Tuesday, August 17, 1858.Bath, IL and Lewistown, IL. | At
nine o'clock in the morning, a contingent of "one hundred horsemen" ride out to
meet Lincoln who is coming from Bath to Lewistown to deliver a speech. A large
crowd, enough to fill the "whole space in front of the Court House, extending
the length of an entire block," gathers in anticipation. At two o'clock in the
afternoon, William Kellogg, a Republican member of Illinois's congressional
delegation, introduces Lincoln. Lincoln speaks for two and one half hours, and
includes extracts "from the speeches and letters of Henry Clay." Lincoln
criticizes his opponent Stephen A. Douglas for refusing to state his opinion
clearly on the morality of slavery. When Lincoln finishes his speech, the crowd
gives him "three great cheers." One report deems his arguments "the most
powerful...ever heard in Old Fulton." Chicago Daily Press and
Tribune (IL), 21 August 1858, 2:3-4;
Speech
at Lewistown, Illinois, 17 August 1858, CW, 2:544-47. |