Historian says Lincoln won Civil War with the 'idea of Idaho,' and early governor might have prevented assassination - East Idaho News

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Historian says Lincoln won Civil War with the ‘idea of Idaho,’ and early governor might have prevented assassination

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IDAHO FALLS – Abraham Lincoln said goodbye to his friend for the last time as they left the meeting that afternoon.

It was Friday, April 14, 1865. America’s 16th president was 42 days into his second term and would be shot later that night while attending a play with his wife at Ford’s Theatre.

It had been two years since Lincoln had signed the bill that made Idaho a territory. His friend, William Wallace, whom he’d appointed its governor, declined an invitation to accompany him to the theater that night before they parted ways.

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David Leroy — a Lincoln historian who spoke at the Museum of Idaho Wednesday night in celebration of the state’s creation on March 4, 1863 — says Lincoln’s fate might have been different had Wallace decided to attend.

“Maybe he would’ve prevented the assassination,” Leroy tells EastIdahoNews.com.

This New York Herald headline announcing Lincoln's assassination was pn display at the Museum of Idaho | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com
This New York Herald article about Lincoln’s assassination was on display at the Museum of Idaho Wednesday night. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com

Lincoln’s ties to the state’s beginnings and his friendship with Wallace are just two of numerous connections to Idaho. Though Lincoln never set foot in the Gem State, he actively lobbied for its creation and almost became its governor at one point, though indirectly.

During Wednesday night’s event, Leroy suggested Lincoln developed the “idea of Idaho” throughout his life and left a massive footprint that many Idahoans don’t know about.

Lincoln’s ideas of Idaho

Lincoln’s first connection to Idaho dates back to his youth on the American Frontier.

“He was a farmer’s son, a rail splitter, a man of the soil … in Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois,” Leroy told Wednesday night’s crowd. “He was also a merchant, understanding commerce and its interaction with farming.”

At age 19, Leroy said Lincoln also saw the “abhorrence of slavery.” On a river boat trip to Mississippi and Louisiana, he saw black men and women being auctioned on a city block.

These experiences shaped Lincoln’s world view and resemble values that are important to Idahoans today.

Lincoln’s connection to Idaho became more recognizable in 1848 when he was serving in Congress. The Oregon Territory — which included parts of present-day Idaho, Montana, and Washington — was created that year after months of heated debate.

“The House of Representatives fought for months (over Oregon’s creation),” Leroy said. “It was contentious because the southern senators wanted to allow the possibility that Oregon Territory could have slaves.”

Lincoln opposed slavery.

President Zachary Taylor, a fellow Whig Party member who sided with Lincoln on the slavery issue, was elected that same year and offered Lincoln a job as the territory’s first governor. Lincoln declined.

“He went home and proudly suggested to Mary (his wife) that he had a singular opportunity to move out West. She said, ‘No way. We’re not going out there,'” Leroy told the crowd. “Think of that! Lincoln could’ve been our governor!”

President Zachary Taylor, left, next to a map of Oregon Territory in 1848 | Wikipedia
President Zachary Taylor, left, next to a map of Oregon Territory boundaries. | Courtesy Wikipedia

The debate about slavery in the western territories of the United States continued for years, and came to a head in 1861 when the country was propelled into Civil War. Lincoln publicly expressed his opposition to slavery in a speech printed in the New York Tribune in 1858. His views were so well expressed, Leroy said, that it led to his election as president in 1860 and the creation of Idaho three years later.

Although history records that the Civil War ended in 1865, Leroy believes “Lincoln won the war in 1862 … with the idea of Idaho.”

He cites multiple bills he signed that year as an example. Among them was the Territorial Abolition Act, which abolished slavery in all federal territories of the United States. He also signed the Pacific Railroad Act, authorizing the construction of the transcontinental railroad. This law, Leroy said, connected free states across the country and promoted equal opportunity for everyone.

Lincoln signed the bill that created the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which Leroy said “recognized the importance of farming and what farming would be” in Idaho and the western territories.

That same year, Lincoln signed the Homestead Act, which promoted westward settlement and development of the American frontier. It allowed American citizens to claim land to live on and farm. More than 60,000 Idahoans benefitted from this law.

Another bill, the Morrill Land Grant College Act, gave states federal land to build colleges that taught agriculture. This bill resulted in the founding of the University of Idaho in 1889.

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Lincoln artifacts on display at the Museum of Idaho. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com
Lincoln artifacts on display at the Museum of Idaho. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com

Idaho’s creation

But Lincoln didn’t just sign bills that aligned with Idaho values. He actively lobbied for its creation.

On March 3, 1863, Leroy says Lincoln stayed up all night urging Congress to vote in favor of Idaho becoming a territory.

“The bill was due to expire at midnight on March 4. Lincoln remained at the capitol in the President’s Room off the floor of the Senate and helped lobby it through the Senate and the House,” Leroy says. “He stayed in the capitol building until it was … on the roll.”

Around 4 a.m., Lincoln likely approached the legislation with a sense of satisfaction as he read these words:

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“Providing that slavery is prohibited in said territory by act of Congress…,” the bill said, according to Leroy.

With the stroke of a pen, Lincoln then signed the bill into law.

Lincoln's signature on a document appointing a territorial judge in Idaho. This was on display at the Museum of Idaho Wednesday night. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com
Lincoln’s signature on a document appointing a territorial judge in Idaho. This was on display at the Museum of Idaho Wednesday night. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com

Lincoln’s friendship with Gov. Wallace

Lincoln’s friendship with William Wallace is one of his most noteworthy connections to Idaho.

In a conversation with EastIdahoNews.com, Leroy says the two met around 1840 when Wallace was a young attorney in Indiana. Both men were members of the Whig Party and Wallace introduced Lincoln —- then an Illinois state legislator —- who was speaking at a rally for presidential candidate William Henry Harrison.

“Wallace introduced Lincoln in a friendly, jocular way. Their senses of humor connected and over the years, they stayed in touch,” says Leroy.

Wallace later moved to Iowa, where he served as Speaker of the House in the state legislature. After an unsuccessful bid for U.S. Senator, he moved to Washington Territory and was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.

Through letters, Lincoln and Wallace often discussed the politics of the day, including when Lincoln entered the presidential race in 1860.

“When Lincoln was elected, Wallace went to Washington, D.C. to lobby for selection to territorial positions appointed by the president. He was successful,” Leroy explains.

Lincoln appointed Wallace governor of Washington Territory in 1861.

At that time, Washington extended from the Pacific Ocean to modern day Montana and Wyoming. The land that makes up Idaho today was under Wallace’s jurisdiction as governor. Realizing the large size of the geographic area, he became an advocate for breaking it up and Idaho was created on March 4, 1863.

Wallace met with Lincoln the day he was shot to talk about filling a vacancy on the Idaho Supreme Court and in the U.S. Marshal’s Office.

“They talked for a bit, talked about Idaho, talked about the need for these specific offices — and then Lincoln said, ‘Old Idaho, come back on Monday and you shall have the appointments as you wish them,'” Leroy said at Wednesday’s event.

Old Idaho was the nickname Lincoln gave Wallace.

Wallace declined the invitation to attend the play because his wife was sick.

Around 10:20 p.m., a bullet to the back of Lincoln’s head at point-blank range rendered him unconscious. He died the next morning at a boarding house across the street.

“I wonder, at some point during the play, with the Idaho appointments due on Monday being fresh in his mind, whether Lincoln thought just a bit about the idea of Idaho?” Leroy said on Wednesday.

The gun that killed Lincoln was on display at the Museum of Idaho | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com
This gun, or one just like it, killed Lincoln on April 15, 1865. It was on display at the Museum of Idaho Wednesday night. | Rett Nelson, EastIdahoNews.com

Lincoln may have visited Idaho had he lived

Prior to his visit with Wallace, Leroy said Lincoln took a carriage ride along the Potomac River with his wife. The ending of the Civil War days earlier weighed heavily on his mind and the possibility of a peaceful second term delighted him.

“When we finish the term, I’d like to travel,” Lincoln said, according to Leroy.

Walking the streets where Jesus walked in Jerusalem and going to California after the completion of the transcontinental railroad are two places Lincoln mentioned.

“I theorize that had he made it to California, he may well have come to visit (Idaho),” said Leroy.

An 1860 lithograph of a young Lincoln. | Wikipedia
An 1860 lithograph of a young Abraham Lincoln. | Wikipedia

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