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Auction archive: Lot number 100

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph letter signed ("A. Lincoln") to Illinois Congressman William Kellogg (1814-1872), Springfield, Illinois, 11 December 1859.

Auction 09.10.2002
9 Oct 2002
Estimate
US$60,000 - US$80,000
Price realised:
US$83,650
Auction archive: Lot number 100

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph letter signed ("A. Lincoln") to Illinois Congressman William Kellogg (1814-1872), Springfield, Illinois, 11 December 1859.

Auction 09.10.2002
9 Oct 2002
Estimate
US$60,000 - US$80,000
Price realised:
US$83,650
Beschreibung:

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph letter signed ("A. Lincoln") to Illinois Congressman William Kellogg (1814-1872), Springfield, Illinois, 11 December 1859. 2 pages, 4to (9¾ x 7¾ in.), integral blank with recipent's docket . Fine condition. TROUBLE WITH HORACE GREELEY AND THE CONTINUING PROBLEM OF STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS: LINCOLN LOOKS AHEAD TO THE 1860 REPUBLICAN CONVENTION Following his unsuccessful 1858 campaign for an Illinois Senate seat, which had featured a series of debates with Stephen A. Douglas that attracted national attention, Lincoln returned to his law practice. But he continued his close involvment in Republican politics, both locally--in Illinois--where there were various factions contending for power, and nationally, where the fragile alliance which coalesced to form the new party was subjected to considerable pressure and threatened to splinter apart. In addition, "he continued to worry about the fatal attraction that Stephen A. Douglas had for many Republicans." Senator Douglas, who openly intended to campaign for the Presidency in 1860, had alienated many supporters in the south with his enunciation during the debates of the so-called Freeport Doctrine. In consequence, he shrewdly sought to use the issues that had cost him southern support to woo new Republican voters. Widely proclaiming his doctrine of popular sovereignty, he reminded Republicans "that he had consistently opposed enacting a slave code that would protect slavery in all the national territories and had fought the reopening of the African slave trade--both measures dear to Republicans," (D.H. Donald, Lincoln , p.232), and took steps to ingratiate himself with influential Republican journalists, like Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune . On popular sovereignty, which he considered a mere political expediency, Lincoln acidly observed that it was tantamount to saying "that, if one man chooses to make a slave of another man, neither that man nor anybody else has a right to object" (Speech in Columbus, Ohio, 16 September 1859, see Basler, 3:405). In an effort to counteract Douglas's insidious message, Lincoln energetically took again to the stump during the Fall campaigns in Ohio, honing and sharpening many of the same arguments he had emphasized in the Lincoln-Douglas debates. His speeches were favorably received, and he began to be mentioned as a possible running-mate on the Republican ticket in 1860. But Douglas remained a troublesome thorn to the Republicans and an opponent whom Lincoln considered "the most dangerous enemy of liberty." Kellogg, a first-term Illinois Republican Congressman who had known Lincoln for many years, learned of a meeting between Douglas and Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune , and charged, on the floor of the House, that Greeley and others had "met in the parlor of Senator Douglas, plotting and planning to sell Illinois, and Missouri too..." On 8 December, Greeley responded to Kellogg's charge in an editorial entitled "A Word With a Congressman" in the New York Tribune . Greeley did not deny that the controversial meeting had taken place, but insisted that "Mr. Douglas's reelection to the Senate, or his future election to any post whatever, was not even mentioned." Lincoln and other Republicans found Greeley's denial highly implausible, especially since the Tribune went on to endorse the re-election of unnamed "anti-Lecompton Democrats." Lincoln, though, in considering the affair and its implications, is conciliatory, and takes pains to urge restraint on the incensed Kellogg. Perhaps mindful that Greeley would be among the New York press reporting on his important Cooper Union Address two months hence, he even suggests that Kellogg go easy on the influential editor. He writes: "I have been a good deal relieved this morning by a sight of Greeley's letter to you, published in the Tribune . Before seeing it, I much feared you had, in charging interviews between Douglas & Greely [ sic ], stated what y

Auction archive: Lot number 100
Auction:
Datum:
9 Oct 2002
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph letter signed ("A. Lincoln") to Illinois Congressman William Kellogg (1814-1872), Springfield, Illinois, 11 December 1859. 2 pages, 4to (9¾ x 7¾ in.), integral blank with recipent's docket . Fine condition. TROUBLE WITH HORACE GREELEY AND THE CONTINUING PROBLEM OF STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS: LINCOLN LOOKS AHEAD TO THE 1860 REPUBLICAN CONVENTION Following his unsuccessful 1858 campaign for an Illinois Senate seat, which had featured a series of debates with Stephen A. Douglas that attracted national attention, Lincoln returned to his law practice. But he continued his close involvment in Republican politics, both locally--in Illinois--where there were various factions contending for power, and nationally, where the fragile alliance which coalesced to form the new party was subjected to considerable pressure and threatened to splinter apart. In addition, "he continued to worry about the fatal attraction that Stephen A. Douglas had for many Republicans." Senator Douglas, who openly intended to campaign for the Presidency in 1860, had alienated many supporters in the south with his enunciation during the debates of the so-called Freeport Doctrine. In consequence, he shrewdly sought to use the issues that had cost him southern support to woo new Republican voters. Widely proclaiming his doctrine of popular sovereignty, he reminded Republicans "that he had consistently opposed enacting a slave code that would protect slavery in all the national territories and had fought the reopening of the African slave trade--both measures dear to Republicans," (D.H. Donald, Lincoln , p.232), and took steps to ingratiate himself with influential Republican journalists, like Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune . On popular sovereignty, which he considered a mere political expediency, Lincoln acidly observed that it was tantamount to saying "that, if one man chooses to make a slave of another man, neither that man nor anybody else has a right to object" (Speech in Columbus, Ohio, 16 September 1859, see Basler, 3:405). In an effort to counteract Douglas's insidious message, Lincoln energetically took again to the stump during the Fall campaigns in Ohio, honing and sharpening many of the same arguments he had emphasized in the Lincoln-Douglas debates. His speeches were favorably received, and he began to be mentioned as a possible running-mate on the Republican ticket in 1860. But Douglas remained a troublesome thorn to the Republicans and an opponent whom Lincoln considered "the most dangerous enemy of liberty." Kellogg, a first-term Illinois Republican Congressman who had known Lincoln for many years, learned of a meeting between Douglas and Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune , and charged, on the floor of the House, that Greeley and others had "met in the parlor of Senator Douglas, plotting and planning to sell Illinois, and Missouri too..." On 8 December, Greeley responded to Kellogg's charge in an editorial entitled "A Word With a Congressman" in the New York Tribune . Greeley did not deny that the controversial meeting had taken place, but insisted that "Mr. Douglas's reelection to the Senate, or his future election to any post whatever, was not even mentioned." Lincoln and other Republicans found Greeley's denial highly implausible, especially since the Tribune went on to endorse the re-election of unnamed "anti-Lecompton Democrats." Lincoln, though, in considering the affair and its implications, is conciliatory, and takes pains to urge restraint on the incensed Kellogg. Perhaps mindful that Greeley would be among the New York press reporting on his important Cooper Union Address two months hence, he even suggests that Kellogg go easy on the influential editor. He writes: "I have been a good deal relieved this morning by a sight of Greeley's letter to you, published in the Tribune . Before seeing it, I much feared you had, in charging interviews between Douglas & Greely [ sic ], stated what y

Auction archive: Lot number 100
Auction:
Datum:
9 Oct 2002
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
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