Besides the terrible burden of war, Lincoln endured many personal trials
while in the White House. The strain of war was almost too much for Mrs.
Lincoln. Four of her brothers were killed fighting for the Confederacy.
A final blow, the death of her son Willie in 1862, left her mentally ill
and morbidly preoccupied with death. She refused to allow her eldest son,
Robert, to enter the army. He remained a civilian until the closing days
of the war, when Lincoln secured him a relatively safe position on General
Grant's staff.
Although weary and saddened by Willie's death and the terrible toll
of the war, Lincoln continued to devote full time to his duties. His amazing
physical strength enabled him to work long hours, but in spite of his many
duties he found time to talk with the many visitors who called at the White
House. Nothing was too small to escape his attention. He made a special
effort to review death sentences by military courts-martial. He often sent
urgent notes to his military commander about particular cases, and wherever
possible he urged leniency. "Let him fight instead of being shot," read
one such note. And to Stanton he wrote, "Injustice has probably been done
in this case, Sec. of War please examine it."
Final Military Strategy
In March 1864, Lincoln promoted Grant to lieutenant general and commander
in chief of all Union armies. Grant gave Major General William Tecumseh
Sherman full command in the West while he himself came east to lead Meade's
Army of the Potomac against Lee's veterans. Grant's overall strategy was
bold. Instead of going after key Southern cities, he decided to attack
principal Southern armies. Grant's objective was Lee, while Sherman was
"to go for Joe Johnston," the commander of the Confederate Army of Tennessee.
In so doing, Sherman was to strike toward Atlanta, Georgia, and then march
across Georgia to the sea, destroying the resources of the Confederacy
as he went. The strategy was similar to the modern concept of total war,
and a man with less determination than Lincoln would have shied away from
such a commitment to destruction.
Presidential Nominations
Democrats and radical Republicans were dissatisfied with Lincoln's policies.
The radicals first favored Chase and then Frémont for the 1864 presidential
election. A splinter group did, in fact, nominate Frémont for president.
But the moderate Republicans remained faithful to their leader, and, because
the radicals could not get support for their candidate, Lincoln was unanimously
nominated for president by the official Republican convention. Senator
Andrew Johnson, a Democrat from Tennessee and the only congressman from
a secessionist state to remain loyal to the Union, was nominated for vice
president. The platform called for a constitutional amendment abolishing
slavery.
The Democrats nominated General McClellan as their presidential candidate.
He was immensely popular with the soldiers of the Army of the Potomac,
and many people believed that Lincoln had been unjustified in relieving
him of his command after Antietam. The Democratic platform called for an
immediate end to the war, which was characterized as "four years of failure."
However, McClellan, who favored continuing the war, disavowed his party's
platform.
Election of 1864
In the spring and summer of 1864, Lincoln did not think he would win
the election. Grant's offensive was stalled at Petersburg, Virginia, and
Sherman had not yet delivered a decisive blow against Johnston. In July,
Washington itself was briefly threatened by a Confederate force under General
Jubal Early. The Jacobins, as always, were a continual source of trouble
for Lincoln. In August, U.S. Senator Benjamin F. Wade and U.S. Representative
Henry W. Davis published a manifesto bitterly denouncing Lincoln's lenient
Reconstruction policy.
Finally, in September the political and military situation took a turn
for the better. Moderate Republicans prevailed on Frémont to withdraw
from the race, and the party united behind Lincoln. Sherman took Atlanta
and forced the Confederates to retreat north to Tennessee. Major General
Philip Sheridan, on orders from Grant, destroyed the Shenandoah Valley,
the breadbasket of Lee's army. Victory seemed near at last.
Under these conditions, Lincoln won an easy victory. He had 212 electoral
votes to McClellan's 21. The Democrats carried only Kentucky, Delaware,
and New Jersey. Lincoln polled 2,206,938 popular votes to McClellan's 1,803,787.
Even the soldier vote went to Lincoln, or "Father Abraham," as he was called.
Hampton Roads Conference
In December, Major General George H. Thomas's army smashed the Confederate
Army of Tennessee at the Battle of Nashville. In December, Sherman took
Savannah, Georgia, and began his march north to join Grant's army, which
was ready for a final breakthrough at Petersburg. In February 1865, Lincoln
and Seward met with Lincoln's old friend, Confederate Vice President Stephens,
and two other Southern representatives at Hampton Roads, Virginia, to discuss
peace terms. Lincoln refused to recognize the Confederacy as an independent
nation, and he insisted on the restoration of the Union without slavery.
He offered pardons to all former Confederates and promised to recommend
compensation of slave owners for their losses. But even these terms were
unacceptable to the South (see Hampton Roads Conference).
Second Term as President
At his second inaugural on March 3, 1865, Lincoln made a speech that
stands among the greatest pronouncements in history. At the threshold of
victory, Lincoln spoke only of peace and of ending the nation's sectional
differences. His closing lines are among the most eloquent in the English
language: "With malice toward none, with charity for all; with firmness
in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish
the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who
shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan-to do all
which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace, among ourselves,
and with all nations."
Surrender at Appomattox Court House
In the closing days of March, Sherman and Grant met with Lincoln to
discuss terms of surrender. Lincoln told his generals that he hoped to
get the troops of both sides back to their farms, stores, and families
as speedily as possible. In early April, Grant took Petersburg and the
Union army entered Richmond. Lincoln made a short trip to the fallen Confederate
capital, and he was cheered wildly by freed slaves and Union soldiers.
A Union general asked Lincoln how the conquered people of Richmond should
be treated, and Lincoln answered, "If I were in your place, I'd let 'em
up easy, let 'em up easy." On April 9, 1865, just as Lincoln returned to
Washington, Lee surrendered his army to Grant at Appomattox Court House,
a village in Virginia. The war was all but over.
Two days later, Lincoln addressed a celebrating crowd gathered outside
the White House. Again he called for national unity and goodwill toward
the defeated South. He appealed to his audience to "join in doing the acts
necessary to restoring the practical relations between these states and
the Union."
Assassination of Lincoln
Standing in that crowd listening to Lincoln speak was an angry, half-crazed
actor with pro-Southern sympathies, John Wilkes Booth. Booth had planned
for some time to kidnap Lincoln and take him to Richmond. However, when
Richmond fell, Booth decided on murder. He planned to assassinate Lincoln
on Good Friday, April 14, 1865.
On that day, Lincoln and his wife, along with General and Mrs. Grant,
were to attend a performance of a comic melodrama, Our American Cousin,
at Ford's Theatre in Washington. Early that day, Lincoln held a Cabinet
meeting at which Secretary of the Treasury McCulloch noted that he had
never seen the president "so cheerful and happy." Lincoln told his Cabinet
about a dream he had had the previous night, which he interpreted to mean
that a final victory for Sherman was near. In this happy mood he did not
mention another recent dream in which he had followed a crowd of people
into the East Room of the White House. There he saw his corpse laid out,
and he heard people say, "Lincoln is dead."
That night the Lincolns went to the theater as scheduled. General and
Mrs. Grant had been called away, and Miss Clara Harris and her fiancé,
Major Henry R. Rathborn, occupied their places in the president's box.
At about 10:30 PM, Booth made his way into the box. Choosing a moment when
all attention was fixed on the stage, he put a pistol to Lincoln's head
and fired once. The President slumped in his seat, unconscious. Booth leaped
to the stage, shouting "Sic semper tyrannis," the Virginia state motto,
meaning "Thus ever to tyrants." He made his escape, but was killed while
resisting arrest 12 days later. The same day Lincoln was shot, an accomplice
of Booth made an attack on Seward, but the secretary lived.
The stricken president was taken to a lodging house across the street
from the theater. Mrs. Lincoln, friends, and Cabinet members waited through
the night while doctors worked to save Lincoln's life. At 7:20 AM on Saturday,
April 15, 1865, Lincoln died. As they covered his face with a sheet, Secretary
Stanton said, "Now he belongs to the ages." A few hours later, Vice President
Andrew Johnson was sworn in as president.
Lincoln's body lay in state in the East Room of the White House. On
April 19, Lincoln was given a military funeral in Washington. Two days
later his coffin was placed on a special train that carried his body back
to Springfield. On May 4 the train reached the end of its journey, and
Lincoln was buried in Oak Ridge Cemetery, near his home in Springfield.
Of all the American presidents, Lincoln is probably the one about whom
the most has been written. Many critical evaluations of his life have been
published, but they have not diminished his stature, and he remains one
of the foremost products of American democracy and an eloquent spokesman
for its ideals.
"Lincoln, Abraham," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996
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