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Abraham Lincoln spoke here
January/February 2009
by Judith Ann Schiff
Judith Ann Schiff is
chief research archivist at the Yale University Library.
In
2009, the nation will mark the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. As
the Bicentennial Commission established by Congress stated, "During the gravest
crisis in American history, Lincoln preserved the Union, led the effort to
eradicate slavery, and articulated the best aspirations of American democracy.”
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Abraham Lincoln posed for this portrait by Mathew Brady on February 27, 1860, a week before he gave the speech in New Haven that introduced his image as a rail splitter. ©National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
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Lincoln's
ability to persuade the American people that slavery is wrong was forcefully
demonstrated on March 6, 1860, in an impassioned speech before a large New
Haven audience that included Yale students and alumni. The two-hour oration at
Union Hall, wrote historian Waldo Braden in Abraham Lincoln, Public Speaker (1988), "launched his Rail Splitter
image," which would figure heavily in his campaign for the Republican
nomination and the presidency that year. Lincoln also, for the first time,
condemned the Democrats for stoking fears about the "struggle between the white
man and negro.”
These
themes and their delivery played well with the crowd, according to the local
paper, the Palladium. "There was witnessed the wildest scene of enthusiasm and excitement
that has been seen in New Haven for years.”
In
1860, Yale student opinion on slavery and secession was divided, mainly
according to home-state loyalties. Town and gown were bustling: New Haven was
the largest city in the state, with a population of 40,000, and Yale one of the
largest colleges in the country, with a student body of nearly 650. Lincoln was
actively seeking the Republican Party’s nomination for president, and two New
Haven men arranged his visit to New Haven: James F. Babcock, editor of the Palladium, and John D. Candee, Class of 1847,
Yale Law 1849. Candee wrote to Lincoln on February 28: "On Monday we expect to
hear you in New Haven. You will please stop at the New Haven House [a hotel].
It is unnecessary to give names of friends here as so many of us have met you
& we shall find you at the Cars or Hotel.”
For
Leonard Bacon, Class of 1820, pastor of Center Church, Lincoln’s speech would
have special meaning. Bacon was an active antislavery worker and writer, and
his Slavery Discussed in Occasional Essays (1846) was said to have influenced Lincoln. Bacon
wrote: "If that form of government, that system of social order is not wrong—if
those laws of the Southern States, by virtue of which slavery exists there, and
is what it is, are not wrong—nothing is wrong." Lincoln, in his New Haven
speech, said: "If Slavery is right, all words, acts, laws, and Constitutions
against it, are themselves wrong, and should be silenced, and swept away. If it
is right, we cannot justly object to its nationality—its universality; if it is
wrong they cannot justly insist upon its extension—its enlargement.”
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While he never returned to Yale, Lincoln continued to have direct and indirect contact.
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Lincoln
closed with: "Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations
against us, nor frightened from it by menaces of destruction to the Government,
nor of dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes might; and in
that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty, as we understand it.”
That
May Lincoln was nominated as the Republican candidate for president, and while
he never returned to Yale, he continued to have direct and indirect contact. On
July 3, 1860, from his home in Springfield, Illinois, Lincoln wrote to Yale
president Theodore Dwight Woolsey on behalf of a fellow Springfield lawyer,
Volney Hickox, Class of 1857. In the original letter, preserved in Woolsey's
papers at Yale, Lincoln wrote that Hickox was "fully worthy of the additional
academical honors he seeks at your hands." The honor Hickox sought and received
was a Master of Arts degree, customarily awarded after an alumnus successfully
completed a course of professional apprenticeship or graduate study.
Lincoln's
letter for Hickox was additionally endorsed by one A. Hale, whom I found to be
Rev. Albert Hale, Class of 1827, Yale Divinity School 1831. In 1839, Hale had
become a pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church in Springfield, which Lincoln
attended. Hale once said of his famous congregant’s life in Springfield:
"Abraham Lincoln has been here all the time, consulting and consulted by all
classes, all parties, and on all subjects of political interest, with men of
every degree of corruption, and yet I have never heard even an enemy accuse him
of intentional dishonesty or corruption." After Lincoln’s assassination, Rev.
Hale officiated at his burial service in Springfield on May 4, 1865. Other
clergy delivered the address and benediction, but Hale opened the ceremony with
a prayer.
The
news of Lincoln’s assassination on April 14, 1865, had reached New Haven the
following morning by telegraph. All businesses closed, the church bells tolled,
and a public meeting was held at noon at the steps of the State House on the
Green in front of the Old Brick Row of the Yale campus. Rev. Leonard Bacon led
the meeting in prayer.
The Yale
Literary Magazine, the only student journal at the time, published a tribute that concluded with
these words: "But amid all our grief we have some consolations. His death was
not in vain. … It awakened all men to a proper estimation of the virtues of
Abraham Lincoln, and inspired all with a spirit of investigation into the life
and character of a truly great man."
Readers respond
The Speech That Made Abraham Lincoln President
Your story provides interesting information about Lincoln’s visit to New
Haven on March 6, 1860, yet overlooks a related and more prominent
event during Lincoln’s campaign for his party’s nomination and then the
presidency.
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“Lincoln gave 'practically a repetition of the … famous Cooper [Union] speech.'” |
No mention was made of Lincoln’s prior speech
criticizing slavery, only one week earlier, at the Cooper Union in New York
City. Having traveled from Springfield, Illinois, for the purpose of enhancing
his national reputation, Lincoln’s initial oration in downtown Manhattan
received unprecedented attention at the time, in both newspapers and other
print media. In the 2006 book Lincoln at Cooper Union, historian Harold Holzer used as
his subtitle The Speech that Made Abraham Lincoln President. The phrase "Let us have faith that
right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty
as we understand it," was first spoken by Lincoln in New York, not in New
Haven, as readers of the story may have assumed incorrectly.
Lincoln apparently did cause "the wildest scene of
enthusiasm and excitement that [had] been seen in New Haven for years."
However, according to Holzer, a Yale student would later mention that Lincoln
gave "practically a repetition of the … famous Cooper [Union] speech.”
In addition, the famous portrait photograph of
Lincoln, dated February 27, 1860, and reproduced in the magazine, was taken in
New York on the day Lincoln spoke at Cooper Union. Years later, on March 27,
2008, candidate Barack Obama would speak in the same hall and refer to
Lincoln’s speech.
John Concato '91MPH
Professor of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine

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