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Abraham Lincoln

Page 24

by Stephen B. Oates


  Missouri, in Union

  “Mortality” (Knox)

  Mudd, Samuel A.

  myth:

  Frye on

  functions of

  history vs.

  truth of

  see also Lincoln myth

  National Intelligencer, Booth’s letter to

  New York Herald

  New York World

  Nicholas I, Czar of Russia

  North Carolina

  O’Laughlin, Michael

  trial and sentence of

  Our American Cousin (English comedy)

  Owens, Mary

  pardons

  Parker, John

  Petersen, William

  Petersen House (Washington, D.C.)

  Philadelphia North American

  Phillips, Wendell

  Poore, Benjamin Perley

  Pope, John

  Powell, Lewis T.

  apprehension of

  death sentence of

  Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction

  property, confiscation of

  Quarles, Benjamin

  Randall, Ruth Painter

  Rathbone, Henry

  reconstruction

  army’s role in

  Lincoln myth and

  Lincoln’s evolving approach to

  Lincoln’s views on, at war’s end

  military governors in

  radical views on

  southern Unionists in

  ten percent plan in

  voting limitations in

  Republicans, advanced

  conspiracy theory of assassination and

  as “radicals,”

  reconstruction and

  Republicans, Republican party

  conservative

  in election of 1858

  in election of 1860

  in election of 1862

  in election of 1864

  emergence of

  Jeffersonian heritage of

  Lincoln’s joining of

  moderate

  radical, as misnomer, see also Republicans, advanced

  Thirteenth Amendment and

  vision of

  as warmongering abolitionists

  revolution, in Western world (1820s to 1840s)

  Richmond, Va., McClellan’s march toward

  Rosecrans, William S. (“Old Rosey”)

  Russia, czarist

  Lincoln legend in

  Rutherford, Mildred Lewis

  Rutledge, Ann, and Lincoln

  Sandburg, Carl

  secession

  Secret Service, U.S., search for Booth and

  segregation

  Lincoln as proponent of

  in Union forces

  self-improvement, right of

  Senate, U.S.

  advanced Republicans in

  Lincoln’s ambitions for

  Vardaman in

  Seward, William H.

  attempted assassination of

  Sherman, Stuart

  Sherman, William Tecumseh

  Sherwood, Robert E.

  slaveowners, compensation of

  slaves, slavery

  fugitive

  as gradually dying out

  as inflammable issue

  Kansas-Nebraska Act and

  Lincoln’s hands-off policy toward

  Lincoln’s hatred of

  Lincoln viewed as unopposed to

  moral contradiction of

  rebellions of

  see also emancipation; Emancipation Proclamation

  Smith, Lydia

  South, southerners

  elimination of ruling class of

  Lincoln-as-demon view of

  Lincoln embraced by

  Lincoln’s election as viewed by

  Lincoln’s views on

  people vs. politicians in

  Unionists in

  see also Confederacy

  Spangler, Edman

  Speed, James

  Speed, Joshua

  Springfield Young Men’s Lyceum, Lincoln’s speech at

  Stanton, Edwin M.

  assassination conspiracy theory and

  background of

  Booth’s personal effects and

  death of

  Lincoln’s correspondence with

  Lincoln’s reliance on

  Lincoln’s security and

  search for Booth and

  states’ rights, Lincoln’s views on

  Stevens, Thaddeus

  reconstruction and

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher

  Sumner, Charles

  background and personality of

  reconstruction and

  slave policy influenced by

  Supreme Court, U.S.

  slavery issue and

  Surratt, John

  Surratt, Mary

  Swett, Leonard

  Taney, Roger B.

  Tanner, James

  Tennessee:

  occupation of

  Union army in

  There Is a River (Harding)

  They’ve Shot Lincoln! (television show)

  Thirteenth Amendment

  Thomas, George (“Old Pap”)

  Todd, Mary, see Lincoln, Mary Todd

  Tolstoy, Leo

  truth:

  biographical

  mythical vs. historical

  Turner, Henry M.

  Turner, Justin and Linda

  Turner, Nat

  Turner, Thomas Reed

  Union army

  blacks in

  Confederate army compared to

  Grand Plan of

  military arrests of

  military strategy of

  problems of

  in reconstruction

  scorched-earth warfare of

  Unionism, Union:

  slave states in

  southern

  Vallandigham, Clement L., arrest of

  Vardaman, James K.

  Vicksburg, Grant’s capture of (1863)

  Vidal, Gore

  Virginia:

  Army of the Potomac in

  Union cavalry in

  voting rights

  Lincoln’s restriction of

  in reconstruction

  Wade, Benjamin F.

  prejudice of

  wages:

  apprenticeship plan vs.

  unequal

  War Department, U.S.

  Booth’s body released by

  Washington, D.C.:

  defense of

  “Georgia pen” in

  Petersen House in

  see also Ford’s Theater

  Washington, George

  Washington Arsenal

  Washington Metropolitan Police Force

  Weems, Parson

  Weichmann, Louis J.

  welfare, of freedmen

  Welles, Gideon

  Welles, Mary Jane

  Whigs, Whig party

  Whitman, Walt

  Wilson, Edmund

  With Malice Toward None (Oates)

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  STEPHEN B. OATES is a professional biographer and the author of the Civil War Quartet, comprising biographies of Nat Turner, John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, and Martin Luther King, Jr., tragically doomed men who sought different solutions to the central problem of the American Republic—the problem of slavery and racial oppression. Mr. Oates’ With Malice Toward None, hailed as the best one-volume life of Lincoln, won a Christopher Award for outstanding literature and the Barondess/Lincoln Award of the New York Civil War Round Table. His Let the Trumpet Sound: The Life of Martin Luther King, Jr. also won a Christopher Award, plus the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Book Award. Mr. Oates has published eight other books and more than sixty essays and shorter biographical studies. An elected member of the Society of American Historians, he has been a Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and a Senior Summer Fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities. He is currently Professor of History and Adjunct Profe
ssor of English at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he teaches courses in the Civil War era and a nationally recognized seminar in the art and technique of biography.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.

  OTHER BOOKS BY

  Books by Stephen B. Oates

  William Faulkner: The Man and the Artist

  Biography as High Adventure: Life-Writers Speak on Their Art

  Abraham Lincoln: The Man Behind the Myths

  THE CIVIL WAR QUARTET:

  Let the Trumpet Sound: A Life of Martin Luther King, Jr.

  With Malice Toward None: A Life of Abraham Lincoln

  The Fires of Jubilee: Nat Turner’s Fierce Rebellion

  To Purge This Land with Blood: A Biography of John Brown

  Our Fiery Trial

  Portrait of America (2 volumes)

  Visions of Glory

  Rip Ford’s Texas

  Confederate Cavalry West of the River

  COPYRIGHT

  ABRAHAM LINCOLN: The Man Behind the Myths. Copyright © 1984 by Stephen B. Oates. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  EPub Edition © OCTOBER 2007 ISBN: 9780061865916

  Version 04032013

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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  *There is not a scintilla of evidence for Sandburg’s scenes about Lincoln and Ann. In fairness, though, Sandburg did delete a lot of this material in a one-volume condensation of the Prairie and War Years. But even there he persists in suggesting a romance between Lincoln and Ann and even quotes Edgar Lee Master’s ridiculous poem about how Ann Rutledge, “beloved in life of Abraham Lincoln,” was wedded to him in her grave. Later Sandburg was sorry that he had fallen for the legend. He should have known it was out of character for Lincoln, he said.

  *Nor is there any truth to the persistent gossip that John C. Calhoun (or possibly Henry Clay) was Lincoln’s real father. After my life of Lincoln appeared in 1977, I received several letters chastising me for not stating that the great Calhoun had authored Lincoln. Where else could he have gotten his political skills and eloquence? This assumes, of course, that somehow, somewhere (a haystack in Virginia or Kentucky?), Senator Calhoun and Nancy Hanks fooled around and the result was the future Head of the Nation. Of all the fanciful notions about Lincoln, this is the most preposterous. Thomas Lincoln was Lincoln’s father, period.

  *A view held by certain white scholars, too, but for a different reason. For them, this illustrates his admirable conservatism and legalistic approach.

  *In those days, state legislatures chose U.S. Senators. Lincoln hoped to win by persuading Illinois voters to elect Republican rather than Democratic candidates to the legislature.

  *Because so many southerners had resigned their congressional seats and joined the Confederacy, the Republicans had gained control of both houses on Capitol Hill. Thereupon they had voted to expel the secessionists as traitors.

  *The amendment was finally ratified in December, 1865. Until then, the freedom of most southern blacks rested on Lincoln’s Proclamation.

  *Irvin McDowell had been the army’s first commander; McClellan had replaced him.

  *For a discussion of this point, see the reference notes.

 

 

 


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