From “Lincoln 365,” by Arnold Kunst
August 20
In the 1850's Lincoln was involved
in a high-profile case arguing for a steam ship company against a railroad
company. The issue had to do with low-lying tressles across a river. In his
summation to the jury the lawyer for the railroad argued brilliantly as to why
the burgeoning economic prosperity of the entire region demanded free and
unfettered access to bridges across rivers. His summary took over an hour.
Lincoln's summary was one sentence: 'What this jury has to decide is whether
one group has more right to cross a river than another has to go up and down
that same river.'
He won the case.
‘The man who has no imagination has
no wings.’
- Muhammad Ali
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