<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>A SHORT LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN</h1>
<h3>CONDENSED FROM NICOLAY & HAY'S ABRAHAM LINCOLN: A HISTORY</h3>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>JOHN G. NICOLAY</h2>
<br/>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN>I</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Ancestry—Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks—Rock
Spring Farm—Lincoln's Birth—Kentucky Schools—The
Journey to Indiana—Pigeon Creek Settlement—Indiana
Schools—Sally Bush Lincoln—Gentryville—Work and
Books—Satires and Sermons—Flatboat Voyage to New
Orleans—The Journey to Illinois</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>Abraham Lincoln, the sixteenth President of the United States,
was born in a log cabin in the backwoods of Kentucky on the 12th
day of February 1809. His father, Thomas Lincoln, was sixth in
direct line of descent from Samuel Lincoln, who emigrated from
England to Massachusetts in 1638. Following the prevailing drift of
American settlement, these descendants had, during a century and a
half, successively moved from Massachusetts to New Jersey, from New
Jersey to Pennsylvania, from Pennsylvania to Virginia, and from
Virginia to Kentucky; while collateral branches of the family
eventually made homes in other parts of the West. In Pennsylvania
and Virginia some of them had acquired considerable property and
local prominence.</p>
<p>In the year 1780, Abraham Lincoln, the President's grandfather,
was able to pay into the public treasury of Virginia "one hundred
and sixty pounds, current money," for which he received a warrant,
directed to<SPAN name="page4" id="page4"></SPAN> the "Principal Surveyor of any County within
the commonwealth of Virginia," to lay off in one or more surveys
for Abraham Linkhorn, his heirs or assigns, the quantity of four
hundred acres of land. The error in spelling the name was a blunder
of the clerk who made out the warrant.</p>
<p>With this warrant and his family of five
children—Mordecai, Josiah, Mary, Nancy, and Thomas—he
moved to Kentucky, then still a county of Virginia, in 1780, and
began opening a farm. Four years later, while at work with his
three boys in the edge of his clearing, a party of Indians,
concealed in the brush, shot and killed him. Josiah, the second
son, ran to a neighboring fort for assistance; Mordecai, the
eldest, hurried to the cabin for his gun, leaving Thomas, youngest
of the family, a child of six years, by his father. Mordecai had
just taken down his rifle from its convenient resting-place over
the door of the cabin when, turning, he saw an Indian in his
war-paint stooping to seize the child. He took quick aim through a
loop-hole, shot, and killed the savage, at which the little boy
also ran to the house, and from this citadel Mordecai continued
firing at the Indians until Josiah brought help from the fort.</p>
<p>It was doubtless this misfortune which rapidly changed the
circumstances of the family.<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN>
Kentucky was yet a wild, new country. As compared with later
periods of emigration, settlement was slow and pioneer life a hard
struggle. So it was probably under the stress of poverty, as well
as by the marriage of the older children, that the home was
gradually broken up, and Thomas Lincoln became "even in childhood
... a wandering laboring boy, and grew up literally without
education.... Before he was<SPAN name="page5" id="page5"></SPAN> grown he passed one year as a hired hand
with his uncle Isaac on Watauga, a branch of the Holston River."
Later, he seems to have undertaken to learn the trade of carpenter
in the shop of Joseph Hanks in Elizabethtown.</p>
<p>When Thomas Lincoln was about twenty-eight years old he married
Nancy Hanks, a niece of his employer, near Beechland, in Washington
County. She was a good-looking young woman of twenty-three, also
from Virginia, and so far superior to her husband in education that
she could read and write, and taught him how to sign his name.
Neither one of the young couple had any money or property; but in
those days living was not expensive, and they doubtless considered
his trade a sufficient provision for the future. He brought her to
a little house in Elizabethtown, where a daughter was born to them
the following year.</p>
<p>During the next twelvemonth Thomas Lincoln either grew tired of
his carpenter work, or found the wages he was able to earn
insufficient to meet his growing household expenses. He therefore
bought a little farm on the Big South Fork of Nolin Creek, in what
was then Hardin and is now La Rue County, three miles from
Hodgensville, and thirteen miles from Elizabethtown. Having no
means, he of course bought the place on credit, a transaction not
so difficult when we remember that in that early day there was
plenty of land to be bought for mere promises to pay; under the
disadvantage, however, that farms to be had on these terms were
usually of a very poor quality, on which energetic or forehanded
men did not care to waste their labor. It was a kind of land
generally known in the West as "barrens"—rolling upland, with
very thin, unproductive soil. Its momentary usefulness was that it
was partly cleared and<SPAN name="page6" id="page6"></SPAN> cultivated, that an indifferent cabin stood
on it ready to be occupied, and that it had one specially
attractive as well as useful feature—a fine spring of water,
prettily situated amid a graceful clump of foliage, because of
which the place was called Rock Spring Farm. The change of abode
was perhaps in some respects an improvement upon Elizabethtown. To
pioneer families in deep poverty, a little farm offered many more
resources than a town lot—space, wood, water, greens in the
spring, berries in the summer, nuts in the autumn, small game
everywhere—and they were fully accustomed to the loss of
companionship. On this farm, and in this cabin, the future
President of the United States was born, on the 12th of February,
1809, and here the first four years of his childhood were
spent.</p>
<p>When Abraham was about four years old the Lincoln home was
changed to a much better farm of two hundred and thirty-eight acres
on Knob Creek, six miles from Hodgensville, bought by Thomas
Lincoln, again on credit, for the promise to pay one hundred and
eighteen pounds. A year later he conveyed two hundred acres of it
by deed to a new purchaser. In this new home the family spent four
years more, and while here Abraham and his sister Sarah began going
to A B C schools. Their first teacher was Zachariah Riney, who
taught near the Lincoln cabin; the next, Caleb Hazel, at a distance
of about four miles.</p>
<p>Thomas Lincoln was evidently one of those easy-going,
good-natured men who carry the virtue of contentment to an extreme.
He appears never to have exerted himself much beyond the attainment
of a necessary subsistence. By a little farming and occasional jobs
at his trade, he seems to have supplied his family with food and
clothes. There is no record that he made any payment on either of
his farms. The fever of<SPAN name="page7" id="page7"></SPAN> westward emigration was in the air, and,
listening to glowing accounts of rich lands and newer settlements
in Indiana, he had neither valuable possessions nor cheerful
associations to restrain the natural impulse of every frontiersman
to "move." In this determination his carpenter's skill served him a
good purpose, and made the enterprise not only feasible but
reasonably cheap. In the fall of 1816 he built himself a small
flatboat, which he launched at the mouth of Knob Creek, half a mile
from his cabin, on the waters of the Rolling Fork. This stream
would float him to Salt River, and Salt River to the Ohio. He also
thought to combine a little speculation with his undertaking. Part
of his personal property he traded for four hundred gallons of
whisky; then, loading the rest on his boat with his carpenter's
tools and the whisky, he made the voyage, with the help of the
current, down the Rolling Fork to Salt River, down Salt River to
the Ohio, and down the Ohio to Thompson's Ferry, in Perry County,
on the Indiana shore. The boat capsized once on the way, but he
saved most of the cargo.</p>
<p>Sixteen miles out from the river he found a location in the
forest which suited him. Since his boat would not float up-stream,
he sold it, left his property with a settler, and trudged back home
to Kentucky, all the way on foot, to bring his wife and the two
children—Sarah, nine years old, and Abraham, seven. Another
son had been born to them some years before, but had died when only
three days old. This time the trip to Indiana was made with the aid
of two horses, used by the wife and children for riding and to
carry their little equipage for camping at night by the way. In a
straight line, the distance is about fifty miles; but it was
probably doubled by the very few roads it was possible
to<SPAN name="page8" id="page8"></SPAN>
follow.</p>
<p>Having reached the Ohio and crossed to where he had left his
goods on the Indiana side, he hired a wagon, which carried them and
his family the remaining sixteen miles through the forest to the
spot he had chosen, which in due time became the Lincoln farm. It
was a piece of heavily timbered land, one and a half miles east of
what has since become the village of Gentryville, in Spencer
County. The lateness of the autumn compelled him to provide a
shelter as quickly as possible, and he built what is known on the
frontier as a half-faced camp, about fourteen feet square. This
structure differed from a cabin in that it was closed on only three
sides, and open to the weather on the fourth. It was usual to build
the fire in front of the open side, and the necessity of providing
a chimney was thus avoided. He doubtless intended it for a mere
temporary shelter, and as such it would have sufficed for good
weather in the summer season. But it was a rude provision for the
winds and snows of an Indiana winter. It illustrates Thomas
Lincoln's want of energy, that the family remained housed in this
primitive camp for nearly a whole year. He must, however, not be
too hastily blamed for his dilatory improvement. It is not likely
that he remained altogether idle. A more substantial cabin was
probably begun, and, besides, there was the heavy work of clearing
away the timber—that is, cutting down the large trees,
chopping them into suitable lengths, and rolling them together into
great log-heaps to be burned, or splitting them into rails to fence
the small field upon which he managed to raise a patch of corn and
other things during the ensuing summer.</p>
<p>Thomas Lincoln's arrival was in the autumn of 1816. That same
winter<SPAN name="page9" id="page9"></SPAN> Indiana was admitted to the Union as a
State. There were as yet no roads worthy of the name to or from the
settlement formed by himself and seven or eight neighbors at
various distances. The village of Gentryville was not even begun.
There was no sawmill to saw lumber. Breadstuff could be had only by
sending young Abraham, on horseback, seven miles, with a bag of
corn to be ground on a hand grist-mill. In the course of two or
three years a road from Corydon to Evansville was laid out, running
past the Lincoln farm; and perhaps two or three years afterward
another from Rockport to Bloomington crossing the former. This gave
rise to Gentryville. James Gentry entered the land at the
cross-roads. Gideon Romine opened a small store, and their joint
efforts succeeded in getting a post-office established from which
the village gradually grew. For a year after his arrival Thomas
Lincoln remained a mere squatter. Then he entered the
quarter-section (one hundred and sixty acres) on which he opened
his farm, and made some payments on his entry, but only enough in
eleven years to obtain a patent for one half of it.</p>
<p>About the time that he moved into his new cabin, relatives and
friends followed from Kentucky, and some of them in turn occupied
the half-faced camp. In the ensuing autumn much sickness prevailed
in the Pigeon Creek settlement. It was thirty miles to the nearest
doctor, and several persons died, among them Nancy Hanks Lincoln,
the mother of young Abraham. The mechanical skill of Thomas was
called upon to make the coffins, the necessary lumber for which had
to be cut with a whip-saw.</p>
<p>The death of Mrs. Lincoln was a serious loss to her husband and
children. Abraham's sister Sarah was only eleven years old, and
the<SPAN name="page10" id="page10"></SPAN> tasks and cares of the little household
were altogether too heavy for her years and experience.
Nevertheless, they struggled on bravely through the winter and next
summer, but in the autumn of 1819 Thomas Lincoln went back to
Kentucky and married Sally Bush Johnston, whom he had known and, it
is said, courted when she was merely Sally Bush. Johnston, to whom
she was married about the time Lincoln married Nancy Hanks, had
died, leaving her with three children. She came of a better station
in life than Thomas, and is represented as a woman of uncommon
energy and thrift, possessing excellent qualities both of head and
heart. The household goods which she brought to the Lincoln home in
Indiana filled a four-horse wagon. Not only were her own three
children well clothed and cared for, but she was able at once to
provide little Abraham and Sarah with home comforts to which they
had been strangers during the whole of their young lives. Under her
example and urging, Thomas at once supplied the yet unfinished
cabin with floor, door, and windows, and existence took on a new
aspect for all the inmates. Under her management and control, all
friction and jealousy was avoided between the two sets of children,
and contentment, if not happiness, reigned in the little cabin.</p>
<p>The new stepmother quickly perceived the superior aptitudes and
abilities of Abraham. She became very fond of him, and in every way
encouraged his marked inclination to study and improve himself. The
opportunities for this were meager enough. Mr. Lincoln himself has
drawn a vivid outline of the situation:</p>
<p>"It was a wild region, with many bears and other wild animals
still in the woods. There I grew up. There were some schools so
called, but no qualification was ever required of a teacher beyond
readin', writin',<SPAN name="page11" id="page11"></SPAN> and cipherin' to the Rule of Three. If a
straggler supposed to understand Latin happened to sojourn in the
neighborhood, he was looked upon as a wizard. There was absolutely
nothing to excite ambition for education."</p>
<p>As Abraham was only in his eighth year when he left Kentucky,
the little beginnings he had learned in the schools kept by Riney
and Hazel in that State must have been very slight—probably
only his alphabet, or possibly three or four pages of Webster's
"Elementary Spelling Book." It is likely that the multiplication
table was as yet an unfathomed mystery, and that he could not write
or read more than the words he spelled. There is no record at what
date he was able again to go to school in Indiana. Some of his
schoolmates think it was in his tenth year, or soon after he fell
under the care of his stepmother. The school-house was a low cabin
of round logs, a mile and a half from the Lincoln home, with split
logs or "puncheons" for a floor, split logs roughly leveled with an
ax and set up on legs for benches, and a log cut out of one end and
the space filled in with squares of greased paper for window panes.
The main light in such primitive halls of learning was admitted by
the open door. It was a type of school building common in the early
West, in which many a statesman gained the first rudiments of
knowledge. Very often Webster's "Elementary Spelling Book" was the
only text-book. Abraham's first Indiana school was probably held
five years before Gentryville was located and a store established
there. Until then it was difficult, if not impossible, to obtain
books, slates, pencils, pen, ink, and paper, and their use was
limited to settlers who had brought them when they came. It is
reasonable to infer that the Lincoln<SPAN name="page12" id="page12"></SPAN> family had no such luxuries,
and, as the Pigeon Creek settlement numbered only eight or ten
families there must have been very few pupils to attend this first
school. Nevertheless, it is worthy of special note that even under
such difficulties and limitations, the American thirst for
education planted a school-house on the very forefront of every
settlement.</p>
<p>Abraham's second school in Indiana was held about the time he
was fourteen years old, and the third in his seventeenth year. By
this time he probably had better teachers and increased facilities,
though with the disadvantage of having to walk four or five miles
to the school-house. He learned to write, and was provided with
pen, ink, and a copy-book, and probably a very limited supply of
writing-paper, for facsimiles have been printed of several scraps
and fragments upon which he had carefully copied tables, rules, and
sums from his arithmetic, such as those of long measure, land
measure, and dry measure, and examples in multiplication and
compound division. All this indicates that he pursued his studies
with a very unusual purpose and determination, not only to
understand them at the moment, but to imprint them indelibly upon
his memory, and even to regain them in visible form for reference
when the school-book might no longer be in his hands or
possession.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln has himself written that these three different
schools were "kept successively by Andrew Crawford, ——
Swaney, and Azel W. Dorsey." Other witnesses state the succession
somewhat differently. The important fact to be gleaned from what we
learn about Mr. Lincoln's schooling is that the instruction given
him by these five different teachers—two in Kentucky and
three in Indiana, in short sessions of attendance scattered over a
period of nine years—made up in all less than a
twelvemonth.<SPAN name="page13" id="page13"></SPAN> He said of it in 1860, "Abraham now thinks
that the aggregate of all his schooling did not amount to one
year." This distribution of the tuition he received was doubtless
an advantage. Had it all been given him at his first school in
Indiana, it would probably not have carried him half through
Webster's "Elementary Spelling Book." The lazy or indifferent
pupils who were his schoolmates doubtless forgot what was taught
them at one time before they had opportunity at another; but to the
exceptional character of Abraham, these widely separated fragments
of instruction were precious steps to self-help, of which he made
unremitting use.</p>
<p>It is the concurrent testimony of his early companions that he
employed all his spare moments in keeping on with some one of his
studies. His stepmother says: "Abe read diligently.... He read
every book he could lay his hands on; and when he came across a
passage that struck him, he would write it down on boards, if he
had no paper, and keep it there until he did get paper. Then he
would rewrite it, look at it, repeat it. He had a copy-book, a kind
of scrap-book, in which he put down all things, and thus preserved
them." There is no mention that either he or other pupils had
slates and slate-pencils to use at school or at home, but he found
a ready substitute in pieces of board. It is stated that he
occupied his long evenings at home doing sums on the fire-shovel.
Iron fire-shovels were a rarity among pioneers; they used, instead
a broad, thin clapboard with one end narrowed to a handle. In
cooking by the open fire, this domestic implement was of the first
necessity to arrange piles of live coals on the hearth, over which
they set their "skillet" and "oven," upon the lids of which live
coals were also heaped.<SPAN name="page14" id="page14"></SPAN></p>
<p>Upon such a wooden shovel Abraham was able to work his sums by
the flickering firelight. If he had no pencil, he could use
charcoal, and probably did so. When it was covered with figures he
would take a drawing-knife, shave it off clean, and begin again.
Under these various disadvantages, and by the help of such
troublesome expedients, Abraham Lincoln worked his way to so much
of an education as placed him far ahead of his schoolmates, and
quickly abreast of the acquirements of his various teachers. The
field from which he could glean knowledge was very limited, though
he diligently borrowed every book in the neighborhood. The list is
a short one—"Robinson Crusoe," Aesop's "Fables," Bunyan's
"Pilgrim's Progress," Weems's "Life of Washington," and a "History
of the United States." When he had exhausted other books, he even
resolutely attacked the Revised Statutes of Indiana, which Dave
Turnham, the constable, had in daily use and permitted him to come
to his house and read.</p>
<p>It needs to be borne in mind that all this effort at
self-education extended from first to last over a period of twelve
or thirteen years, during which he was also performing hard manual
labor, and proves a degree of steady, unflinching perseverance in a
line of conduct that brings into strong relief a high aim and the
consciousness of abundant intellectual power. He was not permitted
to forget that he was on an uphill path, a stern struggle with
adversity. The leisure hours which he was able to devote to his
reading, his penmanship, and his arithmetic were by no means
overabundant. Writing of his father's removal from Kentucky to
Indiana, he says:</p>
<p>"He settled in an unbroken forest, and the clearing away of
surplus wood was the great task ahead. Abraham, though very young,
was large of his<SPAN name="page15" id="page15"></SPAN> age, and had an ax put into his hands at
once; and from that till within his twenty-third year he was almost
constantly handling that most useful instrument—less, of
course, in plowing and harvesting seasons."</p>
<p>John Hanks mentions the character of his work a little more in
detail. "He and I worked barefoot, grubbed it, plowed, mowed, and
cradled together; plowed corn, gathered it, and shucked corn." The
sum of it all is that from his boyhood until after he was of age,
most of his time was spent in the hard and varied muscular labor of
the farm and the forest, sometimes on his father's place, sometimes
as a hired hand for other pioneers. In this very useful but
commonplace occupation he had, however, one advantage. He was not
only very early in his life a tall, strong country boy, but as he
grew up he soon became a tall, strong, sinewy man. He early
attained the unusual height of six feet four inches, with arms of
proportionate length. This gave him a degree of power and facility
as an ax-man which few had or were able to acquire. He was
therefore usually able to lead his fellows in efforts of both
muscle and mind. He performed the tasks of his daily labor and
mastered the lessons of his scanty schooling with an ease and
rapidity they were unable to attain.</p>
<p>Twice during his life in Indiana this ordinary routine was
somewhat varied. When he was sixteen, while working for a man who
lived at the mouth of Anderson's Creek, it was part of his duty to
manage a ferry-boat which transported passengers across the Ohio
River. It was doubtless this which three years later brought him a
new experience, that he himself related in these words:</p>
<p>"When he was nineteen, still residing in Indiana, he made his
first<SPAN name="page16" id="page16"></SPAN> trip upon a flatboat to New Orleans. He
was a hired hand merely, and he and a son of the owner, without
other assistance, made the trip. The nature of part of the 'cargo
load,' as it was called, made it necessary for them to linger and
trade along the sugar-coast, and one night they were attacked by
seven negroes with intent to kill and rob them. They were hurt some
in the mêlée, but succeeded in driving the negroes
from the boat, and then 'cut cable,' 'weighed anchor,' and
left."</p>
<p>This commercial enterprise was set on foot by Mr. Gentry, the
founder of Gentryville. The affair shows us that Abraham had gained
an enviable standing in the village as a man of honesty, skill, and
judgment—one who could be depended on to meet such
emergencies as might arise in selling their bacon and other produce
to the cotton-planters along the shores of the lower
Mississippi.</p>
<p>By this time Abraham's education was well advanced. His
handwriting, his arithmetic, and his general intelligence were so
good that he had occasionally been employed to help in the
Gentryville store, and Gentry thus knew by personal test that he
was entirely capable of assisting his son Allen in the trading
expedition to New Orleans. For Abraham, on the other hand, it was
an event which must have opened up wide vistas of future hope and
ambition. Allen Gentry probably was nominal supercargo and
steersman, but we may easily surmise that Lincoln, as the "bow
oar," carried his full half of general responsibility. For this
service the elder Gentry paid him eight dollars a month and his
passage home on a steamboat. It was the future President's first
eager look into the wide, wide world.</p>
<p>Abraham's devotion to his books and his sums stands forth in
more<SPAN name="page17" id="page17"></SPAN> striking light from the fact that his
habits differed from those of most frontier boys in one important
particular. Almost every youth of the backwoods early became a
habitual hunter and superior marksman. The Indiana woods were yet
swarming with game, and the larder of every cabin depended largely
upon this great storehouse of wild meat.<SPAN name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</SPAN>
The Pigeon Creek settlement was especially fortunate on this point.
There was in the neighborhood of the Lincoln home what was known in
the West as a deer-lick—that is, there existed a feeble
salt-spring, which impregnated the soil in its vicinity or created
little pools of brackish water—and various kinds of animals,
particularly deer, resorted there to satisfy their natural craving
for salt by drinking from these or licking the moist earth. Hunters
took advantage of this habit, and one of their common customs was
to watch in the dusk or at night, and secure their approaching prey
by an easy shot. Skill with the rifle and success in the chase were
points of friendly emulation. In many localities the boy or youth
who shot a squirrel in any part of the animal except its head
became the butt of the jests of his companions and elders. Yet,
under such conditions and opportunities Abraham was neither a
hunter nor a marksman. He tells us:</p>
<p>"A few days before the completion of his eighth year, in the
absence of his father, a flock of wild turkeys approached the new
log cabin, and Abraham, with a rifle gun, standing inside, shot
through a crack and killed one of them. He has never since pulled a
trigger on any larger game."</p>
<p><SPAN name="page18" id="page18"></SPAN> The hours which other boys spent in
roaming the woods or lying in ambush at the deer-lick, he preferred
to devote to his effort at mental improvement. It can hardly be
claimed that he did this from calculating ambition. It was a native
intellectual thirst, the significance of which he did not himself
yet understand. Such exceptional characteristics manifested
themselves only in a few matters. In most particulars he grew up as
the ordinary backwoods boy develops into the youth and man. As he
was subjected to their usual labors, so also he was limited to
their usual pastimes and enjoyments.</p>
<p>The varied amusements common to our day were not within their
reach. The period of the circus, the political speech, and the
itinerant show had not yet come. Schools, as we have seen, and
probably meetings or church services, were irregular, to be had
only at long intervals. Primitive athletic games and commonplace
talk, enlivened by frontier jests and stories, formed the sum of
social intercourse when half a dozen or a score of settlers of
various ages came together at a house-raising or corn-husking, or
when mere chance brought them at the same time to the post-office
or the country store. On these occasions, however, Abraham was,
according to his age, always able to contribute his full share or
more. Most of his natural aptitudes equipped him especially to play
his part well. He had quick intelligence, ready sympathy, a
cheerful temperament, a kindling humor, a generous and helpful
spirit. He was both a ready talker and appreciative listener. By
virtue of his tall stature and unusual strength of sinew and
muscle, he was from the beginning a leader in all athletic games;
by reason of his studious<SPAN name="page19" id="page19"></SPAN> habits and his extraordinarily retentive
memory he quickly became the best story-teller among his
companions. Even the slight training he gained from his studies
greatly quickened his perceptions and broadened and steadied the
strong reasoning faculty with which nature had endowed him.</p>
<p>As the years of his youth passed by, his less gifted comrades
learned to accept his judgments and to welcome his power to
entertain and instruct them. On his own part, he gradually learned
to write not merely with the hand, but also with the mind—to
think. It was an easy transition for him from remembering the
jingle of a commonplace rhyme to the constructing of a doggerel
verse, and he did not neglect the opportunity of practising his
penmanship in such impromptus. Tradition also relates that he added
to his list of stories and jokes humorous imitations from the
sermons of eccentric preachers. But tradition has very likely both
magnified and distorted these alleged exploits of his satire and
mimicry. All that can be said of them is that his youth was marked
by intellectual activity far beyond that of his companions.</p>
<p>It is an interesting coincidence that nine days before the birth
of Abraham Lincoln Congress passed the act to organize the
Territory of Illinois, which his future life and career were
destined to render so illustrious. Another interesting coincidence
may be found in the fact that in the same year (1818) in which
Congress definitely fixed the number of stars and stripes in the
national flag, Illinois was admitted as a State to the Union. The
Star of Empire was moving westward at an accelerating speed.
Alabama was admitted in 1819, Maine in 1820, Missouri in 1821.
Little by little the line of frontier settlement was pushing itself
toward the Mississippi. No sooner had the pioneer built him a cabin
and opened his little farm, than during every summer<SPAN name="page20" id="page20"></SPAN>
canvas-covered wagons wound their toilsome way over the new-made
roads into the newer wilderness, while his eyes followed them with
wistful eagerness. Thomas Lincoln and his Pigeon Creek relatives
and neighbors could not forever withstand the contagion of this
example, and at length they yielded to the irrepressible longing by
a common impulse. Mr. Lincoln writes:</p>
<p>"March 1, 1830, Abraham having just completed his twenty-first
year, his father and family, with the families of the two daughters
and sons-in-law of his stepmother, left the old homestead in
Indiana and came to Illinois. Their mode of conveyance was wagons
drawn by ox-teams, and Abraham drove one of the teams. They reached
the county of Macon, and stopped there some time within the same
month of March. His father and family settled a new place on the
north side of the Sangamon River, at the junction of the timber
land and prairie, about ten miles westerly from Decatur. Here they
built a log cabin, into which they removed, and made sufficient of
rails to fence ten acres of ground, fenced and broke the ground,
and raised a crop of sown corn upon it the same year.... The
sons-in-law were temporarily settled in other places in the county.
In the autumn all hands were greatly afflicted with ague and fever,
to which they had not been used, and by which they were greatly
discouraged, so much so that they determined on leaving the county.
They remained, however, through the succeeding winter, which was
the winter of the very celebrated 'deep snow' of Illinois."</p>
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