From “Lincoln 365,” by Arnold Kunst
September 26
In the 1860 Presidential election
Lincoln won California and Oregon as well as every Northern free state except
New Jersey. It was enough to give him a comfortable Electoral College majority.
On the face of it, that sounds very impressive. But unfortunately, there were
three other major candidates for President that year. And in the popular vote
Lincoln only won 39% - that is the smallest plurality of any victorious
presidential candidate in all of American presidential history, before or
since. Or, to put the case a little differently, at a time when the 15th
President, James Buchanan, actually described himself as ‘the last President of
the United States,’ at a time when the nation was dissolving like snow in
spring, the 16th President received a vote of no-confidence from 61%
of the 1860 electorate.
“Whatever course you decide upon,
there is always someone to tell you that you are wrong. There are always
difficulties arising which tempt you to believe that your critics are right. To
map out a course of action and follow it to an end requires courage.’
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
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