One hundred and forty years after his assassination on April 14, 1865,
Abraham
Lincoln towers more than ever above the landscape of American politics.
In
myth and memory, he is always the Great Emancipator and savior of the
Union,
second in stature only to George Washington.
But was Lincoln always so exalted?Was he, as some historians argue, a
poor
President, deeply disliked, whose legacy was ennobled only by John
Wilkes
Booth's bullet?
In this fascinating book, a leading historian finally takes the full
measure of
Lincoln's reputation. Drawing on a remarkable range of primary
documents--
speeches, newspaper accounts and editorials, private letters, memoirs,
and
other sources--Hans L. Trefousse gives us the voices of Lincoln's own
time. From
North and South, at home and abroad, here are politicians and ordinary
people,
soldiers and statesmen, abolitionists and slaveholders alike, in a rich
chorus of
American opinion. The result is a masterly portrait of Lincoln the
President in
the eyes of his fellow Americans.