He soon became a member of the legislature, taking his seat as the
youngest member in that body. He was the Democratic nominee for
Congress before he had acquired the required age, however, his twenty-fifth
birthday occurred before election, thus this obstacle was removed. In his
district a most
spirited canvass took place, and out of over thirty-five
thousand votes cast, his opponent was declared elected by only five. He was
appointed register of the land office at Springfield, but resigned this
position in 1889. He became Secretary of State the following year, and in
1841 was elected a judge of the Supreme Court at the age of twenty-eight.
This position he also resigned two years after
to represent his district in
congress where he was returned by successive elections until 1848.
He was recognized as one of the able members while in the national
legislature, and his speeches on the Oregon question are models. He next
became a Senator from his State, and supported President Polk in the
Mexican war. As is well-known he was the father of the Kansas-Nebraska
act, popularly known as 'Squatter Sovereignty,'
carrying the measure
through in spite of great opposition.
He was a strong candidate for the Democratic nomination for the
presidency in 1852, and his strength was still more developed four years
later when he was the favorite candidate save one, James Buchanan, who
finally received the honor. At the end of the next four years he was
nominated by the convention
meeting at Charleston, and was the unanimous
choice of the northern wing of the Democracy, but bitterly opposed by the
Southern faction, who nominated Mr. Breckinridge at a separate
convention. This caused a split in the Democratic vote, and Mr. Lincoln was
elected on a minority of the total vote cast.
Stephen A. Douglass however,
like Webster and Clay, needed not the
honor of occupying the presidential chair to make his name illustrious. He
was remarkably successful in the promotion of his State's interest in
Congress. To him is due the credit of securing the splendid grant of land
which brought about the successful operation of the Illinois Central railroad
which contributed so much toward the weakened resources of the State. As
previously stated, Mr. Douglass was defeated by Mr. Lincoln, yet at the
outbreak of the civil war his voice was heard in earnest pleas for the Union,
declaring that if this system of resistance by the sword,
when defeated at the
ballot-box was persisted in, then "The history of the United States is already
written in the history of Mexico."
He most strongly denounced secession as a crime and characterized it as
madness. His dying words were in defence of the Union. To say that Mr.
Douglass was a wonderful man is the least that can be said, while more
could be added in his praise with propriety. As an orator he was graceful,
and possessed natural qualities which carried an audience by storm. He died
June 3rd, 1861, at the outbreak of the civil war. Had he lived no one would
have rendered more valuable assistance in the suppression of that gigantic
rebellion than would Stephen A. Douglass.
But it was in the great political debate between himself and Abraham
Lincoln that Mr. Douglass gained his greatest notoriety as well as Lincoln
himself. The details of this debate will be seen in our sketch of Mr. Lincoln.