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PREFACE.

IN

N the following pages I have endeavored to give the life of Abraham Lincoln, from his birth to his inauguration as President of the United States. The reader will judge the character of the performance by the work itself: for that reason I shall spare him the perusal of much prefatory explanation.

At the time of Mr. Lincoln's death, I determined to write his history, as I had in my possession much valuable material for such a purpose. I did not then imagine that any person could have better or more extensive materials than I possessed. I soon learned, however, that Mr. William H. Herndon of Springfield, Ill., was similarly engaged. There could be no rivalry between us; for the supreme object of both was to make the real history and character of Mr. Lincoln as well known to the public as they were to us. He deplored, as I did, the many publications pretending to be biographies which came teeming from the press, so long as the public interest about Mr. Lincoln excited the hope of gain. Out of the mass of works which appeared, of one only — Dr. Holland's — is it possible to speak with any degree of respect.

Early in 1869, Mr. Herndon placed at my disposal his remarkable collection of materials, the richest, rarest, and fullest collection it was possible to conceive. Along with them came an offer of hearty co-operation, of which I have availed myself so extensively, that no art of mine would serve to conceal it. Added to my own collections, these acquisitions have enabled me to do what could not have been done before, biography of Mr. Lincoln.

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Mr. Herndon had been the partner in business and the intimate personal associate of Mr. Lincoln for something like a quarter of a century; and Mr.

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Lincoln had lived familiarly with several members of his family long before their individual acquaintance began. New Salem, Springfield, the old judicial circuit, the habits and friends of Mr. Lincoln, were as well known to Mr. Herndon as to himself. With these advantages, and from the numberless facts and hints which had dropped from Mr. Lincoln during the confidential intercourse of an ordinary lifetime, Mr. Herndon was able to institute a thorough system of inquiry for every noteworthy circumstance and every incident of value in Mr. Lincoln's career.

The fruits of Mr. Herndon's labors are garnered in three enormous volumes of original manuscripts and a mass of unarranged letters and papers. They comprise the recollections of Mr. Lincoln's nearest friends; of the surviving members of his family and his family-connections; of the men still living who knew him and his parents in Kentucky; of his schoolfellows, neighbors, and acquaintances in Indiana; of the better part of the whole population of New Salem; of his associates and relatives at Springfield; and of lawyers, judges, politicians, and statesmen everywhere, who had any thing of interest or moment to relate. They were collected at vast expense of time, labor, and money, involving the employment of many agents, long journeys, tedious examinations, and voluminous correspondence. Upon the value of these materials it would be impossible to place an estimate. That I have used them conscientiously and justly is the only merit to which I lay claim.

As a general thing, my text will be found to support itself; but whether the particular authority be mentioned or not, it is proper to remark, that each statement of fact is fully sustained by indisputable evidence remaining in my possession. My original plan was to verify every important statement by one or more appropriate citations; but it was early abandoned, not because it involved unwelcome labor, but because it encumbered my pages with a great array of obscure names, which the reader would probably pass unnoticed.

I dismiss this volume into the world, with no claim for it of literary excellence, but with the hope that it will prove what it purports to be, — a faithful record of the life of Abraham Lincoln down to the 4th of March, 1861.

WASHINGTON CITY, May, 1872.

WARD H. LAMON.

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HON. DAVID Davis, Judge of tHE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 313

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FAC-SIMILE OF MR. LINCOLN'S ACCOUNT OF HIS FAMILY

Appendix.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

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CHAPTER I.

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Birth.-
His father and mother. - History of Thomas Lincoln and his family
a necessary part of Abraham Lincoln's biography. - Thomas Lincoln's
ancestors. Members of the family remaining in Virginia. - Birth of
Thomas Lincoln. — Removal to Kentucky.— Life in the Wilderness. —
Lincolns settle in Mercer County.-Thomas Lincoln's father shot by
Indians.—Widow and family remove to Washington County. Thomas
poor. - Wanders into Breckinridge County.— Goes to Hardin County. —
Works at the carpenter's trade. - Cannot read or write.- Personal
appearance. Called "Linckhorn," or "Linckhern."-Thomas Lincoln
as a carpenter. - Marries Nancy Hanks. — Previously courted Sally
Bush. Character of Sally Bush.-The person and character of Nancy
Hanks. Thomas and Nancy Lincoln go to live in a shed. - Birth of a
daughter. They remove to Nolin Creek. - Birth of Abraham. - Re-
moval to Knob Creek.- Little Abe initiated into wild sports. His sad-
ness. Goes to school. -Thomas Lincoln concludes to move. - Did not
fly from the taint of slavery. — Abraham Lincoln always reticent about
the history and character of his family.-Record in his Bible.

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CHAPTER II.

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Thomas Lincoln builds a boat. -Floats down to the Ohio. - Boat capsizes.
Lands in Perry County, Indiana. -Selects a location.-Walks back to
Knob Creek for wife and children. - Makes his way through the wilderness.
- Settles between the two Pigeon Creeks. — Gentryville. — Selects a site. —
Lincoln builds a half-faced camp. - Clears ground and raises a small crop.
-Dennis Hanks.-Lincoln builds a cabin. - State of the country. -
Indiana admitted to the Union. Rise of Gentryville. — Character of the
people.- Lincoln's patent for his land. - His farm, cabin, furniture. —
The milk-sickness. — Death of Nancy Hanks Lincoln. — Funeral discourse
by David Elkin. - Grave. - Tom Lincoln marries Sally Bush. - Her

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