Sunday, January 25, 2026

Message To Ken Burns: What Lincoln Said About Our Founders On Slavery

           (By Lee Habeeb and Vince Benedetto, Dec 30, 2025)

It was 1860 and America was at an inflection point. It wasn't just slavery that was on trial: the Founding Fathers' vision itself was up for grabs. A growing segment of America’s population—mostly in the South—was convinced that the authors of the Constitution were fundamentally pro-slavery. It’s a claim, ironically, that’s been repeated ad nauseum about our founders for the past few decades in progressive academic circles, too, a claim that runs throughout the most recent documentary by Ken Burns, The American Revolution.

That's why it’s worth turning to Abraham Lincoln—a president universally admired by historians, Burns included. What did the Great Emancipator have to say about the matter when he was alive, and why did Burns and his team leave his most famous address on the subject out of the documentary?

In 1857, Lincoln tipped his hand on the subject of slavery and the founders' intention in his condemnation of the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott ruling. Far from being hypocrites, Lincoln believed they were visionaries.  "They did not mean to assert the obvious untruth, that all were then actually enjoying that equality, nor yet, that they were about to confer it immediately upon them," Lincoln said. "In fact they had no power to confer such a boon. They meant simply to declare the right, so that the enforcement of it might follow as fast as circumstances should permit."

Then came Lincoln’s 1860 Cooper Union Address in New York City that propelled the little-known politician from Illinois to national prominence. It was less a speech than a defense of our founders on the subject of slavery and a constitutional argument for the use of federal power to restrict slavery in the territories. He deployed a tool he’d used many times before as one of America’s best trial lawyers: evidence.

Lincoln prepared for months, scouring Jonathan Elliot's The Debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution and official records of Congress, too. Like a detective, Lincoln followed the 39 founders' actions to determine whether they’d acted to limit or abolish slavery or to contribute to its preservation or expansion.

Lincoln began by transporting listeners to 1784. The issue at hand was land in possession of the federal government known as the Northwestern Territory. Four of the eventual signers of the Constitution were present, and three voted to prohibit slavery in the new territory.  In 1787, the issue reappeared. Two more of the 39 signers of our future Constitution were present, and both voted to prevent slavery in the Northwest Territory.

And in 1789, the very first federal Congress under the new Constitution renewed the Northwest Ordinance, setting rules and rights for the new territories. And again, banning slavery. Here is Lincoln once again.  "The bill went through all its stages without a word of opposition, and finally passed both branches without yeas and nays, which is equivalent to a unanimous passage," he said. "In this Congress there were sixteen of the thirty-nine fathers who framed the original Constitution....George Washington, another of the "thirty-nine," was then President of the United States, and, as such approved and signed the bill."

By Lincoln's final calculations, 23 of the 39 signers of the Constitution had a voting record on the issue of slavery. Of the 23, 21—91 percent—voted to prohibit or limit its expansion. Of the remaining 16 signers with no record, Lincoln's research revealed strong anti-slavery sentiments.  "If we should look into their acts and declarations…, it would appear to us that on the direct question of federal control of slavery in federal territories, the sixteen, if they had acted at all, would probably have acted just as the twenty-three did," he said. "Among that sixteen were several of the most noted anti-slavery men of those times—as Dr. [Benjamin] Franklin, Alexander Hamilton and Gouverneur Morris—while there was not one now known to have been otherwise, unless it may be John Rutledge of South Carolina."

Lincoln demonstrated beyond any doubt that our founders believed slavery was a moral wrong.  "Neither the word slave nor slavery is found in the Constitution, nor the word property even, in any connection with language alluding to the things slave, or slavery," he wrote.  This was done intentionally, he noted, to "exclude from the Constitution the idea that there could be property in man."

Burns, an admirer of Lincoln, ignored Lincoln’s speech in The American Revolution and downplayed the history-making achievement of our founders when, in July of 1787, they outlawed slavery in territory that nearly doubled the size of America and would become the free states of Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin.

Burns instead closed out his documentary with these words by historian Vincent Brown: “If we take the words of the Declaration of Independence written by Thomas Jefferson, all men–let’s say men and women–are created free and equal, Jefferson clearly didn’t take that seriously as a slave holder, but I do.”

One man who has written about Jefferson and the founders extensively is Dr. Larry Arnn, president of Hillsdale College, who would surely disagree with Brown.  "The astounding thing is not that some of our founders were slaveholders. There was a lot of slavery back then, and for all recorded time,” Arnn noted in a speech a decade ago. “The astounding thing—the miracle even, one might say—is that these slaveholders founded a republic based on principles designed to abnegate slavery."

The Burns documentary, brilliant in many parts, also did a poor job of contextualizing slavery. Not mentioned was any note of the trans-Saharan slave trade from the seventh to 20th centuries, when between 10 million and 18 million Africans were sold and transported, or other countries that dominated the transatlantic slave trade (Brazil with nearly 6 million slaves traded, Britain 3.2 million, France 1.4 million, Spain 1.1 million, the Netherlands 550,000 and America 305,000).

"Very few Americans know that slavery was common throughout the world as well as in Africa," said Sandra Greene, professor of African history at Cornell and author of Slave Owners of West Africa. "Slavery in the United States ended in 1865, but in West Africa it was not legally ended until 1875, and then it stretched on unofficially until almost World War I."

While 11 million to 12 million people are estimated to have been exported as slaves from West Africa during the years of the slave trade, millions more were kept in Africa, according to Greene.  "It's not something that many West African countries talk about," she said. "It's not exactly a proud moment because everyone now realizes that slavery is not acceptable."

Burns also spent little to no time on the burgeoning abolition movement around the world.  "While slavery is as old as humanity, abolitionism is a relatively recent phenomenon," historian Katie Kelaidis wrote. "It's not difficult to trace the explosion of the worldwide abolition movement to the decade the Declaration of Independence was signed."

The study of American history should not whitewash the ills of slavery and must include the impact of segregation and racism in American life. Burns and his team did great work on both fronts and a terrific job including Black and Native American voices into the rich narrative of our nation. But misrepresenting our founders' intent on the subject of slavery–by design or omission—is not just a sign of bad scholarship and bad history, it’s an act of bad faith.

Lincoln’s own words make the definitive case of our founders' intent on the subject of slavery. Burns ignored it, but Lincoln’s Cooper Union Address lives on for all to see and read.

https://www.abrahamlincolnonline.org/lincoln/speeches/cooper.htm

Vince Benedetto is the founder and president of the Bold Gold Media Group. A graduate of the Air Force Academy, he is an avid historian and head of the Churchill Society of Pennsylvania.

 

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