home bbs files messages ]

Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   alt.history      Pretty sure discussion of all kinds      15,187 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 14,959 of 15,187   
   Jeffrey Rubard to All   
   James McPherson, "Tried By War: Abraham    
   09 Aug 23 15:00:55   
   
   From: jeffreydanielrubard@gmail.com   
      
   On July 27, 1848, a tall, rawboned Whig congressman from Illinois rose in the   
   House of Representatives to challenge the Mexican War policies of President   
   James K. Polk. An opponent of what he considered an unjust war, Abraham   
   Lincoln mocked his own    
   meager record as a militia captain who saw no action in the Black Hawk War of   
   1832. “By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero?” said   
   Lincoln. “Yes, sir . . . I fought, bled, and came away” after “charges   
   upon the wild onions”   
    and “a good many struggles with the musketoes.”   
      
   Lincoln might not have indulged his famous sense of humor in this fashion if   
   he had known that thirteen years later he would become commander in chief of   
   the U.S. Army in a war that turned out to be forty-seven times more lethal for   
   American soldiers    
   than the Mexican War. On his way to Washington in February 1861 as   
   presidentelect of a broken nation, Lincoln spoke in a far more serious manner.   
   He looked back on another war, which had given birth to the nation that now   
   seemed in danger of perishing    
   from the earth. In a speech to the New Jersey legislature in Trenton, Lincoln   
   recalled the story of George Washington and his tiny army, which crossed the   
   ice-choked Delaware River in a driving sleet storm on Christmas night in 1776   
   to attack the Hessian    
   garrison in Trenton. “There must have been something more than common that   
   those men struggled for,” said the president-elect. “Something even more   
   than National Independence. . . something that held out a great promise to all   
   the people of the    
   world for all time to come. I am exceedingly anxious that the Union, the   
   Constitution, and the liberties of the people shall be perpetuated in   
   accordance with the original idea for which that struggle was made.”   
      
   Lincoln faced a steep learning curve as commander in chief in the war that   
   began less than two months after that speech at Trenton. He was also painfully   
   aware that his adversary, Jefferson Davis, was much better prepared for that   
   daunting task. A    
   graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Davis had fought   
   courageously as a colonel of a Mississippi regiment in the Mexican War and had   
   served as an excellent secretary of war from 1853 to 1857—while Lincoln’s   
   only military experience    
   was his combat with mosquitoes in 1832. Lincoln possessed a keen analytical   
   mind, however, and a fierce determination to master any subject to which he   
   applied himself. This determination went back to his childhood. “Among my   
   earliest recollections,”    
   Lincoln told an acquaintance in 1860, “I remember how, when a mere child, I   
   used to get irritated when anybody talked to me in a way I could not   
   understand.” Lincoln recalled “going to my little bedroom, after hearing   
   the neighbors talk of an    
   evening with my father, and spending the night walking up and down, and trying   
   to make out what was the exact meaning of some of their, to me, dark sayings.   
   I could not sleep . . . when I got on such a hunt after an idea, until I had   
   caught it. . . .    
   This was a kind of passion with me, and it has stuck by me.” Later in life   
   Lincoln mastered Euclidean geometry on his own for mental exercise. As a   
   largely self-taught lawyer, he honed this quality of mind. He was not a quick   
   study but a thorough one.    
   I am never easy,” he said, “when I am handling a thought, till I have   
   bounded it North, and bounded it South, and bounded it East, and bounded it   
   West.”   
      
   Several contemporaries testified to the slow but tenacious qualities of   
   Lincoln’s mind. The mercurial editor of the New York Tribune, Horace   
   Greeley, noted that Lincoln’s intellect worked “not quickly nor   
   brilliantly, but exhaustively.” Lincoln’   
   s law partner William Herndon sometimes expressed impatience with Lincoln’s   
   deliberate manner of researching or arguing a case. But Herndon conceded that   
   his partner “not only went to the root of the question, but dug up the root,   
   and separated and    
   analyzed every fibre of it.”4 Lincoln also focused intently on the central   
   issue in a legal case and refused to be distracted by secondary questions.   
   Another fellow lawyer noted that Lincoln would concede nonessential points to   
   an opponent in the    
   courtroom, lulling him into a sense of complacency. But “by giving away six   
   points and carrying the seventh he carried his case . . . the whole case   
   hanging on the seventh. . . . Any man who took Lincoln for a simple-minded man   
   would very soon wake up    
   with his back in a ditch.”   
      
   As commander in chief Lincoln sought to master the intricacies of military   
   strategy in the same way he had tried to penetrate the meaning of mysterious   
   adult conversations when he was a boy. His private secretary John Hay, who   
   lived in the White House,    
   often heard the president walking back and forth in his bedroom at midnight as   
   he digested books on military strategy. “He gave himself, night and day, to   
   the study of the military situation,” Hay later wrote. “He read a large   
   number of strategical    
   works. He pored over the reports from the various departments and districts of   
   the field of war. He held long conferences with eminent generals and admirals,   
   and astonished them by the extent of his special knowledge and the keen   
   intelligence of his    
   questions.” Some of those generals, like Lincoln’s courtroom adversaries,   
   eventually found themselves on their backs in a ditch. By 1862 Lincoln’s   
   grasp of military strategy and operations was firm enough almost to justify   
   the assertion of the    
   historian T. Harry Williams: “Lincoln stands out as a great war president,   
   probably the greatest in our history, and a great natural strategist, a better   
   one than any of his generals.”   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca