Lincoln on the Verge: Thirteen Days to Washington
D**T
A breezy storytelling style that is as interesting as it is informative
Distinguished lecturer and prolific writer Ted Widmer pens what is certainly one of the best Lincoln books of the year. The focus is on the thirteen days Abraham Lincoln traveled from Springfield, Illinois to Washington in time for his first inauguration. All told, Lincoln traveled 1,904 miles, taking 18 different railway lines through eight states, engaging in adventures and misadventures along the way. Widmer captures all of these events, both the well known and the obscure.For example, many have heard of the assassination attempt planned for Lincoln’s passage through Baltimore. Widmer keeps us apprised of the developments as the Lincoln party learned of them, and the thrilling nighttime diversion from schedule to ensure his safe arrival in the District. Less well known was the unattended carpet bag containing a grenade that would have destroyed the entire car, fortuitously discovered just before the presidential train left Cincinnati. Or the over-exuberance of welcoming festivities at Alliance, Ohio, when a celebratory cannon fired too close to the car, showering a less than happy, but subsequently uninjured, Mary Lincoln with broken glass. [Another spectator would blow off his own hand when a cannon fired prematurely outside of Cleveland.] Or the coincidental occurrence of John Wilkes Booth staying in Albany when Lincoln arrived, having traveled a nearly identical route between there and Rochester, New York, touring a series of Shakespearean tragedies.Wary of entering into southern territory—seven states had already seceded from the Union by this time—the Lincoln entourage kept to a winding route through the northern states. Each stop provides fodder for Widmer to regale the reader with the historical significance of the city in addition to Lincoln’s activities. Upstate New York, for example, allows him to meet 12-year-old Grace Bedell, who had encouraged him to grow a beard, while Rochester was the home of Frederick Douglass, who may (or may not, we don’t know for sure) have greeted the train during Lincoln’s brief stop). It turns out Cincinnati was a center of scientific excellence while simultaneously also known as “Porkopolis” for its massive number of pig slaughterhouses. The anecdotes are endless. While the focus is on Lincoln’s travels, the book interweaves thousands of small details and flashbacks relevant to Lincoln’s life. The author does this in a breezy storytelling style that is as interesting as it is informative. I highly recommend this book for all to read.
R**O
Masterful
What this book does masterfully well is show how the president-elect Abraham Lincoln shored up northern morale in preparation for the coming Civil War, while at the same time found his voice as our nation's 16th president. This is a wonderfully informative book about Lincoln's train trip to the nation's capital, that reveals yet another facet for Lincoln admirers to appreciate. The writing is crisp and compelling, and the book's length--some 467 pages--hardly seems long at all, such is the author's gift for story-telling.The statistics of the Washington trip are mind-numbing: in 13 days, Lincoln traveled 1904 miles, through eight states, along 18 different railroad lines, and gave 101 speeches, some to as many as 10,000 people.At the beginning of each chapter, the author selects a short, appropriate passage from Homer's "The Odyssey". Which seems fitting, as Lincoln's journey was fraught with danger (he received a number of death threats, and on several occasions was nearly crushed to death by the press of the crowd). It was an exhausting trip asl well, with overnight stops and speeches along the way, in Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Albany, and New York City. The author expertly summarizes a number of these speeches. Perhaps the most telling was the one Lincoln gave at Philadelphia's Independence Hall on Washington's birthday, where he said, "I have never had a feeling politically that did not spring from the sentiments embodied in the Declaration of Independence . . . that Declaration giving liberty, not alone to the people of this country, but hope to the world for all future time. . . ." With the issue of slavery threatening civil war, the true meaning of the Declaration of Independence was being questioned openly; Lincoln made the issue of equality the centerpiece of his administration.The trip began in Lincoln's hometown of Springfield, Illinois, where, on February 12th, 1861 the president-elect, his family, political advisers, security guards, and members of the press, boarded The President's Special (a private train comprised of one baggage car, a passenger car, and a private car, for Lincoln and his family). At the same time, the author contrasts Jefferson Davis's train trip to the Confederate capital in Montgomery, Alabama via the South's primitive, circuitous railroad network.Lincoln was loaded for bear, with a file of prepared speeches for each of the train stops, each meticulously labeled and placed in separate envelopes, including his inaugural address. As it turned out many of the 100-plus speeches he delivered were ad-libbed off-the-cuff remarks delivered from hotel balconies and from the the platform of his train.While the South was gearing up for war, the north was in disarray under the hapless and corrupt leadership of outgoing president James Buchanan (since rated by historians as our nation's worst president). How bad was the state of the North? Democracy itself was under siege, says the author. "The lessons of history are hard to ignore. Every democracy ever known had failed, beginning with the Greeks twenty-four centuries earlier. They had succumbed one by one, to all the well-known vices of the people: corruption, greed, lust, ethnic hatred, distractibility, or simply a fatal indifference." Regarding the state of the nation's leadership, the author says, "As the Buchanan administration was sinking under the weight of its corruption, the public learned that it had awarded contracts for work on the Capitol to insider friends, who then outsourced the labor and pocketed the profits." The Buchanan administration also looked the other way while southern sympathizers raided federal armories of canons, guns and ammunition.Meanwhile, safely ensconced in Montgomery, Jefferson Davis issued a number of threats. With Lincoln still en route to Washington, Davis made a speech in which he predicted that Northerners would soon "feel Southern steel." Unfortunately for the south, writes the author, most of that Southern steel was made in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.Indeed, one of the stops on Lincoln's trip was in Pittsburgh, for the very reason that the steel city represented a source of industrial power that Davis and the Deep South could only dream about. The author explains that a number of industrial and engineering advantages the North held over the South was mainly due the institution of slavery. For example, a number of Germans who were the very engineers who designed the advanced northern railway infrastructure that Lincoln enjoyed while en route to Washington, was made possible because these German immigrants chose the free North over the slave-holding South because that's where the job opportunities were (by contrast, the South's railway system was haphazard and badly antiquated; a combination of mixed-gauge tracks and old technology, that greatly hindered the South's war effort, and would not be updated until late in the 19th century.Among the people Lincoln encountered on his 13-day journey was a Scottish immigrant, and captain of the steel industry, Dale Carnegie, who years later recalled: "I never met a great man who so thoroughly made himself one with all men as Mr. Lincoln."What was Lincoln's secret? Quite simply, he trusted people and, in turn they trusted him. According to historian and Lincoln biographer Benjamin Thomas, Lincoln had supreme faith in the people's right-mindedness, provided they could be made to understand, and he never questioned their powers of comprehension when the facts were presented to them simply and honestly.That, in a nutshell is what Lincoln did on his 13 day journey through the North, is inform the people that equality was at the root of democracy, and would be the source of Northern strength in the coming cataclysm.Lincoln survived the threat of death and arrived safely in Washington, exhausted by the ordeal, but buoyed by his deeply-held belief in democracy. Concludes the author: "By his words, and presence, he had shored up America's flagging belief in her institutions. Millions of Americans had glimpsed a top hat parting a sea of humanity, or seen a bearded man wave from the back of a speeding train, or bow from a hotel balcony, and felt a connection to their government. Most had never seen a president and never would again. . . . Despite exhaustion, Lincoln had grown throughout the ordeal. After a few missteps, his speeches became masterful, especially near the end, when he began to discover the mystical power that would lift his oratory to the heights he achieved at Gettysburg and the Second Inaugural. No president has ever climbed to a higher altitude. He restored a sense that America's words mean something."
O**E
Interesting, but a little slow
It could have been a smaller book.
N**E
Essential History; Then and Now
It is not only a good story, it is sending a message to the present day.
K**T
Very simply an absolutely touching and important book
Beyond awesome. I am 75 years old and only now have begun to learn about and understand Lincoln’s impact on this country. Mr Widmer has brilliantly told the tale we all should learn from today in this period of political uncertainty.
F**L
A unique and welcome addition to your Lincoln library.
This is a unique and welcome addition to the vast literature of one of our greatest Presidents. The author writes in a very literate and readable style, tracing Lincoln’s journey from Springfield to the White House in 1861. Wilmer gives the reader interesting background on each of the towns and cities on Lincoln’s whistle stops, as well as the major and minor politicians and celebrities then in the spotlight. The response of the crowds along the way made me realize what a rock star Lincoln was. I have one major quibble and a minor one, neither of which detracts from this impressive work. I was disappointed that the author chose not to directly quote Lincoln in any of his whistle-stop speeches, instead preferring to summarize his remarks. Given Lincoln’s penchant for memorable speeches and anecdotes, this would have added a richness to the narrative. On a lesser note, there is a picture of the famous industrialist Henry Flagler on p. 226, but there is no mention whatsoever of him in text. Overall, I strongly recommend this book to anyone wishing to learn about a little-known chapter in Lincoln’s life.
R**3
brilliant journey
A stunning history of Lincoln’s perilous train journey to Washington for his inaugural. Beautifully written and suspenseful as a novel. Inspires one to preserve our democracy yet again
B**P
Excellent
Excellent
S**C
Very good if you like Lincoln and the civil war.
Well written, well laid out,had I got it.
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