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Showing results for : Abraham Lincoln, First Debate with Stephen A. Douglas at Ottawa, Illinois, August 21, 1858 (Excerpt)

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Abraham Lincoln
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincoln-6091.html

well familiar and utmost presidents in American history (Monaghan 7). This is verified by his successful management during the Civil War, the formation of policies that promoted everyone in the United States and the efforts that kept the U...

Abraham Lincoln
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincoln-6248.html

employed the language of 18th-century logic and rhetoric. The argument of the Declaration is in the form of a syllogism, with a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion. Jefferson supplemented those basic components of the syllogis...

Abraham Lincoln
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincoln-11015.html

as a man with high morals and strong conviction towards righteousness. Born Feb. 28th, 1809 in Kentucky, Lincoln spent his early youth educating himself and became a Lawyer in Illinois. A series of debates held with Stephen A. Douglas, led...

Abraham Lincoln
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincoln-11042.html

Abraham Lincoln's Peoria speech was made in Peoria, Illinois on October 16, 1854. The speech, with its specific arguments against slavery, was an important step in Abraham Lincoln's political ascension. The 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act, written...

Abraham Lincoln
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincoln-12234.html

Abraham had nearly no prescribed schooling—the dispersed weeks of school attendance in Kentucky and Indiana amounted to less than a year; but he educated himself, reading and rereading a little supply of books. His first glimpse of the broa...

Abraham Lincoln's Legacy
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincolns-Legacy-12314.html

legacy continues to exert a powerful influence to this day. Protesters against injustice have echoed his famous definition of democracy – “government of the people, by the people, for the people” – around the world: in Hungary in 1956, Teh...

Abraham Lincoln, Slavery, And The Civil War By Michael Johnson
http://www.researchomatic.com/Abraham-Lincoln-Slavery-And-The-Civil-War-By-Michael-Johnson-12684.html

affected a social justice movement by providing leadership during a complex of interrelated historical moments. Johnson (2000) mentions that Lincoln did not participate in a social justice movement for strictly moral, religious, or ethical...