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THE EXCELSIOR LITERATURE SERIES

Sincoln, Akrabass)

THE

Lincoln-Douglas Debates

Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by
EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, Ph. D., LL. D.
President of The Pennsylvania State College; formerly Professor
of American History at the University of Chicago; Author
of "The Expansion of the American People;" "The
Men Who Made the Nation;" "Lincoln-Douglas
Debates," in Illinois Historical Library.

F. A. OWEN PUBLISHING COMPANY,

DANSVILLE, N. Y.

COPYRIGHT, 1918

F. A. OWEN PUBLISHING CO.

The Lincoln-Douglas Debates

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JOE - 6 1977

F948
L63
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THE

LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATES

INTRODUCTION

Stump Speaking-As the American people pushed their way across the continent from the Atlantic to the Pacific, the thin edge of advancing civilization was known as the "frontier." It was made up of courageous spirits who subdued the Indians, drove the French and Spanish from their pathway, slew the wild beasts, felled the forests, built their log cabins, and planted their fields. Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett belonged to these hardy people. Cut off from the comforts and privileges which they had enjoyed before migrating to "the West," these people resorted to various makeshifts to supply their needs. They used Indian moccasins on their feet, and coonskin caps on their heads. Lacking newspapers, they learned the issues of the political campaigns by assembling to hear the candidates who, in turn, mounted the stump of a felled tree in the streets of the frontier town and from that forum addressed the voters. A good stump speaker" could always attract a crowd, and a wit combat between two speakers representing opposite parties was a real holiday of sport. It is true that the jokes and counterstrokes were often feeble attempts, and sometimes not

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