WINCHESTER, ILLINOIS
LINCOLN'S FIRST CHALLENGE OF
DOUGLAS AND DESTINY
ABRAHAM LINCOLN FIRST PUBLICLY CHALLENGED U.S. SENATOR STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS'S
"NEBRASKA BILL" DURING A WHIG COUNTY CONVENTION AUGUST 20, 1854, IN THE SCOTT COUNTY
COURTROOM LOCATED AT THIS SITE. BECAUSE THE BILL ALLOWED FOR THE EXPANSION OF
SLAVERY, LINCOLN WAS SO "AROUSED" THAT HE RE-ENTERED POLITICS TO CHALLENGE IT AFTER
FIVE YEARS OF POLITICAL RETIREMENT. DRAFTED BY SENATOR DOUGLAS AND COINED POPULAR
SOVEREIGNTY, THE KANSAS/NEBRASKA ACT GAVE NEW TERRITORIES AND EMERGING STATES THE
RIGHT TO CHOOSE BY POPULAR BALLOT IF SLAVERY WAS TO BE PERMITTED OR BANNED. THE BILL
EFFECTIVELY CANCELED THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE, WHICH DURING THE PREVIOUS 34 YEARS
HAD ALLOWED LIMITED EXPANSION OF SLAVERY IN THE NATION. LINCOLN'S ANTI-NEBRASKA
SPEECHES AND HISTORIC 1858 DEBATES WITH DOUGLAS GAINED HIM NATIONAL POLITICAL
RECOGNITION. ALTHOUGH HE FAILED TWICE TO BECOME U.S. SENATOR, FIRST AS A WHIG AND SECOND
AS A REPUBLICAN. LINCOLN WAS ELECTED THE 16TH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES IN 1860.
CIVIL WAR CAME TO THE NATION IN 1861. AFTER THE CONFEDERATE DEFEAT AT ANTIETAM.
LINCOLN SIGNED THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION ON JANUARY 1, 1863, FREEING ALL SLAVES
IN REBELLIOUS STATES. HE SIGNED THE 13TH AMENDMENT, FEBRUARY 1, 1865. WHEN RATIFIED ON
DECEMBER 6 1865. THE LAW FREED 4 MILLION AFRICAN-AMERICAN SLAVES, MADE THE
KANSAS/NEBRASKA ACT MOOT, AND FOREVER BANNED SLAVERY. LINCOLN CONCLUDED HIS
"MASTERLY EFFORT". THAT DAY IN WINCHESTER WITH A PROFOUND PREDICTION ABOUT THE UNION
ONE HE REPEATED LATER IN PEORIA. "WE SHALL HAVE SO SAVED IT (FROM SLAVERY), THAT THE
MILLIONS OF FREE HAPPY PEOPLE, THE WORLD OVER. SHALL RISE UP, AND CALL US BLESSED TO
THE LATEST GENERATION."
SPONSORED BY
CITIZENS OF WINCHESTER AND SCOTT COUNTY, ILLINOIS.
HARDT PIONEER FARMS, INC., IVAN AND DORIS HARDT,
AND THE ILLINOIS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY.