[Abraham Lincoln, A History, Volume 2 by John George Nicolay and John Hay]@TWC D-Link bookAbraham Lincoln, A History, Volume 2 CHAPTER II 5/31
78. One piece of his history rendered him specially acceptable to young and spirited Western voters.
His service in Congress began amid exciting debates over the compromise measures of 1850, when the Southern fire-eaters were already rampant.
Seddon, of Virginia, in his eagerness to depreciate the North and glorify the South, affirmed in a speech that at the battle of Buena Vista, "at that most critical juncture when all seemed lost save honor," amid the discomfiture and rout of "the brave but unfortunate troops of the North through a mistaken order," "the noble regiment of Mississippians" had snatched victory from the jaws of death.
Replying some days later to Seddon's innuendo, Bissell, competent by his presence on the battle-field to bear witness, retorted that when the 2d Indiana gave way, it was McKee's 2d Kentucky, Hardin's 1st Illinois, and Bissell's 2d Illinois which had retrieved the fortunes of the hour, and that the vaunted Mississippi regiment was not within a mile and a half of the scene of action.
Properly this was an issue of veracity between Seddon and Bissell, of easy solution.
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