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Lincoln's White House Secretary
The Adventurous Life of William O.Stoddard
1st Edition
Edited by Harold Holzer
$39.95
E Book
0-8093-8754-9
978-0-8093-8754-0
432 pages, 6 x 9, 14 Illus.
5/21/2007

About the Book

William Osborn Stoddard, Lincoln’s “third secretary” who worked alongside John G. Nicolay and John Hay in the White House from 1861 to 1865, completed his autobiography in 1907, one of more than one hundred books he wrote. An abridged version was published by his son in 1955 as “Lincoln’s Third Secretary: The Memoirs of William O. Stoddard.”  In this new, edited version, Lincoln’s White House Secretary: The Adventurous Life of William O. Stoddard, Harold Holzer provides an introduction, afterword, and annotations and includes comments by Stoddard’s granddaughter, Eleanor Stoddard. The elegantly written volume gives readers a window into the politics, life, and culture of the mid-nineteenth century.
 
Stoddard’s bracing writing, eye for detail, and ear for conversation bring a novelistic excitement to a story of childhood observations, young friendships, hardscrabble frontier farming, early hints of the slavery crisis, the workings of the Lincoln administration, and the strange course of war and reunion in the southwest. More than a clerk, Stoddard was an adventurous explorer of American life, a farmer, editor, soldier, and politician.
Enhanced by seventeen illustrations, this narrative sympathetically draws the reader into the life and times of Lincoln’s third secretary, adding to our understanding of the events and the larger-than-life figures that shaped history.

Authors/Editors

Harold Holzer is the senior vice president for external affairs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Among the country’s leading authorities on Abraham Lincoln and the political culture of the Civil War era, Holzer is the author, coauthor, or editor of twenty-six books—including The Lincoln Image, The Lincoln Family Album, and Lincoln at Cooper Union: The Speech that Made Abraham Lincoln President. He is a cochair of the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission.

Reviews

 “This autobiography combines the fascinating details of social history with the drama of high politics. Lincoln’s White House Secretary richly chronicles the interesting life of a jack-of-all-trades who witnessed Lincoln’s greatness, documented the tumultuous events of our national ordeal, and played a small, yet fascinating, role in those events.”—Joseph Fornieri, author of Abraham Lincoln’s Political Faith 

Awards

Illinois State Historical Society Award (2008)