Lincoln’s other
battlefield: the press
Harold Holzer visits Lincoln Presidential Library Oct. 29 to discuss
Lincoln’s strategic use of the press
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[October 25, 2014]
SPRINGFIELD
– Abraham Lincoln owned one newspaper, shut down others and
alternately battled and manipulated key publishers to help his
career and the Union, yet this important part of Lincoln’s success
is often overlooked.
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Celebrated historian Harold Holzer visits the
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum on Oct. 29 to
discuss his new book on this fascinating topic, “Lincoln and the
Power of the Press: The War for Public Opinion.”
Holzer will discuss Lincoln’s secret purchase of a German-language
newspaper to boost his standing with immigrants. He’ll describe the
way Lincoln skillfully handled three important New York publishers
and also explain the Springfield newspaper scene. He writes that
Springfield was a “seething two-party battleground where election
campaigns took on the urgency of outright war, and combatants
deployed newspapers as their most powerful weapons.”
Holzer will sign copies of his book at 6 p.m. at the presidential
museum (212 N. Sixth St., Springfield) and begin his lecture at
6:30.
The event is free, but reservations must be made in advance. Visit
bit.ly/HolzerTickets or call (217) 558-8934.
“We’re thrilled to have Harold Holzer return for another fascinating
presentation,” said Eileen Mackevich, executive director of the
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. “His scholarship is
impeccable, but he also knows how to present it in ways that engage
the audience and inspire great discussions.”
If today’s journalism sometimes seems partisan, it’s nothing
compared to the close alliances between politicians and newspapers
in Lincoln’s day.
“They became mutually dependent and totally inseparable—weapons in
the same arsenal,” Holzer says. “In some cases, they synchronized
their efforts so closely that it was impossible to determine where
one organization ended its work and the other began it. Lincoln
embraced and thrived in this milieu, yet the story has escaped full
scrutiny since.”
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Historian James McPherson says “Lincoln and the Power of the
Press” is a “tour de force.” Doris Kearns Goodwin calls it a
“significant contribution to our understanding of Lincoln’s
leadership.”
Holzer, senior vice president of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, is
one of America’s most popular and prolific Lincoln scholars. He is
the author or editor of 37 books, including “Lincoln at Cooper
Union,” “Lincoln: President-elect” and “Emancipating Lincoln.” He
served as co-chair of the U.S. Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial
Commission and was an advisor during development of the Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.
For more about the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum,
visit
www.presidentlincoln.
illinois.gov
or
www.Facebook.com/lincoln
.museum.
[Chris Wills, Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library & Museum]
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