Author and historian Michael Burlinghame PhD, author of the definitive biography Abraham Lincoln: A Life, commented:
“To come from a background where he really suffered from emotional malnutrition (his baby brother dies, his mother dies when he’s nine, his father is unsympathetic and beats him, his older sister dies, his sweetheart dies, he has a terrible marriage, two of his children die, he suffers career failures, and has a difficult midlife crisis), and yet he overcomes
all that to become not only famous but profoundly psychologically whole and mature, balanced and a model of moral clarity with unimpeachable integrity.
“I think that there’s hope for all of us.”
—from an interview in Abraham
Lincoln Online.
The man who became the 16th president of the United States was nothing if not resilient, as the record of the setbacks he overcame on his path to the presidency
shows:
shows:
1832 Lost job
1832 Defeated for state legislature
1833 Failed in business
1832 Defeated for state legislature
1833 Failed in business
1834 Elected for
state legislature
1835 Death of sweetheart
1836 Nervous breakdown
1838 Defeated for post of Speaker
1843 Defeated for nomination to Congress
1846 Elected to Congress
1848 Lost nomination
1849 Rejected for post of land officer
1854 Defeated for US Senate
1856 Lost nomination for Vice President
1858 Again defeated for US Senate
1860 Elected President of the United States
1835 Death of sweetheart
1836 Nervous breakdown
1838 Defeated for post of Speaker
1843 Defeated for nomination to Congress
1846 Elected to Congress
1848 Lost nomination
1849 Rejected for post of land officer
1854 Defeated for US Senate
1856 Lost nomination for Vice President
1858 Again defeated for US Senate
1860 Elected President of the United States