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Abraham Lincoln and slavery

Abraham Lincoln's position on slavery in the United States is one of the most discussed aspects of his life. Lincoln frequently expressed his moral opposition to slavery in public and private.[1] "I am naturally anti-slavery. If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong," he stated. "I can not remember when I did not so think, and feel."[2] However, the question of what to do about it and how to end it, given that it was so firmly embedded in the nation's constitutional framework and in the economy of much of the country, was complex and politically challenging. In addition, there was the unanswered question, which Lincoln had to deal with, of what would become of the four million slaves if liberated: how they would earn a living in a society that had almost always rejected them or looked down on their very presence.

Emancipation Memorial statue placed in Washington, D.C. in 1876

Evolution of Lincoln's policies edit

As early as the 1850s, Lincoln was attacked as an abolitionist.[3] But in 1860, he was attacked as not abolitionist enough: Wendell Phillips charged that, if elected, Lincoln would waste four years trying to decide whether to end slavery in the District of Columbia.[4] Many abolitionists emphasized the sinfulness of slave owners, but Lincoln did not.[5] Lincoln tended not to be judgmental. In his 1854 Peoria, Illinois, speech, he said, "I have no prejudice against the Southern people. They are just what we would be in their situation. If slavery did not now exist amongst them, they would not introduce it. If it did now exist amongst us, we should not instantly give it up."[6] In 1865, in his second inaugural address, he said, "It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men's faces; but let us judge not that we be not judged," and he urged "malice toward none" and "charity for all." Nonetheless, Lincoln suggested, God had judged the nation — "both North and South" — for the "offence" of slavery.[7][8]

Lincoln focused on what he saw as a more politically practical goal: preventing the expansion of slavery into the new Western territories, which, if it occurred, could lead to new slave states, and if it were prevented would eventually lead to slavery's demise.[9] He supported excluding slavery from territories with the failed Wilmot Proviso in the 1840s. His 1850s activism was in reaction to the 1854 Kansas–Nebraska Act, designed by his great rival, Illinois Senator Stephen A. Douglas. The Act was a radical departure[9] from the previous law of the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which had banned slavery from all new states north of the 36°30′ parallel (except for Missouri).[10] Lincoln suggested that if slavery were allowed to spread it would block free labor from settling in the new states and, as a result, the entire nation would soon become ever more dominated by slave owners.[11]

After Lincoln was elected, the departure of the Southern members of Congress made it finally possible to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia. The District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act of 1862 provided partial compensation to slave owners, paid out of federal funds.[12] Lincoln hoped to persuade the border states of Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and Missouri to do likewise, because that would eliminate their incentive to secede from the Union to join the Confederacy. Their secession might result both in the North losing the Civil War and in the continued existence of slavery.[13]

On September 22, 1862, having waited until the North won a significant victory in the battle at Antietam,[14] Lincoln used the power granted to the president under Article II, section 2, of the U.S. Constitution as "Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy" to issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. It provided that, on January 1, 1863, in the states still in rebellion, the enslaved people would be freed. On January 1, 1863, as promised, he issued the final Emancipation Proclamation, which declared "that all persons held as slaves" in "States and parts of States ... in rebellion against the United States" on that day "are, and henceforward shall be free."[15] The proclamation immediately freed on paper millions of the enslaved, but it had little practical effect until the Union Army was present. Week by week, as the army advanced, more slaves were liberated. The last were freed in Texas on "Juneteenth" (June 19, 1865),[16] which became a federal holiday on June 17, 2021.[17]

Although Lincoln stated in the Emancipation Proclamation that he "sincerely believed [it] to be an act of justice," he issued it as a "military necessity," because he believed that the U.S. Constitution would not permit it on any other basis. The Emancipation Proclamation was a war tactic, because by freeing enslaved people it deprived the South of labor, and it allowed African American people to "be received into the armed service of the United States." Lincoln worried about the consequences of his action, fearing an endemic racial divide in the nation.[18] Nonetheless, during his second presidential campaign, he ran on a platform to forever abolish slavery by constitutional amendment.

According to Michael Lind, Lincoln was for most of his life a moderate Northern mainstream white supremacist and proponent of black colonization abroad in Panama, Haiti, and Liberia. An ardent follower of Henry Clay, he envisioned an all-white United States without slavery.[19] Leading Lincoln scholars, however, do not see Lincoln as a white supremacist and view his support for voluntary colonization as intended at least in part to make emancipation more palatable to racist white people.[20] Until late in his life, Lincoln wanted human rights — the rights listed in the Declaration of Independence (life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness) and the natural right to eat the bread they earn with their own hands — for black people, but civil rights, such as the vote, "only on their own soil", that is in their own lands abroad, to which they moved pursuant to voluntary colonization.[21] Nonetheless, in 1864, writing to the governor of Louisiana,[22][23] and in 1865, in his last public speech, which led directly to his assassination, Lincoln supported voting rights in the United States for some African Americans. He was the first U.S. President to do so.[24][25]

Early years edit

Lincoln was born in a slave state on February 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky.[26] His family attended a Separate Baptists church, which had strict moral standards and opposed alcohol, dancing, and slavery.[27] The family moved north across the Ohio River to Indiana, where slavery was not allowed, and made a new start in then Perry, now Spencer County, Indiana. Lincoln later noted that this move was "partly on account of slavery" but mainly due to his father's problems with the unclear land title system in Kentucky.[28]

As a young man, he moved west to the free state of Illinois. On January 27, 1838, he delivered his Lyceum address to the Young Men's Lyceum of Springfield, Illinois, and in the address he spoke about slavery.[29] Seven weeks earlier, a mob in Alton, Illinois, across the river from St. Louis, Missouri, had killed Elijah Lovejoy, a Presbyterian minister and editor of a newspaper with strong anti-slavery views.[30] "The mood of Illinois when an angry mob killed Lovejoy was pro-slavery, but not only in Illinois. The state legislatures of Connecticut and New York in the mid-1830s passed resolutions stating that slavery was accepted in the U.S. Constitution and that no state had a right to interfere." Lincoln himself had been one of only six in the Illinois House of Representatives to vote against a resolution saying "That we highly disapprove of the formation of abolition societies ... That the right of property in slaves, is sacred ... That the General Government cannot abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, against the consent of the citizens of said District...." "Six weeks later, he and Representative Dan Stone filed a protest to the passage of the resolution—a rarely used device to register strong disagreement".[31]

In 1842, Lincoln married Mary Todd in Springfield, Illinois. She was the daughter of a slaveholder in Kentucky, but she never owned slaves herself and came to oppose slavery as an adult.[32][33]

1840s–1850s edit

Legal and political edit

Lincoln, the leader most associated with the end of slavery in the United States, came to national prominence in the 1850s, following the advent of the Republican Party, whose official position was that freedom was "national," the natural condition of all areas under the direct sovereignty of the Constitution, whereas slavery was "exceptional" and local.[34] Earlier, as a member of the Whig Party in the Illinois General Assembly, Lincoln issued a written protest of the Assembly's passage of a resolution stating that slavery should not be abolished in the District of Columbia.[35][36] In 1841, he won a court case (Bailey v. Cromwell), representing a black woman, Nance Legins-Costley, and her children who claimed she had already been freed and could not be sold as a slave.[37]

One of the earliest examples of Lincoln's written views on slavery comes from an 1845 letter Lincoln wrote to his friend Williamson Durley, concerning the annexation of Texas. In it, Lincoln said he took no position on annexation, but he added, "It is possibly true, to some extent, that with annexation, some slaves may be sent to Texas and continued in slavery, that otherwise might have been liberated. To whatever extent this may be true, I think annexation an evil." He then explained, "I hold it to be a paramount duty of us in the free states, due to the Union of the states, and perhaps to liberty itself (paradox though it may seem) to let the slavery of the other states alone; while, on the other hand, I hold it to be equally clear, that we should never knowingly lend ourselves directly or indirectly, to prevent that slavery from dying a natural death—to find new places for it to live in, when it can no longer exist in the old."[38] This view, that slavery would be most efficiently curtailed by preventing its expansion rather than by directing abolishing it, would be consistent for Lincoln throughout his political career leading up to his election as president in 1860.

In 1845, he successfully defended Marvin Pond (People v. Pond)[39] for harboring the fugitive slave John Hauley. In 1847, he lost a case (Matson v. Ashmore et al. for the use of Bryant) representing a slave owner (Robert Matson) seeking to recover fugitive slaves. Michael Burlingame writes, "Lincoln's agreement to represent Matson has been called ... the 'most profound mystery ever to confound Lincoln specialists'...." Burlingame speculates that, "despite his antislavery convictions, Lincoln accepted the Matson case in keeping with what became known in England as the 'cab-rank' rule—stipulating that lawyers must accept the first client who hails them—and with the prevailing Whig view that lawyers should try to settle disputes in an orderly fashion through the courts, trusting in the law and the judges to assure that justice was done."[40]

While a congressman from Illinois in 1846 to 1848, Lincoln supported the Wilmot Proviso, which, if it had been adopted, would have banned slavery in any U.S. territory won from Mexico.[41] Lincoln, in collaboration with abolitionist Congressman Joshua R. Giddings, wrote a bill to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia with compensation for the owners, enforcement to capture fugitive slaves, and a popular vote on the matter.[42][43] (Slavery in the District of Columbia was not ended until 1862, when Lincoln was president and there were no Southern senators.)

After leaving Congress in 1849 Lincoln largely ignored politics to concentrate on his law practice. He was drawn back by the firestorm over the Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854, which reversed the longstanding Missouri Compromise and allowed territories to decide for themselves whether they would allow slavery. Lincoln was morally opposed to slavery and politically opposed to any expansion of it. At issue was its extension into the western territories.[1] On October 16, 1854, in his Peoria speech, Lincoln declared his opposition to slavery, which he repeated as he sought the presidency.[44] Speaking in his Kentucky accent, with a very powerful voice,[45] he said that the Kansas-Nebraska Act's "declared indifference, but as I must think, covert real zeal for the spread of slavery, I can not but hate. I hate it because of the monstrous injustice of slavery itself. I hate it because it deprives our republican example of its just influence in the world."[46]

The United States Supreme Court's 1857 decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford appalled Lincoln. In the decision, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney held that blacks were not citizens and derived no rights from the Constitution. Although Taney hoped that Dred Scott would end all disputes over slavery in the favor of southern slaveholders,[47] the decision sparked further outrage in the North.[48] Lincoln denounced it as the product of a conspiracy to support the Slave Power[49] and believed that Dred Scott, together with the Kansas–Nebraska Act, could enable slavery to spread into the free states.[50] He argued the decision was at variance with the Declaration of Independence; he said that while the founding fathers did not believe all men equal in every respect, they believed all men were equal "in certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."[51]

Impressed by the strength of anti-black racism, especially in his home states of Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky, Lincoln concluded that, because whites would never allow blacks to live in America as equals, they would be better off migrating voluntarily to a colony outside the United States, ideally in Central America or the Caribbean.[52] He had little faith in the program of the American Colonization Society, whose goal was to colonize American blacks in Liberia, on the West African coast. In a speech at Peoria, Illinois[53] (transcribed after the fact by Lincoln himself),[52]: b  Lincoln pointed out the immense difficulties of such a task as an obstacle to finding an easy way to quickly end slavery.[52]: c [54] In a debate in August 1858, he said:[55][56]

If all earthly power were given to me, ... [m]y first impulse would be to free all the slaves, and send them to Liberia, — to their own native land. But a moment's reflection would convince me that whatever of high hope (as I think there is) there may be in this, in the long run, its sudden execution is impossible.

According to historian Paul Escott, Lincoln favored a system of gradual emancipation that would allow for controlled management of free Negroes.[56] Nonetheless, Lincoln was instrumental in forging antislavery voters into a potent political movement.[57]

Letter to Joshua Speed edit

In 1854, Lincoln wrote to Joshua Speed, a personal friend and slave owner in Kentucky:[58]

You know I dislike slavery, and you fully admit the abstract wrong of it.... I also acknowledge your rights and my obligations under the Constitution in regard to your slaves. I confess I hate to see the poor creatures hunted down and caught and carried back to their stripes and unrequited toil; but I bite my lip and keep quiet. In 1841 you and I had together a tedious low-water trip, on a steamboat from Louisville to St. Louis. You may remember, as I well do, that from Louisville to the mouth of the Ohio, there were, on board ten or a dozen slaves shackled together with irons. That sight was a continued torment to me, and I see something like it every time I touch the Ohio or any other slave border. It is not fair for you to assume that I have no interest in a thing which has, and continually exercises, the power of making me miserable. You ought rather to appreciate how much the great body of the Northern people do crucify their feelings, in order to maintain their loyalty to the Constitution and the Union.... How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid. As a nation we began by declaring that "all men are created equal." We now practically read it "all men are created equal, except negroes." When the Know-nothings get control, it will read "all men are created equal, except negroes and foreigners and Catholics." When it comes to this, I should prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretence of loving liberty,—to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy.

Lincoln–Douglas debates edit

Many of Lincoln's public anti-slavery sentiments were presented in the seven Lincoln–Douglas debates against his opponent, Stephen Douglas, during Lincoln's unsuccessful campaign for a seat in the U.S. Senate (which was decided by the Illinois legislature). Douglas advocated "popular sovereignty" and self-government, which would give the citizens of a territory the right to decide if slavery would be legal there.[59] Douglas criticized Lincoln as being inconsistent, saying he altered his message and position on slavery and on the political rights of freed blacks in order to appeal to the audience before him, as northern Illinois was more hostile to slavery than southern Illinois.

Lincoln stated that Negroes had the rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" in the first of the Lincoln–Douglas debates, saying:

there is no reason in the world why the negro is not entitled to all the natural rights enumerated in the Declaration of Independence, the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. I hold that he is as much entitled to these as the white man. I agree with Judge Douglas he is not my equal in many respects-certainly not in color, perhaps not in moral or intellectual endowment. But in the right to eat the bread, without the leave of anybody else, which his own hand earns, he is my equal and the equal of Judge Douglas, and the equal of every living man."[60]

Publicly, Lincoln said he was not advocating Negro suffrage in speeches both in Columbus, Ohio, on September 16, 1859,[52]: d  and in Charleston, Illinois, on September 18, 1858, stating on the latter date:

I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black races [applause]—that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people; and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will for ever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race. I say upon this occasion I do not perceive that because the white man is to have the superior position the negro should be denied every thing. I do not understand that because I do not want a negro woman for a slave I must necessarily want her for a wife. My understanding is that I can just let her alone. I am now in my fiftieth year, and I certainly never have had a black woman for either a slave or a wife.[61]

This might have been a strategy speech used to gain voters, as Douglas had accused Lincoln of favoring negroes too much as well.[62]

A fragment from Lincoln dated October 1, 1858, refuting theological arguments by Frederick Augustus Ross in favor of slavery, reads in part, "As a good thing, slavery is strikingly perculiar [sic], in this, that it is the only good thing which no man ever seeks the good of, for himself. Nonsense! Wolves devouring lambs, not because it is good for their own greedy maws, but because it is good for the lambs!!!"[63][64]

Constitutional arguments edit

Two diametrically opposed anti-slavery positions emerged regarding the United States Constitution. The Garrisonians emphasized that the document permitted and protected slavery and was therefore "an agreement with hell" that should be rejected in favor of immediate emancipation. Lincoln deeply supported the Constitution and rejected this position. Instead, he adopted and promoted the mainstream anti-slavery position of the new Republican party. It argued that the Constitution could and should be used to eventually end slavery, but that the Constitution gave the national government no authority to abolish slavery in the states directly. However, multiple tactics were available to support the long-term strategy of using the Constitution as a battering ram against the peculiar institution. First, Congress could block the admission of any new slave states. That would steadily move the balance of power in Congress and the Electoral College in favor of freedom. Congress could abolish slavery in the District of Columbia and the territories. Congress could use the Commerce Clause to end the interstate slave trade, thereby crippling the steady movement of slavery from the economically stagnant southeast to the growing southwest. Congress could recognize free blacks as full citizens and insist on due process rights to protect fugitive slaves from being captured and returned to bondage. Finally, the government could use patronage powers to promote the anti-slavery cause across the country, especially in the border states. Pro-slavery elements considered the Republican strategy to be much more dangerous to their cause than radical abolitionism, and Lincoln's election was met by secession. Indeed, the Republican strategy mapped the "crooked path to abolition" that prevailed during the Civil War.[65][66]

1860 Republican presidential nomination edit

 
"The Rail Candidate": Lincoln's 1860 candidacy is depicted as held up by the slavery issue—a slave on the left and party organization on the right.

The Republican Party was committed to restricting the growth of slavery, and its victory in the election of 1860 was the trigger for secession by Southern states. The debate before 1860 was mainly focused on the Western territories, especially Kansas and the popular sovereignty controversy.

Lincoln was nominated as the Republican candidate for president in the election of 1860. Lincoln was opposed to the expansion of slavery into the territories, but agreed with nearly all Americans, including most radical abolitionists, that the federal government was prevented by the Constitution from abolishing slavery in states where it already existed. His plan was to halt the spread of slavery and to offer monetary compensation to slave owners in states that agreed to gradually end slavery (see Compensated emancipation). He was considered a moderate within the Republican party in taking the position that slavery should be put on a course of "ultimate extinction" with the help of the federal government.

As President-elect in 1860 and 1861 edit

In a letter to Senator Lyman Trumbull on December 10, 1860, Lincoln wrote, "Let there be no compromise on the question of extending slavery."[67][68] In a letter to John A. Gilmer of North Carolina of December 15, 1860, which was soon published in newspapers, Lincoln wrote that the "only substantial difference" between North and South was that "You think slavery is right and ought to be extended; we think it is wrong and ought to be restricted." Lincoln repeated this statement in a letter to Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia on December 22, 1860.[69][70][71]

On December 15, 1860, Kentucky Senator John J. Crittenden proposed the Crittenden Compromise, a series of constitutional amendments intended to coax the Confederate states into returning to the Union. President-elect Lincoln rejected the Crittenden Compromise out of hand because it would have permitted the expansion of slavery, stating "I will suffer death before I will consent or will advise my friends to consent to any concession or compromise which looks like buying the privilege of taking possession of this government to which we have a constitutional right."[72]

On February 22, 1861, at a speech in Independence Hall, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Lincoln reconfirmed that his convictions sprang from the sentiment expressed in the Declaration of Independence, which was also the basis of the continued existence of the United States since that time, namely, the "principle or idea" "in that Declaration giving liberty, not alone to the people of this country, but hope to the world for all future time. (Great applause.) It was that which gave promise that in due time the weights should be lifted from the shoulders of all men, and that all should have an equal chance. (Cheers.)"[73][74][75]

Presidency (1861–1865) edit

Corwin amendment edit

The proposed Corwin amendment was passed by Congress before Lincoln became President and was ratified by three states but was abandoned once the Civil War began. It would have reaffirmed what historians call the Federal Consensus—the nearly universal belief that under the Constitution the federal government had no power to abolish slavery in a state where it already existed. In his First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861, Lincoln explained that while he had not seen the amendment and took no position on amendments in general, "holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable."[76][77][78] The Corwin amendment was a late attempt at reconciliation but it was doomed to fail because southerners knew that it would not stop the federal government from adopting a host of antislavery policies that did not violate the Federal Consensus.[79][80] Most significantly, the Corwin amendment would not have interfered with Lincoln's plan to ban the expansion of slavery into the federal territories, which was one of the main points of contention between pro- and anti-slavery factions.[81]

Building a demand for emancipation edit

Lincoln's long-term goal was to apply federal pressure on the slave states to get them to abolish slavery on their own, beginning with the four loyal, non-seceding border states of Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and Missouri. But he also warned that if the slave states seceded from the Union they would forfeit the constitutional protection of slavery, including any claim to the recovery of their fugitive slaves.

The American Civil War began in April 1861, and by the end of May the Lincoln administration approved a policy of not returning fugitive slaves who came within Union lines from disloyal states. Such slaves were deemed "contraband of war," or "contrabands." On August 6, 1861, Congress declared the forfeiture of contraband to be permanent by passing the first of the Confiscation Acts, and two days later Lincoln's War Department issued instructions emancipating all the slaves who came within Union lines from disloyal states or owners. By the end of the year thousands of slaves were being emancipated.

So as not to alienate the border states, Lincoln was careful to ensure that his generals followed the letter of the law. He encouraged General James K. Lane in western Missouri to emancipate thousands of slaves of disloyal masters who came voluntarily within his lines. But in eastern Missouri, when General John C. Frémont issued a decree emancipating the slaves of disloyal owners in areas the Union did not control, Lincoln ordered the general to revise his decree to conform with the law. Lincoln promoted Lane to brigadier general but would later fire Frémont for corruption and military incompetence. In western Missouri, Lincoln replaced Frémont with an abolitionist general, David Hunter. The care Lincoln took to distinguish legal from extralegal emancipation was reaffirmed in May 1862, after Hunter issued two emancipation proclamations covering the areas his troops recently occupied "along the Carolina, Georgia, and Florida coast."[82] The first proclamation, which was legal, freed "all persons of color lately held to involuntary servitude by enemies of the United States."[83] The second proclamation declared all the slaves in Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina "to be 'forever free,' not just those belonging to disloyal masters."[84] That second proclamation, like Frémont's, went beyond the law, and Lincoln reversed it, as he had Frémont's.

After revoking Hunter's attempt at emancipation, Lincoln issued a statement explaining that Hunter had issued his proclamation without Lincoln's knowledge or approval, and the authority to free slaves in the rebel states was held only by the President, not his generals. He concluded by referring to a congressional resolution passed in March that stated the federal government's intent to provide compensation to assist states that were willing to voluntarily abolish slavery and encouraged all slave states to come up with a plan to carry it out.[85]

By the end of 1861 tens of thousands of slaves were emancipated as they crossed into Union lines at Fort Monroe, Virginia, the Sea Islands off South Carolina, and in western Missouri. In December the Lincoln administration announced its emancipation policy in a series of annual reports by the president and by several of his cabinet secretaries. By January Lincoln himself declared that no federal authority, civil or military, could legally return fugitive slaves to their owners.[86] By then the sentiment for a more radical approach to emancipation had been building, and in July Congress authorized the president to issue a more general emancipation proclamation, freeing all the slaves in all areas in rebellion. A few days after Lincoln signed the law—known as the Second Confiscation Act—he drafted the first version of what would become his Emancipation Proclamation.

Because the Constitution could sanction emancipation only under the president's war powers,[87] freeing slaves could be justified only as a means of suppressing the Southern rebellion and winning the war. As a result, until the very end of the war, Lincoln claimed that the purpose of the war was the restoration of the Union. Southern leaders denounced Lincoln as a bloodthirsty revolutionary whose emancipation policies proved that the secessionists were right all along about those they labeled "Black Republicans." Northern Democrats, meanwhile, denied that emancipation was a "military necessity," as Lincoln and the Republicans claimed it was. But Lincoln never deviated from his official position, that because the Constitution recognized slavery in the states, the only constitutional justification for freeing slaves was military necessity.

All throughout 1862, the Lincoln administration took several direct actions against slavery. On April 16, Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, which abolished slavery in Washington, D.C. Two months later, on June 19, Congress banned slavery in all federal territories, fulfilling Lincoln's 1860 campaign promise to ban the expansion of slavery.[88] On July 17, Congress passed the second of the Confiscation Acts. While the initial act did not make any determination on the final status of escaped slaves who fled to Union lines, the Second Confiscation act did, stating that escaped or liberated slaves belonging to anyone who participated in or supported the rebellion "shall be deemed captives of war, and shall be forever free of their servitude, and not again held as slaves." The act also prohibited anyone in the military from returning escaped slaves to their masters, even if the slaves had escaped from a Union slave state.[89]

Letter to Greeley edit

On August 22, 1862, Lincoln published a letter in response to an editorial titled "The Prayer of Twenty Millions" by Horace Greeley of the New-York Tribune, in which the editor asked why Lincoln had not yet issued an emancipation proclamation, as he was authorized to do by the Second Confiscation Act. In his reply Lincoln differentiated between "my view of official duty"—that is, what he can do in his official capacity as President—and his personal views. Officially he must save the Union above all else; personally he wanted to free all the slaves:[90]

I would save the Union. I would save it the shortest way under the Constitution. The sooner the national authority can be restored; the nearer the Union will be "the Union as it was." If there be those who would not save the Union, unless they could at the same time save slavery, I do not agree with them. If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time destroy slavery, I do not agree with them. My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union. I shall do less whenever I shall believe what I am doing hurts the cause, and I shall do more whenever I shall believe doing more will help the cause. I shall try to correct errors when shown to be errors; and I shall adopt new views so fast as they shall appear to be true views. I have here stated my purpose according to my view of official duty; and I intend no modification of my oft-expressed personal wish that all men everywhere could be free.

At the time that Lincoln published this letter, he seemingly had already chosen the third of the three options he named: He was waiting for a Union victory to issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, which would announce that he would free some but not all the slaves on January 1, 1863. Nevertheless, "From mid-October to mid-November 1862, he sent personal envoys to Louisiana, Tennessee, and Arkansas. His envoys bore tidings" that "[i]f citizens desired 'to avoid the unsatisfactory' terms of the Final Emancipation Proclamation 'and to have peace again on the old terms' (i.e., with slavery intact), they should rally ... to vote in an 'election of members of the members of the Congress of the United States'...."[91] Thus, Lincoln may not have ruled out the first option he expressed to Greeley: saving the Union without freeing any slave.

Emancipation Proclamation edit

 
1864 Reproduction of Emancipation Proclamation

Just one month after writing this letter, Lincoln issued his preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, which announced that, on January 1, 1863, he would, under his war powers, free all slaves in states still in rebellion. Lincoln scholar Harold Holzer wrote: "Unknown to Greeley, Lincoln composed this [the letter to Greeley] after he had already drafted a preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, which he had determined to issue after the next Union military victory. Therefore, this letter was, in truth, an attempt to position the impending announcement in terms of saving the Union, not freeing slaves as a humanitarian gesture. It was one of Lincoln's most skillful public relations efforts, even if it has cast longstanding doubt on his sincerity as a liberator."[92] Historian Richard Striner argues that "for years" Lincoln's letter has been misread as "Lincoln only wanted to save the Union."[93] However, within the context of Lincoln's entire career and pronouncements on slavery this interpretation is wrong, according to Striner. Rather, Lincoln was softening the strong Northern white supremacist opposition to his imminent emancipation by tying it to the cause of the Union. This opposition would fight for the Union but not to end slavery, so Lincoln gave them the means and motivation to do both at the same time.[93] In his 2014 book, Lincoln's Gamble, journalist and historian Todd Brewster asserted that Lincoln's desire to reassert the saving of the Union as his sole war goal was in fact crucial to his claim of legal authority for emancipation. Since slavery was protected by the Constitution, the only way that he could free the slaves was as a tactic of war—not for its own sake.[94] But that carried the risk that when the war ended, so would the justification for freeing the slaves. Late in 1862, Lincoln asked his Attorney General, Edward Bates, for an opinion as to whether slaves freed through a war-related proclamation of emancipation could be re-enslaved once the war was over. Bates had to work through the language of the Dred Scott decision to arrive at an answer, but he finally concluded that they could indeed remain free. Still, a complete end to slavery would require a constitutional amendment.[95]

But a constitutional amendment has to be ratified by three-fourths of the states. There were too many slave states and not enough free states for a constitutional amendment to be ratified, so even as he was preparing to issue his Emancipation Proclamation he proposed a series of constitutional amendments that would make it easier for the federal government to pressure states to abolish slavery on their own, including compensation, a gradual timetable for abolition, and subsidies for blacks willing to colonize themselves outside the United States. None of those constitutional amendments came close to passage. But by 1863 Lincoln had other ways of pressuring the state to abolish slavery: By refusing to return slaves who escaped from loyal masters in loyal states, and by enlisting slaves from loyal states into the Union Army with the promise of emancipation, the Lincoln administration systematically undermined slavery in many of the Southern states.

Lincoln had begun pressuring the border states to abolish slavery in November 1861, with no success. In 1862 he began to warn the states that if they did not abolish slavery on their own, the institution would succumb to the "incidents of war" and would be undermined by "mere friction and abrasion".[96] But the abrasion was no mere incident; it was the policy of emancipation. Beginning in mid-1863 Lincoln intensified the pressure on all the slave states, and in early 1864 the policy began to pay off. Between January 1864 and January 1865, three slave states abolished slavery, all under intense pressure from the federal government. By the time the House of Representatives sent the Thirteenth Amendment to the states for ratification, the ratio of free to slave states was 27:9, or the needed three-quarters.

West Virginia edit

Early in the war, several counties of Virginia that were loyal to the Union formed the Restored Government of Virginia and applied for statehood for part of western Virginia into the Union as a new state. Lincoln required West Virginia to have a constitutional plan for gradual emancipation as a condition of statehood. In response, West Virginia passed the Willey Amendment, which declared "The children of slaves born within the limits of this State after the fourth day of July, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, shall be free; and all slaves within this state who shall, at the time aforesaid, be under the age of ten years, shall be free when they arrive at the age of twenty-one years; and all slaves over ten and under twenty-one years shall be free when they arrive at the age of twenty-five years; and no slave shall be permitted to come into the State for permanent residence therein."[97] Lincoln considered this satisfactory, writing, "the admission of the new state, turns that much slave soil to free; and thus, is a certain, and irrevocable encroachment upon the cause of the rebellion."[98] West Virginia was granted statehood on June 20, 1863, and went on to fully abolish slavery on February 3, 1865, roughly three months before the end of the war.[99]

Conkling letter edit

Lincoln came to appreciate the role that black troops played in this process. In the end some 180,000 blacks served in the Union Army, a disproportionate number of them from the states that ended up abolishing slavery. He made his feeling clear in an eloquent letter a year later to James C. Conkling on August 26, 1863.[100][101]

The war has certainly progressed as favorably for us, since the issue of proclamation as before. I know as fully as one can know the opinions of others, that some of the commanders of our armies in the field who have given us our most important successes, believe the emancipation policy, and the use of the colored troops, constitute the heaviest blow yet dealt to the rebellion; and that, at least one of those important successes, could not have been achieved when it was, but for the aid of black soldiers. Among the commanders holding these views are some who have never had any affinity with what is called abolitionism, or with republican party politics; but who hold them purely as military opinions. I submit these opinions as being entitled to some weight against the objections, often urged, that emancipation, and arming the blacks, are unwise as military measures, and were not adopted, as such, in good faith.

You say you will not fight to free negroes. Some of them seem willing to fight for you; but, no matter. Fight you, then, exclusively to save the Union. I issued the proclamation on purpose to aid you in saving the Union. Whenever you shall have conquered all resistance to the Union, if I shall urge you to continue fighting, it will be an apt time, then, for you to declare you will not fight to free negroes.

I thought that in your struggle for the Union, to whatever extent the negroes should cease helping the enemy, to that extent it weakened the enemy in his resistance to you. Do you think differently? I thought that whatever negroes can be got to do as soldiers, leaves just so much less for white soldiers to do, in saving the Union. Does it appear otherwise to you? But negroes, like other people, act upon motives. Why should they do any thing for us, if we will do nothing for them? If they stake their lives for us, they must be prompted by the strongest motive—even the promise of freedom. And the promise being made, must be kept.... [When peace comes] then, there will be some black men who can remember that, with silent tongue, and clenched teeth, and steady eye, and well-poised bayonet, they have helped mankind on to this great consummation; while, I fear, there will be some white ones, unable to forget that, with malignant heart, and deceitful speech, they strove to hinder it.

The Conkling letter was dated August 26, 1863, the month after two great Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, but also at a time when Americans were reading the first reports of black troops fighting courageously in battles at Milliken's Bend and Battery Wagner. It was also in the summer of 1863 that Lincoln initiated his intensified effort to get various slave states to abolish slavery on their own.

Lincoln addresses the changes to his positions and actions regarding emancipation in an 1864 letter to Albert G. Hodges.[102][103] In that letter, Lincoln states his moral opposition to slavery, writing, "I am naturally anti-slavery. If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I can not remember when I did not so think, and feel. And yet I have never understood that the Presidency conferred upon me an unrestricted right to act officially upon this judgment and feeling." Lincoln further explained that he had eventually determined that military emancipation and the enlistment of black soldiers were necessary for the preservation of the Union, which was his responsibility as president.

Having won re-election to the presidency in November 1864 on a platform of abolishing slavery, Lincoln and several members of his cabinet embarked on a sustained lobbying effort to get the abolition amendment through the House of Representatives. The amendment abolishing slavery everywhere in the United States was ratified by every state that had abolished slavery during the war, and it became part of the Constitution on December 6, 1865.

Reconstruction edit

On December 8, 1863, Lincoln used his war powers to issue a "Proclamation for Amnesty and Reconstruction", which offered Southern states a chance to peacefully rejoin the Union if they abolished slavery and collected loyalty oaths from 10 percent of their voting population.[104] Before the end of the war, Louisiana.[105] Arkansas,[106] Maryland,[107] Missouri,[108] Tennessee,[109] and West Virginia,[110] abolished slavery.[111] In addition, the Union loyalist, Restored government of Virginia, abolished slavery before the end of the war.[112]

On June 28, 1864, President Lincoln signed into law Congress's repeal of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.[113]

As Lincoln began to be concerned about the 1864 presidential election and the potential for a new administration that would end the war without emancipation, he turned to Frederick Douglass. He said, according to Douglass, "I want you to set about devising some means of making them [slaves] acquainted with it [the Emancipation Proclamation], and for bringing them into our lines,"[114] thereby making emancipation an accomplished fact before a potential next administration could take office.[115]

Thirteenth Amendment edit

When Lincoln accepted the nomination for the Union party for president in June 1864, he called for the first time for the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, to immediately abolish slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime. He wrote in his letter of acceptance that "it would make a fitting and necessary conclusion" to the war and would permanently join the causes of "Liberty and Union." He won re-election on this platform in November, and in December, 1864, Lincoln worked to have the House approve the amendment.[116]

When the House passed the 13th amendment on January 31, 1865, Lincoln signed the amendment, although this was not a legal requirement, and said in a speech the next day, "He thought all would bear him witness that he had never shrunk from doing all that he could to eradicate slavery by issuing an emancipation proclamation." He pointed out that the emancipation proclamation did not complete the task of eradicating slavery; "But this amendment is a King's cure for all the evils [of slavery]."[117][118][119][120]

Second inaugural address edit

Lincoln, having gotten the constitutional amendment to abolish slavery through Congress, began his second term. He discussed slavery throughout his second inaugural address, describing it as not only the cause of the Civil War, but claiming that, as an offense to God, it drew God's righteous judgment against the entire nation.[121][122]

One eighth of the whole population were colored slaves, not distributed generally over the Union, but localized in the Southern part of it. These slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All knew that this interest was, somehow, the cause of the war.... It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men's faces; but let us judge not that we be not judged.... The Almighty has His own purposes. "Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!" [ Matthew 18:7 ] If we shall suppose that American Slavery is one of those offences which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but which, having continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both North and South, this terrible war, as the woe due to those by whom the offence came.... Fondly do we hope — fervently do we pray — that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue, until all the wealth piled by the bond-man's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said "the judgments of the Lord, are true and righteous altogether." [ Psalms 19:9 ][123]

Compensated emancipation: buy out the slave owners edit

The Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery, provided no compensation to slave owners, but previously, President Lincoln had made numerous proposals to the loyal border states to agree to "compensated emancipation." None did. The only area of the country that would ever receive compensated emancipation would be Washington, D.C. Because Washington, D.C., was under federal jurisdiction, Congress was able pass the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act.

President Lincoln advocated that slave owners be compensated for emancipated slaves. On March 6, 1862, President Lincoln, in a message to the U.S. Congress, proposed that Congress adopt a Joint Resolution stating that "any state which may adopt gradual abolishment of slavery" should be given "pecuniary aid ... to compensate for the inconveniences public and private, produced by such a change of system".[124] Congress adopted the resolution.[125] On July 12, 1862, President Lincoln, in a conference with congressmen from the four border states of Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware, and Missouri, urged that their respective states adopt emancipation legislation that compensated slave owners. On July 14, 1862, President Lincoln sent a bill to Congress that allowed the Treasury to issue bonds at 6% interest to states for slave emancipation compensation to slave owners. The bill never came to a vote.[126][127]

In the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, issued on September 22, 1862, Lincoln stated, "That it is my purpose, upon the next meeting of Congress to again recommend ... tendering pecuniary aid to the free acceptance of all slave-states, so called, the people whereof may not then be in rebellion against the United States, and which states, may then have voluntarily adopted, or thereafter may voluntarily adopt, immediate, or gradual abolishment of slavery...."[128]

In his December 1, 1862, Annual Message to Congress, Lincoln proposed a constitutional amendment that would provide federal compensation, in the form of interest-bearing U.S. bonds, to any state that voluntarily abolished slavery before the year 1900.[129] It also provided, "Any State having received bonds ... and afterwards reintroducing or tolerating slavery therein, shall refund to the United States the bonds so received, or the value thereof, and all interest paid thereon." Giving the states the option to reintroduce slavery meant that Lincoln was offering to end the war without slavery ever permanently ending.

As late as the Hampton Roads Conference in 1865, Lincoln met with Confederate leaders and proposed a "fair indemnity," possibly $500,000,000, in compensation for emancipated slaves.[130]

Colonization edit

 
One of several failed colonization attempts during Lincoln's presidency was on the Île à Vache, off the coast of Haiti.

Like many self-styled moderates, Abraham Lincoln supported the voluntary colonization (resettlement) of African Americans outside the United States, notably in Liberia. Historians have disputed his motivation, with scholars such as James McPherson, David Reynolds, and Allen Guelzo arguing that Lincoln advocated colonization of the freedpeople in order to assuage racist concerns about the Emancipation Proclamation.[131][132][133] Other historians, such as Phillip W. Magness, Richard Blackett, Phillip Paludan, and Mark E. Neely, Jr., have challenged that contention by highlighting the quiet, even secretive basis of most of Lincoln's colonization activity; the lack of falsifiability to any unsubstantiated claim that historical actors did not mean what they said; and the inadequacy, for a deportationist target audience, of Lincoln's adherence to African American consent.[134][135][136][137] The author of the one book-length study of black colonization during the Civil War era, Sebastian N. Page, argues that Lincoln believed in colonization to his death, but that the policy failed due to the corruption, controversy, and the inadequate African American interest that it generated.[138]

Antebellum Activity (to 1861) edit

Probably present at the 1845 founding of a short-lived Illinois auxiliary to the American Colonization Society (ACS), Lincoln had helped transfer a donation to the latter during his residency in Washington, D.C., as a member of the Thirtieth Congress. In 1852, he made his first recorded remarks on African American resettlement in a eulogy for the president of the ACS (and national statesman), Henry Clay. The next year, he helped an Indiana colonizationist, James Mitchell, who had come to Springfield, Illinois, to rekindle that state's colonization movement.[139] In 1854, in his Peoria speech, Lincoln articulated two motifs of his support for colonization: first, the unwillingness of "the great mass of white people" to accept black equality, and second, on a note of qualification, Liberia's liability to be overwhelmed by any sizable influx of immigrants.[140][141] Accordingly, he supported the colonization program of Francis Preston Blair and his sons Frank and Montgomery (until 1860, better-known Republicans than Lincoln), who rejected Liberia in favor of closer destinations in the American tropics.[142][143]

Wartime Provisions (1861-62) edit

In his first annual message to Congress (now known as the State of the Union Address), of December 3, 1861, Lincoln advised Congress to provide for the colonization of free African American people, even if it required the United States to acquire further territory. He encouraged the Thirty-Seventh Congress's insertion of voluntary colonization clauses into its District Emancipation and Second Confiscation Acts, intimating that he would not sign those bills unless they contained such a provision. Once Congress had passed this legislation, which it reinforced with a $600,000 fund for colonization, Lincoln appointed his old collaborator, James Mitchell, to an ad hoc position within the Department of the Interior. Together, they arranged his famous meeting of August 14, 1862, with a deputation of black Washingtonians, whom he told, "without the institution of Slavery and the colored race as a basis, the war could not have an existence. It is better for us both, therefore, to be separated." Civil War historian Jonathan W. White wrote of this meeting, "Few moments in Lincoln’s presidency appear as regrettable as this one.... Lincoln’s words were terribly condescending."[144] Lincoln biographer Michael Burlingame took a more favorable view of Lincoln's remarks to his visitors, finding one statement "remarkably empathetic."[145]

During a series of three cabinet meetings of late September 1862, Lincoln rebuffed Attorney General Edward Bates's suggestion of compulsory colonization, but decided to ask Congress, in his second annual message of December 1, 1862, to pass an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to promote black resettlement by treaty with putative host states. Legislators' lack of response drove Lincoln thereafter to his own public silence on colonization, though he quietly continued to pursue colonization schemes, and in two waves.[146]

First-wave schemes: "contract colonies" in Latin America (1861-1864) edit

The president's two best-known colonization projects, Linconia (in Chiriquí Province, today in Panama) and the Île-à-Vache (Haiti), would both fail, albeit at different stages of their development, because of Lincoln's initial proclivity for pursuing colonization through U.S.- based concessionaires rather than the sovereign states that had granted them their leases.[147]

For over a year from October 1861, Lincoln hoped to found a black colony in the Chiriquí district of what is now Panama, then an outlying part of Colombia. The settlers would mine coal to supply the U.S. Navy, and might even secure isthmian transit from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The president appointed the U.S. senator for Kansas, Samuel Pomeroy, to lead the expedition and choose pioneers from the 13,700 African Americans who applied to join him. Lincoln also signed a contract with Ambrose W. Thompson, the leaseholder of the tract in question, which allowed for tens of thousands of African Americans to immigrate. The secretary of the interior, Caleb B. Smith, also issued Pomeroy $25,000 from the colonization fund, to pay for transportation and equipment.[148]

Lincoln suspended the project in early October 1862, before a single ship had sailed, ostensibly because of diplomatic protests by the governments of Central America, but really because of the uncertainty caused by the Colombian Civil War. The president hoped to overcome these complications by having Congress provide for a treaty with Colombia for African American emigration, much as he outlined in his second annual message, but he shelved the Chiriquí project over the New Year of 1863 when he learned that its stakeholders included not only a personal friend, Richard W. Thompson, but also the new secretary of the interior, John P. Usher.[149][148][150]

By way of substitute, on New Year's Eve, 1862, Lincoln arranged with a New Orleans businessman, Bernard Kock, to establish a colony on the Île-à-Vache, an island off Haiti. Although the White House subsequently remade the agreement with more trustworthy partners than Kock, the new contractors retained Kock as the supervisor of the settlement, for which more than 400 freed slaves sailed from Fort Monroe, Virginia. Lack of shelter on the island, an outbreak of smallpox, and an ever-growing mistrust between the administration and its contractors doomed the colony. In February 1864, at Lincoln's behest, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton dispatched a vessel to rescue the survivors.[151][152][153]

Second-Wave Schemes: Emigration to the European West Indies (1862-1864) edit

A critic of the "contract colonies," the commissioner of emigration, James Mitchell, encouraged Abraham Lincoln to promote African American emigration to British Honduras (Belize) and the British West Indies at large. Separately, the U.S. minister to the Netherlands, James Shepherd Pike, negotiated a treaty for black resettlement in the Dutch West Indies (Suriname). Lincoln believed that by dealing with the comparatively stable European empires, he could avoid some of the problems that had plagued his earlier contracts with private interests.[154][155]

Lincoln signed an agreement on June 13, 1863, with John Hodge of British Honduras, which authorized colonial agents to recruit ex-slaves and transport them to Belize from the approved ports of Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston. Later that year the Department of the Interior sent John Willis Menard, a free African American clerk who supported colonization, to investigate the site for the government. The scheme petered out when John Usher refused to release funds to the would-be pioneers of Henry Highland Garnet's African Civilization Society and when the British Colonial Office banned the recruitment of "contraband" freedpeople for fear that the Confederacy would deem this a hostile act.[156][157]

Final disposition of colonization (1864-65) edit

The question of when Lincoln abandoned colonization, if ever, has aroused debate among historians. The government funded no more colonies after the rescue of the Ile à Vache survivors in early 1864, and Congress repealed most of the colonization funding that July.[158][159][160]

Lincoln left no surviving statements in his own hand on the subject during the last two years of his presidency. An entry in the diary of presidential secretary John Hay, dated July 1, 1864, claims that Lincoln had "sloughed off" colonization, though attributes that change to the president's frustration with corrupt contractors rather than to any philosophical departure.[161] In the fall of 1864, Lincoln wrote Attorney General Edward Bates to inquire whether the legislation of 1862 allowed him to continue pursuing colonization and to retain Mitchell's services irrespective of the loss of funding.[162][163] General Benjamin F. Butler claimed that Lincoln approached him in 1865, a few days before his assassination, to talk about reviving colonization in Panama.[164] Since the mid-twentieth century, historians have debated the validity of Butler's account, as Butler wrote it years after the fact and was prone to exaggerating his prowess as a general.[165] Recently discovered documents prove that Butler and Lincoln did indeed meet on April 11, 1865, though whether and to what extent they talked about colonization is not recorded except in Butler's account.[166]

A postwar article by Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles suggested that Lincoln intended to revive colonization in his second term.[167][168]

Citizenship and limited suffrage edit

In his second term as president, on April 11, 1865, Lincoln gave his last public speech. In it, for the first time publicly, he promoted voting rights for some blacks, stating "It is also unsatisfactory to some that the elective franchise is not given to the colored man. I would myself prefer that it were now conferred on the very intelligent, and on those who serve our cause as soldiers."[169][170] John Wilkes Booth, a Southerner and outspoken Confederate sympathizer, attended the speech and became determined to kill Lincoln for supporting citizenship for blacks.[171] Booth assassinated Lincoln three days later.[172]

In analyzing Lincoln's position historian Eugene H. Berwanger notes:[173]

During his presidency, Lincoln took a reasoned course which helped the federal government both destroy slavery and advance the cause of black suffrage. For a man who had denied both reforms four years earlier, Lincoln's change in attitude was rapid and decisive. He was both open-minded and perceptive to the needs of his nation in a postwar era. Once committed to a principle, Lincoln moved toward it with steady, determined progress.

Views on African Americans edit

Known as the Great Emancipator, Lincoln was a complicated figure who wrestled with his own views on race.[174] Through changing times, successive generations have interpreted Lincoln's views on African Americans differently. According to Henry Louis Gates Jr.: "To apply 20th century beliefs and standards to an America of 1858 and declare Abraham Lincoln a 'racist' is a faulty formula that unfairly distorts Lincoln's true role in advancing civil and human rights. By the standards of his time, Lincoln's views on race and equality were progressive and truly changed minds, policy and most importantly, hearts for years to come."[174]

Lincoln's primary audience was white (male) voters. Lincoln's views on slavery, race equality, and African-American colonization are often intermixed.[174] During the 1858 debates with Stephen Douglas, Lincoln stated that the "physical difference between the white and black races ... will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality". He added that "there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I, as much as any other man, am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race."[174] On August 22, 1862, he said to a delegation of five black men whom he'd invited to the White House:

You and we are different races. We have between us a broader difference than exists between almost any other two races. Whether it is right or wrong I need not discuss, but this physical difference is a great disadvantage to us both, as I think your race suffer very greatly, many of them by living among us, while ours suffer from your presence. In a word we suffer on each side.[175]

While president, as the Civil War progressed, Lincoln advocated or implemented anti-slavery policies, including the Emancipation Proclamation and limited suffrage for African Americans, which he had earlier opposed.[174] Former slave and leading abolitionist Frederick Douglass unequivocally regarded Lincoln as sharing "the prejudices of his white fellow-countrymen against the Negro",[176] but also observed of Lincoln that "in his company, I was never reminded of my humble origin, or of my unpopular color."[177] According to Douglass, Lincoln "was preeminently the white man's President" and also, "emphatically the black man’s President: the first to show any respect to their rights as men".[178]

Douglass attested to Lincoln's genuine respect for him and other blacks, and to the wisdom of Lincoln's course of action in obtaining both the preservation of the Union (his sworn duty as president) and the freeing of the slaves. In an 1876 speech at the unveiling of the Freedmen's Monument in Memory of Abraham Lincoln (later renamed the Emancipation Memorial), he defended Lincoln's actions:

His great mission was to accomplish two things: first, to save his country from dismemberment and ruin; and, second, to free his country from the great crime of slavery. To do one or the other, or both, he must have the earnest sympathy and the powerful cooperation of his loyal fellow-countrymen. Without this primary and essential condition to success his efforts must have been vain and utterly fruitless. Had he put the abolition of slavery before the salvation of the Union, he would have inevitably driven from him a powerful class of the American people and rendered resistance to rebellion impossible.

Viewed from the genuine abolition ground, Mr. Lincoln seemed tardy, cold, dull, and indifferent; but measuring him by the sentiment of his country, a sentiment he was bound as a statesman to consult, he was swift, zealous, radical, and determined....

[T]aking him for all in all, measuring the tremendous magnitude of the work before him, considering the necessary means to ends, and surveying the end from the beginning, infinite wisdom has seldom sent any man into the world better fitted for his mission than Abraham Lincoln.[176]: 11 

In his past, Lincoln lived in a middle-class, racially mixed neighborhood of Springfield, Illinois; one of his long-time neighbors, Jameson Jenkins (who may have been born a slave), had come from North Carolina and was publicly implicated in the 1850s as a Springfield conductor on the Underground Railroad, sheltering fugitive slaves. In 1861, President-elect Lincoln called on Jenkins to give him a ride to the train depot, where Lincoln delivered his farewell address before leaving Springfield for the last time.[179] Accompanying Lincoln to Washington was a free African American, William Johnson, who acted during the trip as valet, messenger, and bodyguard.[180][181] Johnson was afterward employed by the White House and then as messenger in the Treasury Department.[182] The two men called on each other for favors.[183] When Johnson contracted fever, probably from Lincoln, and died in 1864, Lincoln satisfied Johnson's family debts and paid for his burial and tombstone in Arlington.[183]

When Lincoln arrived at the White House, for the first time in his life he lived within a large community of free African Americans employed there. Many had previously been enslaved or were descendants of slaves, and their success as free people may have influenced Lincoln's own thinking.[184] Lincoln is said to have showed these employees "a peculiar care and solicitude," and it was noted, perhaps surprisingly, that Lincoln treated them "like people".[184] "He 'sympathized with us colored folks,' one former servant said, 'and we loved him.'"[184] White House Usher, William Slade, who became an "intimate friend," was often the first person Lincoln asked to review parts of his writings and speeches, likely including drafts of the Emancipation Proclamation.[184]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Striner, Richard (2006). Father Abraham: Lincoln's Relentless Struggle to End Slavery. Oxford University Press. pp. 2–4. ISBN 978-0-19-518306-1.
  2. ^ Lincoln, Abraham (April 4, 1864). "Letter to Albert G. Hodges".
  3. ^ "In the extreme Northern part of Illinois he can proclaim as bold and radical Abolitionism as ever Giddings, Lovejoy, or Garrison enunciated...." Stephen A. Douglas at Lincoln-Douglas debate at Galesburg, Illinois, October 7, 1858.
  4. ^ "Speech of Wendell Phillips, Esq., at the New England Anti-Slavery Convention, Wednesday, May 30th, 1860. Phonographic report for The Liberator by J. M. W. Yereinton". The Liberator. Boston, Massachusetts. 8 June 1860. pp. 1 and 2 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^ National Park Service (2015). "Lincoln on Slavery". Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  6. ^ Abraham Lincoln, Peoria Speech, October 16, 1854
  7. ^ Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln
  8. ^ Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address March 4, 1865, read aloud
  9. ^ a b Lincoln, Abraham (2018) [June 16, 1858]. "House Divided Speech". Abraham Lincoln Online]. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
  10. ^ Drexler, Ken (March 7, 2019). "Missouri Compromise: Primary Documents in American History". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  11. ^ Lincoln, Abraham (August 27, 1856). "Speech at Kalamazoo, Michigan". Mr. Lincoln and Freedom. Lehrman Institute. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  12. ^ "When Congress passed the DC Emancipation Act in April 1862, giving compensation to 'loyal' owners, Coakley [Gabriel Coakley, a leader of the black Catholic community in Washington] successfully petitioned for his wife and children, since he had purchased their freedom in earlier years. He was one of only a handful of black Washingtonians to make a claim like this. The federal government paid him $1489.20 for eight slaves that he 'owned' (he had claimed their value at $3,300)." White, Jonathan W., A House Built by Slaves: African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House, Rowman & Littlefield, 2022, p. 106.
  13. ^ "Appeal to Border State Representatives to Favor Compensated Emancipation," in Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. Volume 5.
  14. ^ "Battle of Antietam". history.com. January 13, 2021 [October 27, 2009]. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
  15. ^ Lincoln, Abraham (January 1, 1863). "Transcript of Emancipation Proclamation". ourdocuments.gov. National Archives & Records Administration. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  16. ^ Randolph B. Campbell, "The End of Slavery in Texas" Southwestern Historical Quarterly 88.1 (1984): 71–80.
  17. ^ "Biden Signs Law Making Juneteenth a Federal Holiday," New York Times, June 17, 2021.
  18. ^ "1619 (podcast). Episode 1: The Fight for a True Democracy". The New York Times. 2019-08-23. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  19. ^ Lind, Michael, What Lincoln Believed: The Values and Convictions of America's Greatest President, New York: Anchor Books, 2004.
  20. ^ See, e.g., books listed in "Further reading" by Michael Burlingame, Allen Guelzo, and James Oakes.
  21. ^ Lind, Michael (2004), ch. 6, "Race and Restoration," pp. 191-232.
  22. ^ White, Jonathan W., A House Built by Slaves: African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House, Rowman & Littlefield, 2022, p. 92.
  23. ^ Stahr, Walter, Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival, Simon & Schuster, 2021, p. 476.
  24. ^ Masur, Louis P. (2015-05-09). "Why Lincoln's last speech matters". OUPblog. University of Oxford Press. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  25. ^ "Lincoln & Race. Michael Lind, reply by James M. McPherson. In response to: What Did He Really Think About Race? from the March 29, 2007 issue". www.nybooks.com. The New York Review of Books. 2007-04-26. Retrieved 2021-12-01.
  26. ^ Donald (1996), pp. 20–22.
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Further reading edit

  • Black, William R. (February 12, 2018). "Abraham Lincoln's Secret Visits to Slaves". The Atlantic.
  • Belz, Herman (1997). Abraham Lincoln, Constitutionalism, and Equal Rights in the Civil War Era. Fordham University Press.
  • Burlingame, Michael (2021). The Black Man's President: Abraham Lincoln, African Americans, & the Pursuit of Racial Equality. Pegasus Books.
  • Burton, Orville Vernon (2008). The Age of Lincoln. Hill and Wang.
  • Carwardine, Richard (2006). Lincoln: A Life of Purpose and Power. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  • Chaput, Erik J. "The Bitter Fruit of Freedom: Struggles over Land, Labor, and Citizenship in the Age of Emancipation." Reviews in American History 44.1 (2016): 118-125. ResearchGate JSTOR
  • Cox, LaWanda. Lincoln and Black Freedom: A Study in Presidential Leadership. University of South Carolina Press, 1981).
  • Crofts, Daniel W. Lincoln and the Politics of Slavery: The Other Thirteenth Amendment and the Struggle to Save the Union (University of North Carolina Press, 2016).
  • Danoff, Brian. "Lincoln and the 'Necessity' of Tolerating Slavery before the Civil War." Review of Politics 77.1 (2015): 47–71 online[permanent dead link].
  • Dirck, Brian R., ed. Lincoln Emancipated: The President and the Politics of Race (Northern Illinois University Press (2007).
  • Donald, David H. (1995). Lincoln. Simon & Schuster.
  • Escott, Paul D. (2009). "What Shall We Do with the Negro?" Lincoln, White Racism, and Civil War America. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-2786-2.
  • Foner, Eric (2010). The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery. W. W. Norton & Co. Pulitzer Prize winner.
  • Finkelman, Paul (2010). "Lincoln and Emancipation: Constitutional Theory, Practical Politics, and the Basic Practice of Law". Journal of Supreme Court History. 35 (3): 243–266. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5818.2010.01249.x. S2CID 143921210.
  • Fredrickson, George M. (2008). Big Enough to Be Inconsistent: Abraham Lincoln Confronts Slavery and Race. The W. E. B. Du Bois Lectures series. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674027749. Review
  • Guelzo, Allen C. (1999). Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. ISBN 9780802838728. Second edition, 2022. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-8028-7858-8
  • Guelzo, Allen C. (2002). "Defending Emancipation: Abraham Lincoln and the Conkling Letter, 1863". Civil War History. 48 (4): 313–337. doi:10.1353/cwh.2002.0056. S2CID 145742371.
  • Guelzo, Allen C. (Winter 2004). "How Abe Lincoln Lost the Black Vote: Lincoln and Emancipation in the African American Mind". Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association. 25: 1–22.
  • Holzer, Harold (2004). Lincoln at Cooper Union: The Speech That Made Abraham Lincoln President. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-9964-0.
  • Holzer, Harold and Sara Vaughn Gabbard. Lincoln and Freedom: Slavery, Emancipation, and the Thirteenth Amendment (Southern Illinois University Press, 2007).
  • Jones, Howard (1999). Abraham Lincoln and a New Birth of Freedom: The Union and Slavery in the Diplomacy of the Civil War. University of Nebraska Press.
  • Kendrick, Paul, and Kendrick, Stephen (2007). Douglass and Lincoln: How a Revolutionary Black Leader and a Reluctant Liberator Struggled to End Slavery and Save the Union (Bloomsbury Publishing USA).
  • Klingaman, William K. (2001). Abraham Lincoln and the Road to Emancipation, 1861–1865. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780670867547.
  • Lind, Michael (2004). What Lincoln Believed: The Values and Convictions of America's Greatest President. Anchor Books. ISBN 978-1-4000-3073-6.
  • McPherson, James M. (1991). Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-505542-9.
  • Manning, Chandra (Winter 2013). "The Shifting Terrain of Attitudes Toward Abraham Lincoln and Emancipation". Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association. 34: 18–39.
  • Oakes, James. The Crooked Path to Abolition: Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution (W. W. Norton & Co., 2021).
  • Oakes, James. The Scorpion's Sting: Antislavery and the Coming of the Civil War (W. W. Norton & Co., 2014).
  • Oakes, James. Freedom National: The Destruction of Slavery in the United States, 1861–1865 (W. W. Norton & Co., 2012).
  • Page, Sebastian N. Black Resettlement and the American Civil War (Cambridge University Press, 2021).
  • Quarles, Benjamin. Lincoln and the Negro (Oxford University Press, 1962).
  • Striner, Richard. Lincoln and Race (Southern Illinois University Press, 2012).
  • Vorenberg, Michael (2004). Final Freedom: The Civil War, the Abolition of Slavery, and the Thirteenth Amendment. Cambridge University Press.
  • White, Jonathan W. (2022). A House Built by Slaves: African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House (Rowman & Littlefield).

Primary sources edit

  • Johnson, Michael P., ed. Abraham Lincoln, Slavery, and the Civil War: Selected Writing and Speeches (Macmillan Higher Education, 2010).
  • Clay, Henry; Douglas, Stephen (1860). Abraham Lincoln's Record on the Slavery Question. Baltimore.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Gates, Jr., Henry Louis, ed. Lincoln on Race & Slavery (Princeton University Press, 2009).

External links edit

abraham, lincoln, slavery, abraham, lincoln, position, slavery, united, states, most, discussed, aspects, life, lincoln, frequently, expressed, moral, opposition, slavery, public, private, naturally, anti, slavery, slavery, wrong, nothing, wrong, stated, remem. Abraham Lincoln s position on slavery in the United States is one of the most discussed aspects of his life Lincoln frequently expressed his moral opposition to slavery in public and private 1 I am naturally anti slavery If slavery is not wrong nothing is wrong he stated I can not remember when I did not so think and feel 2 However the question of what to do about it and how to end it given that it was so firmly embedded in the nation s constitutional framework and in the economy of much of the country was complex and politically challenging In addition there was the unanswered question which Lincoln had to deal with of what would become of the four million slaves if liberated how they would earn a living in a society that had almost always rejected them or looked down on their very presence Emancipation Memorial statue placed in Washington D C in 1876 Contents 1 Evolution of Lincoln s policies 2 Early years 3 1840s 1850s 3 1 Legal and political 3 2 Letter to Joshua Speed 3 3 Lincoln Douglas debates 4 Constitutional arguments 5 1860 Republican presidential nomination 6 As President elect in 1860 and 1861 7 Presidency 1861 1865 7 1 Corwin amendment 7 2 Building a demand for emancipation 7 3 Letter to Greeley 7 4 Emancipation Proclamation 7 5 West Virginia 7 6 Conkling letter 7 7 Reconstruction 7 8 Thirteenth Amendment 7 9 Second inaugural address 7 10 Compensated emancipation buy out the slave owners 7 11 Colonization 7 11 1 Antebellum Activity to 1861 7 11 2 Wartime Provisions 1861 62 7 11 3 First wave schemes contract colonies in Latin America 1861 1864 7 11 4 Second Wave Schemes Emigration to the European West Indies 1862 1864 7 11 5 Final disposition of colonization 1864 65 7 12 Citizenship and limited suffrage 8 Views on African Americans 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksEvolution of Lincoln s policies editAs early as the 1850s Lincoln was attacked as an abolitionist 3 But in 1860 he was attacked as not abolitionist enough Wendell Phillips charged that if elected Lincoln would waste four years trying to decide whether to end slavery in the District of Columbia 4 Many abolitionists emphasized the sinfulness of slave owners but Lincoln did not 5 Lincoln tended not to be judgmental In his 1854 Peoria Illinois speech he said I have no prejudice against the Southern people They are just what we would be in their situation If slavery did not now exist amongst them they would not introduce it If it did now exist amongst us we should not instantly give it up 6 In 1865 in his second inaugural address he said It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God s assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men s faces but let us judge not that we be not judged and he urged malice toward none and charity for all Nonetheless Lincoln suggested God had judged the nation both North and South for the offence of slavery 7 8 Lincoln focused on what he saw as a more politically practical goal preventing the expansion of slavery into the new Western territories which if it occurred could lead to new slave states and if it were prevented would eventually lead to slavery s demise 9 He supported excluding slavery from territories with the failed Wilmot Proviso in the 1840s His 1850s activism was in reaction to the 1854 Kansas Nebraska Act designed by his great rival Illinois Senator Stephen A Douglas The Act was a radical departure 9 from the previous law of the Missouri Compromise of 1820 which had banned slavery from all new states north of the 36 30 parallel except for Missouri 10 Lincoln suggested that if slavery were allowed to spread it would block free labor from settling in the new states and as a result the entire nation would soon become ever more dominated by slave owners 11 After Lincoln was elected the departure of the Southern members of Congress made it finally possible to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia The District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act of 1862 provided partial compensation to slave owners paid out of federal funds 12 Lincoln hoped to persuade the border states of Maryland Delaware Kentucky and Missouri to do likewise because that would eliminate their incentive to secede from the Union to join the Confederacy Their secession might result both in the North losing the Civil War and in the continued existence of slavery 13 On September 22 1862 having waited until the North won a significant victory in the battle at Antietam 14 Lincoln used the power granted to the president under Article II section 2 of the U S Constitution as Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy to issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation It provided that on January 1 1863 in the states still in rebellion the enslaved people would be freed On January 1 1863 as promised he issued the final Emancipation Proclamation which declared that all persons held as slaves in States and parts of States in rebellion against the United States on that day are and henceforward shall be free 15 The proclamation immediately freed on paper millions of the enslaved but it had little practical effect until the Union Army was present Week by week as the army advanced more slaves were liberated The last were freed in Texas on Juneteenth June 19 1865 16 which became a federal holiday on June 17 2021 17 Although Lincoln stated in the Emancipation Proclamation that he sincerely believed it to be an act of justice he issued it as a military necessity because he believed that the U S Constitution would not permit it on any other basis The Emancipation Proclamation was a war tactic because by freeing enslaved people it deprived the South of labor and it allowed African American people to be received into the armed service of the United States Lincoln worried about the consequences of his action fearing an endemic racial divide in the nation 18 Nonetheless during his second presidential campaign he ran on a platform to forever abolish slavery by constitutional amendment According to Michael Lind Lincoln was for most of his life a moderate Northern mainstream white supremacist and proponent of black colonization abroad in Panama Haiti and Liberia An ardent follower of Henry Clay he envisioned an all white United States without slavery 19 Leading Lincoln scholars however do not see Lincoln as a white supremacist and view his support for voluntary colonization as intended at least in part to make emancipation more palatable to racist white people 20 Until late in his life Lincoln wanted human rights the rights listed in the Declaration of Independence life liberty and the pursuit of happiness and the natural right to eat the bread they earn with their own hands for black people but civil rights such as the vote only on their own soil that is in their own lands abroad to which they moved pursuant to voluntary colonization 21 Nonetheless in 1864 writing to the governor of Louisiana 22 23 and in 1865 in his last public speech which led directly to his assassination Lincoln supported voting rights in the United States for some African Americans He was the first U S President to do so 24 25 Early years editLincoln was born in a slave state on February 12 1809 in Hardin County Kentucky 26 His family attended a Separate Baptists church which had strict moral standards and opposed alcohol dancing and slavery 27 The family moved north across the Ohio River to Indiana where slavery was not allowed and made a new start in then Perry now Spencer County Indiana Lincoln later noted that this move was partly on account of slavery but mainly due to his father s problems with the unclear land title system in Kentucky 28 As a young man he moved west to the free state of Illinois On January 27 1838 he delivered his Lyceum address to the Young Men s Lyceum of Springfield Illinois and in the address he spoke about slavery 29 Seven weeks earlier a mob in Alton Illinois across the river from St Louis Missouri had killed Elijah Lovejoy a Presbyterian minister and editor of a newspaper with strong anti slavery views 30 The mood of Illinois when an angry mob killed Lovejoy was pro slavery but not only in Illinois The state legislatures of Connecticut and New York in the mid 1830s passed resolutions stating that slavery was accepted in the U S Constitution and that no state had a right to interfere Lincoln himself had been one of only six in the Illinois House of Representatives to vote against a resolution saying That we highly disapprove of the formation of abolition societies That the right of property in slaves is sacred That the General Government cannot abolish slavery in the District of Columbia against the consent of the citizens of said District Six weeks later he and Representative Dan Stone filed a protest to the passage of the resolution a rarely used device to register strong disagreement 31 In 1842 Lincoln married Mary Todd in Springfield Illinois She was the daughter of a slaveholder in Kentucky but she never owned slaves herself and came to oppose slavery as an adult 32 33 1840s 1850s editLegal and political edit Further information Slavery in the United States and Slave states and free states Lincoln the leader most associated with the end of slavery in the United States came to national prominence in the 1850s following the advent of the Republican Party whose official position was that freedom was national the natural condition of all areas under the direct sovereignty of the Constitution whereas slavery was exceptional and local 34 Earlier as a member of the Whig Party in the Illinois General Assembly Lincoln issued a written protest of the Assembly s passage of a resolution stating that slavery should not be abolished in the District of Columbia 35 36 In 1841 he won a court case Bailey v Cromwell representing a black woman Nance Legins Costley and her children who claimed she had already been freed and could not be sold as a slave 37 One of the earliest examples of Lincoln s written views on slavery comes from an 1845 letter Lincoln wrote to his friend Williamson Durley concerning the annexation of Texas In it Lincoln said he took no position on annexation but he added It is possibly true to some extent that with annexation some slaves may be sent to Texas and continued in slavery that otherwise might have been liberated To whatever extent this may be true I think annexation an evil He then explained I hold it to be a paramount duty of us in the free states due to the Union of the states and perhaps to liberty itself paradox though it may seem to let the slavery of the other states alone while on the other hand I hold it to be equally clear that we should never knowingly lend ourselves directly or indirectly to prevent that slavery from dying a natural death to find new places for it to live in when it can no longer exist in the old 38 This view that slavery would be most efficiently curtailed by preventing its expansion rather than by directing abolishing it would be consistent for Lincoln throughout his political career leading up to his election as president in 1860 In 1845 he successfully defended Marvin Pond People v Pond 39 for harboring the fugitive slave John Hauley In 1847 he lost a case Matson v Ashmore et al for the use of Bryant representing a slave owner Robert Matson seeking to recover fugitive slaves Michael Burlingame writes Lincoln s agreement to represent Matson has been called the most profound mystery ever to confound Lincoln specialists Burlingame speculates that despite his antislavery convictions Lincoln accepted the Matson case in keeping with what became known in England as the cab rank rule stipulating that lawyers must accept the first client who hails them and with the prevailing Whig view that lawyers should try to settle disputes in an orderly fashion through the courts trusting in the law and the judges to assure that justice was done 40 While a congressman from Illinois in 1846 to 1848 Lincoln supported the Wilmot Proviso which if it had been adopted would have banned slavery in any U S territory won from Mexico 41 Lincoln in collaboration with abolitionist Congressman Joshua R Giddings wrote a bill to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia with compensation for the owners enforcement to capture fugitive slaves and a popular vote on the matter 42 43 Slavery in the District of Columbia was not ended until 1862 when Lincoln was president and there were no Southern senators After leaving Congress in 1849 Lincoln largely ignored politics to concentrate on his law practice He was drawn back by the firestorm over the Kansas Nebraska Act of 1854 which reversed the longstanding Missouri Compromise and allowed territories to decide for themselves whether they would allow slavery Lincoln was morally opposed to slavery and politically opposed to any expansion of it At issue was its extension into the western territories 1 On October 16 1854 in his Peoria speech Lincoln declared his opposition to slavery which he repeated as he sought the presidency 44 Speaking in his Kentucky accent with a very powerful voice 45 he said that the Kansas Nebraska Act s declared indifference but as I must think covert real zeal for the spread of slavery I can not but hate I hate it because of the monstrous injustice of slavery itself I hate it because it deprives our republican example of its just influence in the world 46 The United States Supreme Court s 1857 decision in Dred Scott v Sandford appalled Lincoln In the decision Chief Justice Roger B Taney held that blacks were not citizens and derived no rights from the Constitution Although Taney hoped that Dred Scott would end all disputes over slavery in the favor of southern slaveholders 47 the decision sparked further outrage in the North 48 Lincoln denounced it as the product of a conspiracy to support the Slave Power 49 and believed that Dred Scott together with the Kansas Nebraska Act could enable slavery to spread into the free states 50 He argued the decision was at variance with the Declaration of Independence he said that while the founding fathers did not believe all men equal in every respect they believed all men were equal in certain inalienable rights among which are life liberty and the pursuit of happiness 51 Impressed by the strength of anti black racism especially in his home states of Indiana Illinois and Kentucky Lincoln concluded that because whites would never allow blacks to live in America as equals they would be better off migrating voluntarily to a colony outside the United States ideally in Central America or the Caribbean 52 He had little faith in the program of the American Colonization Society whose goal was to colonize American blacks in Liberia on the West African coast In a speech at Peoria Illinois 53 transcribed after the fact by Lincoln himself 52 b Lincoln pointed out the immense difficulties of such a task as an obstacle to finding an easy way to quickly end slavery 52 c 54 In a debate in August 1858 he said 55 56 If all earthly power were given to me m y first impulse would be to free all the slaves and send them to Liberia to their own native land But a moment s reflection would convince me that whatever of high hope as I think there is there may be in this in the long run its sudden execution is impossible According to historian Paul Escott Lincoln favored a system of gradual emancipation that would allow for controlled management of free Negroes 56 Nonetheless Lincoln was instrumental in forging antislavery voters into a potent political movement 57 Letter to Joshua Speed edit In 1854 Lincoln wrote to Joshua Speed a personal friend and slave owner in Kentucky 58 You know I dislike slavery and you fully admit the abstract wrong of it I also acknowledge your rights and my obligations under the Constitution in regard to your slaves I confess I hate to see the poor creatures hunted down and caught and carried back to their stripes and unrequited toil but I bite my lip and keep quiet In 1841 you and I had together a tedious low water trip on a steamboat from Louisville to St Louis You may remember as I well do that from Louisville to the mouth of the Ohio there were on board ten or a dozen slaves shackled together with irons That sight was a continued torment to me and I see something like it every time I touch the Ohio or any other slave border It is not fair for you to assume that I have no interest in a thing which has and continually exercises the power of making me miserable You ought rather to appreciate how much the great body of the Northern people do crucify their feelings in order to maintain their loyalty to the Constitution and the Union How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid As a nation we began by declaring that all men are created equal We now practically read it all men are created equal except negroes When the Know nothings get control it will read all men are created equal except negroes and foreigners and Catholics When it comes to this I should prefer emigrating to some country where they make no pretence of loving liberty to Russia for instance where despotism can be taken pure and without the base alloy of hypocrisy Lincoln Douglas debates edit nbsp Abraham Lincoln nbsp Stephen A Douglas Many of Lincoln s public anti slavery sentiments were presented in the seven Lincoln Douglas debates against his opponent Stephen Douglas during Lincoln s unsuccessful campaign for a seat in the U S Senate which was decided by the Illinois legislature Douglas advocated popular sovereignty and self government which would give the citizens of a territory the right to decide if slavery would be legal there 59 Douglas criticized Lincoln as being inconsistent saying he altered his message and position on slavery and on the political rights of freed blacks in order to appeal to the audience before him as northern Illinois was more hostile to slavery than southern Illinois Lincoln stated that Negroes had the rights to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness in the first of the Lincoln Douglas debates saying there is no reason in the world why the negro is not entitled to all the natural rights enumerated in the Declaration of Independence the right to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness I hold that he is as much entitled to these as the white man I agree with Judge Douglas he is not my equal in many respects certainly not in color perhaps not in moral or intellectual endowment But in the right to eat the bread without the leave of anybody else which his own hand earns he is my equal and the equal of Judge Douglas and the equal of every living man 60 Publicly Lincoln said he was not advocating Negro suffrage in speeches both in Columbus Ohio on September 16 1859 52 d and in Charleston Illinois on September 18 1858 stating on the latter date I will say then that I am not nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black races applause that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes nor of qualifying them to hold office nor to intermarry with white people and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will for ever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality And inasmuch as they cannot so live while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race I say upon this occasion I do not perceive that because the white man is to have the superior position the negro should be denied every thing I do not understand that because I do not want a negro woman for a slave I must necessarily want her for a wife My understanding is that I can just let her alone I am now in my fiftieth year and I certainly never have had a black woman for either a slave or a wife 61 This might have been a strategy speech used to gain voters as Douglas had accused Lincoln of favoring negroes too much as well 62 A fragment from Lincoln dated October 1 1858 refuting theological arguments by Frederick Augustus Ross in favor of slavery reads in part As a good thing slavery is strikingly perculiar sic in this that it is the only good thing which no man ever seeks the good of for himself Nonsense Wolves devouring lambs not because it is good for their own greedy maws but because it is good for the lambs 63 64 Constitutional arguments editTwo diametrically opposed anti slavery positions emerged regarding the United States Constitution The Garrisonians emphasized that the document permitted and protected slavery and was therefore an agreement with hell that should be rejected in favor of immediate emancipation Lincoln deeply supported the Constitution and rejected this position Instead he adopted and promoted the mainstream anti slavery position of the new Republican party It argued that the Constitution could and should be used to eventually end slavery but that the Constitution gave the national government no authority to abolish slavery in the states directly However multiple tactics were available to support the long term strategy of using the Constitution as a battering ram against the peculiar institution First Congress could block the admission of any new slave states That would steadily move the balance of power in Congress and the Electoral College in favor of freedom Congress could abolish slavery in the District of Columbia and the territories Congress could use the Commerce Clause to end the interstate slave trade thereby crippling the steady movement of slavery from the economically stagnant southeast to the growing southwest Congress could recognize free blacks as full citizens and insist on due process rights to protect fugitive slaves from being captured and returned to bondage Finally the government could use patronage powers to promote the anti slavery cause across the country especially in the border states Pro slavery elements considered the Republican strategy to be much more dangerous to their cause than radical abolitionism and Lincoln s election was met by secession Indeed the Republican strategy mapped the crooked path to abolition that prevailed during the Civil War 65 66 1860 Republican presidential nomination edit nbsp The Rail Candidate Lincoln s 1860 candidacy is depicted as held up by the slavery issue a slave on the left and party organization on the right The Republican Party was committed to restricting the growth of slavery and its victory in the election of 1860 was the trigger for secession by Southern states The debate before 1860 was mainly focused on the Western territories especially Kansas and the popular sovereignty controversy Lincoln was nominated as the Republican candidate for president in the election of 1860 Lincoln was opposed to the expansion of slavery into the territories but agreed with nearly all Americans including most radical abolitionists that the federal government was prevented by the Constitution from abolishing slavery in states where it already existed His plan was to halt the spread of slavery and to offer monetary compensation to slave owners in states that agreed to gradually end slavery see Compensated emancipation He was considered a moderate within the Republican party in taking the position that slavery should be put on a course of ultimate extinction with the help of the federal government As President elect in 1860 and 1861 editIn a letter to Senator Lyman Trumbull on December 10 1860 Lincoln wrote Let there be no compromise on the question of extending slavery 67 68 In a letter to John A Gilmer of North Carolina of December 15 1860 which was soon published in newspapers Lincoln wrote that the only substantial difference between North and South was that You think slavery is right and ought to be extended we think it is wrong and ought to be restricted Lincoln repeated this statement in a letter to Alexander H Stephens of Georgia on December 22 1860 69 70 71 On December 15 1860 Kentucky Senator John J Crittenden proposed the Crittenden Compromise a series of constitutional amendments intended to coax the Confederate states into returning to the Union President elect Lincoln rejected the Crittenden Compromise out of hand because it would have permitted the expansion of slavery stating I will suffer death before I will consent or will advise my friends to consent to any concession or compromise which looks like buying the privilege of taking possession of this government to which we have a constitutional right 72 On February 22 1861 at a speech in Independence Hall in Philadelphia Pennsylvania Lincoln reconfirmed that his convictions sprang from the sentiment expressed in the Declaration of Independence which was also the basis of the continued existence of the United States since that time namely the principle or idea in that Declaration giving liberty not alone to the people of this country but hope to the world for all future time Great applause It was that which gave promise that in due time the weights should be lifted from the shoulders of all men and that all should have an equal chance Cheers 73 74 75 Presidency 1861 1865 editCorwin amendment edit The proposed Corwin amendment was passed by Congress before Lincoln became President and was ratified by three states but was abandoned once the Civil War began It would have reaffirmed what historians call the Federal Consensus the nearly universal belief that under the Constitution the federal government had no power to abolish slavery in a state where it already existed In his First Inaugural Address March 4 1861 Lincoln explained that while he had not seen the amendment and took no position on amendments in general holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable 76 77 78 The Corwin amendment was a late attempt at reconciliation but it was doomed to fail because southerners knew that it would not stop the federal government from adopting a host of antislavery policies that did not violate the Federal Consensus 79 80 Most significantly the Corwin amendment would not have interfered with Lincoln s plan to ban the expansion of slavery into the federal territories which was one of the main points of contention between pro and anti slavery factions 81 Building a demand for emancipation edit Lincoln s long term goal was to apply federal pressure on the slave states to get them to abolish slavery on their own beginning with the four loyal non seceding border states of Maryland Delaware Kentucky and Missouri But he also warned that if the slave states seceded from the Union they would forfeit the constitutional protection of slavery including any claim to the recovery of their fugitive slaves The American Civil War began in April 1861 and by the end of May the Lincoln administration approved a policy of not returning fugitive slaves who came within Union lines from disloyal states Such slaves were deemed contraband of war or contrabands On August 6 1861 Congress declared the forfeiture of contraband to be permanent by passing the first of the Confiscation Acts and two days later Lincoln s War Department issued instructions emancipating all the slaves who came within Union lines from disloyal states or owners By the end of the year thousands of slaves were being emancipated So as not to alienate the border states Lincoln was careful to ensure that his generals followed the letter of the law He encouraged General James K Lane in western Missouri to emancipate thousands of slaves of disloyal masters who came voluntarily within his lines But in eastern Missouri when General John C Fremont issued a decree emancipating the slaves of disloyal owners in areas the Union did not control Lincoln ordered the general to revise his decree to conform with the law Lincoln promoted Lane to brigadier general but would later fire Fremont for corruption and military incompetence In western Missouri Lincoln replaced Fremont with an abolitionist general David Hunter The care Lincoln took to distinguish legal from extralegal emancipation was reaffirmed in May 1862 after Hunter issued two emancipation proclamations covering the areas his troops recently occupied along the Carolina Georgia and Florida coast 82 The first proclamation which was legal freed all persons of color lately held to involuntary servitude by enemies of the United States 83 The second proclamation declared all the slaves in Georgia Florida and South Carolina to be forever free not just those belonging to disloyal masters 84 That second proclamation like Fremont s went beyond the law and Lincoln reversed it as he had Fremont s After revoking Hunter s attempt at emancipation Lincoln issued a statement explaining that Hunter had issued his proclamation without Lincoln s knowledge or approval and the authority to free slaves in the rebel states was held only by the President not his generals He concluded by referring to a congressional resolution passed in March that stated the federal government s intent to provide compensation to assist states that were willing to voluntarily abolish slavery and encouraged all slave states to come up with a plan to carry it out 85 By the end of 1861 tens of thousands of slaves were emancipated as they crossed into Union lines at Fort Monroe Virginia the Sea Islands off South Carolina and in western Missouri In December the Lincoln administration announced its emancipation policy in a series of annual reports by the president and by several of his cabinet secretaries By January Lincoln himself declared that no federal authority civil or military could legally return fugitive slaves to their owners 86 By then the sentiment for a more radical approach to emancipation had been building and in July Congress authorized the president to issue a more general emancipation proclamation freeing all the slaves in all areas in rebellion A few days after Lincoln signed the law known as the Second Confiscation Act he drafted the first version of what would become his Emancipation Proclamation Because the Constitution could sanction emancipation only under the president s war powers 87 freeing slaves could be justified only as a means of suppressing the Southern rebellion and winning the war As a result until the very end of the war Lincoln claimed that the purpose of the war was the restoration of the Union Southern leaders denounced Lincoln as a bloodthirsty revolutionary whose emancipation policies proved that the secessionists were right all along about those they labeled Black Republicans Northern Democrats meanwhile denied that emancipation was a military necessity as Lincoln and the Republicans claimed it was But Lincoln never deviated from his official position that because the Constitution recognized slavery in the states the only constitutional justification for freeing slaves was military necessity All throughout 1862 the Lincoln administration took several direct actions against slavery On April 16 Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act which abolished slavery in Washington D C Two months later on June 19 Congress banned slavery in all federal territories fulfilling Lincoln s 1860 campaign promise to ban the expansion of slavery 88 On July 17 Congress passed the second of the Confiscation Acts While the initial act did not make any determination on the final status of escaped slaves who fled to Union lines the Second Confiscation act did stating that escaped or liberated slaves belonging to anyone who participated in or supported the rebellion shall be deemed captives of war and shall be forever free of their servitude and not again held as slaves The act also prohibited anyone in the military from returning escaped slaves to their masters even if the slaves had escaped from a Union slave state 89 Letter to Greeley edit On August 22 1862 Lincoln published a letter in response to an editorial titled The Prayer of Twenty Millions by Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune in which the editor asked why Lincoln had not yet issued an emancipation proclamation as he was authorized to do by the Second Confiscation Act In his reply Lincoln differentiated between my view of official duty that is what he can do in his official capacity as President and his personal views Officially he must save the Union above all else personally he wanted to free all the slaves 90 I would save the Union I would save it the shortest way under the Constitution The sooner the national authority can be restored the nearer the Union will be the Union as it was If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time save slavery I do not agree with them If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time destroy slavery I do not agree with them My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union and is not either to save or to destroy slavery If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that What I do about slavery and the colored race I do because I believe it helps to save the Union and what I forbear I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union I shall do less whenever I shall believe what I am doing hurts the cause and I shall do more whenever I shall believe doing more will help the cause I shall try to correct errors when shown to be errors and I shall adopt new views so fast as they shall appear to be true views I have here stated my purpose according to my view of official duty and I intend no modification of my oft expressed personal wish that all men everywhere could be free At the time that Lincoln published this letter he seemingly had already chosen the third of the three options he named He was waiting for a Union victory to issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation which would announce that he would free some but not all the slaves on January 1 1863 Nevertheless From mid October to mid November 1862 he sent personal envoys to Louisiana Tennessee and Arkansas His envoys bore tidings that i f citizens desired to avoid the unsatisfactory terms of the Final Emancipation Proclamation and to have peace again on the old terms i e with slavery intact they should rally to vote in an election of members of the members of the Congress of the United States 91 Thus Lincoln may not have ruled out the first option he expressed to Greeley saving the Union without freeing any slave Emancipation Proclamation edit Further information Emancipation Proclamation nbsp 1864 Reproduction of Emancipation ProclamationJust one month after writing this letter Lincoln issued his preliminary Emancipation Proclamation which announced that on January 1 1863 he would under his war powers free all slaves in states still in rebellion Lincoln scholar Harold Holzer wrote Unknown to Greeley Lincoln composed this the letter to Greeley after he had already drafted a preliminary Emancipation Proclamation which he had determined to issue after the next Union military victory Therefore this letter was in truth an attempt to position the impending announcement in terms of saving the Union not freeing slaves as a humanitarian gesture It was one of Lincoln s most skillful public relations efforts even if it has cast longstanding doubt on his sincerity as a liberator 92 Historian Richard Striner argues that for years Lincoln s letter has been misread as Lincoln only wanted to save the Union 93 However within the context of Lincoln s entire career and pronouncements on slavery this interpretation is wrong according to Striner Rather Lincoln was softening the strong Northern white supremacist opposition to his imminent emancipation by tying it to the cause of the Union This opposition would fight for the Union but not to end slavery so Lincoln gave them the means and motivation to do both at the same time 93 In his 2014 book Lincoln s Gamble journalist and historian Todd Brewster asserted that Lincoln s desire to reassert the saving of the Union as his sole war goal was in fact crucial to his claim of legal authority for emancipation Since slavery was protected by the Constitution the only way that he could free the slaves was as a tactic of war not for its own sake 94 But that carried the risk that when the war ended so would the justification for freeing the slaves Late in 1862 Lincoln asked his Attorney General Edward Bates for an opinion as to whether slaves freed through a war related proclamation of emancipation could be re enslaved once the war was over Bates had to work through the language of the Dred Scott decision to arrive at an answer but he finally concluded that they could indeed remain free Still a complete end to slavery would require a constitutional amendment 95 But a constitutional amendment has to be ratified by three fourths of the states There were too many slave states and not enough free states for a constitutional amendment to be ratified so even as he was preparing to issue his Emancipation Proclamation he proposed a series of constitutional amendments that would make it easier for the federal government to pressure states to abolish slavery on their own including compensation a gradual timetable for abolition and subsidies for blacks willing to colonize themselves outside the United States None of those constitutional amendments came close to passage But by 1863 Lincoln had other ways of pressuring the state to abolish slavery By refusing to return slaves who escaped from loyal masters in loyal states and by enlisting slaves from loyal states into the Union Army with the promise of emancipation the Lincoln administration systematically undermined slavery in many of the Southern states Lincoln had begun pressuring the border states to abolish slavery in November 1861 with no success In 1862 he began to warn the states that if they did not abolish slavery on their own the institution would succumb to the incidents of war and would be undermined by mere friction and abrasion 96 But the abrasion was no mere incident it was the policy of emancipation Beginning in mid 1863 Lincoln intensified the pressure on all the slave states and in early 1864 the policy began to pay off Between January 1864 and January 1865 three slave states abolished slavery all under intense pressure from the federal government By the time the House of Representatives sent the Thirteenth Amendment to the states for ratification the ratio of free to slave states was 27 9 or the needed three quarters West Virginia edit Early in the war several counties of Virginia that were loyal to the Union formed the Restored Government of Virginia and applied for statehood for part of western Virginia into the Union as a new state Lincoln required West Virginia to have a constitutional plan for gradual emancipation as a condition of statehood In response West Virginia passed the Willey Amendment which declared The children of slaves born within the limits of this State after the fourth day of July eighteen hundred and sixty three shall be free and all slaves within this state who shall at the time aforesaid be under the age of ten years shall be free when they arrive at the age of twenty one years and all slaves over ten and under twenty one years shall be free when they arrive at the age of twenty five years and no slave shall be permitted to come into the State for permanent residence therein 97 Lincoln considered this satisfactory writing the admission of the new state turns that much slave soil to free and thus is a certain and irrevocable encroachment upon the cause of the rebellion 98 West Virginia was granted statehood on June 20 1863 and went on to fully abolish slavery on February 3 1865 roughly three months before the end of the war 99 Conkling letter edit Lincoln came to appreciate the role that black troops played in this process In the end some 180 000 blacks served in the Union Army a disproportionate number of them from the states that ended up abolishing slavery He made his feeling clear in an eloquent letter a year later to James C Conkling on August 26 1863 100 101 The war has certainly progressed as favorably for us since the issue of proclamation as before I know as fully as one can know the opinions of others that some of the commanders of our armies in the field who have given us our most important successes believe the emancipation policy and the use of the colored troops constitute the heaviest blow yet dealt to the rebellion and that at least one of those important successes could not have been achieved when it was but for the aid of black soldiers Among the commanders holding these views are some who have never had any affinity with what is called abolitionism or with republican party politics but who hold them purely as military opinions I submit these opinions as being entitled to some weight against the objections often urged that emancipation and arming the blacks are unwise as military measures and were not adopted as such in good faith You say you will not fight to free negroes Some of them seem willing to fight for you but no matter Fight you then exclusively to save the Union I issued the proclamation on purpose to aid you in saving the Union Whenever you shall have conquered all resistance to the Union if I shall urge you to continue fighting it will be an apt time then for you to declare you will not fight to free negroes I thought that in your struggle for the Union to whatever extent the negroes should cease helping the enemy to that extent it weakened the enemy in his resistance to you Do you think differently I thought that whatever negroes can be got to do as soldiers leaves just so much less for white soldiers to do in saving the Union Does it appear otherwise to you But negroes like other people act upon motives Why should they do any thing for us if we will do nothing for them If they stake their lives for us they must be prompted by the strongest motive even the promise of freedom And the promise being made must be kept When peace comes then there will be some black men who can remember that with silent tongue and clenched teeth and steady eye and well poised bayonet they have helped mankind on to this great consummation while I fear there will be some white ones unable to forget that with malignant heart and deceitful speech they strove to hinder it The Conkling letter was dated August 26 1863 the month after two great Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg but also at a time when Americans were reading the first reports of black troops fighting courageously in battles at Milliken s Bend and Battery Wagner It was also in the summer of 1863 that Lincoln initiated his intensified effort to get various slave states to abolish slavery on their own Lincoln addresses the changes to his positions and actions regarding emancipation in an 1864 letter to Albert G Hodges 102 103 In that letter Lincoln states his moral opposition to slavery writing I am naturally anti slavery If slavery is not wrong nothing is wrong I can not remember when I did not so think and feel And yet I have never understood that the Presidency conferred upon me an unrestricted right to act officially upon this judgment and feeling Lincoln further explained that he had eventually determined that military emancipation and the enlistment of black soldiers were necessary for the preservation of the Union which was his responsibility as president Having won re election to the presidency in November 1864 on a platform of abolishing slavery Lincoln and several members of his cabinet embarked on a sustained lobbying effort to get the abolition amendment through the House of Representatives The amendment abolishing slavery everywhere in the United States was ratified by every state that had abolished slavery during the war and it became part of the Constitution on December 6 1865 Reconstruction edit On December 8 1863 Lincoln used his war powers to issue a Proclamation for Amnesty and Reconstruction which offered Southern states a chance to peacefully rejoin the Union if they abolished slavery and collected loyalty oaths from 10 percent of their voting population 104 Before the end of the war Louisiana 105 Arkansas 106 Maryland 107 Missouri 108 Tennessee 109 and West Virginia 110 abolished slavery 111 In addition the Union loyalist Restored government of Virginia abolished slavery before the end of the war 112 On June 28 1864 President Lincoln signed into law Congress s repeal of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 113 As Lincoln began to be concerned about the 1864 presidential election and the potential for a new administration that would end the war without emancipation he turned to Frederick Douglass He said according to Douglass I want you to set about devising some means of making them slaves acquainted with it the Emancipation Proclamation and for bringing them into our lines 114 thereby making emancipation an accomplished fact before a potential next administration could take office 115 Thirteenth Amendment edit When Lincoln accepted the nomination for the Union party for president in June 1864 he called for the first time for the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution to immediately abolish slavery and involuntary servitude except as punishment for a crime He wrote in his letter of acceptance that it would make a fitting and necessary conclusion to the war and would permanently join the causes of Liberty and Union He won re election on this platform in November and in December 1864 Lincoln worked to have the House approve the amendment 116 When the House passed the 13th amendment on January 31 1865 Lincoln signed the amendment although this was not a legal requirement and said in a speech the next day He thought all would bear him witness that he had never shrunk from doing all that he could to eradicate slavery by issuing an emancipation proclamation He pointed out that the emancipation proclamation did not complete the task of eradicating slavery But this amendment is a King s cure for all the evils of slavery 117 118 119 120 Second inaugural address edit Lincoln having gotten the constitutional amendment to abolish slavery through Congress began his second term He discussed slavery throughout his second inaugural address describing it as not only the cause of the Civil War but claiming that as an offense to God it drew God s righteous judgment against the entire nation 121 122 One eighth of the whole population were colored slaves not distributed generally over the Union but localized in the Southern part of it These slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest All knew that this interest was somehow the cause of the war It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God s assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men s faces but let us judge not that we be not judged The Almighty has His own purposes Woe unto the world because of offences for it must needs be that offences come but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh Matthew 18 7 If we shall suppose that American Slavery is one of those offences which in the providence of God must needs come but which having continued through His appointed time He now wills to remove and that He gives to both North and South this terrible war as the woe due to those by whom the offence came Fondly do we hope fervently do we pray that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away Yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bond man s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword as was said three thousand years ago so still it must be said the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether Psalms 19 9 123 Compensated emancipation buy out the slave owners edit The Thirteenth Amendment which abolished slavery provided no compensation to slave owners but previously President Lincoln had made numerous proposals to the loyal border states to agree to compensated emancipation None did The only area of the country that would ever receive compensated emancipation would be Washington D C Because Washington D C was under federal jurisdiction Congress was able pass the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act President Lincoln advocated that slave owners be compensated for emancipated slaves On March 6 1862 President Lincoln in a message to the U S Congress proposed that Congress adopt a Joint Resolution stating that any state which may adopt gradual abolishment of slavery should be given pecuniary aid to compensate for the inconveniences public and private produced by such a change of system 124 Congress adopted the resolution 125 On July 12 1862 President Lincoln in a conference with congressmen from the four border states of Kentucky Maryland Delaware and Missouri urged that their respective states adopt emancipation legislation that compensated slave owners On July 14 1862 President Lincoln sent a bill to Congress that allowed the Treasury to issue bonds at 6 interest to states for slave emancipation compensation to slave owners The bill never came to a vote 126 127 In the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation issued on September 22 1862 Lincoln stated That it is my purpose upon the next meeting of Congress to again recommend tendering pecuniary aid to the free acceptance of all slave states so called the people whereof may not then be in rebellion against the United States and which states may then have voluntarily adopted or thereafter may voluntarily adopt immediate or gradual abolishment of slavery 128 In his December 1 1862 Annual Message to Congress Lincoln proposed a constitutional amendment that would provide federal compensation in the form of interest bearing U S bonds to any state that voluntarily abolished slavery before the year 1900 129 It also provided Any State having received bonds and afterwards reintroducing or tolerating slavery therein shall refund to the United States the bonds so received or the value thereof and all interest paid thereon Giving the states the option to reintroduce slavery meant that Lincoln was offering to end the war without slavery ever permanently ending As late as the Hampton Roads Conference in 1865 Lincoln met with Confederate leaders and proposed a fair indemnity possibly 500 000 000 in compensation for emancipated slaves 130 Colonization edit nbsp One of several failed colonization attempts during Lincoln s presidency was on the Ile a Vache off the coast of Haiti Like many self styled moderates Abraham Lincoln supported the voluntary colonization resettlement of African Americans outside the United States notably in Liberia Historians have disputed his motivation with scholars such as James McPherson David Reynolds and Allen Guelzo arguing that Lincoln advocated colonization of the freedpeople in order to assuage racist concerns about the Emancipation Proclamation 131 132 133 Other historians such as Phillip W Magness Richard Blackett Phillip Paludan and Mark E Neely Jr have challenged that contention by highlighting the quiet even secretive basis of most of Lincoln s colonization activity the lack of falsifiability to any unsubstantiated claim that historical actors did not mean what they said and the inadequacy for a deportationist target audience of Lincoln s adherence to African American consent 134 135 136 137 The author of the one book length study of black colonization during the Civil War era Sebastian N Page argues that Lincoln believed in colonization to his death but that the policy failed due to the corruption controversy and the inadequate African American interest that it generated 138 Antebellum Activity to 1861 edit Probably present at the 1845 founding of a short lived Illinois auxiliary to the American Colonization Society ACS Lincoln had helped transfer a donation to the latter during his residency in Washington D C as a member of the Thirtieth Congress In 1852 he made his first recorded remarks on African American resettlement in a eulogy for the president of the ACS and national statesman Henry Clay The next year he helped an Indiana colonizationist James Mitchell who had come to Springfield Illinois to rekindle that state s colonization movement 139 In 1854 in his Peoria speech Lincoln articulated two motifs of his support for colonization first the unwillingness of the great mass of white people to accept black equality and second on a note of qualification Liberia s liability to be overwhelmed by any sizable influx of immigrants 140 141 Accordingly he supported the colonization program of Francis Preston Blair and his sons Frank and Montgomery until 1860 better known Republicans than Lincoln who rejected Liberia in favor of closer destinations in the American tropics 142 143 Wartime Provisions 1861 62 edit In his first annual message to Congress now known as the State of the Union Address of December 3 1861 Lincoln advised Congress to provide for the colonization of free African American people even if it required the United States to acquire further territory He encouraged the Thirty Seventh Congress s insertion of voluntary colonization clauses into its District Emancipation and Second Confiscation Acts intimating that he would not sign those bills unless they contained such a provision Once Congress had passed this legislation which it reinforced with a 600 000 fund for colonization Lincoln appointed his old collaborator James Mitchell to an ad hoc position within the Department of the Interior Together they arranged his famous meeting of August 14 1862 with a deputation of black Washingtonians whom he told without the institution of Slavery and the colored race as a basis the war could not have an existence It is better for us both therefore to be separated Civil War historian Jonathan W White wrote of this meeting Few moments in Lincoln s presidency appear as regrettable as this one Lincoln s words were terribly condescending 144 Lincoln biographer Michael Burlingame took a more favorable view of Lincoln s remarks to his visitors finding one statement remarkably empathetic 145 During a series of three cabinet meetings of late September 1862 Lincoln rebuffed Attorney General Edward Bates s suggestion of compulsory colonization but decided to ask Congress in his second annual message of December 1 1862 to pass an amendment to the U S Constitution to promote black resettlement by treaty with putative host states Legislators lack of response drove Lincoln thereafter to his own public silence on colonization though he quietly continued to pursue colonization schemes and in two waves 146 First wave schemes contract colonies in Latin America 1861 1864 edit The president s two best known colonization projects Linconia in Chiriqui Province today in Panama and the Ile a Vache Haiti would both fail albeit at different stages of their development because of Lincoln s initial proclivity for pursuing colonization through U S based concessionaires rather than the sovereign states that had granted them their leases 147 For over a year from October 1861 Lincoln hoped to found a black colony in the Chiriqui district of what is now Panama then an outlying part of Colombia The settlers would mine coal to supply the U S Navy and might even secure isthmian transit from the Atlantic to the Pacific The president appointed the U S senator for Kansas Samuel Pomeroy to lead the expedition and choose pioneers from the 13 700 African Americans who applied to join him Lincoln also signed a contract with Ambrose W Thompson the leaseholder of the tract in question which allowed for tens of thousands of African Americans to immigrate The secretary of the interior Caleb B Smith also issued Pomeroy 25 000 from the colonization fund to pay for transportation and equipment 148 Lincoln suspended the project in early October 1862 before a single ship had sailed ostensibly because of diplomatic protests by the governments of Central America but really because of the uncertainty caused by the Colombian Civil War The president hoped to overcome these complications by having Congress provide for a treaty with Colombia for African American emigration much as he outlined in his second annual message but he shelved the Chiriqui project over the New Year of 1863 when he learned that its stakeholders included not only a personal friend Richard W Thompson but also the new secretary of the interior John P Usher 149 148 150 By way of substitute on New Year s Eve 1862 Lincoln arranged with a New Orleans businessman Bernard Kock to establish a colony on the Ile a Vache an island off Haiti Although the White House subsequently remade the agreement with more trustworthy partners than Kock the new contractors retained Kock as the supervisor of the settlement for which more than 400 freed slaves sailed from Fort Monroe Virginia Lack of shelter on the island an outbreak of smallpox and an ever growing mistrust between the administration and its contractors doomed the colony In February 1864 at Lincoln s behest Secretary of War Edwin Stanton dispatched a vessel to rescue the survivors 151 152 153 Second Wave Schemes Emigration to the European West Indies 1862 1864 edit A critic of the contract colonies the commissioner of emigration James Mitchell encouraged Abraham Lincoln to promote African American emigration to British Honduras Belize and the British West Indies at large Separately the U S minister to the Netherlands James Shepherd Pike negotiated a treaty for black resettlement in the Dutch West Indies Suriname Lincoln believed that by dealing with the comparatively stable European empires he could avoid some of the problems that had plagued his earlier contracts with private interests 154 155 Lincoln signed an agreement on June 13 1863 with John Hodge of British Honduras which authorized colonial agents to recruit ex slaves and transport them to Belize from the approved ports of Philadelphia New York City and Boston Later that year the Department of the Interior sent John Willis Menard a free African American clerk who supported colonization to investigate the site for the government The scheme petered out when John Usher refused to release funds to the would be pioneers of Henry Highland Garnet s African Civilization Society and when the British Colonial Office banned the recruitment of contraband freedpeople for fear that the Confederacy would deem this a hostile act 156 157 Final disposition of colonization 1864 65 edit The question of when Lincoln abandoned colonization if ever has aroused debate among historians The government funded no more colonies after the rescue of the Ile a Vache survivors in early 1864 and Congress repealed most of the colonization funding that July 158 159 160 Lincoln left no surviving statements in his own hand on the subject during the last two years of his presidency An entry in the diary of presidential secretary John Hay dated July 1 1864 claims that Lincoln had sloughed off colonization though attributes that change to the president s frustration with corrupt contractors rather than to any philosophical departure 161 In the fall of 1864 Lincoln wrote Attorney General Edward Bates to inquire whether the legislation of 1862 allowed him to continue pursuing colonization and to retain Mitchell s services irrespective of the loss of funding 162 163 General Benjamin F Butler claimed that Lincoln approached him in 1865 a few days before his assassination to talk about reviving colonization in Panama 164 Since the mid twentieth century historians have debated the validity of Butler s account as Butler wrote it years after the fact and was prone to exaggerating his prowess as a general 165 Recently discovered documents prove that Butler and Lincoln did indeed meet on April 11 1865 though whether and to what extent they talked about colonization is not recorded except in Butler s account 166 A postwar article by Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles suggested that Lincoln intended to revive colonization in his second term 167 168 Citizenship and limited suffrage edit In his second term as president on April 11 1865 Lincoln gave his last public speech In it for the first time publicly he promoted voting rights for some blacks stating It is also unsatisfactory to some that the elective franchise is not given to the colored man I would myself prefer that it were now conferred on the very intelligent and on those who serve our cause as soldiers 169 170 John Wilkes Booth a Southerner and outspoken Confederate sympathizer attended the speech and became determined to kill Lincoln for supporting citizenship for blacks 171 Booth assassinated Lincoln three days later 172 In analyzing Lincoln s position historian Eugene H Berwanger notes 173 During his presidency Lincoln took a reasoned course which helped the federal government both destroy slavery and advance the cause of black suffrage For a man who had denied both reforms four years earlier Lincoln s change in attitude was rapid and decisive He was both open minded and perceptive to the needs of his nation in a postwar era Once committed to a principle Lincoln moved toward it with steady determined progress Views on African Americans editKnown as the Great Emancipator Lincoln was a complicated figure who wrestled with his own views on race 174 Through changing times successive generations have interpreted Lincoln s views on African Americans differently According to Henry Louis Gates Jr To apply 20th century beliefs and standards to an America of 1858 and declare Abraham Lincoln a racist is a faulty formula that unfairly distorts Lincoln s true role in advancing civil and human rights By the standards of his time Lincoln s views on race and equality were progressive and truly changed minds policy and most importantly hearts for years to come 174 Lincoln s primary audience was white male voters Lincoln s views on slavery race equality and African American colonization are often intermixed 174 During the 1858 debates with Stephen Douglas Lincoln stated that the physical difference between the white and black races will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality He added that there must be the position of superior and inferior and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race 174 On August 22 1862 he said to a delegation of five black men whom he d invited to the White House You and we are different races We have between us a broader difference than exists between almost any other two races Whether it is right or wrong I need not discuss but this physical difference is a great disadvantage to us both as I think your race suffer very greatly many of them by living among us while ours suffer from your presence In a word we suffer on each side 175 While president as the Civil War progressed Lincoln advocated or implemented anti slavery policies including the Emancipation Proclamation and limited suffrage for African Americans which he had earlier opposed 174 Former slave and leading abolitionist Frederick Douglass unequivocally regarded Lincoln as sharing the prejudices of his white fellow countrymen against the Negro 176 but also observed of Lincoln that in his company I was never reminded of my humble origin or of my unpopular color 177 According to Douglass Lincoln was preeminently the white man s President and also emphatically the black man s President the first to show any respect to their rights as men 178 Douglass attested to Lincoln s genuine respect for him and other blacks and to the wisdom of Lincoln s course of action in obtaining both the preservation of the Union his sworn duty as president and the freeing of the slaves In an 1876 speech at the unveiling of the Freedmen s Monument in Memory of Abraham Lincoln later renamed the Emancipation Memorial he defended Lincoln s actions His great mission was to accomplish two things first to save his country from dismemberment and ruin and second to free his country from the great crime of slavery To do one or the other or both he must have the earnest sympathy and the powerful cooperation of his loyal fellow countrymen Without this primary and essential condition to success his efforts must have been vain and utterly fruitless Had he put the abolition of slavery before the salvation of the Union he would have inevitably driven from him a powerful class of the American people and rendered resistance to rebellion impossible Viewed from the genuine abolition ground Mr Lincoln seemed tardy cold dull and indifferent but measuring him by the sentiment of his country a sentiment he was bound as a statesman to consult he was swift zealous radical and determined T aking him for all in all measuring the tremendous magnitude of the work before him considering the necessary means to ends and surveying the end from the beginning infinite wisdom has seldom sent any man into the world better fitted for his mission than Abraham Lincoln 176 11 In his past Lincoln lived in a middle class racially mixed neighborhood of Springfield Illinois one of his long time neighbors Jameson Jenkins who may have been born a slave had come from North Carolina and was publicly implicated in the 1850s as a Springfield conductor on the Underground Railroad sheltering fugitive slaves In 1861 President elect Lincoln called on Jenkins to give him a ride to the train depot where Lincoln delivered his farewell address before leaving Springfield for the last time 179 Accompanying Lincoln to Washington was a free African American William Johnson who acted during the trip as valet messenger and bodyguard 180 181 Johnson was afterward employed by the White House and then as messenger in the Treasury Department 182 The two men called on each other for favors 183 When Johnson contracted fever probably from Lincoln and died in 1864 Lincoln satisfied Johnson s family debts and paid for his burial and tombstone in Arlington 183 When Lincoln arrived at the White House for the first time in his life he lived within a large community of free African Americans employed there Many had previously been enslaved or were descendants of slaves and their success as free people may have influenced Lincoln s own thinking 184 Lincoln is said to have showed these employees a peculiar care and solicitude and it was noted perhaps surprisingly that Lincoln treated them like people 184 He sympathized with us colored folks one former servant said and we loved him 184 White House Usher William Slade who became an intimate friend was often the first person Lincoln asked to review parts of his writings and speeches likely including drafts of the Emancipation Proclamation 184 See also edit nbsp American Civil War portalLincoln s Lost Speech George Washington and slavery Thomas Jefferson and slavery John Quincy Adams and abolitionism Timeline of the civil rights movementReferences edit a b Striner Richard 2006 Father Abraham Lincoln s Relentless Struggle to End Slavery Oxford University Press pp 2 4 ISBN 978 0 19 518306 1 Lincoln Abraham April 4 1864 Letter to Albert G Hodges In the extreme Northern part of Illinois he can proclaim as bold and radical Abolitionism as ever Giddings Lovejoy or Garrison enunciated Stephen A Douglas at Lincoln Douglas debate at Galesburg Illinois October 7 1858 Speech of Wendell Phillips Esq at the New England Anti Slavery Convention Wednesday May 30th 1860 Phonographic report for The Liberator by J M W Yereinton The Liberator Boston Massachusetts 8 June 1860 pp 1 and 2 via newspapers com National Park Service 2015 Lincoln on Slavery Retrieved 2021 08 02 Abraham Lincoln Peoria Speech October 16 1854 Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Abraham Lincoln s Second Inaugural Address March 4 1865 read aloud a b Lincoln Abraham 2018 June 16 1858 House Divided Speech Abraham Lincoln Online Retrieved 2020 08 22 Drexler Ken March 7 2019 Missouri Compromise Primary Documents in American History Library of Congress Retrieved 2021 08 02 Lincoln Abraham August 27 1856 Speech at Kalamazoo Michigan Mr Lincoln and Freedom Lehrman Institute Retrieved 2021 08 02 When Congress passed the DC Emancipation Act in April 1862 giving compensation to loyal owners Coakley Gabriel Coakley a leader of the black Catholic community in Washington successfully petitioned for his wife and children since he had purchased their freedom in earlier years He was one of only a handful of black Washingtonians to make a claim like this The federal government paid him 1489 20 for eight slaves that he owned he had claimed their value at 3 300 White Jonathan W A House Built by Slaves African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House Rowman amp Littlefield 2022 p 106 Appeal to Border State Representatives to Favor Compensated Emancipation in Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Volume 5 Battle of Antietam history com January 13 2021 October 27 2009 Retrieved 2020 08 22 Lincoln Abraham January 1 1863 Transcript of Emancipation Proclamation ourdocuments gov National Archives amp Records Administration Retrieved 2021 08 02 Randolph B Campbell The End of Slavery in Texas Southwestern Historical Quarterly 88 1 1984 71 80 Biden Signs Law Making Juneteenth a Federal Holiday New York Times June 17 2021 1619 podcast Episode 1 The Fight for a True Democracy The New York Times 2019 08 23 Retrieved 2021 03 03 Lind Michael What Lincoln Believed The Values and Convictions of America s Greatest President New York Anchor Books 2004 See e g books listed in Further reading by Michael Burlingame Allen Guelzo and James Oakes Lind Michael 2004 ch 6 Race and Restoration pp 191 232 White Jonathan W A House Built by Slaves African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House Rowman amp Littlefield 2022 p 92 Stahr Walter Salmon P Chase Lincoln s Vital Rival Simon amp Schuster 2021 p 476 Masur Louis P 2015 05 09 Why Lincoln s last speech matters OUPblog University of Oxford Press Retrieved 2021 03 21 Lincoln amp Race Michael Lind reply by James M McPherson In response to What Did He Really Think About Race from the March 29 2007 issue www nybooks com The New York Review of Books 2007 04 26 Retrieved 2021 12 01 Donald 1996 pp 20 22 Donald 1996 pp 22 24 Sandburg 1926 p 20 Abraham Lincoln Lyceum Address Archived 2013 01 03 at the Wayback Machine January 27 18389 White Ronald C A Lincoln A Biography New York Random House 2009 p 87 Simon Paul Essay on Lincoln s Lyceum Speech Slavery Mary Todd Lincoln House Retrieved 2020 08 23 Landreth Andrew 2017 11 02 Ever True and Loyal Mary Todd Lincoln as a Kentuckian Scholars Week Oakes James Freedom National The Destruction of Slavery in the United States 1861 1865 New York W W Norton amp Company 2013 Lincoln on Slavery Retrieved November 15 2009 Lincoln Abraham 1907 Injustice The Foundation of Slavery In Marion Mills Miller ed Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln Vol 3 New York Current Literature pp 26 27 Adams Carl Fall Winter 2008 Lincoln s First Freed Slave A Review of Bailey v Cromwell 1841 Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 101 3 4 Archived from the original on January 28 2012 Retrieved June 16 2012 Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Volume 1 2001 Lincoln Law Practice People v Pond Burlingame Michael Abraham Lincoln A Life Volume One p 252 Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 2008 Unedited Manuscript pp 736 737 Holzer p 63 Harris William C 2007 Lincoln s Rise to the Presidency University Press of Kansas p 54 ISBN 978 0 7006 1520 9 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton p 57 ISBN 978 0 393 06618 0 Thomas 2008 pp 148 152 White p 199 Basler 1953 p 255 Finkelman Paul 2006 12 01 Scott v Sandford The Court s Most Dreadful Case and How It Changed History Chicago Kent Law Review 82 1 34 ISSN 0009 3599 White Ronald C 2009 A Lincoln A Biography Random House Publishing Group pp 236 238 ISBN 978 1 58836 775 4 Zarefsky David 1993 Lincoln Douglas and Slavery In the Crucible of Public Debate University of Chicago Press pp 69 110 ISBN 978 0 226 97876 5 Springfield Mailing Address 413 S 8th Street Us IL 62701 Phone 492 4241 Contact House Divided Speech Lincoln Home National Historic Site U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved 2020 08 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Jaffa Harry V 2000 A New Birth of Freedom Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War Rowman amp Littlefield pp 299 300 ISBN 9780847699520 a b c d Mr Lincoln and Freedom Abraham Lincoln Institute a Speech at Peoria October 16 1854 Archived from the original on January 24 2009 Retrieved September 15 2008 b Preface by Lewis Lehrman Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Retrieved August 31 2008 c 1854 Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Retrieved August 31 2008 d The progress of Abraham Lincoln s opposition to slavery Archived from the original on January 24 2009 Retrieved August 31 2008 Abraham Lincoln at Peoria The Turning Point Getting Right with the Declaration of Independence LincolnAtPeoria com Archived from the original on September 14 2008 Retrieved August 31 2008 Lincoln on Slavery Academic UDayton edu University of Dayton Retrieved August 31 2008 Lincoln Abraham Mr Lincoln s Reply Bartleby com First Joint Debate at Ottawa Retrieved September 15 2008 a b Escott Paul 2009 What Shall We Do with the Negro University of Virginia Press p 25 Peck Graham Alexander Summer 2007 Abraham Lincoln and the Triumph of an Antislavery Nationalism Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 28 2 hdl 2027 spo 2629860 0028 203 ISSN 1945 7987 Letter to Joshua F Speed August 24 1855 in The Complete Works of Abraham Lincoln v 2 Northern Illinois University Digital Library digital lib niu edu Retrieved 2021 11 22 In Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln the capitalization italicization and punctuation differ 32b The Lincoln Douglas Debates USHistory org Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved April 28 2014 First Debate Ottawa Illinois Lincoln Home National Historic Site U S National Park Service Lincoln and Negro Equality The New York Times December 28 1860 p 4 Vespasian Warner s recount of events leading up to the Lincoln Douglas Debate Moore Warner Farm Management Archived from the original on January 26 2009 Retrieved January 21 2009 Cuomo Mario M Holzer Harold 1990 Lincoln on Democracy Harper Collins p 131 ISBN 0 06 039126 X Fragment On Slavery Teaching American History James Oakes The Crooked Path to Abolition Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution W W Norton 2021 excerpt Gordon S Wood Was the Constitution a Pro Slavery Document The New York Times Jan 12 2021 Review of James Oakes The Crooked Path to Abolition Cuomo Mario M Holzer Harold 1990 Lincoln on Democracy Harper Collins p 180 ISBN 0 06 039126 X Lincoln Abraham December 10 1860 To Lyman Trumbull Retrieved March 9 2015 via The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln University of Michigan Library Lincoln Abraham December 15 1860 To John A Gilmer Retrieved March 9 2015 via The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln University of Michigan Library Lincoln Abraham December 15 1860 To Alexander H Stephens Retrieved March 9 2015 via The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln University of Michigan Library Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton p 153 ISBN 978 0 393 06618 0 New York Herald January 28 1861 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton p 155 ISBN 978 0 393 06618 0 Lincoln Abraham February 22 1861 Speech in Independence Hall Philadelphia Pennsylvania Retrieved March 9 2015 via The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln University of Michigan Library Cuomo Mario M Holzer Harold 1990 Lincoln on Democracy Harper Collins p 198 ISBN 0 06 039126 X Lincoln Abraham 4 March 1861 First Inaugural Address Abraham Lincoln Online Retrieved 9 March 2015 Cuomo Mario M Holzer Harold 1990 Lincoln on Democracy Harper Collins p 208 ISBN 0 06 039126 X Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton pp 156 158 ISBN 978 0 393 06618 0 Jenkins Sally and John Stauffer The State of Jones New York Anchor Books edition Random House 2009 2010 ISBN 978 0 7679 2946 2 p 72 Daniel W Crofts Lincoln and the Politics of Slavery The Other Thirteenth Amendment and the Struggle to Save the Union 2016 Abraham Lincoln speaks out against slavery Guelzo Allen C Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation The End of Slavery in America New York Simon amp Schuster 2004 p 73 Carnahan Burrus M Act of Justice Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation and the Law of War Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky 2007 p 99 Carnahan Act of Justice p 100 President Lincoln s Proclamation Overruling Hunter s Emancipation May 19 1862 Cox LaWanda 1981 Lincoln and Black Freedom A Study in Presidential Leadership University of South Carolina Press pp 12 14 ISBN 978 0 87249 400 8 The war powers derive from Article II section 2 which provides The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States Emancipation in the Federal Territories June 19 1862 The Second Confiscation Act July 17 1862 Lincoln Abraham Letter to Horace Greeley August 22 1862 In Miller Marion Mills ed Life and Works of Abraham Lincoln Current Literature Retrieved January 24 2011 Freehling William W The South vs The South How Anti Confederate Southerners Shaped the Course of the Civil War Oxford University Press 2001 p 111 Harold Holzer Dear Mr Lincoln Letters to the President Southern Illinois University Press 2006 p 162 a b Striner Richard 2006 Father Abraham Lincoln s Relentless Struggle to End Slavery Oxford University Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 19 518306 1 Brewster Todd 2014 Lincoln s Gamble The Tumultuous Six Months that Gave America the Emancipation Proclamation and Changed the Course of the Civil War Scribner p 59 ISBN 978 1451693867 Brewster Todd 2014 Lincoln s Gamble The Tumultuous Six Months that Gave America the Emancipation Proclamation and Changed the Course of the Civil War Scribner p 236 ISBN 978 1451693867 Appeal to Border State Representatives to Favor Compensated Emancipation Willey Amendment Lincoln Abraham Opinion on the Admission of West Virginia into the Union December 31 1862 On This Day in West Virginia History February 3 Allen C Guelzo Defending emancipation Abraham Lincoln and the Conkling letter 1863 Civil War History 48 4 2002 p 313 online For the full text see Henry Louis Gates Jr and Donald Yacovone eds Lincoln on Race and Slavery 2009 pp 284 290 or Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Cuomo and Holzer Lincoln on Democracy 1990 If Slavery is not wrong nothing is Wrong pp 316 318 Vorenberg Final Freedom 2001 p 47 Reconstruction A State Divided 23 January 2014 Freedmen and Southern Society Project Chronology of Emancipation www freedmen umd edu University of Maryland Retrieved 2019 11 26 Archives of Maryland Historical List Constitutional Convention 1864 November 1 1864 Retrieved November 18 2012 Missouri abolishes slavery January 11 1865 Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved November 18 2012 Tennessee State Convention Slavery Declared Forever Abolished The New York Times January 14 1865 Retrieved November 18 2012 On this day 1865 FEB 03 Retrieved November 18 2012 Education from LVA Convention Resolved to Abolish Slavery edu lva virginia gov Archived from the original on 2016 03 30 Constitutional Convention Virginia 1864 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 2021 07 01 June 28 1864 Hereby Repealed 28 June 2019 Douglass Frederick Life and Times of Frederick Douglass p 435 Nagler Jorg 2009 Abraham Lincoln s Attitudes on Slavery and Race American Studies Journal University of Gottingen 53 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton pp 299 312 313 ISBN 978 0 393 06618 0 Cuomo and Holzer Lincoln on Democracy 1990 pp 338 340 Tackach James 2002 Lincoln s Moral Vision University Press of Mississippi p 79 ISBN 9781578064953 Gienapp William E Abraham Lincoln and the Border States Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association Vol 13 1992 pp 13 46 Hoffecker Carol E Abraham Lincoln and Delaware Delaware History 2008 Vol 32 No 3 pp 155 170 Our Documents Transcript of President Abraham Lincoln s Second Inaugural Address 1865 www ourdocuments gov Retrieved 2020 07 13 White Ronald C 2002 Lincoln s Greatest Speech The Second Inaugural Simon and Schuster pp 143 145 ISBN 978 0 7432 9962 6 Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln Congressional Joint Resolution on Compensated Emancipation Lowell H Harrison Lincoln and Compensated Emancipation in Kentucky in Douglas Cantrell et al eds Kentucky through the Centuries A Collection of Documents and Essays 2005 Aaron Astor Rebels on the Border Civil War Emancipation and the Reconstruction of Kentucky and Missouri LSU Press 2012 Text of Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation The Annual Message to Congress was the equivalent of the modern State of the Union Address Abraham Lincoln December 1 1862 Randall James G Donald David 1960 The Civil War and Reconstruction 2nd ed Pickle Partners p 673 ISBN 9781787200272 McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era New York pp 508 9 ISBN 0 19 503863 0 OCLC 15550774 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Reynolds David S 2020 Abe Abraham Lincoln in his Times New York ISBN 978 1 59420 604 7 OCLC 1127067670 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Guelzo Allen C The 1619 Project s Outrageous Lying Slander of Abe Lincoln The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 2021 03 21 Magness Phillip W 2011 Colonization after Emancipation Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement Sebastian N Page Columbia University of Missouri Press pp 118 20 ISBN 978 0 8262 7235 5 OCLC 793207678 Blackett Richard 2007 10 01 Lincoln and Colonization OAH Magazine of History 21 4 19 22 doi 10 1093 maghis 21 4 19 ISSN 0882 228X Paludan Phillip Shaw Winter 2004 Lincoln and Colonization Policy or Propaganda Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 25 1 hdl 2027 spo 2629860 0025 104 ISSN 1945 7987 Mark E Neely Jr Colonization and the Myth That Lincoln Prepared the People for Emancipation in Lincoln s Proclamation Emancipation Reconsidered William Alan Blair Karen Fisher Younger eds Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2009 pp 45 74 ISBN 978 0 8078 3316 2 OCLC 646847027 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge United Kingdom ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge pp 26 28 ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dirck Brian R 2012 Abraham Lincoln and White America Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas pp 182 184 ISBN 978 0 7006 2182 8 OCLC 914328737 Escott Paul D 2009 What shall we do with the Negro Lincoln white racism and Civil War America Charlottesville University of Virginia Press pp 22 25 ISBN 978 0 8139 3046 6 OCLC 753977945 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery 1st ed New York W W Norton pp 124 129 ISBN 978 0 393 06618 0 OCLC 601096674 May Robert E 2013 Slavery Race and Conquest in the Tropics Lincoln Douglas and the Future of Latin America Cambridge pp 182 188 ISBN 978 0 521 76383 7 OCLC 845349791 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link White Jonathan W A House Built by Slaves African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House Rowman amp Littlefield 2022 p 44 Burlingame Michael The Black Man s President Abraham Lincoln African Americans amp the Pursuit of Racial Equality Pegasus Books 2021 p 75 Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge United Kingdom pp 121 6 129 42 ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge United Kingdom p 145 ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Page Sebastian N 2011 Lincoln and Chiriqui Colonization Revisited American Nineteenth Century History 12 3 289 325 doi 10 1080 14664658 2011 626160 S2CID 143566173 Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge United Kingdom pp 162 75 ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Schoonover Thomas 1980 11 01 Misconstrued Mission Expansionism and Black Colonization in Mexico and Central America during the Civil War Pacific Historical Review 49 4 607 620 doi 10 2307 3638969 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3638969 Lockett James D 1991 Abraham Lincoln and Colonization An Episode That Ends in Tragedy at L Ile a Vache Haiti 1863 1864 Journal of Black Studies 21 4 428 444 doi 10 1177 002193479102100404 ISSN 0021 9347 JSTOR 2784687 S2CID 144846693 May Robert E 2013 Slavery Race and Conquest in the Tropics Lincoln Douglas and the Future of Latin America Cambridge pp 230 4 ISBN 978 0 521 76383 7 OCLC 845349791 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge United Kingdom pp 175 88 ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Douma Michael J 2015 The Lincoln Administration s Negotiations to Colonize African Americans in Dutch Suriname Civil War History 61 2 111 137 doi 10 1353 cwh 2015 0037 ISSN 1533 6271 S2CID 142674093 Magness Phillip W 2011 Colonization After Emancipation Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement Sebastian N Page Columbia University of Missouri Press pp 10 24 38 ISBN 978 0 8262 7235 5 OCLC 793207678 Magness Phillip W 2013 03 01 The British Honduras Colony Black Emigrationist Support for Colonization in the Lincoln Presidency Slavery amp Abolition 34 1 39 60 doi 10 1080 0144039X 2012 709044 ISSN 0144 039X S2CID 145451389 Magness Phillip W 2011 Colonization After Emancipation Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement Sebastian N Page Columbia University of Missouri Press pp 37 54 ISBN 978 0 8262 7235 5 OCLC 793207678 Lincoln Abraham 2009 Henry Louis Gates Jr Donald Yacovone eds Lincoln on Race amp Slavery Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp lii lxiv ISBN 978 1 4008 3208 8 OCLC 647843182 Page Sebastian N 2021 Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge pp 253 256 ISBN 978 1 316 49391 5 OCLC 1226077146 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lincoln Revisited New Insights from the Lincoln Forum New York Fordham University Press 2011 pp 215 230 ISBN 978 0 8232 2737 2 OCLC 702327554 Hay John 1999 Michael Burlingame John R T Ettlinger eds Inside Lincoln s White House The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press p 217 ISBN 0 585 10658 4 OCLC 44954715 Phillip W Magness and Sebastian N Page Colonization after Emancipation Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement University of Missouri Press 2011 p 98 Abraham Lincoln Papers Series 1 General Correspondence 1833 1916 Edward Bates to Abraham Lincoln Wednesday November 30 1864 Opinion on James Mitchell Library of Congress Retrieved 2021 04 07 Benjamin F Butler Autobiography and Personal Reminiscences of Major General Benj F Butler Butler s Book Boston A M Thayer 1892 p 903 Mark E Neely Abraham Lincoln and Black Colonization Benjamin Butler s Spurious Testimony Civil War History 25 1979 pp 77 83 Magness Phillip W Winter 2008 Benjamin Butler s Colonization Testimony Reevaluated Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 29 1 hdl 2027 spo 2629860 0029 103 ISSN 1945 7987 Lincoln Abraham 2009 Henry Louis Gates Jr Donald Yacovone eds Lincoln on Race amp Slavery Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp lv lx ISBN 978 1 4008 3208 8 OCLC 647843182 Magness Phillip W February 2016 Lincoln and Colonization Essential Civil War Curriculum Last Public Address Abraham Lincoln Online 2014 Retrieved January 15 2020 In 1864 Lincoln had made the same suggestion in a letter to Michael Hahn the governor of Louisiana White Jonathan W A House Built by Slaves African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House Rowman amp Littlefield 2022 p 92 Swanson James Manhunt The 12 Day Chase for Lincoln s Killer Harper Collins 2006 ISBN 978 0 06 051849 3 p 6 Booth and Lincoln National Museum of American History 2012 04 04 Retrieved 2021 04 11 Lincoln s Constitutional Dilemma Emancipation and Black Suffrage Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association Volume 5 Issue 1 1983 pp 25 38 a b c d e Gates Henry Louis Jr February 12 2009 Was Lincoln a Racist The Root Archived from the original on December 3 2011 Retrieved January 8 2021 The President s Colonization Scheme His interview with a committee of colored men National Republican Washington D C August 15 1862 p 2 via newspapers com a b Douglass Frederick April 14 1876 Oration in Memory of Abraham Lincoln Archived from the original on April 27 2011 Retrieved October 29 2011 via TeachingAmericanHistory org Douglass Frederick 1892 Life and Times of Frederick Douglass Written by Himself Boston De Wolfe amp Fiske p 436 Lederle Cheryl 2013 02 07 Frederick Douglass on Abraham Lincoln The Writer and Abolitionist Remembers the President in Library of Congress Primary Sources Library of Congress Retrieved 2022 01 17 Lincoln Home The Underground Railroad in Lincoln s Neighborhood PDF National Park Service US Dept of the Interior February 2008 Retrieved August 25 2012 Paull Bonnie E Hart Richard E 2015 Lincoln s Springfield Neighborhood Arcadia Publishing pp 148 149 ISBN 978 1 62585 532 9 Paradis James M 2012 African Americans and the Gettysburg Campaign Scarecrow Press p 82 ISBN 978 0 8108 8336 9 Washington John E They Knew Lincoln Oxford University Press 2018 1942 pp 127 134 a b Basler Roy P 1972 Did President Lincoln Give the Smallpox to William H Johnson Huntington Library Quarterly 35 3 279 284 doi 10 2307 3816663 JSTOR 3816663 PMID 11635173 a b c d Conroy James B Slavery s Mark on Lincoln s White House White House Historical Association en US Retrieved 2021 08 18 Further reading editBlack William R February 12 2018 Abraham Lincoln s Secret Visits to Slaves The Atlantic Belz Herman 1997 Abraham Lincoln Constitutionalism and Equal Rights in the Civil War Era Fordham University Press Burlingame Michael 2021 The Black Man s President Abraham Lincoln African Americans amp the Pursuit of Racial Equality Pegasus Books Burton Orville Vernon 2008 The Age of Lincoln Hill and Wang Carwardine Richard 2006 Lincoln A Life of Purpose and Power New York Alfred A Knopf Chaput Erik J The Bitter Fruit of Freedom Struggles over Land Labor and Citizenship in the Age of Emancipation Reviews in American History 44 1 2016 118 125 ResearchGate JSTOR Cox LaWanda Lincoln and Black Freedom A Study in Presidential Leadership University of South Carolina Press 1981 Crofts Daniel W Lincoln and the Politics of Slavery The Other Thirteenth Amendment and the Struggle to Save the Union University of North Carolina Press 2016 Danoff Brian Lincoln and the Necessity of Tolerating Slavery before the Civil War Review of Politics 77 1 2015 47 71 online permanent dead link Dirck Brian R ed Lincoln Emancipated The President and the Politics of Race Northern Illinois University Press 2007 Donald David H 1995 Lincoln Simon amp Schuster Escott Paul D 2009 What Shall We Do with the Negro Lincoln White Racism and Civil War America University of Virginia Press ISBN 978 0 8139 2786 2 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton amp Co Pulitzer Prize winner Finkelman Paul 2010 Lincoln and Emancipation Constitutional Theory Practical Politics and the Basic Practice of Law Journal of Supreme Court History 35 3 243 266 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5818 2010 01249 x S2CID 143921210 Fredrickson George M 2008 Big Enough to Be Inconsistent Abraham Lincoln Confronts Slavery and Race The W E B Du Bois Lectures series Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674027749 Review Guelzo Allen C 1999 Abraham Lincoln Redeemer President Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 9780802838728 Second edition 2022 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 7858 8 Guelzo Allen C 2002 Defending Emancipation Abraham Lincoln and the Conkling Letter 1863 Civil War History 48 4 313 337 doi 10 1353 cwh 2002 0056 S2CID 145742371 Guelzo Allen C Winter 2004 How Abe Lincoln Lost the Black Vote Lincoln and Emancipation in the African American Mind Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 25 1 22 Holzer Harold 2004 Lincoln at Cooper Union The Speech That Made Abraham Lincoln President Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 9964 0 Holzer Harold and Sara Vaughn Gabbard Lincoln and Freedom Slavery Emancipation and the Thirteenth Amendment Southern Illinois University Press 2007 Jones Howard 1999 Abraham Lincoln and a New Birth of Freedom The Union and Slavery in the Diplomacy of the Civil War University of Nebraska Press Kendrick Paul and Kendrick Stephen 2007 Douglass and Lincoln How a Revolutionary Black Leader and a Reluctant Liberator Struggled to End Slavery and Save the Union Bloomsbury Publishing USA Klingaman William K 2001 Abraham Lincoln and the Road to Emancipation 1861 1865 Penguin Books ISBN 9780670867547 Lind Michael 2004 What Lincoln Believed The Values and Convictions of America s Greatest President Anchor Books ISBN 978 1 4000 3073 6 McPherson James M 1991 Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 505542 9 Manning Chandra Winter 2013 The Shifting Terrain of Attitudes Toward Abraham Lincoln and Emancipation Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 34 18 39 Oakes James The Crooked Path to Abolition Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution W W Norton amp Co 2021 Oakes James The Scorpion s Sting Antislavery and the Coming of the Civil War W W Norton amp Co 2014 Oakes James Freedom National The Destruction of Slavery in the United States 1861 1865 W W Norton amp Co 2012 Page Sebastian N Black Resettlement and the American Civil War Cambridge University Press 2021 Quarles Benjamin Lincoln and the Negro Oxford University Press 1962 Striner Richard Lincoln and Race Southern Illinois University Press 2012 Vorenberg Michael 2004 Final Freedom The Civil War the Abolition of Slavery and the Thirteenth Amendment Cambridge University Press White Jonathan W 2022 A House Built by Slaves African American Visitors to the Lincoln White House Rowman amp Littlefield Primary sources edit Johnson Michael P ed Abraham Lincoln Slavery and the Civil War Selected Writing and Speeches Macmillan Higher Education 2010 Clay Henry Douglas Stephen 1860 Abraham Lincoln s Record on the Slavery Question Baltimore a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gates Jr Henry Louis ed Lincoln on Race amp Slavery Princeton University Press 2009 External links edit Abraham Lincoln and Emancipation Abraham Lincoln Papers Library of Congress Lincoln on Slavery Lincoln Home United States National Park Service Looking for Lincoln s Views on Slavery Quicktime MOV Public Broadcasting System 2017 Four short videos intended for school instruction grades 5 8 Abraham Lincoln A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress Research Guides Library of Congress Norton Roger J ed 2010 Abraham Lincoln Quotes About Slavery Including Sources RogerJNorton com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org 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