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It seemed as if the whole civilized world were arrested in its daily concerns of life by this tragic calamity. From every quarter of the globe, from kings and queens, emperors, senates, and legislative assemblies, from private individuals, high and low, and from convocations of the plain people of many lands, came messages of sympathy, condolence, respect, and sincere sorrow. It was a tribute unprecedented and spontaneous to the ended life and completed services of Abraham Lincoln.

The author of this brief biography has imperfectly carried out his purpose if he has failed to show how the character of Lincoln was developed and shaped by his early training; how he was raised up and fitted, in the obscure seclusion of humble life, by the providence of God, for a special and peculiar service; how he became the type, flower, and representative of all that is worthily American; how in him the commonest of human traits were blended with an allembracing charity and the highest human wisdom; and how, with single-hearted devotion to the right, he lived unselfishly, void of selfish personal ambition, and, dying tragically, left a name to be remembered with love and honor as one of the best and greatest of mankind.

A

INDEX.

Altoona, conference of governors
at, 342

American party, 156
Anderson, Major Robert, in the
Black Hawk War, 58; in Fort
Sumter, 255; surrender of, 256
Andrew, John A., Governor of
Massachusetts, 261
Antietam, battle of, 307
Anti-Lecompton, 160
Appomattox, surrender at, 445
Arkansas, reply to call for troops,
261; Halleck in, 323
Arming the freedmen, 303
Armstrong, Jack, encounter with

Lincoln, 50; Lincoln defends
his son on trial for murder, 127
Army of the Potomac, McClellan

commander of, 319, 324; pro-
posed reorganization of, 334:
ordered to support Pope, 342;
Lincoln visits, 356; at Gettys-
burg, 371; Sabbath-breaking,
379; Grant's headquarters
with, 387; Meade in command
cf, 388; corps commanders of,
388; battles of the Wilderness,
388; at Appomattox, 445
Ashmun, George, chairman of
Republican Convention of 1860,

197

Assassination, threats against Lin-
coln before inauguration, 219
Atchison, David R., in the Kan-
sas troubles, 145
Autobiography, Lincoln's, 165-
167

Awakening on slavery question,
133

B

Baker, Col. Edward D., law part-
ner with Lincoln, 75; Lincoln

rescues, from mob, 87; elected
to Congress, 97; friendship
with Lincoln, 415

Baltimore, Sixth Massachusetts
Regiment fired on in, 264
Banks, Gen. Nathaniel P., Gov-
ernor of Massachusetts, 262;
under Pope, 341
Barn-burners, 108, 109

Bateman, Newton, Lincoln's in-
terview with, 208

Beauregard, Gen. P. G. T., in com-
mand at Charleston, 256; de-
mands surrender of Fort Sum-
ter, 256; at Bull Run, 279
Bell, John, and Edward Everett
nominated, 191

Berry, partner of Lincoln, 65
Big Bethel, Federal defeat at, 279
Bissell, William H., Representa-
tive in Congress from Illinois,
83

Black Hawk War, 56-60
Black, Jeremiah S., Attorney-
General in Buchanan's Cabinet,

21 I

Blair, Francis P., Sr., visits Rich-
mond, 404
Blair, Montgomery, house de-
stroyed by Rebels, 392; dis-
missed by Lincoln, 437
Blockade of Southern ports de-
clared, 268

Bonds, six per cent., ordered, 360
Boone, Daniel, Kentucky pioneer,
8

Boonville, Lincoln attends court
at, 33

Booth, John Wilkes, 452
Breckinridge, Robert J., Lincoln
meets, at Boonville, 34
Breckinridge, John C., nominated
for President, 191

Broderick, David C., his death in
California, 205.

Brown, John, in Kansas, 145

Browning, O.H., lawyer in Spring-

field, Ill., 83

Buchanan, James, nominated for

President, 155; elected, 158;
at Lincoln's inauguration, 236
Buell, Gen. Don Carlos, in Ken-
tucky, 351

Bull Run, first battle of, 278;
second battle of, 343

Burns's poems, Lincoln reads,
30

Burnside, Gen. Ambrose E., at
Roanoke Island, 322; succeeds
McClellan, 349; at the battle
of Fredericksburg, 350; arrests
Vallandigham, 362; in Knox-
ville, 381

Butler, Gen. Benjamin F., at An-
napolis, 267; Fortress Monroe,
277; Ship Island, 323; City
Point, 391

Butterfield, Gen. Daniel, despatch
from Army of Potomac, 358

с

Cabinet, Lincoln's, 246

Call for troops, 259; call and draft
ordered, 400
Cameron, Simon, Secretary of
War, 432; proposes to form
negro regiments, 4331 ар-
pointed Minister to Russia,
434; defended by Lincoln, 434
Camp, half-faced, 12
Cartwright, Peter, candidate for
Congress, 101

Cass, Gen. Lewis, in Black Hawk
War, 60; Lincoln's sarcasm
concerning, 106; nominated
for President, 110; Secretary
of State, 212

Chancellorsville, battle of, 357
Charleston, Ill., Lincoln's speech

in, 174

Charleston, S. C., Democratic
Convention in 1860, 190; har-
bor fortifications, 212
Chase, Salmon P., favored by
radical Republicans, 383; his
dissatisfaction, 435; resigns
Treasury portfolio, 435; ap-
pointed Chief-Justice, 436
Chicago Convention, 1860, 191;
Lincoln nominated by, 195;
Hamlin nominated by, 196

Cincinnati menaced by Rebel
raids. 351

Clary's Grove boys, 50
Clay, Henry, Lincoln reads life of,
24; Lincoln's eulogy of, 32; de-
feated for President, 99; visited
by Lincoln, 100

Cobb, Howell, Secretary of Treas
ury in Buchanan's Cabinet, 211
Cochrane, John, nominated for
Vice-President, 396

Condition of people of the United
States in 1789, I
Confederacy, Rebel, organized,
214

Confiscation of Rebel property
authorized by Congress, 359
Conscription, ordered, 359; riots
in New York, 374

"Contraband," first use of the
word, 277, 278

Cooper Institute, Lincoln's speech
in, 185

Cooper's novels read by young
Lincoln, 29

Crocodile, Douglas's figure of
speech, 180

Curtin, Andrew G., Governor of
Pennsylvania, 262

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Dixon, John, guide in Black | Free Soilers, organize, 109; Lin-

Hawk War, 39

Donelson, Fort, capture of, 322
Dorsey, Hazel, Lincoln's school-

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Early, Jubal A., Rebel general,
threatens Washington, 391
Electoral vote, 1856, 159; 1860,
200; 1864, 401
Elkin, Parson, border preacher,
8; funeral sermon at Mrs. Lin-
coln's burial, 22

Ellsworth, Elmer, death of, 272
Emancipation, proclamations of
Frémont and Hunter, 295, 297;
Lincoln's message concerning
same, 298; Lincoln considers
his proclamation, 307; it is
issued, 308; full text of, 311-
317
Ewell, Richard S., Rebel general,
invades Pennsylvania, 367

F

Farragut, Admiral David G.,
operations in Gulf of Mexico,
324; at New Orleans, 324
Fessenden, William Pitt, accepts
the Treasury, 435

Fillmore, Millard, and Donelson
nominated, 156
Fisher, Fort, capture of, 441
Floyd, John B., Secretary of War
in Buchanan's Cabinet, 211; at
Fort Donelson, 322
Forquer, George, Lincoln's en-
counter with, 73
Fort Beargrass, 3

coln leader of, 151

Frémont, John C., nominated for
President, 1856, 155; anti-
slavery views, 293; emancipa-
tion proclamation, 294; popu-
larity, 295; nominated for
President, 1864, 396

G

re-

Garfield, James A., defeats Rebel
general, H. Marshall, 322;
port of Lincoln's capture of
Norfolk, 336

"

Gettysburg, battle of, 366; dedi-
cation of cemetery at, 377
Grant, Gen. Ulysses S., his rising,
321; 'unconditional surren-
der," 322;
capture of Forts
Henry and Donelson, 322; at
Lieutenant-
Vicksburg, 365;
General, 384; at the Rapidan,
387; "fight it out on this line,'
388; suggested for the presi-
dency, 393; Lee seeks inter-
view with, 441; conference
with Lincoln and Sherman,
442; envelops Lee's army, 444
Greeley, Horace, Lincoln's letter
to, 305; favors a foreign arbi-
tration, 354; opposes Lincoln,
393; at Niagara Conference,
398

Greene, Bolin, death of, 68

H

Hale, John P., comments on Trent
affair, 290, 291
Half-faced camp, 12
Halleck, Henry W., at Corinth,

Miss., 323; called to Washing-
ton, 341; his warning to Meade,
370
Hamlin, Hannibal, nominated
Vice-President, 196

Hampton Roads Conference, 405
Hanks, Dennis, 20
Hanks, Nancy, 5

Hanks, Thomas, 43; helping Lin-
coln, 44; brings rails into con-
vention, 183.

Hardin, John J., elected to Con-
gress, 98

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