Authors: Rich Lowry
212 Funding should follow: Frederick M. Hess, “Does School Choice âWork'?”
National Affairs 5
(Fall 2010), 35â53.
213 “forestalled social dynamism”: Guelzo,
Redeemer
, 9.
213 expanded inexorably: Nicholas Eberstadt,
A Nation of Takers: America's Entitlement Epidemic
(West Conshohocken, PA: Templeton Press, 2012). The information on food stamps is from one of my own columns, “The Rise of Food Stamp Nation,”
National Review Online
, July 10, 2012. Murray's
Coming Apart
, 170, and Lindsey's
Human,
chapter six, discuss the rise in usage of Social Security Disability Insurance.
214 advent of the welfare state: The pensions for widows and orphans of the Civil War dead and for disabled veterans are sometimes interpreted as a precursor to the welfare state. They indeed became incredibly expansive in the decades after the war. But they applied to a class of Âpeople who had served the country, and they faded out with the passing of the veterans and their families.
215 makes it impossible to build: White's
New Atlantis
essay addresses this point.
216 creating the Department of Agriculture: The language in the act creating the department can be found at the USDA National Agricultural Library, http://www.nal.usda.gov/lincolns-Âagricultural-Âlegacy. A report by the non-Âprofit The American Association for the Advancement of Science notes the decline in research funding, http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd/fy2013/hist13pGDP.pdf.
217 “By increasing total wealth”: Howe,
Political Culture
, 9. Sellers's
Market Revolution
has the nineteenth century income-Âdistribution numbers. The labor quote is from Taylor's
Transportation
, 264.
217 the occasional Irish joke: The count is from P. M. Zall, ed.,
Abe Lincoln Laughing
(Knoxville, TN: The University of Tennessee Press, 1995), index. Burlingame's
A Life
, 413, Foner's
Fiery
, 78-Â133, and Foner's
Free
, 198, 257-Â59, are the sources of much of the information regarding the nativist and immigrant votes.
222 same odor of elitism: Howe's
Political Cultur
e, 37, has the Emerson put-Âdown. Haskins and Sawhill's
Creating
, 71, sets out the data on the effect of adherence to bourgeois norms. The Susan Mayer book is
What Money Can't Buy: Family Income and Children's Life Chances
, 2-Â12. The alcohol numbers come from Sellers's
Market Revolution
, 259-Â65. The Yuval Levin quote comes from his excellent review of Murray's
Coming Apart
in the
Weekly Standard
, March 19, 2012. Lindsey's
Human
, chapter seven, discusses prescriptive parole, and any number of papers by Robert Rector make the case for work requirements across welfare programs and for a campaign of public suasion on illegitimacy. Finally, Baker's “ â
Not Much of Me'
” notes the contrasting rustic and bourgeois cultures during Lincoln's day.
225 A vast apparatus of cultural uplift: Warren's
Youth
, 79, 106, 167, Âdescribes Lincoln's readers and quotes from them extensively. The dyspeptic quote is from Sellers's
Market Revolution
, 365.
227 bordered on the worshipful: I'm indebted here to the wonderful discussion of Lincoln and the Founders in Allen C. Guelzo's
Abraham Lincoln: As a Man of Ideas
(Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 2009), chapter six.
232 last spasm of the Civil War: I previously published this paragraph making this argument about the Civil Rights Act elsewhere. Gerard Alexander, “The Myth of the Racist Republicans,”
Claremont Review of Books
, IV:2 (Spring 2004)
.
Â
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Abe Lincoln Laughing
(Zall), 217
Abraham Lincoln: A Life
(Burlingame), 19n
“Abraham Lincoln and the Self-ÂMade Myth” (Hofstadter), 14
Academically Adrift
(Arum and Roksa), 212
Adams, Charles Francis, 8
Adams, John, 20
Adams, John Quincy, 60, 61, 85
agriculture, 21; Department of Agriculture, 216; Homestead Act, 177â79; Lincoln and, 91â92, 193; specialization, 45, 119â20, 121; subsistence farming, 21, 45, 119
Alexander, Gerard, 232â33
Alger, Horatio, 7
American Dream, 5, 16, 129, 198, 205â6, 240
Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President
(Guelzo), 12n
American North: banking/currency reform, 174â75; as capitalist republic, 145, 168; Civil War and prosperity, 181â82; economic rise of, 120â21; immigration and, 168â69; industrialization, 168, 171â72; as laissez-Âfaire haven, 179; manufacturing in, 171; population of, 168â69; railroads in, 171; slaves in, 136; strength in 1864, 167â68; wage labor in, 146â47
American Revolution, 73
American South: caste system, 5; Civil Rights Act and, 232; Confederacy income tax, 12, 180; Confederate Army, 181; cotton crop, 136, 170â71, 190; Declaration and, 11, 140â41; decline of New Orleans, 118â19; economic effect of war, 181, 189â90; economy of, 149â50; expansionist goals, 137, 159â60, 170; fear of free states, 169; federalism in, 11; filibustering, 137; homestead bills opposed, 178; industrialization, 169â70, 190â91; inflation, 180â81; manufacturing, 171; on Northern capitalism, 146; political power, 136, 182; population, 168â69; post-Âbellum decline, 189â90; racial oppression in, 190; reconstruction, 183, 190; rejoining mainstream, 201; romantic image, 148â49; secession, 5, 11, 170, 181, 198, 228, 237; sharecropping, 190; slavery, 5, 11, 136â37, 145, 147â51, 158â59, 169, 182; Southern Democrats, 11; Tariff of Abominations, 106â7; transportation in, 150, 181; war socialism, 179â81
Armstrong, John, 126
Arnavon, Cyrille, 192
Arum, Richard, 212
Baker, Jean, 30, 206, 225
banking, 15, 59, 105; Bank of the United States, 61â62, 91, 105; Bank War, 103, 105; Jacksonian opposition, 60â61, 87â88, 105, 175; Legal Tender Act and, 174â75; Lincoln and, 103â6, 114, 174â75, 193; national banks, 175, 187â88; Whig party support, 61â62, 91
Basler, Roy P., 2n
Beard, Charles and Mary, 187
Bell, Alexander Graham, 191
Bensel, Richard Franklin, 174, 179, 180, 187
Benton, Thomas Hart, 114
Biddle, Nicholas, 62
Birch, Jonathan, 152, 153
Black Hawk War, 3, 46, 70
Blackstone, Sir William, 51, 75
Bliss, J. S., 236â37
Bloomberg, Michael, 222
Boritt, Gabor, 90, 91, 103, 121
Breckinridge, John, 170
Breese, Sidney, 110
“Broadway Pageant, A” (Whitman), 167
Brockman, John, 75
Brooks, Arthur, 200
Brownson, Orestes, 146
Bryan, William Jennings, 193â94
Buchanan, James, 178
Buckley, William F., Jr., 239
Burlingame, Michael, 19n, 40, 78
Bush, George W., 209
Bushnell, Horace, 95
Butler, William, 48, 78
Calhoun, John C., 53, 54, 140
Campbell, James, 176
Canisius, Theodore, 219
capitalism, American, 87â123; Declaration as foundation, 143; industrial capitalism, 191â92; infrastructure and, 96; labor theory of value, 90â91; Lincoln and, 103â7, 111â13, 145, 148, 168, 198; in the North, 145, 168; as opportunity, 114â16; post-Âbellum America and, 185â87, 191â92; railroads and, 119; South and, 146â47, 168; Wayland's ideas, 90â91; Whig party and, 90â92, 114â15
Carey, Henry Charles, 90, 91
Carnegie, Andrew, 15, 188â89
Chapman, A. H., 29, 37
Chase, Salmon P., 168, 174
Chicago, Illinois, 120, 135, 185
Churchill, Winston, 228
cities, 21, 118â19, 120, 185
Civil Rights Act, 232
Civil War: Anaconda Plan, 168; bond drives, 188; casualties, 181; Confederate Army, 181; federal spending, 184; industrialized North triumphs over agrarian South, 168; Lincoln on purpose of, 2; Lincoln's address to 166th Ohio Regiment, 1â3; Northern prosperity and, 181â82; Southern economic-Âpolitical power and, 179â81, 182; tariffs levied for, 176; tax levied for, 11â12, 176
Clay, Clement Claiborne, Jr., 177
Clay, Henry, 56â64, 80, 85, 134, 142, 154, 238; “American System” of, 58â59; Hamiltonian economics of, 59; Lincoln's eulogy, 86, 141; re-Âchartering Bank of the United States, 61â62; “self-Âmade man” coined, 57
Clinton, DeWitt, 98
Cobb, Williamson R. W., 177
Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln
(Basler ed.), 2n
Colton, Calvin, 114â15
Commentaries on the Laws of England
(Blackstone), 51, 75
Cooke, Jay, 188
Cooper, Thomas, 95
Cowen, Tyler, 202
Crawford, Elizabeth, 25
Crawford, Josiah, 34
Cuomo, Mario, 9, 13, 207
currency, 61â62, 87, 91, 103â5; “greenbacks,” 174; Legal Tender Act and, 174â75; Lincoln and national bank, 105â6
Davis, David, 32, 53, 77â78, 97, 109
Davis, Rodney O., 23n
De Bow, James, 146, 150
DeBow's Review
, 118â19
Declaration of Independence, 5, 7, 16; Lincoln and, 128, 129, 140â45, 156, 164, 228; natural rights and, 143â45, 161; “self-Âevident lie,” 140â41
Democracy in America
(Tocqueville), 197
Democratic Party: banking and, 61â62, 87â88, 175; basic tenets, 230â31; “Cross of Gold” speech, 194; as Democratic Republicans, 60; government action vs. self-Âreliance, 230; hard-Âmoney gospel of, 105; in Illinois, 53, 101; Jacksonians in, 61, 105, 121, 146; “negative liberal state” of, 58.
See also
Jackson, Andrew
Dickey, T. Lyle, 127â28
DiLorenzo, Thomas, 10â11
Dirck, Brian, 50
Dodge, William E., 171
Donald, David Herbert, 8, 26, 78
Douglas, Stephen, 42, 82, 129â30, 132â33, 152, 192, 229; Kansas-ÂNebraska Act, 133â35; Lincoln debates, 57, 125â40, 151â64; as Lincoln rival, 114, 123, 126, 127, 130â33; railroads and, 128â29, 134; slavery and, 133â35, 151â64, 237; wife Adele, 152
Douglass, Frederick, 161
Duncan, Joseph, 100
Eberstadt, Nicholas, 213
economy, 194; banking-Âcurrency and, 104, 174â75; barter economy, 29, 38; cash economy, 29, 76, 103; democratic capitalism and, 5, 168; federal spending, Civil War and post-Âwar, 184; financiers, debt financing, and Robber Barons, 187â89; free trade and, 176; global, U.S. share, 209; globalization, 203â4; government debt, 184; housing bubble, 209; industrialization and, 15â16, 21, 107, 120, 121, 149, 168, 171â72, 193; labor market, 204; Lincoln and a robust market, 14; Lincoln and industrialization, 4, 7, 15â16, 107, 120, 121, 149, 168; as Lincolnian republic and, 199â207; of Lincoln's boyhood, 20â21, 29; Lincoln's formula for today's economic ills, 207; Lincoln's modernization of, 5, 168; Lincoln's vision, 89, 107, 116â17, 129, 165, 172, 183â84, 193; post-ÂCivil War, 185â87 191; post-ÂWorld War II, 201â2; protective tariffs and, 193; private sector and, 209â10; revolution in business, 187â89; slowing growth of, 202â3, 209; Southern cotton sales, 170â71; technology and, 202, 204, 208, 210; unemployment and, 206; U.S. vs. Western Europe, 204; World War II and, 194â95
Edison, Thomas, 191
education: American Dream and, 205â6; class divide in America and, 207; costs, 211, 212; emphasizing today, 210â12; G.I. Bill and, 201; land-Âgrant colleges, 176â77, 185; Lincoln policies, 44, 45, 210â11; moral, 225â26; North vs. South, 150; opportunity and, 210â11; reforms proposed, 211â12; rural America, 31â32 ; socio-Âcultural effects, 205, 206; U.S. advantage in, 202; U.S. slippage, 211, 227
Edwards, Elizabeth (sister-Âin-Âlaw), 77, 79, 80
Edwards, Matilda, 130
Edwards, Ninian (brother-Âin-Âlaw), 80, 113â14, 130
Eisenhower, Dwight, 232
Elements of Political Economy, T
he
(Wayland), 90
Elmore, Johnson, 42
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 4, 8
English Grammar
(Kirkham), 49
English Reader
(Murray), 34, 226
Erie Canal, 98, 99
Faust, Drew Gilpin, 3
Federalist Papers, 95â96
Fehrenbacher, Don, 126, 153
Fillmore, Millard, 219
Fisk, John Moore, 53
Fitzhugh. George, 140, 146, 208
Fogel, Robert, 149
Foner, Eric, 120, 158
Ford, Thomas, 101, 106
Forquer, George, 55
Founding Fathers, 8, 16, 141, 142, 155â58; Lincoln reverence for, 227â29
Francis, Simeon, 82
Franklin, Benjamin, 195
Garrison, William Lloyd, 228
Gentry, James, 38â39
Gentry, Joseph, 25
Gettysburg Address, 2, 7
Gillespie, Joseph, 78, 84, 88, 89, 131â32, 142, 151
globalization, 203â4
Godbey, Russell, 51â52
Goldwater, Barry, 231â33
Goodrich, Grant, 93â94
Grant, Ulysses S., 186
Great Stagnation, The
(Cowen), 202
Greeley, Horace, 177, 179
Green, Bowling, 50â51
Greene, William, 49â50, 70
Grigsby, Nathaniel, 70â71
Guelzo, Allen, 12, 12n, 153, 229
Hacker, Louis, 184, 189, 192
Hamilton, Alexander, 61, 95â96, 116, 168
Hammond, James, 145, 147, 170
Hanks, Dennis (cousin), 27, 29, 30, 34, 35â36, 38, 206â7
Hanks, John (cousin), 33, 40, 41, 206â7
Hardin, John, 71
Harmony of Interests, The
(Carey), 91
Harrison, William, 80, 85â86
Hartz, Louis, 116
Haskins, Ron, 223
Hay, John Milton, 78, 121
Hay, Milton, 121
Hazel, Caleb, 31
Herndon, J. Rowan, 56â57
Herndon, William “Billy,” 22, 57, 23n, 78, 164; on Douglas, 131; interviews on Lincoln, 22, 23â24, 25, 29, 30, 31, 35â36, 39, 40, 51, 53, 54â55, 63, 69, 70, 71, 78, 80, 84, 93â94, 114, 127â28, 130, 142, 151, 184; letter from Mary Owen, 79; letter from Wentworth, 133; Lincoln and
Elements
, 90; Lincoln and law, 50; Lincoln and railroads, 111â13; Lincoln as politician, 80; Lincoln letter to, 75â76; Lincoln's mother, 28; Lincoln's ambition, 22, 23, 80; Lincoln's debt, 46; Lincoln's 1839 debate loss, 131â32; Lincoln's love of politics, 80; Lincoln's office, 108; Lincoln's presidential aims, 86; Lincoln's remoteness, 77; Lincoln's “skinning of Thomas,” 82; Lincoln's thinking, 93; on the System, 99
Herndon's Informants
(Wilson and Davis, eds.), 23n
Hofstadter, Richard, 14
Holt, Michael, 59, 62
Homestead Act, 12, 177â79, 185
Howe, Daniel Walker, 56, 56n, 58, 74, 94, 192, 217
Illinois, 21; 1840 Bank crisis, 87â88; banning of blacks in, 162â63; corn and wheat exports, 120; Democrats, 53, 87â88, 101, 103; elections as events, 80â81; industrialization of, 120; Lincoln and the System, 95â102, 110; Lincoln and the Long Nine, 99â100; Lincoln as representative, 48; Lincoln family moves to, 39â40; Lincoln's economic vision manifested in, 116â17, 120â21; manufacturing in, 121; party switchers in, 54; population growth, 120; railroads, 99, 110, 117, 134; Republican Party, 125â26; state bank created, 103, 106; state capital, 48, 100; Whigs in, 54â55, 88
Illinois Central Railroad, 110â13, 128
immigration, 168â69, 217â18, 221â22
Indiana, 21; banning of blacks in, 162; Lincoln attends school in, 32; Lincoln family in, 19, 23, 22â24, 27â28, 31; Lincoln return to (1859), 121â22; newspapers in, 34; property rights in, 95
In Pursuit
(Murray), 200
Internet, 208
Jackson, Andrew, 54, 59â63, 96, 106, 142, 154, 235; Douglas as supporter of, 129â30
Jaffa, Harry, 73
Jefferson, Thomas, 20, 35, 57, 96, 142, 156, 158, 168
Johnson, Andrew, 177â78
Johnson, Lyndon Baines, 11, 12
Johnston, John (stepbrother), 69, 76â77
Junius Tracts
(Colton), 114â15
Kelley, Robert, 67
Kendall, Willmoore, 10
Kentucky: banning of blacks in, 162; Clay and, 57; Lincoln attends school in, 31; Lincoln family in, 19, 22, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28â29; property rights in, 94â95; as slave state, 137â38
Kentucky Preceptor, The
, 226
Kerry, John, 9
Kirkham, Samuel, 49
Kleiman, Mark, 224â25
Know-ÂNothings, 135, 218, 219
Lamborn, Josiah, 55
law: bankruptcy law, 61;
Commentaries
, 51, 75; land law, 94â95; Lincoln circuit riding, 109â10; Lincoln letters on, 74â75; Lincoln's belief in rule of, 72â73; Lincoln's cases, 52, 108â15; Lincoln's earnings, 110, 111; Lincoln's office, 108; Lincoln's study of, 50â52; patent law, 93â94; upward mobility and, 50.
See also
property rights
Lehrman, Lewis, 140
Lessons in Elocution
, 34, 225â26
Levin, Yuval, 224
Levine, Bruce, 21, 45, 120
liberalism/progressivism, 12, 58, 231; claiming Lincoln, 9, 194, 229â30
Libertarians, 10â11, 233
Licht, Walter, 187, 190, 191
Life of Washington
(Weems), 165
Lincoln, Abraham, 19n, 108; ambition of, 8, 22â23, 25, 30â31, 50, 52, 55, 67, 122, 240; animals, kindness to, 70â72; appearance, 42, 43, 46, 47, 78â79, 83, 114, 152, 206â7; aspiration and, 115; character and personality, 2, 23â24, 35, 42â43, 69, 71, 77â78, 109, 122, 131â32; courtship of Mary Owen, 79; Declaration and, 5, 7, 16, 128, 129, 140â45, 156, 164, 228; deification of, 197; enduring relevance of, 240; the Founding and, 8, 16, 141, 194, 228; “getting right with Lincoln,” 8â9, 229; individualism and, 13, 14; as inventor, 93; Irish jokes, 217â18, 219; judgment of human nature, 236â37; marriage to Mary Todd, 78â79; middle-Âclass values, 4â5, 30, 67â70, 214â15; as non-Âdrinker, 67â68, 73â74, 81; as non-Âsmoker, 68; “optimism of Western Civilization” and, 90; principles of, 53â54, 67â73, 115â16, 163â64; “race of life,” 199; rhetorical style, wit, verbal acuity, 33, 42, 48, 55â56, 82â83, 84â85, 153, 236; strength of, 20, 38, 42, 69â70, 81; talents and intelligence, 23â25, 35, 84â85; voice, 154; work ethic, 4â5, 18, 20, 33, 74, 75, 76â77, 200, 214â15