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Leonard
Bacon
1802-1881
B.A.
1820
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Abraham Lincoln paid
a singular tribute to New Haven clergyman Leonard Bacon. Bacon's book Slavery
Discussed, the president told a visitor in 1864, "had much to do in shaping
my own thinking on the subject of slavery." And, added Lincoln: "He is quite
a man."
Yet Bacon's views
on emancipation -- expressed in hundreds of magazine articles and a series
of books from the 1820s until beyond the Civil War -- angered many abolitionists.
While condemning the institution of slavery, Bacon sought a solution in colonization -- the emigration of slaves to Africa -- and favored financial compensation
for slaveholders. Above all, gradualism and gentle persuasion of "good slaveholders"
were key, rather than any absolute fiat. Until 1862, these views were largely
shared by Lincoln as well. Bacon's postwar attitude toward Reconstruction
and universal suffrage was tangled up with an enduring concern for states'
rights and a degree of paternalism toward freedmen.
Pastor of the Center
Church in New Haven -- one of the most prestigious in New England -- for more
than 40 years, Bacon also taught theology at Yale and served on the Corporation.
He studied and wrote history, helped found several anti-slavery and "Negro
assistance" societies, and published frequently on Congregationalist doctrine
and polity, the early temperance movement, and other current issues. Biographer
and historian Hugh H. Davis believes Bacon, on balance, was too divisive to
have helped build an effective abolitionist coalition, although his conservative,
middle-of-the-road approach served to prepare public opinion in the North
for acceptance of emancipation.
