A Just and Generous Nation

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A Just and Generous Nation Page 32

by Harold Holzer


  See also Free-market economic systems

  Economic theory: Adam Smith’s procapitalist theory, 240

  Economist magazine, 250–251

  Education

  GI Bill, 206–208

  land grants through the Morrill Act, 78, 206

  Lincoln’s, 13, 16

  Thomas Lincoln’s lack of, 19–20

  Effie Afton case, 22–23

  Eight-hour work day, 173

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 214(fig.), 215–216, 215(fig.)

  Elections and election campaigns

  abolitionist platform, 98

  growing momentum of the secession movement, 55–60

  Harding’s postwar rhetoric, 194–195

  Lincoln’s challenge to Senator Douglas, 38–42

  Lincoln’s Cooper Union address, 43–49, 48(fig.), 59, 102–104

  Lincoln’s election victory triggering the secession crisis, 55–60

  Lincoln’s New England speaking tour, 49–50

  Lincoln’s position on the Southern economy, 52–54

  Lincoln’s victory, 55–57

  military stalemate threatening the election, 151

  Obama embracing Lincolnian government, 241–244

  political cartoons, 105–106

  Reagan’s victory, 223

  regional success of the Republican Party, 43

  Republicans’ nonabolitionist position, 102–104

  Theodore Roosevelt’s attempted comeback, 186–188

  Wade-Davis Bill provisions, 163

  Wilson claiming Lincolnian views, 189

  See also Suffrage; Voting rights

  Electoral College, 57–59

  “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” (Gray), 15

  Elements of Military Art and Science (Halleck), 136

  Emancipation (lithograph), 131(fig.)

  Emancipation efforts

  Confederate emancipation proposals, 112–113

  fugitive slaves during the war, 111–112

  interregnum, 114

  Lincoln’s political guile and political weakness, 115

  Emancipation Memorial (statue), 130

  Emancipation Proclamation (Preliminary, 1863), 127

  Emancipation Proclamation (1863), 120(fig.), 244(fig.)

  as military order, 125

  congressional presentation, 134

  criticism of, 113–116

  draft copy, 123

  Frederick Douglass’s response to, 127–128

  hinging on Union victory, 120–121

  initial misgivings over, 117–118

  issuance of, 126

  Lincoln bypassing Congress, 119–120

  Lincoln’s concerns over reelection, 149

  Lincoln’s persistence in eradicating slavery, 79

  Lincoln’s “unfinished work,” 139

  omitting racial equality, 124

  reconstruction process, 162–163

  Seward and Welles denouncing, 117–118

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 64–65

  Employment Act (1946), 208

  Employment programs

  Clinton’s economic policy, 231

  low-income jobs replacing middle-income jobs, 247

  Entrepreneurship, 221–222, 232

  Environmental protections, 184, 228

  Equality of opportunity. See Economic opportunity

  Erie Canal, 25

  Estate tax, 192, 231–232, 252, 261–262

  Eugenics, 175–176

  Exceptionalism, American, 73

  Extension of slavery

  as requirement for the survival of slavery, 72–73

  Kansas-Nebraska Act, 33–36

  Lincoln-Douglas debates, 38–42, 60

  Lincoln’s Cooper Union address, 44–49

  Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address, 67–68

  Lincoln’s refusal to compromise on, 61–64

  Lincoln’s shift towards abolitionism, 100–101

  Republican Party backing for Lincoln’s position on, 49–50

  Republican voters’ support of Lincoln over, 105

  Southern states’ secession, 71–72

  ”ultimate extinction” philosophy, 52–54

  versus secession, 60–61

  Extremists, Lincoln’s concerns over, 94–95, 98–99, 102–104

  Fair Deal initiatives, 215

  Fair Labor Standards Act (1938), 205

  Fairness in government, 257

  Family and Medical Leave Act (1993), 228

  Family as labor force, 13–14

  Federal Bureau of Corporations, 186

  Federal Government Arbitration Commission, 183

  Federal Meat Inspection Act (1906), 184

  Federal Reserve Bank, 216

  Federal Reserve Board, 192

  Federal Trade Commission (FTC), 192

  Fifteenth Amendment, 168–169

  Film industry, 188–189

  Foner, Eric, 123

  Ford, Gerald, 219–220

  Four freedoms, 214

  Fourteenth Amendment, 164, 168

  Free labor

  Lincoln’s economic policy, 49–50

  Lincoln’s position on government involvement, 30–31

  Lincoln’s position on slavery, 91–93

  Lincoln’s presentation of the Emancipation Proclamation, 116

  under free-market economics, 173–175

  See also Labor

  Free Soil issue, 43, 60

  Free trade, 173

  Freed slaves

  Andrew Johnson’s lack of postwar protection and support, 166

  laissez-faire economic doctrine and social Darwinism, 176

  response to former slave owners, 165–166

  Union troops, 149

  Freedmen’s Bureau, 164, 166–168

  Free-market economic systems, 30–31, 172–175, 220–221, 237–238

  Friedman, Milton, 216, 218

  Fugitive Slave Act (1850), 34, 67–68, 100, 107, 110

  Fugitive slaves: Civil War onset, 110–112

  Garrison, William Lloyd, 104, 129–130

  Gates, Bill, 258

  Gender roles: Lincoln’s background, 13–14

  General Land Office, 80

  Gettysburg, Battle of, 147, 188

  Gettysburg Address, 76–77, 114, 137–142, 137(fig.), 141(fig.), 178, 188

  GI Bill (1944), 206–208

  Giddings, Joshua, 99

  Gilded Age

  abandonment of the poor, 172(fig.)

  Bush’s conservative policies, 234

  government policies enriching the rich, 177

  laissez-faire economic doctrines, 175

  loss of economic opportunity, 190

  rationale of political economy, 172–173

  Reagan’s belief in the values of, 221

  supply-side economics as rebirth of, 219

  Glass-Steagall Act (1933), 227

  Godkin, E.L., 175

  God’s will, Civil War as, 140–145, 149, 151–155

  Gospel of Wealth, 179, 190, 195–196, 217, 220, 232, 234, 257, 260

  Government, federal

  Clinton’s economic policy involving, 228–230

  declining confidence after the Great Recession, 240

  expenditures under Roosevelt, 209–210

  Franklin Roosevelt codifying America’s social contract, 205–206

  history of efficiency and effectiveness, 249–250

  ideological debate over the function of, 257–260

  infrastructure development, 25–26

  laissez-faire economic doctrine, 172–175, 177–179

  legislating economic control, 77–78

  legitimate objects of, 75–77

  Lincoln’s expansion of federal government and army, 84–87

  Obama espousing Lincolnian tradition, 241–244

  postwar federal expansion, 171

  Reagan and the Republicans’ benefits for the wealthy, 234–235

  Reagan’s call for reduction in, 220–222

  s
ocial Darwinism, 176

  state economic regulation regimes, 222

  supremacy of state governments over, 134

  Government failure, 235

  Government “for the people”

  Cleveland denouncing, 178

  FDR’s New Deal programs, 199–210

  laissez-faire doctrines denying, 178–179

  Lincoln’s legacy, 7, 73

  Lyndon Johnson’s “great society,” 216

  national and state parks, 80

  Reagan’s rhetoric and economic policies, 222–225

  role of armed conflict, 136–139

  slavery as economic and moral issue, 113–115

  Theodore Roosevelt’s commitment to social problems, 182–187

  Wilson’s commitment to, 191–192

  Graduated income tax system, 78, 192

  Grant, Ulysses S., 142, 149, 150(fig.), 151–152, 171–172, 177–178

  Gray, Thomas, 15

  Great Depression, 197–198

  Great Recession, 237–240, 245–246, 259

  Great Society programs, 216

  Greeley, Horace, 46, 113, 124

  Greenspan, Alan, 218, 237–238

  Griffith, D.W., 188–189

  Guerrilla warfare, 167

  Gustrine, Charles, 193(fig.)

  Habeas corpus, suspension of, 140

  Halleck, Henry W., 117, 136, 147

  Hanks, Dennis, 13

  Hard war program, 154

  Harding, Warren G., 194–195

  Harpers Ferry raid, 102–104, 103(fig.)

  Harper’s New Monthly magazine, 42

  Hay, John M., 119

  Hayes, Rutherford B., 167–168

  Health insurance programs under Lyndon Johnson, 216

  Henry Jackson Initiative for Inclusive Capitalism, 238–239

  Heritage Foundation, 218–219

  Hodges, Albert G., 141

  Home ownership, 248

  Homestead Act (1862), 78, 88

  Hooker, Joseph, 147

  Hoover, Herbert, 196–198, 222, 260

  Hoovervilles, 195–196

  “House divided” speech, 4–8, 39–40, 42–43, 47–50, 141

  Human capital, federal spending for, 228

  Hurd v. Rock Island Bridge Co., 22–23

  Ideological differences

  Gilded Age policies enriching the rich, 177

  Reagan’s economic policy, 217–218

  the function of government, 257–260

  See also Laissez-faire (free-market economics) doctrines; Slaves and slavery

  Immigration

  building the economy through, 87

  labor surplus creation, 174

  Obama’s policies, 249

  Union troops, 149

  Impeachment vote against Andrew Johnson, 166

  Inaugural Addresses, Lincoln’s, 67–70, 77, 106–107, 142–145, 144(fig.), 155, 162, 243

  Inauguration, Lincoln’s, 65

  Income inequality, 232–234

  Income tax bill, 78, 85

  Independence Day message, 134–135

  Individual rights, 228

  Industrial Revolution, 80, 89–90

  Industrialization

  free-market economics, 172–175

  New Deal social policies, 205

  Northern states’ economic expansion, 86–87

  postwar wealth gap in the North, 171

  Theodore Roosevelt’s commitment to the working class, 181–183

  Inequality, economic and social

  building a successful middle class to reduce, 257

  Bush dismantling Clinton’s economic gains, 231–232

  Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth, 179

  equal pay for African American soldiers, 79, 127

  Franklin Roosevelt codifying America’s social contract, 205–206

  Great Recession increasing, 238–240

  income inequality, 232–234

  Nordic countries’ economic equality, 250–252

  Obama’s economic plan targeting the wealthy, 249–250

  post-1982 economic shift to benefit the wealthy, 231–237

  postwar wealth concentration, 171

  rise with postwar expansions, 236(fig.)

  social Darwinism increasing, 176–177

  Thomas Lincoln’s ambivalence towards slavery, 17

  Tocqueville’s observations of the American Dream, 11–12

  See also Middle class

  Inflation: Carter’s monetary policy, 216–217

  Infrastructure

  chain gangs and peonage labor, 168

  destruction of, 152–153

  federal government support for, 22–26

  Jackson’s opposition to development of, 28

  Insurance

  Franklin Roosevelt’s social insurance programs, 204, 209–210

  health insurance programs under Lyndon Johnson, 216

  Interregnum, 114

  Interstate Commerce Act (1887), 184

  Interstate Commerce Commission, 186

  Jackson, Andrew, 27–28, 77–78

  James, Frank, 167

  James, Jesse, 167

  Job creation, 247–249

  “John Brown’s Body” (song), 154–155

  Johnson, Andrew, 156, 164–166

  Johnson, Lyndon, 216

  Judiciary

  laissez-faire doctrines, 178–179

  Theodore Roosevelt’s reforms, 186

  The Jungle (Sinclair), 184

  Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854), 29–30, 33–36, 57(fig.), 60, 92

  Kellogg, William, 62

  Keynes, John Maynard, 219

  Ku Klux Klan, 168–169, 189

  Labor

  capital and, 81–84, 185–186, 200–201

  foreign immigrants, 87

  Franklin Roosevelt’s defense of the New Deal, 200–201

  free labor under free-market economics, 173–175

  Lincoln’s background, 13–15

  minimum wage debate, 249

  Obama’s economic recovery plan, 248–249

  right-to-work laws, 222–223

  Theodore Roosevelt echoing Lincoln’s views on the superiority of, 185–186

  Theodore Roosevelt’s policies, 184

  Labor surplus, 174

  Labor unrest, 204

  Laissez-faire (free-market economics) doctrines, 172–175, 177–179

  Land

  Homestead and Morrill Acts, 78, 88, 206, 249–250

  national and state park systems, 80

  Thomas Lincoln’s struggle to retain, 20

  voting rights based on property ownership, 176–177

  Law practice, Lincoln’s, 21–24, 34–35

  League of Nations, 193

  Lee, Robert E., 142, 147–148, 152–153

  Liberty League, 200–201

  Lincoln, Abraham

  abolition and racial equality in reconstructed states, 163–164

  age progression, 256(fig.)

  Alschuler’s photograph, 39(fig.)

  assassination of, 155–156

  Cooper Union address, 43–49, 48(fig.), 59, 102–104

  Cuomo invoking the legacy of, 223

  Eisenhower’s portrait of, 214(fig.)

  equal economic opportunity, 80

  “enslavement” to his father, 17–18

  eulogy for Henry Clay, 30

  fireside reader, 14(fig.)

  Franklin Roosevelt’s progressive policies as the legacy of, 198–199, 210–211, 213–214

  Gilded Age abandonment of the poor, 172(fig.)

  ideological differences in the purpose of government, 257–260

  inauguration, 65

  initial tenets and goals, 23–27

  innovative programs, 249–250

  Kansas-Nebraska Act, 35–36

  legitimate objects of government, 75–76

  Lincoln’s embrace of antislavery, 92–93 (see also Economic opportunity)

  Lincoln-Douglas debates on extension of slavery, 38–42

/>   Lincoln’s loss to Douglas, 42 (see also Elections and election campaigns; Lincoln-Douglas debates)

  McClellan’s tactics, 146–147

  military service and law practice, 21–24

  military stalemate threatening the election, 151

  personal ambition and commitment to abolition, 44

  pragmatism, Lincoln’s, 72, 255–256

  presidential candidates’ claims on, 187

  presidential nomination, 44

  racial equality stance, 121–124

  Rail-Splitter painting, 19(fig.)

  Reagan’s claim to the legacy of, 220–221, 223–225

  retail enterprise, 20

  socioeconomic background, 12–15

  Theodore Roosevelt and, 185(fig.), 187(fig.)

  Wilson claiming Lincolnian views, 189–192

  See also Casus belli; Civil War; Economic opportunity; Emancipation Proclamation; God’s will, Civil War as

  Lincoln, Nancy (mother), 14

  Lincoln, Robert (son), 187

  Lincoln, Thomas (father), 13–14, 16–17, 19–21

  Lincoln Quick-Step (sheet music), 56(fig.)

  Lincoln-Douglas debates

  attacking Lincoln’s abolitionist position, 102

  Horace White’s coverage of, 174

  “House Divided” speech, 4–8, 39–40, 42–43, 47–50, 141

  influence of public opinion on public policy, 114

  Lincoln’s embrace of antislavery, 92–93

  Lincoln’s position on extension compromise, 38–42

  Linder, Usher, 98

  Lippman, Walter, 198

  Lochner v. New York, 178–179

  Lovejoy, Elijah, 97

  Lyceum speech, 95–97

  Lynchings, 95–96, 168–169

  Magee, J. L., 131(fig.)

  Mandate for Leadership: Policy Management in a Conservative Administration (Heritage Foundation), 218–219

  Manufacturing

  black labor migration from the South, 169–170, 203

  Lincoln encouraging development of, 78

  postwar industrialization in the North, 170–171

  Union’s scorched-earth policy toward the South, 151–152

  See also Industrialization

  Mason-Dixon line, 33

  McClellan, George B., 111, 117–118, 146–147, 150(fig.)

  Meade, George G., 147

  Meatpacking industry, 184

  Media

  attacking Lincoln’s position on abolitionism, 101

  Lincoln’s command of public opinion and, 115

  Lincoln’s Cooper Union address, 46

  Lincoln’s emancipation proposal, 118–119

  political assassination, 97

  publication of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 100

  Southern response to Lincoln’s Inaugural Address, 70

  voter interest in politics, 35

  Mellon, Andrew, 222

  Mexican-American War (1846–1848), 33, 98

  Micklethwait, John, 250–251

 

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