Lincoln and Leadership: Military, Political, and Religious Decision Making
Lincoln and Leadership: Military, Political, and Religious Decision Making
Edited by Randall M. Miller
Paul A. Cimbala series editor
Copyright Date: 2012
Published by: Fordham University Press
Pages: 164
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt13x00rz
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Book Info
Lincoln and Leadership: Military, Political, and Religious Decision Making
Book Description:

A book that does something truly remarkable: says something new about Lincoln! Lincoln and Leadership offers fresh perspectives on the 16th president-making novel contributions to the scholarship of one of the more studied figures of American history. The book explores Lincoln's leadership through essays focused, respectively, on Lincoln as commander-in-chief, deft political operator, and powerful theologian. Taken together, the essays suggest the interplay of military, political, and religious factors informing Lincoln's thought and action and guiding the dynamics of his leadership. The contributors, all respected scholars of the Civil War era, focus on several critical moments in Lincoln's presidency to understand the ways Lincoln understood and dealt with such issues and concerns as emancipation, military strategy, relations with his generals, the use of black troops, party politics and his own re-election, the morality of the war, the place of America in God's design, and the meaning and obligations of sustaining the Union. Overall, they argue that Lincoln was simultaneously consistent regarding his commitments to freedom, democratic government, and Union but flexible, and sometimes contradictory, in the means to preserve and extend them. They further point to the ways that Lincoln's decision making defined the presidency and recast understandings of American "exceptionalism." They emphasize that the "real" Lincoln was an unabashed party man and shrewd politician, a self-taught commander-in-chief, and a deeply religious man who was self-confident in his ability to judge men and to persuade them with words but unsure of what God demanded from America for its collective sins of slavery. Randall Miller's Introduction in particular provides essential weight to the notion that Lincoln's presidential leadership must be seen as a series of interlocking stories. In the end, the contributors collectively remind readers that the Lincoln enshrined as the "Great Emancipator" and "savior of the Union" was in life and practice a work-in-progress. And they insist that "getting right with Lincoln" requires seeing the intersections of his-and America's-military, political, and religious interests and identities.

eISBN: 978-0-8232-4658-8
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. List of Illustrations
    List of Illustrations (pp. ix-x)
  4. Preface
    Preface (pp. xi-xvi)
  5. 1 Lincoln and Leadership: An Introduction
    1 Lincoln and Leadership: An Introduction (pp. 1-38)
    Randall M. Miller

    Over a half-century ago, the eminent historian David Donald observed that Americans have been trying to “get right with Lincoln” since his death and predicted that trying to do so would continue thereafter.¹ He was right on both counts, as any sampling of the enormous and continuing cascade of literature on the man and his meaning will attest. Donald wrote and many others have agreed that Americans’ preoccupation, or at least fascination, with getting to know Lincoln was in part due to the centrality of Lincoln and the events of his day in defining “freedom” and defending the integrity of...

  6. 2 Sowing the Wind and Reaping the Whirlwind: Abraham Lincoln as a War President
    2 Sowing the Wind and Reaping the Whirlwind: Abraham Lincoln as a War President (pp. 39-59)
    Gregory J. W. Urwin

    Any consideration of Abraham Lincoln as a war president must attempt to contrast image with historical reality. When it comes to Lincoln, of course, there is no shortage of images. Our conception of this fascinating, contradictory man has been shaped by a mountain of books and articles, as well as numerous works from photographers, painters, sculptors, poets, playwrights, and screenwriters.¹

    Perhaps the most appropriate way to start wrestling with this titanic figure is to consider the way that Union veterans—the men Lincoln considered his chief partners in the struggle to preserve the American experiment in federated self-government—viewed their...

  7. 3 Seeing Lincoln’s Blind Memorandum
    3 Seeing Lincoln’s Blind Memorandum (pp. 60-77)
    Matthew Pinsker

    A few days after his reelection on Tuesday, November 8, 1864, President Abraham Lincoln made a startling revelation to his inner circle. According to the diary of aide John Hay, the president “took out a paper from his desk” at the Friday morning cabinet meeting, and said, ‘Gentleman do you remember last summer I asked you all to sign your names to the back of a paper of which I did not show you the inside? This is it.” Lincoln then directed Hay to open the mysterious note, which had been “pasted up in so singular a style that it...

  8. 4 Abraham Lincoln as Moral Leader: The Second Inaugural as America’s Sermon to the World
    4 Abraham Lincoln as Moral Leader: The Second Inaugural as America’s Sermon to the World (pp. 78-95)
    Harry S. Stout

    This chapter addresses the subject of Abraham Lincoln as a moral leader in the context of both the Civil War and nineteenth-century standards of morality. Such a topic, if handled thoroughly, would require an entire book addressing such themes as just-war planning for Civil War campaigns, just-war conduct, treatment of civilians and of prisoners of war, slavery and racism, and so on. For purposes of this chapter, I will select only one aspect of Lincoln’s moral vision and leadership, namely, his Second Inaugural Address, which I take to be the single most eloquent moral commentary on the war.

    It is...

  9. 5 Lincoln and Leadership: An Afterword
    5 Lincoln and Leadership: An Afterword (pp. 96-102)
    Allen C. Guelzo

    Shortly after his arrival in Washington in late February 1861, Abraham Lincoln was confronted by an anxious delegation from a national peace conference that was even at that late moment hoping to head off the national gallop toward civil war. They were not unfriendly; many of the conference’s members were, like Lincoln, old-time Whigs from the Upper South and the border states. But they wanted some statement from Lincoln about the policy he would adopt toward the seven southern states that had declared their secession from the Union, a statement that they could add to the oil they were trying...

  10. Notes
    Notes (pp. 103-120)
  11. Bibliographical Essay
    Bibliographical Essay (pp. 121-130)
  12. List of Contributors
    List of Contributors (pp. 131-132)
  13. Index
    Index (pp. 133-135)
  14. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 136-144)
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