Biography of Abraham Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln biography

Biography of Abraham Lincoln


Biography of Abraham Lincoln

Biography of Abraham Lincoln


“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…. ”  ith 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…. ” 

Abraham Lincoln:

Abraham Lincoln was  born Feb   12, 1809, in a single-room               log    cabin,             Hardin     County, Kentucky. His family   upbringing was modest; his parents from Virginia were neither wealthy or   well     known. At an     early    age,    the     young lincoln Abraham lost his mother, and his father moved away to Indiana. Abraham had to work hard   splitting logs     and  other  manual labour. But, he also       had a   thirst     for knowledge and worked very   hard to excel in his  studies. This led him to become self-trained as a lawyer. He spent eight years working on the  Illinois court circuit;      his  ambition, drive,    and  capacity   for hard  work    were    evident    to    all      around him. Lincoln became respected on  the legal circuit and he  gained the nickname ‘Honest  Abe.’ He often encouraged neighbours to mediate their own     conflicts  rather  than      pursue   full     legal litigation. Lincoln    also   had a     good sense   of humour         and was          deprecating   about        his looks.

“If   I were    two-faced, would I   be  wearing this one?”

Work   colleagues       and                friends  noted   that Lincoln had    a  capacity      to defuse  tense  and argumentative  situations, though       the   use of humour and his capacity to take an optimistic view of  human nature. He  loved to tell stories to illustrate a serious point through the use of humour and parables. Lincoln was shy around women        but   after    a  difficult      courtship,      he married     Mary      Todd       in   1842.      Mary      Todd shared               many     of     her    husband’s    political thinking        but         they        also         had               different temperaments     –  with    Mary  more     prone   to swings     in    her   emotions.              They         had four children, who   Lincoln            was             devoted         to. Although  three died before  reaching  maturity –   which caused   much grief   to  both  parents. As  a   lawyer,  Abraham  developed a     capacity for quick thinking    and oratory. His  interest   in public       issues   encouraged    him   to  stand for public  office. In 1847,     he    was  elected to  the House    of            Representatives  for    Illinois   and served  from    1847-49.        During his      period  in Congress, Lincoln   criticised    President  Folk’s handling    of           the  American-Mexican             War, arguing      Polk  used   patriotism      and      military glory    to      defend    the    unjust  action  of taking Mexican     territory.   However, Lincoln’s  stance was    politically    unpopular  and     he   was        not re-elected.

Biography of Abraham Lincoln

Biography of Abraham Lincoln



Lawyer

Abraham_Lincoln_by_ByersAfter   his         political career   appeared    to  be  over,  he         returned to working  as  a lawyer in Illinois.   However,      the 1850s saw the slavery question re-emerge  as a    prominent  divisive   national  issue.     Lincoln abhorred          slavery          and    from          a       political perspective    wished  to prevent   slavery from  being extended and   ultimately       be phased   out.   He gave influential    speeches, which  drew on the Declaration         of         Independence to  prove  the Founding    Fathers had intended  to  stop         the spread of slavery. In particular, Lincoln used a novel    argument   that although society    was a long way from equality, America should aspire towards the lofty statement in the Declaration of Independence.

We hold these truths  to be   self-evident: That all men are created equal

Lincoln had a strong capacity for empathy. He would try    to     see problems  from      everyone’s point     of      view        –      including                           southern slaveholders.     He   used          this               concept    of empathy to speak against slavery.

“I have always thought  that all men should be free;  but   if any should be slaves,  it should   be first   those who  desire it for    themselves,  and secondly, those who desire it for others. When I hear  anyone   arguing   for        slavery,      I   feel    a strong  impulse to             see    it       tried      on             him personally.” 

Lincoln’s speeches were notable because they drew on  both  legal   precedents but   also easy to understand parables, which struck  a  chord with               the            public.   In     1858,        Lincoln was nominated  as   the Republican     candidate     for the Senate. He undertook  a  series  of  high-profile debates     with     the    Democratic             incumbent Stephen Douglass.  Douglass was in favour of allowing  the extension  of slavery –  if citizens voted  for it. Lincoln  opposed the extension of slavery. During this campaign, he gave  one  of his                     best-remembered      speeches,     which reflected on the divisive nature of America.

“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. ” (House Divided) 

In this House  Divided  speech, Lincoln  gave   a prophetic   utterance       to     the            potential      for slavery    to divide the   nation. Although he  lost this 1858  Senate   election, his   debating skills and oratory             caused       him    to    become  well known               within     the        Republican  party.     On February 27, 1860. Lincoln was also invited to give     a notable     address at   Cooper   Union     in New  York. The East  Coast was relatively  new territory   for       Lincoln; many    in   the     audience thought     his   appearance awkward    and   even ugly,    but his calls  for     moral   clarity     over the wrongness  of slavery struck  a chord   with his East coast audience.

“Let us  have faith that right makes might, and in  that    faith,  let us,  to the end, dare to do  our duty       as we      understand  it.”        (Cooper  Union address) 

The   reputation    he       gained  on  the  campaign trail  and  speeches  on the  East coast   caused him to    be put  forward as  a candidate   for the Republican      nominee for  President   in      1860. Lincoln was   an      outsider  because          he      had much          less       experience   than  other    leading candidates such        as         Steward, Bates           , and Chase,    but after   finishing second on the  first ballot   he went  on       to become      unexpectedly nominated.           After       a       hard-fought,    divisive campaign of      1860,     Lincoln  was  elected the first          Republican  President      of        the     United States.  Lincoln’s  support came  entirely    from the North and  West of the  country.  The south strongly disagreed  with  Lincoln’s position    on slavery The election of Lincoln as President in 1861, sparked  the South  to  secede     from the North. Southern independence  sentiment had been growing for many years, and the election of      a     president   opposed  to   slavery was  the final          straw.          However,       Lincoln    resolutely opposed the breakaway of the South, and this led  to   the       American   civil   war  with      Lincoln committed  to   preserving    the  Union.    Lincoln surprised many by including in his cabinet the main        rivals    from       the               1860    Republican campaign.                    It      demonstrated              Lincoln’s willingness and ability to  work   with people of different political    and     personal  approaches. This       helped       to keep    the   Republican    party together.    Abraham-lincoln the  Civil    War    was much     more              costly       than             many   people anticipated and at  times  Lincoln   appeared to be        losing       the   support      of                   the    general population.  But,  Lincoln’s patient      leadership, and   willingness          to     work              with        unionist Democrats held the country   together.  Lincoln oversaw many   of   the military aspects  of   the war and   promoted the  general               Ulysses     S Grant            to      command    the    northern     forces. Initially,      the   war     was    primarily     about       the secession  of southern states and the survival of     the      Union,       but  as  the     war   progressed, Lincoln increasingly made the issue of ending slavery paramount.     On September    22, 1862, Lincoln                         issued                the               Emancipation Proclamation     that declared  the     freedom    of slaves within the Confederacy.

“All persons held as slaves within any State or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall  then  be    in rebellion    against the    United States,     shall be      then,           thenceforward,  and forever free” (Emancipation Proclamation) 

The Proclamation came into force on January 1,     1863.  Towards  the   end   of the  year, many black regiments were raised to help the Union army.

Biography of Abraham Lincoln

Biography of Abraham Lincoln



Gettysburg address:

After  a difficult opening       two years,  by   1863, the  tide of war   started to  swing   towards  the Union     forces    –  helped    by   the victory at  the Battle of Gettysburg in  July  1863. Lincoln  felt able to redefine the      goals     of   the civil war to include the ending of slavery.

Dedicating  the ceremony         at    Gettysburg   on November 19, 1863, Lincoln declared:

“Four score  and   seven  years   ago our fathers brought   forth on this  continent, a new nation, conceived in      Liberty,    and  dedicated         to the proposition   that     all men  are  created      equal. 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.”

Abraham           Lincoln,                Gettysburg       Address November 19, 1863

Eventually,   after  four    years   of        attrition,  the Federal  forces secured   the   surrender  of    the defeated  south.     The   union  had     been  saved and the issue of slavery had been brought to ahead.

After the Civil War:

In   the       aftermath   of    the          civil   war,   Lincoln sought      to reunite     the       country  –   offering a generous         settlement     to  the          south.  When asked how to   deal  with  the  southern     states, Lincoln replied. “Let ’em up easy.” Lincoln was opposed    by           more      radical  factions           who wanted    greater           activism    in the           south to ensure civil rights for freed slaves.

On  January    31,  1865,        Lincoln   helped   pass through Congress a bill to outlaw slavery. The Thirteenth     Amendment to    the  United  States Constitution was officially signed into   law   on December 6, 1865.

Some northern  abolitionists  and  Republicans wanted  Lincoln    to   go further  and implement full racial  equality on issues  of education and voting rights.  Lincoln  was unwilling to do this (it  was  a minority political  view for the     time) Frederick    Douglass,  a leading      black  activist (who had escaped from slavery) didn’t always agree    with  the    policies     of  Lincoln but   after meeting   Lincoln,   he   said  enthusiastically    of the President.

“He    treated me      as  a  man;   he did not  let me feel          for  a          moment      that        there  was     any difference in       the           color      of our skins!       The President   is a   most     remarkable  man.      I  am satisfied          now     that           he       is  doing   all     that circumstances will permit him to do.”

Biography of Abraham Lincoln

Biography of Abraham Lincoln



Assassination:

Five  days after the surrender of Robert  E. Lee and  the         Confederate    Army,  Lincoln              was assassinated     by    John      Wilkes     Booth  while visiting Ford’s Theatre.          Lincoln’s   death was widely mourned across the country.

Posterity:

Lincoln is widely regarded as one of America’s most influential and important presidents.  As well  as  saving            the  Union       and      promoting Republican       values,  Lincoln  was     viewed     as embodying              the      ideals       of  honesty           and integrity.

“Posterity will call you the great    emancipator, a more enviable title than any crown could be, and greater   than     any              merely             mundane treasure.”

Giuseppe Garibaldi, 6 August 1863.

“Five   score   years  ago,  a     great   American,  in whose    symbolic      shadow    we       stand   today, signed   the  Emancipation  Proclamation.  This momentous decree   came    as a  great beacon light   of hope to  millions  of Negro slaves who had   been   seared in   the     flames   of withering injustice. It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity.”

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