Tuesday, November 29, 2011
 
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Douglas trumps Lincoln at Lincoln?

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[November 29, 2011]  The following is provided by D. Leigh Henson:

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Springfield, Missouri–November 28, 2011— Lincoln, Illinois, boasts of its namesake history, hosts an annual festival to celebrate the Lincoln railsplitter legend, and thrills to its giant, fiberglass Abe statue on "the world's largest covered wagon." But Abraham Lincoln's nemesis, Stephen A. Douglas, has three historical markers there for a single namesake-town speech, while Mr. Lincoln has two markers for just one of three known speeches at his first namesake town. And now a fourth Lincoln-at-Lincoln speech has been verified.

As a Lincoln buff and native son of Lincoln, I am pleased to announce the discovery of information that confirms a previously unverified local legend of a speech Lincoln gave there during the Senate race of 1858 just before the Lincoln-Douglas debates. Early reference to this speech is found in Judge Lawrence Stringer's 1911 History of Logan County: "During that campaign, Douglas held a meeting at Lincoln and it is likely that very early in the campaign, Lincoln made a speech at Lincoln. A number of old settlers are positive that Lincoln spoke here quite early that year, but no newspaper notice of same can be found."

In 1971 the late Lloyd Ostendorf, a renowned Lincoln photo expert and artist, created a drawing (attached) of Lincoln speaking at Lincoln in front of the Lincoln House hotel, located across from the train station at Broadway and Chicago Streets. Ostendorf dated that speech July 13, 1858, without citing a source. Early last year Professor Ron Keller, director-curator of the Lincoln Heritage Museum at Lincoln College, kindly gave me a copy of this drawing.

Recently I looked at The Lincoln Log, the official day-by-day record of Lincoln's activities, and it had no entry for July 13, 1858. The entry for July 12 placed Lincoln in Chicago, and the entry for July 14 said he had returned to Springfield that evening. Travel was by train, and the route ran through the first Lincoln namesake town. Thus, he was through his special town on July 13 or July 14 and could have spent time there. Yet Ostendorf's undocumented date still puzzled, so I kept looking.

The Lincoln Log says Lincoln traveled from Springfield to Bloomington to hear Douglas speak on the evening of July 16, but Lincoln declined to speak. The next day Lincoln was on the train with Douglas as it headed south toward Springfield. After Douglas spoke in Atlanta, locals urged Lincoln to speak, but again he declined. The Lincoln Log made no mention of the train stopping at Lincoln on July 17, but I have located four sources that refer to that stop. Reports in the Daily Pantagraph, Illinois State Journal, and Illinois State Register mention that Lincoln was on the train with Douglas and that it stopped midday at Lincoln. Douglas spoke, and a large dinner was served. Those reports neither confirm nor deny Lincoln spoke—curious but not entirely surprising because the trip was all about Douglas, not Lincoln. Yet a fourth source says Lincoln did speak briefly on this occasion.

That source is an article by sculptor Leonard Wells Volk (1828–1895) published in an 1881 issue of the Century Magazine and reprinted in a 1915 issue of the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. Volk (photo attached) wrote he was on the train that took Douglas from Chicago to Springfield with a stop in Bloomington, where Douglas was scheduled to speak on the evening of July 16. Volk wrote that Abraham Lincoln was in Bloomington to witness Douglas's speech. Volk then wrote: "The next day we all stopped at the town of Lincoln, where short speeches were made by the contestants, and dinner was served at the hotel, after which and as Mr. Lincoln came out on the plank walk in front, I was formally presented to him." Volk wrote that he asked Lincoln to sit for a bust sometime in Chicago, and Lincoln agreed. The first sitting took place at Chicago in April 1860. The Lincoln Heritage Museum at Lincoln College and the State Bank of Lincoln's Annex (at Broadway and Sangamon Streets) have reproductions of Volk's famous Lincoln life mask and hands.

Volk's reminiscent account seems reliable: he had even accurately recalled the name of the hotel in Bloomington as the Landon House. Volk's article thus has credibility in validating the oral tradition first reported in Stringer's 1911 history book that Lincoln had delivered a political speech in his first namesake town in 1858 before the Lincoln-Douglas debates. Thanks to Volk we now know the date was July 17, 1858, not July 13 as Ostendorf had indicated and not July 16, the incorrect date on the current historical marker at the Lincoln House site on Broadway Street, erected in 1964, that describes Volk's meeting with Lincoln. The marker does not mention any public speaking.

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Ostendorf's drawing portrays Volk and Douglas in the audience with the Lincoln House in the background, but the depiction of Lincoln speaking in front of the Lincoln House hotel remains speculative. That speech might have been given at the train station, in the open area between the station and the hotel, or in front of the courthouse just a block from the hotel, as was the custom of the day.

I have shared all of this information with Dr. Daniel Stowell, director and editor of The Papers of Abraham Lincoln, so that he may consider adding a reference to Lincoln at Lincoln to The Lincoln Log entry for July 17, 1858, which also says Lincoln delivered a major address at Springfield that evening. I have added a more detailed account of the information I found, including images, to my community history Web site of Lincoln: http://findinglincolnillinois.com/alincoln-lincolnil.html#2ndspeech.

Besides the speech of July 17, 1858, three other speeches by Lincoln at Lincoln have been documented: September 2, 1856, during Frémont's presidential campaign; October 16, 1858, during Lincoln's Senate campaign; and November 21, 1860, during Lincoln's trip as President-elect to Chicago to meet Vice President-elect Hannibal Hamlin. The latter speech was a brief greeting given from the back of a train. The October 16, 1858, speech of more than two hours was the most significant of the namesake town speeches because it was delivered during a large Republican rally the day after the last Lincoln-Douglas debate and therefore must have demonstrated Lincoln at the height of his rhetorical powers at that time. I researched and wrote the script for a re-enactment of that speech on October 16, 2008, during the Lincoln Bicentennial Celebration  (http://www.historycooperative.org/
journals/jishs/101.3-4/henson.html
).

Early in 2008 the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission of Lincoln, Illinois, had accepted my proposal to erect a historical marker for the speech of October 16, 1858. I had pledged $500 toward a large, prestigious marker cosponsored by the Illinois State Historical Society (similar to several other markers in Lincoln). This kind of marker has a reasonable cost of $3,000 plus crating and shipping (http://www.historyillinois.org/), but Mayor Beth Davis-Kavelman disbanded the Commission in April 2009, so the project stalled. Early in 2010 I communicated with the new mayor, Keith Snyder, and other civic leaders (not the historians) about finishing the historical marker project. I renewed my pledge, but they said either the project lacked priority or they did not have the funds. Details of my efforts are included in my book titled The Town Abraham Lincoln Warned, described at http://findinglincolnillinois.com/
townabewarned.html.

Douglas had spoken in Lincoln on September 4, 1858, under a circus tent, and there are three historical markers in Lincoln relating to that speech: two at the site of the speech at Union and Decatur Streets and a third in front of the State Bank of Lincoln's Annex. Yet the only Lincoln-at-Lincoln speech marked there is his brief 1860 greeting from the back of a train. Two markers refer to that speech: a 1965 marker facing Broadway Street at the former train station and a 2010 marker in front of the State Bank of Lincoln's Annex. The 2010 marker is the good work of Paul Beaver, professor emeritus of history at Lincoln College.

Historical markers educate, promote civic pride, and encourage visitors to park, investigate, walk around, visit eateries, and shop. The three historical markers citing a single Douglas speech and the absence of markers for Lincoln's two previously documented speeches--right in the center of the Logan County Courthouse Square Historic District--add up to a strangely ironic predicament for a town that otherwise revels in its namesake history and heritage. All of this begs the question: will the verification of Lincoln's fourth-known speech at Lincoln now spur the town to get right with its famous namesake and mark all of his speeches there?

D. Leigh Henson, Ph.D. (Illinois State University)
Professor emeritus of English
Missouri State University, Springfield

DLHenson@missouristate.edu  

http://www.illinoisauthors.org/
authors/Darold_Leigh_Henson

http://findinglincolnillinois.com/
DLHensoncv5-11.pdf

[Text copied from file received]

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