Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  
  • 5
  •  
  • 6
  •  
  • 7
  •  
  • 8
  •  
  • 9
  •  
  • 10
  •  
  • 11
  •  
  • 12
  •  
  • 13
  •  
  • 14
  •  
  • 15
  •  
  • 16
  •  
  • 17
  •  
  • 18
  •  
  • 19
  •  
  • 20
  •  
  • 21
  •  
  • 22
  •  
  • 23
  •  
  • 24
  •  
  • 25
  •  
  • 26
  •  
  • 27
  •  
  • 28
  •  
  • 29
  •  
  • 30
  •  
  • 31
  •  
  • 32
  •  
  • 33
  •  
  • 34
  •  

Lincoln and His Ohio Friends

Lincoln and His Ohio Friends

 

By FRANCIS P. WEISENBURGER*

 

 

 

IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE VIEWPOINTS which helped

to mold the political career of Abraham Lincoln,1 a major

influence was Joshua R. Giddings, antislavery congressman

(1838-59) from Jefferson, Ohio.2 Over a period of years

Lincoln and his Springfield, Illinois, law partner, William

Henry Herndon, read abolitionist literature together, and

Lincoln became a careful student of Giddings' speeches.3

Professor Elbert J. Benton has indicated that Giddings'

"greatest influence upon the course of American history"

may have been his contribution to the evolving of Lincoln's

ideas, or, at any rate, to the preparation of public opinion

for the leadership which Lincoln was to exercise.4

A second influence in the same direction was that of

Thomas Corwin, peerless orator, former governor, and Whig

senator from Lebanon, Ohio.5 In July 1847 Lincoln made

his first trip to Chicago, where twenty thousand people gath-

ered for a river and harbor convention, assembled to protest

against Polk's veto of a rivers and harbors appropriation

bill and to give endorsement to government-supported inter-

 

* Francis P. Weisenburger is professor of history at Ohio State University.

1 An unusually comprehensive article, based upon much careful investigation, is

Daniel J. Ryan, "Lincoln and Ohio," Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quar-

terly, XXXII (1923), 1-281. The present article endeavors, however, to include

the results of the scholarly research of the past thirty-six years.

2 For a thoughtful analysis of his "radicalism," see Robert P. Ludlum, "Joshua

R. Giddings, Radical," Mississippi Valley Historical Review, XXIII (1936-37),

49-61.

3 Albert J. Beveridge, Abraham Lincoln, 1809-1858 (Boston, 1928), III, 19n.

4 Dictionary of American Biography. Hereafter cited as D. A. B.

5 See biographical sketch by Homer C. Hockett in D. A. B.