Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln was the 16th president of the United States. Born in a
log cabin in the backwoods, Lincoln was almost entirely self-educated.
In 1831 he settled in New Salem, Ill., and worked as a storekeeper,
surveyor, and postmaster while studying law. The story of his brief love
affair there with Anne Rutledge is now discredited. In 1834 he was
elected to the state legislature, and in 1836 he became a lawyer. He
served one term (1847–49) in Congress as a Whig; in 1855 he sought to
become a senator but failed. In 1856 he joined the new Republican Party.
He ran again in 1858 for the Senate against Stephen A. Douglas, and in a
spirited campaign he and Douglas engaged in seven debates. Lincoln was
not an abolitionist, but he regarded slavery as an evil and opposed its
extension. Although he lost the election, he had by now made a name for
himself, and in 1860 he was nominated by the Republicans for president.
He ran against a divided Democratic party and was elected with a
minority of the popular vote.
To the
South, Lincoln's election was a signal for secession. By Inauguration
Day seven states had seceded, and four more seceded after he issued a
summons to the militia. It is generally agreed that Lincoln handled the
vast problems of the Civil War with skill and vigor. Besides conducting
the war, he faced opposition in the North from radical abolitionists,
who considered him too mild, and from conservatives, who were gloomy
over the prospects of success in the war. His cabinet was rent by
internal hatred, and the progress of the war went against the North at
first. In 1863 he moved to free the slaves by issuing the Emancipation
Proclamation, but preserving the Union remained his main war aim. His
thoughts on the war were beautifully expressed in the Gettysburg Address
(1863).
In 1864
Lincoln ran for reelection against George B. McClellan and won, partly
because of the favorable turn of military affairs after his appointment
of General Ulysses Grant as commander-in-chief. Lincoln saw the end of
the war but did not live to implement his plan for Reconstruction. On
Apr. 14, 1865, while attending a play at Ford's Theater, in Washington,
D.C., he was shot by the actor John Wilkes Booth. He died the next
morning. As time passed a full-blown "Lincoln legend" grew, and he
became the object of adulation and a symbol of democracy.
Early Life
Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809, near Hodgenville, Kentucky, the
son of Nancy Hanks and Thomas Lincoln, pioneer farmers. At the age of
two he was taken by his parents to nearby Knob Creek and at eight to
Spencer County, Indiana. The following year his mother died. In 1819 his
father married Sarah Bush Johnston, a kindly widow, who soon gained the
boy's affection.
Lincoln grew up a tall, gangling youth, who could hold his own in
physical contests and also showed great intellectual promise, although
he had little formal education. In 1831, after moving with his family to
Macon County, Illinois, he struck out on his own, taking cargo on a
flatboat to New Orleans, Louisiana. He then returned to Illinois and
settled in New Salem, a short-lived community on the Sangamon River,
where he split rails and clerked in a store. He gained the respect of
his fellow townspeople, including the so-called Clary Grove boys, who
had challenged him to physical combat, and was elected captain of his
company in the Black Hawk War (1832). Returning from the war, he began
an unsuccessful venture in shopkeeping that ended when his partner died.
In 1833 he was appointed postmaster but had to supplement his income
with surveying and various other jobs. At the same time he began to
study law. That he gradually paid off his and his deceased partner's
debts firmly established his reputation for honesty. The story of his
romance with Ann Rutledge, a local young woman whom he knew briefly
before her untimely death, is unsubstantiated.
Illinois Politician and Lawyer
Defeated in 1832 in a race for the state legislature, Lincoln was
elected on the Whig ticket two years later and served in the lower house
from 1834 to 1841. He quickly emerged as one of the leaders of the party
and was one of the authors of the removal of the capital to Springfield,
where he settled in 1837. After his admission to the bar (1836), he
entered into successive partnerships with John T. Stuart, Stephen T.
Logan, and William Herndon, and soon won recognition as an effective and
resourceful attorney.
In 1842 Lincoln married Mary Todd, the daughter of a prominent Kentucky
banker, and despite her somewhat difficult disposition, the marriage
seems to have been reasonably successful. The Lincolns had four
children, only one of whom reached adulthood.
His birth in a slave state notwithstanding, Lincoln had long opposed
slavery. In the legislature he voted against resolutions favorable to
the "peculiar institution" and in 1837 was one of two members who signed
a protest against it. Elected to Congress in 1846, he attracted
attention because of his outspoken criticism of the war with Mexico and
formulated a plan for gradual emancipation in the District of Columbia.
He was not an abolitionist, however. Conceding the right of the states
to manage their own affairs, he merely sought to prevent the spread of
human bondage.
National Recognition
Disappointed in a quest for federal office at the end of his one
term in Congress (1847-49), Lincoln returned to Springfield to pursue
his profession. In 1854, however, because of his alarm at Senator
Stephen A. Douglas's Kansas-Nebraska Act, he became politically active
again. Clearly setting forth his opposition to the repeal of the
Missouri Compromise, he argued that the measure was wrong because
slavery was wrong and that Congress should keep the territories free for
actual settlers (as opposed to those who traveled there mainly to vote
for or against slavery). The following year he ran for the U.S. Senate,
but seeing that he could not win, he yielded to Lyman Trumbull, a
Democrat who opposed Douglas's bill. He campaigned for the newly founded
Republican party in 1856, and in 1858 he became its senatorial candidate
against Douglas. In a speech to the party's state convention that year
he warned that "a house divided against itself cannot stand" and
predicted the eventual triumph of freedom. Meeting Douglas in a series
of debates, he challenged his opponent in effect to explain how he could
reconcile his principles of popular sovereignty with the Dred Scott
decision (see Dred Scott Case). In his reply, Douglas reaffirmed his
belief in the practical ability of settlers to keep slavery out of the
territories despite the Supreme Court's denial of their right to do so.
Although Lincoln lost the election to Douglas, the debates won him
national recognition.
Election and Secession Crisis
In 1860 the Republicans, anxious to attract as many different
factions as possible, nominated Lincoln for the presidency on a platform
of slavery restriction, internal improvements, homesteads, and tariff
reform. In a campaign against Douglas and John C. Breckinridge, two
rival Democrats, and John Bell, of the Constitutional Union party,
Lincoln won a majority of the electoral votes and was elected president.
Immediately after the election, South Carolina, followed by six other
Southern states, took steps to secede from the Union. Declaring that
secession was illegal but that he had no power to oppose it, President
James Buchanan preferred to rely on Congress to find a compromise. The
success of this effort, however, depended on Lincoln, the
president-elect, who was open to concessions but refused to countenance
any possible extension of slavery. Thus, the Crittenden Compromise, the
most promising scheme of adjustment, failed, and a new Southern
government was inaugurated in February 1861. See Confederate States of
America.
Lincoln as President
When Lincoln took the oath of office on March 4, 1861, he was
confronted with a hostile Confederacy determined to expand and
threatening the remaining federal forts in the South, the most important
of which was Fort Sumter in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina.
Anxious not to offend the upper South, which had not yet seceded,
Lincoln at first refused to take decisive action. After the failure of
an expedition to Fort Pickens, Florida, however, he decided to relieve
Fort Sumter and informed the governor of South Carolina of his intention
to send food to the beleaguered garrison. The Confederates, unwilling to
permit continued federal occupation of their soil, opened fire to reduce
the fort, thus starting the Civil War. When Lincoln countered with a
call for 75,000 volunteers, the North responded with enthusiasm, but the
upper South seceded.
Military Leadership
As commander in chief, Lincoln encountered great difficulties in the
search for capable generals. After the defeat of Irvin McDowell at the
First Battle of Bull Run, the president appointed George B. McClellan to
lead the eastern army but found him excessively cautious. His Peninsular
campaign against Richmond, Virginia, the Confederate capital, failed,
and Lincoln, whose own strategy had not succeeded in trapping Stonewall
Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, virtually superseded
McClellan with John Pope. When Pope was defeated at the Second Battle of
Bull Run, the president turned once more to McClellan, only to be
disappointed again. Despite his victory at Antietam, Maryland, the
general was so hesitant that Lincoln finally had to remove him. The
president's next choice, Ambrose Burnside, was also unfortunate.
Decisively beaten at Fredericksburg, Virginia, Burnside gave way to
Joseph Hooker, who in turn was routed at Chancellorsville, Virginia.
Then Lincoln appointed George G. Meade, who triumphed at Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania, but failed to follow up his victory. Persisting in his
determination to discover a general who could defeat the Confederates,
the president in 1864 entrusted overall command to Ulysses S. Grant, the
victor at Fort Donelson, Tennessee, Vicksburg, Mississippi, and
Chattanooga, Tennessee. This choice was a good one. Grant, in a series
of coordinated campaigns, finally brought the war to a successful
conclusion.
Emancipation
In dealing with the problem of emancipation, Lincoln proved himself
a masterful statesman. Carefully maneuvering to take advantage of
radical pressure to move forward and conservative entreaties to hold
back, he was able to retain the loyalty of the Democrats and the border
states while still bringing about the final abolition of slavery.
Lincoln pleased the radicals in 1861, when he signed the first
Confiscation Act, freeing slaves used by the Confederates for military
purposes. He deferred to the conservatives when he countermanded
emancipation orders of the Union generals John C. Frémont and David
Hunter, but again courted the radicals by reverting to a cautious
antislavery program. Thus, he exerted pressure on the border states to
inaugurate compensated emancipation, signed the bill for abolition in
the District of Columbia, and consented to the second Confiscation Act.
On July 22, 1862, in response to radical demands and diplomatic
necessity, he told his cabinet that he intended to issue an emancipation
proclamation but took care to soften the blow to the border states by
specifically exempting them. Advised to await some federal victory, he
did not make his proclamation public until September 22, following the
Battle of Antietam, when he announced that all slaves in areas still in
rebellion within 100 days would be "then, thenceforward, and forever,
free." The final Emancipation Proclamation followed on January 1, 1863.
Promulgated by the president in his capacity as commander in chief in
times of actual armed rebellion, it freed slaves in regions held by the
insurgents and authorized the creation of black military units. Lincoln
was determined to place emancipation on a more permanent basis, however,
and in 1864 he advocated the adoption of an antislavery amendment to the
U.S. Constitution. The amendment was passed after Lincoln's reelection,
when he made use of all the powers of his office to ensure its success
in the House of Representatives (January 31, 1865).
Political Skill
A consummate politician, Lincoln sought to maintain harmony among the
disparate elements of his party by giving them representation in his
cabinet. Recognizing former Whigs by the appointment of William H.
Seward as secretary of state and Edward Bates as attorney general, he
also extended invitations to such former Democrats as Montgomery Blair,
who became postmaster general, and Gideon Welles, who became secretary
of the navy. He honored local factions by appointing Simon Cameron of
Pennsylvania secretary of war and Caleb B. Smith of Indiana secretary of
the interior, while satisfying the border states with Bates and Blair.
At the same time, he offset the conservative Bates with the radical
Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase and later with Secretary of
War Edwin M. Stanton. Although Lincoln was much closer to the radicals
and gradually moved toward ever more radical measures, he did not
needlessly offend the conservatives and often collaborated with them.
His careful handling of the slavery issue is a case in point, as is his
appointment of Democratic generals and his deference to the
sensibilities of the border states. In December 1862 he foiled critics
demanding the dismissal of the conservative Seward. Refusing to accept
Seward's resignation and inducing the radical Chase to offer to step
down as well, he maintained the balance of his cabinet by retaining both
secretaries.
Lincoln's political influence was enhanced by his great gifts as an
orator. Able to stress essentials in simple terms, he effectively
appealed to the nation in such classical short speeches as the
Gettysburg Address and his second inaugural address. Moreover, he was a
capable diplomat. Firmly rejecting Seward's proposal in April 1861 that
the country be united by means of a foreign war, he sought to maintain
friendly relations with the nations of Europe, used the Emancipation
Proclamation to win friends for the Union, and effectively countered
Confederate efforts to gain foreign recognition.
Reelection and Reconstruction
In 1864 a number of disgruntled Republicans sought to prevent
Lincoln's renomination. Adroitly outmaneuvering his opponents,
especially the ambitious Chase, he succeeded in obtaining his party's
endorsement at Baltimore, Maryland, even though a few extremists
nominated Frémont. Lincoln's renomination did not end his political
problems, however. Unhappy with his Proclamation of Amnesty (December
1863), which called for the restoration of insurgent states if 10
percent of the electorate took an oath of loyalty, Congress in July 1864
passed the Wade-Davis Bill, which provided for more onerous conditions
and their acceptance by 50 percent of the voters. When Lincoln used the
pocket veto to kill it, some radicals sought to displace him and in the
so-called Wade-Davis Manifesto passionately attacked the administration.
The president, nevertheless, prevailed again. His poor prospects in
August 1864 improved when the Democrats nominated General McClellan on a
peace platform. Subsequent federal victories and the withrawal of
Frémont, coupled with the resignation of the conservative Blair,
reunited the party, and in November 1864 Lincoln was triumphantly
reelected.
The president's success at the polls enabled him to seek to establish
his own Reconstruction policies. To blunt conservative criticism, he met
with leading Confederates at Hampton Roads, Virginia, and demonstrated
the impossibility of a negotiated peace. The radicals, however, were
also dissatisfied. Because of their demand for black suffrage, Lincoln
was unable to induce Congress to accept the members-elect of the free
state government of Louisiana, which he had organized. In addition,
after the fall of Richmond, he alarmed his critics by inviting the
Confederate legislature of Virginia to repeal the secession ordinance.
His Reconstruction policies, however, had been determined by military
necessity. As soon as the Confederate general Robert E. Lee surrendered
at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia, Lincoln withdrew the invitation to
the Virginians. He again proved how close he was to the radicals by
endorsing a limited black franchise.
The Assassination
At his second inaugural, Lincoln, attributing the war to the evil
consequences of slavery, summed up his attitude in the famous phrase
"with malice toward none, with charity for all." A few weeks later, he
publicly announced his support for limited black suffrage in Louisiana.
This open defiance of conservative opinion could only have strengthened
the resolve of one in his audience, John Wilkes Booth, a well-known
actor who had long been plotting against the president. Aroused by the
prospect of votes for blacks, he determined to carry out his
assassination scheme and on April 14, 1865, shot Lincoln at Ford's
Theatre in Washington, D.C. The president died the next day.
The subject of numerous myths, Lincoln ranks with the greatest of
American statesmen. His humanitarian instincts, brilliant speeches, and
unusual political skill ensured his hold on the electorate and his
success in saving the Union. That he also gained fame as the Great
Emancipator was due to a large degree to his excellent sense of timing
and his open-mindedness. Thus, he was able to bring about the abolition
of slavery and to advocate a policy of Reconstruction that envisaged the
gradual enfranchisement of the freedmen. It was a disaster for the
country that he did not live to carry it out.
Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, was very
important to the past history of our country. He helped to abolish
slavery in this country and kept the American Union from splitting apart
during the Civil War.
At 22, he moved to New Salem, Illinois. With his gift for swapping
stories and making friends, he became quite popular and was elected to
the Illinois legislature in 1834. In his spare time, he taught himself
law and became a lawyer. In 1847, he was elected to the U.S. Congress,
but returned to his law practice until 1858, when his concern about the
spread of slavery prompted him to return to national politics and run
for the U.S. Senate.
Lincoln rose to greatness from a humble beginning. Born in 1809 in a log
cabin in Kentucky, Lincoln spent most of his childhood working on the
family farm. He had less than a year of school but managed to educate
himself by studying and reading books on his own.
He believed that slavery and democracy were fundamentally incompatible.
In an 1858 speech, he said:
"What constitutes the bulwark of our own liberty and independence? It is
not our frowning battlements, our bristling sea coats, our army and our
navy . . . Our defense is in the spirit which prized liberty as the
heritage of all men, in all lands everywhere. Destroy this spirit and
you have planted the seeds of despotism at your own doors. Familiarize
yours"
Lincoln, Abraham (1809-65), 16th president of the United States
(1861-65), who steered the Union to victory in the American Civil War
and abolished slavery.
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