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Abraham Lincoln Biography
The first Republican President
Conservative Hall of Fame
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Abraham Lincoln Quotes
Lincoln warned
the South in his Inaugural Address: "In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow
countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The
government will not assail you.... You have no oath registered in Heaven
to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve,
protect and defend it."
Lincoln thought
secession illegal, and was willing to use force to defend Federal law
and the Union. When Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter and forced
its surrender, he called on the states for 75,000 volunteers. Four more
slave states joined the Confederacy but four remained within the Union.
The Civil War had begun.
The son of a
Kentucky frontiersman, Lincoln had to struggle for a living and for learning.
Five months before receiving his party's nomination for President, he
sketched his life:
"I was born
Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky. My parents were both born in
Virginia, of undistinguished families--second families, perhaps I should
say. My mother, who died in my tenth year, was of a family of the name
of Hanks.... My father ... removed from Kentucky to ... Indiana, in my
eighth year.... It was a wild region, with many bears and other wild animals
still in the woods. There I grew up.... Of course when I came of age I
did not know much. Still somehow, I could read, write, and cipher ...
but that was all."
Lincoln made
extraordinary efforts to attain knowledge while working on a farm, splitting
rails for fences, and keeping store at New Salem, Illinois. He was a captain
in the Black Hawk War, spent eight years in the Illinois legislature,
and rode the circuit of courts for many years. His law partner said of
him, "His ambition was a little engine that knew no rest."
He married Mary
Todd, and they had four boys, only one of whom lived to maturity. In 1858
Lincoln ran against Stephen A. Douglas for Senator. He lost the election,
but in debating with Douglas he gained a national reputation that won
him the Republican nomination for President in 1860.
As President,
he built the Republican Party into a strong national organization. Further,
he rallied most of the northern Democrats to the Union cause. On January
1, 1863, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation that declared forever
free those slaves within the Confederacy.
Lincoln never
let the world forget that the Civil War involved an even larger issue.
This he stated most movingly in dedicating the military cemetery at Gettysburg:
"that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain--that
this nation, under God, 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."
Lincoln won
re-election in 1864, as Union military triumphs heralded an end to the
war. In his planning for peace, the President was flexible and generous,
encouraging Southerners to lay down their arms and join speedily in reunion.
The spirit that
guided him was clearly that of his Second Inaugural Address, now inscribed
on one wall of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D. C.: "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.... "
On Good Friday,
April 14, 1865, Lincoln was assassinated at Ford's Theatre in Washington
by John Wilkes Booth, an actor, who somehow thought he was helping the
South. The opposite was the result, for with Lincoln's death, the possibility
of peace with magnanimity died.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/al16.html
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