ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE UNION,

A CHRONICLE OF THE EMBATTLED NORTH


Volume 29 In The Chronicles Of America Series


By Nathaniel W. Stephenson


Allen Johnson, Editor


New Haven: Yale University Press Toronto: Glasgow

Brook & Co. London: Humphrey Milford

Oxford University Press

1918






CONTENTS


PREFACE


CHAPTER I.   THE TWO NATIONS OF THE REPUBLIC

CHAPTER II.   THE PARTY OF POLITICAL EVASION

CHAPTER III.   THE POLITICIANS AND THE NEW DAY

CHAPTER IV.   THE CRISIS

CHAPTER V.   SECESSION

CHAPTER VI.   WAR

CHAPTER VII.   LINCOLN

CHAPTER VIII.   THE RULE OF LINCOLN

CHAPTER IX.   THE CRUCIAL MATTER

CHAPTER X.   THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY

CHAPTER XI.   NORTHERN LIFE DURING THE WAR

CHAPTER XII.   THE MEXICAN EPISODE

CHAPTER XIII.      THE PLEBISCITE OF 1864

CHAPTER XIV.   LINCOLN'S FINAL INTENTIONS






PREFACE

In spite of a lapse of sixty years, the historian who attempts to portray the era of Lincoln is still faced with almost impossible demands and still confronted with arbitrary points of view. It is out of the question, in a book so brief as this must necessarily be, to meet all these demands or to alter these points of view. Interests that are purely local, events that did not with certainty contribute to the final outcome, gossip, as well as the mere caprice of the scholar—these must obviously be set aside.

The task imposed upon the volume resolves itself, at bottom, into just two questions: Why was there a war? Why was the Lincoln Government successful? With these two questions always in mind I have endeavored, on the one hand, to select and consolidate the pertinent facts; on the other, to make clear, even at the cost of explanatory comment, their relations in the historical sequence of cause and effect. This purpose has particularly governed the use of biographical matter, in which the main illustration, of course, is the career of Lincoln. Prominent as it is here made, the Lincoln matter all bears in the last analysis on one point—his control of his support. On that the history of the North hinges. The personal and private Lincoln it is impossible to present within these pages. The public Lincoln, including the character of his mind, is here the essential matter.

The bibliography at the close of the volume indicates the more important books which are

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