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THE ELECTION OF 1864: LINCOLN’S LEGACY OF RESOLVE AND INTEGRITY Elizabeth Farrington I. Introduction Speaking at the College of Law last fall, Akhil Reed Amar explained why, contrary to most Originalist scholars, Americans are not the children of Thomas Jefferson or James Madison or even George Washington; rather, we are all children of Abraham Lincoln. We are children of Lincoln because, prior to his administration, the Constitution failed to provide the guarantees of liberty and equality that define our country today. 1 Though he was assassinated before the Reconstruction Amendments were enacted and, in fact, before the Fourteenth and Fifteenth were even drafted, Abraham Lincoln was much more than the Great Emancipator.2 He “did more than preserve the Union. He also redefined it. In a deeper way than ever before, the nation after and because of Lincoln became ‘dedicated to the proposition that all men [and women] are created equal.’”3 As if it were not enough to preserve the Union, and to lay the groundwork so that the Thirty-Ninth Congress could make it more perfect, 4 President Lincoln’s domestic policies advanced equality and economic stability to ensure a thriving country was left to preserve following the Civil War. For example, he supported and signed the first Homestead Act in 1862, allowing “any person . . . who has never borne arms against the United States Government” to obtain a federal land grant.5 The grant was available to “any person,” which meant that “farmers from nearby Midwestern states, landless farmers from the East, immigrants just off the boat, single women, and even former slaves were eligible.”6 Further, the occupants were required to 1 See AKHIL REED AMAR, THE LAW OF THE LAND: A GRAND TOUR OF OUR CONSTITUTIONAL REPUBLIC 28 (2015) (“In this largest sense, all Americans, whether or not they have ever set foot in Illinois, are living in the land of Lincoln.”). 2 This title often refers to his Emancipation Proclamation, but also to his part in passing the Thirteenth Amendment. 3 AMAR, THE LAW OF THE LAND, supra note 1, at 28. 4 See generally Richard L. Aynes, The 39th Congress and the Fourteenth Amendment, 42 AKRON L. REV. 1019 (2009). 5 An Act to secure Homesteads to actual Settlers on the Public Domain, Pub. L. 37-64, 12 Stat. 392, 37 Cong. Ch. 75 (1862). 6 Roger D. Billings, The Homestead Act, Pacific Railroad Act and Morrill Act, 39 N. KY. L. REV. 700, 714 (2012). 1 make improvements on the land, thus providing a land ownership opportunity for those otherwise unable to do so and rapidly settling the West in one fell swoop.7 That same year, President Lincoln also signed the Morrill Act,8 which aided states in establishing agricultural and mechanical colleges and eventually gave rise to the vast majority of state flagship universities, including our own University of Illinois.9 These newly established “land grant colleges were to equalize opportunity for education and branch out from the liberal arts, while not altogether leaving them behind.”10 Today, every state has at least one university originally established through the Morrill Act11 and more Americans are able to pursue a college education than ever before. Yet, all of the above notwithstanding, to me, the most lasting aspect of President Lincoln’s remarkable legacy was neither the legislation he helped enact nor the war he won. Even as a law student, it is not the fact that he is often regarded as one of, if not the single greatest lawyer in American history.12 Rather, the actions that I try to employ as guiding tenets in my own life, and the reason I believe President Lincoln is the father of the Constitution as we know it today, was the election of 1864, both his candidacy and the fact that an election even took place. II. The Election of 1864 America had not voted for a President during wartime since 1812 and many assumed President Lincoln would postpone the November 1864 election until the war was over.13 After all, “no American President had been reelected since Andrew Jackson” 14 and the incumbent President could easily justify delaying the election on account of the seemingly endless Civil 7 Id. at 721 (“As it is a blessed thing for the poor and landless to receive, substantially as a gift, a farm from the Government, where they and their children may till their own soil, and enjoy competence, freedom, and free schools, let them never forget, that this was the act of the North, and opposed by the South.”) (citation omitted). See also 4 COLLECTED WORKS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN 203 (1953) (“An allusion has been made to the Homestead Law. I think it worthy of consideration, and that the wild lands of the country should be distributed so that every man should have the means and opportunity of benefitting his condition.”). 8 Morrill Act, 12 Stat. 503, 37 Cong. Ch. 130 (1862) (codified as amended at 7 U.S.C. § 301). 9 Billings, The Homestead Act, supra note 6, at 731. 10 Id. at 729. 11 Id. at 730. As a recipient of the College of Law’s Morrill Scholarship and a graduate of two other public universities, I am particularly grateful for this initiative. 12 See generally BRIAN DIRCK, LINCOLN THE LAWYER (2008). 13 WILLIAM LEE MILLER, PRESIDENT LINCOLN: THE DUTY OF A STATESMAN (2008); DAN RYAN, THE GENERAL: THE CALDWELL SERIES 309 (2011). 14 JENNIFER WEBER, COPPERHEADS: THE RISE AND FALL OF LINCOLN’S OPPONENTS IN THE NORTH (2008). 2 War.15 Instead, he insisted and ensured that the election was held as scheduled. This is even more astonishing because President Lincoln was convinced of the probability, or at least the very real possibility, that he would lose. In addition to holding the election as scheduled, President Lincoln also insisted on proceeding with “the deeply unpopular call for [500,000] troops” just months before the election, believing these troops were necessary for a Union Victory, even at the cost of his reelection.16 In August 1864, he told Schuyler Hamilton: “You think I don't know I am going to be beaten, but I do, and unless some great change takes place, badly beaten.”17 Less than three months before the election, Lincoln wrote, signed, and dated what he believed would be his last political statement, and asked his Cabinet members to ratify the sealed document by “signing the outside, sight unseen.”18 In it he wrote: This morning, as for some days past, it seems exceedingly probable that this Administration will not be re-elected. Then it will be my duty to so co-operate with the President-elect as to save the Union between the election and the inauguration; as he will have secured his election on such ground that he can not possibly save it afterwards.19 It was not self-doubt that drove Lincoln to draft this statement; he had been advised throughout his campaign that there was virtually no chance he could win if he insisted on abolishing slavery, and “would be drubbed even in his home state of Illinois.”20 Of course no politician would submit to losing an election if he or she could avoid it, but a loss meant much more to President Lincoln than simply vacating the oval office. A McClellan presidency would likely lead to “compromise with the Confederacy and a negotiated dissolution of the Union that Lincoln loved.” 21 Yet rather than postpone the election, and rather than 15 For an account of how noteworthy that decision was, see Akhil Reed Amar, Abraham Lincoln and the American Union, 2001 U. ILL. L. REV. 1109, 1118 n.26 (“In marked contrast, England held no general Parliamentary elections between November, 1935, and July, 1945.”) (citing WINSTON S. CHURCHILL, TRIUMPH AND TRAGEDY 586–87 (1953)). This address was delivered on October 26, 1999 as the Fall 1999 David C. Baum Memorial Lecture on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. See also Steven G. Calabresi & Christopher S. Yoo, The Unitary Executive During the Second Half-Century, 26 HARV. J.L. & PUB. POL'Y 667, 728 (2003) (“Notably, in the middle of the greatest war in the nation's history, Lincoln held the 1862 and1864 elections right on schedule, something no tyrant or dictator would ever do. In fact, although at several points in his 1864 re-election campaign it appeared that Lincoln could lose and the war end in stalemate, Lincoln nevertheless refused to cancel the presidential election.”). 16 Id. (“‘What is the presidency to me,’ Lincoln said to a protesting Ohio committee, ‘if I have no country?’”). 17 MICHAEL R. BESCHLOSS, PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE: BRAVE LEADERS AND HOW THEY CHANGED AMERICA 1789– 1989, 96 (2008). 18 Id. at 97. 19 Lincoln’s Secret Memorandum Concerning His Probable Failure of Re-election (Aug, 23, 1864), in 7 COLLECTED WORKS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN 514 (1953). 20 BESCHLOSS, PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE, supra note 17, at 96. 21 Amar, Abraham Lincoln, supra note 15, at 1118. 3 compromise on the issue of abolition or yield to calls for peace, the President drew courage of his own conviction from what he later called the “chief gem of [his] character”—his celebrated resolve.22 He later explained: “We cannot have free government without elections, and if the rebellion could force us to forego or postpone a national election, it might fairly claim to have already conquered and ruined us.”23 Thus, despite the fact that Lincoln eventually comfortably won reelection (due in large part to General Sherman’s military victory in Atlanta that September24), we know that Lincoln had insisted on staying the course despite full recognition of the consequences. As Amar explained in a separate address here at the College of Law: Like Washington's decision in 1792-93 to walk away from power after two terms, and Adams's decision in 1800-01 to accept the people's verdict and yield the presidency to his bitterest political foe, Lincoln's decision in 1864 to submit himself and his platform to the judgment of the supreme tribunal of the American people deserves our highest praise. . . . Together, these three examples have given the rest of the world a stunning illustration of the true meaning of constitutional democracy – government of, by, and for the people.25 This essay is a brief attempt to contribute to that praise. More specifically, I aim to examine how President Lincoln’s celebrated resolve and unwavering integrity as illustrated by the 1864 presidential election can serve to guide both law students and practicing attorneys in the pursuit of a successful and honorable career. A. Resolve As noted above, President Lincoln’s political advisors were convinced that his commitment to abolition was dragging him down politically and that if the North were to lose the war, it would be lost on the back of the Emancipation Proclamation.26 His call for troops at the behest of Union military leadership was rejected by the Northern public and Republican politicians “who urged the president to modify or postpone it. But he would not do it.” 27 Thankfully, the “chief gem of [his] character”—the “ability to keep [his] resolves when they are made”28 guided his decision to stand fast in his belief that slavery must be abolished and that the 22 BESCHLOSS, PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE, supra note 17, at 102. MILLER, PRESIDENT LINCOLN, supra note 13. 24 See GARY W. GALLAGHER ET. AL., CIVIL WAR: FORT SUMTER TO APPOMATTOX 269 (2014). 25 Amar, Abraham Lincoln, supra note 15, at 1118. 26 BESCHLOSS, PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE, supra note 17, at 96. 27 MILLER, PRESIDENT LINCOLN, supra note 13. 28 Id. at 102. 23 4 war was the proper vehicle to end it.29 President Lincoln later said he “could not recall a single time he had erred as President by following his own judgment. By contrast, when he ‘yielded to the views of others,’ he usually regretted it.” 30 The election of 1864 was no exception; his resolve helped abolish slavery, win the war, and preserve the Union. I did not know about the election of 1864 when I decided to come to law school. Truth be told, I knew embarrassingly little about President Lincoln at all at that time. But I, and the rest of my peers, came to law school at a time when it seemed as though everyone tried to tell us it was a mistake. Nearly every popular media outlet wrote some version of “Why You Shouldn’t Go to Law School.”31 As proof positive for their career advice, these authors often cited the recession, unemployment rates of recent grads, overwhelming debt, and the possibility that “the boom times [of the legal market pre-2008] might be over for good.”32 These articles may not have caused the decline in application and matriculation that followed, but it seems they at least contributed to the general feeling that law school may not be a safe bet anymore. I cannot speak for my classmates, but I believe that many others shared my experience. That is, well meaning friends and family, with my best interests at heart, tried to echo these articles with personal anecdotes about why it would be a better decision to either remain at my current job (as a Lieutenant in the Navy) or to pursue a different post-graduate degree. At a job fair for service academy graduates, recruiters consistently offered opportunities in management that would remove the risk of entering a struggling legal market and would eliminate the opportunity costs of law school. One concerned friend went so far as submitting my name and address for business school mailers from seven different universities. Thankfully, I am writing this essay because I am lucky enough to share one characteristic with President Lincoln: the ability to keep my resolve. My colleagues and I enrolled, and— contrary to those media outlets—not because our condemned liberal arts degrees left us out of options. Rather, we came to law school because we knew that there was something here we were looking for, both individually and collectively, that we would not find elsewhere. For me, it was the opportunity to serve our Constitution even after I removed my Navy uniform and to remain 29 See generally WEBER, COPPERHEADS, supra note 14. BESCHLOSS, PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE, supra note 17, at 102. 31 See, e.g., David Segal, Is Law School a Losing Game?, N.Y. TIMES (Jan. 8, 2011), available at http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html?_r=0. 32 Jordan Weissmann, Law School Applications Are Collapsing (as They Should Be), ATLANTIC (Jan. 31, 2013), available at http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/01/law-school-applications-are-collapsing-as-theyshould-be/272729/. 30 5 intellectually challenged long after I finished my degree. The law is a noble profession, one that we hope to enter with pride, and one that we could not enter without steeling our resolve in getting to and getting through law school. B. Integrity President Lincoln would have been justified in yielding to popular demand. His friends and advisors urged, even begged the President to yield on any or all issues of contention.33 As noted above, likely the easiest action would have been to delay the election until after he had secured a Union victory, but he refused. His call for troops was incredibly unpopular; “although it sought volunteers, the bottom of the barrel had been scraped, and in fact volunteers were going to be few”34 and a draft just months before an election seemed to seal the President’s fate. To many, ending slavery seemed a foregone conclusion, so the President’s actions to abolish it immediately had worn thin: “[M]illions of Northerners were willing to shed blood to restore the American Union, but not to abolish slavery.”35 In light of all this, we know it was much more than resolve that kept the President steadfast. It was also his sincere belief that the election was essential for the preservation of democracy and that his actions were ethically sound and morally required. Although integrity is most often understood as doing the right thing when no one is watching, it seems even more imperative to do the right thing when everyone is watching—and disagreeing with you. President Lincoln’s integrity goes far beyond the simplistic “honest Abe” moniker. Believing he would lose the election, if proceeding on resolve alone, the President could have postponed the election or altered his policies to ensure he would remain in office long enough to accomplish his goals. Combined with his integrity, however, he found himself morally obligated to stand strong in the face of overwhelming odds. As a result, President Lincoln was able to abolish slavery, preserve the Union, and ensure democracy prevailed. I cannot think of a more poignant message to carry throughout and after law school: decide what is right and just, and stand fast to it. In President Lincoln’s own words: “Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way.”36 33 See MILLER, PRESIDENT LINCOLN, supra note 13. Id. 35 BESCHLOSS, PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE, supra note 17, at 96. 36 1 COLLECTED WORKS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN 480 (1953). 34 6 In Canada, law graduates are “called to the bar,” 37 and perhaps that is a more apt description than the American analog, “sit for the bar.” As Abraham Lincoln (the lawyer) knew, this career is more than a job, it truly is a calling that requires more than intelligent reasoning and incredible work ethic; it requires infallible integrity. In notes he prepared for a law lecture a decade prior to his presidency, Lincoln noted with disdain the “vague popular belief that lawyers are necessarily dishonest.”38 While it is quite clear that Lincoln did not believe lawyers were the only citizens with the duty to live with integrity, he plead for all those studying law to take the requirements of the calling to heart: “[R]esolve to be honest at all events; and if in your own judgment you cannot be an honest lawyer, resolve to be honest without being a lawyer. Choose some other occupation, rather than one in the choosing of which you do, in advance, consent to be a knave.”39 As law students, our integrity is tested even when we are not consciously aware of it. We do not collaborate on individual assignments or exams, we do not plagiarize our work, and we do not use outside assistance when forbidden from doing so. To me, and I believe to my classmates, it is not a fear of repercussion that keeps us on the straight and narrow. Instead, we took an oath upon entering the College of Law, and took that oath to heart, in which we “acknowledge[d] and accept[ed] the privileges and responsibilities inherent in becoming a lawyer, and the high standards and ideals that accompany such an undertaking.” 40 We committed ourselves to “integrity without compromise” 41 and, without a doubt, this commitment in law school is practice for more difficult tests carrying higher stakes in our legal careers. For President Lincoln, if he was unable to remain in office without sacrificing his integrity, the office was no longer worth having. There are occupations that may encourage dishonesty or reward those who cut corners; the law is not one of them. As attorneys, if we are unable to sway a judge, close a deal, secure a job, or convince a jury without without sacrificing our integrity, we should heed the President’s advice and “choose some other occupation.”42 37 Call to the Bar, Law Society of Upper Canada, http://www.lsuc.on.ca/CalltoBar/ (last visited Jan. 17, 2016). Fragment, Notes for a Law Lecture (July 1, 1850), in 2 COLLECTED WORKS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN 82 (1853). 39 Id. 40 Pledge of Professionalism, Illinois College of Law, http://www.law.illinois.edu/pdf/orientation/2012-Pledge-ofProfessionalism.pdf (last visited Jan. 19, 2015). 41 Id. 42 Notes of a Law Lecture, supra note 38. 38 7 III. Conclusion If law students can emulate any part of Abraham Lincoln’s presidential triumphs or take a fraction of the skill of Abraham Lincoln’s advocacy with us, we should be grateful beyond measure. For brevity’s sake this essay focused on President Lincoln’s actions concerning the election of 1864, as I believe it illustrates those characteristics most vital for success as an attorney and as an American. To conclude, however, I borrow a more personal account of President Lincoln’s legacy, as told by his personal friend and pastor (and the Senate Chaplain), Phineas Densmore Gurley: We admired and loved him on many accounts, for strong and various reasons. We admired . . . his staunch and sterling integrity . . . his persistent, self-sacrificing devotion to all the duties of his eminent position, from the least to the greatest; his readiness to hear and consider the cause of the poor and humble, the suffering and the oppressed . . . his true and enlarged philanthropy, that knew no distinction of color or race, but regarded all men as brethren . . . his inflexible purpose that what freedom had gained in our terrible civil strife should never be lost, and that the end of the war should be the end of slavery, and, as a consequence, of rebellion; his readiness to spend and be spent for the attainment of such a triumph, a triumph, the blessed fruits of which shall be as wide-spreading as the earth and as enduring as the sun, all these things commanded and fixed our admiration and the admiration of the world, and stamped upon his character and life the unmistakable impress of greatness.43 The “blessed fruits” of President Lincoln’s legacy are indeed wide spread and enduring, and should continue to influence the study and practice of law into perpetuity. If we are to believe popular media, it seems as though the profession Abraham Lincoln so loved has become no more than a business, and one that encourages moral ambiguity and dishonesty. But it is not and need not be so. Law students and lawyers can and do succeed by remaining loyal to their own informed judgments and by ensuring truthful advocacy and faithful devotion to the law. And if we do, I believe we will have served to preserve President Lincoln’s incredible legacy. 43 The Funeral Sermon, N.Y. TIMES, Apr. 20, 1865. 8