LIBRARY University of California Irvine A SHORT LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND HIS SON "TAD." A SHORT LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN CONDENSED FROM NICOLAY & HAY'S ABRAHAM LINCOLN: A HISTORY BY JOHN G. NICOLAY Copyright, 1902, by THE CENTURY Co Published October, igoa. CONTENTS i PAGE Ancestry Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks Rock Spring Farm Lincoln's Birth -Kentucky Schools The Journey to Indiana Pigeon Creek Settlement Indiana Schools Sally Bush Lincoln Gentryville Work and Books Satires and Sermons Flatboat Voyage to New Orleans The Journey to Illinois 3 II Flatboat New Salem Election Clerk Store and Mill Kirk- ham's "Grammar" "Sangamo Journal" The Talisman Lincoln's Address, March 9, 1832 Black Hawk War Lincoln Elected Captain Mustered out May 27, 1832 Re- enlisted in Independent Spy Battalion Finally Mustered out, June 16, 1832 Defeated for the Legislature Blacksmith or Lawyer? The Lincoln-Berry Store Appointed Postmaster, May 7, 1833 National Politics 21 III Appointed Deputy Surveyor Elected to Legislature in 1834 Campaign Issues Begins Study of Law Internal Improve- ment System The Lincoln-Stone Protest Candidate for Speaker in 1838 and 1840 39 IV Law Practice Rules for a Lawyer Law and Politics: Twin Occupations The Springfield Coterie Friendly Help Anne Rutledge Mary Owens 49 viii CONTENTS PAGE Springfield Society Miss Mary Todd Lincoln's Engagement His Deep Despondency Visit to Kentucky Letters to Speed The Shields Duel Marriage Law Partnership with Logan Hardin Nominated for Congress, 1843 Baker Nomi- nated for Congress, 1844 Lincoln Nominated and Elected, 1846 61 VI First Session of the Thirtieth Congress Mexican War "Wil- mot Proviso" Campaign of 1848 Letters to Herndon about Young Men in Politics Speech in Congress on the Mexican War Second Session of the Thirtieth Congress Bill to Pro- hibit Slavery in the District of Columbia Lincoln's Recom- mendations of Office-Seekers Letters to Speed Commis- sioner of the General Land Office Declines Governorship of Oregon 76 VII Repeal of the Missouri Compromise State Fair Debate Peoria Debate Trumbull Elected Letter to Robinson The Know-Nothings Decatur Meeting Bloomington Conven- tion Philadelphia Convention Lincoln's Vote for Vice- President Fremont and Dayton Lincoln's Campaign Speeches Chicago Banquet Speech 94 VIII Buchanan Elected President The Dred Scott Decision Douglas's Springfield Speech, 1857 Lincoln's Answering Speech Criticism of Dred Scott Decision Kansas Civil War Buchanan Appoints Walker Walker's Letter on Kansas The Lecompton Constitution Revolt of Douglas .... 108 IX The Senatorial Contest in Illinois "House Divided against Itself" Speech The Lincoln-Douglas Debates The Free- port Doctrine Douglas Deposed from Chairmanship of Com- CONTENTS ix FAGB mittee on Territories Benjamin on Douglas Lincoln's Popular Majority Douglas Gains Legislature Greeley, Crit- tenden, et al. "The Fight Must Go On" Douglas's South- ern Speeches Senator Brown's Questions Lincoln's Warn- ing against Popular Sovereignty The War of Pamphlets Lincoln's Ohio Speeches The John Brown Raid Lincoln's Comment .118 Lincoln's Kansas Speeches The Cooper Institute Speech New England Speeches The Democratic Schism Senator Brown's Resolutions Jefferson Davis's Resolutions The Charleston Convention Majority and Minority Reports Cotton State Delegations Secede Charleston Convention Adjourns Democratic Baltimore Convention Splits Breck- inridge Nominated Douglas Nominated Bell Nominated by Union Constitutional Convention Chicago Convention Lincoln's Letters to Pickett and Judd The Pivotal States- Lincoln Nominated 136 XI Candidates and Platforms The Political Chances Decatur Lincoln Resolution John Hanks and the Lincoln Rails The Rail-Splitter Candidate The Wide- A wakes Douglas's Southern Tour Jefferson Davis's Address Fusion Lin- coln at the State House The Election Result 152 XII Lincoln's Cabinet Program Members from the South Ques- tions and Answers Correspondence with Stephens Action of Congress Peace Convention Preparation of the In- augural Lincoln's Farewell Address The Journey to Wash- ington Lincoln's Midnight Journey 161 XIII The Secession Movement South Carolina Secession Buchan- an's Neglect Disloyal Cabinet Members Washington Cen- x CONTENTS PAGR tral Cabal Anderson's Transfer to Sumter Star of the West Montgomery Rebellion Davis and Stephens Cor- ner-stone Theory Lincoln Inaugurated His Inaugural Ad- dress Lincoln's Cabinet The Question of Sumter Sew- ard's Memorandum Lincoln's Answer Bombardment of Sumter Anderson's Capitulation 175 XIV president's Proclamation Calling for Seventy- five Regiments Responses of the Governors Maryland and Virginia The Baltimore Riot Washington Isolated Lincoln Takes the Responsibility Robert E. Lee Arrival of the New York Seventh Suspension of Habeas Corpus The Annapolis Route Butler in Baltimore Taney on the Merryman Case Kentucky Missouri Lyon Captures Camp Jackson Boon- ville Skirmish The Missouri Convention Gamble made Governor The Border States 191 XV Davis's Proclamation for Privateers Lincoln's Proclamation of Blockade The Call for Three Years' Volunteers Southern Military Preparations Rebel Capital Moved to Richmond Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas Admitted to Confederate States Desertion of Army and Navy Officers Union Troops Fortify Virginia Shore of the Potomac Con- centration at Harper's Ferry Concentration at Fortress Mon- roe and Cairo English Neutrality Seward's 2ist-of-May Despatch Lincoln's Corrections Preliminary Skirmishes Forward to Richmond Plan of McDowell's Campaign . . . 205 XVI Congress The President's Message Men and Money Voted The Contraband Dennison Appoints McClellan Rich Mountain McDowell Bull Run Patterson's Failure McClellan at Washington 217 CONTENTS xi XVII PAGE General Scott's Plans Criticized as the "Anaconda" The Three Fields of Conflict Fremont Appointed Major-General His Military Failures Battle of Wilson's Creek Hunter Ordered to Fremont Fremont's Proclamation President Revokes Fremont's Proclamation Lincoln's Letter to Brown- ing Surrender of Lexington Fremont Takes the Field Cameron's Visit to Fremont Fremont's Removal . . . .231 XVIII Blockade Hatteras Inlet Port Royal Captured The Trent Affair Lincoln Suggests Arbitration Seward's Despatch McClellan at Washington Army of the Potomac McClel- lan's Quarrel with Scott Retirement of Scott Lincoln's Memorandum "All Quiet on the Potomac" Conditions in Kentucky Cameron's Visit to Sherman East Ten- nessee Instructions to Buell Buell's Neglect Halleck in Missouri 244 XIX Lincoln Directs Cooperation Halleck and Buell Ulysses S. Grant Grant's Demonstration Victory at Mill River Fort Henry Fort Donelson Buell's Tardiness Halleck's Activity Victory of Pea Ridge Halleck Receives General Command Pittsburg Landing Island No. 10 Halleck's Corinth Campaign Halleck's Mistakes 262 XX The Blockade Hatteras Inlet Roanoke Island Fort Pulaski Merrimac and Monitor The Cumberland Sunk The Con- gress Burned Battle of the Ironclads Flag-Officer Farragut Forts Jackson and St. Philip New Orleans Captured Farragut at Vicksburg Farragut's Second Expedition to Vicksburg Return to New Orleans ..,.,,.. 277 xii CONTENTS XXI PAGH McClellan's Illness Lincoln Consults McDowell and Franklin President's Plan against Manassas McClellan's Plan against Richmond Cameron and Stan ton President's War Order No. i Lincoln's Questions to McClellan News from the West Death of Willie Lincoln The Harper's Ferry Fiasco President's War Order No. 3 The News from Hampton Roads Manassas Evacuated Movement to the Peninsula Yorktown The Peninsula Campaign Seven Days' Battles Retreat to Harrison's Landing 288 XXII Jackson's Valley Campaign Lincoln's Visit to Scott Pope Assigned to Command Lee's Attack on McClellan Retreat to Harrison's Landing Seward Sent to New York Lincoln's Letter to Seward Lincoln's Letter to McClellan Lincoln's Visit to McClellan Halleck Made General-in-Chief Hal- leek's Visit to McClellan Withdrawal from Harrison's Land- ing Pope Assumes Command Second Battle of Bull Run The Cabinet Protest McClellan Ordered to Defend Wash- ington The Maryland Campaign Battle of Antietam Lincoln visits Antietam Lincoln's Letter to McClellan McClellan Removed from Command 305 XXIII Cameron's Report Lincoln's Letter to Bancroft Annual Mes- sage on Slavery The Delaware Experiment Joint Resolu- tion on Compensated Abolishment First Border State Inter- view Stevens's Comment District of Columbia Abolish- ment Committee on Abolishment Hunter's Order Revoked Antislavery Measures of Congress Second Border State Interview Emancipation Proposed and Postponed .... 320 XXIV Criticism of the President for his Action on Slavery Lincoln's Letters to Louisiana Friends Greeley's Open Letter Mr. CONTENTS xiii PAGE Lincoln's Reply Chicago Clergymen Urge Emancipation Lincoln's Answer Lincoln Issues Preliminary Proclamation President Proposes Constitutional Amendment Cabinet Con- siders Final Proclamation Cabinet Discusses Admission of West Virginia Lincoln Signs Edict of Freedom Lincoln's Letter to Hodges 333 XXV Negro Soldiers Fort Pillow Retaliation Draft Northern Democrats Governor Seymour's Attitude Draft Riots in New York Vallandigham Lincoln on his Authority to Suspend Writ of Habeas Corpus Knights of the Golden Cir- cle Jacob Thompson in Canada 348 XXVI Burnside Fredericksburg A Tangle of Cross-Purposes Hooker Succeeds Burnside Lincoln to Hooker Chancel- lorsville Lee's Second Invasion Lincoln's Criticisms of Hooker's Plans Hooker Relieved Meade Gettysburg Lee's Retreat Lincoln's Letter to Meade Lincoln's Gettys- burg Address Autumn Strategy The Armies go into Win- ter Quarters 363 XXVII Buell and Bragg Perryville Rosecrans and Murfreesboro Grant's Vicksburg Experiments Grant's May Battles Siege and Surrender of Vicksburg Lincoln to Grant Rosecrans's March to Chattanooga Battle of Chickamauga Grant at Chattanooga Battle of Chattanooga Burnside at Knoxville Burnside Repulses Longstreet 379 XXVIII Grant Lieutenant-General Interview with Lincoln Grant Visits Sherman Plan of Campaigns Lincoln to Grant From the Wilderness to Cold Harbor The Move to City Point Siege of Petersburg Early Menaces Washington Lincoln under Fire Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley . . 393 xiv CONTENTS XXIX PAGE Sherman's Meridian Expedition Capture of Atlanta Hood Supersedes Johnston Hood's Invasion of Tennessee Frank- lin and Nashville Sherman's March to the Sea Capture of Savannah Sherman to Lincoln Lincoln to Sherman Sherman's March through the Carolinas The Burning of Charleston and Columbia Arrival at Goldsboro Junction with Schofield Visit to Grant 405 XXX Military Governors Lincoln's Theory of Reconstruction Con- gressional Election in Louisiana Letter to Military Gover- nors Letter to Shepley Amnesty Proclamation, December 8, 1863 Instructions to Banks Banks's Action in Louisiana Louisiana Abolishes Slavery Arkansas Abolishes Slavery Reconstruction in Tennessee Missouri Emancipation Lincoln's Letter to Drake Missouri Abolishes Slavery Emancipation in Maryland Maryland Abolishes Slavery . .418 XXXI Shaping of the Presidential Campaign Criticisms of Mr. Lincoln Chase's Presidential Ambitions The Pomeroy Circular Cleveland Convention Attempt to Nominate Grant Meet- ing of Baltimore Convention Lincoln's Letter to Schurz Platform of Republican Convention Lincoln Renominated Refuses to Indicate Preference for Vice-PresidentJohnson Nominated for Vice-PresidentLincoln's Speech to Committee of Notification Reference to Mexico in his Letter of Accept- ance The French in Mexico 437 XXXII The Bogus Proclamation The Wade-Davis Manifesto Resig- nation of Mr. Chase Fessenden Succeeds Him The Greeley Peace Conference Jaquess-Gilmore Mission Letter of Ray- mondBad Outlook for the Election Mr. Lincoln on the Issues CONTENTS xv PAGE of the Campaign President's Secret Memorandum Meeting of Democratic National Convention McClellan Nominated His Letter of Acceptance Lincoln Reelected His Speech on Night of Election The Electoral Vote Annual Message of December 6, 1864 Resignation of McClellan from the Army 453 XXXIII The Thirteenth Amendment The President's Speech on its Adoption The Two Constitutional Amendments of Lincoln's Term Lincoln on Peace and Slavery in his Annual Message of December 6, 1864 Blair's Mexican Project The Hamp- ton Roads Conference 471 XXXIV Blair Chase Chief Justice Speed Succeeds Bates McCulloch Succeeds Fessenden Resignation of Mr. Usher Lincoln's Offer of $400,000,000 The Second Inaugural Lincoln's Literary Rank His Last Speech 487 XXXV Depreciation of Confederate Currency Rigor of Conscription Dissatisfaction with the Confederate Government Lee Gen- eral-in-Chief J. E. Johnston Reappointed to Oppose Sher- man's March Value of Slave Property Gone in Richmond Davis's Recommendation of Emancipation Benjamin's Last Despatch to Slidell Condition of the Army when Lee took Command Lee Attempts Negotiations with Grant Lincoln's Directions Lee and Davis Agree upon Line of Retreat- Assault on Fort Stedman Five Forks Evacuation of Peters- burg Surrender of Richmond Pursuit of Lee Surrender of Lee Burning of Richmond Lincoln in Richmond .... 499 XXXVI Lincoln's Interviews with Campbell Withdraws Authority for Meeting of Virginia Legislature Conference of Davis and Johnston at Greensboro Johnston Asks for an Armistice xvi CONTENTS FAGB Meeting of Sherman and Johnston Their Agreement Re- jected at Washington Surrender of Johnston Surrender of other Confederate Forces End of the Rebel Navy Capture of Jefferson Davis Surrender of E. Kirby Smith Number of Confederates Surrendered and Exchanged Reduction of Federal Army to a Peace Footing Grand Review of the Army 519 XXXVII The I4th of April Celebration at Fort Sumter Last Cabinet Meeting Lincoln's Attitude toward Threats of Assassination Booth's Plot Ford's Theater Fate of the Assassins The Mourning Pageant 530 XXXVIII Lincoln's Early Environment Its Effect on his Character His Attitude toward Slavery and the Slaveholder His Schooling in Disappointment His Seeming Failures His Real Suc- cessesThe Final Trial His Achievements His Place in History 549 Index 557 ABRAHAM LINCOLN ABRAHAM LINCOLN i Ancestry Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks Rock Spring Farm Lincoln's Birth Kentucky Schools The Journey to Indiana Pigeon Creek Settlement Indiana Schools Sally Bush Lincoln Gentryville Work and Books Satires and Sermons Flatboat Voy- age to New Orleans The Journey to Illinois A BRAHAM LINCOLN, the sixteenth President of JLA. the United States, was born in a log cabin in the backwoods of Kentucky on the I2th day of Feb- ruary, 1809. His father, Thomas Lincoln, was sixth in direct line of descent from Samuel Lincoln, who emigrated from England to Massachusetts in 1638. Following the prevailing drift of American settlement, these descendants had, during a century and a half, successively moved from Massachusetts to New Jersey, from New Jersey to Pennsylvania, from Pennsylvania to Virginia, and from Virginia to Kentucky; while collateral branches of the family eventually made homes in other parts of the West. In Pennsylvania and Vir- ginia some of them had acquired considerable prop- erty and local prominence. In the year 1780, Abraham Lincoln, the President's grandfather, was able to pay into the public treasury of Virginia "one hundred and sixty pounds, current money," for which he received a warrant, directed to 4 ABRAHAM LINCOLN the "Principal Surveyor of any County within the commonwealth of Virginia," to lay off in one or more surveys for Abraham Linkhorn, his heirs or assigns, the quantity of fo^ir hundred acres of land. The error in spelling the name was a blunder of the clerk who made out the warrant. With this warrant and his family of five children Morclecai, Josiah, Mary, N'ancy, and Thomas he moved to Kentucky, then still a county of Virginia, in 1780, and began opening a farm. Four years later, while at work with his three boys in the edge of his clearing, a party of Indians, concealed in the brush, shot and killed him. Josiah, the second son, ran to a neighboring fort for assistance; Mordecai, the eld- est, hurried to the cabin for his gun, leaving Thomas, youngest of the family, a child of six years, by his father. Mordecai had just taken down his rifle from its convenient resting-place over the door of the cabin when, turning, he saw an Indian in his war-paint stoop- ing to seize the child. He took quick aim through a loop-hole, shot, and killed the savage, at which the little boy also ran to the house, and from this citadel Mordecai continued firing at the Indians until Josiah brought help from the fort. It was doubtless this misfortune which rapidly changed the circumstances of the family. 1 Kentucky was yet a wild, new country. As compared with later periods of emigration, settlement was slow and pioneer /ife a hard struggle. So it was probably under the stress of poverty, as well as by the marriage of the older children, that the home was gradually broken up, and Thomas Lincoln became "even in childhood . a wandering laboring boy, and grew up lit- 1 By the law of primogeniture, pealed in Virginia, the family estate which at that date was still unre- went to Mordecai, the eldest son. THOMAS LINCOLN AND NANCY HANKS 5 erally without education. . . . Before he was grown he passed one year as a hired hand with his uncle Isaac on Watauga, a branch of the Holston River." Later, he seems to have undertaken to learn the trade of carpenter in the shop of Joseph Hanks in Elizabethtown. When Thomas Lincoln was about twenty-eight years old he married Nancy Hanks, a niece of his employer, near Beechland, in Washington County. She was a good-looking young woman of twenty-three, also from Virginia, and so far superior to her husband in educa- tion that she could read and write, and taught him how to sign his name. Neither one of the young cou- ple had any money or property; but in those days liv- ing was not expensive, and they doubtless considered his trade a sufficient provision for the future. He brought her to a little house in Elizabethtown, where a daughter was born to them the following year. During the next twelvemonth Thomas Lincoln either grew tired of his carpenter work, or found the wages he was able to earn insufficient to meet his growing household expenses. He therefore bought a little farm on the Big South Fork of Nolin Creek, in what was then Hardin and is now La Rue County, three miles from Hodgensville, and thirteen miles from Elizabeth- town. Having no means, he of course bought the place on credit, a transaction not so difficult when we remember that in that early day there was plenty of land to be bought for mere promises to pay ; under the disadvantage, however, that farms to be had on these terms were usually of a very poor quality, on which energetic or forehanded men did not care to waste their labor. It was a kind of land generally known in the West as "barrens" rolling upland, with very thin, unproductive soil. Its momentary usefulness was 6 ABRAHAM LINCOLN that it was partly cleared and cultivated, that an indif- ferent cabin stood on it ready to be occupied, and that it had one specially attractive as well as useful fea- ture a fine spring of water, prettily situated amid a graceful clump of foliage, because of which the place was called Rock Spring Farm. The change of abode was perhaps in some respects an improvement upon Elizabethtown. To pioneer families in deep poverty, a little farm offered many more resources than a town lot space, wood, water, greens in the spring, berries in the summer, nuts in the autumn, small game every- where and they were fully accustomed to the loss of companionship. On this farm, and in this cabin, the future President of the United States was born, on the 1 2th of February, 1809, and here the first four years of his childhood were spent. When Abraham was about four years old the Lin- coln home was changed to a much better farm of two hundred and thirty-eight acres on Knob Creek, six miles from Hodgensville, bought by Thomas Lincoln, again on credit, for the promise to pay one hundred and eighteen pounds. A year later he conveyed two hundred acres of it by deed to a new purchaser. In this new home the family spent four years more, and while here Abraham and his sister Sarah began going to A B C schools. Their first teacher was Zacha- riah Riney, who taught near the Lincoln cabin; the next, Caleb Hazel, at a distance of about four miles. Thomas Lincoln was evidently one of those easy- going, good-natured men who carry the virtue of con- tentment to an extreme. He appears never to have exerted himself much beyond the attainment of a necessary subsistence. By a little farming and occa- sional jobs at his trade, he seems to have supplied his family with food and clothes. There is no record that THE JOURNEY TO INDIANA 7 he made any payment on either of his farms. The fever of westward emigration was in the air, and, lis- tening to glowing accounts of rich lands and newer settlements in Indiana, he had neither valuable pos- sessions nor cheerful associations to restrain the nat- ural impulse of every frontiersman to "move." In this determination his carpenter's skill served him a good purpose, and made the enterprise not only feas- ible, but reasonably cheap. In the fall of 1816 he built himself a small flatboat, which he launched at the mouth of Knob Creek, half a mile from his cabin, on the waters of the Rolling Fork. This stream would float him to Salt River, and Salt River to the Ohio. He also thought to combine a little speculation with his undertaking. Part of his personal property he traded for four hundred gallons of whisky ; then, load- ing the rest on his boat with his carpenter's tools and the whisky, he made the voyage, with the help of the current, down the Rolling Fork to Salt River, down Salt River to the Ohio, and down the Ohio to Thomp- son's Ferry, in Perry County, on the Indiana shore. The boat capsized once on the way, but he saved most of the cargo. Sixteen miles out from the river he found a location in the forest which suited him. Since his boat would not float up-stream, he sold it, left his property with a settler, and trudged back home to Kentucky, all the way on foot, to bring his wife and the two children Sarah, nine years old, and Abraham, seven. Another son had been born to them some years before, but had died when only three days old. This time the trip to In- diana was made with the aid of two horses, used by the wife and children for riding and to carry their little equipage for camping at night by the way. In a straight line, the distance is about fifty miles; but 8 ABRAHAM LINCOLN it was probably doubled by the very few roads it was possible to follow. Having reached the Ohio and crossed to where he had left his goods on the Indiana side, he hired a wagon, which carried them and his family the remain- ing sixteen miles through the forest to the spot he had chosen, which in due time became the Lincoln farm. It was a piece of heavily timbered land, one and a half miles east of what has since become the village of Gentryville, in Spencer County. The lateness of the autumn compelled him to provide a shelter as quickly as possible, and he built what is known on the frontier as a half- faced camp, about fourteen feet square. This structure differed from a cabin in that it was closed on only three sides, and open to the weather on the fourth. It was usual to build the fire in front of the open side, and the necessity of provid- ing a chimney was thus avoided. He doubtless in- tended it for a mere temporary shelter, and as such it would have sufficed for good weather in the sum- mer season. But it was a rude provision for the winds and snows of an Indiana winter. It illustrates Thomas Lincoln's want of energy, that the family remained housed in this primitive camp for nearly a whole year. He must, however, not be too hastily blamed for his dilatory improvement. It is not likely that he re- mained altogether idle. A more substantial cabin was probably begun, and, besides, there was the heavy work of clearing away the timber that is, cutting down the large trees, chopping them into suitable lengths, and rolling them together into great log-heaps to be burned, or splitting them into rails to fence the small field upon which he managed to raise a patch of corn and other things during the ensuing summer. Thomas Lincoln's arrival was in the autumn of GENTRYVILLE 9 1816. That same winter Indiana was admitted to the Union as a State. There were as yet no roads worthy of the name to or from the settlement formed by him- self and seven or eight neighbors at various distances. The village of Gentryville was not even begun. There was no sawmill to saw lumber. Breadstuff could be had only by sending young Abraham, on horseback, seven miles, with a bag of corn to be ground on a hand grist-mill. In the course of two or three years a road from Corydon to Evansville was laid out, run- ning past the Lincoln farm; and perhaps two or three years afterward another from Rockport to Blooming- ton, crossing the former. This gave rise to Gentry- ville. James Gentry entered the land at the cross- roads. Gideon Romine opened a small store, and their joint efforts succeeded in getting a post-office estab- lished, from which the village gradually grew. For a year after his arrival Thomas Lincoln remained a mere squatter. Then he entered the quarter-section (one hundred and sixty acres) on which he opened his farm, and made some payments on his entry, but only enough in eleven years to obtain a patent for one half of it. About the time that he moved into his new cabin, relatives and friends followed from Kentucky, and some of them in turn occupied the half- faced camp. In the ensuing autumn much sickness prevailed in the Pigeon Creek settlement. It was thirty miles to the nearest doctor, ana several persons died, among them Nancy Hanks Lincoln, the mother of young Abraham. The mechanical skill of Thomas was called upon to make the coffins, the necessary lumber for which had to be cut with a whip-saw. The death of Mrs. Lincoln was a serious loss to her husband and children. Abraham's sister Sarah was io ABRAHAM LINCOLN only eleven years old, and the tasks and cares of the little household were altogether too heavy for her years and experience. Nevertheless, they struggled on bravely through the winter and next summer, but in the autumn of 1819 Thomas Lincoln went back to Kentucky and married Sally Bush Johnston, whom he had known and, it is said, courted when she was merely Sally Bush. Johnston, to whom she was married about the time Lincoln married Nancy Hanks, had died, leaving her with three children. She came of a better station in life than Thomas, and is represented as a woman of uncommon energy and thrift, possessing excellent qualities both of head and heart. The house- hold goods which she brought to the Lincoln home in Indiana rilled a four-horse wagon. Not only were her own three children well clothed and cared for, but she was able at once to provide little Abraham and Sarah with home comforts to which they had been strangers during the whole of their young lives. Under her example and urging, Thomas at once supplied the yet unfinished cabin with floor, door, and windows, and existence took on a new aspect for all the inmates. Under her management and control, all friction and jealousy was avoided between the two sets of children, and contentment, if not happiness, reigned in the little cabin. The new stepmother quickly perceived the superior aptitudes and abilities of Abraham. She became very fond of him, and in every way encouraged his marked inclination to study and improve himself. The op- portunities for this were meager enough. Mr. Lincoln himself has drawn a vivid outline of the situation : "It was a wild region, with many bears and other wild animals still in the woods. There I grew up. There were some schools so called, but no qualifica- FRONTIER SCHOOLS n tion was ever required of a teacher beyond readin', writin', and cipherin' to the Rule of Three. If a strag- gler supposed to understand Latin happened to so- journ in the neighborhood, he was looked upon as a wizard. There was absolutely nothing to excite am- bition for education." As Abraham was only in his eighth year when he left Kentucky, the little beginnings he had learned in the schools kept by Riney and Hazel in that State must have been very slight probably only his alphabet, or possibly three or four pages of Webster's "Elementary Spelling Book." It is likely that the multiplication table was as yet an un fathomed mystery, and that he could not write or read more than the words he spelled. There is no record at what date he was able again to go to school in Indiana. Some of his schoolmates think it was in his tenth year, or soon after he fell under the care of his stepmother. The school-house was a low cabin of round logs, a mile and a half from the Lincoln home, with split logs or "puncheons" for a floor, split logs roughly leveled with an ax and set up on legs for benches, and a log cut out of one end and the space filled in with squares of greased paper for window panes. The main light in such primitive halls of learning was admitted by the open door. It was a type of school building common in the early West, in which many a statesman gained the first rudi- ments of knowledge. Very often Webster's "Elemen- tary Spelling Book" was the only text-book. Abra- ham's first Indiana school was probably held five years before Gentryville was located and a store established there. Until then it was difficult, if not impossible, to obtain books, slates, pencils, pen, ink, and paper, and their use was limited to settlers who had brought them when they came. It is reasonable to infer that the 12 ABRAHAM LINCOLN Lincoln family had no such luxuries, and, as the Pig- eon Creek settlement numbered only eight or ten fami- lies, there must have been very few pupils to attend this first school. Nevertheless, it is worthy of special note that even under such difficulties and limitations, the American thirst for education planted a school-house on the very forefront of every settlement. Abraham's second school in Indiana was held about the time he was fourteen years old, and the third in his seventeenth year. By this time he probably had better teachers and increased facilities, though with the dis- advantage of having to walk four or five miles to the school-house. He learned to write, and was provided with pen, ink, and a copy-book, and probably a very limited supply of writing-paper, for facsimiles have been printed of several scraps and fragments upon which he had carefully copied tables, rules, and sums from his arithmetic, such as those of long measure, land measure, and dry measure, and examples in mul- tiplication and compound division. All this indicates that he pursued his studies with a very unusual pur- pose and determination, not only to understand them at the moment, but to imprint them indelibly upon his memory, and even to retain them in visible form for reference when the school-book might no longer be in his hands or possession. Mr. Lincoln has himself written that these three different schools were "kept successively by Andrew Crawford, Swaney, and Azel W. Dorsey." Other witnesses state the succession somewhat differ- ently. The important fact to be gleaned from what we learn about Mr. Lincoln's schooling is that the instruc- tion given him by these five different teachers two in Kentucky and three in Indiana, in short sessions of attendance scattered over a period of nine years WORK AND BOOKS 13 made up in all less than a twelvemonth. He said of it in 1860, "Abraham now thinks that the aggre- gate of all his schooling did not amount to one year." This distribution of the tuition he received was doubt- less an advantage. Had it all been given him at his first school in Indiana, it would probably not have car- ried him half through Webster's "Elementary Spell- ing Book." The lazy or indifferent pupils who were his schoolmates doubtless forgot what was taught them at one time before they had opportunity at another ; but to the exceptional character of Abraham, these widely separated fragments of instruction were precious steps to self-help, of which he made unremitting use. It is the concurrent testimony of his early compan- ions that he employed all his spare moments in keeping on with some one of his studies. His stepmother says : "Abe read diligently. . . . He read every book he could lay his hands on ; and when he came across a passage that struck him, he would write it down on boards, if he had no paper, and keep it there until he did get paper. Then he would rewrite it, look at it, repeat it. He had a copy-book, a kind of scrap-book, in which he put down all things, and thus preserved them." There is no mention that either he or other pupils had slates and slate-pencils to use at school or at home, but he found a ready substitute in pieces of board. It is stated that he occupied his long even- ings at home doing sums on the fire-shovel. Iron fire- shovels were a rarity among pioneers; they used, in- stead, a broad, thin clapboard with one end narrowed to a handle. In cooking by the open fire, this domestic implement was of the first necessity to arrange piles of live coals on the hearth, over which they set their "skillet" and "oven," upon the lids of which live coals were also heaped. 14 ABRAHAM LINCOLN Upon such a wooden shovel Abraham was able to work his sums by the flickering firelight. If he had no pencil, he could use charcoal, and probably did so. When it was covered with figures he would take a drawing-knife, shave it off clean, and begin again. Under these various disadvantages, and by the help of such troublesome expedients, Abraham Lincoln worked his way to so much of an education as placed him far ahead of his schoolmates, and quickly abreast of the acquirements of his various teachers. The field from which he could glean knowledge was very lim- ited, though he diligently borrowed every book in the neighborhood. The list is a short one "Robinson Crusoe," /Esop's "Fables," Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Prog- ress," Weems's "Life of Washington," and a "History of the United States." When he had exhausted other books, he even resolutely attacked the Revised Statutes of Indiana, which Dave Turnham, the constable, had in daily use and permitted him to come to his house and read. It needs to be borne in mind that all this effort at self-education extended from first to last over a period of twelve or thirteen years, during which he was also performing hard manual labor, and proves a degree of steady, unflinching perseverance in a line of con- duct that brings into strong relief a high aim and the consciousness of abundant intellectual power. He was not permitted to forget that he was on an uphill path, a stern struggle with adversity. The leisure hours which he was able to devote to his reading, his penman- ship, and his arithmetic were by no means overabun- dant. Writing of his father's removal from Kentucky to Indiana, he says : "He settled in an unbroken forest, and the clearing away of surplus wood was the great task ahead. Abra- FARM WORK 13 ham, though very young, was large of his age, and had an ax put into his hands at once; and from that till within his twenty-third year he was almost con- stantly handling that most useful instrument less, of course, in plowing and harvesting seasons." John Hanks mentions the character of his work a little more in detail. "He and I worked barefoot, grubbed it, plowed, mowed, and cradled together; plowed corn, gathered it, and shucked corn." The sum of it all is that from his boyhood until after he was of age, most of his time was spent in the hard and varied muscular labor of the farm and the forest, sometimes on his father's place, sometimes as a hired hand for other pioneers. In this very useful but com- monplace occupation he had, however, one advantage. He was not only very early in his life a tall, strong country boy, but as he grew up he soon became a tall, strong, sinewy man. He early attained the unusual height of six feet four inches, with arms of propor- tionate length. This gave him a degree of power and facility as an ax man which few had or were able to acquire. He was therefore usually able to lead his fellows in efforts of both muscle and mind. He per- formed the tasks of his daily labor and mastered the lessons of his scanty schooling with an ease and rapidity they were unable to attain. Twice during his life in Indiana this ordinary rou- tine was somewhat varied. When he was sixteen, while working for a man who lived at the mouth of Anderson's Creek, it was part of his duty to manage a ferry-boat which transported passengers across the Ohio River. It was doubtless this which three years later brought him a new experience, that he himself related in these words : "When he was nineteen, still residing in Indiana, he 16 ABRAHAM LINCOLN made his first trip upon a flatboat to New Orleans. He was a hired hand merely, and he and a son of the owner, without other assistance, made the trip. The nature of part of the 'cargo load/ as it was called, made it necessary for them to linger and trade along the sugar-coast, and one night they were attacked by seven negroes with intent to kill and rob them. They were hurt some in the melee, but succeeded in driving the negroes from the boat, and then 'cut cable,' 'weighed anchor/ and left." This commercial enterprise was set on foot by Mr. Gentry, the founder of Gentryville. The affair shows us that Abraham had gained an enviable standing in the village as a man of honesty, skill, and judgment one who could be depended on to meet such emer- gencies as might arise in selling their bacon and other produce to the cotton-planters along the shores of the lower Mississippi. By this time Abraham's education was well ad- vanced. His handwriting, his arithmetic, and his gen- eral intelligence were so good that he had occasionally been employed to help in the Gentryville store, and Gentry thus knew by personal test that he was entirely capable of assisting his son Allen in the trading expe- dition to New Orleans. For Abraham, on the other hand, it was an event which must have opened up wide vistas of future hope and ambition. Allen Gen- try probably was nominal supercargo and steersman, but we may easily surmise that Lincoln, as the "bow oar," carried his full half of general responsibility. For this service the elder Gentry paid him eight dol- lars a month and his passage home on a steamboat. It was the future President's first eager look into the wide, wide world. Abraham's devotion to his books and his sums INDIANA HUNTERS 17 stands forth in more striking light from the fact that his habits differed from those of most frontier boys in one important particular. Almost every youth of the backwoods early became a habitual hunter and supe- rior marksman. The Indiana woods were yet swarm- ing with game, and the larder of every cabin depended largely upon this great storehouse of wild meat. 1 The Pigeon Creek settlement was especially fortunate on this point. There was in the neighborhood of the Lin- coln home what was known in the West as a deer-lick that is, there existed a feeble salt-spring, which im- pregnated the soil in its vicinity or created little pools of brackish water and various kinds of animals, par- ticularly deer, resorted there to satisfy their natural craving for salt by drinking from these or licking the moist earth. Hunters took advantage of this habit, and one of their common customs was to watch in the dusk or at night, and secure their approaching prey by an easy shot. Skill with the rifle and success in the chase were points of friendly emulation. In many localities the boy or youth who shot a squirrel in any part of the animal except its head became the butt of the jests of his companions and elders. Yet, under such conditions and opportunities Abraham was neither a hunter nor a marksman. He tells us : "A few days before the completion of his eighth year, in the absence of his father, a flock of wild tur- keys approached the new log cabin, and Abraham, with a rifle gun, standing inside, shot through a crack 1 Franklin points out how much to afford freedom and subsistence this resource of the early Americans to any man who can bait a hook or contributed to their spirit of inde- pull a trigger." pendence by saying: (See "The Century Magazine," "I can retire cheerfully with " Franklin as a Diplomatist, " Octo- my little family into the boundless ber, 1899, p. 888.) woods of America, which are sure 2 j 8 ABRAHAM LINCOLN and killed one of them. He has never since pulled a trigger on any larger game." The hours which other boys spent in roaming the woods or lying in ambush at the deer-lick, he preferred to devote to his effort at mental improvement. It can hardly be claimed that he did this from calculating am- bition. It was a native intellectual thirst, the signifi- cance of which he did not himself yet understand. Such exceptional characteristics manifested themselves only in a few matters. In most particulars he grew up as the ordinary backwoods boy develops into the youth and man. As he was subjected to their usual labors, so also he was limited to their usual pastimes and enjoyments. The varied amusements common to our day were not within their reach. The period of the circus, the political speech, and the itinerant show had not yet come. Schools, as we have seen, and probably meet- ings or church services, were irregular, to be had only at long intervals. Primitive athletic games and com- monplace talk, enlivened by frontier jests and stories, formed the sum of social intercourse when half a dozen or a score of settlers of various ages came together at a house-raising or corn-husking, or when mere chance brought them at the same time to the post-office or the country store. On these occasions, however, Abra- ham was, according to his age, always able to con- tribute his full share or more. Most of his natural aptitudes equipped him especially to play his part well. He had quick intelligence, ready sympathy, a cheerful temperament, a kindling humor, a generous and help- ful spirit. He was both a ready talker and apprecia- tive listener. By virtue of his tall stature and unusual strength of sinew and muscle, he was from the begin- ning a leader in all athletic games; by reason of his SATIRES AND SERMONS 19 studious habits and his extraordinarily retentive mem- ory, he quickly became the best story-teller among his companions. Even the slight training he gained from his studies greatly quickened his perceptions and broad- ened and steadied the strong reasoning faculty with which nature had endowed him. As the years of his youth passed by, his less gifted comrades learned to accept his judgments and to wel- come his power to entertain and instruct them. On his own part, he gradually learned to write not merely with the hand, but also with the mind to think. It was an easy transition for him from remembering the jingle of a commonplace rhyme to the constructing of a doggerel verse, and he did not neglect the oppor- tunity of practising his penmanship in such im- promptus. Tradition also relates that he added to his list of stories and jokes humorous imitations from the sermons of eccentric preachers. But tradition has very likely both magnified and distorted these alleged ex- ploits of his satire and mimicry. All that can be said of them is that his youth was marked by intellectual activity far beyond that of his companions. It is an interesting coincidence that nine days before the birth of Abraham Lincoln Congress passed the act to organize the Territory of Illinois, which his future life and career were destined to render so illustrious. Another interesting coincidence may be found in the fact that in the same year (1818) in which Congress definitely fixed the number of stars and stripes in the national flag, Illinois was admitted as a State to the Union. The Star of Empire was moving westward at an accelerating speed. Alabama was admitted in 1819, Maine in 1820, Missouri in 1821. Little by little the line of frontier settlement was pushing itself toward the Mississippi. No sooner had the pioneer built him 20 ABRAHAM LINCOLN a cabin and opened his little farm, than during every summer canvas-covered wagons wound their toilsome way over the new-made roads into the newer wilder- ness, while his eyes followed them with wistful eager- ness. Thomas Lincoln and his Pigeon Creek relatives and neighbors could not forever withstand the conta- gion of this example, and at length they yielded to the irrepressible longing by a common impulse. Mr. Lincoln writes : "March i, 1830, Abraham having just completed his twenty-first year, his father and family, with the fami- lies of the two daughters and sons-in-law of his step- mother, left the old homestead in Indiana and came to Illinois. Their mode of conveyance was wagons drawn by ox-teams, and Abraham drove one of the teams. They reached the county of Macon, and stopped there some time within the same month of March. His father and family settled a new place on the north side of the Sangamon River, at the junction of the timber land and prairie, about ten miles westerly from De- catur. Here they built a log cabin, into which they removed, and made sufficient of rails to fence ten acres of ground, fenced and broke the ground, and raised a crop of sown corn upon it the same year. . . . The sons-in-law were temporarily settled in other places in the county. In the autumn all hands were greatly afflicted with ague and fever, to which they had not been used, and by which they were greatly discouraged, so much so that they determined on leav- ing the county. They remained, however, through the succeeding winter, which was the winter of the very celebrated 'deep snow' of Illinois." II Flatboat New Salem Election Clerk Store and Mitt Kirkham's ''Grammar" "Sangamo Journal" The Talisman Lincoln's Address, March p, 1832 Black Hawk War Lincoln Elected Captain Mustered out May 2f, 1832 Recnlisted in Independent Spy Battalion Finally Mustered out, June 16, 1832 Defeated for the Legislature Blacksmith or Lawyer? The Lin- coln-Berry Store Appointed Postmaster, May 7, 1833 National Politics THE life of Abraham Lincoln, or that part of it which will interest readers for all future time, properly begins in March, 1831, after the winter of the "deep snow." According to frontier custom, being then twenty-one years old, he left his father's cabin to make his own fortune in the world. A man named Denton Offutt, one of a class of local traders and speculators usually found about early Western settle- ments, had probably heard something of young Lin- coln's Indiana history, particularly that he had made a voyage on a flatboat from Indiana to New Orleans, and that he was strong, active, honest, and generally, as would be expressed in Western phrase, "a smart young fellow." He was therefore just the sort of man Offutt needed for one of his trading enterprises, and Mr. Lincoln himself relates somewhat in detail how Offutt engaged him and the beginning of the venture : "Abraham, together with his stepmother's son, John 21 22 ABRAHAM LINCOLN D. Johnston, and John Hanks, yet residing in Macon County, hired themselves to Denton Offutt to take a flatboat from Beardstown, Illinois [on the Illinois River], to New Orleans; and for that purpose were to join him Offutt at Springfield, Illinois, so soon as the snow should go off. When it did go off, which was about the first of March, 1831, the county was so flooded as to make traveling by land impracticable, to obviate which difficulty they purchased a large canoe, and came down the Sangamon River in it. This is the time and the manner of Abraham's first entrance into Sangamon County. They found Offutt at Spring- field, but learned from him that he had failed in getting a boat .at Beardstown. This led to their hiring them- selves to him for twelve dollars per month each, and getting the timber out of the trees and building a boat at Old Sangamon town on the Sangamon River, seven miles northwest of Springfield, which boat they took to New Orleans, substantially upon the old contract." It needs here to be recalled that Lincoln's father was a carpenter, and that Abraham had no doubt acquired considerable skill in the use of tools during his boy- hood, and a practical knowledge of the construction of flatboats during his previous New Orleans trip, suf- ficient to enable him with confidence to undertake this task in shipbuilding. From the after history of both Johnston and Hanks, we know that neither of them was gifted with skill or industry, and it becomes clear that Lincoln was from the first leader of the party, master of construction, and captain of the craft. It took some time to build the boat, and before it was finished the Sangamon River had fallen so that the new craft stuck midway across the dam at Rut- ledge's Mill, at New Salem, a village of fifteen or twenty houses. The inhabitants came down to the ELECTION CLERK 23 bank, and exhibited great interest in the fate of the boat, which, with its bow in the air and its stern under water, was half bird and half fish, and they probably jestingly inquired of the young captain whether he expected to dive or to fly to New Orleans. He was, however, equal to the occasion. He bored a hole in the bottom of the boat at the bow, and rigged some sort of lever or derrick to lift the stern, so that the water she had taken in behind ran out in front, enabling her to float over the partly submerged dam ; and this feat, in turn, caused great wonderment in the crowd at the novel expedient of bailing a boat by boring a hole in her bottom. This exploit of naval engineering fully established Lincoln's fame at New Salem, and grounded him so firmly in the esteem of his employer Offutt that the latter, already looking forward to his future useful- ness, at once engaged him to come back to New Salem, after his New Orleans voyage, to act as his clerk in a store. Once over the dam and her cargo reloaded, partly there and partly at Beardstown, the boat safely made the remainder of her voyage to New Orleans ; and, re- turning by steamer to St. Louis, Lincoln and Johnston (Hanks had turned back from St. Louis) continued on foot to Illinois, Johnston remaining at the family home, which had meanwhile been removed from Macon to Coles County, and Lincoln going to his employer and friends at New Salem. This was in July or August, 1831. Neither Offutt nor his goods had yet arrived, and during his waiting he had a chance to show the New Salemites another accomplishment. An election was to be held, and one of the clerks was sick and failed to come. Scribes were not plenty on the fron- tier, and Mentor Graham, the clerk who was present, 24 ABRAHAM LINCOLN looking around for a properly qualified colleague, no- ticed Lincoln, and asked him if he could write, to which he answered, in local idiom, that he "could make a few rabbit tracks," and was thereupon imme- diately inducted into his first office. He performed his duties not only to the general satisfaction, but so as to interest Graham, who was a schoolmaster, and afterward made himself very useful to Lincoln. Offutt finally arrived with a miscellaneous lot of goods, which Lincoln opened and put in order in a room that a former New Salem storekeeper was just ready to vacate, and whose remnant stock Offutt also purchased. Trade was evidently not brisk at New Salem, for the commercial zeal of Offutt led him to increase his venture by renting the Rutledge and Cam- eron mill, on whose historic dam the flatboat had stuck. For a while the charge of the mill was added to Lincoln's duties, until another clerk was engaged to help him. There is likewise good evidence that in addition to his duties at the store and the mill, Lincoln made himself generally useful that he cut down trees and split rails enough to make a large hog-pen adjoin- ing the mill, a proceeding quite natural when we re- member that his hitherto active life and still growing muscles imperatively demanded the exercise which measuring calico or weighing out sugar and coffee failed to supply. We know from other incidents that he was possessed of ample bodily strength. In frontier life it is not only needed for useful labor of many kinds, but is also called upon to aid in popular amusement. There was a settlement in the neighborhood of New Salem called Clary's Grove, where lived a group of restless, rol- licking backwoodsmen with a strong liking for various forms of frontier athletics and rough practical jokes. KIRKHAM'S "GRAMMAR" 25 In the progress of American settlement there has al- ways been a time, whether the frontier was in New England or Pennsylvania or Kentucky, or on the banks of the Mississippi, when the champion wrestler held some fraction of the public consideration accorded to the victor in the Olympic games of Greece. Until Lin- coln came, Jack Armstrong was the champion wrestler of Clary's Grove and New Salem, and picturesque stories are told how the neighborhood talk, inflamed by Offutt's fulsome laudation of his clerk, made Jack Armstrong feel that his fame was in danger. Lincoln put off the encounter as long as he could, and when the wrestling match finally came off neither could throw the other. The bystanders became satisfied that they were equally matched in strength and skill, and the cool courage which Lincoln manifested throughout the ordeal prevented the usual close of such incidents with a fight. Instead of becoming chronic enemies and leaders of a neighborhood feud, Lincoln's self- possession and good temper turned the contest into the beginning of a warm and lasting friendship. If Lincoln's muscles were at times hungry for work, not less so was his mind. He was already instinc- tively feeling his way to his destiny when, in conver- sation with Mentor Graham, the schoolmaster, he indi- cated his desire to use some of his spare moments to increase his education, and confided to him his "no- tion to study English grammar." It was entirely in the nature of things that Graham should encourage this mental craving, and tell him: "If you expect to go before the public in any capacity, I think it the best thing you can do." Lincoln said that if he had a grammar he would begin at once. Graham was obliged to confess that there was no such book at New Salem, but remembered that there was one at Vaner's, six 26 ABRAHAM LINCOLN miles away. Promptly after breakfast the next morn- ing Lincoln walked to Vaner's and procured the pre- cious volume, and, probably with Graham's occasional help, found no great difficulty in mastering its contents. While tradition does not mention any other study begun at that time, we may fairly infer that, slight as may have been Graham's education, he must have had other books from which, together with his friendly advice, Lincoln's intellectual hunger derived further stimulus and nourishment. In his duties at the store and his work at the mill, in his study of Kirkham's "Grammar," and educa- tional conversations with Mentor Graham, in the some- what rude but frank and hearty companionship of the citizens of New Salem and the exuberant boys of Clary's Grove, Lincoln's life for the second half of the year 1831 appears not to have been eventful, but was doubtless more comfortable and as interesting as had been his flatboat building and New Orleans voyage during the first half. He was busy in useful labor, and, though he had few chances to pick up scraps of school- ing, was beginning to read deeply in that book of hu- man nature, the profound knowledge of which ren- dered him such immense service in after years. The restlessness and ambition of the village of New Salem was many times multiplied in the restlessness and ambition of Springfield, fifteen or twenty miles away, which, located approximately near the geograph- ical center of Illinois, was already beginning to crave, if not yet to feel, its future destiny as the capital of the State. In November of the same year that aspir- ing town produced the first number of its weekly news- paper, the "Sangamo Journal," and in its columns we begin to find recorded historical data. Situated in a region of alternating spaces of prairie and forest, THE TALISMAN 27 of attractive natural scenery and rich soil, it was nev- ertheless at a great disadvantage in the means of commercial transportation. Lying sixty miles from Beardstown, the nearest landing on the Illinois River, the peculiarities of soil, climate, and primitive roads rendered travel and land carriage extremely difficult often entirely impossible for nearly half of every year. The very first number of the "Sangamo Journal" sounded its strongest note on the then leading tenet of the Whig party internal improvements by the gen- eral government, and active politics to secure them. In later numbers we learn that a regular Eastern mail had not been received for three weeks. The tide of immi- gration which was pouring into Illinois is illustrated in a tabular statement on the commerce of the Illinois River, showing that the steamboat arrivals at Beards- town had risen from one each in the years 1828 and 1829, and only four in 1830, to thirty-two during the year 1831. This naturally directed the thoughts of travelers and traders to some better means of reach- ing the river landing than the frozen or muddy roads and impassable creeks and sloughs of winter and spring. The use of the Sangamon River, flowing within five miles of Springfield and emptying itself into the Illi- nois ten or fifteen miles from Beardstown, seemed for the present the only solution of the problem, and a pub- lic meeting was called to discuss the project. The deep snows of the winter of 1830-31 abundantly filled the channels of that stream, and the winter of 1831-32 substantially repeated its swelling floods. Newcomers in that region were therefore warranted in drawing the inference that it might remain navigable for small craft. Public interest on the topic was greatly height- ened when one Captain Bogue, commanding a small steamer then at Cincinnati, printed a letter in the 28 ABRAHAM LINCOLN "Journal" of January 26, 1832, saying: "I intend to try to ascend the river [Sangamo] immediately on the breaking up of the ice." It was well understood that the chief difficulty would be that the short turns in the channels were liable to be obstructed by a gorge of driftwood and the limbs and trunks of overhanging trees. To provide for this, Captain Bogue's letter added : "I should be met at the mouth of the river by ten or twelve men, having axes with long handles under the direction of some experienced man. I shall deliver freight from St. Louis at the landing on the Sangamo River opposite the town of Springfield for thirty-seven and a half cents per hundred pounds." The "Journal" of February 16 contained an adver- tisement that the "splendid upper-cabin steamer Talis- man" would leave for Springfield, and the paper of March i announced her arrival at St. Louis on the 22d of February with a full cargo. In due time the citizen committee appointed by the public meeting met the Talisman at the mouth of the Sangamon, and the "Journal" of March 29 announced with great flourish that the "steamboat Talisman, of one hundred and fifty tons burden, arrived at the Portland landing op- posite this town on Saturday last." There was great local rejoicing over this demonstration that the San- gamon was really navigable, and the "Journal" pro- claimed with exultation that Springfield "could no longer be considered an inland town." President Jackson's first term was nearing its close, and the Democratic party was preparing to reelect him. The Whigs, on their part, had held their first national convention in December, 1831, and nominated Henry Clay to dispute the succession. This nomination, made almost a year in advance of the election, indicates an unusual degree of political activity in the East, and CANDIDATE FOR LEGISLATURE 29 voters in the new State of Illinois were fired with an equal party zeal. During the months of January and February, 1832, no less than six citizens of Sangamon County announced themselves in the "Sangamo Jour- nal" as candidates for the State legislature, the elec- tion for which was not to occur until August; and the "Journal" of March 15 printed a long letter, ad- dressed "To the People of Sangamon County," under date of the ninth, signed A. Lincoln, and beginning: "FELLOW-CITIZENS : Having become a candidate for the honorable office of one of your representatives in the next general assembly of this State, in accordance with an established custom and the principles of true republicanism, it becomes my duty to make known to you, the people whom I propose to represent, my senti- ments with regard to local affairs." He then takes up and discusses in an eminently methodical and practical way the absorbing topic of the moment the Whig doctrine of internal improvements and its local appli- cation, the improvement of the Sangamon River. He mentions that meetings have been held to propose the construction of a railroad, and frankly acknowledges that "no other improvement that reason will justify us in hoping for can equal in utility the railroad," but contends that its enormous cost precludes any such hope, and that, therefore, "the improvement of the Sangamon River is an object much better suited to our infant resources." Relating his experience in building and navigating his flatboat, and his observa- tion of the stage of the water since then, he draws the very plausible conclusion that by straightening its channel and clearing away its driftwood the stream can be made navigable "to vessels of from twenty-five to thirty tons burden for at least one half of all common years, and to vessels of much greater burden a part 30 ABRAHAM LINCOLN of the time." His letter very modestly touches a few other points of needed legislation a law against usury, laws to promote education, and amendments to estray and road laws. The main interest for us, however, is in the frank avowal of his personal ambition. "Every man is "said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether it be true or not, I can say, for one, that I have no other so great as that of being truly esteemed of my fellow-men by rendering myself worthy of their esteem. How far I shall succeed in gratifying this ambition is yet to be developed. I am young, and un- known to many of you. I was born, and have ever remained, in the most humble walks of life. I have no wealthy or popular relations or friends to recom- mend me. My case is thrown exclusively upon the independent voters of the country, and if elected they will have conferred a favor upon me for which I shall be unremitting in my labors to compensate. But if the good people in their wisdom shall see fit to keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with disap- pointments to be very much chagrined." This written and printed address gives us an accu- rate measure of the man and the time. When he wrote this document he was twenty-three years old. He had been in the town and county only about nine months of actual time. As Sangamon County covered an esti- mated area of twenty-one hundred and sixty square miles, he could know but little of either it or its peo- ple. How dared a "friendless, uneducated boy, work- ing on a flatboat at twelve dollars a month," with "no wealthy or popular friends to recommend" him, aspire to the honors and responsibilities of a legislator ? The only answer is that he was prompted by that intuition of genius, that consciousness of powers which justify their claims by their achievements. When we scan BLACK HAWK WAR 31 the circumstances more closely, we find distinct evi- dence of some reason for his confidence. Relatively speaking, he was neither uneducated nor friendless. His acquirements were already far beyond the simple elements of reading, writing, and ciphering. He wrote a good, clear, serviceable hand; he could talk well and reason cogently. The simple, manly style of his printed address fully equals in literary ability that of the aver- age collegian in the twenties. His migration from Indiana to Illinois and his two voyages to New Or- leans had given him a glimpse of the outside world. His natural logic readily grasped the significance of the railroad as a new factor in transportation, although the first American locomotive had been built only one year, and ten to fifteen years were yet to elapse before the first railroad train was to run in Illinois. One other motive probably had its influence. He tells us that Offutt's business was failing, and his quick judgment warned him that he would soon be out of a job as clerk. This, however, could be only a secondary reason for announcing himself as a candidate, for the election was not to occur till August, and even if he were elected there would be neither service nor salary till the coming winter. His venture into politics must therefore be ascribed to the feeling which he so frankly announced in his letter, his ambition to become useful to his fellow-men the impulse that throughout history has singled out the great leaders of mankind. In this particular instance a crisis was also at hand, calculated to develop and utilize the impulse. Just about a month after the publication of Lincoln's an- nouncement, the "Sangamo Journal" of April 19 printed an official call from Governor Reynolds, di- rected to General Neale of the Illinois militia, to or- ganize six hundred volunteers of his brigade for mili- 32 ABRAHAM LINCOLN tary service in a campaign against the Indians under Black Hawk, the war chief of the Sacs, who, in defiance of treaties and promises, had formed a combination with other tribes during the winter, and had now crossed back from the west to the east side of the Mis- sissippi River with the determination to reoccupy their old homes in the Jiock-River country toward the north- ern end of the State. In the memoranda which Mr. Lincoln furnished for a campaign biography, he thus relates what followed the call for troops : "Abraham joined a volunteer company, and, to his own surprise, was elected captain of it. He says he has not since had any success in life which gave him so much satisfaction. He went to the campaign, served near three months, met the ordinary hardships of such an expedition, but was in no battle. Official docu- ments furnish some further interesting details. As already said, the call was printed in the "Sangamo Journal" of April 19. On April 21 the company was organized at Richland, Sangamon County, and on April 28 was inspected and mustered into service at Beardstown and attached to Colonel Samuel Thomp- son's regiment, the Fourth Illinois Mounted Volun- teers. They marched at once to the hostile frontier. As the campaign shaped itself, it probably became evident to the company that they were not likely to meet any serious fighting, and, not having been enlisted for any stated period, they became clamorous to return home. The governor therefore had them and other companies mustered out of service, at the mouth of Fox River, on May 27. Not, however, wishing to weaken his forces before the arrival of new levies already on the way, he called for volunteers to remain twenty days longer. Lincoln had gone to the frontier to perform LINCOLN REENLISTS 33 real service, not merely to enjoy military rank or reap military glory. On the same day, therefore, on which he was mustered out as captain, he reenlisted, and became Private Lincoln in Captain Iles's company of mounted volunteers, organized apparently principally for scout- ing service, and sometimes called the Independent Spy Battalion. Among the other officers who imitated this patriotic example were General Whiteside and Major John T. Stuart, Lincoln's later law partner. The Inde- pendent Spy Battalion, having faithfully performed its new term of service, was finally mustered out on June 1 6, 1832. Lincoln and his messmate, George M. Har- rison, had the misfortune to have their horses stolen the day before, but Harrison relates : "I laughed at our fate and he joked at it, and we all started off merrily. The generous men of our com- pany walked and rode by turns with us, and we fared about equal with the rest. But for this generosity our legs would have had to do the better work ; for in that day this dreary route furnished no horses to buy or to steal, and, whether on horse or afoot, we always had company, for many of the horses' backs were too sore for riding." Lincoln must have reached home about August i, for the election was to occur in the second week of that month, and this left him but ten days in which to push his claims for popular indorsement. His friends, how- ever, had been doing manful duty for him during his three months' absence, and he lost nothing in public estimation by his prompt enlistment to defend the fron- tier. Successive announcements in the "Journal" had by this time swelled the list of candidates to thirteen. But Sangamon County was entitled to only four rep- resentatives, and when the returns came in Lincoln was among those defeated. Nevertheless, he made a very 34 ABRAHAM LINCOLN respectable showing in the race. The list of successful and unsuccessful aspirants and their votes was as fol- lows: E. D. Taylor 1 127 John T. Stuart 991 Achilles Morris 945 Peter Cartwright 815 Under the plurality rule, these four had been elected. The unsuccessful candidates were: A. G. Herndon 806 W. Carpenter 774 J. Dawson 717 A. Lincoln 657 T. M. Neale 571 R. Quinton 485 Z. Peter 214 E. Robinson 169 Kirkpatrick 44 The returns show that the total vote of the county was about twenty-one hundred and sixty-eight. Com- paring this with the vote cast for Lincoln, we see that he received nearly one third of the total county vote, notwithstanding his absence from the canvass, notwith- standing the fact that his acquaintanceship was limited to the neighborhood of New Salem, notwithtsanding the sharp competition. Indeed, his talent and fitness for ac- tive practical politics were demonstrated beyond ques- tion by the result in his home precinct of New Salem, which, though he ran as a Whig, gave two hundred and seventy-seven votes for him and only three against him. Three months later it gave one hundred and eighty-five for the Jackson and only seventy for the BLACKSMITH OR LAWYER? 35 Clay electors, proving Lincoln's personal popularity. He remembered for the remainder of his life with great pride that this was the only time he was ever beaten on a direct vote of the people. . The result of the election brought him to one of the serious crises of his life, which he forcibly stated in after years in the following written words: "He was now without means and out of business, but was anxious to remain with his friends, who had treated him with so much generosity, especially as he had noth- ing elsewhere to go to. He studied what he should do ; thought of learning the blacksmith trade, thought of trying to study law, rather thought he could not suc- ceed at that without a better education." The perplexing problem between inclination and means to follow it, the struggle between conscious tal- ent and the restraining fetters of poverty, has come to millions of young Americans before and since, but per- haps to none with a sharper trial of spirit or more reso- lute patience. Before he had definitely resolved upon either career, chance served not to solve, but to post- pone his difficulty, and in the end to greatly increase it. New Salem, which apparently never had any good reason for becoming a town, seems already at that tin^ to have entered on the road to rapid decay. Offutt's speculations had failed, and he had disappeared. The brothers Herndon, who had opened a new store, found business dull and unpromising. Becoming tired of their undertaking, they offered to sell out to Lincoln and Berry on credit, and took their promissory notes in pay- ment. The new partners, in that excess of hope which usually attends all new ventures, also bought two other similar establishments that were in extremity, and for these likewise gave their notes. It is evident that the confidence which Lincoln had inspired while he was 36 ABRAHAM LINCOLN a clerk in Offutt's store, and the enthusiastic support he had received as a candidate, were the basis of credit that sustained these several commercial transactions. It turned out in the long run that Lincoln's credit and the popular confidence that supported it were as valuable both to his creditors and himself as if the sums which stood over his signature had been gold coin in a solvent bank. But this transmutation was not at- tained until he had passed through a very furnace of financial embarrassment. Berry proved a worthless partner, and the business a sorry failure. Seeing this, Lincoln and Berry sold out again on credit to the Trent brothers, who soon broke up and ran away. Berry also departed and died, and finally all the notes came back upon Lincoln for payment. He was unable to meet these obligations, but he did the next best thing. He remained, promised to pay when he could, and most of his creditors, maintaining their confidence in his in- tegrity, patiently bided their time, till, in the course of long years, he fully justified it by paying, with in- terest, every cent of what he learned to call, in humor- ous satire upon his own folly, the "national debt." With one of them he was not so fortunate. Van Ber- gen, 'who bought one of the % Lincoln-Berry notes, ob- tained judgment, and, by peremptory sale, swept away the horse, saddle, and surveying instruments with the daily use of which Lincoln "procured bread and kept body and soul together," to use his own words. But here again Lincoln's recognized honesty was his safety. Out of personal friendship, James Short bought the property and restored it to the young surveyor, giving him time to repay. It was not until his return from Congress, seventeen years after the purchase of the store, that he finally relieved himself of the last instal- ments of his "national debt." But by these seventeen APPOINTED POSTMASTER 37 years of sober industry, rigid economy, and unflinching faith to his obligations he earned the title of "Honest old Abe," which proved of greater service to himself and his country than if he had gained the wealth of Crcesus. Out of this ill-starred commercial speculation, how- ever, Lincoln derived one incidental benefit, and it may be said it became the determining factor in his career. It is evident from his own language that he underwent a severe mental struggle in deciding whether he would become a blacksmith or a lawyer. In taking a middle course, and trying to become a merchant, he probably kept the latter choice strongly in view. It seems well established by local tradition that during the period while the Lincoln-Berry store was running its fore- doomed course from bad to worse, Lincoln employed all the time he could spare from his customers (and he probably had many leisure hours) in reading and study of various kinds. This habit was greatly stimulated and assisted by his being appointed, May 7, 1833, post- master at New Salem, which office he continued to hold until May 30, 1836, when New Salem partially disap- peared, and the office was removed to Petersburg. The influences which brought about the selection of Lincoln are not recorded, but it is suggested that he had acted for some time as deputy postmaster under the former incumbent, and thus became the natural successor. Evidently his politics formed no objection, as New Salem precinct had at the August election, when he ran as a Whig, given him its almost solid vote for rep- resentative, notwithstanding the fact that it was more than two thirds Democratic. The postmastership in- creased his public consideration and authority, broad- ened his business experience, and the newspapers he handled provided him an abundance of reading matter 38 ABRAHAM LINCOLN on topics of both local and national importance up to the latest dates. Those were stirring times, even on the frontier. The "Sangamo Journal" of December 30, 1832, printed Jackson's nullification proclamation. The same paper, of March 9, 1833, contained an editorial on Clay's com- promise, and that of the i6th had a notice of the great nullification debate in Congress. The speeches of Clay, Calhoun, and Webster were published in full during the following month, and Mr. Lincoln could not well help reading them and joining in the feelings and com- ments they provoked. While the town of New Salem was locally dying, the county of Sangamon and the State of Illinois were having what is now called a boom. Other wide-awake newspapers, such as the "Missouri Republican" and "Louisville Journal," abounded in notices of the estab- lishment of new stage lines and the general rush of immigration. But the joyous dream of the New Salem- ites, that the Sangamon River would become a com- mercial highway, quickly faded. The Talisman was obliged to hurry back down the rapidly falling stream, tearing away a portion of the famous dam to permit her departure. There were rumors that another steamer, the Sylph, would establish regular trips be- tween Springfield and Beardstown, but she never came. The freshets and floods of 1831 and 1832 were suc- ceeded by a series of dry seasons, and the navigation of the Sangamon River was never afterward a telling plank in the county platform of either political party. Ill Appointed Deputy Surveyor Elected to Legislature in 1834 Campaign Issues Begins Study of Law In- ternal Improvement System The Lincoln-Stone Pro- test Candidate for Speaker in 1838 and 1840 ~Y\7TTTEN Lincoln was appointed postmaster, in May, W 1833, the Lincoln-Berry store had not yet com- pletely "winked out," to use his own picturesque phrase. When at length he ceased to be a merchant, he yet re- mained a government official, a man of consideration and authority, who still had a responsible occupation and definite home, where he could read, write, and study. The proceeds of his office were doubtless very meager, but in that day, when the rate of postage on letters was still twenty-five cents, a little change now and then came into his hands, which, in the scarcity of money prevailing on the frontier, had an importance difficult for us to appreciate. His positions as candi- date for the legislature and as postmaster probably had much to do in bringing him another piece of good for- tune. In the rapid settlement of Illinois and Sanga- mon County, and the obtaining titles to farms by pur- chase or preemption, as well as in the locating and opening of new roads, the county surveyor had more work on his hands than he could perform throughout a county extending forty miles east and west and fifty north and south, and was compelled to appoint depu- ties to assist him. The name of the county surveyor was John Calhoun, recognized by all his contempo- 39 40 ABRAHAM LINCOLN raries in Sangamon as a man of education and talent and an aspiring Democratic politician. It was not an easy matter for Calhoun to find properly qualified depu- ties, and when he became acquainted with Lincoln, and learned his attainments and aptitudes, and the estima- tion in which he was held by the people of New Salem, he wisely concluded to utilize his talents and standing, notwithstanding their difference in politics. The inci- dent is thus recorded by Lincoln : "The surveyor of Sangamon offered to depute to Abraham that portion of his work which was within his part of the county. He accepted, procured a com- pass and chain, studied Flint and Gibson a little, and went at it. This procured bread, and kept soul and body together." Tradition has it that Calhoun not only gave him the appointment, but lent him the book in which to study the art, which he accomplished in a period of six weeks, aided by the schoolmaster, Mentor Graham. The exact period of this increase in knowledge and business capacity is not recorded, but it must have taken place in the summer of 1833, as there exists a certifi- cate of survey in Lincoln's handwriting signed, "J. Calhoun, S. S. C, by A. Lincoln," dated January 14, 1834. Before June of that year he had surveyed and located a public road from "Musick's Ferry on Salt Creek, via New Salem, to the county line in the direc- tion to Jacksonville," twenty-six miles and seventy chains in length, the exact course of which survey, with detailed bearings and distances, was drawn on common white letter-paper pasted in a long slip, to a scale of two inches to the mile, in ordinary yet clear and distinct penmanship. The compensation he received for this ser- vice was three dollars per day for five days, and two dollars and fifty cents for making the plat and report. DEPUTY SURVEYOR 41 An advertisement in the "Journal" shows that the reg- ular fees of another deputy were "two dollars per day, or one dollar per lot of eight acres or less, and fifty cents for a single line, with ten cents per mile for traveling." While this class of work and his post-office, with its emoluments, probably amply supplied his board, lodg- ing, and clothing, it left him no surplus with which to pay his debts, for it was in the latter part of that same year (1834) that Van Bergen caused his horse and surveying instruments to be sold under the hammer, as already related. Meanwhile, amid these fluctuations of good and bad luck, Lincoln maintained his equa- nimity, his steady, persevering industry, and his hope- ful ambition and confidence in the future. Through all his misfortunes and his failures, he preserved his self-respect and his determination to succeed. Two years had nearly elapsed since he was defeated for the legislature, and, having received so flattering a vote on that occasion, it was entirely natural that he should determine to try a second "chance. Four new representatives were to be chosen at the August elec- tion of 1834, and near the end of April Lincoln pub- lished his announcement that he would again be a can- didate. He could certainly view his expectations in every way in a more hopeful light. His knowledge had increased, his experience broadened, his acquain- tanceship greatly increased. His talents were acknow- ledged, his ability recognized. He was postmaster and deputy surveyor. He had become a public character whose services were in demand. As compared with the majority of his neighbors, he was a man of learn- ing who had seen the world. Greater, however, than all these advantages, his sympathetic kindness of heart, his sincere, open frankness, his sturdy, unshrinking 42 ABRAHAM LINCOLN honesty, and that inborn sense of justice that yielded to no influence, made up a nobility of character and bearing that impressed the rude frontiersmen as much as, if not more quickly and deeply than, it would have done the most polished and erudite society. Beginning his campaign in April, he had three full months before him for electioneering, and he evidently used the time to good advantage. The pursuit of popu- larity probably consisted mainly of the same methods that in backwoods districts prevail even to our day : personal visits and solicitations, attendance at various kinds of neighborhood gatherings, such as raisings of new cabins, horse-races, shooting-matches, sales of town lots or of personal property under execution, or whatever occasion served to call a dozen or two of the settlers together. One recorded incident illustrates the practical nature of the politician's art at that day : "He [Lincoln] came to my house, near Island Grove, during harvest. There were some thirty men in the field. He got his dinner and went out in the field where the men were at work. I gave him an introduction, and the boys said that they could not vote for a man unless he could make a hand. 'Well, boys/ said he, 'if that is all, I am sure of your votes.' He took hold of the cradle, and led the way all the round with perfect ease. The boys were satisfied, and I don't think he lost a vote in the crawd." Sometimes two or more candidates would meet at such places, and short speeches be called for and given. Altogether, the campaign was livelier than that of two years before. Thirteen candidates were again contest- ing for the four seats in the legislature, to say nothing of candidates for governor, for Congress, and for the State Senate. The scope of discussion was enlarged and localized. From the published address of an indus- ELECTED TO LEGISLATURE 43 trious aspirant who received only ninety-two votes, we learn that the issues now were the construction by the general government of a canal from Lake Michigan to the Illinois River, the improvement of the Sangamon River, the location of the State capital at Springfield, a United States bank, a better road law, and amend- ments to the estray laws. When the election returns came in Lincoln had rea- son to be satisfied with the efforts he had made. He received the second highest number of votes in the long list of candidates. Those cast for the representatives chosen stood: Dawson, 1390; Lincoln, 1376; Carpen- ter, 1170; Stuart, 1164. The location of the State capital had also been submitted to popular vote at this election. Springfield, being much nearer the geograph- ical center of the State, was anxious to deprive Van- dalia of that honor, and the activity of the Sangamon politicians proved it to be a dangerous rival. In the course of a month the returns from all parts of the State had come in, and showed that Springfield was third in the race. It must be frankly admitted that Lincoln's success at this juncture was one of the most important events of his life. A second defeat might have discouraged his efforts to lift himself to a professional career, and sent him to the anvil to make horseshoes and to iron wagons for the balance of his days. But this hand- some popular indorsement assured his standing and confirmed his credit. With this lift in the clouds of his horizon, he could resolutely carry his burden of debt and hopefully look to wider fields of public usefulness. Already, during the progress of the canvass, he had received cheering encouragement and promise of most valuable help. One of the four successful candidates was John T. Stuart, who had been major of volun- 44 ABRAHAM LINCOLN teers in the Black Hawk War while Lincoln was cap- tain, and who, together with Lincoln, had reenlisted as a private in the Independent Spy Battalion. There is every likelihood that the two had begun a personal friendship during their military service, which was of course strongly cemented by their being fellow-candi- dates and both belonging to the Whig party. Mr. Lincoln relates : "Major John T. Stuart, then in full practice of the law [at Springfield], was also elected. During the canvass, in a private conversation he encouraged Abra- ham to study law. After the election, he borrowed books of Stuart, took them home with him, and went at it in good earnest. He studied with nobody. . . In the autumn of 1836 he obtained a law license, and on April 15, 1837, removed to Springfield and commenced the practice, his old friend Stuart tak- ing him into partnership." From and after this election in 1834 as a represen- tative, Lincoln was a permanent factor in the politics and the progress of Sangamon County. At a Spring- field meeting in the following November to promote common schools, he was appointed one of eleven dele- gates to attend a convention at Vandalia called to de- liberate on that subject. He was reflected to the legis- lature in 1836, in 1838, and in 1840, and thus for a period of eight years took a full share in shaping and enacting the public and private laws of Illinois, which in our day has become one of the leading States in the Mississippi valley. Of Lincoln's share in that legisla- tion, it need only be said that it was as intelligent and beneficial to the public interest as that of the best of his colleagues. The most serious error committed by the legislature of Illinois during that period was that it enacted laws setting on foot an extensive system of INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS 45 internal improvements, in the form of railroads and canals, altogether beyond the actual needs of trans- portation for the then existing population of the State, and the consequent reckless creation of a State debt for money borrowed at extravagant interest and liberal commissions. The State underwent a season of specula- tive intoxication, in which, by the promised and expected rush of immigration and the swelling currents of its business, its farms were suddenly to become villages, its villages spreading towns, and its towns transformed into great cities, while all its people were to be made rich by the increased value of their land and property. Both parties entered with equal recklessness into this ill-advised internal improvement system, which in the course of about four years brought the State to bankruptcy, with no substantial works to show for the foolishly expended millions. In voting for these measures, Mr. Lincoln repre- sented the public opinion and wish of his county and the whole State ; and while he was as blamable, he was at the same time no more so than the wisest of his col- leagues. It must be remembered in extenuation that he was just beginning his parliamentary education. From the very first, however, he seems to have become a force in the legislature, and to have rendered special service to his constituents. It is conceded that the one object which Springfield and the most of Sangamon County had at heart was the removal of the capital from Vandal ia to that place. This was accomplished in 1836, and the management of the measure appears to have been intrusted mainly to Mr. Lincoln. One incident of his legislative career stands out in such prominent relation to the great events of his after life that it deserves special explanation and emphasis. Even at that early date, a quarter of a century before 46 ABRAHAM LINCOLN the outbreak of the Civil War, the slavery question was now and then obtruding itself as an irritating and per- plexing element into the local legislation of almost every new State. Illinois, though guaranteed its free- dom by the Ordinance of 1787, nevertheless underwent a severe political struggle in which, about four years after her admission into the Union, politicians and set- tlers from the South made a determined effort to change her to a slave State. The legislature of 1822-23, w ^ ln a two-thirds pro-slavery majority of the State Senate, and a technical, but legally questionable, two-thirds majority in the House, submitted to popular vote an act calling a State convention to change the constitu- tion. It happened, fortunately, that Governor Coles, though a Virginian, was strongly anti slavery, and gave the weight of his official influence and his whole four years' salary to counteract the dangerous scheme. From the fact that southern Illinois up to that time was mostly peopled from the slave States, the result was seriously in doubt through an active and exciting campaign, and the convention was finally defeated by a majority of eighteen hundred in a total vote of eleven thousand six hundred and twelve. While this result effectually decided that Illinois would remain a free State, the propagandism and reorganization left a deep and tenacious undercurrent of pro-slavery opinion that for many years manifested itself in vehement and in- tolerant outcries against "abolitionism," which on one occasion caused the murder of Elijah P. Lovejoy for persisting in his right to print an antislavery newspaper at Alton. Nearly a year before this tragedy the Illinois legisla- ture had under consideration certain resolutions from the Eastern States on the subject of slavery, and the committee to which they had been referred reported a LINCOLN-STONE PROTEST 47 set of resolves "highly disapproving abolition societies," holding that "the right of property in slaves is secured to the slaveholding States by the Federal Constitu- tion," together with other phraseology calculated on the whole to soothe and comfort pro-slavery sentiment. After much irritating discussion, the committee's reso- lutions were finally passed, with but Lincoln, and five others voting in the negative. No record remains whether or not Lincoln joined in the debate; but, to leave no doubt upon his exact position and feeling, he and his colleague, Dan Stone, caused the following pro- test to be formally entered on the journals of the House : "Resolutions upon the subject of domestic slavery having passed both branches of the General Assembly at its present session, the undersigned hereby protest against the passage of the same. "They believe that the institution of slavery is founded on both injustice and bad policy, but that the promulgation of abolition doctrines tends rather to in- crease than abate its evils. "They believe that the Congress of the United States has no power under the Constitution to interfere with the institution of slavery in the different States. "They believe that the Congress of the United States has the power, under the Constitution, to abolish sla- very in the District of Columbia, but that the power ought not to be exercised, unless at the request of the people of the District. "The difference between these opinions and those contained in the said resolutions is their reasons for entering this protest." In view of the great scope and quality of Lincoln's public service in after life, it would be a waste of time to trace out in, detail his words or his votes upon the 48 ABRAHAM LINCOLN multitude of questions on which he acted during this legislative career of eight years. It needs only to be remembered that it formed a varied and thorough school of parliamentary practice and experience that laid the broad foundation of that extraordinary skill and sagacity in statesmanship which he afterward dis- played in party controversy and executive direction. The quick proficiency and ready aptitude for leader- ship evidenced by him in this, as it may be called, his preliminary parliamentary school are strikingly proved by the fact that the Whig members of the Illinois House of Representatives gave him their full party vote for Speaker, both in 1838 and 1840. But being in a minority, they could not, of course, elect him. IV Law Practice Rules for a Lawyer Law and Politics: Twin Occupations The Springfield Coterie Friendly Help Anne Rutledge Mary Owens E^COLN'S removal from New Salem to Spring- field and his entrance into a law partnership with Major John T. Stuart begin a distinctively new period in his career. From this point we need not trace in detail his progress in his new and this time deliberately chosen vocation. The lawyer who works his way up in professional merit from a five-dollar fee in a suit before a justicj of the peace to a five-thousand-dollar fee be- fore the Supreme Court of his State has a long and diffi- cult path to climb. Mr. Lincoln climbed this path for twenty-five years with industry, perseverance, patience above all, with that sense of moral responsibility that always clearly traced the dividing line between his duty to his client and his duty to society and truth. His unqualified frankness of statement assured him the con- fidence of judge and jury in every argument. His habit of fully admitting the weak points in his case gained their close attention to its strong ones, and when clients brought him bad cases, his uniform advice was not to begin the suit. Among his miscellaneous writings there exist some fragments of autograph notes, evi- dently intended for a little lecture or talk to law stu- dents, which set forth with brevity and force his opin- ion of what a lawyer ought to be and do. He earnestly commends diligence in study, and, next to diligence, promptness in keeping up his work. 49 50 ABRAHAM LINCOLN "As a general rule, never take your whole fee in ad- vance," he says, "nor any more than a small retainer. When fully paid beforehand, you are more than a com- mon mortal if you can feel the same interest in the case as if something was still in prospect for you as well as for your client." "Extemporaneous speaking should be practised and cultivated. It is the lawyer's avenue to the public. However able and faithful he may be in other respects, people are slow to bring him business if he cannot make a speech. And yet, there is not a more fatal error to young lawyers than relying too much on speech-making. If any one, upon his rare powers of speaking, shall claim an exemption from the drudgery of the law, his case is a failure in advance. Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever you can. Point out to them how the nominal winner is often a real loser in fees, expenses, and waste of time. As a peacemaker, the lawyer has a superior opportunity of being a good man. There will still be business enough. Never stir up liti- gation. A worse man can scarcely be found than one who does this. Who can be more nearly a fiend than he who habitually overhauls the register of deeds in search of defects in titles, whereon to stir up strife and put money in his pocket? A moral tone ought to be infused into the profession which should drive such men out of it." "There is a vague popular belief that lawyers are necessarily dishonest. I say vague because when we consider to what extent confidence and honors are reposed in and conferred upon lawyers by the peo- ple, it appears improbable that their impression of dis- honesty is very distinct and vivid. Yet the impression is common almost universal. Let no young man choosing the law for a calling for a moment yield to the popular belief. Resolve to be honest at all events ; LAW A.ND POLITICS 51 and if, in your own judgment, you cannot be an hon- est lawyer, resolve to be honest without being a lawyer. Choose some other occupation, rather than one in the choosing of which you do, in advance, consent to be a knave." While Lincoln thus became a lawyer, he did not cease to remain a politician. In the early West, law and poli- tics were parallel roads to usefulness as well as distinc- tion. Newspapers had not then reached any consider- able circulation. There existed neither fast presses to print them, mail routes to carry them, nor subscribers to read them. Since even the laws had to be newly framed for those new communities, the lawyer became the inevitable political instructor and guide as far as ability and fame extended. His reputation as a lawyer was a twin of his influence as an orator, whether through logic or eloquence. Local conditions fostered, almost necessitated, this double pursuit. Westward emi- gration was in its full tide, and population was pouring into the great State of Illinois with ever accelerating rapidity. Settlements were spreading, roads were being opened, towns laid out, the larger counties divided and new ones organized, and the enthusiastic visions of coming prosperity threw the State into that fever of speculation which culminated in wholesale internal improvements on borrowed capital and brought col- lapse, stagnation, and bankruptcy in its inevitable train. As already said, these swift changes required a plenti- ful supply of new laws, to frame which lawyers were in a large proportion sent to the legislature every two years. These same lawyers also filled the bar and re- cruited the bench of the new State, and, as they fol- lowed the itinerant circuit courts from county to county in their various sections, were called upon in these summer wanderings to explain in public speeches 52 ABRAHAM LINCOLN their legislative work of the winter. By a natural con- nection, this also involved a discussion of national and party issues. It was also during this period that party activity was stimulated by the general adoption of the new system of party caucuses and party conventions to which President Jackson had given the impulse. In the American system of representative govern- ment, elections not only occur with the regularity of clockwork, but pervade the whole organism in every degree of its structure from top to bottom Federal, State, county, township, and school district. In Illi- nois, even the State judiciary has at different times been chosen by popular ballot. The function of the politician, therefore, is one of continuous watchfulness and activity, and he must have intimate knowledge of details if he would work out grand results. Activity in politics also produces eager competition and sharp rivalry. In 1839 the seat of government was definitely transferred from Vandalia to Springfield, and there soon gathered at the new State capital a group of young men whose varied ability and future success in public service has rarely been excelled Douglas, Shields, Cal- houn, Stuart, Logan, Baker, Treat, Hardin, Trumbull, McClernand, Browning, McDougall, and others. His new surroundings greatly stimulated and rein- forced Mr. Lincoln's growing experience and spread- ing acquaintance, giving him a larger share and wider influence in local and State politics. He became a val- ued and sagacious adviser in party caucuses, and a power in party conventions. Gradually, also, his gifts as an attractive and persuasive campaign speaker were making themselves felt and appreciated. His removal, in April, 1837, from a village of twenty houses to a "city" of about two thousand inhabitants placed him in striking new relations and necessities as FRIENDLY HELP 53 to dress, manners, and society, as well as politics; yet here again, as in the case of his removal from his father's cabin to New Salem six years before, peculiar conditions rendered the transitiqn less abrupt than would at first appear. Springfield, notwithstand- ing its greater population and prospective dignity as the capital, was in many respects no great improve- ment on New Salem. It had no public buildings, its streets and sidewalks were unpaved, its stores, in spite of all their flourish of advertisements, were stagger- ing under the hard times of 1837-39, and stagna- tion of business imposed a rigid economy on all classes. If we may credit tradition, this was one of the most serious crises of Lincoln's life. His intimate friend, William Butler, related to the writer that, having at- tended a session of the legislature at Vandalia, he and Lincoln returned together at its close to Springfield by the usual mode of horseback travel. At one of their stopping-places over night Lincoln, in one of his gloomy moods, told Butler the story of the almost hopeless prospects which lay immediately before him that the session was over, his salary all drawn, and his money all spent; that he had no resources and no work; that he did not know where to turn to earn even a week's board. Butler bade him be of good cheer, and, without any formal proposition or agreement, took him and his belongings to his own house and domesticated him there as a permanent guest, with Lincoln's tacit compliance rather than any definite consent. Later Lincoln shared a room and genial companionship, which ripened into closest intimacy, in the store of his friend Joshua F. Speed, all without charge or expense; and these bro- therly offerings helped the young lawyer over present necessities which might otherwise have driven him to muscular handiwork at weekly or monthly wages. 54 ABRAHAM LINCOLN From this time onward, in daily conversation, in ar- gument at the bar, in political consultation and discus- sion, Lincoln's life gradually broadened into contact with the leading professional minds of the growing State of Illinois. The man who could not pay a week's board bill was twice more elected to the legislature, was invited to public banquets and toasted by name, became a popular speaker, moved in the best society of the new capital, and made what was considered a brilliant marriage. Lincoln's stature and strength, his intelligence and ambition in short, all the elements which gave him popularity among men in New Salem, rendered him equally attractive to the fair sex of that village. On the other hand, his youth, his frank sincerity, his longing for sympathy and encouragement, made him peculiarly sensitive to the society and influence of women. Soon after coming to New Salem he chanced much in the society of Miss Anne Rutledge, a slender, blue-eyed blonde, nineteen years old, moderately educated, beau- tiful according to local standards an altogether lovely, tender-hearted, universally admired, and generally fas- cinating girl. From the personal descriptions of her which tradition has preserved, the inference is natu- rally drawn that her temperament and disposition were very much akin to those of Mr. Lincoln himself. It is little wonder, therefore, that he fell in love with her. But two years before she had become engaged to a Mr. McNamar, who had gone to the East to settle certain family affairs, and whose absence became so unac- countably prolonged that Anne finally despaired of his return, and in time betrothed herself to Lincoln. A year or so after this event Anne Rutledge was taken sick and died the neighbors said of a broken heart, but the doctor called it brain fever, and his science MARY OWENS 55 was more likely to be correct than their psychology. Whatever may have been the truth upon this point, the incident threw Lincoln into profound grief, and a pe- riod of melancholy so absorbing as to cause his friends apprehension for his own health. Gradually, however, their studied and devoted companionship won him back to cheerfulness, and his second affair of the heart as- sumed altogether different characteristics, most of which may be gathered from his own letters. Two years before the death of Anne Rutledge, Mr. Lincoln had seen and made the acquaintance of Miss Mary Owens, who had come to visit her sister Mrs. Able, and had passed about four weeks in New Salem, after which she returned to Kentucky. Three years later, and perhaps a year after Miss Rutledge's death, Mrs. Able, before starting for Kentucky, told Mr. Lin- coln, probably more in jest than earnest, that she would bring her sister back with her on condition that he would become her Mrs. Abie's brother-in-law. Lin- coln, also probably more in jest than earnest, promptly agreed to the proposition; for he remembered Mary Owens as a tall, handsome, dark-haired girl, with fair skin and large blue eyes, who in conversation could be intellectual and serious as well as jovial and witty, who had a liberal education, and was considered weal- thy one of those well-poised, steady characters who look upon matrimony and life with practical views and social matronly instincts. The bantering offer was made and accepted in the autumn of 1836, and in the following April Mr. Lin- coln removed to Springfield. Before this occurred, however, he was surprised to learn that Mary Owens had actually returned with her sister from Kentucky, and felt that the romantic jest had become a serious and practical question. Their first interview dissipated 56 ABRAHAM LINCOLN some of the illusions in which each had indulged. The three years elapsed since they first met had greatly changed her personal appearance. She had become stout; her twenty-eight years (one year more than his) had somewhat hardened the lines of her face. Both in figure and feature she presented a disappointing con- trast to the slim and not yet totally forgotten Anne Rutledge. On her part, it was more than likely that she did not find in him all the attractions her sister had pictured. The speech and manners of the Illinois frontier lacked much of the chivalric attentions and flattering com- pliments to which the Kentucky beaux were addicted. He was yet a diamond in the rough, and she would not immediately decide till she could better understand his character and prospects, so no formal engagement re- sulted. In December, Lincoln went to his legislative duties at Vandalia, and in the following April took up his permanent abode in Springfield. Such a separation was not favorable to rapid courtship, yet they had occasional interviews and exchanged occasional letters. None of hers to him have been preserved, and only three of his to her. From these it appears that they sometimes discussed their affair in a cold, hypothetical way, even down to problems of housekeeping, in the light of mere worldly prudence, much as if they were guardians ar- ranging a manage de convenance, rather than impul- sive and ardent lovers wandering in Arcady. Without Miss Owens's letters it is impossible to know what she may have said to him, but in May, 1837, Lincoln wrote to her : "I am often thinking of what we said about your coming to live at Springfield. I am afraid you would not be satisfied. There is a great deal of flourishing MARY OWENS 57 about in carriages here, which it would be your doom to see without sharing it. You would have to be poor, without the means of hiding your poverty. Do you be- lieve you could bear that patiently? Whatever woman may cast her lot with mine, should any ever do so, it is my intention to do all in my power to make her happy and contented ; and there is nothing I can imagine that would make me more unhappy than to fail in the effort. I know I should be much happier with you than the way I am, provided I saw no signs of discontent in you. What you have said to me may have been in the way of jest, or I may have misunderstood it. If so, then let it be forgotten; if otherwise, I much wish you would think seriously before you decide. What I have said I will most positively abide by, provided you wish it. My opinion is that you had better not do it. You have not been accustomed to hardship, and it may be more severe than you now imagine. I know you are capable of thinking correctly on any subject, and if you deliberate maturely upon this before you decide, then I am willing to abide your decision." Whether, after receiving this, she wrote him the "good long letter" he asked for in the same epistle is not known. Apparently they did not meet again until August, and the interview must have been marked by reserve and coolness on both sides, which left each more uncertain than before; for on the same day Lincoln again wrote her, and, after saying that she might per- haps be mistaken in regard to his real feelings toward her, continued thus: "I want in all cases to do right, and most particu- larly so in all cases with women. I want at this par- ticular time, more than anything else, to do right with you ; and if I knew it would be doing right, as I rather suspect it would, to let you alone, I would do it. And 58 ABRAHAM LINCOLN for the purpose of making the matter as plain as pos- sible, I now say that you can now drop the subject, dis- miss your thoughts (if you ever had any) from me for- ever, and leave this letter unanswered, without calling forth one accusing murmur from me. And I will even go further, and say that if it will add anything to your comfort or peace of mind to do so, it is my sincere wish that you should. Do not understand by this that I wish to cut your acquaintance. I mean no such thing. What I do wish is that our further acquaintance shall depend upon yourself. If such further acquaintance would contribute nothing to your happiness, I am sure it would not to mine. If you feel yourself in any de- gree bound to me, I am now willing to release you, provided you wish it; while, on the other hand, I am willing and even anxious to bind you faster, if I can be convinced that it will in any considerable degree add to your happiness. This, indeed, is the whole question with me." All that we know of the sequel is contained in a let- ter which Lincoln wrote to his friend Mrs. Browning nearly a year later, after Miss Owens had finally re- turned to Kentucky, in which, without mentioning the lady's name, he gave a seriocomic description of what might be called a courtship to escape matrimony. He dwells on his disappointment at her changed appear- ance, and continues : "But what could I do? I had told her sister that I would take her for better or for worse, and I made a point of honor and conscience in all things to stick to my word, especially if others had been induced to act on it, which in this case I had no doubt they had ; for I was now fairly convinced that no other man on earth would have her, and hence the conclusion that they were bent on holding me to my bargain, 'Well,' MARY OWENS 59 thought I, 'I have said it, and, be the consequences what they may, it shall not be my fault if I fail to do it.' . . . All this while, although I was fixed 'firm as the surge-repelling rock' in my resolution, I found I was continually repenting the rashness which had led me to make it. Through life I have been in no bondage, either real or imaginary, from the thraldom of which I so much desired to be free. . . . After I had delayed the matter as long as I thought I could in honor do (which, by the way, had brought me round into last fall), I concluded I might as well bring it to a consummation without further delay, and so I mus- tered my resolution and made the proposal to her direct ; but, shocking to relate, she answered, No. At first I supposed she did it through an affectation of modesty, which I thought but ill became her under the peculiar circumstances of her case, but on my renewal of the charge I found she repelled it with greater firmness than before. I tried it again and again, but with the same success, or rather with the same want of success. I finally was forced to give it up, at which I very unex- pectedly found myself mortified almost beyond endur- ance. I was mortified, it seemed to me, in a hundred different ways. My vanity was deeply wounded by the reflection that I had so long been too stupid to dis- cover her intentions, and at the same time never doubt- ing that I understood them perfectly ; and also that she, whom I had taught myself to believe nobody else would have, had actually rejected me with all my fancied greatness. And, to cap the whole, I then for the first time began to suspect that I was really a little in love with her." The serious side of this letter is undoubtedly genuine and candid, while the somewhat over-exaggeration of the comic side points as clearly that he had not fully 60 ABRAHAM LINCOLN recovered from the mental suffering he had undergone in the long conflict between doubt and duty. From the beginning, the match-making zeal of the sister had placed the parties in a false position, produced embar- rassment, and created distrust. A different beginning might have resulted in a very different outcome, for Lincoln, while objecting to her corpulency, acknow- ledges that in both feature and intellect she was as at- tractive as any woman he had ever met; and Miss Owens's letters, written after his death, state that her principal objection lay in the fact that his training had been different from hers, and that "Mr. Lincoln was deficient in those little links which make up the chain of a woman's happiness." She adds: "The last mes- sage I ever received from him was about a year after we parted in Illinois. Mrs. Able visited Kentucky, and he said to her in Springfield, 'Tell your sister that I think she was a great fool because she did not stay here and marry me.' ' She was even then not quite clear in her own mind but that his words were true. Springfield Society Miss Mary Todd Lincoln's En- gagement His Deep Despondency Visit to Ken- tucky Letters to Speed The Shields Duel Marriage Law Partnership with Logan Hardin Nominated for Congress, 1843 Baker Nominated for Congress, 1844 Lincoln Nominated and Elected, 1846 THE deep impression which the Mary Owens affair made upon Lincoln is further shown by one of the concluding phrases of his letter to Mrs. Browning : "I have now come to the conclusion never again to think of marrying." But it was not long before a reac- tion set in from this pessimistic mood. The actual transfer of the seat of government from Vandalia to Springfield in 1839 gave the new capital fresh anima- tion. Business revived, public improvements were be- gun, politics ran high. Already there was a spirit in the air that in the following year culminated in the extraordinary enthusiasm and fervor of the Harrison presidential campaign of 1840, that rollicking and up- roarious party carnival of humor and satire, of song and jollification, of hard cider and log cabins. While the State of Illinois was strongly Democratic, Sanga- mon County was as distinctly Whig, and the local party disputes were hot and aggressive. The Whig delegation of Sangamon in the legislature, popularly called the "Long Nine," because the sum of the stature of its members was fifty-four feet, became noted for its influence in legislation in a body where the majority 61 62 was against them; and of these Mr. Lincoln was the "tallest" both in person and ability, as was recognized by his twice receiving the minority vote for Speaker of the House. Society also began organizing itself upon metropoli- tan rather than provincial assumptions. As yet, how- ever, society was liberal. Men of either wealth or po- sition were still too few to fill its ranks. Energy, ambi- tion, talent, were necessarily the standard of admis- sion ; and Lincoln, though poor as a church mouse, was as welcome as those who could wear ruffled shirts and carry gold watches. The meetings of the legislature at Springfield then first brought together that splendid group of young men of genius whose phenomenal ca- reers and distinguished services have given Illinois fame in the history of the nation. It is a marked pe- culiarity of the American character that the bitterest foes in party warfare generally meet each other on terms of perfect social courtesy in the drawing-rooms of society; and future presidential candidates, cabinet members, senators, congressmen, jurists, orators, and battle heroes lent the little social reunions of Spring- field a zest and exaltation never found perhaps impos- sible amid the heavy, oppressive surroundings of conventional ceremony, gorgeous upholstery, and mag- nificent decorations. It was at this period also that Lincoln began to feel and exercise his expanding influence and powers as a writer and speaker. Already, two years earlier, he had written and delivered before the Young Men's Lyceum of Springfield an able address upon "The Per- petuation of Our Political Institutions," strongly en- forcing the doctrine of rigid obedience to law. In December, 1839, Douglas, in a heated conversation, challenged the young Whigs present to a political dis- MISS MARY TODD 63 cussion. The challenge was immediately taken up, and the public of Springfield listened with eager interest to several nights of sharp debate between Whig and Dem- ocratic champions, in which Lincoln bore a prominent and successful share. In the following summer, Lin- coln's name was placed upon the Harrison electoral ticket for Illinois, and he lent all his zeal and eloquence to swell the general popular enthusiasm for "Tippe- canoe and Tyler too." In the midst of this political and social awakening of the new capital and the quickened interest and high hopes of leading citizens gathered there from all parts of the State, there came into the Springfield circles Miss Mary Todd of Kentucky, twenty-one years old, handsome, accomplished, vivacious, witty, a dashing and fascinating figure in dress and conversation, gra- cious and imperious by turns. She easily singled out and secured the admiration of such of the Springfield beaux as most pleased her somewhat capricious fancy. She was a sister of Mrs. Ninian W. Edwards, whose husband was one of the "Long Nine." This circum- stance made Lincoln a frequent visitor at the Edwards house; and, being thus much thrown in her company, he found himself, almost before he knew it, entangled in a new love affair, and in the course of a twelvemonth engaged to marry her. Much to the surprise of Springfield society, however, the courtship took a sudden turn. Whether it was caprice or jealousy, a new attachment, or mature re- flection will always remain a mystery. Every such case is a law unto itself, and neither science nor poetry is ever able to analyze and explain its causes and effects. The conflicting stories then current, and the varying traditions that yet exist, either fail to agree or to fit the sparse facts which came to light. There re- 64 ABRAHAM LINCOLN mains no dispute, however, that the occurrence, what- ever shape it took, threw Mr. Lincoln into a deeper despondency than any he had yet experienced, for on January 23, 1841, he wrote to his law partner, John T. Stuart : "For not giving you a general summary of news you must pardon me; it is not in my power to do so. I am now the most miserable man living. If what I feel were equally distributed to the whole human fam- ily, there would not be one cheerful face on earth. Whether I shall ever be better, I cannot tell ; I awfully forebode I shall not. To remain as I am is impossible ; I must die or be better." Apparently his engagement to Miss Todd was broken off, but whether that was the result or the cause of his period of gloom seems still a matter of conjecture. His mind was so perturbed that he felt unable to attend the sessions of the legislature of which he was a mem- ber; and after its close his intimate friend Joshua F. Speed carried him off for a visit to Kentucky. The change of scene and surroundings proved of great bene- fit. He returned home about midsummer very much improved, but not yet completely restored to a natural mental equipoise. While on their visit to Kentucky, Speed had likewise fallen in love, and in the following winter had become afflicted with doubts and perplex- ities akin to those from which Lincoln had suffered. It now became his turn to give sympathy and counsel to his friend, and he did this with a warmth and deli- cacy born of his own spiritual trials, not yet entirely overmastered. He wrote letter after letter to Speed to convince him that his doubts about not truly loving the woman of his choice were all nonsense. "Why, Speed, if you did not love her, although you might not wish her death, you would most certainly LETTERS TO SPEED 65 be resigned to it. Perhaps this point is no longer a question with you, and my pertinacious dwelling upon it is a rude intrusion upon your feelings. If so, you must pardon me. You know the hell I have suffered on that point, and how tender I am upon it. ... I am now fully convinced that you love her as ardently as you are capable of loving. . . . It is the pecu- liar misfortune of both you and me to dream dreams of Elysium far exceeding all that anything earthly can realize." When Lincoln heard that Speed was finally married, he wrote him : "It cannot be told how it now thrills me with joy to hear you say you are 'far happier than you ever ex- pected to be.' That much, I know, is enough. I know you too well to suppose your expectations were not, at least, sometimes extravagant; and if the reality ex- ceeds them all, I say, Enough, dear Lord. I am not going beyond the truth when I tell you that the short space it took me to read your last letter gave me more pleasure than the total sum of all I have enjoyed since the fatal first of January, 1841. Since then it seems to me I should have been entirely happy, but for the never- absent idea that there is one still unhappy whom I have contributed to make so. That still kills my soul. I cannot but reproach myself for even wishing to be happy while she is otherwise." It is quite possible that a series of incidents that occurred during the summer in which the above was written had something to do with bringing such a frame of mind to a happier conclusion. James Shields, after- ward a general in two wars and a senator from two States, was at that time auditor of Illinois, with his office at Springfield. Shields was an Irishman by birth, and, for an active politician of the Democratic 66 ABRAHAM LINCOLN party, had the misfortune to be both sensitive and iras- cible in party warfare. Shields, together with the Democratic governor and treasurer, issued a circular order forbidding the payment of taxes in the depre- ciated paper of the Illinois State banks, and the Whigs were endeavoring to make capital by charging that the order was issued for the purpose of bringing enough silver into the treasury to pay the salaries of these officials. Using this as a basis of argument, a couple of clever Springfield society girls wrote and printed in the "Sangamo Journal" a series of humorous let- ters in country dialect, purporting to come from the "Lost Townships," and signed by "Aunt Rebecca," who called herself a farmer's widow. It is hardly ne- cessary to say that Mary Todd was one of the culprits. The young ladies originated the scheme more to poke fun at the personal weaknesses of Shields than for the sake of party effect, and they embellished their simu- lated plaint about taxes with an embroidery of fictitious social happenings and personal allusions to the auditor that put the town on a grin and Shields into fury. The fair and mischievous writers found it necessary to consult Lincoln about how they should frame the political features of their attack, and he set them a pat- tern by writing the first letter of the series himself. Shields sent a friend to the editor of the "Journal," and demanded the name of the real "Rebecca." The editor, as in duty bound, asked Lincoln what he should do, and was instructed to give Lincoln's name, and not to mention the ladies. Then followed a letter from Shields to Lincoln demanding retraction and apology, Lincoln's reply that he declined to answer under men- ace, and a challenge from Shields. Thereupon Lin- coln instructed his "friend" as follows : If former offensive correspondence were withdrawn and a polite THE SHIELDS DUEL 67 and gentlemanly inquiry made, he was willing to ex- plain that : "I did write the 'Lost Townships' letter which ap- peared in the 'Journal' of the 2d instant, but had no participation in any form in any other article alluding to you. I wrote that wholly for political effect; I had no intention of injuring your personal or private char- acter or standing as a man or a gentleman; and I did not then think, and do not now think, that that article could produce or has produced that effect against you, and had I anticipated such an effect I would have for- borne to write it. And I will add that your conduct toward me, so far as I know, had always been gentle- manly, and that I had no personal pique against you and no cause for any. ... If nothing like this is done, the preliminaries of the fight are to be : "First. Weapons : Cavalry broadswords of the larg- est size, precisely equal in all respects, and such as now used by the cavalry company at Jacksonville. "Second. Position : A plank ten feet long, and from nine to twelve inches broad, to be firmly fixed on edge, on the ground, as the line between us, which neither is to pass his foot over upon forfeit of his life. Next, a line drawn on the ground on either side of said plank and parallel with it, each at the distance ( of the whole length of the sword and three feet additional from the plank, and the passing of his own such line by either party during the fight shall be deemed a surrender of the contest." The two seconds met, and, with great unction, pledged "our honor to each other that we would endeavor to set- tle the matter amicably," but persistently higgled over points till publicity and arrests seemed imminent. Pro- curing the necessary broadswords, all parties then hur- ried away to an island in the Mississippi River opposite 68 Alton, where, long before the planks were set on edge or the swords drawn, mutual friends took the case out of the hands of the seconds and declared an adjustment. The terms of the fight as written by Mr. Lincoln show plainly enough that in his judgment it was to be treated as a farce, and would never proceed beyond "prelimi- naries." There, of course, ensued the usual very belli- cose after-discussion in the newspapers, with additional challenges between the seconds about the proper eti- quette of such farces, all resulting only in the shedding of much ink and furnishing Springfield with topics of lively conversation for a month. These occurrences, naturally enough, again drew Mr. Lincoln and Miss Todd together in friendly interviews, and Lincoln's letter to Speed detailing the news of the duels contains this significant paragraph : "But I began this letter not for what I have been writing, but to say something on that subject which you know to be of such infinite solicitude to me. The immense sufferings you endured from the first days of September till the middle of February you never tried to conceal from me, and I well understood. You have now been the husband of a lovely woman nearly eight months. That you are happier now than the day you married her I well know, for without you could not be living. But I have your word for it too, and the re- turning elasticity of spirits which is manifested in your letters. But I want to ask a close question. 'Are you now in feeling as well as judgment glad that you are married as you are?' From anybody but me this would be an impudent question not to be tolerated, but I know you will pardon it in me. Please answer it quickly, as I am impatient to know." The answer was evidently satisfactory, for on No- vember 4, 1842, the Rev. Charles Dresser united Abra- MARRIAGE 69 ham Lincoln and Mary Todd in the holy bonds of matrimony. 1 His marriage to Miss Todd ended all those mental perplexities and periods of despondency from which he had suffered more or less during his several love af- fairs, extending over nearly a decade. Out of the keen anguish he had endured, he finally gained tha't perfect mastery over his own spirit which Scripture declares to denote a greatness superior to that of him who takes a city. Few men have ever attained that complete domination of the will over the emotions, of reason over passion, by which he was able in the years to come to meet and solve the tremendous questions destiny had in store for him. His wedding once over, he took up with resolute patience the hard, practical routine of daily life, in which he had already been so severely schooled. Even his sentimental correspon- dence with his friend Speed lapsed into neglect. He was so poor that he and his bride could not make the contemplated visit to Kentucky they would both have so much enjoyed. His "national debt" of the old New Salem days was not yet fully paid off. "We are not keeping house, but boarding at the Globe tavern," he writes. "Our room . . . and boarding only cost us four dollars a week." His law partnership with Stuart had lasted four years, but was dissolved by reason of Stuart's election 1 The following children were Lincoln, in Springfield, July 16, born of this marriage : 1882. Robert Todd, August I, 1843; Robert, who filled the office of Kdward Baker, March IO, 1846; Secretary of War with distinction William Wallace, December 21, under the administrations of Presi- 1850; Thomas, April 4, 18^3. dents Garfield and Arthur, as well Edward died in infancy ; William as that of minister to England in the White House, February 20, under the administration of Presi- 1862; Thomas in Chicago, July dent Harrison, now resides in Chi- 15, 1871; and the mother, Mary cago, Illinois. ?o ABRAHAM LINCOLN to Congress, and a new one was formed with Judge Stephen T. Logan, who had recently resigned from the circuit bench, where he had learned the quality and promise of Lincoln's talents. It was an opportune and important change. Stuart had devoted himself mainly to politics, while with Logan law was the primary ob- ject. Under Logan's guidance and encouragement, he took up both the study and practical work of the pro- fession in a more serious spirit. Lincoln's interest in politics, however, was in no way diminished, and, in truth, his limited practice at that date easily afforded him the time necessary for both. Since 1840 he had declined a reelection to the legis- lature, and his ambition had doubtless contributed much to this decision. His late law partner, Stuart, had been three times a candidate for Congress. He was defeated in 1836, but successfully gained his elec- tion in 1838 and 1840, his service of two terms ex- tending from December 2, 1839, to March 3, 1843. For some reason, the next election had been postponed from the year 1842 to 1843. ^ was but natural that Stuart's success should excite a similar desire in Lin- coln, who had reached equal party prominence, and rendered even more conspicuous party service. Lin- coln had profited greatly by the companionship and friendly emulation of the many talented young poli- ticians of Springfield, but this same condition also in- creased competition and stimulated rivalry. Not only himself, but both Hardin and Baker desired the nomi- nation, which, as the district then stood, was equivalent to an election. When the leading Whigs of Sangamon County met, Lincoln was under the impression that it was Baker and not Hardin who was his most dangerous rival, as appears in a letter to Speed of March 24, 1843 ' CONGRESSIONAL NOMINATIONS 71 "We had a meeting of the Whigs of the county here on last Monday to appoint delegates to a district con- vention, and Baker beat me and got the delegation in- structed to go for him. The meeting, in spite of my attempt to decline it, appointed me one of the delegates, so that in getting Baker the nomination I shall be fixed a good deal like a fellow who is made groomsman to a man that has cut him out and is marrying his own dear 'gal/ ' The causes that led to his disappointment are set forth more in detail in a letter, two days later, to a friend in the new county of Menard, which now included his old home, New Salem, whose powerful assistance was therefore lost from the party councils of Sanga- mon. The letter also dwells more particularly on the complicated influences which the practical politician has to reckon with, and shows that even his marriage had been used to turn popular opinion against him. "It is truly gratifying to me to learn that while the people of Sangamon have cast me off, my old friends of Menard, who have known me longest and best, stick to me. It would astonish, if not amuse, the older citi- zens to learn that I (a stranger, friendless, uneducated, penniless boy, working on a flatboat at ten dollars per month) have been put down here as the candidate of pride, wealth, and aristocratic family distinction. Yet so, chiefly, it was. There was, too, the strangest com- bination of church influence against me. ' Baker is a Campbellite, and therefore, as I suppose, with few ex- ceptions, got all that church. My wife has some rela- tions in the Presbyterian churches and some with the Episcopal churches; and therefore, wherever it would tell, I was set down as either the one or the other, while it was everywhere contended that no Christian ought to go for me, because I belonged to no church, was 72 ABRAHAM LINCOLN suspected of being a deist, and had talked about fight- ing a duel. With all these things, Baker of course had nothing to do. Nor do I complain of them. As to his own church going for him, I think that was right enough, and as to the influences I have spoken of in the other, though they were very strong, it would be grossly untrue and unjust to charge that they acted upon them in a body, or were very near so. I only mean that those influences levied a tax of a considerable per cent, upon my strength throughout the religious community." In the same letter we have a striking illustration of Lincoln's intelligence and skill in the intricate details of political management, together with the high sense of honor and manliness which directed his action in such matters. Speaking of the influences of Menard County, he wrote : "If she and Mason act circumspectly, they will in the convention be able so far to enforce their rights as to decide absolutely which one of the candidates shall be successful. Let me show the reason of this. Hardin, or some other Morgan candidate, will get Putnam, Marshall, Woodford, Tazewell, and Logan [counties], making sixteen. Then you and Mason, having three, can give the victory to either side. You say you shall instruct your delegates for me, unless I object. I cer- tainly shall not object. That would be too pleasant a compliment for me to tread in the dust. And, besides, if anything should happen (which, however, is not probable) by which Baker should be thrown out of the fight, I would be at liberty to accept the nomina- tion if I could get it. I do, however, feel myself bound not to hinder him in any way from getting the nomi- nation. I should despise myself were I to attempt it. I think, then, it would be proper for your meeting to BAKER NOMINATED 73 appoint three delegates, and to instruct them to go for some one as a first choice, some one else as a second, and perhaps some one as a third; and if in those in- structions I were named as the first choice it would gratify me very much. If you wish to hold the bal- ance of power, it is important for you to attend to and secure the vote of Mason also." A few weeks again changed the situation, of which he informed Speed in a letter dated May 18: "In relation to our Congress matter here, you were right in supposing I would support the nominee. Nei- ther Baker nor I, however, is the man but Hardin, so far as I can judge from present appearances. We shall have no split or trouble about the matter ; all will be harmony." In the following year (1844) Lincoln was once more compelled to exercise his patience. The Camp- bellite friends of Baker must have again been very ac- tive in behalf of their church favorite; for their influ- ence, added to his dashing politics and eloquent oratory, appears to have secured him the nomination without serious contention, while Lincoln found a partial rec- ompense in being nominated a candidate for presiden- tial elector, which furnished him opportunity for all his party energy and zeal during the spirited but un- successful presidential campaign for Henry Clay. He not only made an extensive canvass in Illinois, but also made a number of speeches in the adjoining State of Indiana. It was probably during that year that a tacit agree- ment was reached among the Whig leaders in Sanga- mon County, that each would be satisfied with one term in Congress and would not seek a second nomina- tion. But Hardin was the aspirant from the neighbor- ing county of Morgan, and apparently therefore not 74 included in this arrangement. Already, in the fall of 1845, Lincoln industriously began his appeals and in- structions to his friends in the district to secure the succession. Thus he wrote on November 17: "The paper at Pekin has nominated Hardin for gov- ernor, and, commenting on this, the Alton paper indi- rectly nominated him for Congress. It would give Hardin a great start, and perhaps use me up, if the Whig papers of the district should nominate him for Congress. If your feelings toward me are the same as when I saw you (which I have no reason to doubt), I wish you would let nothing appear in your paper which may operate against me. You understand. Matters stand just as they did when I saw you. Baker is certainly, off the track, and I fear Hardin intends to be on it." But again, as before, the spirit of absolute fairness governed all his movements, and he took special pains to guard against it being "suspected that I was attempt- ing to juggle Hardin out of a nomination for Congress by juggling him into one for governor." "I should be pleased," he wrote again in January, "if I could concur with you in the hope that my name would be the only one presented to the convention ; but I cannot. Hardin is a man of desperate energy and perseverance, and one that never backs out; and, I fear, to think otherwise is to be deceived in the character of our ad- versary. I would rejoice to be spared the labor of a contest, but, 'being in,' I shall go it thoroughly and to the bottom." He then goes on to recount in much detail the chances for and against him in the several counties of the district, and in later letters discusses the system of selecting candidates, where the conven- tion ought to be held, how the delegates should be chosen, the instructions they should receive, and how LINCOLN NOMINATED 75 the places of absent delegates should be filled. He watched his field of operations, planned his strategy, and handled his forces almost with the vigilance of a military commander. As a result, he won both his nomination in May and his election to the Thirtieth Congress in August, 1846. In that same year the Mexican War broke out. Hardin became colonel of one of the three regiments of Illinois volunteers called for by President Polk, while Baker raised a fourth regiment, which was also accepted. Colonel Hardin was killed in the battle of Buena Vista, and Colonel Baker won great distinction in the righting near the City of Mexico. Like Abraham Lincoln, Douglas was also elected to Congress in 1846, where he had already served the two preceding terms. But these redoubtable Illinois cham- pions were not to have a personal tilt in the House of Representatives. Before Congress met, the Illinois legislature elected Douglas to the United States Sen- tae for six years from March 4, 1847. VI First Session of the Thirtieth Congress Mexican War "Wilmot Proviso" Campaign of 1848 Letters to Herndon about Young Men in Politics Speech in Congress on the Mexican War Second Session of the Thirtieth Congress Bill to Prohibit Slavery in the Dis- trict of Columbia Lincoln's Recommendations of Of- fice-Seekers Letters to Speed Commissioner of the General Land Office Declines Governership of Oregon VERY few men are fortunate enough to gain dis- tinction during their first term in Congress. The reason is obvious. Legally, a term extends over two years; practically, a session of five or six months dur- ing the first, and three months during the second year ordinarily reduce their opportunities more than one half. In those two sessions, even if we presuppose some knowledge of parliamentary law, they must learn the daily routine of business, make the acquaintance of their fellow-members, who already, in the Thirtieth Congress, numbered something over two hundred, study the past and prospective legislation on a multi- tude of minor national questions entirely new to the new members, and perform the drudgery of haunting the departments in the character of unpaid agent and attorney to attend to the private interests of constitu- ents a physical task of no small proportions in Lin- coln's day, when there was neither street-car nor om- nibus in the "city of magnificent distances," as Wash- ington was nicknamed. Add to this that the principal 76 SERVICE IN CONGRESS 77 work of preparing legislation is done by the various committees in their committee-rooms, of which the public hears nothing, and that members cannot choose their own time for making speeches; still further, that the management of debate on prepared legislation must necessarily be intrusted to members of long experience as well as talent, and it will be seen that the novice need not expect immediate fame. It is therefore not to be wondered at that Lincoln's single term in the House of Representatives at Wash- ington added practically nothing to his reputation. He did not attempt to shine forth in debate by either a stinging retort or a witty epigram, or by a sudden burst of inspired eloquence. On the contrary, he took up his task as a quiet but earnest and patient apprentice in the great workshop of national legislation, and per- formed his share of duty with industry and intelligence, as well as with a modest and appreciative respect for the ability and experience of his seniors. "As to speechmaking," he wrote, "by way of getting the hang of the House, I made a little speech two or three days ago on a post-office question of no general interest. I find speaking here and elsewhere about the same thing. I was about as badly scared, and no worse, as I am when I speak in court. I expect to make one within a week or two in which I hope to suc- ceed well enough to wish you to see it." And again, some weeks later : "I just take my pen to say that Mr. Stephens of Georgia, a little, slim, pale-faced consump- tive man with a voice like Logan's, has just concluded the very best speech of an hour's length I ever heard. My old, withered, dry eyes are full of tears yet." He was appointed the junior Whig member of the Committee on Post-offices and Post-roads, and shared its prosaic but eminently useful labors both in the com- 78 ABRAHAM LINCOLN mittee-room and the House debates. His name appears on only one other committee, that on Expenditures of the War Department, and he seems to have interested himself in certain amendments of the law relating to bounty lands for soldiers and such minor military top- ics. He looked carefully after the interests of Illinois in certain grants of land to that State for railroads, but expressed his desire that the government price of the reserved sections should not be increased to actual settlers. During the first session of the Thirtieth Congress he delivered three set speeches in the House, all of them carefully prepared and fully written out. The first of these, on January 12, 1848, was an elaborate defense of the Whig doctrine summarized in a House resolu- tion, passed a week or ten days before, that the Mexi- can War "had been unnecessarily and unconstitution- ally commenced by the President," James K. Polk. The speech is not a mere party diatribe, but a terse his- torical and legal examination of the origin of the Mexi- can War. In the after-light of our own times which shines upon these transactions, we may readily admit that Mr. Lincoln and the Whigs had the best of the argument, but it must be quite as readily conceded that they were far behind the President and his defenders in political and party strategy. The former were clearly wasting their time in discussing an abstract question of international law upon conditions existing twenty months before. During those twenty months the American arms had won victory after victory, and planted the American flag on the ''halls of the Monte- zumas." Could even successful argument undo those victories or call back to life the brave American sol- diers who had shed their blood to win them ? It may be assumed as an axiom that Providence has "WILMOT PROVISO" 79 never gifted any political party with all of political wis- dom or blinded it with all of political folly. Upon the foregoing point of controversy the Whigs were sadly thrown on the defensive, and labored heavily under their already discounted declamation. But instinct rather than sagacity led them to turn their eyes to the future, and successfully upon other points to retrieve their mistake. Within six weeks after Lincoln's speech President Polk sent to the Senate a treaty of peace, under which Mexico ceded to the United States an extent of territory equal in area to Germany, France, and Spain combined, and thereafter the origin of the war was an obsolete question. What should be done with the new territory was now the issue. This issue embraced the already exciting slavery question, and Mr. Lincoln was doubtless gratified that the Whigs had taken a position upon it so consonant with his own convictions. Already, in the previous Congress, the body of the Whig members had joined a small group of antislavery Democrats in fastening upon an appropriation bill the famous "Wilmot Pro- viso," that slavery should never exist in territory ac- quired from Mexico, and the Whigs of the Thirtieth Congress steadily followed the policy of voting for the same restriction in regard to every piece of legislation where it was applicable. Mr. Lincoln often said he had voted forty or fifty times for the Wilmot Proviso in various forms during his single term. Upon another point he and the other Whigs were equally wise. Repelling the Democratic charge that they were unpatriotic in denouncing the war, they voted in favor of every measure to sustain, supply, and en- courage the soldiers in the field. But their most adroit piece of strategy, now that the war was ended, was in their movement to make General Taylor President. 80 ABRAHAM LINCOLN In this movement Mr. Lincoln took a leading and active part. No living American statesman has ever been idolized by his party adherents as was Henry Clay for a whole generation, and Mr. Lincoln fully shared this hero-worship. But his practical campaigning as a candidate for presidential elector in the Harrison campaign of 1840, and the Clay campaign of 1844, in Illinois and the adjoining States, afforded him a basis for sound judgment, and convinced him that the day when Clay could have been elected President was forever passed. "Mr. Clay's chance for an election is just no chance at all," he wrote on April 30. "He might get New York, and that would have elected in 1844, but it will not now, because he must now, at the least, lose Tennes- see, which he had then, and in addition the fifteen new votes of Florida, Texas, Iowa, and Wisconsin. . . . In my judgment, we can elect nobody but General Tay- lor; and we cannot elect him without a nomination. Therefore don't fail to send a delegate." And again on the same day : "Mr. Clay's letter has not advanced his interests any here. Several who were against Taylor, but not for anybody particularly before, are since tak- ing ground, some for Scott and some for McLean. Who will be nominated neither I. nor any one else can tell. Now, let me pray to you in turn. My prayer is that you let nothing discourage or baffle you, but that, in spite of every difficulty, you send us a good Taylor delegate from your circuit. Make Baker, who is now with you, I suppose, help about it. He is a good hand to raise a breeze." In due time Mr. Lincoln's sagacity and earnestness were both justified ; for on June 12 he was able to write to an Illinois friend : "On my return from Philadelphia, where I had been CAMPAIGN OF 1848 81 attending the nomination of 'Old Rough,' I found your letter in a mass of others which had accumulated in my absence. By many, and often, it had been said they would not abide the nomination of Taylor; but since the deed has been done, they are fast falling in, and in my opinion we shall have a most overwhelming, glorious triumph. One unmistakable sign is that all the odds and ends are with us Barnburners, Native Americans, Tyler men, disappointed office-seeking Lo- cofocos, and the Lord knows what. This is important, if in nothing else, in showing which way the wind blows. Some of the sanguine men have set down all the States as certain for Taylor but Illinois, and it as doubtful. Cannot something be done even in Illinois? Taylor's nomination takes the Locos on the blind side. It turns the war-thunder against them. The war is now to them the gallows of Haman, which they built for us, and on which they are doomed to be hanged them- selves." Nobody understood better than Mr. Lincoln the ob- vious truth that in politics it does not suffice merely to nominate candidates. Something must also be done to elect them. Two of the letters which he at this time wrote home to his young law partner, William H. Herndon, are especially worth quoting in part, not alone to show his own zeal and industry, but also as a perennial instruction and encouragement to young men who have an ambition to make a name and a place for themselves in American politics : "Last night I was attending a sort of caucus of the Whig members, held in relation to the coming presi- dential election. The whole field of the nation was scanned, and all is high hope and confidence. . . . Now, as to the young men. You must not wait to be brought forward by the older men. For instance, do 82 ABRAHAM LINCOLN you suppose that I should ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men? You young men get together and form a 'Rough and Ready Club/ and have regular meetings and speeches. . . . Let every one play the part he can play best, some speak, some sing, and all 'holler.' Your meetings will be of evenings; the older men, and the women, will go to hear you ; so that it will not only contribute to the election of 'Old Zach,' but will be an interesting pastime, and improving to the intellectual faculties of all engaged." And in another letter, answering one from Herndon in which that young aspirant complains of having been neglected, he says : "The subject of that letter is exceedingly painful to me; and I cannot but think there is some mistake in your impression of the motives of the old men. I sup- pose I am now one of the old men; and I declare, on my veracity, which I think is good with you, that nothing could afford me more satisfaction than to learn- that you and others of my young friends at home are doing battle in the contest, and endearing them- selves to the people, and taking a stand far above any I have been able to reach in their admiration. I cannot conceive that other old men feel differently. Of course I cannot demonstrate what I say ; but I was young once, and I am sure I was never ungenerously thrust back. I hardly know what to say. The way for a young man to rise is to improve himself every way he can, never suspecting that anybody wishes to hinder him. Allow me to assure you that suspicion and jealousy never did help any man in any situation. There may sometimes be ungenerous attempts to keep a young man down ; and they will succeed, too, if he allows his mind to be di- verted from its true channel to brood over the attempted SPEECHES IN CONGRESS 83 injury. Cast about, and see if this feeling has not in- jured every person you have ever known to fall into it." Mr. Lincoln's interest in this presidential campaign did not expend itself merely in advice to others. We have his own written record that he also took an active part for the election of General Taylor after his nom- ination, speaking a few times in Maryland near Wash- ington, several times in Massachusetts, and canvassing quite fully his own district in Illinois. Before the session of Congress ended he also delivered two speeches in the House one on the general subject of internal improvements, and the other the usual political campaign speech which members of Congress are in the habit of making to be printed for home circulation ; made up mainly of humorous and satirical criticism, favoring the election of General Taylor, and opposing the election of General Cass, the Democratic candidate. Even this production, however, is lighted up by a pas- sage of impressive earnestness and eloquence, in which he explains and defends the attitude of the Whigs in denouncing the origin of the Mexican War : "If to say 'the war was unnecessarily and unconstitu- tionally commenced by the President/ be opposing the war, then the Whigs have very generally opposed it. Whenever they have spoken at all they have said this ; and they have said it on what has appeared good reason to them. The marching an army into the midst of a peaceful Mexican settlement, frightening the inhabi- tants away, leaving their growing crops and other property to destruction, to you may appear a perfectly amiable, peaceful, unprovoking procedure; but it does not appear so to us. So to call such an act, to us ap- pears no other than a naked, impudent absurdity, and we speak of it accordingly. But if, when the war had be- gun, and had become the cause of the country, the giv- 84 ABRAHAM LINCOLN ing of our money and our blood, in common with yours, was support of the war, then it is not true that we have always opposed the war. With few individual excep- tions, you have constantly had our votes here for all the necessary supplies. And, more than this, you have had the services, the blood, and the lives of our politi- cal brethren in every trial and on every field. The beardless boy and the mature man, the humble and the distinguished you have had them. Through suffer- ing and death, by disease and in battle, they have en- dured, and fought and fell with you. Clay and Web- ster each gave a son, never to be returned. From the State of my own residence, besides other worthy but less known Whig names, we sent Marshall, Morrison, Baker, and Hardin ; they all fought and one fell, and in the fall of that one we lost our best Whig man. Nor were the Whigs few in number or laggard in the day of danger. In that fearful, bloody, breathless struggle at Buena Vista, where each man's hard task was to beat back five foes or die himself, of the five high officers who perished, four were Whigs. In speaking of this, I mean no odious comparison between the lion-hearted Whigs and the Democrats who fought there. On other occasions, and among the lower officers and pri- vates on that occasion, I doubt not the proportion was different. I wish to do justice to all. I think of all those brave men as Americans, in whose proud fame, as an American, I, too, have a share. Many of them, W'higs and Democrats, are my constituents and per- sonal friends; and I thank them more than thank them one and all, for the high, imperishable honor they have conferred on our common State." During the second session of the Thirtieth Congress Mr. Lincoln made no long speeches, but in addition to the usual routine work devolved on him by the com- SLAVERY AT WASHINGTON 85 mittee of which he was a member, he busied himself in preparing a special measure which, because of its re- lation to the great events of his later life, needs to be particularly mentioned. Slavery existed in Maryland and Virginia when these States ceded the territory out of which the District of Columbia was formed. Since, by that cession, this land passed under the exclusive control of the Federal government, the "institution" within this ten miles square could no longer be de- fended by the plea of State sovereignty, and antislavery sentiment naturally demanded that it should cease. Pro-slavery statesmen, on the other hand, as persis- tently opposed its removal, partly as a matter of pride and political consistency, partly because it was a con- venience to Southern senators and members of Con- gress, when they came to Washington, to bring their family servants where the local laws afforded them the same security over their black chattels which existed at their homes. Mr. Lincoln, in his Peoria speech in 1854, emphasized the sectional dispute with this vivid touch of local color : "The South clamored for a more efficient fugitive- slave law. The North clamored for the abolition of a peculiar species of slave trade in the District of Colum- bia, in connection with which, in view from the win- dows of the Capitol, a sort of negro livery-stable, where droves of negroes were collected, temporarily kept, and finally taken to Southern markets, precisely like droves of horses, had been openly maintained for fifty years." Thus the question remained a minor but never ending bone of contention and point of irritation, and excited debate arose in the Thirtieth Congress over a House resolution that the Committee on the Judiciary be in- structed to report a bill as soon as practicable prohib- iting the slave trade in the District of Columbia. In 86 ABRAHAM LINCOLN this situation of affairs, Mr. Lincoln conceived the fond hope that he might be able to present a plan of com- promise. He already entertained the idea which in later years during his presidency he urged upon both Congress and the border slave States, that the just and generous mode of getting rid of the barbarous insti- tution of slavery was by a system of compensated eman- cipation, giving freedom to the slave and a money indemnity to the owner. He therefore carefully framed a bill providing for the abolishment of slavery in the District upon the following principal conditions : First. That the law should be adopted by a popular vote in the District. Second. A temporary system of apprenticeship and gradual emancipation for children born of slave mothers after January i, 1850. Third. The government to pay full cash value for slaves voluntarily manumitted by their owners. Fourth. Prohibiting bringing slaves into the District, or selling them out of it. Fifth. Providing that government officers, citizens of slave States, might bring with them and take away again, their slave house-servants. Sixth. Leaving the existing fugitive-slave law in force. When Mr. Lincoln presented this amendment to the House, he said that he was authorized to state that of about fifteen of the leading citizens of the District of Columbia, to whom the proposition had been submitted, there was not one who did not approve the adoption of such a proposition. He did not wish to be misunder- stood. He did not know whether or not they would vote for this bill on the first Monday in April ; but he repeated that out of fifteen persons to whom it had been submitted, he had authority to say that every one of OFFICE-SEEKERS 87 them desired that some proposition like this should pass. While Mr. Lincoln did not so state to the House, it was well understood in intimate circles that the bill had the approval on the one hand of Mr. Seaton, the conservative mayor of Washington, and on the other hand of Mr. Giddings, the radical antislavery member of the House of Representatives. Notwithstanding the singular merit of the bill in reconciling such ex- tremes of opposing factions in its support, the temper of Congress had already become too hot to accept such a rational and practical solution, and Mr. Lincoln's wise proposition was not allowed to come to a vote. The triumphant election of General Taylor to the presidency in November, 1848, very soon devolved upon Mr. Lincoln the delicate and difficult duty of mak- ing recommendations to the incoming administration of persons suitable to be appointed to fill the various Federal offices in Illinois, as Colonel E. D. Baker and himself were the only Whigs elected to Congress from that State. In performing this duty, one of his leading characteristics, impartial honesty and absolute fairness to political friends and foes alike, stands out with note- worthy clearness. His term ended with General Tay- lor's inauguration, and he appears to have remained in Washington but a few days thereafter. Before leaving, he wrote to the new Secretary of the Treasury : "Colonel E. D. Baker and myself are the only Whig members of Congress from Illinois I of the Thirtieth, and he of the Thirty-first. We have reason to think the Whigs of that State hold us responsible, to some ex- tent, for the appointments which may be made of our citizens. We do not know you personally, and our ef- forts to see you have, so far, been unavailing. I there- fore hope I am not obtrusive in saying in this way, for 88 ABRAHAM LINCOLN him and myself, that when a citizen of Illinois is to be appointed, in your department, to an office, either in or out of the State, we most respectfully ask to be heard." On the following day, March 10, 1849, ne addressed to the Secretary of State his first formal recommenda- tion. It is remarkable from the fact that between the two Whig applicants whose papers are transmitted, he says rather less in favor of his own choice than of the opposing claimant. "SiR : There are several applicants for the office of United States Marshal for the District of Illinois, among the most prominent of whom are Benjamin Bond, Esq., of Carlyle, and Thomas, Esq., of Galena. Mr. Bond I know to be personally every way worthy of the office; and he is very numerously and most respectably recommended. His papers I send to you ; and I solicit for his claims a full and fair consid- eration. Having said this much, I add that in my in- dividual judgment the appointment of Mr. Thomas would be the better. "Your obedient servant, "A. LINCOLN." (Indorsed on Mr. Bond's papers.) "In this and the accompanying envelop are the rec- ommendations of about two hundred good citizens, of all parts of Illinois, that Benjamin Bond be appointed marshal for that district. They include the names of nearly all our Whigs who now are, or have ever been, members of the State legislature, besides forty-six of the Democratic members of the present legislature, and many other good citizens. I add that from personal knowledge I consider Mr. Bond every way worthy of the office, and qualified to fill it. Holding the indi- vidual opinion that the appointment of a different gen- tleman would be better, I ask especial attention and OFFICE-SEEKERS 89 consideration for his claims, and for the opinions ex- pressed in his favor by those over whom I can claim no superiority." There were but three other prominent Federal ap- pointments to be made in Mr. Lincoln's congressional district, and he waited until after his return home so that he might be better informed of the local opinion concerning them before making his recommendations. It was nearly a month after he left Washington before he sent his decision to the several departments at Wash- ington. The letter quoted below, relating to one of these appointments, is in substance almost identical with the others, and particularly refrains from expressing any opinion of his own for or against the policy of political removals. He also expressly explains that Colonel Baker, the other Whig representative, claims no voice in the appointment. "DEAR SIR : I recommend that Walter Davis be ap- pointed Receiver of the Land Office at this place, when- ever there shall be a vacancy. I cannot say that Mr. Herndon, the present incumbent, has failed in the proper discharge of any of the duties of the office. He is a very warm partizan, and openly and actively op- posed to the election of General Taylor. I also under- stand that since General Taylor's election he has received a reappointment from Mr. Polk, his old com- mission not having expired. Whether this is true the records of the department will show. I may add that the Whigs here almost universally desire his removal." If Mr. Lincoln's presence in Washington during two sessions in Congress did not add materially to either his local or national fame, it was of incalculable benefit in other respects. It afforded him a close inspection of the complex machinery of the Federal government and its relation to that of the States, and enabled him to 90 ABRAHAM LINCOLN notice both the easy routine and the occasional friction of their movements. It brought him into contact and, to some degree, intimate companionship with political leaders from all parts of the Union, and gave him the opportunity of joining in the caucus and the national convention that nominated General Taylor for Presi- dent. It broadened immensely the horizon of his ob- servation, and the sharp personal rivalries he noted at the center of the nation opened to him new lessons in the study of human nature. His quick intelligence acquired knowledge quite as, or even more, rapidly by process of logical intuition than by mere dry, laborious study ; and it was the inestimable experience of this sin- gle term in the Congress of the United States which prepared him for his coming, yet undreamed-of, re- sponsibilities, as fully as it would have done the ordi- nary man in a dozen. Mr. Lincoln had frankly acknowledged to his friend Speed, after his election in 1846, that "being elected to Congress, though I am very grateful to our friends for having done it, has not pleased me as much as I expected." It has already been said that an agreement had been reached among the several Springfield aspir- ants, that they would limit their ambition to a single term, and take turns in securing and enjoying the coveted distinction; and Mr. Lincoln remained faithful to this agreement. When the time to prepare for the election of 1848 approached, he wrote to his law partner : "It is very pleasant to learn from you that there are some who desire that I should be reflected. I most heartily thank them for their kind partiality; and I can say, as Mr. Clay said of the annexation of Texas, that 'personally I would not object' to a reelection, although I thought at the time, and still think, it would be quite THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE 91 as well for me to return to the law at the end of a single term. I made the declaration that I would not be a candidate again, more from a wish to deal fairly with others, to keep peace among our friends, and to keep the district from going to the enemy, than for any cause personal to myself; so that, if it should so happen that nobody else wishes to be elected, I could not refuse the people the right of sending me again. But to enter myself as a competitor of others, or to authorize any one so to enter me, is what my word and honor forbid." Judge Stephen T. Logan, his late law partner, was nominated for the place, and heartily supported not only by Mr. Lincoln, but also by the Whigs of the dis- trict. By this time, however, the politics of the dis- trict had undergone a change by reason of the heavy emigration to Illinois at that period, and Judge Logan was defeated. Mr. Lincoln's strict and sensitive adherence to his promises now brought him a disappointment which was one of those blessings in disguise so commonly deplored for the time being by the wisest and best. A number of the Western members of Congress had joined in a recommendation to President-elect Taylor to give Colonel E. D. Baker a place in his cabinet, a re- ward he richly deserved for his talents, his party ser- vice, and the military honor he had won in the Mexican War. When this application bore no fruit, the Whigs of Illinois, expecting at least some encouragement from the new administration, laid claim to a bureau appoint- ment, that of Commissioner of the General Land Office, in the new Department of the Interior, recently established. "I believe that, so far as the Whigs in Congress are concerned," wrote Lincoln to Speed twelve days before 92 ABRAHAM LINCOLN Taylor's inauguration, "I could have the General Land Office almost by common consent; but then Sweet and Don Morrison and Browning and Cyrus Edwards all want it, and what is worse, while I think I could easily take it myself, I fear I shall have trouble to get it for any other man in Illinois." Unselfishly yielding his own chances, he tried to in- duce the four Illinois candidates to come to a mutual agreement in favor of one of their own number. They were so tardy in settling their differences as to ex- cite his impatience, and he wrote to a Washington friend : "I learn from Washington that a man by the name of Butterfield will probably be appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office. This ought not to be. . . . Some kind friends think I ought to be an applicant, but I am for Mr. Edwards. Try to defeat Butterfield, and, in doing so, use Mr. Edwards, J. L. D. Morrison, or myself, whichever you can to best advantage." As the situation grew persistently worse, Mr. Lin- coln at length, about the first of June, himself became a formal applicant. But the delay resulting from his devotion to his friends had dissipated his chances. Butterfield received the appointment, and the defeat was aggravated when, a few months later, his unrelent- ing spirit of justice and fairness impelled him to write a letter defending Butterfield and the Secretary of the Interior from an attack by one of Lincoln's warm per- sonal but indiscreet friends in the Illinois legislature. It was, however, a fortunate escape. In the four suc- ceeding years Mr. Lincoln qualified himself for better things than the monotonous drudgery of an administra- tive bureau at Washington. It is probable that this defeat also enabled him more easily to pass by another GOVERNORSHIP OF OREGON 93 temptation. The Taylor administration, realizing its ingratitude, at length, in September, offered him the governorship of the recently organized territory of Oregon; but he replied: "On as much reflection as I have had time to give the subject, I cannot consent to accept it." VII Repeal of the Missouri Compromise State Fair Debate Peoria Debate Trumbull Elected Letter to Robin- son The Know-Nothings Decatur Meeting Bloom- ington Convention Philadelphia Convention Lin- coln's Vote for Vice-President Fremont and Dayton Lincoln's Campaign Speeches Chicago Banquet Speech AFTER the expiration of his term in Congress Mr. ^L\. Lincoln applied himself with unremitting assi- duity to the practice of law, which the growth of the State in population, and the widening of his acquain- tanceship, no less than his own growth in experience and legal acumen, rendered ever more important and absorbing. "In 1854," he writes, "his profession had almost superseded the thought of politics in his mind, when the repeal of the Missouri Compromise aroused him as he had never been before." Not alone Mr. Lincoln, but, indeed, the whole nation, was so aroused the Democratic party, and nearly the entire South, to force the passage of that repeal through Congress, and an alarmed majority, including even a considerable minority of the Democratic party in the North, to resist its passage. Mr. Lincoln, of course, shared the general indigna- tion of Northern sentiment that the whole of the re- maining Louisiana Territory, out of which six States, and the greater part of two more, have since been 94 FIREBRAND OF "REPEAL" 95 organized and admitted to the Union, should be opened to the possible extension of slavery. But two points served specially to enlist his energy in the controversy. One was personal, in that Senator Douglas of Illinois, by whom the repeal was championed, and whose influ- ence as a free-State senator and powerful Democratic leader alone made the repeal possible, had been his personal antagonist in Illinois politics for almost twenty years. The other was moral, in that the new question involved the elemental principles of the American gov- ernment, the fundamental maxim of the Declaration of Independence, that all men are created equal. His intuitive logic needed no demonstration that bank, tariff, internal improvements, the Mexican War, and their related incidents, were questions of passing ex- pediency; but that this sudden reaction, needlessly grafted upon a routine statute to organize a new terri- tory, was the unmistakable herald of a coming struggle which might transform republican institutions. It was in January, 1854, that the accidents of a Senate debate threw into Congress and upon the coun- try the firebrand of the repeal of the Missouri Com- promise. The repeal was not consummated till the month of May; and from May until the autumn elec- tions the flame of acrimonious discussion ran over the whole country like a wild fire. There is no record that Mr. Lincoln took any public part in the discussion until the month of September, but it is very clear that he not only carefully watched its progress, but that he studied its phases of development, its historical origins, and its legal bearings with close industry, and gathered from party literature and legislative documents a har- vest of substantial facts and data, rather than the wordy campaign phrases and explosive epithets with which more impulsive students and speakers were content 96 ABRAHAM LINCOLN to produce their oratorical effects. Here we may again quote Mr. Lincoln's exact written statement of the manner in which he resumed his political activity : "In the autumn of that year [1854] he took the stump, with no broader practical aim or object than to secure, if possible, the reelection of Hon. Richard Yates to Congress. His speeches at once attracted a more marked attention than they had ever before done. As the canvass proceeded he was drawn to different parts of the State, outside of Mr. Yates's district. He did not abandon the law, but gave his attention by turns to that and politics. The State Agricultural Fair was at Springfield that year, and Douglas was an- nounced to speak there." The new question had created great excitement and uncertainty in Illinois politics, and there were abundant signs that it was beginning to break up the organiza- tion of both the Whig and the Democratic parties. This feeling brought together at the State fair an un- usual number of local leaders from widely scattered counties, and almost spontaneously a sort of political tournament of speech-making broke out. In this Sen- ator Douglas, doubly conspicuous by his championship of the Nebraska Bill in Congress, was expected to play the leading part, while the opposition, by a common impulse, called upon Lincoln to answer him. Lincoln performed the task with such aptness and force, witli such freshness of argument, illustrations from history, and citations from authorities, as secured him a decided oratorical triumph, and lifted him at a single bound to the leadership of the opposition to Douglas's propa- gandism. Two weeks later, Douglas and Lincoln met at Peoria in a similar debate, and on his return to Springfield Lincoln wrote out and printed his speech in full THE PEORIA DEBATE 97 The reader who carefully examines this speech will at once be impressed with the genius which immediately made Mr. Lincoln a power in American politics. His grasp of the subject is so comprehensive, his statement so clear, his reasoning so convincing, his language so strong and eloquent by turns, that the wonderful power he manifested in the discussions and debates of the six succeeding years does not surpass, but only amplifies this, his first examination of the whole brood of ques- tions relating to slavery precipitated upon the country by Douglas's repeal. After a searching history of the Missouri Compromise, he attacks the demoralizing ef- fects and portentous consequences of its repeal. "This declared indifference," he says, "but, as I must think, covert real zeal for the spread of slavery, I can- not but hate. I hate it because of the monstrous injus- tice of slavery itself. I hate it because it deprives our republican example of its just influence in the world; enables the enemies of free institutions, with plausibil- ity, to taunt us as hypocrites ; causes the real friends of freedom to doubt our sincerity; and especially because it forces so many good men among ourselves into an open war with the very fundamental principles of civil liberty,' criticizing the Declaration of Independence, and insisting that there is no right principle of action but self-interest. . . . Slavery is founded in the selfishness of man's nature opposition to it in his love of justice. These principles are an eternal antagonism, and when brought into collision so fiercely as slavery extension brings them, shocks and throes and convul- sions must ceaselessly follow. Repeal the Missouri Compromise, repeal all compromises, repeal the Declar- ation of Independence, repeal all past history, you still cannot repeal human nature. It still will be the abun- dance of man's heart that slavery extension is wrong, 98 ABRAHAM LINCOLN and out of the abundance of his heart his moutii will continue to speak." With argument as impetuous, and logic as inexor- able, he disposes of Douglas's plea of popular sov- ereignty : "Here, or at Washington, I would not trouble my- self with the oyster laws of Virginia, or the cranberry laws of Indiana. The doctrine of self-government is right absolutely and eternally right but it has no just application as here attempted. Or perhaps I should rather say, that whether it has such application depends upon whether a negro is not or is a man. If he is not a man, in that case, he who is a man may, as a matter of self-government, do just what he pleases with him. But if the negro is a man, is it not to that extent a total destruction of self-government to say that he too shall not govern himself? When the white man governs himself, that is self-government ; but when he governs himself and also governs another man, that is more than self-government that is despotism. . I particularly object to the new position which the avowed principle of this Nebraska law gives to slavery in the body politic. I object to it because it assumes that there can be moral right in the enslaving of one man by another. I object to it as a dangerous dalliance for a free people a sad evidence that, feeling prosperity, we forget right; that liberty, as a principle, we have ceased to revere. . . . Little by little, but steadily as man's march to the grave, we have been giving up the old for the new faith. Near eighty years ago we began by declaring that all men are created equal; but now, from that beginning, we have run down to the other declaration, that for some men to enslave others is a 'sacred right of self-government.' These principles cannot stand together. They are as opposite as God and Mammon." CANDIDATE FOR SENATE 99 If one compares the seri6us tone of this speech with the hard cider and coon-skin buncombe of the Harrison campaign of 1840, and its lofty philosophical thought with the humorous declamation of the Taylor cam- paign of 1848, the speaker's advance in mental devel- opment at once becomes apparent. In this single effort Mr. Lincoln had risen from the class of the politician to the rank of the statesman. There is a well-founded tradition that Douglas, disconcerted and troubled by Lincoln's unexpected manifestation of power in the Springfield and Peoria debates, sought a friendly inter- view with his opponent, and obtained from him an agreement that neither one of them would make any further speeches before the election. The local interest in the campaign was greatly height- ened by the fact that the term of Douglas's Democratic colleague in the United States Senate was about to expire, and that the State legislature to be elected would have the choosing of his successor. It is not probable that Lincoln built much hope upon this coming politi- cal chance, as the Democratic party had been through- out the whole history of the State in decided political control. It turned out, nevertheless, that in the elec- tion held on November 7, an opposition majority of members of the legislature was chosen, and Lincoln became, to outward appearances, the most available opposition candidate. But party disintegration had been only partial. Lincoln and his party friends still called themselves Whigs, though they could muster only a minority of the total membership of the legisla- ture. The so-called Anti-Nebraska Democrats, oppos- ing Douglas and his followers, were still too full of traditional party prejudice to help elect a pronounced Whig to the United States Senate, though as strongly "Anti-Nebraska" as themselves. Five of them brought forward, and stubbornly voted for, Lyman Trumbull, IOO an Anti-Nebraska Democrat of ability, who had been chosen representative in Congress from the eighth Illinois District in the recent election. On the ninth ballot it became evident to Lincoln that there was dan- ger of a new Democratic candidate, neutral on the Nebraska question, being chosen. In this contingency, he manifested a personal generosity and political sagac- ity far above the comprehension of the ordinary smart politician. He advised and prevailed upon his Whig supporters to vote for Trumbull, and thus secure a vote in the United States Senate against slavery extension. He had rightly interpreted both statesmanship and human nature. His personal sacrifice on this occasion contributed essentially to the coming political regen- eration of his State ; and the five Anti-Nebraska Dem- ocrats, who then wrought his defeat, became his most devoted personal followers and efficient allies in his own later political triumph, which adverse currents, however, were still to delay to a tantalizing degree. The circumstances of his defeat at that critical stage of his career must have seemed especially irritating, yet he preserved a most remarkable equanimity of tem- per. "I regret my defeat moderately," he wrote to a sympathizing friend, "but I am not nervous about it." We may fairly infer that while Mr. Lincoln was not "nervous," he was nevertheless deeply impressed by the circumstance as an illustration of the grave nature of the pending political controversy. A letter written by him about half a year later to a friend in Kentucky, is full of such serious reflection as to show that the existing political conditions in the United States had engaged his most profound thought and investigation. "That spirit," he wrote, "which desired the peaceful extinction of slavery has itself become extinct with the occasion and the men of the Revolution. Under the THE KNOW-NOTHINGS 101 impulse of that occasion, nearly half the States adopted systems of emancipation at once, and it is a significant fact that not a single State has done the like since. So far as peaceful voluntary emancipation is con- cerned, the condition of the negro slave in America, scarcely less terrible to the contemplation of a free mind, is now as fixed and hopeless of change for the better as that of the lost souls of the finally impenitent. The Autocrat of all the Russias will resign his crown and proclaim his subjects free republicans sooner than will our American masters voluntarily give up their slaves. Our political problem now is, 'Can we as a nation continue together permanently forever half slave and half free?' The problem is too mighty for me may God, in his mercy, superintend the solution." Not quite three years later Mr. Lincoln made the concluding problem of this letter the text of a famous speech. On the day before his first inauguration as President of the United States, the "Autocrat of all the Russias," Alexander II, by imperial decree eman- cipated his serfs; while six weeks after the inaugura- tion, the "American masters," headed by Jefferson Davis, began the greatest war of modern times to per- petuate and spread the institution of slavery. The excitement produced by the repeal of the Mis- souri Compromise in 1854, by the election forays of the Missouri Border Ruffians into Kansas in 1855, and by the succeeding civil strife in 1856 in that Territory, wrought an effective transformation of political parties in the Union, in preparation for the presidential election of that year. This transformation, though not seri- ously checked, was very considerably complicated by an entirely new faction, or rather by the sudden revival of an old one, which in the past had called itself Native Americanism, and now assumed the name of the Amer- 102 ABRAHAM LINCOLN lean Party, though it was more popularly known by the nickname of "Know-Nothings," because of its secret organization. It professed a certain hostility to for- eign-born voters and to the Catholic religion, and demanded a change in the naturalization laws from a five years' to a twenty-one years' preliminary residence. This faction had gained some sporadic successes in Eastern cities, but when its national convention met in February, 1856, to nominate candidates for Presi- dent and Vice-President, the pending slavery question, that it had hitherto studiously ignored, caused a dis- ruption of its organization; and though the adhering delegates nominated Millard Fillmore for President and A. J. Donelson for Vice-President, who remained in the field and were voted for, to some extent, in the presidential election, the organization was present only as a crippled and disturbing factor, and disappeared totally from politics in the following years. Both North and South, party lines adjusted them- selves defiantly upon the single issue, for or against men and measures representing the extension or re- striction of slavery. The Democratic party, though radically changing its constituent elements, retained the party name, and became the party of slavery exten- sion, having forced the repeal and supported the result- ing measures; while the Whig party entirely dis- appeared, its members in the Northern States joining the Anti-Nebraska Democrats in the formation of the new Republican party. Southern Whigs either went boldly into the Democratic camp, or followed for a while the delusive prospects of the Know-Nothings. This party change went on somewhat slowly in the State of Illinois, because that State extended in terri- torial length from the latitude of Massachusetts to that of Virginia, and its population contained an equally THE REPUBLICAN PARTY 103 diverse local sentiment. The northern counties had at once become strongly Anti-Nebraska ; the conservative Whig counties of the center inclined to the Know- Nothings ; while the Kentuckians and Carolinians, who had settled the southern end, had strong antipathies to what they called abolitionism, and applauded Douglas and repeal. The agitation, however, swept on, and further hesi- tation became impossible. Early in 1856 Mr. Lincoln began to take an active part in organizing the Republi- can party. He attended a small gathering of Anti- Nebraska editors in February, at Decatur, who issued a call for a mass convention which met at Blooming- ton in May, at which the Republican party of Illinois was formally constituted by an enthusiastic gathering of local leaders who had formerly been bitter antago- nists, but who now joined their efforts to resist slavery extension. They formulated an emphatic but not radical platform, and through a committee selected a composite ticket of candidates for State offices, which the convention approved by acclamation. The occasion remains memorable because of the closing address made by Mr. Lincoln in one of his most impressive oratori- cal moods. So completely were his auditors carried away by the force of his denunciation of existing poli- tical evils, and by the eloquence of his appeal for har- mony and union to redress them, that neither a ver- batim report nor even an authentic abstract was made during its delivery: but the lifting inspiration of its periods will never fade from the memory of those who heard it. About three weeks later, the first national convention of the Republican party met at Philadelphia, and nom- inated John C. Fremont of California for President. There was a certain fitness in this selection, from the 104 ABRAHAM LINCOLN fact that he had been elected to the United States Sen- ate when California applied for admission as a free State, and that the resistance of the South to her admis- sion had been the entering wedge of the slavery agita- tion of 1850. This, however, was in reality a minor consideration. It was rather his romantic fame as a daring Rocky Mountain explorer, appealing strongly to popular imagination and sympathy, which gave him prestige as a presidential candidate. It was at this point that the career of Abraham Lin- coln had a narrow and fortunate escape from a pre- mature and fatal prominence. The Illinois Bloom- ington convention had sent him as a delegate to the Philadelphia convention; and, no doubt very unex- pectedly to himself, on the first ballot for a candidate for Vice-President he received one hundred and ten votes against two hundred and fifty-nine votes for Wil- liam L. Dayton of New Jersey, upon which the choice of Mr. Dayton was at once made unanimous. But the incident proves that Mr. Lincoln was already gaining a national fame among the advanced leaders of politi- cal thought. Happily, a mysterious Providence re- served him for larger and nobler uses. The nominations thus made at Philadelphia com- pleted the array for the presidential battle of 1856. The Democratic national convention had met at Cin- cinnati on June 2, and nominated James Buchanan for President and John C. Breckinridge for Vice-Presi- dent. Its work presented two points of noteworthy interest, namely: that the South, in an arrogant pro- slavery dictatorship, relentlessly cast aside the claims of Douglas and Pierce, who had effected the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and nominated Bu- chanan, in apparently sure confidence of that super- serviceable zeal in behalf of slavery which he so obedi- CAMPAIGN SPEECHES 105 ently rendered; also, that in a platform of intolerable length there was such a cunning ambiguity of word and concealment of sense, such a double dealing of phrase and meaning, as to render it possible that the pro-slavery Democrats of the South and some anti- slavery Democrats of the North might join for the last time to elect a "Northern man with Southern prin- ciples." Again, in this campaign, as in several former presi- dential elections, Mr. Lincoln was placed upon the electoral ticket of Illinois, and he made over fifty speeches in his own and adjoining States in behalf of Fremont and Dayton. Not one of these speeches was reported in full, but the few fragments which have been preserved show that he occupied no doubtful ground on the pending issues. Already the Democrats were raising the potent alarm cry that the Republican party was sectional, and that its success would dissolve the Union. Mr. Lincoln did not then dream that he would ever have to deal practically with such a contingency, but his mind was very clear as to the method of meet- ing it. Speaking for the Republican party, he said : "But the Union in any event will not be dissolved. We don't want to dissolve it, and if you attempt it, we won't let you. With the purse and sword, the army and navy and treasury, in our hands and at our com- mand, you could not do it. This government would be very weak, indeed, if a majority, with a disciplined army and navy and a well-filled treasury, could not preserve itself when attacked by an unarmed, undis- ciplined, unorganized minority. All this talk about the dissolution of the Union is humbug, nothing but folly. We do not want to dissolve the Union; you shall not." While the Republican party was much cast down by the election of Buchanan in November, the Demo' 1 06 ABRAHAM LINCOLN crats found significant cause for apprehension in the unexpected strength with which the Fremont ticket had been supported in the free States. Especially was this true in Illinois, where the adherents of Fremont and Fillmore had formed a fusion, and thereby elected a Republican governor and State officers. One of the strong elements of Mr. Lincoln's leadership was the cheerful hope he was always able to inspire in his fol- lowers, and his abiding faith in the correct political instincts of popular majorities. This trait was happily exemplified in a speech he made at a Republican ban- quet in Chicago about a month after the presidential election. Recalling the pregnant fact that though Bu- chanan gained a majority of the electoral vote, he was in a minority of about four hundred thousand of the popular vote for President, Mr. Lincoln thus summed up the chances of Republican success in the future : "Our government rests in public opinion. Whoever can change public opinion, can change the government, practically, just so much. Public opinion on any sub- ject always has a 'central idea,' from which all its minor thoughts radiate. That 'central idea' in our po- litical public opinion at the beginning was, and until recently has continued to be, 'the equality of men.' And although it has always submitted patiently to whatever of inequality there seemed to be as matter of actual necessity, its constant working has been a steady prog- ress towards the practical equality of all men. The late presidential election was a struggle by one party to discard that central idea and to substitute for it the opposite idea that slavery is right in the abstract; the workings of which as a central idea may be the perpetuity of human slavery and its extension to all countries and colors. . . . All of us who did not vote for Mr. Buchanan, taken together, are a ma- CHICAGO BANQUET SPEECH 107 jority of four hundred thousand. But in the late contest we were divided between Fremont and Fill- more. Can we not come together for the future ? Let every one who really believes, and is resolved, that free society is not and shall not be a failure, and who can conscientiously declare that in the past contest he has done only what he thought best let every such one have charity to believe that every other one can say as much. Thus let bygones be bygones; let past dif- ferences as nothing be ; and with steady eye on the real issue, let us reinaugurate the good old 'central ideas' of the republic. We can do it. The human heart is with us ; God is with us. We shall again be able, not to declare that 'all States as States are equal/ nor yet that 'all citizens as citizens are equal,' but to renew the broader, better declaration, including both these and much more, that 'all men are created equal.' ' VIII Buchanan Elected President The Dred Scott Decision Douglas's Springfield Speech, 1857 Lincoln's An- swering Speech Criticism of Drcd Scott Decision Kansas Civil War Buchanan Appoints Walker Walker's Letter on Kansas The Lecompton Constitu- tion Revolt of Douglas THE election of 1856 once more restored the Dem- ocratic party to full political control in national affairs. James Buchanan was elected President to suc- ceed Pierce; the Senate continued, as before, to have a decided Democratic majority; and a clear Demo- cratic majority of twenty-five was chosen to the House of Representatives to succeed the heavy opposition majority of the previous Congress. Though the new House did not organize till a year after it was elected, the certainty of its coming action was sufficient not only to restore, but greatly to accel- erate the pro-slavery reaction begun by the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. This impending drift of na- tional policy now received a powerful impetus by an act of the third coordinate branch, the judicial depart- ment of the government. Very unexpectedly to the public at large, the Su- preme Court of the United States, a few days after Buchanan's inauguration, announced its judgment in what quickly became famous as the Dred Scott deci- sion. Dred Scott, a negro slave in Missouri, sued for his freedom on the ground that his master had taken 108 THE DRED SCOTT DECISION 109 him to reside in the State of Illinois and the Territory of Wisconsin, where slavery was prohibited by law. The question had been twice decided by Missouri courts, once for and then against Dred Scott's claim; and now the Supreme Court of the United States, after hearing the case twice elaborately argued by eminent counsel, finally decided that Dred Scott, being a negro, could not become a citizen, and therefore was not en- titled to bring suit. This branch, under ordinary pre- cedent, simply threw the case out of court; but in addition, the decision, proceeding with what lawyers call obiter dictum, went on to declare that under the Constitution of the United States neither Congress nor a territorial legislature possessed power to prohibit slavery in Federal Territories. The whole country immediately flared up with the agitation of the slavery question in this new form. The South defended the decision with heat, the North pro- tested against it with indignation, and the controversy was greatly intensified by a phrase in the opinion of Chief Justice Taney, that at the time of the Declara- tion of Independence negroes were considered by gen- eral public opinion to be so far inferior "that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect." This decision of the Supreme Court placed Senator Douglas in a curious dilemma. While it served to in- dorse and fortify his course in repealing the Missouri Compromise, it, on the other hand, totally negatived his theory by which he had sought to make the repeal palatable, that the people of a Territory, by the exercise of his great principle of popular sovereignty, could decide the slavery question for themselves. But, being a subtle sophist, he sought to maintain a show of con- sistency by an ingenious evasion. In the month of June following the decision, he made a speech at i io ABRAHAM LINCOLN Springfield, Illinois, in which he tentatively announced what in the next year became widely celebrated as his Freeport doctrine, and was immediately denounced by his political confreres of the South as serious party heterodoxy. First lauding the Supreme Court as "the highest judicial tribunal on earth," and declaring that violent resistance to its decrees must be put down by the strong arm of the government, he went on thus to define a master's right to his slave in Kansas : "While the right continues in full force under the guarantees of the Constitution, and cannot be divested or alienated by an act of Congress, it necessarily re- mains a barren and a worthless right unless sustained, protected, and enforced by appropriate police regula- tions and local legislation prescribing adequate reme- dies for its violation. These regulations and remedies must necessarily depend entirely upon the will and wishes of the people of the Territory, as they can only be prescribed by the local legislatures. Hence, the great principle of popular sovereignty and self-govern- ment is sustained and firmly established by the author- ity of this decision." Both the legal and political aspects of the new ques- tion immediately engaged the earnest attention of Mr. Lincoln; and his splendid power of analysis set its ominous portent in a strong light. He made a speech in reply to Douglas about two weeks after, subjecting the Dred Scott decision to a searching and eloquent criticism. He said : "That decision declares two propositions first, that a negro cannot sue in the United States courts; and secondly, that Congress cannot prohibit slavery in the Territories. It was made by a divided court dividing differently on the different points. Judge Douglas does not discuss the merits of the decision, THE DRED SCOTT DECISION in and in that respect I shall follow his example, believing I could no more improve on McLean and Curtis than he could on Taney. . . . We think the Dred Scott decision was erroneous. We know the court that made it has often overruled its own decisions, and we shall do what we can to have it overrule this. We offer no resistance to it. ... If this important decision had been made by the unanimous concurrence of the judges, and without any apparent partizan bias, and in accordance with legal public expectation and with the steady practice of the departments throughout our his- tory, and had been in no part based on assumed his- torical facts which are not really true; or if, wanting in some of these, it had been before the court more than once, and had there been affirmed and reaffirmed through a course of years, it then might be, perhaps would be, factious, nay, even revolutionary, not to acquiesce in it as a precedent. But when, as is true, we find it wanting in all these claims to the public con- fidence, it is not resistance, it is not factious, it is not even disrespectful, to treat it as not having yet quite established a settled doctrine for the country. "The Chief Justice does not directly assert, but plainly assumes, as a fact, that the public estimate of the black man is more favorable now than it was in the days of the Revolution. This assumption is a mis- take. In some trifling particulars the condition of that race has been ameliorated ; but as a whole, in this country, the change between then and now is decidedly the other way ; and their ultimate destiny has never ap- peared so hopeless as in the last three or four years. In two of the five States New Jersey and North Caro- lina that then gave the free negro the right of voting, the right has since been taken away ; and in the third New York- it has been greatly abridged; while it has ii2 ABRAHAM LINCOLN not been extended, so far as I know, to a single addi- tional State, though the number of the States has more than doubled. In those days, as I understand, masters could, at their own pleasure, emancipate their slaves; but since then such legal restraints have been made upon emancipation as to amount almost to prohibition. In those days, legislatures held the unquestioned power to abolish slavery in their respective States, but now it is becoming quite fashionable for State constitutions to withhold that power from the legislatures. In those days, by common consent, the spread of the black man's bondage to the new countries was prohibited, but now Congress decides that it will not continue the prohibi- tion, and the Supreme Court decides that it could not if it would. In those days, our Declaration of Inde- pendence was held sacred by all, and thought to include all; but now, to aid in making the bondage of the negro universal and eternal, it is assailed and sneered at and construed, and hawked at and torn, till, if its framers could rise from their graves, they could not at all recognize it. All the powers of earth seem rapidly combining against him. Mammon is after him, ambition follows, philosophy follows, and the theology of the day is fast joining the cry. They have him in his prison-house ; they have searched his person, and left no prying instrument with him. One after an- other, they have closed the heavy iron doors upon him ; and now they have him, as it were, bolted in with a lock of a hundred keys, which can never be unlocked without the concurrence of every key the keys in the hands of a hundred different men, and they scattered to a hundred different and distant places; and they stand musing as to what invention, in all the dominions of mind and matter, can be produced to make the im- possibility of his escape more complete than it is." KANSAS CIVIL WAR 113 There is not room to quote the many other equally forcible points in Mr. Lincoln's speech. Our nar- rative must proceed to other significant events in the great pro-slavery reaction. Thus far the Kansas experi- ment had produced nothing but agitation, strife, and bloodshed. First the storm in Congress over repeal; then a mad rush of emigration to occupy the Territory. This was followed by the Border Ruffian invasions, in which Missouri voters elected a bogus territorial legislature, and the bogus legislature enacted a code of bogus laws. In turn, the more rapid emigration from free States filled the Territory with a majority of free-State voters, who quickly organized a compact free-State party, which sent a free-State constitution, known as the Topeka Constitution, to Congress, and applied for admission. This movement proved barren, because the two houses of Congress were divided in sentiment. Meanwhile, President Pierce recognized the bogus laws, and issued proclamations declaring the free-State movement illegal and insurrectionary; and the free-State party had in its turn baffled the enforce- ment of the bogus laws, partly by concerted action of nonconformity and neglect, partly by open defiance. The whole finally culminated in a chronic border war between Missouri raiders on one hand, and free- State guerrillas on the other; and it became necessary to send Federal troops to check the disorder. These were instructed by Jefferson Davis, then Secretary of War, that "rebellion must be crushed." The future Confederate President little suspected the tremendous prophetic import of his order. The most significant illustration of the underlying spirit of the struggle was that President Pierce had successively appointed three Democratic governors for the Territory, who, starting with pro-slavery bias, all became free-State ii4 ABRAHAM LINCOLN partizans, and were successively insulted and driven from the Territory by the pro-slavery faction when in manly protest they refused to carry out the behests of the Missouri conspiracy. After a three years' struggle neither faction had been successful, neither party was satisfied; and the administration of Pierce bequeathed to its successor the same old question embittered by rancor and defeat. President Buchanan began his administration with a boldly announced pro-slavery policy. In his inaugural address he invoked the popular acceptance of the Dred Scott decision, which he already knew was coming; and a few months later declared in a public letter that slavery "exists in Kansas under the Constitution of the United States. . . . How it ever could have been seriously doubted is a mystery." He chose for the governorship of Kansas, Robert J. Walker, a citizen of Mississippi of national fame and of pronounced pro- slavery views, who accepted his dangerous mission only upon condition that a new constitution, to be formed for that State, must be honestly submitted to the real voters of Kansas for adoption or rejection. President Buchanan and his advisers, as well as Sena- tor Douglas, accepted this condition repeatedly and em- phatically. But when the new governor went to the Territory, he soon became convinced, and reported to his chief, that to make a slave State of Kansas was a delusive hope. "Indeed," he wrote, "it is universally admitted here that the only real question is this: whether Kansas shall be a conservative, constitutional, Democratic, and ultimately free State, or whether it shall be a Republican and abolition State." As a compensation for the disappointment, however, he wrote later direct to the President: "But we must have a slave State out of the south- THE LECOMPTON CONSTITUTION 115 western Indian Territory, and then a calm will follow ; Cuba be acquired with the acquiescence of the North; and your administration, having in reality settled the slavery question, be regarded in all time to come as a re-signing and re-sealing of the Constitution. . . . I shall be pleased soon to hear from you. Cuba ! Cuba ! (and Porto Rico, if possible) should be the counter- sign of your administration, and it will close in a blaze of glory." And the governor was doubtless much gratified to receive the President's unqualified indorsement in re- ply : "On the question of submitting the constitution to the bona fide resident settlers of Kansas, I am willing to stand or fall." The sequel to this heroic posturing of the chief magistrate is one of the most humiliating chapters in American politics. Attendant circumstances leave little doubt that a portion of Mr. Buchanan's cabinet, in se- cret league and correspondence with the pro-slavery Missouri-Kansas cabal, aided and abetted the framing and adoption of what is known to history as the Le- compton Constitution, an organic instrument of a radi- cal pro-slavery type; that its pretended submission to popular vote was under phraseology, and in combina- tion with such gigantic electoral frauds and dictatorial procedure, as to render the whole transaction a mockery of popular government ; still worse, that President Bu- chanan himself, proving too weak in insight and will to detect the intrigue or resist the influence of his malign counselors, abandoned his solemn pledges to Governor Walker, adopted the Lecompton Constitution as an ad- ministration measure, and recommended it to Congress in a special message, announcing dogmatically: "Kan- sas is therefore at this moment as much a slave State as Georgia or South Carolina." u6 ABRAHAM LINCOLN The radical pro-slavery attitude thus assumed by President Buchanan and Southern leaders threw the Democratic party of the free States into serious dis- array, while upon Senator Douglas the blow fell with the force of party treachery almost of personal in- dignity. The Dred Scott decision had rudely brushed iside his theory of popular sovereignty, and now the Lecompton Constitution proceedings brutally trampled it down in practice. The disaster overtook him, too, at a critical moment. His senatorial term was about to expire; the next Illinois legislature would elect his successor. The prospect was none too bright for him, for at the late presidential election Illinois had chosen Republican State officers. He was compelled either to break his pledges to the Democratic voters of Illinois, or to lead a revolt against President Buchanan and the Democratic leaders in Congress. Party disgrace at Washington, or popular disgrace in Illinois, were the alternatives before him. To lose his reelection to the Senate would almost certainly end his public career. When, therefore, Congress met in December, 1857, Douglas boldly attacked and denounced the Lecompton Constitution, even before the President had recom- mended it in his special message. "Stand by the doctrine," he said, "that leaves the people perfectly free to form and regulate their insti- tutions for themselves, in their own way, and your party will be united and irresistible in power. . . . If Kansas wants a slave-State constitution, she has a right to it; if she wants a free-State constitution, she has a right to it. It is none of my business which way the slavery clause is decided. I care not whether it is voted down or voted up. Do you suppose, after the pledges of my honor that I would go for that principle and leave the people to vote as they choose, that I REVOLT OF DOUGLAS 117 would now degrade myself by voting one way if the slavery clause be voted down, and another way if it be voted up? I care not how that vote may stand. . . Ignore Lecompton ; ignore Topeka ; treat both those party movements as irregular and void; pass a fair bill the one that we framed ourselves when we were acting as a unit; have a fair election and you will have peace in the Democratic party, and peace throughout the country, in ninety days. The people want a fair vote. They will never be satisfied with- out it. ... But if this constitution is to be forced down our throats in violation of the fundamental prin- ciple of free government, under a mode of submission that is a mockery and insult, I will resist it to the last." Walker, the fourth Democratic governor who had now been sacrificed to the interests of the Kansas pro- slavery cabal, also wrote a sharp letter of resignation denouncing the Lecompton fraud and policy ; and such was the indignation aroused in the free States, that al- though the Senate passed the Lecompton Bill, twenty- two Northern Democrats joining their vote to that of the Republicans, the measure was defeated in the House of Representatives. The President and his Southern partizans bitterly resented this defeat; and the schism between them, on the one hand, and Douglas and his adherents, on the other, became permanent and irreconcilable. IX The Senatorial Contest in Illinois "House Divided against Itself" Speech The Lincoln-Douglas Debates The Freeport Doctrine Douglas Deposed from Chairmanship of Committee on Territories Benjamin . on Douglas Lincoln's Popular Majority Douglas Gains Legislature Greeley, Crittenden, et al. "The Fight Must Go On" Douglas's Southern Speeches Senator Brown's Questions Lincoln's Warning against Popular Sovereignty The War of Pamphlets Lin- coln's Ohio Speeches The John Brown Raid Lin- coln's Comment THE hostility of the Buchanan administration to Douglas for his part in defeating the Lecompton Constitution, and the multiplying chances against him, served only to stimulate his followers in Illinois to greater efforts to secure his reelection. Precisely the same elements inspired the hope and increased the en- thusiasm of the Republicans of the State to accom- plish his defeat. For a candidate to oppose the "Little Giant," there could be no rival in the Republican ranks to Abraham Lincoln. He had in 1854 yielded his pri- ority of claim to Trumbull; he alone had successfully encountered Douglas in debate. The political events themselves seemed to have selected and pitted these two champions against each other. Therefore, when the Illinois State convention on June 16, 1858, passed by acclamation a separate resolution, "That Abraham Lincoln is the first and only choice of the Republicans 118 SENATORIAL CONTEST 119 of Illinois for the United States Senate as the successor of Stephen A. Douglas," it only recorded the well- known judgment of the party. After its routine work was finished, the convention adjourned to meet again in the hall of the State House at Springfield at eight o'clock in the evening. At that hour Mr. Lincoln ap- peared before the assembled delegates and delivered a carefully studied speech, which has become historic. After a few opening sentences, he uttered the following significant prediction : " '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. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in course of ultimate extinction ; or its advocates will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the States, old as well as new, North as well as South." Then followed his critical analysis of the legislative objects and consequences of the Nebraska Bill, and the judicial effects and doctrines of the Dred Scott deci- sion, with their attendant and related incidents. The first of these had opened all the national territory to slavery. The second established the constitutional in- terpretation that neither Congress nor a territorial legislature could exclude slavery from any United States territory. The President had declared Kansas to be already practically a slave State. Douglas had announced that he did not care whether slavery was voted down or voted up. Adding to these many other indications of current politics, Mr. Lincoln proceeded : "Put this and that together, and we have another 120 ABRAHAM LINCOLN nice little niche, which we may, ere long, see filled with another Supreme Court decision declaring that the Constitution of the United States does not permit a State to exclude slavery from its limits. . . Such a decision is all that slavery now lacks of being alike lawful in all the States. . . . We shall lie down pleasantly dreaming that the people of Missouri are on the verge of making their State free, and we shall awake to the reality, instead, that the Supreme Court has made Illinois a slave State." To avert this danger, Mr. Lincoln declared it was the duty of Republicans to overthrow both Douglas and the Buchanan political dynasty. "Two years ago the Republicans of the nation mus- tered over thirteen hundred thousand strong. We did this under the single impulse of resistance to a common danger, with every external circumstance against us. Of strange, discordant, and even hostile elements, we gathered from the four winds, and formed and fought the battle through, under the constant hot fire of a disciplined, proud, and pampered enemy. Did we brave all then to falter now? now, when that same enemy is wavering, dissevered, and belligerent? The result is not doubtful. We shall not fail if we stand firm, we shall not fail. Wise counsels may accelerate or mistakes delay it, but, sooner or later, the victory is sure to come." Lincoln's speech excited the greatest interest every- where throughout the free States. The grave peril he so clearly pointed out came home to the people of the North almost with the force of a revelation ; and there- after their eyes were fixed upon the Illinois senatorial campaign with undivided attention. Another incident also drew to it the equal notice and interest of the poli- ticians of the slave States. THE LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATES 121 Within a month from the date of Lincoln's speech, Douglas returned from Washington and began his campaign of active speech-making in Illinois. The fame he had acquired as the champion of the Nebraska Bill, and, more recently, the prominence into which his opposition to the Lecompton fraud had lifted him in Congress, attracted immense crowds to his meet- ings, and for a few days it seemed as if the mere con- tagion of popular enthusiasm would submerge all in- telligent political discussion. To counteract this, Mr. Lincoln, at the advice of his leading friends, sent him a letter challenging him to joint public debate. Doug- las accepted the challenge, but with evident hesitation ; and it was arranged that they should jointly address the same meetings at seven towns in the State, on dates extending through August, September, and October. The terms were, that, alternately, one should speak an hour in opening, the other an hour and a half in reply, and the first again have half an hour in closing. This placed the contestants upon an equal footing before their audiences. Douglas's senatorial prestige afforded him no advantage. Face to face with the partizans of both, gathered in immense numbers and alert with crit- ical and jealous watchfulness, there was no evading the square, cold, rigid test of skill in argument and truth in principle. The processions and banners, the music and fireworks, of both parties, were stilled and forgot- ten while the audience listened with high-strung nerves to the intellectual combat of three hours' duration. It would be impossible to give the scope and spirit of these famous debates in the space allotted to these pages, but one of the turning-points in the oratorical contest needs particular mention. Northern Illinois, peopled mostly from free States, and southern Illinois, peopled mostly from slave States, were radically op- 122 posed in sentiment on the slavery question; even the old Whigs of central Illinois had to a large extent joined the Democratic party, because of their ineradi- cable prejudice against what they stigmatized as "abo- litionism." To take advantage of this prejudice, Douglas, in his opening speech in the first debate at Ottawa in northern Illinois, propounded to Lincoln a series of questions designed to commit him to strong antislavery doctrines. He wanted to know whether Mr. Lincoln stood pledged to the repeal of the fugi- tive-slave law; against the admission of any more slave States ; to the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia; to the prohibition of the slave trade between different States; to prohibit slavery in all the Territories ; to oppose the acquisition of any new terri- tory unless slavery were first prohibited therein. In their second joint debate at Freeport, Lincoln answered that he was pledged to none of these proposi- tions, except the prohibition of slavery in all Terri- tories of the United States. In turn he propounded four questions to Douglas, the second, of which was : "Can the people of a United States Territory in any lawful way, against the wish of any citizen of the United States, exclude slavery from its limits prior to the formation of a State constitution ?" Mr. Lincoln had long and carefully studied the im- port and effect of this interrogatory, and nearly a month before, in a private letter, accurately foreshad- owed Douglas's course upon it : "You shall have hard work," he wrote, "to get him directly to the point whether a territorial legislature has or has not the power to exclude slavery. But if you succeed in bringing him to it though he will be compelled to say it possesses no such power he will instantly take ground that slavery cannot actually exist THE FREEPORT DOCTRINE 123 in the Territories unless the people desire it and so give it protection by territorial legislation. If this offends the South, he will let it offend them, as at all events he means to hold on to his chances in Illinois." On the night before the Freeport debate the ques- tion had also been considered in a hurried caucus of Lincoln's party friends. They all advised against pro- pounding it, saying, "If you do, you can never be sen- ator." "Gentlemen," replied Lincoln, "I am killing larger game; if Douglas answers, he can never be President, and the battle of 1860 is worth a hundred of this." As Lincoln had predicted, Douglas had no resource but to repeat the sophism he had hastily invented in his Springfield speech of the previous year. "It matters not," replied he, "what way the Supreme Court may hereafter decide as to the abstract ques- tion whether slavery may or may not go into a Terri- tory under the Constitution, the people have the lawful means to introduce it or exclude it, as they please, for the reason that slavery cannot exist a day or an hour anywhere unless it is supported by local police regula- lations. Those police regulations can only be estab- lished by the local legislature, and if the people are opposed to slavery they will elect representatives to that body who will by unfriendly legislation effectually prevent the introduction of it into their midst. If, on the contrary, they are for it, their legislation will favor its extension. Hence, no matter what the de- cision of the Supreme Court may be on that abstract question, still the right of the people to make a slave Territory or a free Territory is perfect and complete under the Nebraska Bill." In the course of the next joint debate at Jonesboro', Mr. Lincoln easily disposed of this sophism by show- i2 4 ABRAHAM LINCOLN ing: i. That, practically, slavery had worked its way into Territories without "police regulations" in al- most every instance; 2. That United States courts were established to protect and enforce rights under the Constitution; 3. That members of a territorial legislature could not violate their oath to support the Constitution of the United States; and, 4. That in default of legislative support, Congress would be bound to supply it for any right under the Constitution. The serious aspect of the matter, however, to Doug- las was not the criticism of the Republicans, but the view taken by Southern Democratic leaders, of his "Freeport doctrine," or doctrine of "unfriendly legis- lation." His opposition to the Lecompton Constitution in the Senate, grievous stumbling-block to their schemes as it had proved, might yet be passed over as a reckless breach of party discipline; but this new an- nouncement at Freeport was unpardonable doctrinal heresy, as rank as the abolitionism of Giddings and Love joy. The Freeport joint debate took place August 27, 1858. When Congress convened on the first Monday in December of the same year, one of the first acts of the Democratic senators was to put him under party ban by removing him from the chairmanship of the Committee on Territories, a position he had held for eleven years. In due time, also, the Southern leaders broke up the Charleston convention rather than permit him to be nominated for President; and, three weeks later, Senator Benjamin of Louisiana frankly set forth, in a Senate speech, the light in which they viewed his apostacy: "We accuse him for this, to wit: that having bar- gained with us upon a point upon which we were at issue, that it should be considered a judicial point; that LINCOLN'S DEFEAT 125 he would abide the decision; that he would act under the decision, and consider it a doctrine of the party; that having said that to us here in the Senate, he went home, and, under the stress of a local election, his knees gave way; his whole person trembled. His adversary stood upon principle and was beaten ; and, lo ! he is the candidate of a mighty party for the presidency of the United States. The senator from Illinois faltered. He got the prize for which he faltered; but, lo! the grand prize of his ambition to-day slips from his grasp, because of his faltering in his former contest, and his success in the canvass for the Senate, purchased for an ignoble price, has cost him the loss of the presi- dency of the United States." In addition to the seven joint debates, both Lincoln and Douglas made speeches at separate meetings of their own during almost every day of the three months' campaign, and sometimes two or three speeches a day. At the election which was held on November 2, 1858, a legislature was chosen containing fifty-four Demo- crats and forty-six Republicans, notwithstanding the fact that the Republicans had a plurality of thirty- eight hundred and twenty-one on the popular vote. But the apportionment was based on the census of 1850, and did not reflect recent changes in political sentiment, which, if fairly represented, would have given them an increased strength of from six to ten members in the legislature. Another circumstance had great influence in causing Lincoln's defeat. Douglas's opposition to the Lecompton Constitution in Congress had won him great sympathy among a few Republican leaders in the Eastern States. It was even whispered that Seward wished Douglas to succeed as a strong rebuke to the Buchanan administration. The most potent expression and influence of this feeling came, 126 ABRAHAM LINCOLN however, from another quarter. Senator Crittenden of Kentucky, who, since Clay's death in 1852, was the acknowledged leader of what remained of the Whig party, wrote a letter during the campaign, openly ad- vocating the reelection of Douglas, and this, doubtless, influenced the vote of all the Illinois Whigs who had not yet formally joined the Republican party. Lin- coln's own analysis gives, perhaps, the clearest view of the unusual political conditions : "Douglas had three or four very distinguished men of the most extreme antislavery views of any men in the Republican party expressing their desire for his reelection to the Senate last year. That would of itself have seemed to be a little wonderful, but that wonder is heightened when we see that Wise of Virginia, a man exactly opposed to them, a man who believes in the divine right of slavery, was also expressing his desire that Douglas should be reflected; that another man that may be said to be kindred to Wise, Mr. Breckinridge, the Vice-President, and of your own State, was also agreeing with the antislavery men in the North that Douglas ought to be reflected. Still to heighten the wonder, a senator from Kentucky, whom I have always loved with an affection as tender and endearing as I have ever loved any man, who was opposed to the antislavery men for reasons which seemed sufficient to him, and equally opposed to Wise and Breckinridge, was writing letters to Illinois to secure the reelection of Douglas. Now that all these conflicting elements should be brought, while at dag- gers' points with one another, to support him, is a feat that is worthy for you to note and consider. It is quite probable that each of these classes of men thought by the reelection of Douglas their peculiar views would gain something; it is probable that the "THE FIGHT MUST GO ON" 127 antislavery men thought their views would gain some- thing; that Wise and Breckinridge thought so too, as regards their opinions; that Mr. Crittenden thought that his views would gain something, although he was opposed to both these other men. It is probable that each and all of them thought they were using Douglas, and it is yet an unsolved problem whether he was not using them all." Lincoln, though beaten in his race for the Senate, was by no means dismayed, nor did he lose his faith in the ultimate triumph of the cause he had so ably championed. Writing to a friend, he said : "You doubtless have seen ere this the result of the election here. Of course I wished, but I did not much expect a better result. ... 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 marks which will tell for the cause of civil liberty long after I am gone." And to another : "Yours of the I3th was received some days ago. The fight must go on. The cause of civil liberty must not be surrendered at the end of one or even one hun- dred defeats. Douglas had the ingenuity to be sup- ported in the late contest, both as the best means to break down and to uphold the slave interest. No in- genuity can keep these antagonistic elements in har- mony long. Another explosion will soon come." In his "House divided against itself" speech, Lin- coln had emphatically cautioned Republicans not to be led on a false trail by the opposition Douglas had made to the Lecompton Constitution; that his temporary quarrel with the Buchanan administration could not 128 ABRAHAM LINCOLN be relied upon to help overthrow that pro-slavery dynasty. "How can he oppose the advances of slavery? He don't care anything about it. His avowed mission is impressing the 'public heart' to care nothing about it. . Whenever, if ever, he and we can come to- gether on principle so that our great cause may have assistance from his great ability, I hope to have inter- posed no adventitious obstacle. But, clearly, he is not now with us he does not pretend to be he does not promise ever to be. Our cause, then, must be in- trusted to, and conducted by, its own undoubted friends those whose hands are free, whose hearts are in the work, who do care for the result." Since the result of the Illinois senatorial campaign had assured the reelection of Douglas to the Senate, Lincoln's sage advice acquired a double significance and value. Almost immediately after the close of the campaign Douglas took a trip through the Southern States, and in speeches made by him at Memphis, at New Orleans, and at Baltimore sought to regain the confidence of Southern politicians by taking decidedly advanced ground toward Southern views on the sla- very question. On the sugar plantations of Louisi- ana, he said, it was not a question between the white man and the negro, but between the negro and the crocodile. He would say that between the negro and the crocodile, he took the side of the negro; but be- tween the negro and the white man, he would go for the white man. The Almighty had drawn a line on this continent, on the one side of which the soil must be cultivated by slave labor; on the other, by white labor. That line did not run on 36 and 30' [the Mis- souri Compromise line], for 36 and 30' runs over mountains and through valleys. But this slave line, he SENATOR BROWN'S QUESTIONS 129 said, meanders in the sugar-fields and plantations of the South, and the people living in their different localities and in the Territories must determine for themselves whether their "middle belt" were best adapted to slavery or free labor. He advocated the eventual annexation of Cuba and Central America. Still going a step further, he laid down a far-reaching principle. "It is a law of humanity," he said, "a law of civil- ization, that whenever a man or a race of men show themselves incapable of managing their own affairs, they must consent to be governed by those who are ca- pable of performing the duty. ... In accordance with this principle, I assert that the negro race, under all circumstances, at all times, and in all countries, has shown itself incapable of self-government." This pro-slavery coquetting, however, availed him nothing, as he felt himself obliged in the same speeches to defend his Freeport doctrine. Having taken his seat in Congress, Senator Brown of Mississippi, toward the close of the short session, catechized him sharply on this point. "If the territorial legislature refuses to act," he in- quired, "will you act? If it pass unfriendly acts, will you pass friendly? If it pass laws hostile to slavery, will you annul them, and substitute laws favoring slavery in their stead?" There was no evading these direct questions, and Douglas answered frankly : "I tell you, gentlemen of the South, in all candor, I do not believe a Democratic candidate can ever carry any one Democratic State of the North on the platform that it is the duty of the Federal government to force the people of a Territory to have slavery when they do not want it." 130 ABRAHAM LINCOLN An extended discussion between Northern and Southern Democratic senators followed the colloquy, which showed that the Freeport doctrine had opened up an irreparable schism between the Northern and Southern wings of the Democratic party. In all the speeches made by Douglas during his Southern tour, he continually referred to Mr. Lincoln as the champion of abolitionism, and to his doctrines as the platform of the abolition or Republican party. The practical effect of this course was to extend and pro- long the Illinois senatorial campaign of 1858, to ex- pand it to national breadth, and gradually to merge it in the coming presidential campaign. The effect of this was not only to keep before the public the posi- tion of Lincoln as the Republican champion of Illinois, but also gradually to lift him into general recognition as a national leader. Throughout the year 1859 poli- ticians and newspapers came to look upon Lincoln as the one antagonist who could at all times be relied on to answer and refute the Douglas arguments. His propositions were so forcible and direct, his phrase- ology so apt and fresh, that they held the attention and excited comment. A letter written by him in answer to an invitation to attend a celebration of Jefferson's birthday in Boston, contains some notable passages: "Soberly, it is now no child's play to save the prin- ciples of Jefferson from total overthrow in this nation. One would state with great confidence that he could convince any sane child that the simpler propositions of Euclid are true; but, nevertheless, he would fail, utterly, with one who should deny the definitions and axioms. The principles of Jefferson are the definitions and axioms of free society. And yet they are denied and evaded with no small show of success. One dash- ingly calls them 'glittering generalities.' Another LINCOLN'S WARNING 131 bluntly calls them 'self-evident lies.' And others in- sidiously argue that they apply to 'superior races.' These expressions, differing in form, are identical in object and effect the supplanting the principles of free government, and restoring those of classification, caste, and legitimacy. They would delight a convo- cation of crowned heads plotting against the people. They are the vanguard, the miners and sappers of re- turning despotism. We must repulse them, or they will subjugate us. This is a world of compensation; and he who would be no slave must consent to have no slave. Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves, and, under a just God, cannot long retain it." Douglas's quarrel with the Buchanan administra- tion had led many Republicans to hope that they might be able to utilize his name and his theory of popular sovereignty to aid them in their local campaigns. Lin- coln knew from his recent experience the peril of this delusive party strategy, and was constant and ear- nest in his warnings against adopting it. In a little speech after the Chicago municipal election on March i, 1859, he said: "If we, the Republicans of this State, had made Judge Douglas our candidate for the Senate of the United States last year, and had elected him, there would to-day be no Republican party in this Union. . . . Let the Republican party of Illinois dally with Judge Douglas, let them fall in behind him and make him their candidate, and they do not absorb him he absorbs them. They would come out at the end all Douglas men, all claimed by him as having indorsed every one of his doctrines upon the great subject with which the whole nation is engaged at this hour that the question of negro slavery is simply a question of 132 ABRAHAM LINCOLN dollars and cents ; that the Almighty has drawn a line across the continent, on one side of which labor the cultivation of the soil must always be performed by slaves. It would be claimed that we, like him, do not care whether slavery is voted up or voted down. Had we made him our candidate and given him a great majority, we should never have heard an end of decla- rations by him that we had indorsed all these dogmas." To a Kansas friend he wrote on May 14, 1859: "You will probably adopt resolutions in the nature of a platform. I think the only temptation will be to lower the Republican standard in order to gather re- cruits. In my judgment, such a step would be a serious mistake, and open a gap through which more would pass out than pass in. And this would be the same whether the letting down should be in deference to Douglasism, or to the Southern opposition element; either would surrender the object of the Republican organization the preventing of the spread and nation- alization of slavery. . . . Let a union be at- tempted on the basis of ignoring the slavery question, and magnifying other questions which the people are just now not caring about, and it will result in gain- ing no single electoral vote in the South, and losing every one in the North." To Schuyler Col fax (afterward Vice-President) he said in a letter dated July 6, 1859: "My main object in such conversation would be to hedge against divisions in the Republican ranks gen- erally, and particularly for the contest of 1860. The point of danger is the temptation in different localities to 'platform' for something which will be popular just there, but which, nevertheless, will be a firebrand else- where, and especially in a national convention. As instances : the movement against foreigners in Massa- LINCOLN'S WARNING 133 chusetts ; in New Hampshire, to make obedience to the fugitive-slave law punishable as a crime; in Ohio, to repeal the fugitive-slave law ; and squatter sovereignty, in Kansas. In these things there is explosive matter enough to blow up half a dozen national conventions, if it gets into them ; and what gets very rife outside of conventions is very likely to find its way into them." And again, to another warm friend in Columbus, Ohio, he wrote in a letter dated July 28, 1859 : "There is another thing our friends are doing which gives me some uneasiness. It is their leaning toward 'popular sovereignty.' There are three substantial ob- jections to this. First, no party can command respect which sustains this year what it opposed last. Sec- ondly, Douglas (who is the most dangerous enemy of liberty, because the most insidious one) would have little support in the North, and, by consequence, no capital to trade on in the South, if it were not for his friends thus magnifying him and his humbug. But lastly, and chiefly, Douglas's popular sovereignty, ac- cepted by the public mind as a just principle, national- izes slavery, and revives the African slave-trade inev- itably. Taking slaves into new Territories, and buying slaves in Africa, are identical things, identical rights or identical wrongs, and the argument which estab- lishes one will establish the other. Try a thousand years for a sound reason why Congress shall not hin- der the people of Kansas from having slaves, and when you have found it, it will be an equally good one why Congress should not hinder the people of Georgia from importing slaves from Africa." An important election occurred in the State of Ohio in the autumn of 1859, and during the canvass Douglas made two speeches in which, as usual, his pointed at- tacks were directed against Lincoln by name. Quite 134 ABRAHAM LINCOLN naturally, the Ohio Republicans called Lincoln to answer him, and the marked impression created by Lincoln's replies showed itself not alone in their un- precedented circulation in print in newspapers and pamphlets, but also in the decided success which the Ohio Republicans gained at the polls. About the same time, also, Douglas printed a long political essay in "Harper's Magazine," using as a text quotations from Lincoln's "House divided against itself" speech, and Seward's Rochester speech defining the "irrepressible conflict." Attorney-General Black of President Bu- chanan's cabinet here entered the lists with an anony- mously printed pamphlet in pungent criticism of Douglas's "Harper" essay; which again was followed by reply and rejoinder on both sides. Into this field of overheated political controversy the news of the John Brown raid at Harper's Ferry on Sunday, October 19, fell with startling portent. The scattering and tragic fighting in the streets of the little town on Monday; the dramatic capture of the fanatical leader on Tuesday by a detachment of Fed- eral marines under the command of Robert E. Lee, the famous Confederate general of subsequent years; the undignified haste of his trial and condemnation by the Virginia authorities ; the interviews of Governor Wise, Senator Mason, and Representative Vallandigham with the prisoner; his sentence, and execution on the gallows on December 2; and the hysterical laudations of his acts by a few prominent and extreme abolition- ists in the East, kept public opinion, both North and South, in an inflamed and feverish state for nearly six weeks. Mr. Lincoln's habitual freedom from passion, and the steady and common-sense judgment he applied to this exciting event, which threw almost everybody into JOHN BROWN 135 an extreme of feeling or utterance, are well illustrated by the temperate criticism he made of it a few months later : "John Brown's effort was peculiar. It was not a slave insurrection. It was an attempt by white men to get up a revolt among slaves, in which the slaves refused to participate. In fact, it was so absurd that the slaves, with all their ignorance, saw plainly enough it could not succeed. That affair, in its philosophy, corresponds with the many attempts, related in history, at the assassination of kings and emperors. An enthu- siast broods over the oppression of a people till he fan- cies himself commissioned by Heaven to liberate them. He ventures the attempt, which ends in little else than his own execution. Orsini's attempt on Louis Napo- leon and John Brown's attempt at Harper's Ferry were, in their philosophy, precisely the same. The eagerness to cast blame on old England in the one case, and on New England in the other, does not disprove the sameness of the two things." X Lincoln's Kansas Speeches The Cooper Institute Speech New England Speeches The Democratic Schism Senator Brown's Resolutions Jefferson Davis's Reso- lutions The Charleston Convention Majority and Minority Reports Cotton State Delegations Secede Charleston Convention Adjourns Democratic Balti- more Convention Splits Breckinridge Nominated Douglas Nominated Bell Nominated by Union Con- stitutional Convention Chicago Convention Lincoln's Letters to Pickett and Judd The Pivotal States Lin- coln Nominated DURING the month of December, 1859, Mr. Lin- coln was invited to the Territory of Kansas, where he made speeches at a number of its new and growing towns. In these speeches he laid special em- phasis upon the necessity of maintaining undiminished the vigor of the Republican organization and the high plane of the Republican doctrine. "We want, and must have," said he, "a national policy as to slavery which deals with it as being a wrong. Whoever would prevent slavery becoming- national and perpetual yields all when he yields to a policy which treats it either as being right, or as being a matter of indifference." "To effect our main object we have to employ auxiliary means. We must hold conventions, adopt platforms, select candidates, and carry elections. At every step we must be true to the main purpose. If we adopt a platform falling short 136 COOPER INSTITUTE SPEECH 137 of our principle, or elect a man rejecting our principle, we not only take nothing affirmative by our success, but we draw upon us the positive embarrassment of seeming ourselves to have abandoned our principle." A still more important service, however, in giving the Republican presidential campaign of 1860 precise form and issue was rendered by him during the first three months of the new year. The public mind had become so preoccupied with the dominant subject of national politics, that a committee of enthusiastic young Republicans of New York and Brooklyn ar- ranged a course of public lectures by prominent states- men, and Mr. Lincoln was invited to deliver the third one of the series. The meeting took place in the hall of the Cooper Institute in New York, on the evening of February 27, 1860; and the audience was made up of ladies and gentlemen comprising the leading represen- tatives of the wealth, culture, and influence of the great metropolis. Mr. Lincoln's name and arguments had filled so large a space in Eastern newspapers, both friendly and hostile, that the listeners before him were intensely curious to see and hear this rising Western politician. The West was even at that late day but imperfectly understood by the East. The poets and editors, the bankers and merchants of New York vaguely remem- bered having read in their books that it was the home of Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett, the country of bowie-knives and pistols, of steamboat explosions and mobs, of wild speculation and the repudiation of State debts; and these half-forgotten impressions had lately been vividly recalled by a several years' succession of newspaper reports retailing the incidents of Border Ruffian violence and free-State guerrilla reprisals dur- ing the civil war in Kansas. What was to be the type, I 3 8 ABRAHAM LINCOLN the character, the language of this speaker? How would he impress the great editor Horace Greeley, who sat among the invited guests ; David Dudley Field, the great lawyer, who escorted him to the platform; Wil- liam Cullen Bryant, the great poet, who presided over the meeting? Judging from after effects, the audience quickly for- got these questioning thoughts. They had but time to note Mr. Lincoln's impressive stature, his strongly marked features, the clear ring of his rather high- pitched voice, and the almost commanding earnestness of his manner. His beginning foreshadowed a dry ar- gument, using as a text Douglas's phrase that "our fathers, when they framed the government under which we live, understood this question just as well and even better than we do now." But the concise statements, the strong links of reasoning, and the ir- resistible conclusions of the argument with which the speaker followed his close historical analysis of how "our fathers" understood "this question," held every listener as though each were individually merged in the speaker's thought and demonstration. "It is surely safe to assume," said he, with emphasis, "that the thirty-nine framers of the original Constitu- tion and the seventy-six members of the Congress which framed the amendments thereto, taken together, do certainly include those who may be fairly called 'our fathers who framed the government under which we live.' And, so assuming, I defy any man to show that any one of them ever, in his whole life, declared that, in his understanding, any proper division of local from Federal authority, or any part of the Constitu- tion, forbade the Federal government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories." With equal skill he next dissected the complaints, COOPER INSTITUTE SPEECH 139 the demands, and the threats to dissolve the Union made by the Southern States, pointed out their empti- ness, their fallacy, and their injustice, and defined the exact point and center of the agitation. "Holding, as they do," said he, "that slavery is mor- ally right and socially elevating, they cannot cease to demand a full national recognition of it, as a legal right and a social blessing. Nor can we justifiably withhold this on any ground, save our conviction that slavery is wrong. If slavery is right, all words, acts, laws, and constitutions against it are themselves wrong, and should be silenced and swept away. If it is right, we cannot justly object to its nationality its univer- sality! If it is wrong, they cannot justly insist upon its extension its enlargement. All they ask we could readily grant, if we thought slavery right; all we ask they could as readily grant, if they thought it wrong. Their thinking it right, and our thinking it wrong, is the precise fact upon which depends the whole con- troversy. . . . Wrong as we think slavery is we can yet afford to let it alone where it is, because that much is due to the necessity arising from its actual presence in the nation; but can we, while our votes will prevent it, allow it to spread into the na- tional Territories, and to overrun us here in the free States? If our sense of duty forbids this, then let us stand by our duty, fearlessly and effectively. Let us be diverted by none of those sophistical contrivances wherewith we are so industriously plied and bela- bored, contrivances such as groping for some middle ground between the right and the wrong, vain as the search for a man who should be neither a living man nor a dead man; such as a policy of 'don't care,' on a question about which all true men do care; such as Union appeals beseeching true Union men to yield to ABRAHAM LINCOLN disunionists ; reversing the divine rule, and calling, not the sinners, but the righteous to repentance; such as invocations to Washington, imploring men to unsay what Washington said, and undo what Washington did. Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations against us, nor frightened from it by men- aces of destruction to the government nor of dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it." The close attention bestowed on its delivery, the hearty applause that greeted its telling points, and the enthusiastic comments of the Republican journals next morning showed that Lincoln's Cooper Institute speech had taken New York by storm. It was printed in full in four of the leading New York dailies, and at once went into large circulation in carefully edited pamphlet editions. From New York, Lincoln made a tour of speech-making through several of the New England States, and was everywhere received with enthusiastic welcome and listened to with an eagerness that bore a marked result in their spring elections. The interest of the factory men who listened to these addresses was equaled, perhaps excelled, by the gratified surprise of college professors when they heard the style and method of a popular Western orator that would bear the test of their professional criticism and compare with the best examples in their standard text-books. The attitude of the Democratic party in the coming presidential campaign w r as now also rapidly taking shape. Great curiosity existed whether the radical dif- ferences between its Northern and Southern wings could by any possibility be removed or adjusted, whether the adherents of Douglas and those of Buchanan could be brought to join in a common platform and in the sup- DEMOCRATIC DIFFERENCES 141 port of a single candidate. The Democratic leaders in the Southern States had become more and more out- spoken in their pro-slavery demands. They had ad- vanced step by step from the repeal of the Missouri Compromise in 1854, the attempt to capture Kansas by Missouri invasions in 1855 and 1856, the support of the Dred Scott decision and the Lecompton fraud in 1857, the repudiation of Douglas's Freeport heresy in 1858, to the demand for a congressional slave code for the Territories and the recognition of the doctrine of property in slaves. These last two points they had dis- tinctly formulated in the first session of the Thirty- sixth Congress. On January 18, 1860, Senator Brown of Mississippi introduced into the Senate two resolu- tions, one asserting the nationality of slavery, the other that, when necessary, Congress should pass laws for its protection in the Territories. On February 2 Jef- ferson Davis introduced another series of resolutions intended to serve as a basis for the national Democratic platform, the central points of which were that the right to take and hold slaves in the Territories could neither be impaired nor annulled, and that it was the duty of Congress to supply any deficiency of laws for its protection. Perhaps even more significant than these formulated doctrines was the pro-slavery spirit manifested in the congressional debates. Two months were wasted in a parliamentary struggle to prevent the election of the Republican, John Sherman, as Speaker of the House of Representatives, because the Southern members charged that he had recommended an "abo- lition" book; during which time the most sensational and violent threats of disunion were made in both the House and the Senate, containing repeated declarations that they would never submit to the inauguration of a "Black Republican" President. 142 ABRAHAM LINCOLN When the national Democratic convention met at Charleston, on April 23, 1860, there at once became evident the singular condition that the delegates from the free States were united and enthusiastic in their determination to secure the nomination of Douglas as the Democratic candidate for President, while the dele- gates from the slave States were equally united and determined upon forcing the acceptance of an extreme pro-slavery platform. All expectations of a compro- mise, all hope of coming to an understanding .by jug- gling omissions or evasions in their declaration of party principles were quickly dissipated. The platform committee, after three days and nights of fruitless ef- fort, presented two antagonistic reports. The major- ity report declared that neither Congress nor a terri- torial legislature could abolish or prohibit slavery in the Territories, and that it was the duty of the Federal government to protect it when necessary. To this doc- trine the Northern members could not consent; but they were willing to adopt the ambiguous declaration that property rights in slaves were judicial in their character, and that they \vould abide the decisions of the Supreme Court on such questions. The usual expedient of recommitting both reports brought no relief from the deadlock. A second ma- jority and a second minority report exhibited the same irreconcilable divergence in slightly different language, and the words of mutual defiance exchanged in debat- ing the first report rose to a parliamentary storm when the second came under discussion. On the seventh day the convention came to a vote, and, the Northern dele- gates being in the majority, the minority report was substituted for that of the majority of the committee by one hundred and sixty-five to one hundred and thirty-eight delegates in other words, the Douglas DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS 143 platform was declared adopted. Upon this the dele- gates of the cotton States Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, South Carolina, Florida, Texas, and Ar- kansas withdrew from the convention. It soon ap- peared, however, that the Douglas delegates had achieved only a barren victory. Their majority could indeed adopt a platform, but, under the acknowledged two-thirds rule which governs Democratic national conventions, they had not sufficient votes to nominate their candidate. During the fifty-seven ballots taken, the Douglas men could muster only one hundred and fifty-two and one half votes of the two hundred and two necessary to a choice; and to prevent mere slow disintegration the convention adjourned on the tenth day, under a resolution to reassemble in Baltimore on June 1 8. Nothing was gained, however, by the delay. In the interim, Jefferson Davis and nineteen other Southern leaders published an address commending the with- drawal of the cotton States delegates, and in a Senate debate Davis laid down the plain proposition, "We want nothing more than a simple declaration that negro slaves are property, and we want the recognition of the obligation of the Federal government to protect that property like all other." Upon the reassembling of the Charleston convention at Baltimore, it underwent a second disruption on the fifth day; the Northern wing nominated Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois, and the Southern wing John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky as their respective candi- dates for President. In the meanwhile, also, regular and irregular delegates from some twenty-two States, representing fragments of the old Whig party, had con- vened at Baltimore on May 9 and nominated John Bell of Tennessee as their candidate for President, upon 144 ABRAHAM LINCOLN a platform ignoring the slavery issue and declaring that they would "recognize no other political principle than the Constitution of the country, the union of the States, and the enforcement of the laws." In the long contest between slavery extension and slavery restriction which was now approaching its cul- mination, the growing demands and increasing bitter- ness of the pro-slavery party had served in an equal degree to intensify the feelings and stimulate the ef- forts of the Republican party; and, remembering the encouraging opposition strength which the united vote of Fremont and Fillmore had shown in 1856, they felt encouraged to hope for possible success in 1860, since the Fillmore party had practically disappeared throughout the free States. When, therefore, the Charleston convention was rent asunder and adjourned on May 10 without making a nomination, the possibil- ity of Republican victory seemed to have risen to proba- bility. Such a feeling inspired the eager enthusiasm of the delegates to the Republican national convention which met, according to appointment, at Chicago on May 1 6. A large, temporary wooden building, christened "The Wigwam," had been erected in which to hold its sessions, and it was estimated that ten thousand per- sons were assembled in it to witness the proceedings. William H. Seward of New York was recognized as the leading candidate, but Chase of Ohio, Cameron of Pennsylvania, Bates of Missouri, and several promi- nent Republicans from other States were known to have active and zealous followers. The name of Abraham Lincoln had also often been mentioned dur- ing his growing fame, and, fully a year before, an ardent Republican editor of Illinois had requested per- mission to announce him in his newspaper. Lincoln, LETTERS TO PARTY FRIENDS 145 however, discouraged such action at that time, answer- ing him : "As to the other matter you kindly mention, I must in candor say I do not think myself fit for the presi- dency. I certainly am flattered and gratified that some partial friends think of me in that connection; but I really think it best for our cause that no concerted effort, such as you suggest, should be made." He had given an equally positive answer to an eager Ohio friend in the preceding July; but about Christ- mas, 1859, an influential caucus of his strongest Illi- nois adherents made a personal request that he would permit them to use his name, and he gave his consent, not so much in any hope of becoming the nominee for President, as in possibly reaching the second place on the ticket; or at least of making such a showing of strength before the convention as would aid him in his future senatorial ambition at home, or perhaps carry him into the cabinet of the Republican President, should one succeed. He had not been eager to enter the lists, but once having agreed to do so, it was but natural that he should manifest a becoming interest, subject, however, now as always, to his inflexible rule of fair dealing and honorable faith to all his party friends. "I do not understand Trumbull and myself to be rivals," he wrote December 9, 1859. "You know I am pledged not to enter a struggle with him for the seat in the Senate now occupied by him; and yet I would rather have a full term in the Senate than in the presidency." And on February 9 he wrote to the same Illinois friend : "I am not in a position where it would hurt much for me not to be nominated