Abraham Lincoln

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}}{{#if:|{{#ifeq:{{#ifeq:|no|yes}}|yes||}} }}{{#if:|{{#ifeq:{{#ifeq:|no|yes}}|yes||}} }}{{#if:|{{#if:||{{#ifeq:{{#ifeq:|no|yes}}|yes||}}}} }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| regexp1 = 1blankname[%d]* | regexp2 = 1namedata[%d]* | regexp3 = 2blankname[%d]* | regexp4 = 2namedata[%d]* | regexp5 = 3blankname[%d]* | regexp6 = 3namedata[%d]* | regexp7 = 4blankname[%d]* | regexp8 = 4namedata[%d]* | regexp9 = 5blankname[%d]* | regexp10 = 5namedata[%d]* | allegiance | alma_mater | regexp11 = alongside[%d]* | alt | regexp12 = ambassador_from[%d]* | regexp13 = appointed[%d]* | regexp14 = appointer[%d]* | regexp15 = assembly[%d]* | awards | battles | battles_label | birth_date | birth_name | birth_place | birthname | regexp16 = blank[%d]* | bodyclass | branch | branch_label | cabinet | candidate | caption | categories | regexp17 = chancellor[%d]* | children | citizenship | regexp18 = co%-leader[%d]* | commands | committees | regexp19 = constituency[%d]* | regexp20 = constituency_AM[%d]* | regexp21 = constituency_MP[%d]* | regexp22 = convocation[%d]* | regexp23 = country[%d]* | regexp24 = data[%d]* | date | death_cause | death_date | death_manner | death_place | demo | regexp25 = deputy[%d]* | regexp26 = district[%d]* | education | election_date | embed | father | regexp28 = firstminister[%d]* | footnotes | regexp29 = governor[%d]* | regexp30 = governor_general[%d]* | regexp31 = governor%-general[%d]* | height | honorific_prefix | honorific-prefix | honorific_suffix | honorific-suffix | image | image name | image_name_alt | image_size | imagesize | image_upright | incumbent | regexp32 = jr/sr[%d]* | regexp33 = jr/sr and state[%d]* | known_for | regexp34 = leader[%d]* | regexp35 = legislature[%d]* | regexp36 = lieutenant[%d]* | regexp37 = lieutenant_governor[%d]* | mainwidth | regexp38 = majority[%d]* | regexp39 = majority_floor_leader[%d]* | regexp40 = majority_leader[%d]* | regexp41 = majorityleader[%d]* | mawards | regexp42 = military_blank[%d]* | regexp43 = military_data[%d]* | regexp44 = minister[%d]* | regexp45 = minister_from[%d]* | regexp46 = minority_floor_leader[%d]* | regexp47 = minority_leader[%d]* | regexp48 = minorityleader[%d]* | regexp49 = module[%d]* | regexp50 = monarch[%d]* | mother | name | nationality | native_name | native_name_lang | nickname | nocat | regexp51 = nominator[%d]* | nominee | occupation | regexp52 = office[%d]* | opponent | regexp53 = order[%d]* | otherparty | parents | regexp54 = parliament[%d]* | regexp55 = parliamentarygroup[%d]* | partner | party | party_election | portfolio | regexp56 = preceded[%d]* | regexp57 = preceding[%d]* | regexp58 = predecessor[%d]* | regexp59 = premier[%d]* | regexp60 = president[%d]* | regexp61 = primeminister[%d]* | regexp62 = prior_term[%d]* | profession | pronunciation | rank | rank_label | relations | relatives | residence | resting_place | resting_place_coordinates | restingplace | restingplacecoordinates | regexp63 = riding[%d]* | runningmate | salary | serviceyears | serviceyears_label | signature | signature_alt | signature_size | smallimage | smallimage_alt | source | speaker | speaker_office | spouse | spouses | regexp64 = state[%d]* | regexp65 = state_assembly[%d]* | regexp66 = state_delegate[%d]* | regexp67 = state_house[%d]* | regexp68 = state_legislature[%d]* | regexp69 = state_senate[%d]* | regexp70 = status[%d]* | regexp71 = suboffice[%d]* | regexp72 = subterm[%d]* | regexp73 = succeeded[%d]* | regexp74 = succeeding[%d]* | regexp75 = successor[%d]* | regexp76 = taoiseach[%d]* | regexp77 = term[%d]* | regexp78 = term_end[%d]* | regexp79 = term_label[%d]* | regexp80 = term_start[%d]* | regexp81 = termend[%d]* | regexp82 = termlabel[%d]* | regexp83 = termstart[%d]* | regexp84 = title[%d]* | unit | unit_label | regexp85 = vicegovernor[%d]* | regexp86 = vicepremier[%d]* | regexp87 = vicepresident[%d]* | regexp88 = viceprimeminister[%d]* | regexp89 = assuming[%d]* | website | width | year }} Abraham LincolnTemplate:Efn (February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865) was the 16th president of the United States, serving from 1861 until his assassination in 1865. He led the United States through the American Civil War, defeating the Confederate States of America and playing a major role in the abolition of slavery.

Lincoln was born into poverty in Kentucky and raised on the frontier. He was self-educated and became a lawyer, Illinois state legislator, and U.S. representative. Angered by the Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854, which opened the territories to slavery, he became a leader of the new Republican Party. He reached a national audience in the 1858 Senate campaign debates against Stephen A. Douglas. Lincoln won the 1860 presidential election, but the South viewed his election as a threat to slavery, and Southern states began seceding to form the Confederate States of America. A month after Lincoln assumed the presidency, Confederate forces attacked Fort Sumter, starting the Civil War.

Lincoln, a moderate Republican, had to navigate a contentious array of factions in managing the war effort. He suspended the writ of habeas corpus in April 1861, an action that Chief Justice Roger Taney found unconstitutional in Ex parte Merryman, and he averted war with Britain by defusing the Trent Affair. On January 1, 1863, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared the slaves in the states "in rebellion" to be free. On November 19, 1863, he delivered the Gettysburg Address, which 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 Southern ports. He promoted the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which, in 1865, abolished slavery, except as punishment for a crime. Re-elected in 1864, he sought to heal the war-torn nation through Reconstruction.

On April 14, 1865, five days after the Confederate surrender at Appomattox, he was attending a play at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., 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.Template:TOC limit Template:Abraham Lincoln series

Family and childhoodEdit

Early lifeEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809, in a log cabin on Sinking Spring Farm near Hodgenville, Kentucky.Template:Sfn<ref name=anb/> The second child of Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks Lincoln, he was a descendant of Samuel Lincoln, an Englishman who migrated from England to Massachusetts in 1638,Template:Sfn and of the Harrison family of Virginia.Template:Efn His paternal grandfather and namesake, Captain Abraham Lincoln, moved the family from Virginia to Kentucky. The captain was killed in a Native American raid in 1786.Template:Sfn Thomas, Abraham's father, then worked at odd jobs in Kentucky and Tennessee before the family settled in Hardin County, Kentucky, in the early 1800s.Template:Sfn Lincoln's mother Nancy is widely assumed to have been the daughter of Lucy Hanks.Template:Sfn Thomas and Nancy married on June 12, 1806, and moved to Elizabethtown, Kentucky.Template:Sfn They had three children: Sarah, Abraham, and Thomas, who died as an infant.Template:Sfn

Thomas Lincoln bought multiple farms in Kentucky but could not get clear property titles to any, losing hundreds of acres in legal disputes.Template:Sfnm In 1816, the family moved to Indiana, where land titles were more reliable.Template:Sfn They settled on a forested plot in Little Pigeon Creek Community, Indiana.Template:Sfn In Kentucky and Indiana, Thomas worked as a farmer, cabinetmaker, and carpenter.Template:Sfn At various times he owned farms, livestock, and town lots, appraised estates, and served on county patrols. Thomas and Nancy were members of a Separate Baptist Church, a pious evangelical group whose members largely condemned slavery.Template:Sfn Overcoming financial challenges, Thomas in 1827 obtained clear title to Template:Convert in Little Pigeon Creek Community.Template:Sfn

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.Template:Sfn Ten years later, on January 20, 1828, Sarah died in childbirth, devastating Lincoln.Template:Sfn On December 2, 1819, Thomas married Sarah Bush Johnston, a widow with three children of her own.<ref name=anb/> Abraham became close to his stepmother and called her "Mama".Template:Sfn

Education and move to IllinoisEdit

Lincoln was largely self-educated.Template:Sfn His formal schooling was from itinerant teachers. It included two short stints in Kentucky, where he learned to read, but probably not to write. After moving to Indiana at age seven, he attended school only sporadically, for a total of less than 12 months by age 15.Template:Sfn Nonetheless, he was an avid reader and retained a lifelong interest in learning.Template:Sfn

When Lincoln was a teenager his father relied heavily on him for farmwork and for supplementary income, hiring the boy out to area farmers and pocketing the money, as was allowed by law at the time.Template:Sfn Lincoln and some friends took goods by flatboat to New Orleans, Louisiana, where he first witnessed slave markets.<ref name=anb/>

In March 1830, fearing another milk-sickness outbreak, several members of the extended Lincoln family, including Abraham, moved west to Illinois and settled in Macon County.Template:Sfn Abraham became increasingly distant from Thomas, in part due to his father's lack of interest in education;Template:Sfn he would later refuse to attend his father's deathbed or funeral in 1851.<ref name=anb/>

Marriage and childrenEdit

Template:Further

File:Mary, Willie, and Tad Lincoln, c1860.jpg
Mary Todd Lincoln with Willie and Tad

Some historians, such as Michael Burlingame, identify Lincoln's first romantic interest as Ann Rutledge, a young woman also from Kentucky whom he met when he moved to New Salem, Illinois.Template:Sfn Lewis Gannett, however, disputes that the evidence supports a romantic relationship between the two.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> David Herbert Donald states that "How that friendship [between Lincoln and Rutledge] developed into a romance cannot be reconstructed from the record".Template:Sfn Rutledge died on August 25, 1835, of typhoid fever. Lincoln took her death very hard, sinking into a serious depression and contemplating suicide.Template:Sfnm<ref name="Atlanticoct2005" />

In the early 1830s, he met Mary Owens from Kentucky.Template:Sfn Late in 1836, Lincoln agreed to a match with Owens if she returned to New Salem. Owens arrived that November and he courted her, but 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 declined to marry him.Template:Sfn In 1839, Lincoln met Mary Todd in Springfield, Illinois, and the following year they became engaged.Template:Sfnm She was the daughter of Robert Smith Todd, a wealthy lawyer and businessman in Lexington, Kentucky.Template:Sfn Lincoln initially broke off the engagement in early 1841, but the two were reconciled and married on November 4, 1842.Template:Sfn In 1844, the couple bought a house in Springfield near his law office.Template:Sfn

The marriage was turbulent; Mary was verbally abusive and at times physically violent towards her husband.Template:Sfn They had four sons. 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 died of edema at age 18 on July 16, 1871.Template:Sfnm Lincoln loved children,Template:Sfn and the Lincolns were not considered to be strict with their own.Template:Sfnm The deaths of Eddie and Willie had profound effects on both parents. Lincoln suffered from "melancholy", a condition now thought to be clinical depression.<ref name="Atlanticoct2005">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Early vocations and militia serviceEdit

Template:Further In 1831, Thomas moved the family to a new homestead in Coles County, Illinois, after which Abraham struck out on his own.Template:Sfn He made his home in New Salem, Illinois, for six years.Template:Sfn During 1831 and 1832, Lincoln worked at a general store in New Salem.Template:Sfn He gained a reputation for strength and courage after winning a wrestling match with the leader of a group of ruffians known as the Clary's Grove boys.Template:Sfn In 1832, he declared his candidacy for the Illinois House of Representatives, though he interrupted his campaign to serve as a captain in the Illinois Militia during the Black Hawk War.Template:Sfn He was elected the captain of his militia company but did not see combat.Template:Sfn In his political campaigning, Lincoln advocated for navigational improvements on the Sangamon River.Template:Sfn He drew crowds as a raconteur, but lacked name recognition, powerful friends, and money, and lost the election.Template:Sfnm

When Lincoln returned home from the war, he planned to become a blacksmith, but instead purchased a New Salem general store in partnership with William Berry. Because a license was required to sell customers alcoholic beverages, Berry obtained bartending licenses for Lincoln and himself, and in 1833 the Lincoln–Berry General Store became a tavern as well.Template:Sfn But according to Burlingame, Berry was "an undisciplined, hard-drinking fellow", and Lincoln "was too soft-hearted to deny anyone credit";Template:Sfn although the economy was booming, the business struggled and went into debt, prompting Lincoln to sell his share.Template:Sfn

Lincoln served as New Salem's postmaster and later as county surveyor, but he continued his voracious reading and decided to become a lawyer.Template:Sfn Rather than studying in the office of an established attorney, as was customary, Lincoln read law on his own, borrowing legal texts, including Blackstone's Commentaries and Chitty's Pleadings, from attorney John Todd Stuart.Template:Sfn He later said of his legal education that he "studied with nobody."Template:Sfn

Early political offices and prairie lawyerEdit

Illinois state legislature (1834–1842)Edit

File:Abes House.JPG
Lincoln's home in Springfield, Illinois, where he resided from 1844 until becoming president in 1861

In Lincoln's second state house campaign in 1834, this time as a Whig and supporter of Whig leader Henry Clay, he finished second among thirteen candidates running for four places.Template:Sfn Lincoln echoed Clay's support for the American Colonization Society, which advocated abolition in conjunction with settling freed slaves in Liberia.Template:Sfn The Whigs also favored economic modernization in banking, tariffs to fund internal improvements such as railroads, and urbanization.Template:Sfn

Lincoln served four terms in the Illinois House of Representatives for Sangamon County.Template:Sfn In this role, he championed construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal.Template:Sfn Lincoln also voted to expand suffrage beyond White landowners to all White men.Template:Sfn Lincoln was admitted to the Illinois bar on September 9, 1836.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He moved to Springfield and began to practice law under John T. Stuart, Mary Todd's cousin.Template:Sfn He partnered for several years with Stephen T. Logan and, in 1844, began his practice with William Herndon, a "studious young man".Template:Sfn

On January 27, 1838, Lincoln delivered a significant speech at the Lyceum in Springfield, after the murder of the anti-slavery newspaper editor Elijah Parish Lovejoy. In this ostensibly non-partisan speech Lincoln indirectly attacked Stephen Douglas and the Democratic Party, who the Whigs argued were supporting "mobocracy"; he also attacked anti-abolitionism and racial bigotry.Template:Sfn He was criticized in the press for a planned duel with James Shields, whom he had ridiculed in letters published under the name "Aunt Rebecca"; though the duel ultimately did not take place, Burlingame noted that "the affair embarrassed Lincoln terribly".Template:Sfn

U.S. House of Representatives (1847–1849)Edit

In 1843, Lincoln sought the Whig nomination for Illinois's 7th district seat in the U.S. House of Representatives; John J. Hardin was the successful candidate, though Lincoln prevailed with the party in limiting Hardin to one term.Template:Sfn Lincoln not only gained the nomination in 1846, but also won the election.Template:Sfn The only Whig in the Illinois delegation, he was assigned to the Committee on Post Office and Post Roads and the Committee on Expenditures in the War Department.Template:Sfn Lincoln teamed with Joshua R. Giddings on a bill to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, but dropped the bill when it failed to attract support from other Whigs.Template:Sfnm<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Lincoln spoke against the Mexican–American War (1846–1848), for which he said President James K. Polk "had some strong motive ... to involve the two countries in a war, and trusting to escape scrutiny, by fixing the public gaze upon the exceeding brightness of military glory—that attractive rainbow, that rises in showers of blood".Template:Sfnm He supported the Wilmot Proviso, a failed 1846 proposal to ban slavery in any U.S. territory won from Mexico.Template:Sfn Polk insisted that Mexican soldiers had begun the war by "invading the territory of the State of Texas ... and shedding the blood of our citizens on our own soil".Template:Sfn In his 1847 "spot resolutions", Lincoln rhetorically demanded that Polk tell Congress the exact "spot" where this occurred, but the Polk administration did not respond.Template:Sfn<ref name=anb/> His approach and rhetoric cost Lincoln political support in his district, and newspapers derisively nicknamed him "spotty Lincoln".<ref name=anb/>

Lincoln had pledged in 1846 to serve only one term in the House.Template:Sfn Realizing Henry Clay was unlikely to win the presidency, he supported General Zachary Taylor for the Whig nomination in the 1848 presidential election.Template:Sfn Taylor won and Lincoln hoped in vain to be appointed commissioner of the United States General Land Office.Template:Sfnm The administration offered to appoint him secretary of the Oregon Territory instead.Template:Sfn This would have disrupted his legal and political career in Illinois, so he declined and resumed his law practice.Template:Sfn

Prairie lawyerEdit

Template:See also In his Springfield practice, Lincoln handled "virtually every kind of business that could come before a prairie lawyer".Template:Sfn He dealt with many transportation cases in the midst of the nation's western expansion, particularly river barge conflicts under the new railroad bridges. In 1849 he received a patent for a flotation device for the movement of riverboats in shallow waterTemplate:Sfn and Lincoln initially favored riverboat legal interests, but he represented whoever hired him.Template:Sfnm He 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.Template:Sfn His patent was never commercialized, but it made Lincoln the only president to hold a patent.Template:Sfn Lincoln appeared before the Illinois Supreme Court in 411 cases.Template:Sfn From 1853 to 1860, one of his largest clients was the Illinois Central Railroad, against whom Lincoln filed suit for successfully recovering his accumulated legal fees.Template:Sfn

Lincoln represented William "Duff" Armstrong in his 1858 trial for the murder of James Preston Metzker.Template:Sfn The case is famous for Lincoln's use of a fact established by judicial notice to challenge the credibility of an eyewitness. After a 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.Template:Sfnm In an 1859 murder case, he defended "Peachy" Quinn Harrison, the grandson of Peter Cartwright, Lincoln's political opponent.Template:Sfn Harrison was charged with the murder of Greek Crafton who, according to Cartwright, said as he lay dying that he had "brought it upon myself" and that he forgave Harrison.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Lincoln angrily protested the judge's initial decision to exclude Cartwright's claim as hearsay. Lincoln argued that the testimony involved a dying declaration and so was not subject to the hearsay rule. Instead of holding Lincoln in contempt of court as expected, the judge, a Democrat, admitted the testimony into evidence, resulting in Harrison's acquittal.Template:Sfnm

Republican politics (1854–1860)Edit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

Emergence as Republican leaderEdit

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The Compromise of 1850 failed to alleviate tensions over slavery between the slave-holding South and the free North.Template:Sfn 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, but Douglas's Kansas–Nebraska Act narrowly passed Congress in May 1854.Template:Sfn Lincoln's Peoria Speech of October 1854, in which he declared his opposition to slavery,Template:Sfn was one of over 170 speeches he delivered in the next six years on the topic of excluding slavery from the territories.<ref name=anb/> Lincoln's attacks on the Kansas–Nebraska Act marked his return to political life.Template:Sfn

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."Template:Sfn The new Republican Party was formed as a northern party dedicated to anti-slavery, drawing from the anti-slavery wing of the Whig Party and combining Free Soil, Liberty, and anti-slavery Democratic Party members,Template:Sfn Lincoln resisted early Republican entreaties, fearing that the new party would become a platform for extreme abolitionists.Template:Sfn Lincoln held out hope for rejuvenating the Whigs, though he lamented his party's growing closeness with the nativist Know Nothing movement.Template:Sfn In 1854, Lincoln was elected to the Illinois legislature, but before the term began he declined to take his seat so that he would be eligible to run in the upcoming U.S. Senate election.Template:Sfnm At that time, senators were elected by state legislatures. After leading in the first six rounds of voting, Lincoln was unable to obtain a majority. Lincoln instructed his backers to vote for Lyman Trumbull, an anti-slavery Democrat who had received few votes in the earlier ballots. Lincoln's decision to withdraw enabled his Whig supporters and Trumbull's anti-slavery Democrats to combine and defeat the mainstream Democratic candidate, Joel Aldrich Matteson.Template:Sfn

1856 campaignEdit

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, calling for the preservation of the Union.Template:Sfn At the June 1856 Republican National Convention, Lincoln received support to run as vice president, but ultimately the party put forward a ticket of John C. Frémont and William Dayton, which Lincoln supported throughout Illinois. The Democrats nominated James Buchanan and the Know Nothings nominated Millard Fillmore.Template:Sfn Buchanan prevailed, while Republican William Henry Bissell won election as Governor of Illinois, and Lincoln became a leading Republican in Illinois.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Dred Scott v. SandfordEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} 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).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger B. Taney wrote in his opinion 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.Template:Sfn Lincoln denounced it as the product of a conspiracy of Democrats to support the Slave Power.Template:Sfn He argued that the decision was at variance with the Declaration of Independence, which stated that "all men are created equal ... with certain unalienable rights", among them "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness".Template:Sfn

Lincoln–Douglas debates and Cooper Union speechEdit

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Abraham Lincoln, a portrait by Mathew Brady taken February 27, 1860, the day of Lincoln's Cooper Union speech in New York City

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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.Template:Sfn For the first time, Illinois Republicans held a convention to agree upon a Senate candidate, and Lincoln won the nomination with little opposition.Template:Sfn Lincoln accepted the nomination with great enthusiasm and zeal. After his nomination he delivered his House Divided Speech:

"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.Template:Sfn

The speech created a stark image of the danger of disunion.Template:Sfn 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."Template:Sfn

The Senate campaign featured seven debates between Lincoln and Douglas; they had an atmosphere akin to a prizefight and drew thousands.Template:Sfnm 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, local settlers, under popular sovereignty, should be free to choose whether to allow slavery in their territory. He accused Lincoln of having joined the abolitionists.Template:Sfnm

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.Template:Sfn In the aftermath of the 1858 election, newspapers frequently mentioned Lincoln as a potential Republican presidential candidate. While Lincoln was popular in the Midwest, he lacked support in the Northeast and was unsure whether to seek the office.Template:Sfn In January 1860, Lincoln told a group of political allies that he would accept the presidential nomination if offered and, in the following months, William O. Stoddard's Central Illinois Gazette, the Chicago Press & Tribune, and other local papers endorsed his candidacy.Template:Sfn

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 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".Template:Sfn Many in the audience thought he appeared awkward and even ugly.Template:Sfn 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".Template:Sfnm Historian David Herbert Donald described the speech as "a superb political move for an unannounced presidential aspirant."Template:Sfn In response to an inquiry about his ambitions, Lincoln said, "The taste is in my mouth a little".Template:Sfn

1860 presidential electionEdit

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The Rail Candidate, a critical Currier and Ives illustration, which depicted Lincoln's platform in the 1860 presidential campaign as being held up by a slave and his party

On May 9–10, 1860, the Illinois Republican State Convention was held in Decatur.Template:Sfn Exploiting his embellished frontier legend of clearing land and splitting fence rails, Lincoln's supporters adopted the label of "The Rail Candidate".Template:Sfn On May 18 at the Republican National Convention in Chicago, Lincoln won the nomination on the third ballot.<ref name=anb/> A former Democrat, Hannibal Hamlin of Maine, was nominated for vice president to balance the ticket.Template:Sfn

Throughout the 1850s, Lincoln had doubted the prospects of civil war, and his supporters rejected claims that his election would incite secession.Template:Sfn When Douglas was selected as the candidate of the Northern Democrats, delegates from the Southern slave states elected incumbent Vice President John C. Breckinridge as their candidate.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn A nationwide militaristic Republican youth organization, the Wide Awakes, "turned it into one of the most excited elections in American history" and "triggered massive popular enthusiasm", according to the political historian Jon Grinspan.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> People of the Northern states knew the Southern states would vote against Lincoln and rallied supporters for him.Template:Sfn

As Douglas and the other candidates campaigned, Lincoln gave no speeches, relying on the enthusiasm of the Republican Party. Republican speakers emphasized Lincoln's childhood poverty to demonstrate the power of "free labor", which allowed a common farm boy to work his way to the top by his own efforts.Template:Sfn Though he did not give public appearances, many sought to visit and write to Lincoln. 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.Template:Sfnm

On November 6, 1860, Lincoln was elected as the first Republican president. 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.Template:Sfnm Lincoln received 1,866,452 votes, or 39.8 percent of the total in a four-way race, carrying the free Northern states, as well as California and Oregon, and winning the electoral vote decisively.Template:Sfn

Presidency (1861–1865)Edit

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First termEdit

Secession and inaugurationEdit

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The South was outraged by Lincoln's election, and secessionists implemented plans to leave the Union before he took office in March 1861.Template:Sfn<ref name=anb/> On December 20, 1860, South Carolina adopted an ordinance of secession; by February 1, 1861, Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas had followed.Template:Sfnm Six of these states declared themselves to be a sovereign nation, the Confederate States of America, selecting Jefferson Davis as its provisional president.Template:Sfnm The upper South and border states (Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri, and Arkansas) initially rejected the secessionist appeal.Template:Sfn President Buchanan and President-elect Lincoln refused to recognize the Confederacy, declaring secession illegal.Template:Sfn On February 11, 1861, Lincoln gave a particularly emotional farewell address upon leaving Springfield for Washington.Template:Sfn

Lincoln and the Republicans rejected the proposed Crittenden Compromise as contrary to the party's platform of free-soil in the territories.Template:Sfn 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".Template:Sfn Lincoln supported the Corwin Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which would have protected slavery in states where it already existed. The amendment passed Congress and was awaiting ratification by the required three-fourths of the states when Lincoln took office, whereupon Southern states began to secede.Template:Sfnm On March 4, 1861, in his first inaugural address, Lincoln said that, because he held "such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express, and irrevocable".Template:Sfn

File:Lincoln LadyPNG.jpg
Lincoln was mocked by opposition papers falsely claiming that he snuck into Washington in disguise after the 1860 election.

Due to secessionist plots, Lincoln and his train received careful attention to security. 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 to conceal his height. On February 23, 1861, he arrived in Washington, D.C., which was placed under military guard. Many in the opposition press criticized his secretive journey; opposition newspapers mocked Lincoln with caricatures showing him sneaking into the capital.Template:Sfnm Lincoln directed his inaugural address to the South, proclaiming once again that he had no inclination to abolish slavery in the Southern states:

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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."{{#if:First inaugural address, 4 March 1861Template:Sfnm|{{#if:|}}

}}

{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Blockquote with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | author | by | char | character | cite | class | content | multiline | personquoted | publication | quote | quotesource | quotetext | sign | source | style | text | title | ts }} 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."Template:Sfn The failure of the Peace Conference of 1861 signaled that legislative compromise was impossible.Template:Sfn

PersonnelEdit

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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."Template:Sfn Goodwin described the group in her biography of Lincoln as a Team of Rivals.Template:Sfn Lincoln named his main political opponent, William H. Seward, as Secretary of State.Template:Sfn However, Lincoln quickly appointed some top diplomats to persuade European nations not to recognize the Confederacy.Template:Sfn

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."Template:Sfn Lincoln made five appointments to the Supreme Court. Noah Haynes Swayne, a prominent corporate lawyer, replaced John McLean after the latter's death in April 1861. Like McLean, Swayne opposed slavery.Template:Sfn Samuel Freeman Miller, who replaced Peter V. Daniel, was an avowed abolitionist and received widespread support from Iowa politicians.Template:Sfn David Davis was Lincoln's campaign manager in 1860 and had served as a judge in the Illinois court circuit where Lincoln practiced.Template:Sfn Democrat Stephen Johnson Field, a previous California Supreme Court justice, provided geographic and political balance.Template:Sfn Finally, after the death of Roger B. Taney, Lincoln appointed his Treasury Secretary, Salmon P. Chase, to replace Taney as Chief Justice. Lincoln believed Chase was an able jurist who would support Reconstruction legislation and that his appointment would unite the Republican Party.Template:Sfn

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Justice Nominated Appointed
Noah Haynes Swayne January 21, 1862 January 24, 1862
Samuel Freeman Miller July 16, 1862 July 16, 1862
David Davis December 1, 1862 December 8, 1862
Stephen Johnson Field March 6, 1863 March 10, 1863
Salmon Portland Chase (Chief Justice) December 6, 1864 December 6, 1864

Commander-in-ChiefEdit

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In early April 1861, Major Robert Anderson, commander of Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, advised that he was nearly out of food. After considerable debate, Lincoln decided to send provisions; according to Michael Burlingame, he "could not be sure that his decision would precipitate a war, though he had good reason to believe that it might".Template:Sfn On April 12, 1861, Confederate forces fired on Union troops at Fort Sumter.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

On April 15, Lincoln called for 75,000 militiamen to recapture forts, protect Washington, and "preserve the Union". This call forced states to choose whether to secede or to support the Union. North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, and Arkansas seceded; Kentucky remained neutral. The Fort Sumter attack rallied the North to defend the nation.Template:Sfn 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, allowing arrests without charges.Template:Sfnm

John Merryman, a Maryland officer arrested for hindering U.S. troop movements, petitioned Supreme Court Chief Justice Taney to issue a writ of habeas corpus. In June, in Ex parte Merryman, Taney, not ruling on behalf of the Supreme Court,Template:Efn issued the writ, believing that the Constitution authorized only Congress and not the president to suspend it.Template:Efn But Lincoln engaged in nonacquiescence and persisted with the policy of suspension in select areas.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Under the suspension, 15,000 civilians were detained without trial; several, including the Copperhead leader Clement L. Vallandigham, were tried in military courts for "treasonable" actions, an approach which was highly criticized.<ref name=anb/>

Early Union military strategyEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:Further 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.Template:Sfnm 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 (anti-war Democrats) criticized Lincoln for refusing to compromise on slavery; the Radical Republicans (who demanded harsh treatment against secession) criticized him for moving too slowly in abolishing slavery.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfnm

File:RunningtheMachine-LincAdmin.jpg
Running the Machine, an 1864 political cartoon satirizing Lincoln and his administration, including William Fessenden, Edwin Stanton, William Seward, and Gideon Welles.

Lincoln's war strategy had two priorities: ensuring that Washington was well-defended and conducting an aggressive war effort for a prompt, decisive victory.Template:Efn Twice a week, Lincoln met with his cabinet. Occasionally, Lincoln's wife, Mary, prevailed on him to take a carriage ride, concerned that he was working too hard.Template:Sfn Lincoln selected civilian generals from varied political and ethnic backgrounds "to secure their and their constituents' support for the war effort and ensure that the war became a national struggle".Template:Sfn In January 1862, after complaints of inefficiency and profiteering in the War Department, Lincoln replaced War Secretary Simon Cameron with Edwin Stanton.Template:Sfn Stanton worked more often and more closely with Lincoln than did any other senior official. According to Stanton's biographers Benjamin Thomas and Harold Hyman, "Stanton and Lincoln virtually conducted the war together".Template:Sfn

For his edification Lincoln relied on a book by his chief of staff Major 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.Template:Sfn Lincoln saw the importance of Vicksburg and understood the necessity of defeating the enemy's army, rather than merely capturing territory.Template:Sfn In directing the Union's war strategy, Lincoln valued the advice of 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.Template:Sfnm

Internationally, Lincoln wanted to forestall foreign military aid to the Confederacy.Template:Sfn He relied on his combative Secretary of State William Seward while working closely with Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Charles Sumner.Template:Sfn In 1861 the U.S. Navy illegally intercepted a British mail ship, the RMS Trent, on the high seas and seized two Confederate envoys. Although the North celebrated the seizure, Britain protested vehemently, and the Trent Affair threatened war between the Americans and the British. Lincoln ended the crisis by releasing the two diplomats.Template:Sfn

General McClellanEdit

File:Maryland, Antietam, President Lincoln on the Battlefield - NARA - 533297.jpg
Lincoln meeting with Union Army officers on October 3, 1862, following the Battle of Antietam, including left to right: Col. Delos Sackett; 4. Gen. George W. Morell; 5. Alexander S. Webb, Chief of Staff, V Corps; 6. McClellan;. 8. Jonathan Letterman; 10. Lincoln; 11. Henry J. Hunt; 12. Fitz John Porter; 15. Andrew A. Humphreys; 16. Capt. George Armstrong Custer

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After the Union rout at Bull Run and Winfield Scott's retirement, Lincoln appointed Major General George B. McClellan general-in-chief.Template:Sfn Early in the war, he created defenses for Washington that were almost impregnable, consisting of 48 forts, with 480 guns manned by 7,200 artillerists.Template:Sfn McClellan spent months planning his Virginia Peninsula Campaign. McClellan's slow progress frustrated Lincoln, and McClellan, in turn, blamed the failure of the campaign on Lincoln's cautiousness in having reserved troops for the capital.Template:Sfn In 1862, Lincoln removed McClellan as general-in-chief because of the general's continued inaction. He elevated Henry Halleck to the post and appointed John Pope as head of the new Army of Virginia.Template:Sfn But in the summer of 1862 Pope was soundly defeated at the Second Battle of Bull Run, forcing him to retreat to Washington. Soon after, the Army of Virginia was disbanded.Template:Sfn

Despite his dissatisfaction with McClellan's failure to reinforce Pope, Lincoln restored him to command of all forces around Washington, which included both the Army of the Potomac and the remains of the Army of Virginia.Template:Sfnm Two days later, General Robert E. Lee's forces crossed the Potomac River into Maryland, leading to the Battle of Antietam.Template:Sfn That battle, a Union victory, was among the bloodiest in American history.Template:Sfn 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, Rosencrans and Burnside both being politically neutral.Template:Sfn Against presidential advice, Burnside launched an offensive across the Rappahannock River and was defeated by Lee at Fredericksburg in December.Template:Sfn Facing low morale and discontent among the troops, Lincoln replaced Burnside with Joseph Hooker.Template:Sfnm Hooker endured heavy casualties inflicted by Lee at the Battle of Chancellorsville in May, then resigned in June and was replaced by George Meade.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

Emancipation ProclamationEdit

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<imagemap> File:Emancipation proclamation.jpg|thumb|upright=1.25|First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln, an 1864 portrait by Francis Bicknell Carpenter (clickable image—use cursor to identify)|alt=A dark-haired, bearded, middle-aged man holding documents is seated among seven other men.

poly 269 892 254 775 193 738 130 723 44 613 19 480 49 453 75 434 58 376 113 344 133 362 143 423 212 531 307 657 357 675 409 876 Edwin Stanton poly 169 282 172 244 244 201 244 148 265 117 292 125 305 166 304 204 321 235 355 296 374 348 338 395 341 469 Salmon Chase poly 569 893 535 708 427 613 357 562 377 456 393 404 468 351 451 317 473 259 520 256 544 283 530 339 526 374 559 401 594 431 639 494 715 542 692 551 693 579 672 546 623 552 596 617 698 629 680 852 Abraham Lincoln poly 692 514 740 441 788 407 772 350 800 303 831 297 861 329 867 381 868 409 913 430 913 471 847 532 816 533 709 533 Gideon Welles poly 703 783 752 769 825 627 907 620 929 569 905 538 886 563 833 563 873 502 930 450 1043 407 1043 389 1036 382 1042 363 1058 335 1052 333 1052 324 1081 318 1124 338 1133 374 1116 412 1132 466 1145 509 1117 588 1087 632 1083 706 William Seward poly 905 418 941 328 987 295 995 284 982 244 990 206 1036 207 1046 247 1047 284 1066 312 1071 314 1049 327 1044 354 1033 383 1033 407 921 453 Caleb Smith poly 1081 308 1102 255 1095 220 1093 181 1109 161 1145 160 1169 191 1153 227 1153 246 1199 268 1230 310 1239 377 1237 443 1220 486 1125 451 1118 412 1136 378 1124 342 Montgomery Blair poly 1224 479 1298 416 1304 379 1295 329 1325 310 1360 324 1370 359 1371 385 1371 397 1413 425 1422 497 1440 563 1348 555 1232 517 Edward Bates poly 625 555 595 620 699 625 730 550 Emancipation Proclamation poly 120 80 120 300 3 300 3 80 Portrait of Simon Cameron poly 752 196 961 189 948 8 735 10 Portrait of Andrew Jackson </imagemap>

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 induce loyal border states to secede.Template:Sfn However, in June 1862, Congress passed an act banning slavery in all federal territories, which Lincoln signed.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In July, the Confiscation Act of 1862 was enacted,Template:Sfn freeing 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.Template:Sfn Copperheads argued that emancipation was a stumbling block to peace and reunification. Conversely, Horace Greeley, editor of the New-York Tribune, in his public letter, "The Prayer of Twenty Millions", implored Lincoln to embrace emancipation.Template:Sfnm In a public letter of August 22, 1862, Lincoln replied to Greeley that while he personally wished all men could be free, his first obligation as president was to preserve the Union:Template:Sfn

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Buttressed by news of the recent failed Southern offensive at Antietam, on September 22, 1862, Lincoln issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, and, on January 1, 1863, he issued the final Emancipation Proclamation,Template:Sfn freeing the slaves in 10 states not then under Union control,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> exempting areas under such control.Template:Sfn Lincoln commented on signing the Proclamation: "I never, in my life, felt more certain that I was doing right, than I do in signing this paper."Template:Sfn On New Year's Eve in 1862, Black people – enslaved and free – gathered across the United States to hold Watch Night ceremonies for "Freedom's Eve", looking toward the promised fulfillment of the Proclamation.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> With the abolition of slavery in the rebel states now a military objective, Union armies advancing south enabled thousands to escape bondage.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

As Lincoln had hoped, the Proclamation removed the threat that countries that opposed slavery, especially Britain and France, would support the Confederacy.Template:Sfn The Proclamation was immediately denounced by Copperheads, who advocated restoring the union by allowing slavery.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> It was also seen as a betrayal of his promise to Southern Unionists not to tamper with slavery; Emerson Etheridge, then Clerk of the House of Representatives, joined an unsuccessful plot to give the Democrats and Southern Unionists control of the House.Template:Sfn As a result of the Proclamation, enlisting 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".Template:Sfn

Gettysburg Address (1863)Edit

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Lincoln spoke at the dedication of the Gettysburg battlefield cemetery on November 19, 1863.Template:Sfn 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", and that the deaths of the "brave men ... who struggled here" would not be in vain, but that the nation "shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth".Template:Sfnm The Address became the most quoted speech in American history.Template:Sfn

Following Admiral David Farragut's capture of New Orleans in 1862, and after victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, Lincoln proclaimed a national Thanksgiving holiday, to be celebrated on the 26th, the final Thursday of November 1863.Template:Sfn

Promoting General GrantEdit

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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."Template:Sfn Meade's failure to capture Lee's army after Gettysburg and Grant's success at Chattanooga persuaded Lincoln to promote Grant to commander of all Union armies.<ref name=anb/> Grant then waged the bloody Overland Campaign, which exacted heavy losses on both sides.Template:Sfn

Amid the turmoil of military actions, on June 30, 1864, Lincoln signed into law the Yosemite Grant, which provided unprecedented federal protection for the area now known as Yosemite National Park.Template:Sfn According to Rolf Diamant and Ethan Carr, "the 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."Template:Sfn

Lincoln reacted to Union losses by mobilizing support throughout the North.Template:Sfn Lincoln authorized Grant to target infrastructure—plantations, railroads, and bridges—to weaken the South's morale and fighting ability. He emphasized the defeat of the Confederate armies over destruction for its own sake.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn In early April, the Confederate government evacuated Richmond and Lincoln visited the conquered capital.Template:Sfn

Fiscal and monetary policyEdit

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File:US-$1-LT-1862-Fr-16c.jpg
One-dollar "greenback"

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.Template:Sfn 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 $800 ($Template:Inflation 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.Template:Sfn As the average urban worker made approximately $600 per year, the income tax burden fell primarily on the rich.Template:Sfn 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 increase revenue and to protect domestic manufacturing against foreign competition. During the war, the tariff also helped manufacturers offset the burden of new taxes.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

The revenue measures of 1861 proved inadequate for funding the war, forcing Congress to take further action.Template:Sfn In February 1862, Congress passed the Legal Tender Act, which authorized the minting of $150 million in "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.Template:Sfn Congress also passed the Revenue Act of 1862, which established an excise tax affecting nearly every commodity,Template:Sfn as well as the first national inheritance tax.<ref name="pollack1"/> The Revenue Act of 1862 also added a progressive tax structure to the federal income tax.Template:Sfn To collect these taxes, Congress created the Office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.<ref name="pollack1">Template:Cite journal</ref> 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.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

Despite these new measures, funding the war remained challenging.Template:Sfn The government continued to issue greenbacks and borrow large amounts of money, and the U.S. national debt incrementally grew from $65 million in 1860 to $2 billion in 1866.Template:Sfn The Revenue Act of 1864 represented a compromise between those who favored a more progressive tax structure and those who favored a flat tax.Template:Sfn It established a five-percent tax on incomes above $600 and a ten-percent tax on incomes above $10,000, and it raised taxes on businesses.<ref name="pollack1" /> In early 1865, Congress levied a tax of ten percent on incomes above $5,000.Template:Sfn By the end of the war, the income tax constituted about one-fifth of the federal government's revenue,<ref name="pollack1" /> though it was intended as a temporary wartime measure.Template:Sfn Lincoln also took action against rampant fraud during the war, signing into law the False Claims Act of 1863. This statute imposed civil and criminal penalties for false claims and made it possible for private citizens to file false claims (qui tam) lawsuits on behalf of the U.S. government and share in the recovery.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> 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, national banks were authorized to issue federal banknotes.Template:Sfn After Congress imposed a tax on private banknotes in March 1865, federal banknotes became the dominant form of paper currency.Template:Sfn

Foreign policyEdit

Template:Further 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. According to the historian Dean Mahin, Lincoln had "limited familiarity with diplomatic practices" but had a "substantial influence on U.S. diplomacy" as the Union attempted to avoid war with Britain and France.Template:Sfn Lincoln's policy succeeded: all foreign nations were officially neutral throughout the Civil War, with none recognizing the Confederacy.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

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", according to Don H. Doyle. Union diplomats had to explain that United States was not committed to ending 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.Template:Sfn However, the Confederacy's hope that cotton exports would compel European interference did not come to fruition, as Britain found alternative sources and experienced economic growth in industries that did not rely on cotton.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

Native AmericansEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The Lincoln administration faced difficulties guarding Western settlers, railroads, and telegraph lines from Native American attacks.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> On August 17, 1862, the Dakota War broke out in Minnesota. Hundreds of settlers were killed and 30,000 were displaced from their homes.Template:Sfn Some feared incorrectly that it might represent a Confederate conspiracy to start a war on the Northwestern frontier.Template:Sfn Lincoln ordered thousands of Confederate prisoners of war be sent to put down the uprising. When the Confederacy protested, Lincoln revoked the policy and none arrived in Minnesota.Template:Sfn Lincoln sent General Pope as commander of the new Department of the Northwest.Template:Sfnm Serving under Pope was Minnesota Congressman Henry Hastings Sibley. Minnesota's governor had made Sibley a colonel of 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.Template:Sfn

A war crimes trial led by Sibley sentenced 303 Dakota warriors to death.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfnm Less than four months later, Lincoln issued the Lieber Code, which governed wartime conduct of the Union Army, defining command responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> Congressman Alexander Ramsey told Lincoln in 1864 that he would have gotten more re-election support in Minnesota had he executed all 303 warriors. Lincoln responded, "I could not afford to hang men for votes."Template:Sfn Lincoln called for reform of federal Indian policy, but prioritized the war and Reconstruction.Template:Sfn

On May 16, 1864, less than 15 months after meeting President Lincoln in Washington,<ref name="NPS">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Lean Bear, Black Kettle, and others in the tribe were camping on their buffalo hunting grounds near Ash Creek, where the Sand Creek massacre of Colorado Wars occurred. The 1st Colorado Regiment, under the command of Lieutenant George Eayre, approached the group. Certain that this would be a peaceful encounter, Lean Bear went alone to meet the militia to show his peaceful intentions. On his chest, Lean Bear proudly wore the peace medal that he had received on his trip to Washington, D.C., in 1863. In his hand, he held an official document signed by Lincoln stating that he was peaceful and friendly with whites.<ref name="half breed 117">Template:Cite book</ref> What Lean Bear did not realize was that Eayre's troops were operating under orders from Colonel John M. Chivington to "kill Cheyennes whenever and wherever found."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Eayre ordered his men to shoot Lean Bear, who was wounded and fell off his horse. He was then shot repeatedly by the soldiers as they rode past his body on the ground.<ref name="half breed 117"/> Newspaper reports and books from the era report that Cheyenne warriors attacked settlers and committed a number of atrocities in the summer of 1864<ref>Howbert, Irving., "Indians of the Pike's Peak Region." The Knickerbocker Press, New York, 1914.</ref><ref name=Mountains/> including the June 11 Hungate massacre.<ref name="Hungate Family Murdered">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Second termEdit

Re-electionEdit

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Lincoln ran for re-election in 1864; the Republican Party selected Andrew Johnson, a War Democrat, as his running mate. To broaden his coalition to include War Democrats as well as Republicans, Lincoln ran under the label of the new National Union Party.Template:Sfnm Grant's bloody stalemates damaged Lincoln's re-election prospects, and many Republicans feared defeat; Lincoln rejected pressure for a peace settlement.<ref name=anb/> 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".<ref name=anb/>Template:Sfn

Victories at Atlanta and in the Shenandoah Valley turned public opinion, and Lincoln was re-elected.<ref name=anb/> 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.Template:Sfn Lincoln closed his speech with these words:

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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.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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ReconstructionEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} 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."Template:Sfn Lincoln's main goal was to keep the union together, so he proceeded by focusing not on blame but on rebuilding.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

As Southern states fell, they needed leaders while their administrations were being restored. In Tennessee and Arkansas, Lincoln appointed Johnson and Frederick Steele, respectively, as military governors.Template:Sfn In Louisiana, Lincoln ordered General Nathaniel P. Banks to promote a plan that would reestablish statehood when 10 percent of the voters agreed, but only if the reconstructed states abolished slavery. Democratic opponents accused Lincoln of using the plan 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, but Lincoln pocket-vetoed it. The Radicals retaliated by refusing to seat elected representatives from Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee.Template:Sfnm

File:Lincoln and Johnsond.jpg
An 1865 political cartoon, The 'Rail Splitter' At Work Repairing the Union, depicting Vice President Andrew Johnson, a former tailor, and Lincoln.

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.Template:Sfn 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 re-election platform, and after his re-election, the second attempt in the House passed on January 31, 1865.Template:Sfn After ratification by three-fourths of the states in December 1865, it became the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.Template:Sfn

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 for the freedmen to purchase title. Lincoln announced a Reconstruction plan that involved short-term military administration, pending readmission under the control of southern Unionists.Template:Sfn Eric Foner argues:Template:Sfn

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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.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}

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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.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}

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AssassinationEdit

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File:Lincoln assassination slide c1900 - Restoration.jpg
An illustration of Lincoln's assassination on April 14, 1865, in the presidential booth at Ford's Theatre, featuring (left to right): assassin John Wilkes Booth, Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, Clara Harris, and Henry Rathbone

John Wilkes Booth was a well-known actor and a Confederate spy from Maryland; though he never joined the Confederate army, he had contacts within the Confederate secret service.Template:Sfn 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",<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Booth plotted to assassinate the President.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn 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.Template:Sfn

At 10:15 pm, Booth entered 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.Template:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> After being attended by Doctor Charles Leale and two other doctors, Lincoln was taken across the street to Petersen House. He remained in a coma for nine hours and died at 7:22 am on April 15.Template:Sfn Lincoln's body was wrapped in a flag and placed in a coffin, which was loaded into a hearse and escorted to the White House by Union soldiers.Template:Sfn Johnson was sworn in as president later that same day.Template:Sfn Two weeks later, Booth was located, shot, and killed at a farm in Virginia by Sergeant Boston Corbett.Template:Sfnm

Funeral and burialEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} From April 19 to 20, Lincoln lay in state, first in the White House and then in the Capitol rotunda.Template:Sfn The caskets containing Lincoln's body and the body of his third son Willie then traveled for two weeks on a funeral train following a circuitous route from Washington D.C. to Springfield, Illinois, stopping at several cities for memorials attended by hundreds of thousands.Template:Sfn Many others gathered along the tracks as the train passed with bands, bonfires, and hymn singing or in silent grief.Template:Sfnm Historians emphasized the widespread shock and sorrow, but noted that some Lincoln haters celebrated his death.Template:Sfn Poet Walt Whitman composed "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" to eulogize Lincoln.Template:Sfn Lincoln's body was buried at Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield and now lies within the Lincoln Tomb.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Philosophy and viewsEdit

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Lincoln redefined the political philosophy of republicanism in the United States.Template:Sfn He called the Declaration of Independence, which found "self-evident" that all men are created equal and have an "unalienable" right to liberty, the "sheet anchor" of republicanism, at a time when the Constitution, which "tolerated slavery", was the focus of most political discourse.Template:Sfnm John Patrick Diggins notes, "Lincoln presented Americans a theory of history that offers a profound contribution to the theory and destiny of republicanism itself" in the 1860 Cooper Union speech.Template:Sfnm

As a Whig activist Lincoln was a spokesman for business interests, favoring high tariffs, banks, infrastructure improvements, and railroads, in opposition to Jacksonian democrats.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, Lincoln admired Andrew Jackson's steeliness and patriotism,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and adopted the Jacksonian "belief in the common man".Template:Sfn According to historian Sean Wilentz, "just as the Republican Party of the 1850s absorbed certain elements of Jacksonianism, so Lincoln, whose Whiggery had always been more egalitarian than that of other Whigs, found himself absorbing some of them as well."Template:Sfn

William C. Harris found that Lincoln's "reverence for the Founding Fathers, the Constitution, the laws under it, and the preservation of the Republic and its institutions strengthened his conservatism."Template:Sfn In Lincoln's first inaugural address, he denounced secession as anarchy and argued that "a majority held in restraint by constitutional checks, and limitations, and always changing easily with deliberate changes of popular opinions and sentiments, is the only true sovereign of a free people."Template:Sfnm

Religious skepticism and providenceEdit

Template:Further As a young man Lincoln was a religious skeptic.Template:Sfnm However, he was deeply familiar with the Bible;Template:Sfn throughout his public career, he often quoted Scripture.Template:Sfn His three most famous speeches—the House Divided Speech, the Gettysburg Address, and his second inaugural address—all contain such quotes. In the 1840s, Lincoln subscribed to the Doctrine of Necessity, a belief that the human mind was controlled by a higher power.Template:Sfn<ref>Guelzo, Allen C. "Abraham Lincoln and the Doctrine of Necessity", in Guelzo, Allen C. (2009). Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University, pp. 27-48.</ref>

After the death of his son Edward in 1850 he more frequently expressed a dependence on God.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> He never joined a church, although he frequently attended First Presbyterian Church in Springfield, Illinois, with his wife beginning in 1852.Template:Sfn While president, Lincoln often attended services at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C.Template:Sfn The death of his son Willie in February 1862 may have caused him to look toward religion for solace.Template:Sfn Lincoln's frequent use of religious imagery and language toward the end of his life may have reflected his own personal beliefs or might have been a device to reach his audiences, who were mostly evangelical Protestants.Template:Sfn

Health and appearanceEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Lincoln was described as "awkward" and "gawky" as a youth.Template:Sfn In adolescence he was tall and strong; he participated in jumping, throwing, wrestling, and footraces, and "shone when he could use his exceptional strength to advantage."Template:Sfn His stepmother remarked that he cared little about clothing.Template:Sfn Lincoln's clothes "were typically rough and suited to the frontier", with a gap between his shoes, socks, and pants that often exposed six or more inches of his shin.Template:Sfn

Lincoln reached a height of six feet four inches by 21, and was "thin, swarthy, and rawboned",Template:Sfn with a falsetto voice.Template:Sfn While he is usually portrayed bearded, he did not grow a beard until 1860 at the suggestion of 11-year-old Grace Bedell; he was the first of five presidents to do so.Template:Sfn William H. Herndon described Lincoln's face as "long, narrow, sallow, and cadaverous", his cheeks as "leathery and saffron-colored".Template:Sfn Lincoln described himself as having a "dark complexion, with coarse black hair".Template:Sfn Lincoln's detractors also remarked on his appearance. For example, during the Civil War, the Charleston Mercury described him as having "the dirtiest complexion" and asked "Faugh! After him what white man would be President?"Template:Sfn

Among the illnesses that Lincoln is either documented or speculated to have suffered from are depression,<ref name=Atlanticoct2005/> smallpox,Template:Sfn and malaria.Template:Sfn He took blue mass pills, which contained mercury, to treat melancholy or hypochondriasis.<ref name=mercury>Template:Cite journal</ref> It is unknown to what extent this may have resulted in mercury poisoning.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=mercury/> Several claims have been made that Lincoln's health was declining before the assassination, as photographs of Lincoln appear to show weight loss and muscle wasting.<ref name="theatlantic.com" /> It has also been proposed that he could have had a rare genetic disorder such as Marfan syndrome<ref>Template:Cite journal </ref> or multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2B.<ref name="theatlantic.com">Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

LegacyEdit

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Historical reputationEdit

In surveys of U.S. scholars ranking presidents since 1948, the top three presidents are generally Lincoln, George Washington, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, although the order varies.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Between 1999 and 2011, Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan were the top-ranked presidents in eight public opinion surveys by Gallup.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A 2004 study found that scholars in history and politics ranked Lincoln number one, while legal scholars placed him second after Washington.Template:Sfn

Lincoln's assassination made him a national martyr. He was viewed by abolitionists as a champion of human liberty. Many, though not all, in the South considered Lincoln to be a man of outstanding ability.Template:Sfn Historians have said he was "a classical liberal" in the 19th-century sense.Template:Sfnm In the New Deal era, liberals honored Lincoln as an advocate of the common man who they claimed would have supported the welfare state,Template:Sfn and Lincoln became a favorite of liberal intellectuals across the world.Template:Sfn Sociologist Barry Schwartz argues that in the 1930s and 1940s, Lincoln provided the nation with "a moral symbol inspiring and guiding American life."Template:Sfn Schwartz states that Lincoln's American reputation grew slowly from the late 19th century until the Progressive Era (1900–1920s), when he emerged as one of America's most venerated heroes, even among White Southerners. The high point came in 1922 with the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.Template:Sfn However, Schwartz also finds that since World War II Lincoln's symbolic power has lost relevance, and this "fading hero is symptomatic of fading confidence in national greatness." He suggested that postmodernism and multiculturalism have diluted greatness as a concept.Template:Sfn

By the 1970s, Lincoln had become a hero to political conservativesTemplate:Sfn—apart from neo-Confederates such as Mel Bradford, who denounced his treatment of the White South—for his intense nationalism, his support for business, his insistence on stopping the spread of slavery, his acting on Lockean and Burkean principles on behalf of both liberty and tradition, and his devotion to the principles of the Founding Fathers.Template:Sfnm

Frederick Douglass stated that in "his company, I was never reminded of my humble origin, or of my unpopular color",Template:Sfn and Lincoln has long been known as the Great Emancipator.Template:Efn By the late 1960s, however, some Black intellectuals denied that Lincoln deserved that title.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Lerone Bennett Jr. won wide attention when he called Lincoln a White supremacist in 1968.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> He noted that Lincoln used ethnic slurs and argued that Lincoln opposed social equality and proposed that freed slaves voluntarily move to another country.Template:Sfnm Defenders of Lincoln retorted that he was a "moral visionary" who deftly advanced the abolitionist cause, as fast as politically possible.Template:Sfn

David Herbert Donald opined in his 1996 biography that Lincoln was endowed with the personality trait of negative capability, defined by the poet John Keats and attributed to extraordinary leaders who were "capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason".Template:Sfn Lincoln has often been portrayed by Hollywood, almost always in a flattering light.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Lincoln has also been admired by political figures outside the U.S., including German political theorist Karl Marx,Template:Sfn Indian independence leader Mahatma Gandhi,Template:Sfn and Giuseppe Garibaldi, leader of the Italian Risorgimento.Template:Sfn

Memorials and commemorationsEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See also Lincoln's portrait appears on two denominations of United States currency, the penny and the $5 bill. He appears on postage stamps across the world.Template:Sfn He has been memorialized in many town, city, and county names, including the capital of Nebraska.Template:Sfn The United States Navy Template:Sclass Template:USS is named after Lincoln, the second Navy ship to bear his name.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., is one of the most visited National Park Service sites in the country.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Ford's Theatre is across the street from Petersen House, where Lincoln died.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Memorials in Springfield, Illinois, include the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Lincoln's home, and his tomb.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A carving of Lincoln appears with those of three other presidents on Mount Rushmore, which receives about 3 million visitors a year.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

A statue of Lincoln completed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens stands in Lincoln Park, Chicago,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> with recastings given as diplomatic gifts standing in Parliament Square, London, and Parque Lincoln, Mexico City.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Lincoln Portrait is a 1942 classical orchestral work written by the American composer Aaron Copland based on speeches and writings of Lincoln.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Lincoln: A Novel (1984) is part of Gore Vidal's seven-book series of historical novels, Narratives of Empire, and is a Bildungsroman.Template:Sfn Several states commemorate "Presidents' Day" as "Washington–Lincoln Day".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See alsoEdit

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NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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SourcesEdit

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External linksEdit

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