Lincoln President-Elect
Abraham Lincoln and the Great Secession Winter 1860-1861
August 16, 2012
One of our most eminent Lincoln scholars, winner of a Lincoln Prize for
his Lincoln at Cooper Union, examines the four months between Lincoln's
election and inauguration, when the president-elect made the most
important decision of his coming presidency -- there would be no
compromise on slavery or secession of the slaveholding states, even at
the cost of civil war.
Abraham Lincoln first demonstrated his determination and leadership in
the Great Secession Winter -- the four months between his election in
November 1860 and his inauguration in March 1861 -- when he rejected
compromises urged on him by Republicans and Democrats, Northerners and
Southerners, that might have preserved the Union a little longer but
would have enshrined slavery for generations. Though Lincoln has been
criticized by many historians for failing to appreciate the severity of
the secession crisis that greeted his victory, Harold Holzer shows that
the presidentelect waged a shrewd and complex campaign to prevent the
expansion of slavery while vainly trying to limit secession to a few
Deep South states.
During
this most dangerous White House transition in American history, the
country had two presidents: one powerless (the president-elect,
possessing no constitutional authority), the other paralyzed (the
incumbent who refused to act). Through limited, brilliantly timed and
crafted public statements, determined private letters, tough political
pressure, and personal persuasion, Lincoln guaranteed the integrity of
the American political process of majority rule, sounded the death knell
of slavery, and transformed not only his own image but that of the
presidency, even while making inevitable the war that would be necessary
to make these achievements permanent.
Lincoln President-Elect is the first book to concentrate on Lincoln's
public stance and private agony during these months and on the momentous
consequences when he first demonstrated his determination and
leadership. Holzer recasts Lincoln from an isolated prairie politician
yet to establish his greatness, to a skillful shaper of men and opinion
and an immovable friend of freedom at a decisive moment when allegiance
to the founding credo "all men are created equal" might well have been
sacrificed.