The 1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago was a testament to the power of political organization and timing. Lincoln was not the presumptive frontrunner; men like William Seward were better known and better funded. Yet, as the convention progressed, the sheer determination of Lincoln’s friends and the clarity of his platform began to tip the scales. When he secured the nomination on the third ballot, it sent a shockwave through the country. The subsequent election was a four-way race, a fractured contest that reflected the splintering soul of the nation. Lincoln captured the North and the electoral majority without carrying a single state in the South. When the news of his victory reached the telegraph offices, it was not merely an announcement of a new president; it was the final trigger for a secession movement that had been simmering for decades. The mandate was clear, but the price of that mandate was the shattering of the Union.