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  1. February 26 – 1860 Wiyot Massacre: 80 to 250 Wiyot people are killed on Indian Island, near Eureka, California. February 27 – Abraham Lincoln gives his Cooper Union speech. March 6 – While campaigning for the presidency, Abraham Lincoln makes a speech defending the right to strike. March 9 – The first Japanese ambassadors to the United ...

  2. 30 de nov. de 2018 · Updated on November 30, 2018. The election of Abraham Lincoln in November 1860 was perhaps the most significant election in American history. It brought Lincoln to power at a time of great national crisis, as the country was coming apart over the issue of enslavement. The electoral win by Lincoln, the candidate of the anti-enslavement ...

  3. The 1860–61 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between August 6, 1860, and October 24, 1861, before or after the first session of the 37th United States Congress convened on July 4, 1861. The number of House seats initially increased to 239 when California was apportioned an extra one, but these elections were affected by the ...

  4. Party Nominees: Electoral Vote: Popular Vote Presidential: Vice Presidential Republican: Abraham Lincoln: Hannibal Hamlin: 180: 59.4%: 1,865,908: 39.9% Southern ...

  5. The United States presidential election of 1860 was perhaps the most pivotal in American history. A year after John Brown ‘s attempted slave revolt at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, the national debate over slavery had reached a boiling point, and several Southern states were threatening to secede should the Republican Party candidate, Abraham ...

  6. www.smithsonianmag.com › history › election-day-1860-84266675Election Day 1860 | Smithsonian

    Bettmann / Corbis. The cannon salvo that thundered over Springfield, Illinois, at sunrise on November 6, 1860, signaled not the start of a battle, but the end of the bitter, raucous six-month-long ...

  7. 17 de dic. de 2020 · In his 1955 article "A Theory of Critical Elections," Key explained how the Republican Party became dominant between 1860 and 1932; and then how this dominance shifted to the Democratic Party after 1932 by using empirical evidence to identify a number of election which Key termed as “critical,” or “realigning” which resulted in American voters changing their political party affiliations.