A welcome addition to the
ever-growing Concise Lincoln Library collection, published by Southern Illinois
University Press, is noted abolitionist historian Stanley Harrold’s
contribution, Lincoln and theAbolitionists.
In order to understand the
relationship between Abraham Lincoln and the abolitionists, Harrold contends
that it is important to understand their vastly different backgrounds. Lincoln,
born in slaveholding Kentucky, raised in southern Indiana and frontier Illinois,
was a product of the environment and the people he grew up with. Although often
commenting on the basic immorality of slavery, largely as a violation of the
revered Declaration of Independence, as a young man, and even deep into his
political career, Lincoln felt slavery was a political conundrum that would be
difficult to solve. And, as Harrold puts it so well, “being ‘antislavery’ was
not the same thing as being an abolitionist.” (p. 6)
Harrold explains that once
Lincoln embarked on his political career, it was those politics that kept him from
moving into the abolitionist camp. Taking on a political life as a Whig and
revering “The Great Compromiser” Henry Clay as his ideal politician left
Lincoln with a pragmatic approach to what would be the future of slavery in the
United States. The man who would be one day become known as “The Great
Emancipator” knew that any success he was to have in politics—particularly in
local and state politics—depended on meeting in agreement, at least on a
certain level, with those who cast the votes. Lincoln often saw abolitionists
as disrupting the Union and thus chose to maintain a rather conservative stance
on the institution of slavery and race relations in Illinois and reject the
more radically perceived abolitionist view of immediate and uncompensated
emancipation. He knew doing so was instrumental to his success in climbing the
political ladder.
The majority of Lincoln and the Abolitionists focuses on
the Railsplitter’s rise to the presidency, and rightly so. As mentioned above,
understating Lincoln’s background is prerequisite to understanding how he viewed
abolitionists and approached their methods. However, the short treatment—always
a challenge with a “concise history”—on the often fraught relationship between
President Lincoln and abolitionist leaders like William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell
Phillips, Horace Greeley, and Frederick Douglass leaves considerable room for
further examination. Despite this fact, Harrold makes clear that abolitionist
pressure influenced many of Lincoln’s decisions regarding slavery during his
presidential terms.
Lincoln and the Abolitionists clearly achieves its goal in providing a short,
thoroughly researched, yet highly-readable explanation of the sometimes rocky
relationship between the two parties. Despite their differences in backgrounds,
political ideology, and ultimate goals, both Lincoln and the Abolitionists, and
thus their interactions, left a tremendous impact on the history of the United
States that still resonates today. Harrold’s book makes that particular relationship
dynamic ever so more understandable for both casual learners and well-versed
historians. I recommend it.
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