From
“Lincoln 365,” by Arnold Kunst
September 24
The anxiety in Washington about Lincoln's minimal chances for
re-election in 1864 ended in September with the fall of Atlanta, the South’s
principle city and railhead. Once that happened everybody suddenly saw the
light. Horace Greeley announced that his newspaper The New York Tribune would “henceforth
fly the banner of Abraham Lincoln for President.” Lincoln's enemies within the
Republican Party like Salmon Chase the former Treasury Secretary as well as Benjamin
Wade and Henry Davis all chose to stump for the President. Similarly Wendell
Phillips, who had written, “I would cut off both hands before doing anything to
aid Lincoln's election,” did his about-face in October. Even Thaddeus Stevens waxed
eloquent about Lincoln's “firm grasp of the pilot at the helm.”
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