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1864 2014 VOLUME NO. 16 ISSUE NO. 5 MAY 13, 2014 McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS PRESENTATION MCHENRY COUNTY CIVIL WAR ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION GROUP FAITH 440LINCOLN’S WEST JUDD STREET By Father Robert Miller WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS TUESDAY MAY 13, 2014 7:30PM TO 9:00PM NOW CELEBRATING SERVING THE COMMUNITY AND MCHENRY COUNTY SINCE IT”S FOUNDING 6000 NORTHWEST HIGHWAY CRYSTAL LAKE, ILLINOIS SATURDAY MAY 24, 2014 THE AT UNION, McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN SEPTEMBER OF 1998 FROM BY MR. JERRY ALLEN Every Fourth Saturday of the Month THE PUBLIC IS ALWAYS WELCOME AND ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND ______________________________________ MISSION STATEMENT IN HIS FATHER’S PASSING WOULD LIKE TO EXTEND OUR CONGRATULATIONS TO THE WINNING CONTESTANT OF THE ( MCHENRY COUNTY CIVIL WAR ROUND TABLE HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED TO PROMOTE AND FOSTER EDUCATION, DISCUSSION, AND ANALYSIS OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR WE HOPE THROUGH LEARNING ABOUT THE PAST, WE WILL BE ABLE TO MORE COMPLETELY UNDERSTAND THE PRESENT AND HAVE A POSITIVE, BENEFICIAL EFFECT ON OUR LOCAL COMMUNITY INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO OUR MEMBERS. _________________ IS PLANNING A FIELDTRIP TO SOUTH SUBURBAN CWRT Thursday May 22, 2014: Presentation By Bruce Allardice McHENRY COUNTY CWRT Tuesday May 13, 2014 Presentation By Jerry Allen NAPER SETTLEMENT Saturday May 17, & Sunday May 18, 2014 KENOSHA CIVIL WAR MUSEUM Civil War soldiers. Ask them about their gear, Civil War battles, and what it took to be a Civil War soldier. Join us at noon for a 45-minute interactive presentation designed for families or just stop by any time to chat. Sponsored by the Kenosha Garden Railroad Society. Train Extravaganza Weekend Train Weekend Saturday, May 31, 2014; 10am-5pm and Sunday, June 1, 2014; Noon-4pm The Civil War was the first major war during which the railroads played a crucial role. Two free presentations are offered by author and B&O Railroad Museum curator Daniel Carroll Toomey . The First Front Saturday, May 31, 2014; Noon MCCWRT DISCUSSION GROUP AT THE PANERA BREAD COMPANY CRYSTAL LAKE, ILLINOIS TOPIC OF DISCUSSION Every Fourth Saturday of the Month LAKE COUNTY CWRT Thursday May 8, 2014: Presentation By Jeff Johnson NORTHERN ILLINOIS CWRT Friday May 2, 2014: Presentation www.kenosha.org/civilwar/index.html 5400 First Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140 Upcoming Events: The Civil War Museum offers many educational activities throughout the year. Here is the upcoming schedule: Second Friday Lunchbox Lecture Series: By Betty Kay SALT CREEK CWRT Friday May 16, 2014: Presentation By David Keller KANKAKEE VALLEY CWRT Wednesday May 7, 2014: Open Forum Led by Ray Guttendorf LINCOLN/DAVIS CWRT Tuesday May 20, 2014: Presentation By Eric Jacobsen CWRT OF CHICAGO Friday May 9, 2014: Presentation By David Bastian MIDWAY VILLAGE ROCKFORD Tuesday May 6, Through Friday May 9, 2014 Commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. The programs are free. Bring your own lunch. Snacks and beverages are available in Museum vending machines. Sponsored by the Milwaukee Civil War Round Table and the Iron Brigade Association Uncle Billy’s Boys: The 55th Illinois at Vicksburg Friday, May 9, 2014; Noon – Freedom Hall Presented by Laurence Schiller, of Northwestern University. Dr. Schiller describes the actions of the Illinois 55th, under the overall command of Brigadier General William Sherman, during the Vicksburg Campaign and gives a picture of the tensions and problems of the civilian soldiers who made up the regiment. A Soldier’s Life A Soldier's Life Saturdays, May 17, 2014 Noon-4pm Check out family-friendly reenactors in character as When the Civil War began, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad became the most important railroad in the nation by being the only direct rail link between Washington, DC, and the loyal states. During the first three months of the war, the fate of the nation’s capital was determined by the movement of Union soldiers on trains provided by the B&O Railroad. Mr. Toomey explores this “First Front” concept as presented in his new book, The War Came by Train: The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad During the Civil War. The B&O – America’s First Railroad Saturday, May 31, 2014; 2pm Mr. Toomey presents a second lecture on the history of the B&O Railroad with illustrations of all time periods. ___________________________________ Civil War Embalming Approximately fifty members and guests attended the April meeting of the McHenry Civil War Roundtable, which was jointly sponsored by MCCWRT and the Woodstock Area Library. Our guest presenter for the evening was Mr. Jon Austin of the Illinois Humanities Council. His topic was “Civil War Field Embalming: A Demonstration of Period Technique.” Mr. Austin’s presentation is in the form of a “first person” 19th century medical school lecture for general audiences. Dressed in period costume he “demonstrated” embalming techniques on a Union “casualty” – volunteer Ryan Diss from Northwood Middle School in Woodstock. Jon stressed that the embalming surgeons were not military personnel: they were doctors who acted as independent businessmen. They followed the armies as rumors of impending battles spread. Either General Butler or General Burnside, in fact, warned them not to post handbills advertising their services before a battle as it was too demoralizing to the troops. We must keep in mind that embalming was a relatively new procedure; one designed to help preserve the body for shipment home from a far-off battlefield. As Drew Gilpin Faust points out in her book, This Republic of Suffering, the Victorian definition of a “good death” was to die at home, in bed, and surrounded by family. It is a small wonder then that such families would want their relative’s body – cut down by an enemy projectile in an unknown field hundreds of miles away – returned home for proper burial. Jon stressed that embalming was primarily practiced among the Union armies. Many southerners saw it as a horrific practice – a defilement of the body. Also, it was more prevalent among officers as they had more money and would even be extended credit. Estimates have run as high as 40,000 embalmed soldiers, but Mr. Austin, based on his research, thinks the number may have been even greater than that. MAY 5-7, 1864: BATTLE OF THE WILDERNESS The Battle of Davis's Cross Roads, also known as the Battle of Dug Gap, was fought September 10–11, 1863, in northwestern Georgia, as part of the Chickamauga Campaign of the American Civil War. It was more of a series of maneuvers and skirmishes than an actual battle and casualties were negligible. An audience member asked how the bodies of Civil War soldiers were typically shipped home. Jon explained that they were placed in sheet iron or cast iron coffins, and hermetically sealed, then transported by rail or steamboat. Sometimes ice may have been used to retard deterioration of the remains. A candle might have been placed inside the coffin to remove oxygen. Charcoal was used to deodorize bodies, and isinglass, cotton, or linen to mask wounds. Finally, Mr. Austin pointed out that during the April/May, 1865 funeral journey, President Lincoln’s body was injected with additional embalming fluid because of the severity of his injuries. Also, additional cosmetology was done because of discoloration. Almost forty years later, upon the final opening of the coffin, eyewitnesses commented on how life-like the martyred President yet looked. Bob Frenz _________________________________________ The first battle of Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's 1864 Virginia Overland Campaign against Gen. Robert E. Lee and the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia. Both armies suffered heavy casualties, a harbinger of a bloody war of attrition by Grant against Lee's army and, eventually, the Confederate capital, Richmond, Virginia. The battle was tactically inconclusive, and was considered a huge loss for Grant. However, instead of retreating, he would disengage and continued his offensive and advances to Spotsylvania Court House. Casualties consisted of: Union- 17,666 Confederate- 7,750 MAY 7, 1864: BATTLE OF ROCKY FACE RIDGE DALTON, GEORGIA MAY 4, 1864 RADICAL WADE-DAVIS RECONSTRUCTION ACT PASSES IN THE U.S. HOUSEThe Wade–Davis Bill of 1864 was a bill proposed for the Reconstruction of the South written by two Radical Republicans, Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio and Representative Henry Winter Davis of Maryland. In contrast to President Abraham Lincoln's more lenient Ten Percent Plan, the bill made re-admittance to the Union for former Confederate states contingent on a majority in each Southern state to take the Ironclad oath to the effect they had never in the past supported the Confederacy. The bill passed both houses of Congress on July 2, 1864, but was pocket vetoed by Lincoln and never took effect. The Radical Republicans were outraged that Lincoln did not sign the bill. Lincoln wanted to mend the Union by carrying out the Ten percent plan. He believed it would be too difficult to repair all of the ties within the Union if the Wade–Davis bill passed. MAY 11, 1864: BATTLE OF DUG GAP DAVIS’S CROSSROADS, GEORGIA Fought in Whitfield County, Georgia, during the Atlanta Campaign of the American Civil War. The Union army was led by Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman and the Confederate army by Gen. Joseph E. Johnston. Confederates were forced to evacuate their strong position due to a Union flanking movement. General Johnston had entrenched his army on the long, steep Rocky Face Ridge and eastward across Crow Valley. When Sherman approached, he demonstrated against this position with two columns while he sent a third one through Snake Creek Gap, to the south, to hit the Western & Atlantic Railroad at Resaca. The first two columns engaged the enemy at Buzzard Roost (Mill Creek Gap) and at Dug Gap while the third column, under Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson, passed through Snake Creek Gap and on the May 9 advanced to the outskirts of Resaca, where it found Confederates entrenched. Fearing the strength of the enemy, McPherson pulled his column back to Snake Creek Gap. On May 10, Sherman decided to join McPherson in an effort to take Resaca. The next morning, Sherman's army withdrew from in front of Rocky Face Ridge. Discovering Sherman's movement, Johnston retired south towards Resaca on May 12. In the initial stages of the campaign, Union Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans's Army of the Cumberland induced the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Gen. Braxton Bragg to evacuate the city of Chattanooga, Tennessee. Rosecrans dispatched three corps on three different roads toward northwestern Georgia. The corps on the center road was the XIV Corps under Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas, which moved just across the border to Trenton, Georgia, and prepared to move on to Lafayette in pursuit of Bragg. Lafayette was the present location of Bragg's army; due to misinformation and poor intelligence, Rosecrans was convinced that Bragg was demoralized and was retreating to Dalton, Georgia, farther to the southeast. But once he realized that the Union forces had separated and were vulnerable, Bragg intended to attack Thomas, halt his advance, and defeat him. Thomas's corps raced forward, seized the important gaps in Missionary Ridge and the Pigeon Mountains, and moved out into McLemore's Cove. Maj. Gen. James S. Negley's division, supported by Brig. Gen. Absalom Baird's division, was moving across the mouth of the cove on the Dug Gap road when Negley learned that Confederate units were concentrating around Dug Gap. Moving through heavy determined resistance, he closed on the gap, withdrawing to Davis' Cross Roads in the evening of September 10 to await the supporting division. Bragg had ordered Maj. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman with his division to assault Negley in the flank at Davis's Cross Roads, while Maj. Gen. Patrick Cleburne's division forced its way through Dug Gap to strike Negley in front. Hindman was to receive reinforcements for this movement, but most of them did not arrive. The Confederate officers, therefore, met and decided that they could not attack in their present condition. The next morning, however, fresh troops did arrive, and the Confederates began to move on the Union line. The supporting Union division had by now joined Negley, and, hearing of a Confederate attack, the Union forces determined that a strategic withdrawal to Stevens Gap was in order. Negley first moved his division to the ridge east of West Chickamauga Creek, where it established a defensive line. The other division then moved through them to Stevens Gap and established a defensive line there. Both divisions awaited the rest of Thomas's corps. All of this was accomplished under constant pursuit and fire from the Confederates. After his abortive attempt to attack one isolated Union corps, Bragg turned his attention to the corps to his north, the XXI Corps under Maj. Gen. Thomas L. Crittenden, setting the stage for the bloody Battle of Chickamauga on September 19. MAY 8, 1864: BATTLE OF SPOTSYLVANIA COURTHOUSE On May 21, Grant disengaged from the Confederate Army and started southeast on another maneuver to turn Lee's right flank, as the Overland Campaign continued toward the Battle of North Anna. Casualties and losses 18,399 (2,725 killed 13,416 wounded 2,258 captured/missing) 12,687 (1,515 killed 5,414 wounded 5,758 captured/missing) on foot because they were so steep. Still wearing his jack boots, he sank in a small stream the troops were crossing and his boots filled with water. Nearby soldiers rushed back to their general and pulled him out. Hayes' brigade spearheaded the main assault around 11 a.m. The troops fought their way to the Confederate works and severe hand-to-hand fighting ensued. Sparks from the musket fire ignited the thick blanket of leaves on the ground and many men from Sickel's and Hayes' brigades were pinned down and burned alive. The two brigades began to fall back when Crook sent in two fresh regiments into Hayes' front. The West Virginians finally advanced against the cannon that had plagued them throughout the battle and overran its crew. Now the Ohio troops began to overwhelm the Confederate center. Jenkins tried desperately to shift MAY 9, 1864: troops to the threatened areas, but fell mortally wounded BATTLE OF CLOYD’S MOUNTAIN and was captured by Union soldiers. His second-inGettysburg, Pennsylvania The Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, sometimes command, John McCausland, took command and conducted The Battle of Cloyd's Mountain was a Union victory in more simply referred to as the Battle of Spotsylvania (or November 19, 1863 a rear-guard action as he withdrew his troops the 19th century spelling Spottsylvania), was the second western Virginia on May 9, 1864 that allowed the Union . forces to destroy the last railroad connecting Tennessee major battle in Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's 1864 The Battle of Cloyd's Mountain was fought on the Back to Virginia. On June 1, 1865, Senator Charles commented what is now Overland Campaign of the American Civil War. CreekSumner Farm property. The farmhouseon served that day as a considered the most famous speech President In hospital by and as headquartersAbraham for the Union Lincoln. General George Brigadier General George Crook commanded the Union Following the bloody but inconclusive Battle of the eulogy on upthe slain president, heCrook. called it a "monumental act." He said Army of West Virginia, made of three brigades from the Wilderness, Grant's army disengaged from Confederate Division of theLincoln Kanawha. was mistaken that "the world will little note, nor long remember General Robert E. Lee's army and moved to the The battle of Cloyd's Mountain was short and involved few never cease to remember it. Thetroops, battle itself was important southeast, attempting to lure Lee into battle under more but contained someless of the most severe andthan savage When Ulysses S. Grant launched his spring offensive of favorable conditions. speech." fighting of the war. The whole engagement lasted a little over 1864, two Union armies marched towards Richmond and an hour with much of that being hand-to-hand combat. a third moved into the Shenandoah Valley. Crook's troops Elements of Lee's army beat the Union army to the were also involved in the offensive and began to march critical crossroads of Spotsylvania Court House and Casualties were high for the modest number of troops through the Appalachian Mountains into southwest Virginia. began entrenching. Fighting occurred on and off from involved. Crook lost 688 men, roughly 10% of his force. His objective was to destroy the Virginia & Tennessee May 8 through May 21, 1864, as Grant tried various The Confederates lost fewer men—538—but that totaled Railroad, working in conjunction with William W. Averell's schemes to the Confederate line. In the end, the 23% of their total force. © break Abraham Lincoln Online offensive, which had similar objectives. Brig. Gen. Albert battle was tactically inconclusive, but with almost 32,000 G. Jenkins was in command of a few scattered casualties on both sides, it was the costliest battle of the The battle is considered a Union victory because Crook was Confederate units protecting the rail lines. Jenkins had campaign. able to continue on and destroy the Virginia and Tennessee onlyour assumed command a day before Crook'son army begancontinent, a new nation, conceived in Four score and seven years ago fathers brought forth this Railroad at Dublin, Virginia, and Averell was also able to to approach the railroad. andGovernor dedicated toand the proposition that all men are created equal. On May 8,Liberty, Union Maj. Gens. K. Warren destroy several railroad bridges along the same line, John Sedgwick unsuccessfully attempted to dislodge the severing one of the Confederacy's last vital lifelines and its During the 1863 Gettysburg Campaign, Jenkins' Brigade Confederates under Maj. Gen. Richard H. Anderson only rail connection to East Tennessee. formed the cavalry screen for Richard S. Ewell's Second from Laurel Hill, a position that was blocking them from Corps. Jenkins led his men through the Cumberland Valley Spotsylvania Court House. On May 10, Grant ordered The day after the battle, remnant Confederate troops attacks across the Confederate line of earthworks, which into Pennsylvania and seized Chambersburg, burning down unsuccessfully defended a railroad bridge over the nearby nearby railroad structures and bridges. He accompanied Now over we4are in aa great civil war, testing whether that nation, New or any soa soldier conceived and socover by now extended milesengaged (6.5 km), including River. nation In the melee, who refused to take Ewell's column to Carlisle, briefly skirmishing with Union prominentdedicated, salient known as can the Mule Shoe.endure. We until Col.We Hayes did so was mortally wounded. Whilea p long are met on a great battle-field of that war. have come to dedicate militia at the Battle of Sporting Hill near Harrisburg. During first aid,might the soldierlive. was found be a woman. ofield, as a final resting place for those who gaveJenkins theirwas lives thatundergoing that nation It isto altogether the subsequent Battle here of Gettysburg, wounded Although the Union troops failed again at Laurel Hill, an on July 2 and missed the rest of the fighting. He did not fitting and proper that we should do this. innovative assault attempt by Col. Emory Upton against MAY 13, 1864: recover sufficiently to rejoin his command until autumn. He the Mule Shoe showed promise. FIRST AMERICAN SOLDIER BURIED had spent the early part of 1864 raising and organizing a But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate -we can not consecrate -weARLINGTON can not hallow -- thisCEMETERY ground. AT NATIONAL large cavalry force for service in western Virginia. By May, Grant used Upton's assault technique on a much larger been appointed Commander the Thebrave living whohad struggled here, haveof consecrated it, far above our poor power to scale on May 12 when he men, ordered the 15,000and men ofdead,Jenkins of Western with his headquarters first military Arlingtonforget for William Henryth The world will note, nor long Virginia remember what weat sayThe here, but itburial canatnever what Maj. Gen.adddetract. Winfield S. Hancock's corps to assault the littleDepartment Dublin. Christman was made on May 13, 1864. close to what is Mule Shoe. Hancock wasItinitially successful, the didhere. is for us thebutliving, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought h now the northeast gate in Section 27. However, Confederate leadership rallied and repulsed his have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before Jenkins, having decided to make a stand at Cloyd's Quartermaster General Meigs did not formally authorize incursion. Mountain, up a strong defensive position. to When Crook establishment of burials theregave until June 15, last 1864. full that from these honored dead we takesetincreased devotion that cause for which they the decided against a frontal assault, concluding thatshall not have died in vain -- that this of devotion that we arrived herehehighly resolve that these dead Attacks bymeasure Maj. Gen. Horatio G. Wright on the--western the Confederate works were too strong and such an attack edge of the Mule Shoe,under which became as the nation, God,known shall have awould new birthhisofarmy. freedom -- and decimate The surrounding areathat was government of the people, by the people, "Bloody Angle", involved almost 24 hours of desperate forthe people, shall not perish from the earth. heavily forested so Crook used this as cover and swung hand-to-hand fighting, some of the most intense of the his brigades around to the Confederate right flank. Civil War. Supporting attacks by Warren and by Maj. Crook began the battle with an artillery barrage, then sent Gen. Ambrose Burnside were unsuccessful. in his brigade of green West Virginians under Colonel Carr B. White. Crook's remaining Colonel The text above is from the so-called "Bliss Source: Collected Works Lincoln, editedtwobybrigades Roy under P. Basler. Grant repositioned his lines in yet another attemptofto Abraham Horatio G. Sickel and future president Colonel Rutherford engage Lee under more favorable conditions and Copy," one of several versions which Lincoln wrote, and believed to be the final version. For additional versions, y B. Hayes were to launch a frontal assault as soon as the launched amay final attack by Hancock on May 18, which search The Collected WorksWest of Abraham through the of the Abraham Lincoln Association. Virginians hadLincoln gotten under way. Serving as courtesy a major made no progress. A reconnaissance in force by under Hayes was another future U.S. President named Confederate Lt. Gen. Richard S. Ewell at Harris farm William McKinley. White's brigade, in its first fight ever, on May 19 was a costly and pointless failure for the © Abraham Lincoln Online advanced to within 20 yards before heavy casualties in its Confederacy. exposed position forced it back. Crook, moving with Hayes' Ohio brigade, had to dismount and traverse the slopes The Gettysburg Address The Election that Caused the Civil War By Josh Simon (Dr. Edward F. Wilt Jr /MCCWRT Essay Winner 2014) Our Founding Fathers, when drafting the Constitution, intentionally did not tackle the issue of slavery head on. They had the foresight to know that a new country made up of a patchwork of independent states with a strong sense of sovereignty, in its infancy, could not survive if they had tried to resolve the decisive issue of slavery at that time. As the United States expanded, the country's leaders continued to skirt the slavery issue and only addressed it through a patchwork of state laws, compromises, and court cases. The Underground Railroad was helping slaves escape to the north. Conflicts between pro-slavery and anti-slavery groups were becoming more violent such as Bleeding Kansas and Harper's Ferry. As the anti-slavery movement grew and Western Expansion led to the addition of several new territories tensions surrounding the issue escalated. The North and the South became further divided. Inevitably, during the Election of 1860 it all came to a head. By 1860 The Whig party was gone, a casualty of the sectionalizing effects of the slavery issue; the Whig party was unable to exist half slave and half free. The Democratic Party remained intact but slavery was causing ~ divide between the strong southern wing and its smaller northern contingent. The new Republican Party was emerging in the northern states. The key to the Republican Party's success and growth was its position on slavery. Most Republicans took a moderate approach - they opposed the expansion of slavery and felt that Congress needed to insure that slavery remained within its current boundaries. They felt that by limiting the spread of slavery into new territories it would eventually become extinct. This moderate approach separated the majority of Republicans from abolitionists who advocated for a quick end to slavery and the emancipation of all slaves. Lincoln’s first step to the Presidency was garnering the Republican nomination. His opponent, and the early-front runner for the nomination, was William Henry Seward (New York’s Senator and former Governor). Lincoln was not well known outside of Illinois until February 27, 1860 when he was invited to lecture at Cooper Institute in New York. There Lincoln delivered his statement to a crowd of 1,500 people. Lincoln had crafted his speech after meticulous research. In it he looked at the views of the 39 signers of the Constitution and found evidence that at least 21 of them – a majority – believed that Congress should control slavery in the territories and not allow it to expand. He argued that this meant that the Republican stance on the issue of slavery was not, in fact, revolutionary but instead similar to the Founding Fathers and should not alarm Southerners. His speech excited those in attendance and gained him important political support in Seward’s home territory. A New York writer said, “No man ever before made such an impression on his first appeal to a New York Audience”. The speech was printed by New York newspapers and was widely circulated. It led invitations for Lincoln to speak at several locations across the Northeastern United States. In this speech, he made it clear that Republicans should not give in to Southern demands to recognize slavery as being right but to “stand by our duty, fearlessly and effectively” – the gauntlet had been thrown. In May 1860 when the Republican convention convened in Chicago, Lincoln won the nomination against Seward and his more extreme, abolitionist views. As stated earlier, by 1860 the Democratic Party was a party divided. When the Democratic National Convention convened in Charleston in April, the leading candidates for the nomination were Vice President John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky and Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois. Douglas had defeated Lincoln in the Illinois Senate Race which made famous the Lincoln-Douglas debates. In these debates Douglas was forced by Lincoln into articulating his “Freeport Doctrine” The Freeport Doctrine said that it was not up to the Federal government (Congress) to decide if a new state admitted to the union would allow or prohibit slavery but it should be up to the “popular will” of the new state. During his time in the Senate he championed this position during the drafting of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. In fact, Douglas envisioned a nation “forever divided into free and slave states, as our fathers made it as the people of each state have decided. ”This position alienated Southern Democrats that he needed to gain the presidential nomination in 1860. Southern Democrats insisted that the party endorse the idea of a federal slave code for the territories that would allow slaveholders to enter the territories during the territorial period. When a majority of delegates refused to accept the southern positions the initial convention ended with the southern delegates walking out and no majority candidate nominated. The Democratic Convention re-convened in June and once again they failed to agree on nominees as they were split over the party’s slavery position. Ten delegations left the party and organized a Constitutional Democratic convention and nominated Breckinridge. Breckinridge and his party portrayed Lincoln as a threat to the Constitution and the Union. Breckinridge’s platform stated that the federal or local governments lacked the power to restrict slavery in any of the territories. He believed in secession as a right. They hoped that the threat of succession and fear of war would result in a divide in the electoral votes that would throw the election into the House of Representatives where the South had greater leverage. The remaining delegates in Charleston nominated Douglas. The Democrats essentially split their Party’s votes clearing the path for Lincoln’s election. In addition to Lincoln’s two Democratic opponents he faced a fourth opponent, John Bell of Tennessee who represented the newly-organized Constitutional Union Party. This Party was created primarily on the premise that they supported compromise to maintain the Union without advancing a specific agenda. This party’s conservative message created a following, particularly in the Border States. In the South, it was the main opposition to the Breckinridge ticket, further diluting the Democratic votes. In summary, the voters in 1860 had four candidates to choose from: (1) Lincoln, the Republican who wanted to limit slavery to its current boundaries and did not support expansion into new territories and states; (2) Douglas, the Democrat nominated primarily by the northern Democrats who believed in popular sovereignty and the states right to choose; (3) Breckinridge (National Democrat) who represented the deep south delegates who advocated for a Federal Slave Code that would allow slave owners to move freely into new territories; and (4) Bell who represented the Constitutional Party that advocated for compromise with a focus on keeping the Union intact. Inevitably, no candidate secured a majority of the popular vote. Lincoln garnered 39.9% of the popular vote and secured 180 electoral votes, exceeding the 150 electoral votes to secure the election. He did not carry a single Southern state. With only 39.9% of the popular vote Lincoln had no clear mandate. The United States was still a country deeply divided. Immediately following Lincoln’s election South Carolina moved to follow through on threats to succeed and on December 20, 1860 they voted unanimously for succession. Before Lincoln was even inaugurated, a Confederate government under Jefferson Davis was already in place representing Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Texas. It is no wonder that in 2008, U.S. News & World Report stated that, “Abraham Lincoln’s victory in 1860 was probably the most consequential election in American history.” He came to power at a time when a controversial issue that had been left to simmer since the Constitution’s inception 73 years earlier finally boiled over. For Lincoln, the battle was clear. This was not a dispute over the issue of slavery. It was, to Lincoln, the protection of the Constitution. In his Cooper Union speech he addresses the southern states: “Your purpose, then, plainly stated, is that you will destroy the Government, unless you be allowed to construe and enforce the Constitution as you please, on all points in dispute between you and us. You will rule or ruin in all events.” This was, in fact, the “Election that brought on the Civil War”. Quite honestly, the time had come. The issue of slavery was so divisive that there really was no room left to compromise. The issue needed to be settled. The election of an unpopular President that did not have the support of 60% of the population; the election of a President with strong convictions and the ability to articulate his position and excite the masses was just the final catalyst. By the time Lincoln took his oath of office, the country was already too far down the road to civil war to turn back.