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John
Lothrop Motley said, Thinking of America without Webster
seems like thinking of her without Niagara or the Mississippi."
Born in New Hampshire, he was a graduate of Dartmouth College,
whose Webster online exhibit describes the last days of this defender
of the Constitution:
Few have left such a lasting mark on all three branches
of American government. Webster's cases before the Supreme Court
are cited daily as the foundations of American contract and the
supremacy of the Constitution over the states. The Webster-Ashburton
treaty and his work as Secretary of State averted a third war
with Great Britain, and ushered in a new era of peace. It remains
a founding document in the law of nations. Webster's portrait
appears no fewer than six times in the U.S. Capitol, a tribute
to the man who three times averted civil war and epitomizes what
is now called the Golden Age of Senate Oratory. Lincoln
later cited Webster's words as an important source of inspiration
in guiding the nation through the Civil War. And if, as his critics
contended Webster sold his soul by compromising on slavery, he
did so only to purchase a few more years of peace for a troubled
nation and to preserve the Constitution and the Union he so dearly
loved.
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