Lincoln-Douglas Debates, Charleston Debate (Donald, 1996)

Scholarship
David Herbert Donald, Lincoln (New York: Touchstone, 1996), 220-221.
At Charleston, three days later, [Abraham Lincoln] was on more hospitable ground. Many in Coles County had known Thomas Lincoln and his family, and some enthusiasts spread a gigantic painting, eighty feet long, across the main street, showing OLD ABE THIRTY YEARS AGO, on a Kentucky wagon pulled by three yoke of oxen. Democrats countered with a banner, captioned “Negro Equality,” which depicted a white man standing with a Negro woman, and a mulatto boy in the background. Republicans found this so offensive that they tore it down before allowing the debate to begin.
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