Thursday, April 30, 2020

February 27, 1860: Abraham Lincoln Delivers His Cooper Union Address





On the evening of February 27, 1860, New Yorkers paid an exorbitant twenty-five cents to listen to a commonplace politician from some prairie state. The man had a reputation as a storyteller extraordinaire. Everyone expected to be entertained; few took the speaker seriously as a presidential candidate. Abraham Lincoln had earned a modicum of fame due to his debates with Senator Stephen Douglas two years previously, but he had lost that race and most believed the fledgling Republican Party would never nominate a loser. In fact, many wondered how this roughhewn storyteller wangled an invitation to a lecture series meant to expose serious candidates to the New York elite? Homespun yarns might draw crowds in the bucolic West, but New York City demanded a more elevated style of speechmaking.

Monday, April 13, 2020

Guest appearance on Constitution Chat




Constitutional Chats hosted by Janine Turner & Cathy Gillespie

Actress Janine Turner, Cathy Gillespie and Constituting America’s Student Ambassadors chat with experts on hot-topic issues. I'll be interviewed on Saturday, April 18, at 9:00 PM ET. The subject will be my forthcoming essay on Lincoln's Cooper Union Address.
On the evening of February 27, 1860, New Yorkers paid an exorbitant twenty-five cents to listen to a commonplace politician from some prairie state. The man had a reputation as a storyteller extraordinaire. Everyone expected to be entertained; few took the speaker seriously as a presidential candidate.