Douglas | Stephen A.

Collection of Eulogies

First Edition

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Description

Collection of Eulogies and dedications upon the death of Senator Stephen A. Douglas. Bound in tan cloth, library binding. Includes the following works:

  • Funeral Oration By The Rev. C.H. Taylor. Alton, Illinois. June 7, 1861. 22pp.
  • Eulogy Delivered At The Smithsonian Institute by John W. Forney. Philadelphia, Ringwalt & Brown, Printers, 1861. Octavo, 28pp. (Sabin 21102)
  • Addresses On The Death of Hon. Stephen A. Douglas, Delivered In the Senate And House of Representatives. Washington, 1861. Octavo, 92pp. (Sabin 20696)
  • Eulogy Of Hon. Stephen Arnold Douglas, One Of The Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, by Samuel S. Cox. Washington. Smithsonian Institution. Octavo, 16pp. Original wraps.
  • History Of The Douglas Monument At Chicago by Leonard W. Volk. Chicago, Chicago Legal News Company, 1880. Octavo, 124pp. Original wrappers.
  • An Analysis of the Political Principles of Stephen A. Douglas. University of Illinois, Urbana, 1929. Octavo, [7]. Original gray wrappers. (Boyle, 85)

Stephen A. Douglas (1813-1861) was a democratic senator from Illinois, who ran against Lincoln in 1858 for the Senate seat from Illinois. Their eloquent debates, which would be published in 1860 as the Lincoln-Douglas Debates would help launch the presidential candidacy of Lincoln against Douglas in 1860. During his time in the Senate, Douglas advocated for the principle of popular sovereignty, which allowed new western territories to decide for themselves if slavery would be permitted within their borders. In 1850, he advocated for the Compromise of 1850, which aimed to keep an equal number of slave and non-slaveholding states. In 1854, he passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820, created the new territories of Kansas and Nebraska, and followed his principle of popular sovereignty, which allowed the new territories to decide for themselves if they wished to hold slaves. It had the opposite effect on the nation, stoking tensions in the north and solidifying the Republican party as the antislavery party. In the election of 1860, the democratic party split between his candidacy and John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky. As the Civil War broke out, Douglas rallied support for the Union, but he died in 1861.

Additional information

Location Published

[Various Locations]

Edition

First Edition

Date Published

[1861]

Binding

Various

Condition

Very Good

Author

Douglas | Stephen A.