[Senator and Mrs. James Henry Lane]. Dimensions: 22.8 × 19.7 cm (9 × 7 3/4 in.). Photography Studio: Brady & Co. (American, active 1840s-1880s). Date: 1861-66. Senator James H. Lane of Kansas (1814-1866) was most often seen in a woolen shirt, bearskin overcoat, and straw hat. The fiercest leader of the Free State movement in the 1850s, he brought various antislavery forces together to form a unified party and led military campaigns against pro-slavery towns with such effectiveness and brutality that he earned the sobriquet, the "Grim Chieftain of Kansas." Elected as one of the first two senat

[Senator and Mrs. James Henry Lane]. Dimensions: 22.8 × 19.7 cm (9 × 7 3/4 in.). Photography Studio: Brady & Co. (American, active 1840s-1880s). Date: 1861-66.  Senator James H. Lane of Kansas (1814-1866) was most often seen in a woolen shirt, bearskin overcoat, and straw hat. The fiercest leader of the Free State movement in the 1850s, he brought various antislavery forces together to form a unified party and led military campaigns against pro-slavery towns with such effectiveness and brutality that he earned the sobriquet, the "Grim Chieftain of Kansas." Elected as one of the first two senat Stock Photo
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Album / Alamy Stock Photo

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PARY62

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3457 x 3951 px | 29.3 x 33.5 cm | 11.5 x 13.2 inches | 300dpi

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[Senator and Mrs. James Henry Lane]. Dimensions: 22.8 × 19.7 cm (9 × 7 3/4 in.). Photography Studio: Brady & Co. (American, active 1840s-1880s). Date: 1861-66. Senator James H. Lane of Kansas (1814-1866) was most often seen in a woolen shirt, bearskin overcoat, and straw hat. The fiercest leader of the Free State movement in the 1850s, he brought various antislavery forces together to form a unified party and led military campaigns against pro-slavery towns with such effectiveness and brutality that he earned the sobriquet, the "Grim Chieftain of Kansas." Elected as one of the first two senators when Kansas was granted statehood, Lane was a fine orator and master of sarcasm and invective whose broad gestures and rasping voice commanded undivided attention. His impassioned speech in 1864 on behalf of his close friend Abraham Lincoln is credited with having swayed the National Convention to nominate Lincoln for a second term as president. After the war's end and Lincoln's assassination, Lane committed suicide-having been severely rebuked by his former Kansas supporters for his advocacy of President Andrew Johnson's weak Reconstruction policy. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.