The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
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Paving the way for modern discussions between political candidates, the Lincoln-Douglas debates fascinated nineteenth-century America and catapulted Lincoln into the spotlight. Although he lost the race to Douglas, the stature and recognition Lincoln gained during the exchanges helped propel him to the presidency in 1860, just two years later. This volume features rousing speeches by each candidate and the rejoinders and replies.
Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln was a store owner, postmaster, county surveyor, and lawyer, before sitting in both the House of Representatives and Senate. He was our 16th President, being elected twice, and serving until his assassination in 1865. He is best known for leading the United States through the Civil War, and his anti-slavery stance.
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The Lincoln-Douglas Debates - Abraham Lincoln
THE LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATES
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas
Edited by Edwin Erle Sparks
DOVER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
MINEOLA, NEW YORK
DOVER THRIFT EDITIONS
GENERAL EDITOR: SUSAN L. RATTINER
EDITOR OF THIS VOLUME: STEPHANIE CASTILLO SAMOY
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 by Dover Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Bibliographical Note
This Dover edition, first published in 2018, is an unabridged republication of the work originally printed in 1918 by F. A. Owen Publishing Company, Dansville, New York. A new introductory note has been specially prepared for this volume.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Lincoln, Abraham, 1809–1865, author. | Douglas, Stephen A. (Stephen Arnold), 1813–1861, author. | Sparks, Edwin Erle, 1860–1924, editor.
Title: The Lincoln-Douglas debates / Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas ; edited by Edwin Erle Sparks.
Description: Mineola, New York : Dover Publications, 2018. | Series: Dover thrift editions | Unabridged republication of the work originally published in 1918 by F. A. Owen Publishing Company, Dansville, New York
—Back of title page.
Identifiers: LCCN 2018001950| ISBN 9780486817231 (paperback) | ISBN 0486817237 (pbk)
Subjects: LCSH: Lincoln-Douglas Debates, Ill., 1858. | United States—Politics and government—1857–1861. | Lincoln, Abraham, 1809–1865—Political career before 1861. | BISAC: HISTORY / United States / Civil War Period (1850–1877). | LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Rhetoric. | LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Public Speaking. | POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Elections. | POLITICAL SCIENCE / General.
Classification: LCC E457.4 .L535 2018 | DDC 973.6/8092—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018001950
Manufactured in the United States by LSC Communications
81723701 2018
www.doverpublications.com
Contents
Note
Introduction
First Joint Debate
Second Joint Debate
Third Joint Debate
Fourth Joint Debate
Fifth Joint Debate
Sixth Joint Debate
Seventh Joint Debate
NOTE
It was 1858—less than two hundred years ago—when two candidates went toe to toe for the opportunity to represent Illinois in the US Congress. One was six feet four inches, an attorney and a former state representative. The other was a foot shorter (maybe even more, according to some sources) and was the incumbent senator.
Abraham Lincoln, a member of the newly formed Republican Party, was a less seasoned and entrenched politician on the national scene than Stephen A. Douglas, who was known as the Little Giant
because of his short stature yet forceful presence. Douglas was a favorite figure in the Democratic Party and gunning for the US presidency in the near future.
Douglas traveled by private train from town to town, campaigning for his reelection. Lincoln often immediately followed him, taking advantage of the huge crowds, and responded to folks’ questions about his opponent’s stances. Douglas finally agreed to add seven extra dates to his already full schedule so that the two men could appear in public together.
The results are in the history books: Lincoln won the popular vote, but Douglas won the legislative districts. Douglas was named US senator once again. However, the Lincoln-Douglas debates eventually catapulted the gangly gentleman, originally from Kentucky and Indiana, to the highest seat of government and to becoming one of the best-loved figures in US history.
INTRODUCTION
Stump Speaking—As the American people pushed their way across the continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific, the thin edge of advancing civilization was known as the frontier.
It was made up of courageous spirits who subdued the Indians, drove the French and Spanish from their pathway, slew the wild beasts, felled the forests, built their log cabins, and planted their fields. Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett belonged to these hardy people. Cut off from the comforts and privileges which they had enjoyed before migrating to the West,
these people resorted to various makeshifts to supply their needs. They used Indian moccasins on their feet, and coonskin caps on their heads. Lacking newspapers, they learned the issues of the political campaigns by assembling to hear the candidates who, in turn, mounted the stump of a felled tree in the streets of the frontier town and from that forum addressed the voters. A good stump speaker
could always attract a crowd, and a wit combat between two speakers representing opposite parties was a real holiday of sport. It is true that the jokes and counter-strokes were often feeble attempts, and sometimes not very far removed from vulgarity; but the stronger the blows the better they were liked, and the more personal, the more enjoyable they were.
The spirit of democracy was strong in these pioneers and made them intensely interested in politics. Their fondness for hearing political speeches, their attendance upon political meetings, their parades, floats, banners, and bands remained even after the first frontier stage of progress had passed and the country was well settled. In Illinois, stump speaking was popular as late as 1858, although the frontier had passed on into Kansas and Nebraska, just ready for statehood.
Political Parties—The slavery question was always a festering thorn in the side of the body politic, frequently poulticed by compromises, but manifesting itself whenever a new national issue arose. The Abolitionists, headed by William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, and others, opposed all compromises and stood for the unconditional and immediate emancipation of the slaves. They were bitterly condemned by both the Whig and Democrat parties as wild and dangerous reformers, who were likely to bring about a dissolution of the Union through their agitation. Each party denied any sympathy for or connection with the Abolitionists.
The contention of the Abolitionists that slavery was wrong ethically, made little progress until it became an economic and political matter through the proposed statehood for Kansas and Nebraska. The prairies were not fitted climatically for cotton raising, which made slaveholding profitable; but if two new States came in free, as they must do under the Compromise of 1820,¹ they would add four free Senators and many free Congressmen to the Northern strength, thereby further curbing the slaveholding power in national affairs.
The demand of the South for an adjustment led, in 1854, to the substitution for the Missouri Compromise of 1820 of a new remedy (the Kansas-Nebraska measure) which, by permitting the people of the proposed states to determine whether they would be free or slave, was thought to be the very essence of democracy or home rule. As usual, in temporizing with the evil the remedy became worse than the disease.
The Republican Party—This setting aside of the Missouri Compromise for squatter sovereignty
banded together Northern Whigs and Northern Democrats on an anti-slavery platform; and they speedily formed a new party, calling themselves Republicans. In 1856 the new party had a candidate for the presidency, Fremont, and parties were now known politically as Democrats, Old Line Whigs, and Republicans. The first two refused to recognize the Republican movement as more than a conspiracy or corrupt bargain between leaders to break up the old parties and bring themselves into political power. In the debates it will be noticed that Douglas assails the corrupt bargain between Lincoln, an Old Line Whig, and Trumbull, a Democrat, both of whom deserted the old parties to join the new Republican party.
The Little Giant—Stephen A. Douglas, a Senator from Illinois and a Northern Democrat, was chairman of the Senate Committee on Territories. As such he pushed the Kansas-Nebraska bill of 1854 through both Houses, and incurred the criticism of the free soil advocates of both parties in the North. He said later that he could have traveled from Washington to his home in Chicago, when Congress adjourned, by the light of himself being burned in effigy. For three hours in his home town he tried in vain to get his constituents to listen to his explanations.
Douglas was born in Vermont, migrated to Illinois, and had advanced rapidly through the offices of prosecuting attorney, State legislator, Registrar of Public Lands, candidate for Congress, State Supreme Court Judge, Congressman for two terms, and finally, in 1845, member of the United States Senate. He had served two terms in the Senate, and in 1858 was a candidate for a third election by the State legislature. He had a most winning personality, a fearless spirit, a quick temper, and an unlimited energy of physical force and will power. He was short and heavy in figure, but possessed a far-reaching voice, and early acquired the nickname of The Little Giant.
In stump speaking he was considered the champion of the Middle West.
Honest Old Abe—Among those who watched with interest the course of The Little Giant was Abraham Lincoln, a member of the Whig party, who wrote to a friend in 1854 that Douglas’s action might have created an opening for a Whig Senator from Illinois, and if so, I want the chance of being that man;
but it was thought best to nominate Lyman Trumbull. Four years later Lincoln had the opportunity.
Lincoln started even lower in life than Douglas, and progressed more slowly. He lacked Douglas’s personal magnetism and suffered still more by comparison of appearance. He was tall, ungainly, and careless in his dress. He was also hampered all his life by poverty. On the other hand, he possessed more natural shrewdness than Douglas, and always kept his temper, even under the flings of Douglas. His habits of life were extremely temperate and formed a marked contrast to other men in public life at that time.
Lincoln and Douglas knew each other at the State Capital, and in the Courts where both practiced law. Lincoln had taken little part in politics except to serve a term in Congress, 1847–9. He was a candidate for the Senate in 1854, as has been said, but withdrew in favor of Trumbull. Small wonder that many thought him presumptuous in aspiring to the United States Senate in 1858, and especially when that meant to oppose the great Douglas. The task seemed doubly hard because Lincoln was the candidate of a new party, the Republican or Black Republican,
as the Democrats dubbed it because of its espousal of the rights of the negro.
Political Conditions—It was customary at that time to hold nominating conventions some months before elections. The State Legislatures elected the United States Senators, and so the choice of members of the Legislature in senatorial election years was a matter of vital importance. Illinois had always been Democratic, and Douglas felt no apprehension in the senatorial election of 1857 except so far as the Kansas-Nebraska turmoil should disturb normal conditions. Late in 1857 some of the residents of the Territory of Kansas had formed, at Lecompton, a pro-slavery constitution for the proposed State. President Buchanan favored the adoption of the Lecompton Constitution,
but Douglas opposed it on the ground that it was not a fair test of the theory of squatter sovereignty;
all the people of the Territory had not taken part. The Democratic party in Illinois was therefore in a divided condition, and there might be some shifting to the new Republican party if it came out with a strong Free-Soil platform. The fears of the Democratic party leaders were realized, April 21,1858, when the Democratic State Committee met at Springfield and nominated Douglas on an anti-Lecompton platform, which caused a number of the delegates to bolt
the convention, and, six weeks later, to hold another convention and nominate another ticket.
Consequently, it was with high hopes that the new Republican party met in convention at Springfield in June, and resolved that Abraham Lincoln was the first and only choice of the Republicans of Illinois for the United States Senate as the successor of Stephen A. Douglas. The speech which Lincoln had prepared for the convention he read from manuscript, a thing which he rarely did, and he also carefully read the proof in the printing office before the speech was published. He was stating the principles of the new party and, as it chanced, of a new era in American politics. Douglas would make every use of the platform, and Lincoln must be careful to see that it was so plain that its statements could not be twisted or misconstrued by the wily debater.
The two strong factors in the campaign were the situation in the Kansas-Nebraska territory, and a recent decision by the Supreme Court of the United States. This held in the case of Dred Scott,² a fugitive slave, that no negro slave or his descendant can ever be a citizen of a State, that neither Congress nor a State Legislature can exclude slavery from a State or Territory, and that the decision whether a slave can be held in a free State depends upon the courts of that State. Douglas saw how inconsistent this decision was with his squatter sovereignty theory, and was driven to say that he cared not whether slavery was voted up or voted down,
provided the people had a fair vote on the question. Lincoln in his speech at the Republican nominating convention seized the opportunity to point out where the development of events had put Douglas. His friends,’’ he said,
remind us that he is a great man and that the largest of us are very small ones. Let this be granted. But ‘a living dog is better than a dead lion.’ Judge Douglas, if not a dead lion, for this work is at least a caged and toothless one."
In opening the speech, Lincoln used a paraphrase of Mark 3:25 which was prophetic and destined to become immortal, although Douglas later declared it seditious. Lincoln said:
"Mr. President and Gentlemen of the Convention: If we