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The Last Weeks of Abraham Lincoln

A Day-by-Day Account of His Personal, Political, and Military Challenges

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This day-by-day account of Abraham Lincoln's last six weeks of life covers a period of extraordinary events, not only for the president himself but for the fate of the nation.
From March 4 to April 15, 1865—a momentous time for the nation—Abraham Lincoln delivered his second inaugural address, supervised climatic battles leading up to the end of the Civil War, learned that Robert E. Lee had surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox, and finally was killed by assassin John Wilkes Booth at Ford's Theatre. Weaving an arresting narrative around the historical facts, historian David Alan Johnson brings to life the president's daily routine, as he guided the country through one of the most tumultuous periods of American history.
The reader follows the president as he greets visitors at the inaugural ball, asks abolitionist Frederick Douglass's opinion of the inaugural address, confers with Generals Grant and Sherman on the final stages of the war, visits a field hospital for wounded outside Fort Stedman in Virginia, and attempts to calm his high-strung wife Mary, who appears on the verge of nervous collapse. We read excerpts from press reviews of Lincoln's second inaugural address, learn that Mrs. Lincoln's ball gown created a sensation, and are given eye-witness accounts of the celebrations and drunken revelry that broke out in Washington when the end of the war was announced.
This engagingly written narrative history of a short but extremely important span of days vividly depicts the actions and thoughts of one of our greatest presidents during a time of national emergency.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 27, 2018
      Johnson (Battle of Wills: Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, and the Last Year of the Civil War) provides a different perspective on events known to those familiar with Lincoln. Some of the facts he includes, such as that Southern slaves joined the Confederate Army and that there was a suspected attempt on Lincoln’s life on board the River Queen en route back to Washington, will be new to many readers, but the book’s strength lies in the format: by going through Lincoln’s days in detail, it inevitably includes the prosaic as well as the historic. For example, in mid-March, an exhausted Lincoln decided that he needed two days in bed to regain his strength, and, on April 3, a conference he held with Ulysses Grant about postconflict planning was interrupted when one of Grant’s aides realized that 11-year-old Tad Lincoln needed lunch. Johnson makes Lincoln, and the events leading up to the end of the Civil War, both vivid and relatable; he describes the tragedy at Ford’s Theater initially from the vantage point of the audience before moving on to the perspective of those in Lincoln’s box. The end result is an accessible and fresh look at one of the most consequential periods in U.S. history.

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Languages

  • English

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