- "Without Cooper Union, Lincoln might have ended up, at best, as a historical footnote."
- Harold Holzer, Lincoln at Cooper Union
Lincoln at Cooper Union: The Speech That Made Abraham Lincoln President is an interesting work on a speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln in February 1860 at the Cooper Institute in New York City, a speech which author Harold Holzer argues led to Lincoln’s selection as the Republican candidate and therefore President. Holzer is a renowned expert on Abraham Lincoln and the political culture of the Civil War era, but he is not a professional historian. He has worked in public relations and was a speech-writer for Mario Cuomo.
While historians have long agreed that Lincoln’s Cooper Union speech played a critical role in Lincoln's rise from obscurity outside his home state of Illinois to the presidency of the United States, the reasons for this rise have not been well explained. Holzer cogently argues that the Cooper Union address, and related events, was the critical incident in Lincoln's road to the White House.
In 1860, the Republican Party was only six years old, formed around the conviction that slavery should not be allowed to spread to the new states coming into the union. Despite the party’s recent formation, it had become clear that 1860 would provide a significant opportunity to capture the White House. However, the acknowledged Republican front-runner, New York senator William H. Seward, was not the man many New York Republicans wanted to nominate. Moderate Northern voters did not care for Seward’s inflammatory declarations against slavery, nor did they care for Seward’s powerful promoter, Thurlow Weed. Lincoln, who had gained national notice in his campaign debates with Stephen Douglas, was invited to give a lecture in New York City on February 27, 1860, just a few months before the national convention, as part of a series organized by the Young Men's Republican Union. The series was designed to give western Republicans a platform before the eastern Republican establishment on critical issues before the national elections. This was also an opportunity for Lincoln to speak before powerful men like Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune and William Cullen Bryant of the Evening Post. Holzer maintains Lincoln was fully aware that he was being given a golden opportunity for a shot at the presidency. Lincoln intended the speech to be a scholarly, legally powerful rebuttal to Democrat Stephen Douglas's doctrine of "popular sovereignty" in the western territories, which claimed that the country's founders had forbidden Congress to meddle in territorial slavery. Lincoln would argue that Congress had the authority to restrict the spread of slavery into the western territories. As Holzer explains, this was to "prove historically what he had long argued politically: that the extension of slavery was wrong" and that it contradicted the intentions of the founding fathers.
After the invitation arrived in October 1859, Lincoln spent several months in exhaustive preparation, precisely because he knew this was to be the most important speech of his life. Lincoln thoroughly researched his topic, which was to be the right of the federal government to prohibit slavery. Holzer builds tension and anticipation in the chapters leading up to the actual speech, giving the reader a taste of politics in the days when the public was drawn to hear great speakers, especially politicians. As the day for his speech approaches, Holzer shows a remarkable ability to build tension and anticipation leading to the actual speech. Readers follow the future president on his exhausting train trip, as Lincoln sits for four days in train cars to get from Illinois to New York City. We hear of the people he meets on the journey, their conversations and their impressions of Lincoln. Readers experience his visit to the photography studio of Mathew Brady, who took one of the most memorable of all Lincoln photographs. We discover that the venue was changed at the last minute from Henry Ward Beecher’s Plymouth Church in Brooklyn to the Cooper Institute in Manhattan.
At Cooper Union, Lincoln was introduced by William Cullen Bryant. Initially, many in the audience were startled at Lincoln’s ungainly, unkempt appearance. The author quotes an eyewitness to Lincoln’s speech:
- “‘When Lincoln rose to speak, I was greatly disappointed. He was tall – oh, how tall and so angular and awkward that I had, for an instant, a feeling of pity for so ungainly a man. His clothes were travel-stained, ill-fitting and badly wrinkled. He began in a low tone of voice – as if he were used to speaking outdoors and was afraid of speaking too loud. He said ‘Mr. Chairman,’ and he employed many other old-fashioned words. I said to myself: ‘Old fellow, you won’t do; it’s all very well for the wild west, but this will never do in New York.’”
- Harold Holzer, Lincoln at Cooper Union
What followed as a 90-minute master work that combined intellectual power with a fierce determination to clarify his convictions. Digging deep into early American history, Lincoln refuted Douglas' claim that the country's founders had forbidden Congress to meddle in territorial slavery. The speech consisted of three main sections:
1. The first section began with Lincoln’s challenge of an essay published by Douglas in Harper's, in which Douglas claimed the authority of the founders for popular sovereignty. Lincoln examines the views of the 39 signers of the Constitution, and cleverly and convincingly demonstrates from their votes that the fathers overwhelmingly opposed slavery and believed that the federal government had the right to use its powers to restrict the spread of slavery into the new territories.
2. In the second section, Lincoln addresses himself directly to “the Southern people,” insisting that they, by agitating the country over slavery, were responsible for the nation’s growing sectional crisis.
3. The final, and shortest, section turns to application. Lincoln asks his fellow Republicans what their response should be. He asserts that Republicans cannot surrender their principles in order to placate the South. At the end of his speech, he admonishes his fellow Republicans to hold firm with his now famous line: “Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.”
Holzer devotes forty percent of the book to what happened after the speech, emphasizing that "Cooper Union did not mark the end of Lincoln's rise; it represented the beginning." When Lincoln finished, the audience "broke out in wild and prolonged enthusiasm," according to one eyewitness, while another declared that Lincoln was the "greatest man since St. Paul". The Cooper Union speech had demonstrated to a sophisticated Eastern audience that Lincoln was not some ill-educated frontiersman but was a brilliant national politician with matchless oratorical skills. By the next day, 170,000 printed copies of the speech appeared in newspapers and pamphlets. The speech made Lincoln a celebrity and helped the homely, awkward man from Illinois win the Republican presidential nomination.
- "Cooper Union was not just a speech, it was a conquest—a public relations triumph, a political coup d'etat within the Republican party, and an image transfiguration abetted by the press…."
- Harold Holzer, Lincoln at Cooper Union
- "Cooper Union proved a unique confluence of political culture, rhetorical opportunity, technological innovation, and human genius, and it brought Abraham Lincoln to the center stage of American politics at precisely the right time and place, and with precisely the right message."
- Harold Holzer, Lincoln at Cooper Union
Harold Holzer has powerfully described the story behind Lincoln's speech against the extension of slavery. His narrative is wonderfully elegant; it’s a delightful book to read.
"Lincoln at Cooper Union is the most interesting and important book on the sixteenth president published in years. Its richly detailed account of Lincoln's visit to New York in 1860 is as absorbing as any novel, and its close analysis of Lincoln's Cooper Union address adds significantly to our understanding of his political philosophy. I recommend it enthusiastically." — David Herbert Donald, author of Lincoln