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JOSEPH HENRY

JOHN REYNOLDS

JOSEPH SMITH

R. G. INGERSOLL.

PETER CARTWRIGHT

CLEVELAND AND STEVENSON

WILLIAM FREEMAN VILAS

WILLIAM M. EVARTS

JOE WHEELER

DAVID DAVIS

S. S. PRENTISS
EDWIN BOOTH

JOSEPH JEFFERSON

RUFUS CHOATE

ISAAC N. PHILLIPS

WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN

W. H. MILBURN

R. J. OGLESBY

JOSEPH W. FIFER

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LAWRENCE WELDON

THOMAS F. MARSHALL

MATTHEW T. SCOTT

ADLAI E. STEVENSON

LYMAN TRUMBULL

HOME OF ADLAI E. STEVENSON, BLOOMINGTON, ILL.

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SOMETHING OF MEN I HAVE KNOWN

PERIOD

I

ON THE CIRCUIT

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SLAV

DEVELOPMENT OF THE COUNTRY AFTER THE CIVIL WAR
ERY THE APPLE OF DISCORD BEFORE THE WAR LINCOLN AS
A COUNTRY LAWYER · SOCIABILITY OF THE LAWYERS OF THE
THEIR EXCELLENCE AS ORATORS HENRY CLAY AS
A PARTY LEADER EULOGIUMS ON LAWYERS LINCOLN'S
ADMIRATION FOR GENERAL WINFIELD SCOTT –
ADDRESS ON THE LAW AND LAWYERS.

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THE WRITER'S

HE period extending from my first election to Congress in 1874, to my retirement from the Vice-Presidency in 1897, was one of marvellous development to the country. Large enterprises were undertaken, and the sure foundation was laid for much of existing business conditions. The South had recovered from the sad effects of the Civil War, and had in a measure regained its former position in the world of trade, as well as in that pertaining to the affairs of the Government. The population of the country had almost doubled; the ratio of representation in the Lower House of Congress largely augmented; the entire electoral vote increased from 369 to 444. Eight new States had been admitted to the Union, thus increasing the number of Senators from seventy-four to ninety.

The years mentioned likewise witnessed the passing from the national stage, with few exceptions, of the men who had taken a conspicuous part in the great debates directly preceding and during the Civil War and the reconstruction period which immediately followed. By the arbitrament of war,

1

and by constitutional amendment, old questions, for a halfcentury the prime cause of sectional strife, had been irrevocably settled, and passed to the domain of history New men had come to the front, and new questions were to be discussed and determined.

To the student of history, the years immediately preceding the Civil War are of abiding interest. In some of its phases slavery was the all-absorbing subject of debate throughout the entire country. It had been the one recognized peril to the Union since the formation of the Government. Beginning with the debates in the convention that formulated the Federal Constitution, it remained for seventy years the apple of discord, the subject of patriotic apprehension and repeated compromise. The last serious attempt to settle this question in the manner just indicated was by the adjustment known in our political history as "the compromise measures of 1850." These measures, although bitterly denounced in the South as well as in the North, received the sanction in national convention of both of the great parties that two years later presented candidates for the Presidency. It is no doubt true that a majority of the people, in both sections of the country, then believed that the question that had been so fraught with peril to national unity from the beginning was at length settled for all time. The rude awakening came two years later, when the country was aroused, as it had rarely been before, by impassioned debate in and out of Congress, over the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. It was a period of excitement such as we shall probably not see again. Slavery in all its phases was the one topic of earnest discussion, both upon the hustings and at the fireside. There was little talk now of compromise. The old-time statesmen of the Clay and Webster, Winthrop and Crittenden, school soon disappeared from the arena. Men hitherto comparatively unknown to the country at large were soon to the front.

Conspicuous among them was a country lawyer whose home was at Springfield, Illinois. With the mighty events soon to follow, his name is imperishably linked. But it is not of Lincoln the President, the emancipator, the martyr,

we are now to speak. It is of Lincoln the country lawyer, as he stepped upon the arena of high debate, the unswerving antagonist of slavery extension half a century and more ago.

His home, during his entire professional life, was at the capital of the State. He was, at the time mentioned, in general practice as a lawyer and a regular attendant upon the neighboring courts. His early opportunities for education were meagre indeed. He had been a student of men, rather than of books. He was, in the most expressive sense, "of the people," - the people as they then were. For,

"Know thou this, that men are as the time is."

His training was, in large measure, under the severe conditions to be briefly mentioned. The old-time custom of "riding the circuit" is to the present generation of lawyers only a tradition. The few who remember central Illinois as it was sixty years ago will readily recall the full meaning of the expression. The district in which Mr. Lincoln practised extended from the counties of Livingston and Woodford upon the north, almost to the Indiana line - embracing the present cities of Danville, Springfield, and Bloomington. The last named was the home of the Hon. David Davis, the presiding judge of the district. As is well known, he was the intimate friend of Mr. Lincoln, and the latter was often his guest during attendance upon the courts at Bloomington. At that early day, the term of court in few of the counties continued longer than a week, so that much of the time of the judge and the lawyers who travelled the circuit with him was spent upon horseback. When it is remembered that there were then no railroads, but few bridges, a sparse population, and that more than half of the area embraced in the district was unbroken prairie, the real significance of riding the circuit will fully appear. It was of this period that the late Governor Ford, speaking of Judge Young, - whose district extended from Quincy, upon the Mississippi River to Chicago, said: "He possesses in rare degree one of the highest requisites for a good circuit judge, — he is an excellent horseback rider."

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