Douglas L. Wilson

Douglas L. Wilson is a co-director of the Lincoln Studies Center at Knox College, in Galesburg, Illinois, and the author of Honor's Voice: The Transformation of Abraham Lincoln (1998).

Latest

  1. Keeping Lincoln's Secrets

    William H. Herndon, Abraham Lincoln's law partner and biographer, made a record of "secret and privatethings" about Lincoln in two memorandum books that long ago disappeared. Now diary entries have materialized, written by a woman who saw the memorandum books in 1866, and who recorded her shocked reactions to accounts of "profligacy" and "debauchery." A distinguished Lincoln scholar describes the discovery, and considers anew the collision of privacy and history

  2. Thomas Jefferson and the Character Issue

    As the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of Thomas Jefferson’s birth approaches, a Jefferson scholar reflects on Jefferson’s life—and in particular on the enigma at its core: that a slaveholder should be the nation’s most eloquent champion of equality, To understand how this could be so, the author explains, is to appreciate the perils of “presentistn “ and the difficulties that may impede the historical assessment of motive and character