A researcher holding one of America’s most priceless negatives, the glass plate made by famous civil war photographer Mathew Brady of Abraham Lincoln in 1865 just before the 16th President of the United States was assassinated. It is stored in the National Archives in Washington. (Photo by Three Lions/Getty Images)
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A researcher holding one of America’s most priceless negatives, the glass plate made by famous civil war photographer Mathew Brady of Abraham Lincoln in 1865 just before the 16th President of the United States was assassinated. It is stored in the National Archives in Washington. (Photo by Three Lions/Getty Images)
Three Lions/Getty Images
In 1855, Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter to his best friend, Joshua Speed. Speed was from a wealthy, slave-owning Kentucky family; Lincoln believed slavery was wrong. You are mistaken about this, Lincoln wrote to Speed. But, differ we must.”
One way for Lincoln to have dealt with his best friend, I suppose, would be to say you’re a horrible person, you’re morally wrong, and I shun you,” says NPR’s Steve Inskeep. “Lincoln did not take that approach, which I think might be a little controversial today.”
You might know Steve primarily for hosting NPR’s Morning Edition. He also writes histories, and his newest book, “Differ We Must: How Lincoln Succeeded in a Divided America,” takes a long hard look at Lincoln the politician: the man who went out of his way to build political consensus, even with people whose views he considered noxious. It’s a case for why we should collaborate, and yes, compromise with people across the aisle – not because it’s nice or the right thing to do, but because it makes our government work.
Today on Throughline, a conversation with Steve Inskeep about the contradictions of Abraham Lincoln.
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