Scarce, sought-after unsigned book: Political Debates between Hon. Abraham Lincoln and Hon. Stephen A. Douglas, In the Celebrated Campaign of 1858, in Illinois. First edition, later printing (with line over publisher's information on copyright page, a “2” at the bottom of page 13, and publisher's advertisements in the front). Columbus, Ohio: Follett, Foster and Company, 1860. Hardcover, 6.5 x 9.25, 268 pages. Book condition: VG-/None, with contemporary presentation/ownership inscriptions to front endpapers, paper loss to rear endpaper, some foxing to textblock, and a few tiny chips to the brown cloth binding.
The Lincoln-Douglas debates, a series of seven debates between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas during the 1858 Illinois senatorial campaign, stand among the most celebrated dialogues in the history of American politics. The debates focused on the issue of slavery, particularly on the hotly contested question of the expansion of the institution into newly acquired territories. Douglas promoted the solution of popular sovereignty—that is, allowing settlers of those territories to decide on the question—while Lincoln argued against the expansion of slavery, though was not yet advocating for its abolition in whole. Although the incumbent Douglas was re-elected as senator by the Illinois General Assembly, the debates attracted widespread media attention and vaulted Lincoln into the forefront of national politics. This newfound publicity helped to lay the groundwork of Lincoln's successful 1860 presidential campaign.
The text of this edition was set in type from Lincoln's personal scrapbook, into which he had pasted transcripts of the debates as they were printed in local newspapers. It was published in April, a few months before Lincoln's nomination as the Republican candidate for president. The book rapidly became a bestseller—in a matter of months, over 30,000 copies were printed and sold.