Ohio History Journal

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TABLET TO ABRAHAM LINCOLN AT MANSFIELD

TABLET TO ABRAHAM LINCOLN AT MANSFIELD

 

WHERE THE ORGANIZED MOVEMENT BEGAN TO

MAKE    HIM  PRESIDENT OF THE

UNITED STATES

 

 

SPEECH BY HONORABLE CHARLES II. WORKMAN

I arise on behalf of the Abraham Lincoln Association

of Richland county.

We meet to give proper recognition to our fore-

bears in 1858 in this city and in this country, for their

political acumen, sagacity and intuition. We meet to

commemorate an important fact or event in the political

history of the United States, the beginning of the or-

ganized movement to make Abraham Lincoln President.

We meet to augment our attachment for one of the great

characters of the ages.

At the outset, I raise but a single question,-- who

opened to Abraham Lincoln his career of president and

martyr ?

In 1858, Abraham Lincoln, apparently, had no inti-

mation whatever, that he would ever be a candidate for

President of the United States.

Early in the senatorial campaign, in Illinois, between

Douglas and Lincoln, in a speech on July 17, 1858, at

Springfield, Illinois, Lincoln, discussing the advantages

of Douglas and his disadvantages, said:

There is still another disadvantage under which we labor,

and to which I will ask your attention. It arises out of the rela-

tive position of the two persons who stand before the state as

candidates for the senate. Senator Douglas is of world-wide

renown. All the anxious politicians of his party, or who have

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