The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln eBook

Francis Fisher Browne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 764 pages of information about The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln.

The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln eBook

Francis Fisher Browne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 764 pages of information about The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln.
bodies.  He was better read then than the world knows or is likely to know exactly.  No man could talk to me as he did that night unless he had known something of geography as well as astronomy.  He often commented or talked to me about what he had read,—­seemed to read it out of the book as he went along.  He was the learned boy among us unlearned folks.  He took great pains to explain; could do it so simply.  He was diffident, too.”

But another change was about to come into the life of Abraham Lincoln.  In 1830 his father set forth once more on the trail of the emigrant.  He had become dissatisfied with his location in southern Indiana, and hearing favorable reports of the prairie lands of Illinois hoped for better fortunes there.  He parted with his farm and prepared for the journey to Macon County, Illinois.  Abraham visited the neighbors and bade them goodbye; but on the morning selected for their departure, when it came time to start, he was missing.  He was found weeping at his mother’s grave, whither he had gone as soon as it was light.  The thought of leaving her behind filled him with unspeakable anguish.  The household goods were loaded, the oxen yoked, the family got into the covered wagon, and Lincoln took his place by the oxen to drive.  One of the neighbors has said of this incident:  “Well do I remember the day the Lincolns left for Illinois.  Little did I think that I was looking at a boy who would one day be President of the United States!”

An interesting personal sketch of Thomas Lincoln is given by Mr. George B. Balch, who was for many years a resident of Lerna, Coles County, Illinois.  Among other things he says:  “Thomas Lincoln, father of the great President, was called Uncle Tommy by his friends and Old Tom Lincoln by other people.  His property consisted of an old horse, a pair of oxen and a few sheep—­seven or eight head.  My father bought two of the sheep, they being the first we owned after settling in Illinois.  Thomas Lincoln was a large, bulky man, six feet tall and weighing about two hundred pounds.  He was large-boned, coarse-featured, had a large blunt nose, florid complexion, light sandy hair and whiskers.  He was slow in speech and slow in gait.  His whole appearance denoted a man of small intellect and less ambition.  It is generally supposed that he was a farmer; and such he was, if one who tilled so little land by such primitive modes could be so called.  He never planted more than a few acres, and instead of gathering and hauling his crop in a wagon he usually carried it in baskets or large trays.  He was uneducated, illiterate, content with living from hand to mouth.  His death occurred on the fifteenth day of January, 1851.  He was buried in a neighboring country graveyard, about a mile north of Janesville, Coles County.  There was nothing to mark the place of his burial until February, 1861, when Abraham Lincoln paid a last visit to his grave just before he left Springfield for Washington.  On a piece of oak

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Project Gutenberg
The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.