The Political Debates Between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas in the Senatorial Campaign of 1858 in Illinois, Together with Certain Preceding Speeches of Each at Chicago, Springfield, Etc |
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Page x
... party . This article gave a fuller expression than had thus far been made of the views of the men who were later accepted as the leaders of the Repub- lican party . In May , 1856 , Lincoln made a speech at Bloomington , Illinois ...
... party . This article gave a fuller expression than had thus far been made of the views of the men who were later accepted as the leaders of the Repub- lican party . In May , 1856 , Lincoln made a speech at Bloomington , Illinois ...
Page xiii
... party , with an absolute control south of Mason and Dixon's Line and with a very substantial support in the Northern States , was in a position , if unbroken , to control with prac- tical certainty the Presidential election of 1860 ...
... party , with an absolute control south of Mason and Dixon's Line and with a very substantial support in the Northern States , was in a position , if unbroken , to control with prac- tical certainty the Presidential election of 1860 ...
Page 17
... party coming up manfully and sustaining the principle that the people of each Territory , when coming into the Union ... parties did not recognize the right of a people to have slavery or freedom , to tolerate or pro- hibit slavery as ...
... party coming up manfully and sustaining the principle that the people of each Territory , when coming into the Union ... parties did not recognize the right of a people to have slavery or freedom , to tolerate or pro- hibit slavery as ...
Page 36
... party and it nominees . I do not include all of the Federal office holders in this remark . Such of them as are Demo crats and show their Democracy by remaining insid of the Democratic organization and supporting i nominees , I ...
... party and it nominees . I do not include all of the Federal office holders in this remark . Such of them as are Demo crats and show their Democracy by remaining insid of the Democratic organization and supporting i nominees , I ...
Page 40
... party to see t other great party to which they are opposed divid among themselves , and not try to stop the divisi and rather be glad of it , -if that is an alliance , confess I am in ; but if it is meant to be said th the Republicans ...
... party to see t other great party to which they are opposed divid among themselves , and not try to stop the divisi and rather be glad of it , -if that is an alliance , confess I am in ; but if it is meant to be said th the Republicans ...
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Abolition Abolitionism Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln admission adopted agitation amendment answer believe candidate charge Chicago citizen clause Compromise measures Congress Congressional Convention decide Declaration of Independence Democratic party deny doctrine domestic institutions Douglas's Dred Scott decision election equality exclude slavery fact favor forgery form a constitution Freeport friends Fugitive Slave law hold Illinois indorsed interrogatories Judge Douglas Judge Trumbull Kansas Lecompton Constitution legislation Legislature Lincoln Lovejoy measures of 1850 ment Missouri Compromise nation Nebraska Bill negro never North old Whig opinion opposed Ottawa passed platform pledged political popular sovereignty President principle prohibit proposition provision race repeat Republican party resolutions slavery question South speech Springfield stand stitution submitted suppose Supreme Court tell Territory thing tion to-day Toombs bill true Trumbull says Trumbull's ultimate extinction United States Senate vote Washington Union Whig party