Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Douglas statue comes down, but Lincoln had racist views, too

- By John O’Connor

With the nation racing to come to grips with centuries of racial sins, officials plan to remove the Capitol lawn statue of Stephen A. Douglas, whose forceful 19th century politics helped forge modern-day Illinois but who also profited from slavery.

Just inside the Statehouse hangs another revered depiction of an Illinois legend — and longtime Douglas rival — who expressed white supremacis­t views: Abraham Lincoln. The immense painting in the governor’s second-floor office depicts a Sept. 18, 1858, debate between the two men that opened with these words from Lincoln, who was vying for Douglas’ Senate seat and was still two years away from running for president:

“I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and Black races. ... There is a physical difference between the white and Black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality.”

When the Douglas statue is put in storage this fall, it will become the latest in a line of monuments, from Confederat­e generals to Christophe­r Columbus,

to come down during the global reckoning on race sparked by the May 25 death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s police custody. There has been no discussion, though, about removing likenesses of Lincoln, the president whose Civil War victory freed the slaves, despite his earlier views on race.

“At a certain point, where do you cut it off? Jefferson, he wrote the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. You separate that from him being a slave owner,” St. Louis tourist Eric Zuelke said during a recent visit to the Douglas statue, referring to Thomas Jefferson.

Lincoln believed that slavery was morally wrong and, like Douglas, he opposed it, although the two differed on how to end it. While his thinking evolved in the White House, Lincoln’s advocacy for Black people in 1858 stopped at recognizin­g their natural rights under the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce that “all men are created equal,” though his was still a radical position for the time.

Douglas’ contributi­ons to the modern-day Illinois economy and transporta­tion network cannot be understate­d. But he retained a 20% share of a familyowne­d 200-slave Mississipp­i plantation, a littleknow­n fact that led Illinois’ House speaker in July to recommend removing

Douglas’ likenesses from the Statehouse.

On the day in the eastern Illinois city of Charleston depicted in Robert Root’s 1918 painting — the fourth of seven celebrated debates around the state that helped make Lincoln a national figure — Lincoln felt pressured to respond to Douglas’ repeated taunts of Lincoln as a “Black Republican” who stood for “Negro equality.”

Teresa Haley, who heads the Springfiel­d branch of the nation’s oldest civil rights group, the NAACP, said she thinks the Douglas statue should be removed to show intoleranc­e for racism and white supremacy. Although Lincoln also had racist views, he was a president and the one who freed the slaves, she said.

“There’s something about erasing things from history that we still need to be aware of,” Haley said. “But there’s also something about glorifying that negative part of history as well. And this is the part that hurts all people.”

Lincoln isn’t blameless on race off the debate stage.

Allen Guelzo, a Princeton University scholar and three-time Lincoln Prize winner, noted that in 1847, Lincoln unsuccessf­ully represente­d slave owner Robert Matson in court to retrieve fugitive slaves in a free state from among those Matson rotated between his land in Kentucky and eastern Illinois to skirt Illinois’ antislaver­y law.

Guelzo, who co-created a five-step decision-making analysis for the removal of newly scrutinize­d memorials, believes that if Illinois uproots Douglas, Lincoln should follow, disqualifi­ed by the Matson case and his stance during the Charleston debate.

If an offensive racial opinion “is the only yardstick that we use to measure people today, they will have to pull down monuments to everybody from before 1950,” Guelzo said.

Complicati­ng matters is the idea that without Douglas, there might never have been a Great Emancipato­r. Douglas’ position that territoria­l voters in an expanding country should decide whether to allow slavery incensed Lincoln, luring the former congressma­n out of political retirement to challenge Douglas. Each of the 1858 debate sites, from Freeport to Jonesboro, memorializ­es the men — most with full-size statues.

“Dismantlin­g those or taking down just Douglas would sort of erase one of the most important political discussion­s ever held in the country,” said Harold Holzer, another Lincoln Prize winner and Civil War expert at Hunter College in New York. Holzer said Mary Lincoln, who prodded her husband to greatness, and Douglas “are the two best things that happened to

Lincoln.”

Jim Edgar, who requisitio­ned Root’s painting for his office when he was Illinois secretary of state and had it moved to its current location for his 1991-1999 tenure as governor, said that like most politician­s seeking to remain viable, Lincoln felt the need to “play to the crowd” in Charleston.

“When I was campaignin­g, you never wanted to say something you didn’t believe, or say something that later you’re going to deny, but at the same time, you understand that you’ve got to get elected to get something done,” said Edgar, a Republican from Charleston.

He pointed out that despite the ugly stance Lincoln took that day, he clung to the notion that Black people were among those who were “created equal” according to the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. It was a radical view for the time that continued to evolve until, by war’s end, Lincoln embraced citizenshi­p for Black people.

As for Douglas, after he lost the presidency to Lincoln in 1860, he emerged a staunch Unionist and Lincoln ally, said Guelzo, adding that his dying words to his sons in 1861 were, “Tell them to obey the laws and the Constituti­on.”

Those words are inscribed on the base of the Statehouse statue.

 ?? JUSTIN L. FOWLER — THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER VIA AP ?? In this May 22, 2020 file photo, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker answers questions from the media, from his office at the Illinois State Capitol, in Springfiel­d, Ill., in front of a painting depicting a political debate in Charleston, Ill., on Sept. 18, 1858, between Stephen A. Douglas and Abraham Lincoln.
JUSTIN L. FOWLER — THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER VIA AP In this May 22, 2020 file photo, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker answers questions from the media, from his office at the Illinois State Capitol, in Springfiel­d, Ill., in front of a painting depicting a political debate in Charleston, Ill., on Sept. 18, 1858, between Stephen A. Douglas and Abraham Lincoln.

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