Legal Disclaimer: The
Paranormal & Ghost Society
its Pictures, Website Content, Videos, EVP's, AngelOfThyNight Radio
Comedy & Paranormal Show, Theories, Satire, Articles, Content
and
Features are for EducationalPurposes, Personal Usage,
EntertainmentPurposes
and ResearchOnly.
Thus we have the right to reserve and use the following content legally
and willfully! Content is NOT
for redistribution, monetary gain or profit! All information is
produced for theoreticalexamination,
studentprojects, scholars
and other educationalinstitutions
to be used in historical and analytical
research. Do NOT
try this at home for entertainment purposes ONLY!
All locations are considered dangerous, unsafe and illegal to enter
without permission. By browsing our website you agree to not withhold The Paranormal & Ghost Society and Lord Rick aka
AngelOfThyNight Its Founder
liable as our viewers assume all risk & liabilities! Warning:
Viewer Discretion is advised and some content may be ONLY suitable for
mature audiences!
US LAW
We believe that our use of any such digital material & media
constitutes a 'fair use' as provided for in
section
107 of the US Copyright Law. In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
Section 107, the material on The
Paranormal & Ghost Society's Website at www.paranormalghostsociety.org,
facebook at
www.facebook.com/AngelOfThyNight
and
our youtube at www.youtube.com/AngelOfThyNight
is
distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for news, travel, research and
educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Custom Search
The
Oak Ridge Cemetery resides in Springfield Illinois its the second most
visited cemetery in the nation aside from Arlington National Cemetery.
Most folks know the cemetery for being the location of Lincoln's Tomb
where Abraham Lincoln, wife Mary Todd and his children are buried.
The
cemetery was designed by a William Saunders as a Rural Cemetery
Landscape Lawn Style. The key to the style is the rolling hills and
most of the trees here are oaks. A newer section was added later
and opened after 1945. Its design follows the memorial park style for
roadways where you can drive around visit various sites.
The
cemetery also has a Korean War Memorial, WW II Illinois Veterans
Memorial, Illinois Vietam Veterans Memorial and just adjacent to the
cemetery is the Springfield and Central Illinoi African-American
History Museum.
Their are many notable burials here such as
Governor Tanner, John T. Stuart a US Congressman and law partner of
Lincolns, Nellie Grant daughter of President Ulysses S. Grant, John L.
Lewis president of the United Mine Workers, Lincolns and so many more
notable individuals. I would have loved to take a tour but I was on the
road and I just left Abraham Lincolns House and came directly here to
pay my respects at the tomb.
Given what I do most probably
think that its all about thrills, frills and ghosts but its not. What
matters to me more then anything his history because were here to
educate the public and help keep these sites alive in the hearts and
minds of others. Why do you think we have spent over twenty years doing
places like Oak Ridge? This is a beautiful cemetery it deserves a spot
on our website.
On April 16th 1865 after the assassination's
of Abraham Lincoln a group of people in Springfield formed the National
Lincoln Monument Association to collect funds to construct a tomb. The
funeral train had arrived in May and Lincoln lay in state at the
Illinois State Capitol for a night. After the funeral the burial took
place the next day and his coffin was placed in a receiving vault at
Oak Ridge Cemetery. The site that Mary Todd Lincoln had requested for
burial because they chose Oak Ridge the place to be interred at for
many years.
Later in December they removed Lincoln from this
temporary holding area and and transferred him to a temporary vault not
far from the memorial site or todays tomb. In 1871 about three years
after the construction of the tomb Lincoln's sons along with Abraham
were interred in the crypts but the structure was still not fully
finished. The tomb and crypts were completed first before the monument
that surrounds it.
The memorial was completed in 1874 and was
designed by a Larkin Goldsmith Mead. Lincolns remains were interred in
a marble sarcophagus in the center of the chamber they called the
burial room or catacombs. In 1876 Tot many are aware if this but two
criminals tried to steal Lincoln's body and hold it for ransom.
However, this would be no easy task Lincoln was buried ten feet below
and remained deeply hidden. In fact Lincoln is hidden under wood, other
materials and buried within the ground in this tomb. Mary Todd Lincoln
died in 1882 and her remains were placed with Abraham's but later they
exhumed both bodies in 1887 and reburied them in a secure brick vault
beneath the floor.
Three of four sons are buried in this vault
room Edward, William and Thomas. The one son Robert Todd Lincoln was
buried in Arlington National Cemetery his oldest son. In fact Robert
dedicated his father Abraham Lincoln's Home
to the state pending they would not charge others to visit it. Lincoln
honestly is one of my favorite presidents he was a great guy that carry
values most presidents do not carry today. His presidency was directed
at serving the people not his own needs and he felt all were created
equal.
The monument is constructed of granite with nearly a two
story tall base that is trapezoidal in form with a massive 117 foot
tall obelisk. When you enter the rotunda you can go a semicircular
crypt or a receiving room down opposite halls. Their are four flights
of balustrade stairs that lead to the level terrace. The balustrade
extends around the terrace to form a parapet with halls lined with many
bronze statues of Lincoln and stone carvings within. The halls and
floors within are made of marble with stained glass windows and flags
that adorn the crypt room. Lincolns monument is made of a red marble
its all just so beautifully done.
The tomb is massive even
surrounding it is nearly 13 acres with benches and nice lush green
lawn. A place to reflect, read about the history, pay your respects and
adore the nature. Their are statues also on top of the upper terrace
you cannot go up their the stairs are blocked off. But you can see them
from the bottom of the monument.
So if you have not done so I
highly recommend visiting the tomb. I can only give you a small
Birdseye view of it but that does not do it justice to see it with your
eyes is a completely difference story. Lincoln was my favorite
president really so I wanted to pay my respects to this great man this
was not about the paranormal for me only a small part.
What we
do here is educate and it promotes people to get up and about to see
the sites as we did. I can only give our viewers so much but what I
have given I hope people enjoy so they can see the beauty in its
history as well.
Going back to Oak Ridge Cemetery
you may have also noticed a castle like structure in some of our
photos. This really caught my interest even the garage nearby that
houses the tools matches it. The castle like structure is actually
called the Custodial Cottage although I think its a bit to large to be
a cottage as it extends quite a bit further back.
When the
monument was dedicated in 1874 and opened to the public the National
Lincoln Monument Association oversaw all the caretaking to maintain it
along with the acreage surrounding it. So they agreed to hire and
appoint a custodian to manage the tomb and help visitors out. That
person would also lock it up at 5pm that kind of thing. The custodian
would live in the cottage nearby and store any tools in the nearby
garage which matches it. It was built like a castle to match many of
the older architecture in Springfield.
The first appointed
custodian appointed was a John C. Power who started to manage the tomb
on October 27, 1874 until his death in 1894. In fact he is quite the
historical figure to I read about him doing research and he is buried
in Oak Ridge of course that is just a given.
He would charge
visitors a quarter well not him but the cemetery association would to
cover Powers salary. But also went towards the maintenance of the
monument and its grounds. Powers had sold pamphlets, photographs, books
and even postcards. He kept some of what he sold in profit for himself.
He also collected donations and purchases, Lincoln-Related photographs,
relics and ephemera which he adorned the Memorial Hall with.
The
history is really rich and unlike many cemeteries your not going to see
hardly any vandalism something I come across in multiple cemeteries on
my journeys. Even older graves look fairly brand new its quite amazing
to be honest with you. The mausoleum looks like a fortress and Tanners
crypt looks like a temple. You just have to see it for yourself and our
site gets folks reading this to do just that so we all do what we can
to help one another out and we hope you enjoy this special addition to
our website and thank you for checking it all out!
Long before my visit quite a few have felt that the tomb is haunted I did get two EVPs there so I believe it is do you?
Copyright By, Lord Rick aka AngelOfThyNight PGS Founder Author, Talk Show Host, Urban Explorer, Producer and Paranormal Investigator
Constructed of granite, the tomb has a tall, story-and-a-half base in trapezoidal form, surmounted by an obelisk,
with a semicircular receiving room entranceway on one end and a
semicircular crypt or burial room opposite. On the exterior, four
flights of balustraded stairs lead to a level terrace. The balustrade
extends around the terrace to form a parapet, and there are several
bronze statues, reliefs, and stone carvings located at the base of the
obelisk. The obelisk rises 117 feet (36m) high.
A bronze recasting of Gutzon Borglum's head of Lincoln stands on a pedestal in front of the entrance way; Borglum's original marble bust is in the U.S. Capitol.
Inside the tomb's ground level entrance is a rotunda with connecting
hallways to the burial room. Marble is used throughout the interior,
and several well-known, specially cast bronze statues of Lincoln are
displayed in the entrance room and hallways. A stained glass window and
flags adorn the crypt, which is centered around an inscribed red marble
monument.
At the close of the ceremonies and events marking Lincoln's death,
his body was placed in a nearby receiving tomb and later in the state
tomb. The mausoleum is owned and administered by the State of Illinois
as Lincoln Tomb State Historic Site. It was designated one of the first National Historic Landmarks in 1960, and thus became one of the first sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966, when that designation was created.
History
On April 16, 1865, two days after President Abraham Lincolnwas assassinated,
a group of Springfield citizens formed the National Lincoln Monument
Association and spearheaded a drive for funds to construct a memorial
or tomb.[3] Upon arrival of the funeral train on May 3, Lincoln lay in state in the Illinois State Capitol for one night.[4] After funeral and burial services the next day, his coffin was placed in a receiving vault at Oak Ridge Cemetery, the site Mrs. Lincoln requested for burial.[3]
In December, her husband's remains were removed to a temporary vault
not far from the proposed memorial site. In 1871, three years after
laborers had begun constructing the tomb, the body of Lincoln and those
of the three youngest of his sons were placed in crypts in the
unfinished structure.[4]
In 1874, upon completion of the memorial, which had been designed by Larkin Goldsmith Mead, Lincoln's remains were interred in a marblesarcophagus in the center of a chamber known as the "catacombs," or burial room.[3]
In 1876, however, after two Chicago criminals failed in an attempt to
steal Lincoln's body and hold it for ransom, the National Lincoln
Monument Association hid it in another part of the memorial, first
under wood and other debris and then buried in the ground within the
tomb. When Mrs. Lincoln died in 1882, her remains were placed with
those of Lincoln, but in 1887 both bodies were reburied in a brick vault beneath the floor of the burial room.[4]
By
1895, the year the State acquired the memorial, it had fallen into
disrepair. During a rebuilding and restoration program from 1899 to
1901, all five caskets were moved to a nearby subterranean vault.[3]
Following completion of the restoration, State officials returned them
to the burial room and placed that of Lincoln in the sarcophagus it had
occupied in 1874–76. Within a few months, however, at the request of Robert Todd Lincoln,[4]
the President's only surviving son, Lincoln's remains were moved to
their final resting place – a concrete vault 10 feet (3.0 m) below
the surface of the burial room. In 1930–31 the State reconstructed the
interior of the memorial in an Art Deco style. Rededicated in the later year by President Herbert Hoover, it has undergone little change since that time.[3] The Lincoln Tomb was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960.
Design and Layout
The tomb is in the center of a 12½ acre (51,000 m2) plot.[3] Constructed of granite from Biddeford, Maine,[5] dressed at Quincy, Massachusetts, it has a rectangular base surmounted by a 117-foot (36 m)-high obelisk and a semicircular entranceway. A bronze reproduction by sculptor Gutzon Borglum
of his head of Lincoln in the U.S. Capitol rests on a pedestal in front
of the entranceway. Four flights of balustraded stairs—two flanking the
entrance at the front and two at the rear—lead to a level terrace. The
balustrade extends around the terrace to form a parapet. Originally
open to the public, the terrace has since been closed due to safety
concerns.
In
the center of the terrace, a large and ornate base supports the
obelisk. On the walls of the base are 40 hewn stones, cut to represent
raised shields, 37 are engraved with the abbreviation of a State at the
time the tomb was built. The remaining 3 are marked U, S, A. Each
shield is connected to another by two raised bands, and thus the group
forms an unbroken chain encircling the base. Four bronze statues adorn
the corners of the latter. They represent the infantry, navy,
artillery, and cavalry of the Civil War period. In front of the obelisk and above the entrance stands a full-length statue of Lincoln.[3] The tomb's design architect and sculptor, Larkin G. Mead, designed and executed these carvings and statues.[6]
The
interior of the memorial, constructed of marble from Minnesota,
Missouri, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Utah, Italy, Spain, France, and
Belgium,[3] contains a rotunda, a burial room, and connecting corridors. A down-scaled bronze prototype by Daniel Chester French of his 1920 statue in the Lincoln Memorial, in Washington, D.C., dominates the entrance foyer. The walls of the rotunda are decorated with 16 marble pilasters, which are separated by marble panels. The pilasters symbolize Lincoln and the 15 presidents who preceded him.[7] The room also contains 36 bronze panels, one for each state at the time of Lincoln's death. The ceiling is of palladium leaf.
Corridors
lead from the rotunda to the burial room at the rear of the memorial.
Located in niches along the corridor walls are eight statues by
prominent sculptors depicting various phases of Lincoln's life. Four
bronze tablets on the walls are engraved with the Farewell Address, the Gettysburg Address, a portion of the Second Inaugural Address,
and a biographical sketch. Large gold stars in sets of 12 at each
corner of the memorial represent the 48 states in the Union at the time
of its 1930 redecoration.[3]
The
burial room features black and white marble walls and a ceiling of gold
leaf. At its center stands the memorial monument, a 7-ton block of
reddish marble inscribed with Lincoln's name and the years he lived. It
marks the approximate location of the burial vault, which is
30 inches behind and 10 feet below. Nine flags are arranged in a
semicircle around the cenotaph. Seven of them—the State flags of
Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana,
and Illinois—commemorate the homes of Lincoln and his ancestors. The
eighth and ninth are the U.S. flag and the Presidential flag. The inscription "Now he belongs to the ages," reputedly spoken by Secretary of WarEdwin M. Stanton at the time of Lincoln's death, is inscribed in the wall above a stained glass window.[3]
Along the south wall of the burial room are four crypts containing the
remains of Mrs. Lincoln and three of Lincoln's four sons, Edward, Willie, and Tad (the eldest, Robert Todd Lincoln, is buried at Arlington National Cemetery, alongside his wife and son).
The
tomb was built with additional crypts for members of Lincoln's family
in addition to the four spaces already used. However, as the remaining
members of Lincoln's family chose to be buried elsewhere, the other
crypts remain empty.
The original landscaping for the site was designed by William Saunders, a prominent landscape designer and federal employee who had previously designed the Oakridge Cemetery and the Soldiers National Cemetery at Gettysburg where Lincoln had delivered his famous speech.[9]
Adjacent Memorials
Also
part of the site overseen by the State of Illinois, and a short
distance from the tomb, three war memorials have been erected:
The World War II Illinois Veterans Memorial
was dedicated in December 2004. This memorial honors the 987,000
Illinois men and women who served in World War II and the 22,000 who
gave their lives.[10]
Its focal point is a white 22-ton concrete globe flanked on two sides
by black granite walls. Stainless steel buttons on the globe identify
major battles, and quotations from military leaders, and Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman are engraved on the wall.
The Korean War Memorial honors 1,748 Illinoisans killed during the 1950-53 Korean War.
This memorial was dedicated on June 16, 1996. The memorial consists of
a twelve-foot-tall bronze bell, with a diameter of twelve feet, mounted
on a granite base. At the circumference of the bell are four niches,
each with a larger-than-life figure representing a branch of the armed
services. Inscribed on the base are the names of Illinoisans killed in
Korea. A carillon system in the Memorial plays brief musical programs
at regular intervals.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial honors the almost 3,000 Illinoisans killed during the Vietnam War,
and was dedicated in 1988. The memorial has a circular layout allowing
visitors to enter the interior courtyard from any direction. The names
of those killed or missing in action are on five granite slabs, each slab representing one of the branches of the United States Military.
Lincoln, a moderate
Republican, had to navigate a contentious array of factions
with friends and opponents from both the Democratic
and Republican parties. His allies, the War Democrats and the Radical Republicans,
demanded harsh treatment of the Southern Confederates. He managed the
factions by exploiting their mutual enmity, carefully distributing
political patronage, and by appealing to the American people. Anti-war
Democrats (called "Copperheads")
despised Lincoln, and some irreconcilable pro-Confederate elements went
so far as to plot his assassination. His Gettysburg Address
became one of the most famous speeches in American history. Lincoln
closely supervised the strategy and tactics in the war effort,
including the selection of generals, and implemented a naval blockade of the
South's trade. He suspended habeas corpus in Maryland and elsewhere,
and he averted war with Britain by defusing the Trent Affair.
In 1863, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation,
which declared the slaves in the states "in rebellion" to be free. It
also directed the Army and Navy to "recognize and maintain the freedom
of said persons" and to receive them "into the armed service of the
United States." Lincoln pressured border states
to outlaw slavery, and he promoted the Thirteenth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which abolished slavery,
except as punishment for a crime. Lincoln managed his own successful re-election
campaign. He sought to heal the war-torn nation through
reconciliation. On April 14, 1865, just five days after the Confederate
surrender at Appomattox, he was attending a play at Ford's Theatre in
Washington, D.C., with his wife Mary, when he was
fatally shot by Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth.
Lincoln is
remembered as a martyr and a national hero for his
wartime leadership and for his efforts to preserve the Union and
abolish slavery. He
is often ranked in both popular and scholarly polls as the
greatest president in American history.
Thomas Lincoln
bought multiple farms in Kentucky
but could not get clear property titles to
any, losing hundreds of acres in legal disputes.[12] In
1816, the family moved to Indiana,
where the land surveys and titles were more reliable.[13]
They settled in an "unbroken forest"[14] in
Little Pigeon Creek
Community, Hurricane Township, Perry
County, Indiana.[15]
When the Lincolns moved to Indiana it had just been admitted to the Union
as a "free"
(non-slaveholding) state,[16]
except that, though "no new enslaved people were allowed, ... currently
enslaved individuals remained so".[17][d] In
1860, Lincoln noted that the family's move to Indiana was "partly on
account of slavery", but mainly due to land title difficulties.[19][20]
In Kentucky and Indiana, Thomas worked as a farmer, cabinetmaker, and
carpenter.[21] At
various times he owned farms, livestock, and town lots, paid taxes, sat
on juries, appraised estates, and served on county patrols. Thomas and
Nancy were members of a Separate Baptist Church,
which "condemned profanity, intoxication, gossip, horse racing, and
dancing." Most of its members opposed slavery.[22]
Overcoming financial challenges, Thomas in 1827 obtained clear title to 80 acres
(32 ha) in Indiana, an area that became known as Little Pigeon Creek
Community.[23]
Mother's death
On October
5, 1818, Nancy Lincoln died from milk sickness, leaving
11-year-old Sarah in charge of a household including her father,
nine-year-old Abraham, and Nancy's 19-year-old orphan cousin, Dennis
Hanks.[24]
Ten years later, on January 20, 1828, Sarah died while giving birth to
a stillborn son, devastating Lincoln.[25] On
December 2, 1819, Thomas married Sarah Bush Johnston, a
widow from Elizabethtown, Kentucky, with three children of her own.[26]
Abraham became close to his stepmother and called her "Mother".[27]
Dennis Hanks said he was lazy, for all his
"reading—scribbling—writing—ciphering—writing poetry".[28]
His stepmother acknowledged he did not enjoy "physical labor" but loved
to read.[29][30]
When Lincoln
was a teen, his "father grew more and more to depend on him for the
'farming, grubbing, hoeing, making fences' necessary to keep the family
afloat. He also regularly hired his son out to work ... and by law, he
was entitled to everything the boy earned until he came of age".[37]
Lincoln was tall, strong, and athletic, and became adept at using an ax.[38] He
was an active wrestler during his
youth and trained in rough catch-as-catch-can style,
also known as catch wrestling. He became county wrestling champion at
the age of 21.[39] He
gained a reputation for his strength and audacity after winning a
wrestling match with the renowned leader of ruffians known as the
Clary's Grove boys.[40]
In March 1830,
fearing another milk sickness outbreak, several members of the extended
Lincoln family, including Abraham, moved west to Illinois, a free
state, and settled in Macon County.[41][e]
Abraham then became increasingly distant from Thomas, in part, due to
his father's lack of interest in education.[43] In
1831, as Thomas and other family members prepared to move to a new homestead
in Coles County, Illinois,
Abraham struck out on his own.[44] He
made his home in New Salem, Illinois,
for six years.[45]
Lincoln and some friends took goods, including live hogs, by flatboat
to New Orleans, Louisiana, where
he first witnessed slavery.[46]
Marriage and Children
Speculation
persists that Lincoln's first romantic interest was Ann Rutledge, whom he met
when he moved to New Salem. However, witness testimony, given decades
afterward, showed a lack of any specific recollection of a romance
between the two.[47]
Rutledge died on August 25, 1835, most likely of typhoid fever; Lincoln took
the death very hard, saying that he could not bear the idea of rain
falling on Ann's grave. Lincoln sank into a serious episode of
depression, and this gave rise to speculation that he had been in love
with her.[48][49][50] In
the early 1830s, he met Mary Owens
from Kentucky.[51]
Late in 1836, Lincoln agreed to a match with Owens if she returned to
New Salem. Owens arrived that November and he courted her; however,
they both had second thoughts. On August 16, 1837, he wrote Owens a
letter saying he would not blame her if she ended the relationship, and
she never replied.[52]
In 1839,
Lincoln met Mary Todd in Springfield, Illinois,
and the following year they became engaged.[53]
She was the daughter of Robert Smith Todd, a
wealthy lawyer and businessman in Lexington, Kentucky.[54]
Their wedding, which was set for January 1, 1841, was canceled because
Lincoln did not appear, but they reconciled and married on November 4,
1842, in the Springfield home of Mary's sister.[55]
While anxiously preparing for the nuptials, he was asked where he was
going and replied, "To hell, I suppose".[56] In
1844, the couple bought a house
in Springfield near his law office. Mary kept house with the help of a
hired servant and a relative.[57]
Lincoln was an affectionate husband and father of four sons, though his
work regularly kept him away from home. The eldest, Robert Todd Lincoln,
was born in 1843, and was the only child to live to maturity. Edward Baker Lincoln
(Eddie), born in 1846, died February 1, 1850, probably of tuberculosis.
Lincoln's third son, "Willie" Lincoln,
was born on December 21, 1850, and died of a fever at the White House on February 20,
1862. The youngest, Thomas "Tad" Lincoln, was born
on April 4, 1853, and survived his father, but died of heart failure at
age 18 on July 16, 1871.[58][f]
Lincoln "was
remarkably fond of children",[60]
and the Lincolns were not considered to be strict with their own.[61] In
fact, Lincoln's law partner William
H. Herndon would grow irritated when Lincoln brought his
children to the law office, and they misbehaved. Their father, it
seemed, was often too absorbed in his work to notice his children's
behavior. Herndon recounted, "I have felt many and many a time that I
wanted to wring their little necks, and yet out of respect for Lincoln
I kept my mouth shut. Lincoln did not note what his children were doing
or had done."[62]
The deaths of their sons Eddie and Willie had profound effects on both
parents. Lincoln suffered from "melancholy", a
condition now thought to be clinical depression.[49]
Later in life, Mary struggled with the stresses of losing her husband
and sons, and in 1875 Robert committed her to an asylum.[63]
During 1831
and 1832, Lincoln worked at a general store in New Salem, Illinois.
In 1832, he declared his candidacy for the Illinois House of
Representatives, but interrupted his campaign to serve as a
captain in the Illinois
Militia during the Black Hawk War.[64]
When Lincoln returned home from the Black Hawk War, he planned
to become a blacksmith, but instead formed a partnership with
21-year-old William Berry, with whom he purchased a New Salem general
store on credit. Because a license was required to sell customers
beverages, Berry obtained bartending licenses for $7 each for Lincoln
and himself, and in 1833 the Lincoln-Berry General
Store became a tavern as well.[65] As
licensed bartenders, Lincoln and Berry were able to sell spirits,
including liquor, for 12 cents a pint. They offered a wide range of
alcoholic beverages as well as food, including takeout dinners. But
Berry became an alcoholic, was often too drunk to work, and Lincoln
ended up running the store by himself.[66]
Although the economy was booming, the business struggled and went into
debt, causing Lincoln to sell his share.[65]
In his first
campaign speech after returning from his military service, Lincoln
observed a supporter in the crowd under attack, grabbed the assailant
by his "neck and the seat of his trousers", and tossed him.[41] In
the campaign, Lincoln advocated for navigational improvements on the Sangamon River. He could
draw crowds as a raconteur,
but lacked the requisite formal education, powerful friends, and money,
and lost the election.[67]
Lincoln finished eighth out of 13 candidates (the top four were
elected), though he received 277 of the 300 votes cast in the New Salem
precinct.[68]
Lincoln served as New Salem's postmaster and later as county surveyor,
but continued his voracious reading and decided to become a lawyer.[69]
Rather than studying in the office of an established attorney, as was
the custom, Lincoln borrowed legal texts from attorneys John
Todd Stuart and Thomas Drummond,
purchased books including Blackstone's Commentaries
and Chitty's Pleadings,
and read law on his own.[69] He
later said of his legal education that "I studied with nobody."[70]
Early political offices and prairie lawyer
Illinois
state legislature (1834–1842)
Lincoln's
second state house campaign in 1834, this time as a Whig, was a
success over a powerful Whig opponent.[71]
Then followed his four terms in the Illinois House of
Representatives for Sangamon
County.[72] He
championed construction of the Illinois and Michigan
Canal, and later was a Canal Commissioner.[73] He
voted to expand suffrage beyond white landowners to all white males,
but adopted a "free soil" stance opposing both slavery and abolition.[74] In
1837, he declared, "[The] Institution of slavery is founded on both
injustice and bad policy, but the promulgation of abolition doctrines
tends rather to increase than abate its evils."[75] He
echoed Henry Clay's support for the American Colonization
Society which advocated a program of abolition in conjunction
with settling freed slaves in Liberia.[76]
He was admitted
to the Illinois bar on September 9, 1836,[77][78]
and moved to Springfield and began to practice law under John T. Stuart, Mary Todd's
cousin.[79]
Lincoln emerged as a formidable trial combatant during
cross-examinations and closing arguments. He partnered several years
with Stephen T. Logan, and in
1844, began his
practice with William Herndon,
"a studious young man".[80] On
January 27, 1838, Abraham Lincoln, then 28 years old, delivered his first major speech
at the Lyceum in Springfield, Illinois,
after the murder of newspaper editor Elijah Parish Lovejoy
in Alton. Lincoln warned that no trans-Atlantic military giant could
ever crush the U.S. as a nation. "It cannot come from abroad. If
destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher",
said Lincoln.[81][82]
Prior to that, on April 28, 1836, a black man, Francis McIntosh,
was burned alive in St.
Louis, Missouri. Zann Gill describes how these two murders
set off a chain reaction that ultimately prompted Abraham Lincoln to
run for President.[83]
U.S. House of Representatives
(1847–1849
True to his
record, Lincoln professed to friends in 1861 to be "an old line Whig, a
disciple of Henry Clay".[84]
Their party favored economic modernization in banking, tariffs to fund internal improvements
including railroads, and urbanization.[85] In
1843, Lincoln sought the Whig nomination for Illinois's 7th
district seat in the U.S. House of
Representatives; he was defeated by John J. Hardin, though he
prevailed with the party in limiting Hardin to one term. Lincoln not
only pulled off his strategy of gaining the nomination in 1846, but
also won the election. He was the only Whig in the Illinois delegation,
but as dutiful as any participated in almost all votes and made
speeches that toed the party line.[86] He
was assigned to the Committee
on Post Office and Post Roads and the Committee
on Expenditures in the War Department.[87]
Lincoln teamed with Joshua
R. Giddings on a bill to abolish slavery in the District
of Columbia with compensation for the owners, enforcement to
capture fugitive slaves, and a popular vote on the matter. He dropped
the bill when it eluded Whig support.[88][89]
Early
political views
On foreign and
military policy, Lincoln spoke against the Mexican–American War,
which he imputed President James K. Polk's desire for
"military glory — that attractive rainbow, that rises in showers of
blood".[90] He
supported the Wilmot Proviso, a failed
proposal to ban slavery in any U.S. territory won from Mexico.[91]
Lincoln emphasized his opposition to Polk by drafting and introducing
his Spot Resolutions. The war
had begun with a killing of American soldiers by Mexican cavalry patrol
in disputed territory, and Polk insisted that Mexican soldiers had
"invaded our territory and shed the blood of our fellow-citizens on our
own soil".[92]
Lincoln demanded that Polk show Congress the exact spot on which blood
had been shed and prove that the spot was on American soil.[93]
The resolution was ignored in both Congress and the national papers,
and it cost Lincoln political support in his district. One Illinois
newspaper derisively nicknamed him "spotty Lincoln".[94]
Lincoln later regretted some of his statements, especially his attack
on presidential war-making powers.[95]
Lincoln had
pledged in 1846 to serve only one term in the House. Realizing Clay was
unlikely to win the presidency, he supported General Zachary Taylor for the Whig
nomination in the 1848
presidential election.[96]
Taylor won and Lincoln hoped in vain to be appointed Commissioner of
the United States
General Land Office.[97]
The administration offered to appoint him secretary or governor of the Oregon Territory as
consolation.[98]
This distant territory was a Democratic stronghold, and acceptance of
the post would have disrupted his legal and political career in
Illinois, so he declined and resumed his law practice.[99]
In his
Springfield practice, Lincoln handled "every kind of business that
could come before a prairie lawyer".[100]
Twice a year he appeared for 10 consecutive weeks in county seats in
the Midstate county courts; this continued for 16 years.[101][102] He
later represented a bridge company against a riverboat company in Hurd
v. Rock Island Bridge Company, a landmark case
involving a canal boat that sank after hitting a bridge.[103] In
1849 he received a patent for a flotation
device for the movement of boats in shallow water. The idea
was never commercialized, but it made Lincoln the only president to
hold a patent.[104]
Lincoln appeared before the Illinois Supreme Court in 175 cases; he was
sole counsel in 51 cases, of which 31 were decided in his favor.[105]
From 1853 to 1860, one of his largest clients was the Illinois Central Railroad.[106]
His legal reputation gave rise to the nickname "Honest Abe".[107]
Lincoln handled transportation cases in the midst of the nation's
western expansion, particularly river barge conflicts under the many
new railroad bridges. As a riverboat man, Lincoln initially favored
those interests, but ultimately represented whoever hired him.
In an 1858
criminal trial, Lincoln represented William "Duff" Armstrong, who was
on trial for the murder of James Preston Metzker.[108]
The case is famous for Lincoln's use of a fact established by judicial notice to
challenge the credibility of an eyewitness. After an opposing witness
testified to seeing the crime in the moonlight, Lincoln produced a Farmers' Almanac
showing the Moon was at a low angle, drastically reducing visibility.
Armstrong was acquitted.[108] In
an 1859 murder case, leading up to his presidential campaign, Lincoln
elevated his profile with his defense of Simeon Quinn "Peachy"
Harrison, who was a third cousin;[g]
Harrison was also the grandson of Lincoln's political opponent, Rev. Peter Cartwright.[110][111]
Lincoln angrily protested the judge's initial decision to exclude
Cartwright's testimony about the confession as inadmissible hearsay.
Lincoln argued that the testimony involved a dying declaration and
was not subject to the hearsay rule. Instead of holding Lincoln in contempt of court as
expected, the judge, a Democrat, reversed his ruling and admitted the
testimony into evidence, resulting in Harrison's acquittal.[108]
Harrison was charged with the murder of Greek Crafton who, as
he lay dying of his wounds, confessed to Cartwright that he had
provoked Harrison.
The debate
over the status of slavery in the territories failed to alleviate
tensions between the slave-holding South and the free North, with the
failure of the Compromise of 1850, a
legislative package designed to address the issue.[112] In
his 1852 eulogy for Clay, Lincoln highlighted the latter's support for
gradual emancipation and opposition to "both extremes" on the slavery
issue.[113] As
the slavery debate in the Nebraska and Kansas territories became
particularly acrimonious, Illinois Senator Stephen A. Douglas proposed popular
sovereignty as a compromise; the measure would allow the
electorate of each territory to decide the status of slavery. The
legislation alarmed many Northerners, who sought to prevent the spread
of slavery that could result, but Douglas's Kansas–Nebraska Act
narrowly passed Congress in May 1854.[114]
Lincoln did not comment on the act until months later in his "Peoria Speech"
of October 1854. Lincoln then declared his opposition to slavery, which
he repeated en route to the presidency.[115] He
said the Kansas Act had a "declared indifference,
but as I must think, a covert real zeal for the
spread of slavery. I cannot but hate it. I hate it because of the
monstrous injustice of slavery itself. I hate it because it deprives
our republican example of its just influence in the world...."[116]
Lincoln's attacks on the Kansas–Nebraska Act marked his return to
political life.[117]
Nationally,
the Whigs were irreparably split by the Kansas–Nebraska Act and other
ineffective efforts to compromise on the slavery issue. Reflecting on
the demise of his party, Lincoln wrote in 1855, "I think I am a whig;
but others say there are no whigs, and that I am an abolitionist.... I
now do no more than oppose the extension of
slavery."[118]
The new Republican Party
was formed as a northern party dedicated to antislavery, drawing from
the antislavery wing of the Whig Party and combining Free Soil, Liberty,
and antislavery Democratic Party
members,[119]
Lincoln resisted early Republican entreaties, fearing that the new
party would become a platform for extreme abolitionists.[120]
Lincoln held out hope for rejuvenating the Whigs, though he lamented
his party's growing closeness with the nativist Know Nothing movement.[121] In
1854, Lincoln was elected to the Illinois legislature, but before the
term began the following January he declined to take his seat so that
he would be eligible to be a candidate in the upcoming U.S. Senate
election.[122][123]
The year's elections showed the strong opposition to the
Kansas–Nebraska Act, and in the aftermath Lincoln sought election to
the U.S. Senate.[117] At
that time, senators were elected by state legislatures.[124]
After leading in the first six rounds of voting, he was unable to
obtain a majority. Lincoln instructed his backers to vote for Lyman Trumbull. Trumbull
was an antislavery Democrat and had received few votes in the earlier
ballots; his supporters, also antislavery Democrats, had vowed not to
support any Whig. Lincoln's decision to withdraw enabled his Whig
supporters and Trumbull's antislavery Democrats to combine and defeat
the mainstream Democratic candidate, Joel Aldrich Matteson.[125]
1856 campaign
Violent political confrontations in
Kansas continued, and opposition to the Kansas–Nebraska Act
remained strong throughout the North. As the 1856 elections
approached, Lincoln joined the Republicans
and attended the Bloomington Convention,
where the Illinois Republican Party
was established. The convention platform endorsed Congress's right to
regulate slavery in the territories and backed the admission of Kansas
as a free state. Lincoln gave the final speech of the
convention supporting the party platform and called for the
preservation of the Union.[126] At
the June 1856 Republican
National Convention, though Lincoln received support to run
as vice president, John C. Frémont and William
Dayton were on the ticket, which Lincoln supported throughout
Illinois. The Democrats nominated former Secretary of State James Buchanan and the
Know-Nothings nominated former Whig President Millard Fillmore.[127]
Buchanan prevailed, while Republican William Henry Bissell
won election as Governor of Illinois, and Lincoln became a leading
Republican in Illinois.[128][h]
Dred Scott was a slave whose
master took him from a slave state to a territory that was free as a
result of the Missouri Compromise.
After Scott was returned to the slave state, he petitioned a federal
court for his freedom. His petition was denied in Dred Scott v. Sandford
(1857).[i] In
his opinion, Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger B. Taney wrote that
black people were not citizens and derived no rights from the
Constitution, and that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional for
infringing upon slave owners' "property" rights. While many Democrats
hoped that Dred Scott would end the dispute over
slavery in the territories, the decision sparked further outrage in the
North.[131]
Lincoln denounced it as the product of a conspiracy of Democrats to
support the Slave Power.[132] He
argued that the decision was at variance with the Declaration of
Independence, because, while the founding fathers did not believe that
all men were equal in every respect, they believed all men were equal
"in certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness".[133]
Lincoln–Douglas
debates and Cooper Union speech
In 1858,
Douglas was up for re-election in the U.S. Senate, and Lincoln hoped to
defeat him. Many in the party felt that a former Whig should be
nominated in 1858, and Lincoln's 1856 campaigning and support of
Trumbull had earned him a favor.[134]
Some eastern Republicans supported Douglas for his opposition to the Lecompton Constitution
and admission of Kansas as a slave state.[135]
Many Illinois Republicans resented this eastern interference. For the
first time, Illinois Republicans held a convention to agree upon a
Senate candidate, and Lincoln won the nomination with little opposition.[136]
Lincoln accepted the nomination with great enthusiasm and zeal. After
his nomination he delivered his House Divided Speech,
with the biblical reference Mark 3:25, "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."[137]
The speech created a stark image of the danger of disunion.[138]
The stage was then set for the election of the Illinois legislature
which would, in turn, select Lincoln or Douglas.[139]
When informed of Lincoln's nomination, Douglas stated, "[Lincoln] is
the strong man of the party ... and if I beat him, my victory
will be hardly won."[140]
The Senate
campaign featured seven debates between
Lincoln and Douglas. These are the most famous political debates in
American history; they had an atmosphere akin to a prizefight and drew
crowds in the thousands.[141]
The principals stood in stark contrast both physically and politically.
Lincoln warned that the Slave Power was threatening
the values of republicanism, and he accused Douglas of distorting
Jefferson's premise that all men are created equal.
In his Freeport Doctrine,
Douglas argued that, despite the Dred Scott
decision, which he claimed to support,[142]
local settlers, under the doctrine of popular
sovereignty, should be free to choose whether to allow
slavery within their territory, and he accused Lincoln of having joined
the abolitionists.[143]
Lincoln's argument assumed a moral tone, as he claimed that Douglas
represented a conspiracy to promote slavery. Douglas's argument was
more legal in nature, claiming that Lincoln was defying the authority
of the U.S. Supreme Court as exercised in the Dred Scott
decision.[144]
Summarizing
remarks that Lincoln made in an April 1859 letter, Ronald C. White, Jr.
writes that the "two great parties ... formed at the birth of the
Republic ... seventy years later ... had completely changed places.
Modern Republicans, descendants of the old New England Federalists,
paradoxically, had ended up preserving the principles of Jefferson.
Lincoln illustrated his point by the story of two drunken men who
engaged in a fight with the result that 'each having fought himself out
of his own coat, and into the other.'"[145]
White quotes from the same letter: "The democracy [Democrats] of to-day
hold the liberty of one man to be absolutely
nothing, when in conflict with another man's right of property.
Republicans, on the contrary, are for both the man
and dollar; but in cases of conflict, the man before
the dollar.'"[145]
Though the
Republican legislative candidates won more popular votes, the Democrats
won more seats, and the legislature re-elected Douglas. However,
Lincoln's articulation of the issues had given him a national political
presence.[146] In
May 1859, Lincoln purchased the Illinois Staats-Anzeiger,
a German-language newspaper that was consistently supportive; most of
the state's 130,000 German Americans voted for Democrats, but the
German-language paper mobilized Republican support.[147] In
the aftermath of the 1858 election, newspapers frequently mentioned
Lincoln as a potential Republican presidential candidate, rivaled by William H. Seward, Salmon P. Chase, Edward Bates, and Simon Cameron. While Lincoln
was popular in the Midwest, he lacked support in the Northeast and was
unsure whether to seek the office.[148] In
January 1860, Lincoln told a group of political allies that he would
accept the presidential nomination if offered and, in the following
months, several local papers endorsed his candidacy.[149]
Over the coming months Lincoln was tireless, making nearly fifty
speeches along the campaign trail. By the quality and simplicity of his
rhetoric, he quickly became the champion of the Republican party.
However, despite his overwhelming support in the Midwestern United States,
he was less appreciated in the east. Horace Greeley, editor of
the New York Tribune, at that time wrote up an unflattering account of
Lincoln's compromising position on slavery and his reluctance to
challenge the court's Dred Scott ruling, which was
promptly used against him by his political rivals.[150][151]
On February
27, 1860, powerful New York Republicans invited Lincoln to give a speech at Cooper Union,
in which he argued that the Founding
Fathers of the United States had little use for popular
sovereignty and had repeatedly sought to restrict slavery. He insisted
that morality required opposition to slavery and rejected any "groping
for some middle ground between the right and the wrong".[152]
Many in the audience thought he appeared awkward and even ugly.[153]
But Lincoln demonstrated intellectual leadership, which brought him
into contention. Journalist Noah Brooks reported, "No man
ever before made such an impression on his first appeal to a New York
audience".[154]
Historian David Herbert Donald
described the speech as "a superb political move for an unannounced
presidential aspirant. Appearing in Seward's home state, sponsored by a
group largely loyal to Chase, Lincoln shrewdly made no reference to
either of these Republican rivals for the nomination."[155] In
response to an inquiry about his ambitions, Lincoln said, "The taste is
in my mouth a little".[156]
On May 9–10,
1860, the Illinois Republican State Convention was held in Decatur.[157]
Lincoln's followers organized a campaign team led by David Davis,
Norman Judd, Leonard Swett, and Jesse
DuBois, and Lincoln received his first endorsement.[158]
Exploiting his embellished frontier legend (clearing land and splitting
fence rails), Lincoln's supporters adopted the label of "The Rail
Candidate".[159] In
1860, Lincoln described himself: "I am in height, six feet, four
inches, nearly; lean in flesh, weighing, on an average, one hundred and
eighty pounds; dark complexion, with coarse black hair, and gray eyes."[160]
Michael Martinez wrote about the effective imaging of Lincoln by his
campaign. At times he was presented as the plain-talking "Rail
Splitter" and at other times he was "Honest Abe", unpolished but
trustworthy.[161] On
May 18 at the Republican
National Convention in Chicago, Lincoln won the nomination on
the third ballot, beating candidates such as Seward and Chase. A former
Democrat, Hannibal Hamlin of Maine,
was nominated for vice president to balance the ticket.
Lincoln's success depended on his campaign team, his reputation as a
moderate on the slavery issue, and his strong support for internal
improvements and the tariff.[162]
Pennsylvania put him over the top, led by the state's iron interests
who were reassured by his tariff support.[163]
Lincoln's managers had focused on this delegation while honoring
Lincoln's dictate to "Make no contracts that will bind me".[164]
As the Slave
Power tightened its grip on the national government, most Republicans
agreed with Lincoln that the North was the aggrieved party. Throughout
the 1850s, Lincoln had doubted the prospects of civil war, and his
supporters rejected claims that his election would incite secession.[165]
When Douglas was selected as the candidate of the Northern Democrats,
delegates from eleven slave states walked out of the Democratic
convention; they opposed Douglas's position on popular
sovereignty, and selected incumbent Vice President John C. Breckinridge
as their candidate.[166] A
group of former Whigs and Know Nothings formed the Constitutional
Union Party and nominated John Bell
of Tennessee. Lincoln and Douglas competed for votes in the North,
while Bell and Breckinridge primarily found support in the South.[134]
Before the Republican convention, the Lincoln campaign began
cultivating a nationwide youth organization, the Wide Awakes, which it used to
generate popular support throughout the country to spearhead voter
registration drives, thinking that new voters and young voters tended
to embrace new parties.[167]
People of the Northern states knew the Southern states would vote
against Lincoln and rallied supporters for Lincoln.[168]
As Douglas and
the other candidates campaigned, Lincoln gave no speeches, relying on
the enthusiasm of the Republican Party. The party did the leg work that
produced majorities across the North and produced an abundance of
campaign posters, leaflets, and newspaper editorials. Republican
speakers focused first on the party platform, and second on Lincoln's
life story, emphasizing his childhood poverty. The goal was to
demonstrate the power of "free labor", which allowed a common farm boy
to work his way to the top by his own efforts.[169]
The Republican Party's production of campaign literature dwarfed the
combined opposition; a Chicago Tribune writer
produced a pamphlet that detailed Lincoln's life and sold
100,000–200,000 copies.[170]
Though he did not give public appearances, many sought to visit him and
write him. In the runup to the election, he took an office in the
Illinois state capitol to deal with the influx of attention. He also
hired John George Nicolay as
his personal secretary, who would remain in that role during the
presidency.[171] On
November 6, 1860, Lincoln was elected the 16th president. He was the
first Republican president and his victory was entirely due to his
support in the North and West. No ballots were cast for him in 10 of
the 15 Southern slave states, and he won only two of 996 counties in
all the Southern states.[172][173]
Lincoln received 1,866,452 votes, or 39.8% of the total in a four-way
race, carrying the free Northern states, as well as California and
Oregon.[174]
His victory in the Electoral College
was decisive: Lincoln had 180 votes to 123 for his opponents.[175]
The South
was outraged by Lincoln's election, and in response secessionists
implemented plans to leave the Union before he took office in March
1861.[177] On
December 20, 1860, South Carolina adopted an ordinance of secession; by
February 1, 1861, Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana,
and Texas followed.[178]
Six of these states declared themselves to be a sovereign nation, the Confederate States of
America, selecting Jefferson Davis as its
provisional president.[179][180]
President Buchanan and President-elect Lincoln refused to recognize the
Confederacy, declaring secession illegal.[181]
The upper South and border states (Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North
Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri, and Arkansas) initially
rejected the secessionist appeal.
Lincoln and
the Republicans rejected the proposed Crittenden Compromise
as contrary to the Party's platform of free-soil in the territories.[182]
Lincoln said, "I will suffer death before I consent ... to any
concession or compromise which looks like buying the privilege to take
possession of this government to which we have a constitutional right".[183]
Lincoln supported the Corwin Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
which passed Congress and was awaiting ratification by the required
three-fourths of the states when Lincoln took office, whereupon
Southern states began to secede. That doomed amendment would have
protected slavery in states where it already existed.[184] On
March 4, 1861, in his first
inaugural address, Lincoln said that, because he holds "such
a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection
to its being made express and irrevocable".[185]
On February
11, 1861, Lincoln gave a particularly emotional farewell address
upon leaving Springfield; he would never return to Springfield alive.[186][187]
Lincoln traveled east on a special train. Due to secessionist plots,
unprecedented attention to security was given to him and his train. En
route to his inauguration, Lincoln addressed crowds and legislatures
across the North.[188]
The president-elect evaded suspected assassins in Baltimore. He
traveled in disguise, wearing a soft felt hat instead of his customary
stovepipe hat and draping an overcoat over his shoulders while hunching
slightly to conceal his height. On February 23, 1861, he arrived in
Washington, D.C., which was placed under substantial military guard.[189]
Lincoln
directed his
inaugural address to the South, proclaiming once again that
he had no inclination to abolish slavery in the Southern states:
Apprehension
seems to exist among the people of the Southern States, that by the
accession of a Republican Administration, their property, and their
peace, and personal security, are to be endangered. There has never
been any reasonable cause for such apprehension. Indeed, the most ample
evidence to the contrary has all the while existed, and been open to
their inspection. It is found in nearly all the published speeches of
him who now addresses you. I do but quote from one of those speeches
when I declare that "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to
interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it
exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no
inclination to do so."
Lincoln
cited his plans for banning the expansion of slavery as the key source
of conflict between North and South, stating "One section of our
country believes slavery is right and ought to be extended, while the
other believes it is wrong and ought not to be extended. This is the
only substantial dispute." The president ended his address with an
appeal to the people of the South: "We are not enemies, but friends....
The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield, and
patriot grave, to every living heart and hearthstone, all over this
broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched,
as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature."[192]
The failure of the Peace Conference of 1861
signaled that legislative compromise was impossible. By March 1861, no
leaders of the insurrection had proposed rejoining the Union on any
terms. Meanwhile, Lincoln and the Republican leadership agreed that the
dismantling of the Union could not be tolerated.[193] In
his second
inaugural address, Lincoln looked back on the situation at
the time and said: "Both parties deprecated war, but one of them would
make war rather than let the Nation survive, and the other would accept
war rather than let it perish, and the war came."
In the
selection and use of his cabinet Lincoln employed the strengths of his
rivals in a manner that emboldened his presidency. Lincoln commented on
his thought process, "We need the strongest men of the party in the
Cabinet. We needed to hold our own people together. I had looked the
party over and concluded that these were the very strongest men. Then I
had no right to deprive the country of their services."[195]
Goodwin described the group in her biography as a Team of Rivals.[196][197]
Lincoln named his main political rival, William H. Seward, as Secretary
of State and left most diplomatic issues in Seward's portfolio.
However, Lincoln did select some top diplomats as part of his patronage
policy.
Lincoln's
philosophy on court nominations was that "we cannot ask a man what he
will do, and if we should, and he should answer us, we should despise
him for it. Therefore we must take a man whose opinions are known."[198]
Lincoln made five appointments to the Supreme Court. Noah Haynes Swayne was
an anti-slavery lawyer who was committed to the Union. Samuel Freeman Miller
supported Lincoln in the 1860 election and was an avowed abolitionist.
David Davis was Lincoln's campaign manager in 1860 and had served as a
judge in the Illinois court circuit where Lincoln practiced. Democrat Stephen Johnson Field,
a previous California Supreme Court justice, provided geographic and
political balance. Finally, Lincoln's Treasury Secretary, Salmon P.
Chase, became Chief Justice. Lincoln believed Chase was an able jurist,
would support Reconstruction legislation, and that his appointment
united the Republican Party.[199]
Major Robert Anderson,
commander of the Union's Fort Sumter in Charleston,
South Carolina, sent a request for provisions to Washington. Lincoln's
order to meet that request was seen by the secessionists as an act of
war. On April 12, 1861, Confederate forces fired on Union troops at Fort Sumter.
Historian Allan Nevins argued that the
newly inaugurated Lincoln made three miscalculations: underestimating
the gravity of the crisis, exaggerating the strength of Unionist
sentiment in the South, and overlooking Southern Unionist
opposition to an invasion.[200]William Tecumseh Sherman
talked to Lincoln during inauguration week and was "sadly disappointed"
at his failure to realize that "the country was sleeping on a volcano"
and that the South was preparing for war.[201]
Donald concludes:
His
repeated efforts to avoid collision in the months between inauguration
and the firing on Fort Sumter showed he adhered to his vow not to be
the first to shed fraternal blood. But he had also vowed not to
surrender the forts.... The only resolution of these contradictory
positions was for the Confederates to fire the first shot.[202]
On April 15,
Lincoln called on the states to send a total of 75,000
volunteer troops to recapture forts, protect Washington, and
"preserve the Union", which, in his view, remained intact despite the
seceding states. This call forced states to choose sides. Virginia
seceded and was rewarded with the designation of Richmond as the
Confederate capital, despite its exposure to Union lines. North
Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas followed. Secession sentiment was
strong in Missouri and Maryland, but did not prevail; Kentucky remained
neutral.[203]
The Fort Sumter attack rallied Americans north of the Mason-Dixon
line to defend the nation. As states sent regiments south, on
April 19 Baltimore mobs in control of the rail links attacked Union troops
who were changing trains. Local leaders' groups later burned critical
rail bridges to the capital and the Army responded by arresting local
Maryland officials. Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus
in an effort to protect the troops trying to reach Washington.[204]John Merryman, one Maryland
official hindering the U.S. troop movements, petitioned Supreme Court
Chief Justice Roger B. Taney to issue a writ of habeas corpus.
In June, in Ex parte Merryman,
Taney, not ruling on behalf of the Supreme Court,[205]
issued the writ, believing that Article I, section 9 of the
Constitution authorized only Congress and not the president to suspend
it. But Lincoln invoked nonacquiescence and
persisted with the policy of suspension in select areas.[206][207]
Lincoln took
executive control of the war and shaped the Union military
strategy. He responded to the unprecedented political and military
crisis as commander-in-chief by
exercising unprecedented authority. He expanded his war powers, imposed
a blockade on Confederate ports, disbursed funds before appropriation
by Congress, suspended habeas corpus, and arrested
and imprisoned thousands of suspected Confederate sympathizers. Lincoln
gained the support of Congress and the northern public for these
actions. Lincoln also had to reinforce Union sympathies in the border
slave states and keep the war from becoming an international conflict.[208] It
was clear from the outset that bipartisan support was essential to
success, and that any compromise alienated factions on both sides of
the aisle. Copperheads criticized Lincoln for refusing to compromise on
slavery; the Radical Republicans
criticized him for moving too slowly in abolishing slavery.[209] On
August 6, 1861, Lincoln signed the Confiscation Act of 1861,
which authorized judicial proceedings to confiscate and free slaves who
were used to support the Confederates. The law had little practical
effect, but it signaled political support for abolishing slavery.[210]
Internationally,
Lincoln wanted to forestall foreign military aid to the Confederacy.[211] He
relied on his combative Secretary of State William Seward while working
closely with Senate
Foreign Relations Committee chairman Charles Sumner.[212] In
the 1861 Trent Affair, which
threatened war with Britain, the U.S. Navy illegally intercepted a
British mail ship, the Trent, on the high seas and
seized two Confederate envoys; Britain protested vehemently. Lincoln
ended the crisis by releasing the two diplomats. Biographer James G. Randall
dissected Lincoln's successful techniques:[213]
his
restraint, his avoidance of any outward expression of truculence, his
early softening of State Department's attitude toward Britain, his
deference toward Seward and Sumner, his withholding of his paper
prepared for the occasion, his readiness to arbitrate, his golden
silence in addressing Congress, his shrewdness in recognizing that war
must be averted, and his clear perception that a point could be
clinched for America's true position at the same time that full
satisfaction was given to a friendly country.
Lincoln
painstakingly monitored reports coming into the War Department. He
tracked all phases of the effort, consulting with governors and
selecting generals based on their success, their state, and their
party. In January 1862, after complaints of inefficiency and
profiteering in the War Department, Lincoln replaced War Secretary
Simon Cameron with Edwin Stanton. Stanton
centralized the War Department's activities, auditing and canceling
contracts, saving the federal government $17,000,000.[214]
Stanton worked more often and more closely with Lincoln than did any
other senior official. "Stanton and Lincoln virtually conducted the war
together", say Thomas and Hyman.[215]
Lincoln's war
strategy had two priorities: ensuring that Washington was well-defended
and conducting an aggressive war effort for a prompt, decisive victory.[j]
Twice a week, Lincoln met with his cabinet. Occasionally Mary prevailed
on him to take a carriage ride, concerned that he was working too hard.[217]
For his edification Lincoln relied on a book by his chief of staff
General Henry Halleck, Elements
of Military Art and Science. Lincoln began to appreciate the
critical need to control strategic points, such as the Mississippi River.[218]
Lincoln saw the importance of Vicksburg and
understood the necessity of defeating the enemy's army, rather than
merely capturing territory.[219] In
directing the Union's war strategy, Lincoln valued the advice of Gen. Winfield Scott, even
after his retirement as Commanding
General of the United States Army. In June 1862, Lincoln made
an unannounced visit to West Point,
where he spent five hours consulting with Scott regarding the handling
of the war and the staffing of the War Department.[220][221]
After the
Union rout at Bull Run and Winfield Scott's
retirement, Lincoln appointed Major General George B. McClellan
general-in-chief.[222]
McClellan then took months to plan his Virginia Peninsula
Campaign. McClellan's slow progress frustrated Lincoln, as
did his position that no troops were needed to defend Washington.
McClellan, in turn, blamed the failure of the campaign on Lincoln's
reservation of troops for the capital.[223] In
1862, Lincoln removed McClellan for the general's continued inaction.
He elevated Henry Halleck and appointed John
Pope as head of the new Army of Virginia.[224]
Pope satisfied Lincoln's desire to advance on Richmond from the north,
thereby protecting Washington from counterattack.[225]
But in the summer of 1862 Pope was soundly defeated at the Second Battle of Bull Run,
forcing the Army of the Potomac back to defend Washington.[226]
Despite his
dissatisfaction with McClellan's failure to reinforce Pope, Lincoln
restored him to command of all forces around Washington.[227]
Two days later, General Robert E. Lee's forces
crossed the Potomac River into Maryland,
leading to the Battle of Antietam.[228]
That battle, a Union victory, was among the bloodiest in American
history.[229] A
crisis of command occurred for Lincoln when McClellan then resisted the
president's demand that he pursue Lee's withdrawing army, while General
Don Carlos Buell likewise
refused orders to move the Army of the Ohio against
rebel forces in eastern Tennessee. Lincoln replaced Buell with William Rosecrans and
McClellan with Ambrose Burnside. The
appointments were both politically neutral and adroit on Lincoln's part.[230]
Against presidential advice Burnside launched an offensive across the Rappahannock River and
was defeated by Lee at
Fredericksburg in December. Desertions during 1863 came in
the thousands and increased after Fredericksburg, so Lincoln replaced
Burnside with Joseph Hooker.[231] In
the spring of 1863, Lincoln ordered attacks by Hooker on Lee north of
Richmond, Rosecrans on Chattanooga, Grant on Vicksburg, and a
naval assault on Charleston.[232]
Hooker was routed by Lee at the Battle of Chancellorsville
in May, then resigned and was replaced by George Meade.[233]
Meade followed Lee north into Pennsylvania and defeated him in the Gettysburg campaign
but then failed to effectively block Lee's orderly retreat to Virginia,
despite Lincoln's demands. At the same time, Grant captured Vicksburg
and gained control of the Mississippi River.[234]
Before Lincoln
issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, two Union
generals issued their own emancipation orders, but Lincoln overrode
both: he found that the decision to emancipate was not within the
generals' power, and that it might upset loyal border states enough for
them to secede.[235]
However, in June 1862, Congress passed an act banning slavery in all
federal territories, which Lincoln signed.[236] In
July, the Confiscation Act of 1862
was enacted.[237]
Its section 9 freed slaves "within any place occupied by rebel forces
and afterwards occupied by the forces of the United States". On July
22, 1862, Lincoln reviewed a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation
with his cabinet.[238]
Peace Democrats (Copperheads) argued that emancipation was a stumbling
block to peace and reunification, but Republican editor Horace Greeley of the New-York Tribune,
in his public letter, "The Prayer of Twenty Millions", implored Lincoln
to embrace emancipation.[239][240] In
a public letter of August 22, 1862, Lincoln replied to Greeley, writing
that while he personally wished all men could be free, his first
obligation as president was to preserve the Union:[241]
My paramount
object in this struggle is to save the Union, and
is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I
could save the Union without freeing any slave I
would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all
the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and
leaving others alone I would also do that. ... I have here stated my
purpose according to my view of official duty; and
I intend no modification of my oft-expressed personal
wish that all men everywhere could be free.[242]
On January 1,
1863, Lincoln issued the final Emancipation Proclamation,[243]
freeing the slaves in 10 states not then under Union control,[244]
with exemptions specified for areas under such control.[245]
Lincoln's comment on signing the Proclamation was: "I never, in my
life, felt more certain that I was doing right, than I do in signing
this paper."[246]
With the abolition of slavery in the rebel states now a military
objective, Union armies advancing south "enable[d] thousands of slaves
to escape to freedom".[247]
The Emancipation Proclamation having stated that freedmen would be
"received into the armed service of the United States," enlisting these
freedmen became official policy. In a letter to Tennessee military
governor Andrew Johnson, Lincoln
wrote, "The bare sight of fifty thousand armed, and drilled black
soldiers on the banks of the Mississippi would end the rebellion at
once".[248] By
the end of 1863, at Lincoln's direction, General Lorenzo Thomas "had
enrolled twenty regiments of African Americans" from the Mississippi
Valley.[248]
Lincoln
spoke at the dedication of the Gettysburg battlefield cemetery on
November 19, 1863.[251] In
272 words, taking only three minutes, Lincoln asserted that the nation
was "conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all
men are created equal". He defined the war as dedicated to the
principles of liberty and equality for all. He declared that the deaths
of so many soldiers would not be in vain, that the future of democracy
would be assured, and that "government of the people, by the people,
for the people, shall not perish from the earth".[252]
The Address became the most quoted speech in American history.[253]
After victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, Lincoln proclaimed a
national Thanksgiving holiday,
to be celebrated on the 26th, the final Thursday of November 1863.[198]
General Ulysses Grant's
victories at the Battle of Shiloh and in
the Vicksburg campaign
impressed Lincoln. Responding to criticism of Grant after Shiloh,
Lincoln said, "I can't spare this man. He fights."[254]
With Grant in command, Lincoln thought that the Union Army could
advance in multiple theaters. Meade's failure to capture Lee's army
after Gettysburg and the continued passivity of the Army of the Potomac
persuaded Lincoln to promote Grant to supreme commander. Grant then
assumed command of Meade's army.[255]
Lincoln was concerned that Grant might be considering a presidential
candidacy in 1864. He arranged for an intermediary to inquire into
Grant's political intentions and when assured that he had none, Lincoln
promoted Grant to the newly revived rank of Lieutenant General, a rank
not used since George Washington.[256]
Grant then waged the bloody Overland Campaign, which
exacted heavy losses on both sides.[257]
Amid the turmoil of military actions, on June 30, 1864, Lincoln signed
into law the Yosemite Grant enacted by Congress, which provided
unprecedented federal protection for the area now known as Yosemite National Park.[258]
According to Rolf Diamant and Ethan Carr, "[T]he Yosemite Grant was
a direct consequence of the war ... an embodiment of the ongoing
process of remaking government ... an intentional assertion of a
steadfast belief in the eventual Union victory."[259]
Grant's army
moved steadily south. Lincoln traveled to Grant's headquarters at City Point, Virginia,
to confer with Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman.[260]
Lincoln reacted to Union losses by mobilizing support throughout the
North.[261]
Lincoln authorized Grant to target infrastructure—plantations,
railroads, and bridges—to weaken the South's morale and fighting
ability. He emphasized defeat of the Confederate armies over
destruction for its own sake.[262] As
Grant continued to weaken Lee's forces, efforts to discuss peace began.
At one point, Confederate Vice President Stephens led a
meeting with Lincoln, Seward, and others at Hampton Roads.
Lincoln refused to negotiate with the Confederacy as a coequal.[263] In
early April, the Confederate government evacuated Richmond and Lincoln
visited the conquered capital, whereupon on April 9, 1865, Lee
surrendered his Army of Northern Virginia
to Grant at Appomattox.[264]
After the
Battle of Fort Sumter, Lincoln and Secretary of the Treasury Salmon
Chase faced the challenge of funding a wartime economy. Congress
quickly approved Lincoln's request to assemble a 500,000-man army, but
it initially resisted raising taxes.[265]
After the Union defeat at the First Battle of Bull Run, Congress passed
the Revenue Act of 1861,
which imposed the first U.S. federal income
tax. The act created a flat tax of three percent on incomes
above $800 ($28,000 in current dollars). This taxation reflected the
increasing amount of wealth held in stocks and bonds rather than
property, which the federal government had taxed in the past.[266] As
the average urban worker made approximately $600 per year, the income
tax burden fell primarily on the rich.[267]
Lincoln also signed the second and third Morrill Tariffs, the first
having become law in the final months of Buchanan's tenure. These
tariffs raised import duties considerably and were designed both to
raise revenue and to protect domestic manufacturing against foreign
competition. During the war, the tariff also helped manufacturers
offset the burden of new taxes.[268]
Throughout the war, Congress debated whether to raise additional
revenue primarily by increasing tariff rates, which most strongly
affected rural areas in the West, or by increasing income taxes, which
most strongly affected wealthier individuals in the Northeast.[269]
The revenue
measures of 1861 proved inadequate for funding the war, forcing
Congress to pass further bills to generate revenue.[270] In
February 1862, Congress passed the Legal
Tender Act, which authorized the minting of $150 million of "greenbacks"—the
first banknotes issued by the U.S.
government since the end of the American Revolution.
Greenbacks were not backed by gold
or silver, but rather by the
government's promise to honor their value. By the end of the war, $450
million worth of greenbacks were in circulation.[271]
Congress also passed the Revenue Act of 1862, which established an excise tax
affecting nearly every commodity,[272] as
well as the first national inheritance tax.[273]
The Revenue Act of 1862 also added a progressive tax structure
to the federal income tax, implementing a tax of five percent on
incomes above $10,000.[274] To
collect these taxes, Congress created the Office of the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue.[273]
Despite these new measures, funding the war continued to be a challenge.[275]
The government continued to issue greenbacks and borrow large amounts
of money, and the U.S. national debt grew from $65 million in 1860 to
$2 billion in 1866.[271]
The Revenue Act of 1864
represented a compromise between those who favored a more progressive
tax structure and those who favored a flat tax.[276] It
established a five-percent tax on incomes greater than $600, a
ten-percent tax on incomes above $10,000, and it raised taxes on
businesses.[273] In
early 1865, Congress levied a tax of ten percent on incomes above $5000.[277] By
the end of the war, the income tax constituted about one-fifth of the
federal government's revenue.[273]
Lincoln also
took action against rampant fraud during the war, enacting the False Claims Act of 1863.
This law, also known as the "Lincoln Law," made it possible for private
citizens to file false claims (qui
tam) lawsuits on behalf of the U.S. government and also
protect the U.S. government from contractors providing faulty goods to
the Union army.[278][279]
Any person who submitted a false claim would have to pay double the
amount of the government's damages plus $2,000 per false claim.[280]
Hoping to stabilize the currency, Chase convinced Congress to pass the National
Banking Act in February 1863, as well as a second banking act
in 1864. Those acts established the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency to oversee "national banks"
subject to federal, rather than state, regulation. In return for
investing a third of their capital in federal bonds, these national
banks were authorized to issue federal banknotes.[275]
After Congress imposed a tax on private banknotes in March 1865,
federal banknotes became the dominant form of paper currency in the
United States.[267]
In addition to
Seward, Lincoln selected other top diplomats as part of his patronage
policy.[281] He
closely monitored the Trent Affair in late 1861 to
avoid war with Britain.[282]
Seward's main role was to keep Britain and France from supporting the
Confederacy; he convinced them that Washington would declare war on
them if they did.[283] At
the start of the war, Russia was the lone great power to support the
Union, while the other European powers had varying degrees of sympathy
for the Confederacy. Lincoln's policy succeeded: all foreign nations
were officially neutral throughout the Civil War, with none recognizing
the Confederacy.[284]
Although they remained neutral, the European powers, especially France
and Britain, factored into the American Civil War in various ways.
European leaders saw the division of the United States as having the
potential to eliminate, or at least greatly weaken, a growing rival.
They looked for ways to exploit the inability of the U.S. to enforce
the Monroe Doctrine. Spain
invaded the Dominican Republic in
1861, while France established a puppet regime in Mexico.[285]
However, many in Europe also hoped for a quick end to the war, both for
humanitarian reasons and because of the economic disruption it caused.[286]
Lincoln's
foreign policy was deficient in 1861 in terms of appealing to European
public opinion. The European aristocracy (the dominant class in every
major country) was "absolutely gleeful in pronouncing the American
debacle as proof that the entire experiment in popular government had
failed." Union diplomats had to explain that United States was not
committed to the ending of slavery, and instead they argued that
secession was unconstitutional. Confederate spokesmen, on the other
hand, were more successful by ignoring slavery and instead focusing on
their struggle for liberty, their commitment to free trade, and the
essential role of cotton in the European economy.[287]
However, the Confederacy's hope that cotton exports would compel
European interference did not come to fruition, as Britain found
alternative sources of cotton and experienced economic growth in
industries that did not rely on cotton.[288]
Though the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation did not
immediately end the possibility of European intervention, it rallied
European public opinion to the Union by adding abolition as a Union war
goal. Any chance of a European intervention in the war ended with the
Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, as European leaders came
to believe that the Confederate cause was doomed.[289]
The Lincoln
administration faced difficulties guarding Western settlers, railroads,
and telegraph from Native American attacks.[290] On
August 17, 1862, the Dakota War broke out in
Minnesota. Hundreds of settlers were killed and 30,000 were displaced
from their homes.[291]
Some feared incorrectly that it might represent a Confederate
conspiracy to start a war on the Northwestern frontier.[292]
Lincoln ordered thousands of Confederate prisoners of war be sent to
put down the uprising.[293]
When the Confederacy protested, Lincoln revoked the policy and none
arrived in Minnesota. Lincoln sent General John Pope as commander
of the new Department of the
Northwest two weeks into the hostilities.[294][295]
Before he arrived, the Fond Du
Lac band of Chippewa sent Lincoln a letter asking to go to
war for the United States against the Sioux, so Lincoln could send
Minnesota's troops to fight the South.[296][297]
Shortly after, a Mille Lacs Band
chief offered the same.[298][299]
The Chippewa specified they wanted to use the Indigenous rules of warfare.[300]
That meant there would be no prisoners
of war, no surrender, no peace
agreement.[301]
Lincoln did not accept the Chippewa offer, as he could not control the
Chippewa, and women and children were considered legitimate casualties
in native American warfare.[302]
Serving
under Pope was Minnesota Congressman Henry H. Sibley.
Minnesota's governor had made Sibley a Colonel United States Volunteers
to command the U.S. force tasked with fighting the war and that
eventually defeated Little Crow's forces at the Battle of Wood Lake.[295]
During the war, Dakota men killed
358 white settlers, 77 soldiers, and 36 volunteer militia and armed
civilians.[303][304]
Thousands of white settlers fled the area.[305]: 107
Dakota men also took hundreds of "mixed-blood" and white hostages,
almost all women and children.[306][307]
The total number of Dakota casualties is unknown, but 150 Dakota men
died in battle. On September 26, 1862, 269 hostages were released to
Sibley's troops at Camp Release.[308]
Interned at Fort Snelling, approximately
2,000 Dakota surrendered or were taken into custody,[309]
including at least 1,658 non-combatants.[310][305]: 233
In less than
six weeks, a military commission,
composed of officers from the Minnesota volunteer infantry, sentenced
303 Dakota men to death. Lincoln pardoned all but 39, and, with one
getting a reprieve, the remaining 38 were executed in the largest mass
execution in U.S. history.[311][312]
Less than four months later, Lincoln issued the Lieber Code, which governed
wartime conduct of the Union Army, by defining command responsibility
for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Congressman Alexander Ramsey told
Lincoln in 1864 that he would have gotten more re-election support in
Minnesota had he executed all 303. Lincoln responded, "I could not
afford to hang men for votes."[313]
Lincoln ran
for reelection in 1864, while uniting the main Republican factions
along with War
DemocratsEdwin M.
Stanton and Andrew Johnson. Lincoln used conversation and his
patronage powers—greatly expanded from peacetime—to build support and
fend off the Radicals' efforts to replace him.[314] At
its convention, the Republican Party selected Johnson as his running
mate. To broaden his coalition to include War Democrats as well as
Republicans, Lincoln ran under the label of the new Union Party.[315]
Grant's bloody stalemates damaged Lincoln's re-election prospects, and
many Republicans feared defeat. Lincoln prepared a confidential
memorandum pledging that, if he should lose the election, he would
"co-operate with the President elect, as to save the Union between the
election and the inauguration; as he will have secured his election on
such ground that he cannot possibly save it afterward".[316][317][318] At
the next cabinet meeting, Lincoln "asked each member to sign his name
on the back of the document", but he did not allow them to read it.[319]
On March 4,
1865, Lincoln delivered his second
inaugural address. Historian Mark
Noll places the speech "among the small handful of
semi-sacred texts by which Americans conceive their place in the
world;" it is inscribed in the Lincoln Memorial.[320]
Lincoln closed his speech with these words:
Fondly do we
hope—fervently do we pray—that this mighty scourge of war may speedily
pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue, until all the wealth
piled by the bond-man's
two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until
every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn
with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must
be said, "the judgments of the Lord, are true and righteous
altogether". With malice toward none; with charity for all; with
firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive
on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to
care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and
his orphan—to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting
peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.[321]
Reconstruction
preceded the war's end, as Lincoln and his associates considered the
reintegration of the nation, and the fates of Confederate leaders and
freed slaves. When a general asked Lincoln how the defeated
Confederates were to be treated, Lincoln replied, "Let 'em up easy."[322]
Lincoln's main goal was to keep the union together, so he proceeded by
focusing not on whom to blame, but on how to rebuild the nation.[323]
Lincoln led the moderates in Reconstruction policy and was opposed by
the Radicals, under Thaddeus Stevens, Charles
Sumner and Benjamin Wade, who otherwise
remained Lincoln's allies. Determined to reunite the nation and not
alienate the South, Lincoln urged that speedy elections under generous
terms be held. His Amnesty Proclamation of
December 8, 1863, offered pardons to those who had not held a
Confederate civil office and had not mistreated Union prisoners, if
they signed an oath of allegiance.[324]
As Southern
states fell, they needed leaders while their administrations were
restored. In Tennessee and Arkansas, Lincoln respectively appointed
Johnson and Frederick Steele as
military governors. In Louisiana, Lincoln ordered General Nathaniel P. Banks to
promote a plan that would reestablish statehood when 10 percent of the
voters agreed, and only if the reconstructed states abolished slavery.
Democratic opponents accused Lincoln of using the military to ensure
his and the Republicans' political aspirations. The Radicals denounced
his policy as too lenient, and passed their own plan, the 1864 Wade–Davis Bill, which
Lincoln vetoed. The Radicals retaliated by refusing to seat elected
representatives from Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee.[325]
After
implementing the Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln increased pressure
on Congress to outlaw slavery nationwide with a constitutional
amendment. By December 1863 an amendment was brought to Congress.[326]
The Senate passed it on April 8, 1864, but the first vote in the House
of Representatives fell short of the required two-thirds majority.
Passage became part of Lincoln's reelection platform, and after his
reelection, the second attempt in the House passed on January 31, 1865.[327]
After ratification by the legislatures of three-fourths of the states,
it became the Thirteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution on December 6,
1865.[328]
Lincoln
believed the federal government had limited responsibility to the
millions of freedmen. He signed Senator Charles Sumner's Freedmen's Bureau bill
that set up a temporary federal agency designed to meet the immediate
needs of former slaves. The law opened land for a lease of three years
with the ability to purchase title for the freedmen. Lincoln announced
a Reconstruction plan that involved short-term military control,
pending readmission under the control of southern Unionists.[329]Eric Foner argues:[330]
Unlike
Sumner and other Radicals, Lincoln did not see Reconstruction as an
opportunity for a sweeping political and social revolution beyond
emancipation. He had long made clear his opposition to the confiscation
and redistribution of land. He believed, as most Republicans did in
April 1865, that voting requirements should be determined by the
states. He assumed that political control in the South would pass to
white Unionists, reluctant secessionists, and forward-looking former
Confederates. But time and again during the war, Lincoln, after initial
opposition, had come to embrace positions first advanced by
abolitionists and Radical Republicans. ... Lincoln undoubtedly
would have listened carefully to the outcry for further protection for
the former slaves. ... It is entirely plausible to imagine
Lincoln and Congress agreeing on a Reconstruction policy that
encompassed federal protection for basic civil rights plus limited
black suffrage, along the lines Lincoln proposed just before his death.
Lincoln
vetoed only four bills during his presidency, including the Wade-Davis
Bill with its harsh Reconstruction program.[331]
The 1862
Homestead Act made millions of acres of Western
government-held land available for purchase at low cost. The 1862 Morrill
Land-Grant Colleges Act provided government grants for agricultural
colleges in each state. The Pacific
Railway Acts of 1862 and 1864 granted federal support for the
construction of the United States' first
transcontinental railroad, which was completed in 1869.[332]
The passage of the Homestead Act and the Pacific Railway Acts was
enabled by the absence of Southern congressmen and senators who had
opposed the measures in the 1850s.[333]
John Wilkes Booth was a
well-known actor and a Confederate spy from Maryland; though he never
joined the Confederate army, he had contacts with the Confederate
secret service.[334]
After attending Lincoln's last public address, on April 11, 1865, in
which Lincoln stated his preference that the franchise be conferred on
some Black men, specifically "on the very intelligent, and on those who
serve our cause as soldiers",[335]
Booth plotted to assassinate the President.[336]
When Booth learned of the Lincolns' intent to attend a play with
General Grant, he planned to assassinate Lincoln and Grant at Ford's Theatre.[337]
Lincoln and his wife attended the play Our American Cousin
on the evening of April 14. At the last minute, Grant decided to go to
New Jersey to visit his children instead of attending.[338]
At 10:15 pm,
Booth entered the back of Lincoln's theater box, crept up from behind,
and fired at the back of Lincoln's head, mortally wounding him.
Lincoln's guest, Major Henry Rathbone, momentarily
grappled with Booth, but Booth stabbed him and escaped.[339]
After being attended by Doctor Charles Leale and two
other doctors, Lincoln was taken across the street to Petersen House. After
remaining in a coma for nine hours, Lincoln died at
7:22 am on April 15.[340][k]
Stanton said, "Now he belongs to the ages."[345][l]
Lincoln's body was placed in a flag-wrapped coffin, which was loaded
into a hearse and escorted to the White House by Union soldiers.[346]
President Johnson was sworn in later that same day.[347]
Two weeks later, Booth was located, shot and killed at a farm in
Virginia by Sergeant Boston Corbett. Secretary
of War Stanton had issued orders that Booth be taken alive, so Corbett
was initially arrested to be court martialed. Stanton declared him a
patriot and dismissed the charge.[348]
From April
19 to 21, Lincoln lay in state, first in the White House and then in the Capitol rotunda.
The caskets containing Lincoln's body and the body of his third son Willie then
traveled for three weeks on a funeral train[349]
following a circuitous route from Washington D.C. to Springfield,
Illinois, stopping at many cities for memorials attended by hundreds of
thousands. Many others gathered along the tracks as the train passed
with bands, bonfires, and hymn singing[350] or
in silent grief. Historians emphasized the widespread shock and sorrow,
but noted that some Lincoln haters celebrated his death.[351]
Poet Walt Whitman composed "When Lilacs
Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" to eulogize Lincoln.[352]
Lincoln's body was buried at Oak Ridge Cemetery in
Springfield and now lies within the Lincoln Tomb.[353]
Although we do not require it we ask that each viewer donates leisurely or subscribes
therefore we ask that you take the time to gift us even if its minimal.
All
proceeds go towards the cost to maintain our site, equipment, gear and
other services. For years we have taken our donations and applied them
towards many of the trips that you see visible on our site. We know
that times are tough so we are not asking you to go broke donating to
our cause therefore donate leisurely
when you can. On an average PGS
spends more then we ever receive from the volunteer work
that we do. Our equipment does often
break down due to the elements and more then often it needs dire
replacement. Please use the donate button to gift
The Paranormal
& Ghost Society when its at your convenience or if
you prefer to gift us yearly you can do so using the subscribe button.
As a Gold or Platinum
member YOU WILL
recieve a copy of AngelOfThyNight
Radio
on disc which contains hours of stand up comedy, bloopers,
entertainment and various paranormal topics. The more seasons we
perform the more episodes you will recieve on disc. Since we are a
nonprofit group there is no
monetary gain even if you donate a dollar a month we thank
you for your support and loyalty. I want our viewers to know the hardwork
that comes with our explorations which go all the way from dangerous
expeditions to being broken down in the desert. We have been a
reputable Paranormal Group for over
ten years and our work has been legendary. What promise
will future years hold for us? Find out and help support our
cause united as one not because we are asking but because we need your friendship and love
for what we do within our society to contineously improve our
explorations and services. We THANK
each and everyone one of you for your membership with us!
If
you have any questions you can email us at AngelOfThyNight@aol.com or
if you prefer to donate using via postal mail contact us for our Po
Box. If you wish to donate using paypal you can can do so
at Their
are no refunds so we
ask that if you are a member of our society or you are gifting The Paranormal & Ghost Society
that this is something you are serious
about and want to do even if its
a one red cent. Once we recieve donations we apply them immediately towards
the
website cost, equipment and our budget immediately.
AngelOfThyNight and The Paranormal & Ghost Society is
a
volunteer service composed of our staff who continues to bring our
viewers this free site and its
services voluntarily. It is important for our viewers to
play some involvement with our funding so that we can continue to do so
for many more years to
come.
"Over
10 Years Of Upstanding Paranormal Eloquence & Service"
Mib, conspiracy, time travel,
spectres, Armageddon, prophets, prophecy, paranormal, ghosts, aliens,
haunted houses, Cryptozoology, dimensions, apocalypse, Atlantis,
curses, monsters, wild man, yeti, cemetery, stigmata, vampyre,
vampires, angels, bizarre, metaphysics, Atlanta, Louisiana, Myrtle
Beach, planet x, mothman, jersey devil, apparitions, werewolf,
werewolves, devils, vortexes, Bermuda triangle, lycanthropes, mystery,
ancient, spirits, cydonia, mythology, Charlotte, Atlanta ,Mobile,
possession, possess, mailing list, parapsychology, poltergeist, evp,
investigation, crop circles, Roswell, abduction, project blue book,
living dinosaurs, religious miracles, NY, sightings, north Carolina,
south, brown mountain, cleansing, shadowmen, beast, ogopogo, death,
portals, spontaneous human combustion, zombies, Ouija boards,
nostradamus, Edgar Cayce, art bell, George Nooray, Magick, Paganism,
Wicca, Tennessee, Halloween, bigfoot, Sasquatch, ufo, grays, ufos,
vortexes, alien, hybrids, Hauntings, demons, demonology, occult,
Magick, mystics, lochness, chupacabras, equipment, Thermal, EMF,
Cassadaga, energy, asteroid ,civil war, spooky, scary, adventure,
ectoplasm, orbs, graveyards, demons, spirits, cults, buffalo, new York,
ghost society, logo wear, equipment, books, videos, music,
certification, Castles, Forts, fortean, phenomena, nonprofit ,business,
investigations, SHC, EMF, ghost hunting, organization, conventions,
hollow earth, paranormal & ghost Society, detector, posters,
mailboxes, donate, Buffalo, X-files, Ectoplasm, Magick, spells, Wicca,
paganism, holy, cross, Armageddon, NWO, Patriot, 911, September 11th,
tours, Cryptid, ghost lights, dinosaurs, Florida, Fl, Daytona Beach,
Jacksonville, St. Augustine's, Debary, Miami, Tampa bay, Sarasota,
Pensacola, NASA, Cape Canaveral, Space Coast, space shuttle, gulf
breeze, key west, Sanford, port orange, Ormond beach, New Smyrna,
Orlando, Disney world, Tallahassee, Stetson university, panama city,
Alabama, Georgia, Savannah, New Orleans, Cocoa Beach, Ocala,
plantations, Fort Lauderdale, Melbourne, Naples, Lake Wales, grim
reaper, everglades, Seminoles, big cats, Fort Myers's. Petersburg,
Lakeland, Gainesville, West Palm Beach, bike week, spring break,
Deland, Deltona, Orange City, weird, strange, bizarre, mysterious,
rituals, skunk ape, adventure, ships, Bermuda triangle, ghost pirates,
ball lightening, Elves, Fairies, Faeries, Dwarves, Mystical, Mystify,
Port Orange, Edgewater, Clear Water, FSU, Abandoned, Buildings,
Stories, New Age, Occult, Paganism, Tours, Ghost walks, Cydonian,
Pyramids, Ancient, Dead, Soul, Spiritual, Metaphysical, Aura, Tarot,
Naples, Key West, Ever Glades, Kissimmee, Sanford, Orange City, Volusia
County, WNY, Asylum, Entity, Entities, Comet, Space, Ponce Inlet,
Dimensions, Mist, Fog, Horror, Radio, Television, Spontaneous Human
Combustion, Telepathy, Telekinesis, Magic, pubs, castles, churches,
bars, tracks, exorcism, October, Books, Posters, Lake Helen, Fort
Lauderdale, Psychic, Gargoyles, Crystal Skulls, Champ, Mutation,
Miracles, Virgin Mary, Prehistoric, Historical, Being, Men In Black,
Visitors, Mailing List, Mounds, Astronauts, Beam, Reptilian, Dolce,
Specters, Bell Witch, Warlock, Shadowman, Palm Beach, Tallahassee,
Holly Hill, Miami, Winter Park, Global Warming, Contrails, Chemtrails,
Flagler, Homestead, Emerald Coast, Fort Myers, Fort Walton Beach,
Naples, Punta Gorda, Birmingham, Decatur, Dothan, Montgomery,
Tuscaloosa, Columbus, Charleston, Myrtle Beach, Sumter, Athens, Raleigh
Durham, Alexandria, Lafayette, Lake Charles, Monroe, Shreveport,
Bossier City, Greenville, Onslow, Piedmont Triad, Hampton Roads,
Huntington - Ashland Area, Huntsville Area, Idaho Falls - Pocatello
Area, Indianapolis, Iowa City, Jackson, MI, Jackson, MS, Jackson, TN,
Jacksonville, Jefferson County, Johnstown - Altoona, Johnstown,
Jonesboro, Joplin, Joplin - Pittsburg, Juneau, Kansas City, Knoxville,
La Crosse, Lafayette Area, Lafayette, IN, Lafayette, LA, Lake Charles,
Lansing - East Lansing, Lansing Metro, Laredo, Las Cruces, Las Vegas,
Lawton, Lehigh Valley, Lewiston
- Auburn, Lexington, Lima, Lincoln, Little Rock, Little Rock - Pine
Bluff Area, Long Island, Longview, Los Angeles, Louisville, Lubbock,
Lynchburg Area, Madison, Madison Metro, Mankato Area, Marquette,
Memphis, Merced, Meridian, Michiana, Milwaukee, Missoula, Mobile,
Mobile Pensacola Area, Monroe, Monterey Bay Area, Montgomery, Myrtle
Beach Area, Naples, Nashville, National, New Orleans, New York, North
Central Ohio, Northeastern Pennsylvania, Northeastern South Carolina,
Northern Alabama, North Jersey, North Platte Area, Northwest Alabama,
Northwest Arkansas Area, Northwest Arkansas, Oklahoma City, Omaha,
Onslow County, Opelika Auburn, Orange County, Orlando, Ottumwa -
Kirksville, Owensboro, Palm Springs Area, Pensacola, Peoria - Pekin,
Philadelphia, Phoenix, Piedmont Triad, Pine Bluff, Pittsburgh,
Portland, OR, Portland, Portsmouth Rochester, Presque Isle Area,
Providence, Pueblo, Punta Gorda, Quad Cities, Quincy - Hannibal -
Keokuk, Raleigh Durham, Rapid City, Redding - Chico, Redding, Red River
Valley, Reno, Richland - Kennewick Area, Richmond, Rio Grande Valley
Area, Roanoke, Rochester, MN, Rochester, NY, Rock County, Rockford,
Sacramento, Saginaw - Bay City - Midland, Salt Lake City, San Angelo,
San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose, Santa Barbara,
Savannah Area, Scranton Wilkes Barre, Seattle, Sharon, Shenandoah
Valley, Sherman - Denison, Shreveport - Bossier City, Shreveport, LA
Area, Sioux City, Sioux Falls, South Bend, Southeastern North Carolina,
Southern Colorado, Southern Maine, Southern Oregon, Southern Washington
Area, Southern West Virginia, South Florida, Southwestern Indiana,
Southwest Florida, Southwest Georgia, Spokane, Springfield Area,
Springfield - Decatur - Danville, Springfield, MO, Springfield, State
College, Steubenville - Weirton, St. Joseph, St. Louis, Sumter,
Syracuse, Tallahassee Area, Tampa Bay, Terre Haute, Texarkana, Toledo -
Findlay Metro, Toledo, Topeka Area, Tri - Cities, Tri - State Area: KY
- IL - MO, Tucson - Sierra Vista, Tulare County, Tulsa, Tuscaloosa,
Twin Cities, Twin Falls Area, Tyler Area, Tyler, Utica - Rome,
Victoria, Waco, Washington, DC, Waterloo Cedar Falls, Watertown Area,
Wausau - Rhinelander Area, West Central Ohio, West Central Wisconsin,
Western Carolina - NW Georgia, Western North Carolina, West Palm Beach,
West Texas, Wheeling - Steubenville Metro, Wheeling, Wichita Falls
& Lawton, Wichita Falls, Wichita & Western Kansas,
Williamsport, Yakima, Youngstown - Warren, Yuma, Zanesville, Altamonte
Springs, Crescent City, Eustis, Hollywood, Leesburg, Jupiter, Neptune
Beach, New Port Richey, Lake Wales, Lake Mary, Titusville, St Cloud,
Santa Rosa, Palmetto, Vero Beach, St. Petersburg, Baton Rouge,
Meridian, Jackson, Hattiesburg, Biloxi, Pascagoula, Gulfport, Seminole,
Bordin Booger, Panama City, Goblyn, Ghouls, Loch Ness, Nessie, Bessie,
Selkies, Mermaids, Sirens, Kraken, Dragons, Plesiosaur, Loveland Frog,
Sprites, Seljord serpent, Exmoor Beast, Big Cats, Lake Normon, Lake
Bala, Cressie, Alkali, Illiamna Lake Monster, Cressie, Nyami Nyami,
Masbate, Ponik, Chessie, Selma, Tacoma Sea Serpent, Storsie,
Cadborsaurus, Lake Utopia, Gloucester, Lake Tianchi Monster, Tessie,
Mokele-Mbembe, Mongolian Death Worm, Impakta,Orang-Pendek,Owlman,
Easter Island, Olifiau Monster of Flatwoods, Big Bird, Tatzelwurm,
GOATMAN OF MARYLAND , BEAST OF BODMIN MOOR, Kaptar, Biabin-guli,
Grendel, Ferla Mohir, Brenin Ilwyd, Ngoloko, Kikomba, Gin-sung, Yeti,
Mirygdy ,Mecheny, Chinese Wildman, Nguoi Rung, SPRING HEELED JACK,
Pressie, Hardin, White River, Parapsychology, Elves, Bennington
Triangle, Marfa Lights, OBE, Astral, Enigma, Urban Exploration,
Tunnels, Caves, Gaia, earth, healing, new age, runes, goddess, covens,
Asatru, Asatruar, Druid, Druidism, Druidry, Druids, Odian, Odianism,
Odians, Odin, Odinism, Odinist, Odinists, Santeria, Santerian,
Santerians, Setian, Setianism, Setians, Strega, Stregheria, Wicca,
Wiccans, Witch, Witchcraft, Witches, Pagan, Paganism, Neo-Pagan,
Neo-Paganism,Neo-Pagans, poetry, cats, faerie, fairy, faeries,
elements, occult, metaphysics, reiki, alchemy, shaman, Shaman,
Shamanism, Celtic, Native American, Norse, tarot, divination, circle,
fellowship, Samhain, Yule, Imbolic, Ostara, Beltane, Midsummer,
Lughnassah, Mabon, crystals, nature, moon, mythology, sabbat, chants,
dragons, tantra, singles, dating, willow, fire, Isis, gothic,
renaissance, numerology, astrology, Rite, Rites, altar, Mysticism,
brews, Deity, Talisman, Voodoo, charms, Bos, Diana, Hecate, Astarte,
Kali, Fey, Pan, Loki, Totems, Spirit Guide, psychic, Angels, white,
Sacred, Green, Aura, Elementals, mage, magic, Solstice, Equinox, Palm
Reading, Charms, Deity, Invocations, Thermal Detector, Radiological,
Ion, Video Cameras, Micro cassette Player, Centaurs, Cerebral Anoxia,
Clairoleofactor, Clairvoyance, Cosmology, Cryptomnesia, Abductee,
Aigypan, Alchemy, Animism, Automatic Writing, ESP, Daemon, Deja Vu,
Dematerialization, Demonology, Discarnate Spirits, Disembodied,
Doppelganger, Dowsing, EEG or Electro-encephalography, Empathy, Gaus,
Banshee, Basilisk, Body Snatcher, Bunyip, CA, Sacramento, San
Francisco, Oakland, Chico, Lake Tahoe, Jackson, California, Research,
Myspace, Bands, Music, Electronics, Suvival Gear, Protection, Adult,
Amazson, EBAY, MYSPACE, Gothic, Rock, New Age, Alternative, Punk,
Amibent, Electronic, England, France, Paris, Australia, Trains, Mine,
Radio, AngelOfThyNight, Dark, Cursed, Sin City, Canyon, Desert, Mojave,
Adsense, Google, Best Buy, Flashlight, EMF, Energy, Cult, Church,
Nightfall Radio, Tagged, Yahoo, Messenger, Prophet, God, Godlike, Dark
Matter, Lake Tahoe, Sierra Nevada's, Carson City, Minden, Gardnerville,
Markleeville, Woodfords, Indian, Valley, Carson Valley, Indian Hills,
Sparks, Reno, Fernley, Dayton, Truckee, Fredericksberg, Ranchos, Genoa,
Kingsbury,Fallon, Washoe, Pleasant Valley,Silver Springs, Silver City,
Gold Hill, Virginia City, Moundhouse, Empire, Dresslerville, Smith
Valley, Yerington, Wellington, Sacramento,Stockton, Sonora, Angels
Camp, Placerville, Folsom Lake, Topaz Lake,Forest Hill, Alpine, Douglas
County, Philips, Nebelhorn, Wadsworth, Patrick, Meyers, Columbia,
Jamestown, Churchhill, Lyon County, El Dorado County, Amador
County,Placer County and Storey County