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- Report on
- "With Malice Toward None"
- by Stephen B.Oates
- Published by Mentor Books
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- written (ripped off) by Adam Klosowicz :)
- 551-77-7284
- Oct 15, 1996
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- About the Author
- --------------
- Stephen B. Oates is a professor of history at the University of
- Massachusetts, Amherst, and the author of eight other books, including
- The Fires of Jubilee and To Purge This Land with Blood. His task in this
- biography was to perpetuate Lincoln as he was in the days he lived. His
- purpose of this biography was to bring the past into the present for us
- and his students.
-
- The Life of Abraham Lincoln
- --------------------------
- Although other states such as Indiana lay claim to his birth, most
- sources agree that Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809, in a
- backwoods cabin in Hodgeville, Kentucky. In an interview during his
- campaign for the presidency in 1860 Lincoln described his adolescence as
- "the short and simple annals of the poor." (p 30). His father Thomas
- was a farmer who married Nancy Hanks, his mother, in 1806. Lincoln had
- one sister, Sarah, who was born in 1807.
-
- The Lincoln family was more financially comfortable than most despite
- the common historical picture of complete poverty. They moved to
- Indiana because of the shaky system of land titles in Kentucky. Because
- the Lincoln's arrived in Spencer County at the same time as winter,
- Thomas only had time to construct a "half-faced camp." Made of logs and
- boughs, it was enclosed on only three sides with a roaring fire for the
- fourth. The nearest water supply was a mile away, and the family had to
- survive on the abundance of wild game in the area.
-
- Less than two years after the move to Indiana, Mrs. Lincoln caught a
- horrible frontier disease known as "milk sick.". Thomas Lincoln returned
- to Kentucky to find a new wife. On December 2 he married Sarah Bush
- Johnston, a widow with three children, and took them all back to
- Indiana. Although there were now eight people living in the small
- shelter, the Lincoln children, especially Abe, adored their new
- stepmother who played a key role in making sure that Abe at least had
- some formal education, amounting to a little less than a year in all.
- To support his family it was necessary that Abe worked for a wage on
- nearby farms.
-
- "He was strong and a great athlete, but Abe preferred to read instead.
- Although few books were available to a backwoods boy such as himself,
- anything that he could obtain he would read tenaciously" (p 56).
- Although his formal education had come to an end,
- his self-education was just beginning.
-
- After a three month flatboat journey along the Ohio and Mississippi, the
- 19 year old Lincoln returned to Indiana with an enthusiasm for the
- lifestyles that he had just encountered. Unfortunately, his new-found
- joy did not last long as his sister Sarah died in childbirth on January
- 20, 1828.
-
- In 1830 the Lincoln family decided to leave Indiana in hopes of a better
- future in Illinois. It was soon thereafter that Abraham became a leader
- in the town of New Salem while operating a store and managing a mill.
- The next step for such an ambitious man was obvious--he entered
- politics, finishing eighth out of thirteen in a race for the Illinois
- House of Representatives in August of 1832.
-
- Abraham Lincoln was a strong supporter of Whig founder Henry Clay and
- his "American System." This system that arose from the National
- Rebublicans of 1824 was in opposition to the powerful Democratic party
- of President Andrew Jackson. Lincoln agreed with Clay that the
- government should be a positive force with the purpose of serving the
- people. Internal improvements were high on both mens' lists, and this
- stand made the relatively unknown Lincoln popular in rural Illinois from
- the start. As the Whigs rose in stature throughout the 1830's, so did
- Lincoln, but not without paying his dues along the way.
-
- For eighty days in the spring and early summer of 1832 Lincoln served in
- the military. On a constant search for Black Hawk, war leader of the
- Sauk and Fox Indians, he never saw any fighting but he did prove to be a
- superior leader of men in some of the most trying situations, including
- threats of desertion. "In return for his eleven and a half weeks of
- service Lincoln earned a mere $125, but the connections that he made
- with future leaders of Illinois and the experiencing of life from a
- soldier's viewpoint proved to be priceless in his future political
- career" (p 80). During this time Lincoln ran for and won a seat in the
- Illinois Legislature with bipartisan support.
-
- In 1846 Lincoln took his biggest step in politics to that point. He won
- election to Congress as the only Whig from Illinois. His single term
- was only memorable in that he took an unpopular stand against President
- James K. Polk and his Mexican War, which Lincoln saw as unjust. Lincoln
- made unsuccessful bids for an Illinois Senate seat in 1855, running as a
- Whig, and the Vice Presidency in 1856, running as a Republican.
-
- In his early days as a lawyer and an Illinois Legislator, Lincoln was a
- frequent guest of the Edward's family and Mrs. Edward's younger sister,
- Mary Todd, immediately caught Abe's eye.
-
- She was like no woman he had ever known before. Her beauty,
- intelligence, charm, and ability to lead a conversation was enough to
- cause the usually unemotional Abraham to propose. Yet he felt he did
- not love here and they broke up the engagement. Almost immediately
- thereafter, Lincoln began to feel terrible guilt and unhappiness over
- what he had done and what he then realized he had lost. He became so
- depressed that for a short time many of those around him feared that he
- was going to commit suicide. Until he longed for her so much that a
- spark wasreignited between the old lovers and they remarried.
-
- After receiving the Republican Party nomination for the 1858 Illinois
- senatorial race, Lincoln gave his historically famous, yet questionably
- radical "House Divided" speech
-
- Lincoln had lost this election against Douglas but he had strengthened
- the Republican Party and won national recognition in the process. As a
- result of holding his own with the "Little Giant" (referring to
- Douglas's physical stature and political power), the entire nation was
- able to see just how great and powerful of a leader Abraham Lincoln
- could become. Lincoln put the Senatorial defeat in its proper
- perspective six years later
- when he said, "It's a slip, and not a fall." (p 143)
-
- After Illinois chose Lincoln over the more radical William Seward and
- Edward Bates, he almost reluctantly turned his attention to the national
- scene. Lincoln's true desire was to be a Senator, where Abe believed
- that he could concentrate on the most important issues more closely.
- Since he honestly did not believe that he had a chance of actually
- winning the presidency, one of the main reasons that he was running was
- to gain more notoriety for the 1864 senatorial. Nevertheless, Lincoln
- had thrown his hat in the ring and he ran on the Republican platform
- of: 1) opposition to the extension of slavery 2) opposition to
- "nativist" demands that naturalization laws be changed to limit the
- rights of immigrants
- 3) support of federally sponsored internal improvements, a protective
- tariff, a railroad to the Far West, and free land for Western settlers.
- This stand was obviously very attractive to Northern and Western voters.
-
- When election day finally came, Lincoln simply waited, first in his
- office at the statehouse and later in the telegraph office. When the
- final results came in at about two o'clock in the morning, Abraham
- Lincoln had become the sixteenth President of the United States with
- 1,866,452 popular votes. However he, did not receive a single vote in
- ten Southern states, and largely because of his victory, frustrated,
- humiliated, and defeated Southerners began the process of secession,
- beginning with South Carolina in 1860.
-
- Abraham Lincoln was chosen by destiny as the man to lead the
- Nation through its most trying hour, and it is quite probable that he
- understood just how trying it would be. Upon recalling how he felt
- immediately after learning of his victory, Lincoln
- replied, "I went home, but not to get much sleep, for I then felt as I
- never had before, the responsibility that was upon me." (p 231)
-
- By Lincoln's inauguration day in March of 1861, seven states had already
- seceded from the Union, electing Jefferson Davis as President of their
- Confederacy. In his inaugural address Lincoln attempted to avoid
- aggravating the slave states that had not yet seceded. He asked the
- South to reconsider its actions, but also reinforced his belief that the
- Union was perpetual, and that states could not secede, saying, "In your
- hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not mine, is the momentous
- issue of civil war." (p 288) Lincoln also announced that because
- secession was unlawful he would hold the federal forts and installations
- in the South. All sided with the Union basically because they were
- assured by Lincoln that the war was being fought to preserve the Union,
- and not to destroy slavery. In a letter to Horace Greeley, editor of the
- New York Tribune, on August 22, 1862, Lincoln confirmed this position
- saying:
-
- "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." (p 290)
-
- Just as he had previously said that he would, on January 1, 1863,
- Abraham Lincoln declared that all slaves residing in states and
- districts still in rebellion against the United States were to be free.
- Although this was a bold move meant to upset the Southern war effort,
- the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation had no immediate affect
- because it applied only to the Confederate states over which the federal
- government had no control. The proclamation did not apply to the slave
- states under Union control because there was no legal justification for
- Lincoln to apply it in those places. It had to be classified as a
- "military measure," such as depriving the South of the services of her
- slaves.
-
- Lincoln realized that in order to peacefully integrate the former slaves
- into American society he decided to train them as regular soldiers, and
- they fought gallantly. Some
- 186,000 colored troops had been enrolled in the Union army by the end of
- the war. The famous poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow remarked, "At last
- the North consents to let the Negro fight for freedom." (p 340)
-
- Jefferson Davis, and his war-torn South, had one final hope -- the
- defeat of Lincoln in the election of 1864. Davis knew that as long as
- Lincoln was in the Office, the industrial superior North would continue
- to fight, and the South could not withstand the war much longer. If a
- new "peace" candidate were to be elected, then the Confederacy might
- survive.
-
- "Luckily for Lincoln the tide of the war turned dramatically in
- September of 1864 when General Sherman took Atlanta, an extremely
- important Southern rail and manufacturing center. Morale was boosted
- greatly in the North, and the victories continued to mount under
- Lincoln's new-found leaders in Ulysses S. Grant and General Sherman. By
- the time of the election in November, Lincoln won overwhelmingly with
- 212 of the 233 possible electoral." (p 402)
-
- The very weary President addressed the Nation the next day with less
- than victorious words. He stressed that the South should be dealt with
- mildly in order to bring the entire Nation back together as soon as
- possible. "Let us all join in doing the acts necessary to restoring the
- proper practical relations between these states and the Union." (p 409)
- What
- should have been Lincoln's finest hour was probably one of his most
- stressing, because it was now up to him as to where the Nation was to go
- next.
-
- It was Good Friday, April 14, 1865, only five days after the end of the
- war. Despite numerous warnings from some of his closest advisors,
- President Lincoln insisted on attending an evening performance of Our
- American Cousin at Ford's Theater. Since General Grant was expected to
- attend the play with President Lincoln, the President's attendance was
- highly publicized.
-
- John Wilkes Booth, a staunch Southern supporter, was a well known and
- popular actor who felt it necessary to redeem the lost cause of the
- Confederacy. He had previously planned to kidnap President Lincoln, but
- when that plan did not work he decided to
- assassinate him instead. He had the help of three others in his plot,
- with the intention of also assassinating Vice President Johnson,
- Secretary Seward, and General Grant.
-
- The wounded Lincoln was rushed across the street to the Petersen house
- where he was attended to for nine hours. After fighting for life like
- only he could, President Abraham Lincoln passed away at 7:22 a.m. on the
- morning of April 15, 1865.
-
- "Even he who now sleeps, has, by this event, been clothed with a
- new influence...Now his simple and weighty words will be gathered like
- those of Washington, and your children, and your children's children,
- shall be taught to ponder the simplicity and deep wisdom of utterances
- which, in their time, passed, in party heat, as idle words."
- --Reverend Henry Ward Beecher, 1865
-
- "A greater work is seldom performed by a single man. Generations
- yet unborn will rise up and call him blessed."
- --Reverend James Reed, 1865
-
- "...In all America, there was, perhaps, not one man who less
- deserved to be the victim of this revolution, than he who has just
- fallen."
- --The London Times, 1865
-
- "Abraham Lincoln...was at home and welcome with the humblest, and
- had a spirit and a practical vein in the times of terror that commanded
- the admiration of the wisest. His heart was as great as the world, but
- there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong."
- --Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1876
-
- "If one would know the greatness of Lincoln one should listen to
- the stories which are told about him in other parts of the world. I
- have been in wild places where one hears the name of America uttered
- with such mystery as if it were some heaven or hell...but I heard this
- only in connection with the name Lincoln."
- --Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)
-
- "In the days before antiseptic surgery, Lincoln had foreshadowed his own
- demise; his efforts to preserve the life of the nation had been
- successful at the cost of its strongest limb." (p 446)
-
-
- My View on the Book
- ------------------
- I found this book interesting and was surprised it was not another
- documentary style written biography. It was actually interesting to read
- due to OatesÆ creative writing style. And being a factual historical
- story I learned a little about the life style of the post-colonial
- period and of course, the life of Lincoln himself whom I know like a
- close relative now due to the deep personal as well as external imagery
- expressed in this biography.
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