Saturday, February 28, 1857.Chicago, IL. | In Chicago's Metropolitan Hall, Lincoln speaks to Republicans, who gather to
endorse a slate of "municipal officers." Lincoln's speech notes indicate that
he stresses party unity. He writes, "We were without party history, party
pride, or party idols. We were a collection of individuals, but recently in
political hostility, one to another; and thus subject to all that distrust, and
suspicion, and jealousy could do. . . . Let minor differences, and personal
preferences, if there be such; go to the winds." Daily Democratic Press (Chicago, IL), 2 March 1857,
3:3;
Notes for Speech at Chicago,
Illinois, 28 February 1857, CW,
2:390-91. |