Well, Abraham Lincoln was a Federalist-type person- a supporter in a strong central government. During his presidential career, he put into action many economical acts, showing that politics did have its say in economics. One of the main reasons the Civil War existed was due to the institution of slavery. Though he did pass the Emancipation Proclomation in 1863, he was as racist as any other man and or woman during that time period. He did what was best for the country, keep it in order to keep it unified. If that meant putting an end to slavery, he would do it.
George Washington's first career was a surveyor
Before being elected to the office of President, Abraham Lincoln served in both the state and national House of Representatives. Prior to his career in politics, Lincoln had success in banking and commerce.
He never took a Bar Examination. Abraham Lincoln, became a lawyer under an Illinois law enacted in 1833. This law stated that to be a lawyer someone had to "obtain a certificate procured from the court of an Illinois county certifying to the applicant's good moral character."On September 9, 1836, a license to practice law was issued to Abraham Lincoln by two of the justices of the Illinois Supreme Court. Later, in a more formal session, on March 1, 1837, Lincoln appeared before the clerk of the Illinois Supreme Court and took an oath to support the Constitution of the United States and of Illinois. Lincoln was then formally enrolled as an attorney licensed to practice law in all the courts of the state of Illinois.Lincoln prepared for his career by reading Blackstone's Commentaries, borrowed from Stephan Logan, an Attorney, who would later become Lincoln's law partner. "Abraham Lincoln's early legal training and the rapid changes in antebellum law ensured that his legal education continued throughout his law career. Lincoln's early career as a lawyer, was a vocation, and an apprenticeship, rather than a formal or informal learned study of the various subjects in law, followed by a formal standardized examination.Although Lincoln advised would-be lawyers to 'still keep reading' after becoming licensed, Lincoln's reading instead was directed toward the case before him.
This statement was attributed to Lincoln and appears in several books, the most influential was the 1907 title, The Lincoln Story Book A Judicious Collection of the Best Stories and Anecdotes of the Great President, Many Appearing Here for the First Time in Book Form Compiled by Henry L. Williams, 1907, pub G.W. Dillingham, NYHowever, the probable source for the quote is From Pioneer Home to the White House a biography of Abraham Lincoln published in 1882 and authored by the Rev. William Makepeace Thayer (1820-98) and published by Hurst and Company, NY. The title was one of a series of Logcabin to the White House biographies of various presidents. The quote is given as from the recollection of a Mrs. Rebecca Pomeroy (sic) Pomroy, who had worked as a prominent nurse in hospitals in Washington during the Civil War and also as a personal attendant on members of the Lincoln family. She died in 1884, so the information, if not fabricated, might be true. Pomroy ended her career in Massachusetts not far from Thayer. However, the historical accuracy of Thayer's texts are often dubious, he was not a professional historian, though he doesn't appear to have been deliberately dubious, but relied heavily on poor sources and fashioned something closer to hagiography for children than biography, including an earlier Lincoln biography for boys. Earlier in his career he did write several pamphlets of high historical quality. This quote may have come from the actual source given and it at least sounds like Lincoln. Additionally, it comes from a mundane incident, women trying to cross a muddy and water logged Washington street.As an early reply to this query noted: the only problem is, there is no real evidence that he actually said it. Well, you know what they say, "you can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the ..." well you know the rest (but Lincoln didn't because he never said that either).
Illinois
Illinois - he was born there.
No, Abraham Lincoln's family was antislavery. His father and mother greatly opposed the spread of slavery throughout the U.S. This led to Lincoln's opinion of slavery in his political career.
president
Abraham Lincoln was a member of the Illinois House of Representatives from 1834 to 1842 and of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1847 to 1849. In 1858 he campaigned for a U.S. Senate seat but lost.
Roy Dwight Packard has written: 'The love affairs of Abraham Lincoln' 'Was Lincoln a failure at fifty ?' -- subject(s): Political career before 1861 'A. Lincoln, successful lawyer' -- subject(s): Career in law
He started his career in law. He was a lawyer and started in politics.
he was a successful lawyer
Lincoln became a politician starting in 1834. He bacame a laewer in 1837. His political career took off after becoming a Congressman in 1847. He was elected President in 1860, his last job.
yes
He was elected into the Illinois state legislature, became a Congressman, retired to practice law, resumed politics and ran for president.
Lincoln was working as a lawyer in private practice before he began his political career. Before he passed the bar, he worked as a clerk, postmaster of Salem, ILL and farm laborer.