Abraham Lincoln 
Born in 1809 in Kentucky, Abraham Lincoln worked as storekeeper, served as a militia captain,
and was employed as a postmaster, before serving four terms in the Illinois state government. By 1836
he was a licensed lawyer and in 1847 served a term in the U.S. House of Representatives. The debates he had in his loss to
Stephen Douglas propelled him to national recognition. In 1860, as the Republican nominee, he was elected president of the United States.
During the war Lincoln's primary concerns were the preservation of the Union and, with the issuance of the Emancipation
Proclamation, the abolishment of slavery. To achieve this he believed in the vigorous prosecution of the war and allowed the
enlistment of African-American troops. In the fall of 1864 with long casualty lists and stagnant battlefronts at Petersburg
and Atlanta, Lincoln's re-election was only assured with Gen. Sherman's victory in Georgia and Gen. Sheridan's victory in
the Shenandoah Valley.
In late March 1865, Lincoln visited Grant at City Point. It was here he had his last conference with Generals
Grant and Sherman and Admiral Porter regarding the terms of surrender for Confederate forces. Also, Lincoln would leave from City Point
to visit Richmond when it fell into Union hands.
Less than a week after leaving Grant's headquarters' Lincoln is assassinated.
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