Thursday, November 26, 2009

Opinion

Abraham Lincoln, an Everyman Who Saved a Nation

Driven frontier son rose above his peers and his humble beginnings, writes John C. Waugh

Posted February 12, 2009

John C. Waugh is the author of One Man Great Enough: Abraham Lincoln's Road to Civil War.

As we celebrate Abraham Lincoln's 200th birthday this year, a fundamental question still lingers about that great man:

Related Video: Lincoln and Obama: Comparing the new president and his hero
Young Abraham Lincoln
Young Abraham Lincoln

What made him great?

How did this tall, angular, sad-faced, joke-telling hick of a giant from the frontier, with absolutely no executive experience, become what most historians consider the greatest president in our history—at the most desperate time in our history? What sleight of divine hand or alignment of the stars mixed to produce this human phenomenon—at just the moment we most needed him?

There was nothing apparent in his genes that could have produced him. His father, Thomas, was a simple, unlettered frontier farmer and carpenter. His birth mother, Nancy, was an overworked frontier woman whom the times treated hard and let die too young.

But there were clues in Lincoln's youth in southern Indiana that suggested latent greatness. He was an avid reader, devouring any book he could get his hands on in that book-starved frontier—all borrowed, because he had none of his own. One neighborhood boy said of him that he "soared above us," reading his books "whilst we played." His cousin Dennis Hanks said "it didn't seem natural, nohow, to see a feller read like that."

Such an attitude is foreign to us today, but in Lincoln's time children on the frontier had no formal education at all, or very little. Most could not read, many didn't feel they needed to. Lincoln, having less than a year of formal schooling, and that hit-and-miss, had to do it on his own. There was no such idea then as "no child left behind." Many were left behind and bringing them along was not a priority.

Even Lincoln's physical structure—his great height bursting all contemporary bounds, suggested something out of the ordinary. As he grew to manhood, it was apparent that he had, to match his height, a towering, uncommon, and original mind. Coupled with that, he soon exhibited an uncommon ability—despite his less than a year of formal schooling—to eloquently articulate that uncommonness and originality. Honing his rough-hewn, self-hewn intellect in the practice of law and immersion in politics, he developed the ability to speak and write so clearly, to articulate ideas so powerfully, that the least lettered to the best educated could understand him and be moved by what he said.

His ability to couple these outside-the-box talents with an ability to also think outside the box made for an uncommon human package. He thought deeply and to the point. His law partner, Billy Herndon, wrote of his "profound analytical power ... the strongest man I ever saw, looking at him from the elevated standpoint of reason and logic."

Lincoln had soaring ambition, which Herndon described as "a little engine that knew no rest." He wanted desperately in life to be somebody and to do something in the world. In his first bid for elective office, the Illinois legislature, he said, "Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether it be true or not, I can say for one that I have no other so great as that of being truly esteemed by my fellow men, by rendering myself worthy of their esteem."

If Barack Obama is the new Lincoln, as many suggest, that same drive to be something in order to do something worthy of esteem must to some degree also power his ambition a century and a half later.

When there were setbacks to Lincoln's ambition—as there were more than once—he raged against them, telling Herndon, "How hard—oh, how more than hard—it is to die and leave one's country no better for the life of him that lived and died her child!"

After Lincoln's one unsuccessful term in Congress in 1849, he believed he had no further future in politics. He returned to his law practice for the next five years, riding the Illinois Eighth Judicial Circuit. But it was five years that made him what he would become. As he traveled the circuit he read of the great issue threatening to shatter the Union—slavery. He read widely and thought deeply on it in those years in exile. In 1854, when his great Illinois political rival, Stephen A. Douglas, rammed the Kansas Nebraska Act through Congress, allowing slavery into any territory in the Union, the great issue thundered toward a climax.

Reader Comments

lincoln

what made lincoln great, one could say many things president lincoln thought it nessicery to serve all poeple as if they were a king.and also that the sin of man was the sin of our nation he was deaply grounded by faith in our father in heaven and being a christian i can fully understand him in the moral stands he chose also his determination to move foward in times of hardship. president lincoln also thought it nesisary to clear your own path through the forrest and follow someone else.he had clear path unwaivering.i have not seen this in president oboma but i will pray he doe not fail if he fails we fail as a nation and as americans and in lincolns legacy

Deborah Solomon with thoughts about "What made Lincoln great."

I believe there were several things that made Lincoln great. One of the most important attributes was the fact that he developed a reputation for honesty. This is a most important factor in having the credibility to successfully negotiate in any area of life. People must believe that a leader is honest and that holding a title or acquiring a title never comes at the cost of the loss of a person's integrity, in the means of acquiring that title. He also had determination in spite of several election losses. I believe one of the most important factors as well for leaders is that they get information from a variety of sources. For most this means that they are also well read as well as listen to the input of advisors. I believe that if Abraham Lincoln had been more diligent about his security and he had not been assasinated history would have been written differently in this nation. I think he would have helped bring healing in a nation that had been war torn, such as when he spoke about having malice toward none and charity for all, and spoke about binding up the nations wounds. I believe he took a lot of criticism about silly things like his looks, however, he was able to deflect the criticism and go on to try and restore a nation to wholeness. He was truly a man of courage.

LINCOLN WAS A TALL, TALL MAN

I think we should, indeed, compare Obama to Lincoln and see how he stacks up on the “moral courage scale”.

A good example of Abraham Lincoln’s moral character followed the Sioux uprising in Minnesota during the Civil War. 303 Indians were condemned to hang by a military court for the torture, rape and murder of several hundred whites. Many of the Sioux were convicted with virtually no evidence. The people of Minnesota demanded vengeance and the mass hangings were scheduled.

News of this “mob justice” didn’t sit well with Mr. Lincoln. He sent word to stop the executions until he had time to personally review the more than 300 cases and he wanted the full transcripts sent to him. The national press scorned Lincoln for blocking the hangings. Then, during the height of the Civil War, Lincoln devoted many hours in the review of these files. In the end he pardoned 265, allowing convictions to stand on only those who, evidence confirmed, had committed the most atrocious of crimes.

The people of Minnesota were furious. The Senators, Congressmen and Governor of Minnesota attacked Lincoln vehemently. The upcoming election of 1864 was the most important election in our nation’s history. If it had gone against Lincoln then our nation might be divided, perhaps even to this day. Lincoln was warned that unless he hanged more Indians he would lose votes in the next election. To which the tall man replied, “I can not afford to hang men for votes.” The pardons stood.

I wish Obama would learn from Lincoln and embrace the moral truth of the pro-life standard -- And beyond, embrace all life, and in so doing, reject the death penalty as well as abortion. I know this will never be and so Obama will never stand as tall as Lincoln.

Further, it saddens me to think that, even if we had another Lincoln, he couldn’t be elected today because “we, the people” have ceased to value those moral convictions and eternal truths that Lincoln cherished as “self-evident”, and made him the giant he was. Our nation suffers for the want of such a man.

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