Abraham Lincoln, President-elect: The Four Critical Months from Election to Inauguration

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McFarland, 2005 - 228 psl.
Immediately after Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the United States of America, the nation began to experience extreme turmoil. From his election in November 1860 until his inauguration five months later, Lincoln was pushed, pulled, blamed and praised by all people from all sides as the country began its inevitable slide toward war. Southerners refused to see him as anything but a “Black Republican,” an abolitionist poorly disguised as a moderate who was committed only to destroying their beloved slave system, and with it, their entire way of life. Northerners, meanwhile, pleaded with Lincoln to speak out and reassure the country that his election, and his policies, brought not separation, but harmony. This engaging work utilizes, in addition to better known works, sources sometimes overlooked or under appreciated: newspaper accounts from across America (particularly from the cities Lincoln passed through on his journey to Washington), journals and diaries of his contemporaries, and correspondence. Lincoln's speeches also appear here as they did in newspapers in 1860 and 1861; crowd reactions and Lincoln's occasional banter with individuals who called out to him are faithfully reproduced, as well.

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Acknowledgments
1
Sangamon
15
Moving Heaven and Earth
36
Election
50
No Sign Shall Be Given Them
75
Standing Firm
88
The Rubicon Is Now Crossed
103
The Crisis Is All Artificial
128
Plums and Nuts
167
The First Trick
183
Notes
209
Index
225

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Apie autorių (2005)

Attorney Larry D. Mansch is also the author of Rube Marquard (1998). He lives in Missoula, Montana.

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