In 1858 in Illinois state election there was about seven debates that took place there. These seven debates were called the Lincoln-Douglas Debates. The two main people that were involved in these debates were Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas. A very short summary of what the Lincoln-Douglas Debates were about is that they were mainly discussing two main topics. These two topics were slavery and State Rights. There were other issues talked about in the Lincoln-Douglas Debates but Slavery and State rights were the main topic. These debates were a giant part of a larger campaign in the government. All of the Debates were set up to make an immediate political goal. The Lincoln-Douglas Debates were supposed to reflect on the mid nineteen …show more content…
Douglas's senate. He was a Republican. With the Lincoln-Douglas Debates going on and plus Douglas's political nature that had been going on, the campaign started to attracted people from everywhere all over the nation. A lot of the people who heard about the Lincoln-Douglas Debates thought the Democratic party was going to keep hold of the unity and face the State rights and the Slave issues. Other thought that the Lincoln-Douglas Debates were going to help the union itself. The so-called "battle of the union" continued in Illinois. Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas wanted to take their arguments straight to the people of the United States, and so they did. It would be better because the people get to decided what they want for there own country. Lincoln and Douglas both received help from different parties in the congress. There were some people who supported Lincoln but opposed Douglas. The Buchanan company supported Lincoln. Abraham Lincolns plan was to stop the republican party from supporting Douglas. He thought if he exposed Douglas it would separate him from the senator and Abraham Lincoln would win the support from the radical abolitionist and the support from the Conservative Whigs, the people there were against
Sectional Tensions Gadsden Purchase: The Gadsden Purchase was a treaty made in 1853 by James Gadsden of South Carolina. Gadsden was appointed by Secretary of War Jefferson Davis to secure a chunk of Mexico for a railway route. He was able to negotiate land along the southern tips of current day Arizona and New Mexico, the northern border of Mexico, for $10 million from Spaniard Santa Anna. The land Gadsden had managed to obtain would have made making a southern railroad much more simple than cutting through more northern mountains.
In the Rochester city’s celebration for the National Day of 1852, the famous abolitionist Frederick Douglas gave a speech in which he severely criticized the citizens’ hypocritical actions of celebrating their independence, ignoring the oppressive and unjust slavery that millions in the nation were suffering to. In his speech, Douglas achieved the audience’s agreement on his claim by employing commonly admitted allusions, contrast of two subjects and subtle but efficient word choices. In the speech, Douglas discloses the contradiction between the normal citizens’ gratification and the slaves’ expulsion from this happiness to aim a provocative satire on the national day, which carries the white’s pride and ecstasy and the black’s suffer and
The Infamous Lincoln-Douglas Disputations The Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858 hold great significance in America's political history. These seven debates for Senate drew tens of thousands of attendees to several cities around Illinois. Its main arguments brought forth slavery's complex division in America as well as the separation of the union because of it. Although Lincoln did not win the election, these debates proved to be the platform for Lincoln's principles and helped his rise towards presidency.
In 1858 Stephen Douglas a spokesman for the Democratic Party, was seeking reelection to a third term in the U.S. Senate, and Abraham Lincoln was running for Douglas’s Senate seat as a Republican. Douglas and Lincoln traveled across the state of Illinois in a series of debates hitting seven of the nine Congressional Districts. Douglas and Lincoln each took turns discussing party politics, the future of the nation, and the most important topic slavery. Who won the debates, is the question that is still being asked in the year 2016. Through my own personal study and review of The Lincolns Douglas Debates, it is my personal opinion that Stephen Douglas not Abraham Lincoln won the debates because of how the election system was set up in 1858, by
Lincoln and Republican Party Known as one of the greatest presidents of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, shaped the nation in his image, leaving benefits to people. Striking shifts occurred in the nation at Lincoln’s time: In 1809, when Lincoln was born, the nation was just starting to grow with one united body; during his participation in political issues, the nation was parted; but after Lincoln’s presidency, it not only became one again but also forever altered and strengthened. Once had been a self-educated lawyer, a Whig Party leader, and a member of the Illinois House of Representatives and then of the United States House of Representatives, Lincoln led the building of the new Republican Party. During his presidency, the Civil War burst.
Senator Stephen Douglas, hoping to lure transcontinental railroad developers away from lands acquired via the Gadsden Purchase, proposed instead to build the line farther north, so that the railway would end in Chicago and gives his home region a huge economic boost. However, federal law required that the vast unorganized areas in the middle of the country first be carved into official territories before any track could be laid. To do so, Douglas rammed the Kansas-Nebraska Act through Congress in 1854 to create two new territories—Kansas in the South and Nebraska in the North. According to the Missouri Compromise of 1820, both territories would have to be free because they were north of the 36˚ 30 ' line.
There is always someone trying to take a supreme being with power down. People often try to outsmart one another with their words and actions just so they can exceed you in life. The outcome is usually for an essential place in life. Between Lincoln and Douglas, it took 7 different debates to just get the right results. The debates between Lincoln and Douglas were seen as an important event in history due to Lincoln being the underdog, their views on slavery and the outcome.
Stephen Douglas, an advocate of popular sovereignty, and Abraham Lincoln, a Republican candidate, were both running to represent Illinois in the United States Senate. These two men met in a sequence of seven debates before they battled for office of presidency in the election of 1858. Slavery eventually became the main issue discussed repeatedly in each of the debates, due to the Mexican War adding new territories left to be assessed as free soil or not. During this time, the Compromise of 1850 was a temporary fix to the sectional issues for the states that made the decision to participate in the extension of slavery. However, the Missouri Compromise of 1854 brought the issue back up again.
”There are only two sides to this question. Every man must be for the United States or against it. There can be no neutrals in this war; only patriots and traitors” once said by Stephen Douglas of Illinois. He was a man known for creating an act that could be the most significant thing leading up to the civil war. He wrote The Kansas-Nebraska Act which let the people of the territory vote for or against slavery.
A constitution is a document with principles upon which the state or organization must be governed by. In Philadelphia, a convention took place known as the Constitutional Convention on May 25. During the convention, the Founding Fathers of the United States created a framework for which the government should follow. On September 17, 1787, this document was signed, now known as the Constitution of the United States of America. After the Constitution was made a national disagreement took place discussing whether the Constitution was proslavery or antislavery.
This election was unique in that there were two elections taking place. The candidates running were Abraham Lincoln, Stephen Douglas, John Breckenridge, and John Bell. Abraham Lincoln was a moderate Republican running against the very same man he lost an Illinois Senate seat against, Democratic Senator Stephen Douglas. These two candidates were running against each other for the ballot in the North. John Breckenridge was the Democratic nominee for the Southern ballot.
The 1800s was a trying time for our developing union; from the war on slavery to the birth of the Underground Railroad, it was a period of growth. In addition, several states were admitted to the union- California, Maine, and Missouri to name a few. With all this growth will inevitably come struggles; sectionalism to be exact. Sectionalism occurs when a group/region is so focused on their own agenda, they neglect national issues in the process. Southerners were so fixed on maintaining slavery, while Northerners fought so harshly to abolish it.
man we later saw running for the presidency of the United States with the Republican Party ticket, and his name was Abraham Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln believed in the equality of all Americans, whether black or white. As pointed in the “Lincoln Douglas debate” reading, where his argument was quoted, Abraham Lincoln referred to the United States of America as “House divide”. It was divided between the opponents and advocates of slavery, he believed the idea of everyone being free and entitled to their rights and the institution of slavery could not both exist under the same roof- morally, socially or legally under one nation. It was either slavery or no slavery, but he was rooting for a slave free nation.
Douglas, was an important election that would, and did, go down in history. Lincoln had opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, created by Stephen Douglas, which lead him into becoming a Republican. Here, nobody was able to Compromise. He ran against Stephen Douglas, and won the election with getting one hundred eighty electoral votes, and Douglas getting twelve (Southern Democrat Breckinridge seventy-two, and Constitutional Union Bell getting thirty-nine) (Doc H).
Abraham Lincoln would lead the Republican Party even though he did not win the south over in the election. He promised that he would save the Union no matter what the cost. This disconnect in policy would later lay the basis for the Civil War, which started in 1861. He never envisioned a proclamation or ending slavery but he was ultimately committed to saving the Union from the succeeding south. Lincoln gave into the antislavery Republicans toward the end of the war and finally decided to make slavery the true basis of the war.