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Springfield Feb 11 1855
Hon. J. O. Norton
My dear Sir:
I have now been beaten one day over a week and I am very happy to find myself quite convalescent. Your kind letter of the 20th of Jan'y I did not receive until the day before yesterday - owing I suppose to our great snow storm. The day after the election I wrote Washburne the particulars, tolerably fully. Through the untiring efforts of friends, among whom yourself and Washburne were chief, I finally surmounted the difficulty with extreme anti-slavery men and got all their votes. Lovejoy, Magruder, Cook, Judd, Palmer and Baker of Alton were the men who never could vote for a Whig and without the votes of two of whom I never could reach the requisite number to make an election. I do not mean that I actually got within two votes of the required number but I easily enough could have done so, provided I could have assured my friends that two of the above named four would go for me. In this con-
nection it is necessary to bear in mind that your Senator Osgood, together with Davis, Morrison, Kinney & Trapp of St. Clair have openly gone over to the enemy. It was Govr. Matteson's manoevering that forced upon me and my friends the necessity of surrendering to Trumbull. He made his first successful hit by tampering with old man Strunk. Strunk was pledged to me, which Matteson knew, but he succeeded in persuading him that I stood no chance of an election, and in getting a pledge from him to go for him as a second choice. He next made similar impressions on Hills of DuPage, Parks of your town and Strawn & Day of LaSalle, at least we saw strong signs that he had, and they being old democrats and I an old whig, I could get no sufficient access to them to pound them to the bottom. That Matteson assured the Nebraska democrats he could get their men, after they should have made a respectable show by voting a few ballots for other men, I think there is no doubt; and by holding up to their greedy eyes this amount of capital in our ranks, it was that he induced the Nebraska men to drop Shields and leave him en masse. The Nebraska men, since Osgood's
and Davis defection, had control of the Senate, and they refused to pass the resolution for going into the election till three hours before the joint session was to, and did in fact, commence. One of the Nebraska senators has since told me that they only passed the resolution when they did upon being privately assured by the Governor that he had it all safe. I have omitted to say that it was well understood Baker would vote for Trumbull, but would go over to Matteson rather than me. Passing over the first eight ballots which you have doubtless seen when on the ninth, Matteson had 47 - having every Nebraska man, and old man Strunk besides, and wanting but three of an election; and when the looser sort of my friends had gone over to Trumbull and raised him to 35 and reduced me to 15, it struck me that Hill, Parks, Strawn, Day and Baker, or at least some three of them would go over from Trumbull to Matteson & elect him on the tenth ballot, unless they should be kept on T. by seeing my remaining men coming over to him. I accordingly gave the intimation which my friends acted upon, electing T. that ballot. All were taken by surprise, Trumbull quite as much as any one else.
There was no pre-concent about it. In fact I think a pre-concent to that effect could not have been made. The heat of the battle, and imminent danger of Matteson's election were indispensably necessary to the result. I know that few if any, of my remaining 15 men would have gone over from me without my direction; and I gave the direction simultaneously with forming the resolution to do it.
It is not true, as might appear by the first ballot, that Trumbull had only five friends who preferred him to me. I know the leanings of all the men tolerably well and my opinion is, that if the 51 who elected him were compelled to a naked expression of preference between him and me, he would at the outside, have 16 and I would have the remainder. And this again would depend substantially upon the fact that his 16 come from the old democratic ranks & the remainder from the whigs. Such as preferred him yet voted for me on the first ballottings and so on the idea that a minority among friends ought not to stand out against a majority. Lest you might receive a different impression, I wish to say I hold Judge Parks in very high estimation, believing him to be neither knave or fool, but decidedly the reverse of both. Now as I have called names so freely, you will of course consider this confidential. Yours much obliged &c A. Lincoln