Monday, June 28, 2010
 
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What if Abe hadn't been assassinated?

Local Lincoln historian extrapolates political agendas and social issues

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[June 28, 2010]  It's a question that Ron Keller, Lincoln Heritage Museum curator and director, says is typical in his rounds of lectures and discussions about America's 16th president -- "How would U.S. history be different if Abraham Lincoln hadn't been shot that night at Ford's Theatre?"

InsuranceWith bachelor's and master's degrees in history, Keller says inquiries like this one agitate the part of him that tends to "hate hypothetical history." But, he said, Lincoln's assassination was an indicator of the 1865 political climate and "did hinge very much on what he did or what he could have done had he lived."

In Keller's capacity as curator, as well as through lectures he leads and the classes he teaches, such as "The Life of Lincoln and the Civil War" at Lincoln College, he has become encyclopedic about Lincoln's life and the nuances that come to construct this comprehensive question.

On April 11, 1865 -- two days after Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox and three days before the assassination -- Lincoln gave his last public address from the steps of the White House.

"He basically offered for the first time to the American public the belief that perhaps the right to vote should be given to those men of color who served so gallantly in the army," Keller said.

"And (John Wilkes) Booth was in the audience that night, and he turned to his friends and said, 'That means citizenship for the black man' -- well, that's not exactly what he said, but we'll keep it clean -- and then he said that was the last speech Lincoln would ever make."

As history shows, Booth followed through with his assertion. But as Keller emphasizes, Lincoln's death was only one-fourth of the original plan.

"(After the Civil War), I think there were some in the Confederacy that were hoping, even within John Wilkes Booth's own clan, that if they murdered Lincoln, murdered Vice President (Andrew) Johnson, murdered Grant and then murdered (Lincoln's secretary of state William H.) Seward -- the four people who were responsible for the Union victory -- that the entire Union government would capitulate, that the Confederacy could come in, and after the so-called surrender, that they could still take the victory," Keller said. "So it really wasn't such a wild plan, I think, in Booth's own mind, to kill Lincoln for that purpose."

Ultimately, though, Johnson's assassin backed out, Grant and his wife excused themselves from their plans with the Lincolns at Ford's Theatre, and Seward, who at the time was on bed rest from a carriage accident, was brutally stabbed by a man disguised as a doctor.

"But Seward did recover and became secretary of state under Johnson," Keller said. "Grant eventually became president, and honestly, it wasn't a good deal. And then Johnson, who on paper looked like the perfect man to run with Lincoln -- (he was a) former military governor of Tennessee, who was a Democrat, who was pro-union -- turned out to be someone who was a little bit too Southern, and a little bit too Democrat. When he became president, he was very conciliatory to the South and basically allowed them to reclaim their lands."

Keller said that because much of what Lincoln advocated fell away under Johnson's weak leadership, "the country might have been better off" if Booth and his clan had fully carried out the conspiracy.

"They took out the wrong man," Keller said. "If anybody -- and I shouldn't say that, because you don't want anybody to be killed -- but if it was going to be one man, Johnson probably would have been the person to cause the least havoc. So, it would have been interesting to see (what would have happened) if they would have followed through. Presumably, (Edwin M.) Stanton, (Lincoln's secretary of war), would have been president, and I think he would have been a pretty strong and effective leader. I think he would have been a lot better than Johnson, a world of difference."

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As Keller pointed out, this theoretical line of presidential succession is one of many sidetracks he often takes when exploring the unknown territory surrounding Lincoln's death. As to the original question of how history might have been different had Lincoln lived, Keller keeps his answer on a relatively short leash.

"I do wish that Lincoln could have lived at least another year longer," he said. "Because I do think he was on the verge of a legal revolution in the sense that we learned to treat blacks equally legally."

Keller defended this claim by explaining how fervently Lincoln pushed through the House the 13th Amendment resolution to abolish slavery. But in terms of actually changing the course of history and civil rights, Keller says that's a tall order for anyone.

"After Lincoln died, it became this whole, tortured history we call Reconstruction," he said. "The physical reconstruction can be done, but of course it does take the social a lot longer. To win the war is one thing, but to go in and tell the South, 'Now we're going to change the entire way you think, live, act and treat other people,' would have just been very, very difficult. So I guess maybe to rephrase that question: 'Could this long, tortured history of Jim Crow and discrimination all have not happened, had Lincoln lived?'

"Well, if Lincoln had enough power, had enough authority, had enough Lincoln-esque ability of whatever he had, to bring the Union together, to salvage what was left, to end slavery, then certainly an argument could be made that what happened after he died could have been averted. (But) look at what has happened since the 1960s and the civil rights movement. It really took, I think, a generation of young people before we finally get to the point where that is really accepted in society."

One thing Keller says he is certain would be different had Lincoln lived to affect Reconstruction and civil rights, is the glorified persona Americans know today.

Referring to Lincoln's hypothesized role in carving a more direct path to racial equality, Keller said: "I don't think he would have been as successful as what we'd like to think. It just takes a lot of changing of people's minds and their hearts and attitudes. And I think that his legacy would have been tarnished.

"(Lincoln's life and death) were like a Greek drama," he continued. "He was that great hero who was slain just when the grasp of victory was in his hand. That sort of iconic, sort of 'what would have been' or 'what could he have done' -- it's not there, it's removed. But that's the stuff legacies are born with."

[By LINDSEY BOERMA]

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