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Kat Smutz - Abraham Lincoln. History in an Hour

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Kat Smutz Abraham Lincoln. History in an Hour
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Abraham Lincoln. History in an Hour: summary, description and annotation

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Love history? Know your stuff with History in an Hour.

Abraham Lincoln, the sixteenth president of the United States, is an American icon. To many, he is a symbol of values, sacrifice and determination. Modern notions of nationalism, liberty, and constitution all owe their debt to Lincoln, as does the unity of the American states. And yet, in his own day, Lincoln was also reviled by many as a traitor, tarnished by his associations with the wrong kind of race and the wrong end of society.

Charting his ascent from humble origins to the leader of the United during her hardest democratic and ethical conflict --the American Civil War-- Lincoln: History in an Hour is a succinct guide to the life of a great and controversial modernizer. Having educated himself and made good as a lawyer, he embarked on a journey that would see triumph in the abolition of slavery and then tragedy in the final drama of his own assassination. From his struggles as...

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ABRAHAM LINCOLN
History in an Hour
Kat Smutz
Abraham Lincoln History in an Hour - image 1

Contents

Ask any American schoolchild who the greatest president of the United States was, and he or she will probably say Abraham Lincoln. Teachers love to use Lincoln as an example of how the circumstances of birth do not necessarily predetermine what an individual can achieve. From a childhood of poverty, hardship and loss in the American wilderness, Lincoln achieved the highest political office in the country, a position comparable to that of a king or queen in Europe. His popularity can be attributed to what he accomplished while in office. His emancipation of African Americans held in slavery has made him the legendary hero who freed the slaves. But Abraham Lincoln was so much more.

Not all of Lincolns contemporaries saw him as the hero Americans look up to today. Public opinion of the man during his lifetime ranged from hero worship to declaring him to be evil incarnate. Any given individuals opinion of the sixteenth president was often influenced by region, race, economics and social class as much as by politics. To slaveholders, he was a threat to their very way of life. They were well aware of Lincolns position on the issue of slavery and feared that if slavery ended, the agrarian economy in the South would collapse. To the African-American slaves who looked to Lincoln for their salvation he was Father Abraham, sent by God himself to free them from their oppressors.

As a young man, Lincoln earned a reputation for honesty, justice and intellect that endures to this day. He was a master storyteller, a master litigator and a great orator whose words are still quoted. In the political arena, his supporters saw his potential. In spite of being a self-taught, successful attorney, his detractors in both the North and the South saw him as a low-class, uneducated, uncouth barbarian from the wilderness. Some were certain that he would cause the fledgling nation, less than one hundred years old, to tear itself apart. Others were just as sure that he was the only hope of preserving it.

Lincoln left behind a legacy of political firsts. He initiated the first military draft and the first United States income tax, and was the first to allow African Americans to join the military. Lincoln has been given credit for establishing photojournalism by permitting photography of battlefields and military installations. He was also the first American president to be assassinated.

From his first attempt to run for public office, Lincolns political career is well documented. What we know of his life before politics comes primarily from those who knew him. Lincoln seldom spoke of his life as a young boy growing up in the wilderness of Kentucky and Indiana, losing his mother at a young age and his first business ventures. Even less is commonly known of his private life as a husband and father. Those close to Lincoln often commented that he seldom spoke of his life before he became president.

Family, friends, colleagues and even enemies have left behind their own accounts of Lincoln, told from their own viewpoints. Those accounts, along with Lincolns own papers, have been studied and written about by Lincoln scholars, and provide the bulk of the details about one of historys most recognized icons. Among them, some of the answers can be found regarding the conditions that moulded Abraham Lincoln into one of the greatest leaders in the history of the United States, if not the world.

This, in an hour, is the life of Abraham Lincoln.

Drawing of log cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born The actual cabin still - photo 2

Drawing of log cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born. The actual cabin still stands inside a memorial at Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Park near Hodgenville, Kentucky.

For generations, the life of Abraham Lincoln has been passed along to American schoolchildren as a motivational story of how hard work, honesty and perseverance can lead to great things. The traditional Lincoln legend goes something like this.

Lincoln grew up in a log cabin in Kentucky. His family was poor and he educated himself by walking miles to the homes of neighbours to borrow books. As an adult, he fostered a reputation for honesty and fairness which continued to follow him throughout his life. It was his natural likeability and talent for oration that led him into politics. This was the beginning of the road that would lead Lincoln to the White House (known as the Executive Mansion). It is the rags to riches story of an uneducated young man from a poor family who, with no prospects, rises to hold the highest office in the land.

So, how did Abraham Lincoln become an icon after beginning life in a log cabin on what was then Americas frontier?

While Lincolns roots ran deep to a wealthy family in Virginia, his own family was far from affluent. Lincoln was the namesake of his grandfather, Abraham Lincoln, who had come to the wilderness that was then Kentucky. There, a man with little or nothing could carve out his own life for himself and his family.

The first Abe Lincoln in Kentucky was able to purchase a large tract of wilderness acreage. Unfortunately, he would not live to make his family rich. While clearing land with his three sons in 1784, he was killed by Indians. As one brother, Josiah, ran for help, the eldest, Mordecai, ran to the family homestead where he grabbed a rifle. He held off the Indians until help arrived. At some point during the skirmish, the youngest son, Thomas, was almost attacked. He was saved when Mordecai shot dead the Indian who was about to kill his brother. This little brother, Thomas, would be the father of Abraham Lincoln.

The death of the senior Abraham Lincoln was the event that sent the Lincolns even deeper into debt. Abrahams wife, Mary Lincoln, was now a widow with five children to care for. She was forced to sell most of their land, a reported 1,700 acres. As was the tradition in those days, what little was left went to Mordecai, the eldest son. That left Thomas Lincoln with little more to take out into the world than his own two hands. He put them to good use, learning the carpentry trade.

Thomas Herring Lincoln Thomas Lincoln was working in a carpentry shop in - photo 3

Thomas Herring Lincoln

Thomas Lincoln was working in a carpentry shop in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, when he met the owners niece, Nancy Hanks. Nancy was the daughter of Lucy Hanks and had been born in a part of West Virginia which, at the time, was still a part of the state of Virginia. Family histories claim that Nancys mother was Lucy Shipley, and that she was never married to Nancys father, who is reported to have been a man named James Hanks.

Young Nancy lived first with her grandparents, Joseph and Ann Hanks, until her grandfathers death. She lived with her mother for a time after Lucys marriage to a man named Henry Sparrow, then with Lucys sister, Elizabeth, who had married Henrys brother, Thomas. At some point, she went to live in the home of Richard Berry, working as a seamstress. This is where Thomas Lincoln is said to have proposed.

Nancy was 23 when she married Thomas Lincoln and the couple moved into a home in Elizabethtown, Kentucky. It was there that a daughter, Sarah, was born. Little is known of Sarah Lincolns life. It would, no doubt, have been similar to her brothers. She looked after her brother and a cousin, Dennis Hanks, between the time of her mothers death and her fathers second marriage. In August 1826, Sarah married Aaron Grigsby, but her married life was brief. She died after only one year, on 20 January 1828, in childbirth.

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