Archive for the ‘Lincoln’ Category

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An Unexpected Visit…

October 12, 2009

 

Lincoln's Home at 8th & Jackson

Today my youngest son had a doctor’s appointment in Springfield and to my surprise we ended up taking a quick side visit to the Lincoln Home.  This was my children’s first visit to the home and my oldest son thought it was pretty cool to see the house in which the 16th president lived.  They had studied Lincoln for his 200th birthday towards the end of last school year in kindergarten no less.

I was surprised to see all the changes that had taken place since my last visit.  Many of the homes near Lincoln’s have been transformed to their earlier glory.  Some work is still in progress, but things look fantastic…even on a dreary October day like we had here in Illinois today.  I was also a bit taken aback when the guide inside the house began to point out which furniture was actually original to the house and what was histoically accurate but did not actually belong to the Lincoln’s.  In all the other times I have been through the house, the guides did not disclose which furniture was real or not…for whatever reason.

My stay was not as long as I wished, but then again I was not expecting to make the visit in the first place.  The day was cool and cloudy and the kids were hungry after the doctor visit so we quick made a visit to the gift shop and headed out.  It is never fun going to the doctors, but if we have a chance to see the Lincoln home on occasion, it makes the trip that much more bearable.

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New Lincoln Statue in Metamora, Illinois

September 3, 2009

The city of Metamora, Il. has raised the money for ($105,000 or so) and erected a new statue of Abraham Lincoln and Melissa Goings in the town square just across the street from the Metamora Court House where Lincoln practiced law on the 8th Judicial Circuit.

Here are some pictures of the new statues and the story of Melissa Goings and Abraham Lincoln.

Lincoln and Goings 1

Lincoln and Goings 2

Lincoln and Goings 3

Statues in front of the Metamora Court Houst State Historical Site

Statues in front of the Metamora Court House State Historical Site

JUSTICE SERVED

An essay: Abraham Lincoln and the Melissa Goings Case

By Jean Myers

 

Twenty-two years before the 16th President of the United States died of a gunshot to the head after restoring the Union of our broken country, a disheveled thirty-four year old self-taught country lawyer named Abraham Lincoln traveled on horseback through the prairie and wilderness between the counties that made up the Eighth Illinois Judicial Circuit Court – the four-hundred and forty mile circuit that included Hanover, later named Metamora, in Woodford County. 

Lincoln actually started riding part of the newly formed Eighth Judicial Circuit in 1837 before there was a Woodford County, (founded 1841), but by 1843, he was riding most or all of the circuit once in the spring and again in the fall of most years through 1857.  In 1842, Abraham married Mary Todd, and their first child, Robert, was born in 1843.  By that time, Lincoln was spending about five months out of the year riding the circuit.  Sons Edward (Eddie), William (Willie) and Thomas (Tad) were born in 1846, 1850 and 1853, respectively, and Eddie died in 1850. 

During his circuit riding years, Lincoln was re-elected as a Whig to the Illinois General Assembly in 1840, won a seat in the United States Congress in 1846 where he opposed war with Mexico, became the only future president to earn a U.S. patent for his own invention in 1849, publicly denounced slavery in his 1854 “Peoria Speech,” helped to organize the new Republican party in 1856, spoke against the Dred Scott decision in 1857, and in 1858 ran for a seat in the United States Senate (for which he won the popular vote but lost to Stephen Douglas as a result of gerrymandering and the vote against him taken in the Illinois General Assembly).

Less than two years before he would be elected to the presidency, Mr. Lincoln visited the Woodford County Courthouse in Metamora for the last time, when in 1858, between debates with Judge Stephen Douglas at Charleston and Galesburg and while running for the senate seat from Illinois, he gave a stump speech at Page’s Grove, Metamora, on October 4th that attracted thousands of spectators.  And he completed work on his last case in Woodford County – a case that would prove to be one of his strangest, if not the most notorious of his few criminal cases – a case that would test both the letter and the spirit of the law for Lincoln and others involved.

The following account attempts to patch folklore and various versions of that case into the story of the Melissa Goings murder trial:

Roswell Goings was a seventy-seven year old well-to-do farmer, heavy drinker and known wife beater who lived in Worth Township, Woodford County, Illinois.  Melissa Goings was his seventy-year old wife who alleged that Roswell attacked her and attempted to strangle her in their home on April 14th, 1857.  Melissa later acknowledged that it was necessary for her to use a piece of firewood to defend herself and strike Roswell on the head knocking him unconscious. 

Local legend has it that friends of Roswell attended him that evening and were able to revive him briefly, when he is supposed to have said that Melissa attacked him and struck him about the head several times, saying something about getting the house and farm.  Unfortunately for Roswell, he lapsed back into unconsciousness and died four days later.

 A coroner’s inquest was held, and given the differing accounts, the sheriff, Abiah Minor, had no choice but to arrest Melissa after state’s attorney, Hugh Fullerton, indicted her for first degree murder.  Melissa was then allowed her freedom pending trial after several people – including some of Roswell’s own kin – put up $1,000.00 bail.  The case was continued until the fall session, and the trial date was set for Saturday, October 10th, 1857 before Judge James Harriott.

Lincoln and his co-counsel, Henry Grove, entered the courtroom on the second floor of the Woodford County Courthouse in Metamora, and Lincoln supposedly indicated that he needed more time to prepare his case and get to know his client better; whereupon, Judge Harriott granted a recess.  There are two versions to what happened next – one, that Lincoln and Mrs. Goings walked outside and two, that they sat in a downstairs office to talk privately. 

It is unlikely that Mr. Lincoln was in need of much additional information, but he may have needed some time to deal with the judge’s surprise revocation of Melissa’s bond, which may have alerted him to the judge’s possible predisposition to get the trial over with without much concern for the woman’s defense.  In other words, Melissa was going to be on trial for her life before a possibly unsympathetic judge, as a conviction could result in her being hung.  (From 1800 to 1857, twenty-eight women had been executed by hanging in this country.) 

The town’s folklore is consistent in the telling of this story: Everyone felt sorry for Melissa; for even in a time when wife-beating was tolerated, most thought Roswell took it too far, too often.  The town didn’t want to prosecute Melissa, let alone hang her, and Lincoln had to have been aware of these sentiments.  He may also have been of the opinion that the judge didn’t much care about the town’s sentiments, which may have helped Lincoln, and/or others, seek justice for a victim who might pay with her life for having defended it in the first place from a brutal attacker, her husband.

As her bond had been revoked, technically, Melissa was the responsibility of the sheriff.  At the end of the recess, the courtroom again began to fill up with the officers of the court and the many people who filled the spectator section to enjoy the entertainment that any case would provide – but, to particularly enjoy the entertainment that any case involving Abraham Lincoln, a skilled trial lawyer and his well known practice of throwing in jokes, stories and his country wit, would provide.

Everyone had returned from the recess – everyone, that is, except Melissa Goings, and she was nowhere to be found.  One person is alleged to have said that a foot was seen going through an open window, but no one else could, or would, provide any additional information.  It can be assumed that the judge was not amused.

Again, there appear to be different versions of what happened next.  One version has Lincoln being accused by a bailiff of “running her off,” as Abe was the last one seen with her.  But Lincoln said that he thought the sheriff was watching her after their talk.  The more popular version, though, has Mr. Lincoln responding to the judge’s demand that he approach the bench and explain himself and any part he may have played in his client’s disappearance.

In the commotion of what must have been a confused courtroom, it is said that Lincoln told the judge, “Your honor, I did not chase her off.  She simply asked me where she could get a good drink of water, and I said…Tennessee has mighty fine drinkin’ water.”  Local legend has it that what he said was received with uproarious laughter from a possibly relieved and thoroughly entertained crowd. 

Was it the need to lighten the seriousness of an abruptly truncated murder trial that appeared to be heading in a tragic direction for a woman who survived being beaten down by her husband only to be beaten down again by the letter of the law?  Is it possible that “Honest Abe,” an officer of the court, was in cahoots with those who may have helped old Melissa escape?

Much was muddy, but a few things were clear.  Whatever his part, Lincoln was never sanctioned or held in contempt of court, and there is no evidence that Lincoln had any part in the escape, about which he may have known nothing.  There is a theory that the sheriff and the state’s attorney, bowing to the will of the townspeople, may have turned a blind eye to the shenanigans, so that the spirit of the law, if not the letter, could carry the day for this unfortunate woman – and that Lincoln’s funny line may have been a distraction to take the pressure off the guilty, but noble, parties who chose to risk helping the victimized Mrs. Goings.

The state’s attorney never did sign a warrant for Melissa’s arrest after she escaped – a highly unusual situation.  A year later, October 4th, 1858, when Lincoln returned to Metamora for the last time in the midst of the debates for the Senate seat, he met with the state’s attorney, and Melissa Going’s case of first-degree murder was dismissed!

If Mr. Lincoln had known of the escape plan, was it wrong or courageous or both for him to have played a part in preventing the letter of the law from victimizing the woman another and, perhaps, final time?

Most seem to agree that, regardless of who was responsible for what, October 10th, 1857, both in and outside of court – whether a lackadaisical sheriff, a less than aggressive state’s attorney, a seemingly unmerciful judge, other parties unknown, or a defense attorney very aware of the people’s desire for compassion for this old woman – justice was served.

Would justice have been served if Lincoln had not been involved?  We will likely never know.  There are many who think that Lincoln’s character and behavior as president were, to a large extent, formed while riding the circuit.  He was not perfect then, as he was not always perfect as president; yet, he endures as a hero to most. 

As with many great heroes, he became such by combining courage, cunning and compassion – especially when pursuing an objective for the greater good or for the good of an underdog. 

Lincoln was a keen student of both the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution.  Of the former, he said, “I have never had a feeling politically that did not spring from the sentiments embodied in the Declaration of Independence.”  In the politically charged atmosphere preceding his run for the Senate, it is hard to imagine that he would have risked his political and legal career by helping a murder defendant run away.

Yet the Declaration is all about the right to throw off the control of a tyrant responsible for abuses that jeopardize one’s security – such as: Melissa’s unclear right to defend her security from the abuses perpetrated by her tyrannical husband.  And if the defendant’s right to defend her security was possibly going to be punished by an unsympathetic judge and an inflexible legal system, then could an interpretation of the Declaration – that if there is something wrong, those who have the ability to take action also have the responsibility to take action – have been far from Lincoln’s mind or the minds of others?

There has been some debate as to whether the Goings murder case, a fairly minor legal footnote in America’s, Illinois’, and for that fact even Woodford County’s legal history, is worthy of, in some way, being cast in bronze for posterity to represent Lincoln’s ties with the Woodford County Courthouse at Metamora – an idea that is now being promoted by the Woodford County Historical Society and others.  It would be far simpler to portray Abe, for instance, at leisure or sitting on a bench or doing something uncomplicated.

No doubt, he enjoyed leisure times and simpler things in Metamora, as he did anywhere else he went.  But, this complicated man with the uncomplicated demeanor, in this writer’s opinion, did not see the law as merely an unchanging monolith to black and white thinking.  When confronted with nearly overwhelming circumstances during the Civil War, did he abide by the letter of the Constitution by: ordering a blockade of rebel ports without a declaration of war, usurping the authority of Congress to build the Union Army and Navy, ordering commanding generals to ignore writs of habeas corpus, including one issued by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court or by declaring martial law and suppressing a free press in New York? 

Lincoln’s presidential actions carried consequences, but were they flawed if all were in an effort to save the Union, which he did?  And where could such ability and determination have been honed, if not in his earlier law practice working the Eighth, taking on just about any case that came his way, thinking on his feet within a system that was not always as compassionate as he.

Lawyer Lincoln’s involvement in the Goings case may have been only to come up with a funny quip to soothe the court during a very awkward moment; there is no evidence to suggest more.  But had he been more involved in Melissa’s disappearance, would it not have been to right a wrong and to keep further wrong from occurring?  Would he not have been, in either light, responding to “the better angels of our nature” – which, is it not in the Melissa Goings situation, just another way to say…justice?
An artistic portrayal of this little slice of Woodford County history is long overdue.  The world-renowned Lincoln-sculptor, John McClarey, has begun preliminary work on this ambitious project.  Let us make it so before the 2008 sesquicentennial of Lincoln’s completion of the case or by the bicentennial of this great man’s birth in 2009.

Metamora’s heritage and history are strongly tied to Abraham Lincoln’s work.  Both he and the village are more than worthy of the recognition that a bronze work of art would bring.

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Don’t Spend the Money When You Can Get it Free!

July 26, 2009

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GLD

The Confederate Reprint Company is a neo-confederate site that specializes in books written during and after the War of the Rebellion with, need I say it, a southern viewpoint.  Now what I find very interesting is the claim that since the North won the war, they are therefore the Victors, that they have written the history.  From the looks of the titles at the Confederate Reprint Company that is not altogether true.

The site is run by Greg Loren Durand (Greg also runs Crown Rights Book Company, Goose Quill Press, and Classic Reels and Broadcasts Company) who must have hit on the idea (only a guess, not fully aware of where his material comes from nor do I care) for his site after doing a Google Books search for an out-of-print book to feed his desire to understand the War of the Rebellion.  Well, here is what he found…a great way to make money reprinting books whose copyright is no longer in play.  By all means there is nothing wrong with this, he had the idea and ran with it…bully for him.  But my question is, why spend the money when you can get it for free…??  Sure, the PDF format is on your computer and I like many history buffs want to hold the books in our hands, but these are not the original books…they are reprints!

Let’s look at a quick example: A True Vindication of the South at CRC- cost $19.00…not bad for a book compared to the prices of books at the bigger booksellers.  And now for the free version…at Google Books.  I think for my purposes, I will take the free version.  I will also be posting the addresses of the Google Books versions of his reprints in the future.

Billy Yank

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Happy Birthday!

February 12, 2009

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CNN Coverage of Lincoln’s Birthday

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Lincoln on the Web

February 10, 2009

In anticipation of Abraham Lincoln’s 200th Birthday on Thursday, I thought I would provide some easy linking to Lincoln sites on the web.  Please feel free to comment on sites I did not include and I will update them.

A. Lincoln Blog

Lincoln Studies

Lincoln’s Springfield

President Lincoln’s Cottage

The Abraham Lincoln Blog

The Abraham Lincoln Association: Collected Works

The Abraham Lincoln Newspaper Archives

The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum

Lincoln’s Cooper Union Address by Sam Waterston

The Papers of Abraham Lincoln

The Lincoln Log

The Abraham Lincoln Papers at the Library of Congress

By no means is this list complete, but I think it does a good job of providing some of the quality sites out there on our 16th President and the birthday boy!

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SCV & “Looking for Lincoln”

February 5, 2009

 Here is a post in the SCV’s blog site about their inclusion in the new PBS documentary called “Looking for Lincoln”  They seem very proud of their inclusion in this movie on Linclon and even mention people like fomer president Bill Clinton and Doris Kearns Goodwin…people who are usually not mentioned by the SCV without some form of criticism.  They mention a “sizable” segment on the SCV, but their segment is only a bit over five minutes and unfortuantely, the viewer is left with more questions than answers concerning Lincoln and “Black Confederates or Confederate slaves”.

By J. A. Davis, Chairman,
SCV Public Relations and Media Committee
Elm Springs, Columbia, TN
3 February, 2009

After a full year of working with the PBS television network, producers and the host-writer, Henry Louis Gates, the Sons of Confederate Veterans announces its participation and inclusion in the premiere of a the two hour multi-million dollar production entitled “Looking For Lincoln” which will first air on PBS nationwide on Wednesday, February 11, 2009 at 9 PM Eastern Time. It will also be repeated in the days following the initial airing. Consult local listing for the airing times in your area.

Pre-play date showings to critics and select audiences indicate the production will likely be regarded as one of the top television shows of 2009 and a potential candidate for major awards.

Besides a sizeable segment on the SCV, the program features former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, Doris Kearns Goodwin and about a half dozen historians.

The SCV’s participation went forward after careful consideration and scrutiny by the SCV PR & Media Committee, ultimately approved by Commander-in-Chief Chris Sullivan and continued by his successor, Commander-in-Chief Chuck McMicheal. A series of’ understandings were reached with the producers, leading to “Looking for Lincoln” host, Henry Louis “Skip” Gates and a full production crew coming to the SCV Reunion at Concord, NC.in the summer of 2008.

Interviews were arranged with SCV members regarding Lincoln. These will appear on the program on February 11th. They include, from the PR & Media Committee, Jim Dean, of Georgia, Army of Northern Virginia Commander, Bragdon Bowling, of Virginia,
and former Chief- of- Staff, Don Shelton, of Kentucky.

Considerable time is spent showing the tribute paid at the Reuion to the Clyburn family, descendants of a black Confederate soldier from North Carolina. This includes a conversation with the Associate Archivist at the North Carolina State Archives.

The program was originally conceived to be part of the commemoration of Lincoln’s 200th birthday. While that remained its main theme, the segments including the Sons of Confederate Veterans represent a major breakthrough in network television for the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

For those who would like an advance screening of the program on the internet, conduct a search for “Looking For Lincoln” on pbs.org . The program is divided into segments. The segment most centered on the SCV is titled “The Beginning of the Civil War”.

 

 

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Lincoln and Memory

February 2, 2009

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I had the opportunity over this past weekend to visit the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum and Library in Springfield as a guest of State Farm and WNET out of New York in order to preview “Looking For Lincoln”… an new documentary from PBS that will air on Feburary 11th.  On friday night we were treated to a talk by Philip Kunhardt III on the companion book of the same name that he and his brother and nephew along the same lines as the new documentary.  During the dicussion that preceeded the talk by Mr. Kunhardt, we were told by the producer of the documentary that the movie and the book do not follow each other exactly, for the movie was supposed to be four hours but they only received funding for two hours.

Mr. Kunhardt then gave a short talk on Lincoln and Memory and how Lincoln’s myth is more understood today than the real man.  Following his talk was a short (15 minute) segment of the movie which dealt with several of the topics in the entire movie.  I was supprised to see two very unexpected parts, one interview with Lerone Bennett who said that all he ever believed about Lincoln was a lie.  Any student of slavery and the Civil War will know that Lerone Bennett was the author of “Foreced Into Glory: Abraham Lincoln’s White Dream”, which makes the case that Lincoln was really a white supremicist.  The other scene that surprised me was the creator of the documentary, whose journey you follow to find Lincoln, Henry Louis Gates attends the 2008 Sons of Confederate Veterans Annual Convention where they honored Weary Clyburn as a black confederate.   If you watch this movie on Feb. 11th, you will have to be the judge as to how you think the Clyburn family looked and felt with this “distinct honor” bestowed upon them by the SCV.

The next day the teachers that had attened the “premier” the previous night joined WNET and State Farm for a educational seminar at the Lincoln Presidential Library to learn how  to use the companion website and the lesson plans for our classrooms.  To be honest this was more helpful and more applicable to my teaching than the previous night for obvious reasons, but it also helped that during the three our seminar we were able to see more of the documentary.  I did recieve the entire DVD as I left the museum on friday night but was not able to watch it in my hotel room for lack of a DVD player.  After the seminar I had the chance to visit the museum fully and hit the gift shop.  There I parted with $50 of my hard earn teacher’s pay and bought the companion book…and I am glad I did.

On monday I was able to set down and finally watch the entire two hour documentary and look through the companion book and I must say the documenaty needed four hours to finish its discussion of the topics it presented.  For example, there is the discussion between Gates and Bennett where Bennett says everything he learned about Lincol was a lie…and that is it…no further fleshing out of that idea or argument.  The book goes much deeper into why and how the myth of Lincoln developed after his death up until the death of Robet Todd Lincoln in 1926.

All in all the the experience was a great one.  I really enjoyed being invited to take part in something connected to the Lincoln 200th Birthday and to visit the ALPLM.  I look forward to trying out some of the lessons associated with the documentary and I really look forward to reading more of the companion book.

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Heading to Springfield to Look for Lincoln!

January 29, 2009

looking-for-lincoln

I will be heading down to Springfield, Illinois tomorrow afternoon to attend the “Looking For Lincoln Springfield Premier Event” at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, which is being held on Friday evening and saturday morning.  The event will include a premier of the new PBS documentary ”Looking for Lincoln” written and presented by Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.  The keynote speaker will be Philip Kunhardt who co-authored the companion book to the series set to air on PBS on Feb. 11th, 2009. 

This will be the first time I will have attened such an event and I think it will be quite interesting to see the premier and take part in the educators workshop on saturday.  I will give a full explination of the events upon my return.

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Rush, Obama, Lincoln, History & Memory!

December 23, 2008

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Earlier today I had to run up town to the Post Office to mail some letters to of all places South Carolina.  As I drove home I happened to catch a bit of Rush Limbaugh’s show where he was talking about Obama’suse of Lincoln during his campaign and now with the announcement that Obama would use the Lincoln Bible during the Inauguration.  Obama’s Inauguration will be the first since 1861-64 to use the Lincoln Bible and Rush seems to think that this is just another way in which Obama is trying to make himself look like a new Lincoln…and according to el Rushbo…the next FDR…but that is beyond my focus here.

What I think Rush my not be taking into account here is the historical connection between Lincoln and Obama.  Not that the two men are related or that their politics are the same but how they are connected through the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863.  Had it not be for Lincoln, Obama could not be in the situation in which he now finds himself…as President Elect.  Maybe, just maybe, Obama’suse of the Lincoln Bible is not to associate himself with Lincoln on the political basis, but on a historically significant basis.  One that includes an understanding of the Civil War from the Emancipationist viewpoint.

With Obama being our President during the at least the early part of the 150th Anniversary of The War of the Rebellion we may finally see the war placed in its proper context…and finally out from under the shadow of the myth of the Lost Cause.