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Abraham Lincoln

Page 14

by Clara Ingram Judson


  Six days later, April 9th, 1865, General Lee surrendered, and generous peace terms were signed. Men could go to their homes and be safe as long as they did nothing against the Federal government.

  There was a roar in Washington when these terms were known. They were “far too easy,” it was said. And how did it happen, many asked, that both Grant and Sherman wrote the peace agreement in almost identical words? Politicians rushed to complain to the President. No one seemed to remember the conference on the River Queen. That trip had not been publicized.

  “It’s too late for a change, gentlemen,” Mr. Lincoln told them firmly. “Our generals have announced terms which have been accepted. Now we must stand by our given word.” Thus he showed himself to be a master politician.

  On the afternoon of the fourteenth of April the President held a long and important cabinet meeting. Plans for the government of the South were informally discussed. Let private citizens go about business unmolested, the members advised, if they committed no hostile act against the government. Put war frictions aside. Let departments of government, the post office, and the treasury begin to work as best they could as though the South had never rebelled.

  General Grant had met with the cabinet. As the meeting adjourned the President invited the general and his wife to be his guests at the theater that evening. But they were leaving the city and had to decline the honor.

  The day was fine. After the meeting the President and Mrs. Lincoln went for a drive, alone. He talked of their future plans. “Mary,” he said, “we have had a hard time of it since we came to Washington, but the war is over, and with God’s blessing we may hope for four years of peace and happiness; then we will go back to Illinois and pass the rest of our lives in quiet.”

  Planning happily, they drove home to supper.

  • CHAPTER NINETEEN •

  APRIL 15, 1865

  Visitors detained the President at the White House; so he and Mrs. Lincoln and their guests, Major Rathbone and his fiancée, were late in arriving at the theater that evening. The place was crowded; many in the audience were returning soldiers who had come in the hope of seeing their President. When Lincoln appeared, the play stopped and the band struck up “Hail to the Chief.” The audience rose and cheered. The President bowed, and the play went on.

  At noon that very day, John Wilkes Booth, a mad fanatic favoring the South, had heard that Lincoln was to attend the theater. He promptly made plans for a deed that had been in his mind for some time.

  Abraham Lincoln’s home in Springfield.

  About ten o’clock that evening he left his horse by the rear door of the theater and went to the hallway by the President’s box. He carried with him a knife and a pistol. Sneaking into the box, he fired directly at the back of Lincoln’s head.

  Major Rathbone grabbed Booth, and was terribly cut in the arm. Booth shook the major off and leaped to the stage. The shot, then the leap, made many think that this was a part of the play. They were uneasy, but not frightened, until Major Rathbone shouted.

  “Stop him! He has shot the President!”

  The audience stared in horror. The theater was in wild confusion. Booth had caught his spur on a flag draped over the box; he fell on the stage and broke his leg. But the uncertainty of the audience gave him the chance to regain his balance, reach his horse, and gallop away.

  In the President’s box it was seen at once that Lincoln was fatally hurt. Doctors came. He was tenderly carried to a home across the street. Members of the cabinet, more doctors, his son Robert, and dozens of friends hurried to offer aid. But the man they wanted to save was injured beyond hope of recovery. After hours of unconsciousness, the President died about seven o’clock on the morning of April 15th.

  By that hour, grieving crowds thronged Washington streets grabbing extra editions of newspapers which printed the awful news in great black letters:

  EXTRA

  THE PRESIDENT SHOT AT

  THE THEATRE LAST EVENING

  DEATH

  OF

  THE PRESIDENT

  Black-bordered columns told the sad story. All over the country wires and presses were worked overtime carrying the news. People wept openly as they met on the street. The President’s death was a shocking blow to the nation. The South lost a friend it hardly knew. The country lost a wise and experienced guide it sorely needed.

  Services were held in the White House on Tuesday and among the Bible verses read were some phrases that told people’s thoughts better than commonplace words:

  “Man is cut down as a flower. Yet death may be swallowed up in victory.”

  Then began the long, sad journey back to the prairie state.

  Lincoln’s fellow countrymen wanted to pay personal tribute to their fallen hero, so arrangements were made for many stops—in New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Chicago, and other places. The black-draped train crept across the country between rows of weeping citizens. Cities, shrouded in crepe, echoed to the sound of funeral dirges, and ordinary business was suspended during two weeks of mourning. The final rites were held in Springfield on the fourth of May.

  All this while the newspapers were filled with accounts of Lincoln’s life. They recounted his hope of saving the Union, his faith, his hard work, his good judgment, and his kindness. He was a friend of all, the papers said, North and South, slave and free, and never had a man had higher ideals for his country.

  Years have passed. And with each changing season the figure of Abraham Lincoln has grown. People have seen that his genius was many-sided. He chose law and politics for his lifework, but he might have been an actor: his sense of timing was perfect, and he had that gift for mimicry. Or he might have been a writer: he wrote poetry and satire as well as his excellent speeches. Instead he had poured all his gifts into the work he cared for most, political life. The stirring times in which he lived rewarded him with enduring fame.

  In time he became the symbol of the American dream, the backwoods boy who, uneducated and lacking wealth and influence, won the highest office in the land. And he had not won by lucky political chance alone but by his honesty, dignity, and kindness. At a time when he might have gained popularity he stood stanchly for what he believed was true; when he might have compromised and had an easier entrance into the White House, he held to his given word.

  The boy Abe Lincoln had pondered on the Declaration of Independence in Azel Dorsey’s school and had memorized the stirring words, All men are created equal.

  The grown man Abraham Lincoln had learned that men are not equal in all ways. He would never be as rich as Senator Douglas; neither would Douglas be as tall as Lincoln. The Declaration did not promise impossibilities. Its signers were forming a new government. They wrote down what they proposed men’s rights should be under the law. The document they wrote declared a man’s right to live, to be free, and to try to be happy.

  Abraham Lincoln gave his life to keep united a country dedicated to that ideal for men and women of every race and every creed.

  LINCOLN’S OTHER ACCOMPLISHMENTS

  Abraham Lincoln is best known, of course, for being the president to preserve the Union of States and abolish slavery. But he was responsible for many other accomplishments that still have impact on us today.

  1. He reinforced the idea that the duty of the Executive Branch of government is to enforce the laws enacted by Congress. He did not believe that a President should actively steer the laws themselves but simply enforce them. To this day, this is a principle the Republican Party champions.

  2. He signed the Homestead Act, which gave millions of acres of government-owned land to settlers at low cost. This helped develop the western territories very quickly, creating the nation we know today.

  3. He signed the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act, providing the lands for colleges and universities in each state.

  4. He supported the creation of the transcontinental railroad through the Pacific Railway Act.

  5. In 1861, he created the first U.S. incom
e tax by signing the Revenue Act.

  6. He led the creation of a national banking system through the National Banking Act of 1862.

  7. He made Thanksgiving a national holiday, not just a regional New England celebration.

  Tickets to Ford’s Theater.

  The box in which assassin John Wilkes Booth shot Abraham Lincoln during the president’s visit to Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C.

  ⋆ CAST OF CHARACTERS ⋆

  ABRAHAM LINCOLN

  The 16th President of the United States.

  MARY TODD LINCOLN

  Abraham Lincoln’s wife, born in Lexington, Kentucky.

  JOHN T. STUART

  Abraham Lincoln’s first law partner; the man credited with getting Lincoln interested in the law.

  MENTOR GRAHAM

  An influential teacher of Abraham Lincoln’s during Lincoln’s young adult years in New Salem, Illinois.

  MAJOR GENERAL GEORGE MEADE

  Leader of the Army of the Potomac at the Battle of Gettysburg.

  GENERAL ULYSSES S. GRANT

  Commanding General of the United States Army from 1860 to 1864 and later 18th President of the United States.

  STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS

  U.S. representative and senator from Illinois and candidate for the presidency in 1860.

  JOSHUA SPEED

  A close friend of Lincoln’s and his partner in ownership of a general store in New Salem, Illinois.

  WILLIAM HERNDON

  A fellow employee at Joshua Stuart’s law firm, Lincoln and Herndon formed their own law firm in Springfield, Illinois, in 1844.

  WILLIAM SEWARD

  Although a political rival to Lincoln for the party presidential nomination in 1860, Seward was named Secretary of State by Lincoln.

  GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE

  Commanding general of the Army of Northern Virginia and the most important military leader of the Confederacy.

  JOHN WILKES BOOTH

  American stage actor and Confederate sympathizer who assassinated President Lincoln.

  INDEX

  A

  Adams, John Quincy, 61

  Allen, Charles, 135–137

  Armstrong, “Duff,” 135–138

  Armstrong, Jack, 83–84, 135

  Army of the Potomac (Union Army), 187–188, 193–194, 199–200

  Ashmun, George, 153, 155

  B

  Baker, Edward, 124, 175

  Bell, John, 164

  Bergen, Abram, 80

  Berry, William, 95, 96

  Billy the Barber, 114–115, 168

  Black Hawk War, 91–92

  Booth, John Wilkes, 209–210

  Breckinridge, John, 164

  Brown, John, 152

  Burnside, Ambrose, 188

  Butler, William, 110

  C

  Camron, John, 74–75

  Cartwright, Peter, 125

  circuit courts, 134–138

  Civil War

  Antietam, 184, 187

  Bull Run, 180

  Chancellorsville, 193

  Chattanooga, 200

  Emancipation Proclamation and, 182–185

  end of, 206–207

  fall of Richmond, 204–206

  Fort Sumter and, 178–179

  Gettysburg, 194

  Gettysburg Address, 195–197

  Lincoln and his generals in, 187–188, 191–194, 199–200, 206

  Lincoln’s grief about, 191–192

  presidential election (1864) and, 201–202

  as “railroad war,” 189–190

  slavery and, 180, 182

  start of, 179

  threat of, 166–167

  Vicksburg, 192–193, 200

  Clary Grove boys, 83–84

  Clary, John, 81, 83

  Clay, Henry, 25, 36, 61

  Confederate States of America (CSA), 166, 178–179, 191, 204–205, 206

  Congressional Medal of Honor, 191

  Crawford, Andrew, 40

  Crawford, Josiah, 53–54

  D

  Davis, David, 134–135, 153

  Davis, Jefferson, 166, 179, 205

  Democratic Party, 117, 143, 147, 151–152, 164, 166

  Department of Agriculture, 190

  Dill brothers, 55–57

  Douglas, Stephen A.

  Abe’s debates with, 147–151

  congressional campaign, 116

  Lincoln’s inaugural address and, 174

  pictured, 156

  and presidential campaign, 147, 151

  and slavery issue, 140–142, 144, 147–151

  in state legislature, 102–103

  Dubois, Jesse, 153

  E

  Emancipation Proclamation, 176, 182–185

  Everett, Edward, 194

  F

  Farragut, David G., 204

  Fleurville, William de “Billy the Barber,” 114–115, 168

  Fort Sumter, 167, 178–179

  G

  Gentry, Allen, 51, 61–62

  Gentry, James, 51–52, 65

  Gettysburg Address, 195–197

  Graham, Mentor, 80–81, 81, 85, 96, 98, 174

  Grant, Ulysses S., 179, 192–193, 198, 199–200, 202, 204, 206

  Greeley, Horace, 183

  Greene, Billy, 80, 81

  H

  Hall, Levi, 65, 69

  Hall, Matilda Johnston, 65

  Hanks, Dennis, 15–16, 19, 25, 36, 41, 44, 61, 65, 69

  Hanks, John, 64, 65, 72, 72–73, 160

  Hanks, Joseph, 64

  Harper’s Ferry, 152

  Herndon, James, 94–95

  Herndon, Rowan, 90–91

  Herndon, William, 125, 129–130, 133–134, 153, 167

  Homestead Act, 213

  Hooker, “Fighting Joe,” 188, 193

  I

  Illinois

  Lincoln family move to, 64–67, 69

  “Long Nine” in, 107–108

  Sangamon County elections, 86–87, 92, 94, 98

  settlement of, 69–70

  slavery and, 123

  state capital of, 107–108, 111, 119

  state legislature of, 103, 107–109

  “In God We Trust” motto, 189

  Indiana, 27, 61. See Pigeon Creek, Indiana

  J

  Jackson, Andrew, 61

  Johnston, Elizabeth, 42, 65

  Johnston, John, 42, 44, 65, 72–73, 76

  Johnston, Matilda, 42, 51, 65

  Jones, William, 52, 59–60

  K

  Kansas-Nebraska Act, 142–143, 150, 191

  Keckley, Elizabeth, 181

  Kelso, Jack, 81, 82

  Kentucky, 24, 27, 56–57

  L

  Lee, Robert E., 179–180, 191, 194–195, 206

  Lincoln, Abraham

  assassination of, 209–211

  birth of, 11

  books and, 44–46, 52–54, 59, 82, 85–86, 92, 94–95

  childhood of, 10–17, 21–25, 30, 46–47

  debt and, 95–97

  Emancipation Proclamation, 182–185

  Executive Branch of government and, 213

  on free speech, 118–119

  Gettysburg Address by, 195–197

  “House Divided” speech of, 144

  inaugural addresses of, 174–175, 177, 203–204

  legacy of, 212, 213, 215

  license to practice law, 108

  “Lost Speech” of, 143

  mother’s death and, 37, 39–40

  move to Indiana, 30–32, 34

  personal qualities of, 54, 70, 84, 98

  pictured, 48, 100, 120, 186

  political issues and, 60–61, 65–66, 80, 86–87, 94, 105–106, 123, 127–130

  presidental accomplishments of, 189, 213

  presidential campaign (1860), 151–155, 164

  presidential election (1860), 165–166

  presidential election (1864), 201–202

  public speaking and, 51, 72, 81, 94, 143, 149

  re-election
to state legislature, 105–106, 119

  Sangamon County elections, 86–87, 92, 94, 98

  schooling of, 19–21, 45–46

  slavery issue and, 142–145, 147–151

  as state representative, 99, 101–103, 107–109

  stepmother and, 41–45

  in U.S. Congress, 125, 127–130

  Lincoln-Douglas debates, 147–151

  Lincoln, Edward Baker (son), 125, 133, 138,

  Lincoln, Mary Todd

  pictured, 126

  relationship with Lincoln and, 112, 124

  in Springfield, 139

  in Washington, 173, 177–178, 181, 200, 203–204

  Willie’s death and, 181, 203

  Lincoln, Nancy Hanks (mother), 13–15, 22–24, 26–27, 34, 37, 39

  “Lincoln Penny,” 189

  Lincoln, Robert Todd (son), 125, 133, 173, 178, 204

  Lincoln, Sarah Bush (stepmother), 41–45, 64, 167

  Lincoln, Sarah (sister), 13–15, 19–21, 31–32, 34, 36–37, 40–43, 45, 65

  Lincoln, Thomas (father), 10–13

  first wife’s death and, 37, 39–40

  land problems of, 25–27

  move to Coles County and, 76

  move to Illinois and, 64–67, 69–70

  move to Indiana and, 29–32

  political issues and, 61

  second wife and, 41–45

  young Lincoln’s reading habit and, 52–53

  Lincoln, Thomas “Tad” (son), 138–139, 155, 159, 173, 178, 180–181, 188, 204, 205

  Lincoln, William Wallace (son), 138, 155, 159, 173, 178, 180–181, 191, 203

  Logan, Stephen T., 94, 95, 121–122, 153

  Louisiana Purchase, 127, 140–142

  M

  McClellan, George B., 182, 186, 187–188

  McNeil, John, 81, 98

  Meade, George, 193–194, 199

  Mexican War, 127–130

  Missouri Compromise, 140–142, 143, 166

  N

  National Banking Act of 1862, 213

 

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