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---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: H-Net Staff <revh...@mail.h-net.org>
Date: Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 2:13 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-CivWar]: Pinheiro on Strozier, 'Your Friend
Forever, A. Lincoln: The Enduring Friendship of Abraham Lincoln and Joshua
Speed'
To: <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>


Charles B. Strozier.  Your Friend Forever, A. Lincoln: The Enduring
Friendship of Abraham Lincoln and Joshua Speed.  New York  Columbia
University Press, 2016.  xxv + 307 pp.  $35.00 (cloth), ISBN
978-0-231-17132-8.

Reviewed by Holly Pinheiro (University of Iowa)
Published on H-CivWar (January, 2019)
Commissioned by Susan N. Deily-Swearingen

Abraham Lincoln remains one of the most analyzed figures in American
history. Most analyses focus on various aspects of Lincoln's
presidency, including his support of the colonization movement.
Charles B. Strozier, with the assistance of Wayne Soini, provides a
refreshing and captivating historical analysis of Lincoln's life long
before his ascendance to the national political stage. Instead,
Strozier's primary focus is on both the private and public
relationship between Abraham Lincoln and Joshua Speed. Soini and
Strozier's analysis illustrates how Lincoln and Speed's antebellum
connection shaped the future president.

To be clear, _Your Friend Forever, A. Lincoln_ is not a biography but
an investigation of the link between these men during their formative
years. It also examines the various individuals that they interacted
with as young men. Included in that social network was William
Herndon, an associate and later self-appointed Lincoln biographer.
Herndon plays a vital role in Strozier's study, given his
preoccupation with Lincoln's sexuality. His biography suggested that
Lincoln had possibly contracted syphilis from a prostitute and noted
that he shared a bed regularly with Speed, something Lincoln also did
with other men. For Herndon, those scintillating tales were facts,
but Strozier urges readers to remain cautious about accepting
Herndon's stories. Strozier states, "anything Herndon writes about
Lincoln before his direct experience with him is open to question"
(p. xii). Some modern Americans, including AIDS activist and
playwright Larry Kramer, chose to take Herndon's work at face value
and wrote about Speed and Lincoln's sexual intimacies in graphic
detail. Kramer's claims frustrate Strozier since there is little
evidence to bolster them. Strozier argues that Speed and Lincoln were
close friends sharing intimate correspondences and living spaces but
that this was typical for the time.

By applying a combined approach of historical and psychoanalytical
methods, Strozier provides a detailed study of white masculinity and
the partisan politics of prominent Americans, slaveholders and
nonslaveholders, before and during the Civil War. Strozier
accomplishes this by relying on numerous personal correspondences,
census data, and testimony to shed light on the antebellum life of
Abraham Lincoln. In many ways, Speed helped Lincoln to understand
manhood as both men navigated their lives together. Speed even shared
details of the consummation of his marriage to Fanny Henning after
Lincoln prodded him for specifics. When Lincoln dealt with depression
over the sudden death of his first fiancée, Ann Rutledge, or his
failed first engagement to Mary Ann Todd, it was Speed who
emotionally supported his friend. Both men, as Strozier repeatedly
states, needed each other as these bachelors sought to establish
relationships with women.

Speed's influence on Lincoln's life also included nurturing his
friend's intellectual endeavors and political pursuits. Speed's store
in Springfield, Illinois, became a de facto political training ground
as young men, including Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas, sparred over
local and national issues before becoming politicians. Speed remained
important to Lincoln, even though Speed continued to own slaves. The
president hoped that appointing Speed to a cabinet position might
dissuade Kentucky, Speed's home state, from leaving the Union.
Lincoln even sent an early draft of the Emancipation Proclamation to
Speed for his opinion before sharing it with his cabinet. Thus, Speed
was more than just a friend; he nurtured Lincoln's talents and helped
the president with Civil War policies.

Strozier's monograph is a valuable resource for those seeking to
understand the complexity of Abraham Lincoln, not only as a president
but as a man. For historians, this work not only provides a study of
white masculinity but expertly explores Lincoln's life before he
became president. As Strozier makes clear, the Abraham Lincoln who
appeared in Illinois in 1858 to debate Stephen Douglas was not
entirely a self-made man. Instead, he benefited from a relationship
with Joshua Speed, his friend and confidant, who was integral in
molding Lincoln. Strozier's clearly written prose and, at times,
attention to salacious topics will grab the attention of
non-academics. In short, _Your Friend Forever, A. Lincoln_ is a
must-read for Civil War scholars and enthusiasts.

Citation: Holly Pinheiro. Review of Strozier, Charles B., _Your
Friend Forever, A. Lincoln: The Enduring Friendship of Abraham
Lincoln and Joshua Speed_. H-CivWar, H-Net Reviews. January, 2019.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=53042

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.

 --


-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart
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