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Chapter 14
Abraham Lincoln: Great or Reluctant Emancipator
P
erhaps no other American president is as revered as Abraham Lincoln. The selfeducated rail splitter rose from an humble background to guide the US through its greatest crisis, the Civil War. Long known as the “Great Emancipator”, Lincoln has been credited with having fulfilled a lifetime ambition of ending this accursed institution while also reuniting this country. But another view of Lincoln has also emerged. Writing in Ebony Magazine, Lerone Bennett in 1962 complained that Lincoln was like most whites at the time a racist at heart who loved to tell ‘darky’ jokes, and was forced against his own inclinations to end slavery. As you read Lincoln’s speeches and learn of the steps he took toward ending slavery, decide for yourself, was he the “Great” or only a “Reluctant” emancipator. Lincoln as Candidate for Office Lincoln’s Speeches
Social and Political Background
1. 1854: First Public anti-slavery speech
During Lincoln’s boySlavery is unquestionably a wrong. The great mass of mankind con- hood, slaves were unsider slavery a great moral wrong. [This feeling] lies at the very foun- known. But people in dation of their sense of justice, and cannot be trifled with. No statesman the Northwest held can safely disregard it.1 hostile attitudes toward Negroes. 2. 1856: On Slavery Lincoln's wife came Let us draw a cordon so to speak, around the slave states and the from a prominent hateful institution, like a reptile poisoning itself, will perish by its own slave-holding family. infamy.2 In Illinois, runaway slaves were often A house divide against itself cannot stand. I believe this government caught and returned cannot endure permanently half-slave and half-free. I do not expect the to slavery. house to fall, but I do expect it will cease to be divide. It will become all one thing or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the Free blacks could not further spread of it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it vote, were required is in the course of ultimate extinction or its advocates will push it forward, till it shall become alike in all the states, old as well as new, to pay high taxes, and were thus forced North as well as South.3 to leave the state. Have we no tendency to the latter condition? 3. 1858: House Divided Speech
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Quoted in Richard Hofstadter, The American Political Tradition, Random House, New York, 1948, p. 111.