Lincoln's Anger Revealed in Civil War Letter

Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News
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James Cornelius, curator of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, was very surprised by the letter when first informed of it by Discovery News.

"Harlan ended up being Lincoln's in-law," Cornelius said, referring to the fact that the senator's daughter Mary wound up marrying Lincoln's son Robert in 1868.

Cornelius, however, thinks Lincoln's final decision about Mr. Neagle was more about politics than family.

"Lincoln was not feeling optimistic at the time, as it didn't look like he'd be reelected," Cornelius explained, adding that, based on other documentation, Lincoln was also sick and possibly bedridden when he wrote to the Neagles. The day before he wrote the letter, he had also suspended the execution of a man named James Taylor, who was convicted of desertion.

"The Taylor decision was more typical of Lincoln, who often viewed deserters as 'leg cases,' since he felt that many young men listened to their legs rather than to their head when they ran away from battle," Cornelius said.

Mr. Neagle, however, fell into a different group. Cornelius said Lincoln nearly always took a harsh stance in cases of treason, slave trading and rape.

"Iowa was a good, anti-slavery union state," he said, so Lincoln probably felt appeasing its leaders was more important to the country than maintaining his original decision concerning Mr. Neagle, who was likely freed from prison when the war ended.

Although Lincoln must have won favor with the Neagles and Senator Harlan, he remained unpopular with many Americans both before and during the Civil War.

"Abraham Lincoln was one of the four most hated presidents in U.S. history," explained Cornelius. "The other three are Andrew Jackson, Harry Truman and George W. Bush."

The Lincoln letter will be sold at auction by Sotheby's Dec. 11, 2008. It is estimated to be worth between $250,000 to $350,000. Also included in the sale is an extremely rare copy -- one of only 15-20 still known to exist -- of the first volume of Thomas Paine's pamphlet series The American Crisis, written in 1776 when U.S. morale during American Revolution was low. It includes the famous line, "These are the times that try men's souls."

Multiple letters and documents by George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and John Paul Jones will also be included in the sale.


Related Links:

How Stuff Works: American Civil War

Sotheby's

Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library


 
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