Friday, April 7, 2023

Abraham Lincoln's Legacy.

Abraham Lincoln by Alexander Hesler, 1860.
CAMPAIGN
By May of 1860, Lincoln was nominated for President in the Republican National Convention in Chicago. He was running against a deeply divided Democratic Party, positioning the nation on the brink of fundamental change. A Republican win would end the South's political dominance of the Union. Ultimately, Lincoln carried all northern states, but New Jersey and Lincoln's win in the heavily populated North achieved victory in the Electoral College. 

Four years later, in November 1864, amid the civil war, the United States held another presidential election, a feat no democratic nation had ever accomplished. Even when Lincoln felt no hope of winning, he never seriously considered postponing the election. Despite his doubts, Lincoln achieved a huge Electoral College victory, with a considerable margin of 55% of the popular vote. Thousands of Lincoln votes by soldier-citizens were one key to his victory.

CHALLENGES
When Lincoln left Illinois and headed east for his inauguration, he told the crowd at the Springfield railroad station that he confronted challenges equal only to those that had faced the nation's first president: Washington had had to create a nation; Lincoln now had to preserve it. 

Lincoln's election was evidence of the sectional discord that had ripped the United States apart during the 1850s, as slavery became a critical political and moral issue. As Lincoln had remarked, "A house divided against itself [over slavery] cannot stand." This proved prophetic with the collapse of the national party systems (the Whigs disappeared altogether) as North and South evolved into separate societies ─ one based on free labor, the other on slavery. 

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Although the term "free labor" might suggest the same meaning as slavery, the word "free" had nothing to do with bondage or working for no wage, but rather indicated concepts of freedom, independence, and self-reliance. The concept emphasized an egalitarian (all people are equal and deserve equal rights) vision of individual human potential, the idea that anyone could climb the ladder of success with hard work and dedication.

Lincoln's election prompted the South to withdraw, or secede, from the Union. In his first inaugural address, Lincoln delivered a final plea to the South to remain, but to no avail. War broke out in April 1861 with the attempt by the Federal government to resupply South Carolina's Fort Sumter. Despite the partisans' optimism that the war would be over quickly, it became a long, desperate, and exceptionally bloody conflict that would fundamentally reshape the nation.      

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The poet Steve Scafidi (1967─) characterized Lincoln's challenges as those confronted by a doctor trying to perform brain surgery while a dog gnaws at his leg. 

Lincoln's tasks were staggering, both in detail and in scope. Politically, he had to navigate between the many demanding factions and interests of the North. He also had the unprecedented task of organizing and prosecuting what would become the first industrial war, a conflict that ranged across the whole country, involved all of its resources, and was fought by an army not always up to the task. Finally, constitutionally and politically, Lincoln grappled with the evolving meaning of the Civil War. Initially, Lincoln espoused only the cause of Unionism. But as the war continued, he saw that saving the Union was inseparable from the cause of Negroes freedom. In his 1863 Gettysburg Address, he argued that the war must lead to "a new birth of freedom," or it would have been fought in vain.

MAJOR ACTS
In practical terms, the achievements of Abraham Lincoln are mammoth yet simple to describe: he confronted the South's secession and the Union's dissolution with all the political and practical tools at his command to defeat the Confederacy and restore the United States. 

His skills as a practical politician were extraordinary as he juggled the contending interests of his constituencies, which included the army, Congress, foreign countries, and ordinary Americans he was conscious of representing. It must be remembered that Lincoln was, above all, an extremely skillful politician, one frequently underestimated by both friends and foes. 

His use of the levers of power in pursuing his evolving war aims greatly expanded the power of the executive in American politics, setting a precedent that later presidents would build on. His suspension of habeas corpus was controversial both then and now; the military draft caused violent riots, and through government contracting and the expansion of state activity, such as the approval of a transcontinental railway and the Morrill Act to settle western lands, he laid the foundations for a better country.

LEGACY
Lincoln's legacy is based on his momentous achievements: he successfully waged a political struggle and civil war that preserved the Union and ended slavery. He created the possibility of civil and social freedom for Negroes.




President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, as the nation approached its third year of a bloody civil war. The proclamation declared "that all persons held as slaves" within the Confederacy "are, and henceforward shall be free."

On February 25, 1863, President Lincoln signed The National Currency Act into law. The Act established the Office of the Comptroller of Currency, which was responsible for organizing and administering a system of nationally chartered banks and a uniform national currency. 

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The Confederate Congress authorized the recruitment of slaves as soldiers with permission of owners in March 1865.

John Wilkes Booth shot President Lincoln on Friday, April 14, 1865, at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. Lincoln was immediately moved to the William and Anna Petersen's House across the street from Ford's Theatre. Abraham died from his injury on Saturday, April 15, 1865.

However, his assassination prevented him from overseeing the reconstruction of the Union he had helped save. The assassination also had the effect of turning Lincoln into a martyr of almost mythological dimensions. As Edwin Stanton remarked when Lincoln died, "Now he belongs to the ages," Lincoln has not lacked idolaters who viewed him as an almost supernatural representation of American genius. 

It is much more realistic to see Lincoln as a practical genius. Temperamentally, he was humane, tolerant, and patient. But he also had an extraordinary ability to see and adapt to events, responding decisively when necessary. Above all, there is his evolution on civil rights. He began the Civil War with thoughts only of restoring the Union but ended up committing the nation to freedom for Negroes. 

One of the great unanswerable questions in American history centers on how our nation's social trajectory might have changed had Lincoln lived to serve his entire second term.


Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

The Settlement of Chicago and How it was Incorporated.

Until 1833, Chicago was just a settlement with only the Cook County organization for a government. In 1833 with a population of approximately 300, it was incorporated as a town. It became a place of considerable importance and attracted a great body of immigrants who came West that year, producing many improvements.
An 1833 Map of Chicago.


The Indian lands were to be sold, and Chicago started out with a boom. The inns were crowded, and travelers considered themselves fortunate if they could secure a place on the floor to sleep. 

During the summer of 1833, 160 houses were built, and the number of stores increased from five or six to twenty-five. The Green Tree Tavern was the first structure built as a public house among the new buildings. While the old Kinzie house and several other houses had been open to travelers, there had never been a building put up for that purpose until the Green Tree in 1833.

Read a first-hand account of a traveler's overnight stay at the Green Tree Tavern.





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Chicago's First Three Taverns:
Wolf Point Tavern opened in December of 1828. The Wolf Point Tavern was rechristened by its owner, Chester Ingersoll, The Travelers' Home, in October 1833.

Eagle Exchange Tavern  - Mark Beaubien opened the Eagle Exchange Tavern in a log cabin on the south bank in 1829. In 1831 Beaubien added a frame addition and opened Chicago's first hotel, the Sauganash Hotel.

The Green Tree Tavern was built in 1833 - The Green Tree Tavern was later renamed the City Hotel, then the Lake Street House, and finally the Tenement House.

The United States Government began to pay some attention to the growing town on Lake Michigan's shore, and the harbor was improved at the expense of $325,000 ($12M today).

The channel of the river was straightened, widened, and deepened. The sand bar at the mouth of the river turned the river down (south) the shore from Water Street to Madison before emptying into the lake was cut through, and vessels could enter and pass up to the forks. The mail arrived semi-weekly and departed for Galena, Springfield, Alton, and St Louis.

On October 26, 1836, the Town Board took the necessary steps to secure a charter for the city of Chicago. A public meeting was held on November 25, and E. B. Williams, as President, appointed J. D. Caton, Ebenezer Peck, T. W. Smith, W. B. Ogden and Nathan Boiles delegates to draw up a charter for presentation. This charter was presented to the board on December 9, and the Legislature passed the bill approving the charter on March 4, 1837.

THE FIRST CITY LIMITS.
The first meeting was held on August 12, and Colonel Owen was chosen as President. The boundaries of the village were: Commencing at the intersection of Jackson and Jefferson streets, thence north on Jefferson to Ohio Street, thence east on Ohio Street to the lake, thence south along the lake to the middle of the river, thence up to State street, thence South along State to Jackson street, thence west to the place of beginning, comprising about seven-eighths of a mile square. The Jog made from the mouth of the river to State Street was because of the military reservation there. This was the incorporated village of Chicago.

But during this time, the village of Chicago was fast growing in population, importance and fame. By 1837, the population was over 4,000 people, and the citizens thought it was time to keep pace with the dramatic growth and have the city chartered. 

In 1833 the population had been 200, and in 1836 it had increased to 8,820. The harbor was in the process of improvement, the Illinois and Michigan Canal had begun, land speculators were buying up the land, and there was plenty of capital in Chicago.

On October 26, 1836, the Town Board took the necessary steps to secure a charter for the city of Chicago. A public meeting was held on November 25, and E. B. Williams, as President, appointed J. D. Caton, Ebenezer Peck, T. W. Smith, W. B. Ogden and Nathan Boiles delegates to draw up a charter for presentation. This charter was presented to the board on December 9, and the Legislature passed the bill approving the charter on March 4, 1837.

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The indigenous tribes of the Chicago area were the Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Odawa Nations, as well as the Miami, Winnebago (Ho-Chunk), Menominee, Sauk (Sac), Meskwaki (Fox), Kickapoo tribes, and the Illinois.

The first plat of the Chicago settlement was filed in 1830.

Cook County was created on January 15, 1831 by an act of the Illinois State Legislature as the 54th county established in Illinois. The unincorporated Fort Dearborn settlement at the mouth of the Chicago River became the new county's seat. On May 7, 1831, Cook County elected its first officials.

Chicago was incorporated as a town on August 12, 1833, with a population of about 350. With a population of 4,170, the town of Chicago filed new Incorporation documents on March 4, 1837, to become the City of Chicago and for several decades was the world's fastest-growing city. 

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.