Analysis Of Abraham Lincoln's House Divided Speech

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Looking back at the life of Abraham Lincoln, if you read about him before 1858, you wouldn’t think he would be such a predominant figure in American history today. It’s not till you learn about the election in 1860 and the events following that you learn what cemented this man, who would become our nations sixteenth president, into our nation’s history. If Lincoln had not won the election, perhaps our only memory of him would be his famous “House Divided” speech from the Illinois Republican Convention in 1858, but we learn from a young as, that isn’t the case. Lincoln went on the be the President during the bloodiest war in American history. Despite having little schooling as a child he would also write his own speeches before and during his …show more content…

While winning the popular vote, he didn’t win the election. Despite this lose, his “House Divided” speech was well received among northern and southerners alike. He quotes the Bible saying, “A house divided against itself cannot stand”. He references two examples that were dividing Americans in 1858, Bleeding Kansas and the Supreme Court ruling of the Dread Scott case. While both of these are taught in any American history class individually. Lincoln references them both for their similarities. Both were cases that were over the matter of slavery. Slavery at this point had divided the nation in half, the slave holding south and the free states in the north, with people on both sides sympathizing for the others cause. With new territories being settled and becoming states over time, the United States government had to find ways to appease both anti and pro slavery state governments and keep an even keel in the house of representatives. This led to the Missouri Compromise and then to the Kansas Nebraska Act. After “Bleeding Kansas” it was obvious that this had only further divided the country and would inevitably lead to a civil …show more content…

While he does speak of a divide he still, after four years of was, sees both sides as one nation. Even though during his entire duration as President never saw a unified America, he still never gave of hope. To him, they were both still one nation under God. He had at this point in his Presidency came out and taken a firm stance against slavery by abolishing it in all federally controlled land in the south, through the emancipation proclamation. Also, going as far as the say, without saying, it is possible that god has divided this nation because the government would allow a country built on the foundation of freedom, liberty, and justice for all to put an entire group of people into a life of bondage and servitude based solely on the color of their skin. Although this was one of several reasons for the start of the war, by this time it had become the main focus and sole focus in many people’s eyes in American and around the world. At the beginning of the war Lincoln had said, “If I could save the Union without freeing any slaves I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that”. By Lincoln taking his stance against slavery, he would put the northern army in the best possible position to end the war and reunite the country with malice towards none, and

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