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A great contemporary quote from Lincoln's famous speech - "A House divided against itself cannot stand."...



Item # 700990

January 24, 1860

NEW YORK SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, Jan. 24, 1860  There is considerable reporting on the slavery issue, with a few mentions of Abraham Lincoln. However, of particular significance is the front page, column two re-printing of a portion of Lincoln's very famous speech in 1858 during the Lincoln-Douglas debates. During a speech on the Senate floor, Senator Douglas, speaking of Lincoln, states in part: "...When he returned to Illinois in 1858, to canvas the state, he had to meet this 'irrepressible conflict.' True, the Senator from New York had not made his Rochester speech...He wished to call attention to a single passage in a speech by Mr. Lincoln, who was nominated for the U.S. Senate by the Republican Convention, and which speech had been previously written & agreed to in caucus by most of the lasers of the party: 'In my opinion, the slavery agitation will not cease till the crisis shall have been reached and passed. A House divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this Union cannot endure permanently half slave and half free...", with a bit more on Lincoln's historic speech.
The front page is mostly taken up with great reporting from Congress, with considerable reporting on the words of Senator Stephen Douglas.
Eight pages, slightly irregular at the spine from disbinding, very nice condition.

Item from last month's catalog - #360 released for November, 2025

Category: Pre-Civil War