n^^. T-4.V7 Book_ -9? UtlOOkfttAMA w THE LINCOLN ORY-CALENDAR The True Lincoln Stories and the Master Story-Teller's Own Reasons for Them -7^ HERE is nothing else in life or literature like the Lincoln story. There are many collections of so-called stories and "yams" attrib- uted to Abraham Lincoln. He once said of these that only about one in six attributed to him had ever been told by himself. This ratio has diminished, doubtless, since his death. The true Lincoln story is that which illustrates, illuminates or enforces a truth. His stories, torn from their surroundings, lose their point, their peculiar Lincoln tang, their sparkle, their very life. Lincoln's anecdotes shed gleams of light on many dark subjects. The best of them are those which throw light upon himself and his own quaint and original personality. That is the object of "The Lincoln Story- Calendar." Lincoln's early life is herein given in narrative form with an occasional illustration by the master story-teller himself. His later and more public career is illumined by flashes and gleams of Lincoln's wit and humor. It is interesting to note President Lincoln's own reasons for telling his many stories, as he stated them to Col. Silas W. Burt, late one night in the summer of '63, as given in "The Cen- tury Magazine" for February, 1907. Colonel Burt relates that one of the party then interviewing the President, at the Soldiers' Home, carelessly said: " 'Mr. President, tell as-one of your good stories.' "The President dre ., himself up and with great dignity addressed us, saying : *I believe I have the popular reputation of being a story-teller, but I do not de- serve the name in its general sense; for it is not the story itself, but its purpose, or effect, that interests me. I often avoid a long and useless discussion by others, or a laborious explanation on my own part, by a story that illustrates my point of view. So, too, the sharpness of a refusal or the edge of a rebuke may be blunted by an appropriate story, so as to save the wounded feeling and yet serve the pur- pose. No, I am not simply a story-teller, but story-telling, as an emollient, saves me much friction and distress.' " / • If M4JI w THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR ') SIGNING THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION, NEW YEAR'S DAY N the first day of January, 1863, Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proc- lamation, which ranks with the Magna Charta of the English barons and the simple and devout "Compact" signed by the Pilgrim Fathers in the cabin of the "Mayflower," as one of the greatest documents of freedom in all history. During the long, disastrous, distressing summer of '62 President Lincoln had devoted many secret hours to putting this immortal paper into the right form. He had been nagged and badgered by abolitionists and others who went away from his presence saying he was entirely too slow and timid to free the slaves. While his heart yearned to liberate the negro his head held him back. From his height he could view, as no one else could see, that the hour for emancipation had not yet struck. One day a new committee called to urge him to make an ofiBcial declaration of freedom for the blacks of the South. He replied vyith a sad smile, which they thought hopeless, that if he de- clared the negroes free, now, while the Federal armies were being defeated in battle after battle, "it would be like the pope's bull against the comet." About the middle of September, 1862, when he really had the document written and was only waiting for the right psychological moment to announce it, a group of ministers from Chicago waited upon him to urge him to do something short, sharp and decisive for the negro. He dared not let them know how much his own sentiments accorded with theirs, so he saw them leave the audi- ence, murmuring and dissatisfied. But one of them, unable to give up, returned with this final appeal : "Sir," said he, "a message has come from our divine Master commanding you, through me, to open the door of bondage that the slave may go free!" The beleaguered President, with a ghastly smile, instantly replied: "I have studied this question by night and by day, for weeks and for months. Isn't it rather odd that the only channel your divine Master could send such a message by is the roundabout route by way of that awful wicked city of Chicago ?" Those ministers must have been astounded, a few days later, to see the announcement that the President had issued his Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862, to go into effect one hundred days later, which happened to be the first day of January, 1863. When the President came in from the popular New Year's Day reception, he sat down to sign the great document, but he found his hand was lame and his fingers too unsteady to write. Looking up at Mr. Seward, the Secretary of State, who had just laid the paper before him, he said: "I have been shaking hands since nine o'clock this morning and my right arm is almost paralyzed. If my name ever goes into history it will be for this act and my whole soul is in it. If my hand trembles when I sign the Proclamation, all who examine the document hereafter will say, 'He hesitated.' " He then turned and deliberately wrote the signature with which the world is now familiar and of which this is a reduced facsimile: I9IO JANUARY SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. I9IO SAT. l'^ I / J THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR LINCOLN'S GRANDFATHER BRAHAM LINCOLN, grandfather to the President, was a young man of considerable wealth for his time. A lover of adventure, he went from Virginia to Kentucky during the dangerous days of Daniel Boone, who was a distant relative, both Lincoln and Boone being of Quaker descent. After Lincoln had taken a large tract of land and built a cabin on it, he went back to Virginia and brought his wife and three sons, Mordecai, Josiah and Thomas, with him to the wilds of Kentucky. While working with his sons in the clearing, not far from his log house, the father was shot by one of a band of Indians hidden in the edge of the forest. The two older boys ran in different directions, Mordecai into the cabin for a gun, and Josiah to the stockade, not far away, for assistance. Little Thomas, the youngest, a boy of six, was left beside his father's body. A huge Indian stole out of the woods and was just bending over to seize the little boy when, with a sudden cry, he threw up his hands and fell dead beside the white man he had just killed. It was Mordecai's unerring aim, shooting between the logs of the cabin. Thus released, the little boy, with the instinct of a wild creature, ran toward the house and was met and rescued before the other Indians could follow him. Mor- decai held the savages at bay until Josiah arrived with help from the fort, and little Thomas Lincoln was spared to grow to manhood and become the father of the six- teenth President of the United States. "' '"'T "S ^l "'T'! ""* "" dead betide the white mui I9IO JANUARY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 8 i) THE LINCOLN #J STORY-CALENDAR UNCLE MORDECAI ORDECAI LINCOLN never forgave the red man for the murder of his father. He is said to have become "an inveterate Indian stalker," and seems to have cared little whether the savage who came within the range of his rifle was friend or foe. He went on the assumption that "the only good Indian is a dead Indian." Being his father's eldest son he inherited all the property left in the family, as the English custom of primogeniture prevailed in Virginia and Kentucky at that time. It is quite likely that Grandfather Abraham's property was in bad shape for any one to inherit at the time of his sudden death. Mordecai Lincoln became sheriff of Washington County, Kentucky, was a member of the State legislature and was a good and influential citizen in that rough, wild country. He was an honest man and, in spite of his deadly disposition toward the Indian, was said to be as tender-hearted as a woman. It is highly interesting to quote what an old friend was fond of telling about Mordecai Lincoln, the Presi- dent's uncle: "He was, naturally, a man of considerable genius and great drollery. It would almost make you laugh to look at him. I never saw but one other man whose quiet, droll look excited in me the same disposition to laugh, and that was Artemus Ward. Mordecai was quite a story-teller, and in this Abe resembled his 'Uncle Mord,' as we called him. Abe Lincoln had a very high opinion of his uncle, •;^%^-4 _, and on one occasion remarked : 'I have often said that 7;W^f^L-''i ^'''i^ ^^' Uncle Mord had run off with M^> all the talents of the - '\**^l--fA^' family.' " 'Ad inveterftte Indi&n Stalker* I9IO JANUARY 1910 SUN. MON. 10 TUES. II WED. 12 THUR. FRI. SAT. 13 14 15 ^ i STORY-CALENDAR ABRAHAM LINCOLN'S FATHER AND MOTHER HOMAS LINCOLN moved about with his mother from one country place in Ken- tucky to another. He was brought up a "wandering laboring boy," with no chance to get an education or any property. He was not enterprising or indus- trious, as his son proved to be. He hired out as a farm hand and managed to learn the trade of a carpenter and cabinetmaker. He was an honest, good-na- tured man, often imposed upon, but he became, when aroused, a "formidable adversary." "He was above the medium height, with a powerful frame, and had a wide local reputation as a wrestler." He Uved and learned his trade with a man named Berry, the guardian of an orphaned niece. Nancy Hanks. "Nancy was above the ordinary height, weighed about one hundred and thirty pounds was slenderly built and had much the appearance of one inclined to consumption. Her skin was dark; hair dark brown; eyes gray and small; forehead prominent; face sharp and angu- lar with a marked expression of melancholy which fixed itself in the memory of every one who ever knew her. Though her life was seemingly beclouded by a spirit of sadness, she was m disposition amiable and generally cheerful." ^ . , ^ „ , Nancy was in her twenty-third year when she was married to Thomas Lincoln, June 12, 1806, by Jesse Head, a neighboring local preacher of the Methodist Church. Dennis Hanks, a cousin of Nancy's, who afterwards became a member of Thomas Lincoln s family once told of the early married life of Thomas and Nancy Lincoln, at Elizabethtown, Kentucky: "When Nancy married Tom he was workin' in a carpenter shop. It wasn't Tom's fault he couldn t make a livin' by his trade. Thar was sca'cely any money in that kentry. Every man had to do his own tinkerin', an' keep everlastin'ly at it to get enough to eat. So Tom tuk up some land. It was mighty ornery land, but it was the best Tom could git when he hadn't much to trade for it. . . . "Tom thought a heap o' Nancy, an' he was as good to her as he knowed how. He didn't drink or swear or play cyards or fight, an' them was drinkin', cussin', quarrelsome days. Tom was popylar, an' he could lick a bully if he had to. He just couldn't git ahead, some- how." Thomas and Nancy Lincoln removed from Elizabeth- town, after the birth of their first child, Sarah, to Rock Spring Farm on Nolen Creek near Hodgensville, Ken- tucky. Here Abraham Lincoln was born in the little log cabin, which illustrations have made famihar, on the twelfth day of February, 1809. '-^-•'-- "'S***!: The little log' cabin which illustrations have made fdmiliar I9IO JANUARY 1910 SUN. 16 MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. 17 18 19 20 21 SAT. 22 m m THE LINCOLN 9 STORY.CALENDAR LIFE ON KNOB CREEK ANCY'S boy baby" grew up in the cabin at Nolen Creek, learning to walk, play- ing with flowers and berries down by "the spring," watching birds and rabbits, like any other backwoods baby. When he was four years old he must have been happy when his father, mother and sister removed vdth him to Knob Creek, a dozen miles distant, where the father thought the land might be a little better for farming. Evidently Thomas Lincoln was tired of carpenter work, or he could get very little of it to do around Nolen Creek. At Knob Creek little Abe went with his sister to school to Zechariah Riney, and played with a boy named Austin Gollaher, who lived to be a very old man and loved to tell of saving the little Lincoln boy from drowning in the creek. In this humble home a baby brother was born and lived out his little life. Here the mother told the brother and sister stories from the Bible and talked to them about being good and living right, for both parents were re- ligious in their rude, simple way. Nancy Hanks could read, and in the evening, after the work was all done, she used to instruct and entertain them from the very few books the family pos- sessed. In order to prolong these hours of pleasure, little Abe, small as he was, would go out and cut spice-wood bushes to make a bright fire and a "sweet savor" for them all to enjoy together. The boy was sometimes sent to mill, and sometimes he helped his father by dropping corn and doing a boy's work about the little farm. That he went fishing occasionally is shown by the little story he once told -'**7'/ when asked what he remembered of the War of 1812: "Nothing but this," he replied. "I had been fishing one day and caught a little fish which I was taking home. I met a soldier on the road and, having been always told at home that we must be good to the soldiers, I gave him my fish." Lincoln once stated that his father disapproved of slavery in Kentucky and that was one reason for the family's removing from that State when the boy was seven years old. One of the last things the mother did was , to take Sarah and little Abe to visit their baby brother's grave, before emigrating to the still wilder country of Indiana Territory, which was ad- mitted as a State that year, 1816. * I getve him my Msh * I9IO JANUARY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. 23 24 25 26 27 FRI. SAT. 28 29 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR IN CAMP AND CABIN HOMAS LINCOLN built a flatboat and started on ahead of his little family to reconnoiter. He found a place which he thought suited their purpose on Prairie Fork of Pigeon Creek, in Spencer County, Indiana. Then he went back, where a rough trail had been blazed, and, in due time reached the old home in Kentucky, a journey of about one hun- dred miles. Loading his family and the few effects he had left in Ken- tucky on two horses, Thomas and his family "packed through to Posey's," a place on the Ohio, near Troy, in Perry County, Indiana, where he had left the furniture and other property on his first trip. Here they hired a wagon, loaded it and went on their way toward Pigeon Creek, camping and cooking at night. It was slow traveling, for the father had often to clear a road for the team with an ax. When they arrived at Prairie Fork they had to camp out while building a hut to live in. Thomas Lincoln put an ax into the hands of little Abe, who then began uncon- sciously to hew his way to the presidency. They first built a half-faced camp or shed made of poles, enclosed on three sides only, like a horse-shed. Under this poor shelter they lived a year, when Thomas, with the help of his seven-year-old son, had succeeded in erecting a one-room log cabin about fourteen feet square, no more commodious or comfortable than the poor hovels they had left behind them in Kentucky. Although Thomas Lincoln was a carpenter and cabinetmaker his cabin had neither door nor window. Of course he had much to do in clearing land and hunting the game on which the family subsisted. In these days, when hunt- ing seemed such a necessity, Abraham Lincoln did not like gun- ning. He was too tender-hearted to kill even legitimate game. In the odd little autobiography he wrote for a friend, many years after this, Mr. Lincoln wrote of himself in the third person: "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 the trigger on any larger game." "« ""° "^s"" *". ''•'' ''" ""^ I9I0 JANUARY— FEBRUARY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRL SAT 30 31 I 2 3 4 5 THE LINCOLN i STORY-CALENDAR LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY ON THE LIFE-MASK OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN Richard Watson Gilder HIS bronze doth keep the very form and mold Of our great martyr's face. Yes, this is he; That brow of wisdom, all benignity ; That human, humorous mouth; those cheeks that hold Like some harsh landscape all the summer's gold; That spirit fit for sorrow, as the sea For storms to beat on; the lone agony Those silent, patient lips too well foretold. Yes, this is he who ruled a world of men As might some prophet of the elder day Brooding above the tempest and the fray With deep-eyed thought and more than mortal ken. A power was his beyond the touch of art Or armed strength — his pure and mighty heart. From Volk'j Life-Mtuk I9IO FEBRUARY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. 8 THUR. 10 FRI. SAT. II 12 W' w^ THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR THE PASSING OF THE "ANGEL MOTHER" FTER the Lincoln family had moved from the shed of poles into the house of logs, Thomas and Betsy Sparrow, relatives of the Hanks family, came over from Kentucky and lived in the camp, intending to build themselves a cabin This was m 1818; the Lincolns had then lived in Indiana two years, and were yet without a comfortable home, even as hardy pioneers counted comforts During the autumn of that year three of the two families were seized with a terrible, malignant disease, which attacked the cattle also, and was called "the milk-sick." Thomas and Betsy Sparrow died first and little Abe helped make their rude coffins, for which his father cut the lumber out of surrounding trees with his whipsaw. While they were doing this the poor wife and mother was taken worse. There was no doctor within thirty-five rniles. Nancy Hanks Lincoln had suffered too much from privation, exposure and other hardships to survive such an attack. Realizing that she had not long to Uve, she talked long and earnestly with Sarah and little Abe. They did everything they could for their darling mother but she had not strength enough to rally. Feeling that the end was near she beckoned her children, who knelt by her bedside. Laying her thin white hands on their heads, she told them to be good to each other, take care of their father, and live so that they could meet her in heaven, and she, who gave us Lincoln and never knew," passed out of her hard life. The heart-broken little family buried the wife and mother, on a knoll in the edge of the clear- ing beside the new-made graves of her cousins Thomas and Betsy, whose deaths deprived the orphaned Denms Hanks of his foster parents also. The Lincolns took the forlorn lad. several years older than Abe, into their own motherless family. Dennis thus became Abe's almost constant companion and it is from his memories that we have learned the little we know about Abraham Lincoln's boy- hood. It was nearly a year before the funeral of Nancy Lincoln could be held. It has been said that the first letter Abraham ever wrote was to good old Parson Elkin, back in their "old Kentucky home," to ask him to visit them next time he came within fifty miles of Prairie Fork and preach his mother's funeral sermon. This the good preacher did during the following sum- mer. Abe always blessed the memory of his "angel mother," as he had learned, while a little boy, to call his own mother. Abe helped make their rude coffins J9I0 FEBRUARY SUN. MON. TUES. WED. 13 14 15 16 THUR. 17 FRI. 18 I9IO SAT. 19 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY THE PERPETUATION OF OUR POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS HE closing words of an address delivered January 27th, 1837, by Lincoln before the Young Men's Lyceum, a debating society he was instrumental in organizing shortly after he went to live in Springfield, Illinois. This was his first address, delivered at the age of twenty-five. It was in the involved style he at first affected and contains no hint of his Inaugurals or the simple grandeur of the Gettysburg Address. * "Another reason which once was, but which, to the same extent, is now no more, has done much in maintaining our institutions thus far. I mean the powerful influence which the interesting scenes of the Revolution had upon the passions of the people as distinguished from their judgment. By this influence, the jealousy, envy, and avarice incident to our nature . . . were for the time in a great measure smothered and rendered inactive, while the deep-rooted principles of hate, and the powerful motive of revenge, instead of being turned against each other, were directed exclusively against the British nation. . . . But this state of feeling must fade, is fading, has faded with the circumstances that produced it. "I do not mean to say that the scenes of the Revolution are now or ever will be entirely for- gotten, but that, like everything else, they must fade upon the memory of the world, and grow more and more dim by the lapse of time. ... At the close of that struggle nearly every adult male had been a participator in some of its scenes. The consequence was that of those scenes, in the form of a husband, a father, a son, or a brother, a living history was to be found in every family — a history ... in the limbs mangled, in the scars of wounds received in the midst of the very scenes related — a history, too, that could be read and understood alike by all, the wise and the ignorant, the learned and the unlearned. But those histories are gone. . . . "They were pillars of the temple of liberty, and now that they have crumbled away that temple must fall unless we, their descendants, supply their places with other pillars hewn from the solid quarry of sober rea- son. Passion has helped us, but can do so no more. It will in future be our enemy. Reason — cold, calculating, unimpassioned reason — must furnish all the materials for our future support and defense. Let those materials be molded into general intelligence, sound moral- ity, and, in particular, a reverence for the Con- stitution and laws; and that we improved to the last, that we remained free to the last, that we revered his name to the last, that during his long sleep we permitted no hostile foot to pass over or desecrate his resting place, shall be the that which to learn the last trump shall awaken our WASHINGTON. "Upon these let the proud fabric of free- dom rest, as the rock of its basis; and as truly as has been said of the only greater institution, 'the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.' " I9IO FEBRUARY i9i;o SUN. 20 MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 21 22 23 24 25 26 w 9 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT A MOTHER ? OOR Tom Lincoln missed his wife as much as a less shiftless man could. Sarah and Abe, assisted by Dennis, did all that children could do for the forlorn man, but he went about aloof and disconsolate. He stayed away on longer hunts than usual, as though loath to hang around the cabin. He might have laid the floor, hung the door and put oiled paper in the one window-opening to keep out the winter's cold, but he seemed not to care. The children, accustomed to such neglect, went about their daily work and play. Dennis Hanks has told of little Abe's hunger, even then, to read and write. He tells of teaching Abe to write his name in the salt of the deer "lick" near by with a stick. Dennis had made him pens of turkey-buzzard "quills," and decocted him some briar-root ink, so the boy had learned to write. One day the lonesome father told the children he was going to visit his former home in "Kaintuck." After he had been gone several weeks, they were surprised to see him drive up before the cabin with a four-horse team. They could hardly believe their eyes, he looked so spruce and alert. They could hardly believe their ears, either, when the brisk, happy acting man introduced them to the kind, motherly looking woman riding with him, as their new mother. He had heard that Sarah Bush, whom he had known in youth, was now a widow. She had married Jailer Johnston, of Elizabethtown. He had gone back and proposed to her, married her next day, and brought her away at once with her three children and household effects. The furniture was marvellous in the eyes of the Indiana children, for one piece was a "bureau worth forty dollars." The advent of Sarah Bush Lincoln brought new life and cheer into that neglected household. She induced even indolent Thomas Lincoln to exercise his ingenuity as a carpenter by laying the floor and filling the door and window spaces as they should have been two years before. She hung up curtains of deerskin, laid rugs of bearskin, and made the house cheery and comfortable. And the poor, motherless children were washed, combed, clothed; she made them, as she once said, "look a little more human." They could hudiy believe themieiTei I9IO FEBRUARY— MARCH 1910 SUN. MON. 27 28 TUES. I WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. THE LINCOLN STORY.CALCNDAR "ABE WAS A MOTHER'S BOY' T required a woman of more than ordinary tact to bring up children born to three different pairs of parents to live together in unity. But Dennis Hanks testifies to the fact that the Lincolns' second mother did that with rare success. She had three children of her own, named Sarah, Matilda and John Johnson. Because of another Sarah in the family, Sarah Lincoln's name was changed to Nancy, for her dead mother. Then, besides Abraham, there was the Lincolns' cousin Den- nis, making six children for that mother-hearted stepmother to recon- cile and rear to man's and woman's estate. Sarah Bush Lincoln was not long in discovering that "Abe was no common boy." Abraham, on his part, received his new mother with respect and appreciation. A bond of sympathy soon brought them closer to each other. Thomas Lincoln couldn't see any sense in Abe's reading all the time. He thought that was only an aggravated form of laziness. Besides, he had no use for "eddication." It took all his second wife's diplomacy and tact to keep him from preventing the boy from reading and study altogether. Mrs. Lincoln even induced the father to let Abe go to school now and then. For these intercessions Abraham Lincoln never ceased to be grateful to her. He always spoke of her as his mother, and most of the fervent praise he bestowed on his mother's memory was meant for his good stepmother. Dennis Hanks, in after years, described Abraham's life in the home, and his devotion to both mothers. (It should be borne in mind that Nancy Hanks, Abraham's own mother, was Dennis's cousin.) Here is what Dennis told: "We had plenty to eat — such as it was — corn dodgers, bacon and game, some fish and wild fruits. We had very little wheat flour. For clothing we had jeans. Abe was grown before he wore all-wool pants. It was a new country, and he was a raw boy; rather a bright and likely lad; but the big world seemed far ahead of him. We were all slow-goin' folks. But he had the stuff of greatness in him. He got his rare sense and sterling principles from both parents. But his kindliness, humor, love of humanity, ^^^^ ^^^^ Lincoln hatred of slavery, all came from his mother. I am free to ..^ ^^^^ „, ^„,^ ,^„ „j^„y say Abe was a 'mother's boy.'" tact" I9IO MARCH 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. 8 WED. THUR. 10 FRI. II SAT. 12 w THE LINCOLN STORY-CALCNDAR YOUNG ABRAHAM'S SCANTY SCHOOLING O when the father could not find a pretext for keeping Abe at home he was allowed to go to school. Part of the time he had to walk four and a half miles each way, but what of that? Nine miles a day in snowy or muddy winter weather was nothing to the joy of learning something — something his teacher, a wonderful man who knew everything, could tell him. Although Abraham never went to those poor schools a whole year in his life, all told, there are many stories about his school days. The schoolhouses were built of logs, of course, with floors of "puncheon" or split logs, and windows of oiled paper, if there was any substitute at all for glass. They "trapped" up and down and spelled down every week. Abe became so proficient in spelling that he was always chosen in the "spelling-bees," which formed the social dissipation in- dulged in, somewhat as dancing and "bridge" are in modern society. He so excelled in spelling that the side lucky enough to choose Abe Lincoln always "spelled down," and matters came to such a pass that they had to leave him out of their spelling matches. Then he made himself useful in giving out words for the others to spell, or acted as referee or umpire in cases of dispute, being the authority instead of "Web- ster," "Worcester" or the "Century," which are the court of last resort to-day. They did have a book of authority, though. It was Web- ster's Speller. Webster's Dictionary existed only in the fond imagination of the indefatigable Noah Webster. That great work was not published until many years later. "Nat" Grigsby, who afterwards married Abe's sister Sarah, or Nancy, as she was now called, once told of Abe's conduct at school in the following enthusiastic terms: "He was always at school early and attended to his studies. He was always at the head of his class and passed us rapidly in his studies. He lost no time at home, and when he was not at his work was at his books. He kept up his studies on Sunday, and carried his books with him to work, so that he might read when he rested from labor." They "tr.pped- up »nd down I9IO MARCH 19IO SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 13 14 IS 16 17 18 19 w THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR "CRUELTY TO ANIMALS," "MANNERS," "THE RULE OF THREE," AND "DOGGEREL" HEN Abraham had been in school long enough to acquire a little confidence in him- self and his ability to compose, Nat Grigsby further relates that he came for- ward with an awkward bow and a deprecating smile to read an essay on the wickedness of being cruel to helpless animals. Aside from the common branches, including arithmetic to "The Rule of Three," as they used to call "Proportion," one teacher, Andrew Crawford, taught the school children "manners." Abe's schoolmaster used to laugh over the awkwardness of the tallest pupil, who measured nearly six feet at fourteen years of age. Some of them believed that he was clumsier than usual, on pur- pose, and was "laughing in his sleeve," short as it was, all the while. Mrs. Sarah Lincoln told one of his biographers, long afterward, that Abe never owned an arithmetic, so he had to make a memorandum book himself, in which he wrote out some of his hardest "sums," the tables of measures, and other things, including school-boy rhymes such as: Abraham Lincoln his hand and pen. he will be good but God knows When Abraham excited the greatest wonder among the neighbors because he could make rhymes — "write poetry," as they called it. Many verses are attributed to him about which there may be some doubt, like the following from a longer "poem" entitled "Adam and Eve's Wedding": The woman was not taken from Adam's feet, we see, So we must not abuse her, the meaning seems to be. The woman was not taken from Adam's head, we know ; To show she must not rule him — 'tis evidently so. The woman she was taken from under Adam's arm. So she must be protected from injuries and harm. He wrote another so-called poem, beginning: Time, what an empty vapor 'tis, And days, how swift they are I Abraham's penmanship also became the envy of the boys and. after he left school, the lads of the neighborhood used to bring their copy-books to him that he might "set copies" for them to imitate. One of these has been preserved many years because of its verification in the life of the writer of the original couplet-copy: Good boys who to their books apply Will all be great men by and by. / sfuMndton (jfS9ino/M \ /^l. 16 17 18 19 20 21 THE LINCOLN STORY.CALENDAR FROM INDIANA TO ILLINOIS ERY soon after Abraham's return from New Orleans one of the family received a letter from John Hanks, setting forth the attractions of that part of Illinois, where he had located two years earlier, and advising them to sell out and emigrate thither. Thomas Lincoln had lived near Gentryville fourteen years, which was a long time for him to stay in one place. Dennis Hanks accounted for this removal, making himself out, as usual, the hero of his own story, as follows: What made Thomas Lincoln leave? The reason is this. We were perplexed by a disease called "milk-sick." I myself being the oldest, I was determined to leave, and hunt a countrj' where the milk-sick was not. I married his oldest (step) daughter. I sold out, and they concluded to go with me. I was tolerably popular at that time, for I had some money. My wife's mother (Sarah Bush Lincoln) could not think of parting with her daughter, and we ripped up stakes and started to Illinois, and landed at Decatur. This is the reason for leaving Indiana. I am to blame for it, if any. As for getting more land, this was not the case, for we could have entered ten thousand acres of the best land. When we left, it is was on account of the milk. I had four — good milch cows, too — with it, and eleven young calves. This was enough to ruin me. Besides, I liked to have lossed my own life with it. This was reason enough (ain't it?) for leaving. It was in the early spring of 1S30, before winter had fairly broken up, that Thomas Lincoln and Abe, Dennis Hanks and Levi Hall, who was, like Dennis, a distant cousin, and had married one of Abe's stepsisters, — thirteen in all — took the road for Illinois. Thomas Lincoln had sold, or let his farm go on the mortgage, to Mr. Gentry, and sold his com and hogs to Dave Tumham. The goods of the three families — Lincoln. Hanks and Hall — were loaded on a wagon belonging to Lincoln. It was drawn by four yoke of oxen, two yoke of Lincoln's and two of Hank's. Abe "held the gad" and drove the eight-ox team. It was on this journey across muddy prairies and swollen streams that a little dog belonging to one of the party was left behind on the other side of an icy stream. Of this incident Abraham once said: I could not endure the idea of abandoning even a dog. Pulling off shoes and socks. I waded across the stream and triumphantly returned with the shivering animal under my arm. His frantic leaps of joy and other evidences of a dog's gratitude amply repaid me for the exposure I had undergone. John Hanks met the movers with a hearty welcome anc. logs enough ready for their cabin, which the six men of the party "raised" without outside help, since Abe counted for three men on such occasions. Nicolay and Hay have given the follovring account of young Lincoln's efforts to settle his old , father and stepmother: With the assistance of John Hanks he plowed fifteen acres, and split, from the tall walnut trees of the primeval forest, enough rails to surround them with a fence. Little did either dream, while . engaged in this work, that the day would come when John Hanks, in a public meeting, with two of these rails on his shoulder, would electrify a State convention, and kindle throughout the country a contagious and passionate enthusiasm whose results would reach to endless generations. The Lincolns* first home in lUinou I9IO MAY 191O SUN. 22 MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 23 24 25 26 27 28 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR MEMORIAL DAY WOMAN IN THE WAR GREAT fair was holding in the Patent Office building just before the close of the War, for the benefit of the soldiers. President Lin- coln was deeply interested visitor and was asked, while in attend- ance, if he would like to "say a few words of encouragement to the ladies." "Indeed he would," and when escorted to the plat- form he expressed his sentiments as follows, in the course of an offhand but memorable speech: "In this extraordinary war, extraordinary developments have manifested themselves, such as have not been seen in former wars ; and among these mani- festations nothing has been more remarkable than these fairs for the relief of suffering soldiers and their families. And the chief agents in these fairs are the women of America. "I am not accustomed to use the language of eulogy; I have never studied the art of paying compliments to women; but I must say that if all that has been said by orators and poets since the creation of the world, in praise of women, were applied to the women of America, it would not do them justice for their conduct during the war. I will close by saying: "God bless the Women of America !' " * ''°''"*'"Jt°h'«'be«d'' '"'°'° I9IO MAY— JUNE 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. 29 30 31 FRI. SAT ^y THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR A STORY OF THE REMOVAL, AND STARTING OUT FOR HIMSELF LTHOUGH Abraham had attained his majority before their removal to Illinois, he stayed by and did all the hard work getting his father and stepmother com- fortably placed before starting out in life for himself. As his stepmother had a son of her own and two sons-in-law, he might well have excused himself, espe- cially as his father had been harsh and hard with him, requiring all his earnings up to the very day he was twenty-one. Thomas Lincoln had always been more lenient with his stepchildren than with Abraham, for he never ceased to think his son's persistence in reading and study "jest pure laziness." In excuse for the father it may be said that, by being kind to his wife's children, he recipro- cated the considerateness she always showed his children. Before leaving Indiana, Abraham bought a peddler's stock of small wares, paper, thread, needles, and so forth — about thirty dollars' worth, he afterwards said — and "doubled his money." He seems to have turned over that thirty dollars, though made after his twenty-first birthday, for, when he started out for himself, he had no money nor even a "freedom suit" of jeans, for the first thing he did then was to split rails for enough walnut-dyed jeans to make a suit of clothes for himself, at four hundred rails per yard! As "his body was long and lank and lean" it took thousands of rails to pay for the poor majority suit of homespun he so much needed. Long years afterward, when his Cabinet was struggling with the question of the interference of Europe in the quarrel with the Southern States, President Lincoln related the following incident: "Gentlemen," said he, addressing those seated around the Cabinet table, "the situation just now reminds me of a fix I got into some thirty years ago when I was peddling 'notions' on the way from Indiana to Illinois. I didn't have a large stock, but I charged large prices, and I made money. Perhaps you don't see what I'm driving at. . . . Just before we left Indiana we came across a small farmhouse full of children. These ranged in age from seventeen years to seventeen months, and all were in tears. The mother of the family was red-headed and red-faced, and the whip she held in her right hand led to the inference that she had been chastising her brood. The father of the family, a meek-looking, mild-mannered, tow-headed chap, was standing in the front door, to all appearances awaiting his turn. ... I thought there wasn't much use in asking the head of that house if she wanted any 'notions.' She was too busy. . . . She saw me when I came up and, roughly pushing her husband aside, demanded my business. "Nothing, ma'am," I answered as gently as possible. "I merely dropped in, as I came along, to see how things were going." "Well, you needn't wait," she said in an irritated way ; "there's trouble here, and lots of it, too, but I kin manage my own affairs without the help of outsiders. This is jest a family row, but I'll learn these brats their places ef I have to lick the hide off every one of 'em. I don't do much talkin', but I run this house, an' I don't want no one sneakin' round tryin' ' to find out how I do it, either." "That's the case here with us," continued the President. "We must let the other nations know that we propose to settle our family row in our own way, and teach these brats (the seceding States') their places, and we don't want any other countries 'sneakin' round.' Now, Seward, write some diplomatic notes to that effect." ■^^■^^%^^: Splitting rails for his "freedom suit* I9IO JUNE 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. 8 THUR. TRI. 10 SAT. II THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR A STRANGE HERO SAVES THREE LIVES HE dutiful and forgiving son hovered about, doing any odd work he could find in that neighborhood, in order to be near his father's family. In the fall they wrere all seized with fever and ague and felt as though they had made a poor exchange for the "milk-sick." Thomas Lincoln vowed that as soon as he was able he'd "git out o' thar!" He did move again, to Coles County, the following spring. Their first winter in Illinois was a terrible season, always referred to for many years as "the winter of the deep snow." It was bitterly cold also, and many of the people and cattle of that sparsely settled country either froze or starved to. death. Early in the spring of 1831, Abraham, John Hanks and John Johnston were engaged by a "merchant-adventurer," named Offutt, to build a boat to take corn, hogs and pork in barrels to sell in New Orleans. This was Lincoln's second trip to the Crescent City. On the way their flatboat caught on Rutledge's dam at New Salem, and the first sight the people of that village ever had of the young man who afterwards lived among them for six years was while he was making a new and ingenious device for getting the boat over the dam, and wading about "with his trousers rolled up five feet, more or less," while doing it. It was on this trip that he was said to have seen a beautiful octoroon girl sold in open market, and to have exclaimed about slavery: "If I ever get a chance at that thing I'll hit it hard!" While building this flatboat Lincoln became very popular with the men living along the San- gamon river by telling his funny stories. It took a month to build the boat, so he told a great many, morning, noon and night. Before they launched the boat the spring freshet had raised the Sangamon till it overflowed the surrounding prairies and was "booming at a great rate." Two of the men got into the swift current in a "dugout" canoe and would have drowned but for Lincoln's wise and ready directions from the shore. They had just managed to climb into a tree when the "dugout" was torn away from them by the swift current. A young man tried to rescue them by floating out upon a log tied by a long rope to the bank, all under the management of Lincoln, but the venturesome youth only added himself to the number in the tree to be rescued by the newcomer's ingenuity and courage. John Roll, one of the young men who worked with Lincoln, thus tells the close of the thrilhng story in Miss Tarbell's "Life of Abraham Lincoln": The excitement on shore increased, and almost the whole population of the village gathered on the river bank. Lincoln had the log pulled up the stream, and. securing another piece of rope, called to the men in the tree to catch it if they could when he should reach the tree. He then straddled the log himself and gave the word to push out into the stream. When he dashed into the tree he threw the rope over the stump of a broken limb, and let it play until he broke the speed of the log. and gradually drew it back to the tree, holding it there until the three now nearly frozen men had climbed down and seated themselves astride. He then gave orders to the people on the shore to hold fast to the end of the rope which was tied to the log. and leaving his rope in the tree he turned the log adrift. The force of the current, acting against the taut rope, swung the log around against the bank and all 'on beard' were saved. The excited people, who had watched the dangerous experiment with alternate hope and fear, now broke into cheers for Abe Lincoln, and praises for his brave act. This adventure made quite a hero of him along the Sangamon, and the people never tired of telling of the exploit. r ;h^' ^-^fe-^.: * He threw the rope over ' I9IO JUNE 1910 SUN. 12 MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 13 14 15 16 17 IS %.. THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR HOW THE ARMSTRONGS BECAME LINCOLN'S FRIENDS AND HOW HE REPAID THEIR KINDNESS N his way back to Illinois Lincoln visited his father in the new home at Goose- nest Prairie in Coles County, Illinois. While there the county champion, named Needham, challenged him to a wrestling match. Lincoln threw Needham twice, hurting the champion's body less than his pride. "Lincoln," said he, "you have thrown me twice, but you can't whip me." "Needham," said Abraham, "are you satisfied that I can throw you? If not, and if you still want to be convinced by means of a thrashing, I will do that, just to please you." But Needham did not insist on further punishing, even for his own good! When Lincoln returned to New Salem, where he was to open a country store for Offutt as soon as the purchased goods arrived, he hung about while waiting, telling stories and making himself useful. Once he helped the election clerk. Mentor Graham, the schoolmaster, who after- wards advised and aided him in studjring grammar and surveying. When Offutt's stock finally arrived, Lincoln had already made a good many friends to his own and his employer's advantage. Offutt was loud in his praises of his wonderful salesman, and this brought down a challenge from a group of rowdies from Clary's Grove, a neighboring settlement. Their chief bully, Armstrong, was put forward to meet the strange clerk. Lincoln hated above all things to get into a brawl, but Offutt's and his own honor appeared to be at stake. A ring was marked out, and the two seemed about evenly matched, until some of the lawless gang, outside the ring, tried to trip Lincoln up. Stung to wrath by this unfair act, the tall clerk "put forth his whole strength, and, holding the pride of Clary's Grove in his arms like a child, almost choked the exuberant life out of him." This insured him greater respect among those rude, simple folk than he could have gained in any other way. As for the Clary's Grove rowdies, they became Lincoln's staunch friends, and followed him as their leader about the country, when he went into politics, to see that no one imposed upon him. Lincoln often stayed at Armstrong's when he was out of fi\ work, rocking the cradle of William and Hannah Armstrong's ^^^ baby boy. This little fellow, when he grew up, was accused of murder, and Lincoln, then a lawyer, defended his case, winning a verdict of acquittal by a clever stroke. It was a celebrated and dramatic case. He drew the chief witness on to testify that he saw Armstrong strike the murderous blow, by moonlight, at a certain hour, then flashed upon the court an almanac showing that there was no moon at that hour. This discredited all the evidence against his client and young Armstrong was soon set free. Lawyer Lincoln would accept no pay for this great service from those who had been kind to him in New Salem. At the Armstrong; trial I9IO JUNE 1910 SUN. MON. 19 20 TUES. 21 WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 22 23 24 25 %iii THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR "HONEST ABE " LINCOLN T was while clerking for Offutt that Abraham Lincoln began to be called "Honest Abe." Many stories are told of his walking miles after shutting up the store at night, or early in the morning before opening it, to give a woman an ounce or two of tea, or a few pennies which he found to be her due. Offutt soon failed and disappeared only to be heard of again as a horse trainer, when his former clerk had become famous. Then Lincoln worked at anything he could get to do till an opportunity offered for him to go into part- nership with a young man named Berry, who drank himself to death, while Lincoln was reading a set of "Blackstone" he had found in a barrel of old rub- bish. Lincoln tried to carry on the business with the incubus of a drunken partner. But, after all, the store "winked out," as its owner whimsically expressed it, leaving Lin- coln with a lot of notes on his hands which he never should have paid, and which custom and public sentiment did not require him to pay. But he had agreed to take them up and the obliga- tion, so large that he ruefully called it "The National Debt," burdened him for nearly twenty years before he had paid "the uttermost farthing" of principal and interest. While he was storekeeping for himself he was appointed postmaster of New Salem. This office paid a very small salary, but the postmaster was allowed to read the newspapers before delivering them, which was a "perquisite" highly appreciated by the young postmaster, hungry for news and knowledge of the great world around him. Surveying, also, was added to his labors. Being offered a chance to become deputy to the county surveyor, he procured a copy of Flint and Gibson, and, with the aid of Schoolmaster Graham, mastered the science of surveying in a few weeks. He laid out many of the towns of central Illinois, and in some villages all business closed in order that the delighted denizens could go out into the fields to help Surveyor Lincoln, in order to hear and laugh over his many quips and jokes and stories. While Lincoln was acting as deputy surveyor a creditor, holding an old store note, seized his horse and surveying in- struments and, as he could not then pay the notes, sold him out. A friend bought the necessaries in and returned them to their struggling owner. After the young storekeeper, postmaster and surveyor had become a "starving attorney" in Springfield, and the New Salem post office and even the village had gone out of existence, an officer of the government came into the office and asked for the man who had once been postmaster of New Salem, as he had a claim against that office for seventeen dollars and some odd cents. The friends who overheard the inquiry were alarmed, for they knew of the poverty and hardships Lincoln had lately passed through. But the poor young attorney went in silence to a corner of the office, pulled out his little old trunk from under the lounge on which he slept, took out a cotton rag, opened it and counted out the exact sum required by the government, paying it over to the official in the very coins he had received years before in New Salem, and saying briefly: "I never use anybody's money but my own." The very coinj he had received I9IO JUNE>-JULY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. 26 27 28 29 30 FRI. SAT. THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR INDEPENDENCE DAY PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S SPEECH TO THE SLAVES IN RICHMOND N the 4th of April, 1865, President Lincoln walked through the streets of Rich- mond, leading his son "Tad." He was escorted only by Admiral Porter and a few sailors who had rowed him from the steamboat a little way out in the James river. The leading white people had fled, leaving the Confederate capital occupied mostly by negroes. One of the oldest of these, working near the wharf when the President's little party landed, immediately recognized Abra- ham Lincoln's grand, homely face and prostrated himself at the President's feet, crying: "Bress de Lord, dere is de great Messiah! I knowed him as soon as I seed him." This outcry attracted others, and still others, until the President's way was blocked on all sides by slaves swarming around from all directions. At last the great Emanci- pator gave them the following announcement and fatherly advice: "My poor friends, you are free — free as air. You can cast off the name of slave and trample upon it; it will come to you no more. Liberty is your birthright. God gave it to you as he gave it to others, and it is a sin that you have been deprived of it for so many years. "But you must try to deserve this priceless boon. Let the world see that you merit it, and are able to main- tain it by your good works. Don't let your joy carry you into excesses; learn the laws, and obey them. Obey God's commandments, and thank Him for giving you liberty, for to Him you owe all things. There, now, let me pass on ; I have but little time to spare. I want to see the Capitol [of the Confederacy] and must return at once to Washington to secure to you that liberty which you seem to prize so highly." ,„ ,h, „„,,. „, Richmond I9IO JULY 1910 SUN. MON. TUE^S. WED. THUR. FRI. 8 SAT. w THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR BEGINNINGS IN LAW AND POLITICS FTER finding a set of "Blackstone" in an old barrel he had bought of a traveler who did not care to keep it longer, Lincoln began to study law in the "uni- versity of adversity." As a boy he had enjoyed the "Revised Statutes of Indiana" when nothing better to read was at hand. At one time he had yearned to be a deckhand on the Ohio, and even thought seriously, at several points in his career, of learning the blacksmith's trade, but that "Blackstone" proved a "treasure trove" to him and exerted a providential influence upon his life. While in the Black Hawk War he met Major John T. Stuart, of Springfield, with whom he was afterward associated in the State Assembly. Stuart advised and aided Lincoln in his law studies, lending him books, and finally offering to take him into partnership as soon as he could be admitted to the bar. Of course the popular and public spirited young law student took to politics "as a duck takes to water." He was diffident and disparaged his own qualifications, but his friends advised him to "go in and win." Schoolmaster Graham suggested that he would better study grammar, so he walked six miles, borrowed Kirkham's, and came back before breakfast, having learned his first lesson, six miles long, or all the way back. His first political speech was as follows: Fellow-Citizens : I presume you all know who I am. I am humble Abraham Lincoln. I have been solicited by many of my friends to become a candidate for the Legislature My politics are "short and sweet, like an old woman's dance." I am in favor of a national bank. I am in favor of the international improve- ment system, and a high protective tariff. These are my sentitnents and political principles. If elected I will be thankful. If not, it will be all the same. It was "all the same," for the Black Hawk War came up, and Lincoln's patriotism got the better of his self-interest, so he enlisted and was defeated by the Rev. Peter Cartwright, the back- woods Methodist preacher, by a small plurality. But he was elected two years later and was re- elected many times to the State Assembly, in which he became the leading spirit of "the Long Nine," who accomplished the removal of the State capital from Vandalia to Springfield. One time the young lawyer from New Salem was invited to address a political meeting in Springfield. Mr. George Forquer, a wealthy and pompous resident of Springfield, who was said to have changed politics to get a fat land office, took it upon himself to humble the young upstart from the country. Lincoln had noticed a lightning- rod on Forquer's fine house, the first thing of the kind that had ever been seen there. So the young man from New Salem arose, a little pale, but with a smile and a significant glitter in his eye, and replied: "The gentleman commenced his speech by saying that this 'young man.' alluding to me, must be taken down. 1 am not so young in years as I am in the tricks and trades of a politician, but." said he. pointing to Forquer, "live long or die young, I would rather die now, than, like the gentleman, change my politics, and with the change receive an office worth three thousand dollars a year, and then feet obliged to erect a lightning-rod over my house to protect a guilty conscience from an offended God." Forquer's lightning-rod could not save his political future from being blasted by that thunderbolt. His first lesion, six miles lon£' I9IO JULY 1910 SUN. 10 MON. II tue:s. 12 WED. 13 THUR. FRI. SAT. 14 15 16 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR A NEW STORY OF LINCOLN IN THE BLACK HAWK WAR OT long after Abraham came to live in New Salem the Black Hawk War broke out, in the spring of 1832. He was one of the first to enlist and was elected captain of the Sangamon company in preference to a former employer of his who had slighted and treated him meanly. Lincoln stated, after he was elected President, that his election to this captaincy gave him more real pleasure than any other honor he ever received. He held the respect and esteem of his com- pany in spite of the fact that he was not well versed in the manual of arms and was once in disgrace, having his sword taken from him for having dis- charged firearms within limits. That Captain Lincoln should have been guilty of such an infraction of rules has puzzled several of his biographers and others. But the reason was given to the writer at Springfield, Illinois, during the Lincoln Centennial celebration, in February, 1909, by William T. Baker, popularly known as "Uncle Billy," of Bolivia, Illinois. Baker's father was a roadmaster in the Black Hawk War. The follovsring is "Uncle Billy's" account: My father was ordered to make a way for the men to cross a river, and he felled some black-walnut trees across, lopping off their branches on the far side of the stream. Most of the men had to cross on these logs, some of which were small and smooth, and some men fell into the water — among them Captain Lincoln. After they got across, the boys pitched their camp and went to sleep under their little dog-tents. After Lincoln had crawled under his — his head stuck out one side and his feet the other — he backed out and stood up, saying, "There ! I forgot to clean out my pistol." He thought he had wet the powder when he fell into the water. It was a little bull-dog pistol with a barrel so short he could ram the charge in with one of his long fingers. Snapping the trigger, the pistol went off — to his great astonishment. It was against the riiles, of course, to discharge any firearms then and there, so one of General Whitesides' who had fired. No one answered, and father, pointing up the little rise, said : "It sounded as if 'twas on up that way." But the orderly soon came running back, and Lincoln didn't like to see the fellow taking so much trouble, so he kind o' laughed, and showed the pistol, and said : "I fired this thing off by accident," and explained just how it happened. He thought, of course, it was wet after he had fallen into the water with it. So he had to take a light sentence — have his sword taken away a day or so for his carelessness. I've heard Abe Lincoln and father and General Whitesides talk over old times in the Black Hawk War at our house, and I don't believe the real reason for his discharging firearms and being disgraced for it was ever published. At least, I never saw it in print anywhere. Lincoln did not see a battle all summer long. He kept some of his men from killing a harmless old Indian as a spy. When his company was disbanded he re-enlisted as a private. It is often stated that Major Jefferson Davis mustered Lincoln out at the close of that war, but that is an error. They never met. When Lincoln returned to New Salem it was August and almost election time. He found that he was defeated for the Assembly. He mentioned with pride, nearly thirty years after- ward, that this was the only time he was ever defeated by direct vote of the people. orderlies came hurrying along, asking MM ' The pistol went off '* I9IO JULY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. ERI. SAT. 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 t^ THE LINCOLN STORY-CALCNDAR THREE AFFAIRS OF THE HEART INCOLN once told a friend of the "beginning of love" with him. With all his love for people, for helpless creatures, and especially for the unfortunate, his love for women and his grief over their loss almost broke his great heart. Some of his biographers hint that he was more than half in love with Kate Robey, "the pretty girl of the settlement," whom he helped, by pantomime, in spelling the word defied. She married Allen Gentry, son of the leading man of the village — after he and Allen made their first trip to New Orleans. While living in New Sale mhe fell in love with Ann, the beautiful daughter of James Rutledge, who owned the mill and kept the tavern where Lincoln boarded part of the time. Ann was engaged to a young man named McNamar who had gone east to take care of his dying father. Some time after McNamar ceased writing to her Ann plighted her troth to Abraham, but the anxiety and humiliation of her first love's neglect was too much for her sensitive, high-strung nature, and she died of brain fever, in August, 1835. Her distracted lover was unnerved by his passionate grief. It was while he was in a morbid, half- insane frame of mind that he learned to love William Knox's lengthy poem entitled: "O, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" Then he threw himself with greater zest than ever into politics, and success seemed to crown his every effort. Some time after this a friend in New Salem. Mrs. Bennett Able, tried to "make a match" between him and her sister Mary Owens, a "bluegrass beauty" from Kentucky. Lincoln seemed to think he had committed himself to marry this young woman, if she had been led to expect him to, and wrote her to that effect, giving her a rather discouraging outlook upon the future of a poor young attorney in the State capital. She, as became a young lady of spirit and good sense, released him from his supposed obligation and refused him outright. In his first relief over this release he wrote an impulsive and indiscreet letter to a friend who was thoughtless or malicious enough to permit it to get into print, greatly to the annoyance and grief of Lincoln and his family. ^^^ The great and final affair of his heart was with a bright and ,=»"'°^— witty young lady who came from Louisville, Kentucky, to live with her sister, the wife of Ninian W. Edwards, of Springfield, one of Lincoln's friends among "the Long Nine." This was Miss Mary Todd, a pretty cousin of his law-partner, John T. Stuart. She had from the first a great fascination for Abraham Lincoln, and they were soon betrothed. But "the course of true love never did run smooth." Lincoln was morbid and self-disparaging, and Miss Todd was high-strung and exacting, and the engage- ment was broken. Lincoln, in his distress and despair, visited his friend Speed, with whom he had lodged when he first came to Springfield, from Louisville, Kentucky, and tried to forget his over-mastering passion. But there was no other way but for their lives to be united. In his love and gallantry he fought — or was ready to fight — an absurd duel for her sake. Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd were married in the beautiful home of Ninian W. ciobe T»vern. where t.e l ncolns firit Edwards, at Springfield, Illinois, on the 4th of November, 1842. lived after their marriage I9IO JULY 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR HOW THE LITTLE WIFE'S AMBITION SENT HIM TO CONGRESS RS. LINCOLN'S influence over her easy-going husband was soon observed. He had moved his goods and chattels from New Salem on a horse borrowed from Bowling Green, the bluff old Justice of the Peace before whom he had petti- fogged for practice, to Springfield, in March, 1837. The next month he was admitted to the Springfield bar. He roomed vyith his "friend in need" and "friend indeed," Joshua F. Speed, until he took the lounge and slept in Stuart & Lincoln's office. This office was over the courtroom. One night his friend Edwin D. Baker was speaking in the courtroom and said something which enraged the Webber brothers, newspaper men of Springfield. There was an uproar which caused Lincoln to raise the trap door, unnoticed below, and look down to see what was up. He took in the situation at a glance. They were trying to intimidate his friend. He swung himself down through the ceiling, landed beside Baker, seized the water-pitcher, and with a face blazing with indignation, he bran- dished it, demanding, above the clamor, that they allow the speaker the right to say what he pleased. "For shame!" he cried. "Isn't this a free country and haven't we all a right to free speech? The first man that lays hands on this speaker I'll smash this pitcher over his head." Quiet was quickly restored and Baker was permitted to proceed. After four years of partnership v^ith Stuart, Lincoln went in with Judge Stephen T. Logan, one of the best and most painstaking lawyers in Illinois. This copartnership was a high compliment to the young countryman. Here Lincoln began to take his work more seriously and carefully studied his cases, going to the root of every matter, a habit that stood him in good stead when he had the great questions of the country and of humanity to work out. While he was Logan's partner he was married. He had always been a kindly factotum and "wheel-horse" for the Whig party, letting all the official honors go elsewhere before his marriage. It took several years for the party to learn that Lincoln was 4^' to be reckoned with and that he was worthy of serious thought and recognition. This came about through Mrs. Lincoln's and the Edwards family's influence. After self-sacrificing and herculean labors in the "Log Cabin" campaign of 1840, and in '44 and '46, he was himself elected to Congress in '48, defeating the eccentric camp-meeting preacher, Peter Cartwright, who had beaten him in the race for the State Assembly sixteen years before. Those who knew the Lincolns used to say it was his little wife's ambition and confidence in her husband's great abilities He iwung himself down t> rough that sent him to Congress and finally made him President. the ceiling I9IO JULY— AUGUST 1910 SUN. 31 MON. I TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR AS A MEMBER OF CONGRESS N the Lower House of Congress Lincoln made but little impression, while Stephen A. Douglas, his greatest rival for thirty years, won high opinions in the Senate. Lincoln made some valuable acquaintances, among whom was Daniel Webster, and acquired a reputation as a story-teller and a jovial fellow to meet. He had given his first expression upon slavery about fifteen years before, in the Assembly at Vandalia, in what is known as "the Lincoln-Stone Protest," in which he and only one other member declared that "slavery is founded on injustice and bad policy." While in Congress Lincoln was greatly exercised because slaves were herded together and sold in a "negro livery stable" under the very shadow of the Capitol. He formulated and reported a bill for abolishing the traffic in human beings in the District of Columbia, but the bill never came to a vote. He also made a speech offering what came to be known as the "Spot Resolutions," because they took President Polk to task for needlessly, as he thought, precipitating the war with Mexico. Before Lincoln returned home to stay he made a visit to New England, speaking in the inter- ests of Zachary Taylor. He had always been a great admirer of Henry Clay, but he saw that Clay could never be elected to the presidency, so he did all he could for that staunch Southern Whig, "Old Rough and Ready," as General Taylor was called. He also visited Niagara and began to write a lecture about the falls. About this time he perfected his invention for helping stranded steamboats over shallows in the variable Western rivers. His model, whittled out of a cigar box, is still one of the inter- esting sights in the Patent Office. The service for which he was best known in Congress was a humorous speech against General Cass, referring to his own bloodless heroism in the Black Hawk War, as follows: By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero? Yes, sir; in the days of the Black Hawk War, I "fought, bled" and — came away ! Speaking of General Cass's career reminds me of my own. I was not at Stillman's defeat, but I was about as near it as Cass was to Hull's surrender; and, like him. I saw the place very soon after- wards. It is quite certain I did not break my sword for I had none to break ; but I bent my musket pretty badly on one occasion. If Cass broke his sword, the idea is he broke it in desperation. I bent my musket by accident. If General Cass went in advance of me in picking whortle- berries, I guess I surpassed him in charges upon the wild onions. If he saw any live, fighting Indians, it was more than I did ; but I had a good many bloody struggles with mosquitoes, and. although I never fainted from loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry. Mr. Speaker, if I should ever conclude to doff whatever our Democratic friends may suppose there is of black-cockade federalism about me, and thereupon they shall take me up as their candidate for the presidency. I protest they shall not make fun of me. as they have of General Cass, by attempting to write me into a military hero .' ^s& Hit model, whittled out of a cie'er box I9IO AUGUST 1910 SUN. MON. 8 TUES. WED. 10 THUR. II FRI. 12 SAT. 13 m^ THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR THE DEATH OF LINCOLN'S FATHER EING elected to Congress did not seem to make Thomas Lincoln think any better of his son's abilities or attainments. While in Washington Abraham sent "Billy" Greene, his fellow-clerk at Offutt's, to call on his father who was still living in a hovel at Goose Nest Prairie in Coles County, Illinois. The old man was still critical of his son's course in life, and said: "I s'pose Abe's still a-foolin' hisself with eddication. I tried to stop it, but he's got that fool idee in his head, an' it can't be got out." Thomas Lincoln was taken with his last illness two years after Greene's visit. Abraham, unable then to go to see his father, wrote to the family: I sincerely hope Father may yet recover his health. Tell him to confide in our great and merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him in any e.xtremity. He notes the fall of the sparrow, and numbers the hairs of our heads, and He will not forget the dying man who puts his trust in Him. It deepens the pathos of this situation to remember that the son had to write this letter to his stepbrother, John Johnston, to have it read to his dying father, as the old man could not even read his own child's writing. Thomas died in 1851, at the age of 73, and, like Abraham's own mother, "never knew" his son's honor, with which he was to crown the name of their humble family. The father had hardly departed this life when the stepbrother, brought up with the same chance and surroundings that Abe had, showed his gain in good-for-nothingness, even as Abraham was growing in grandeur. The man was really lazy; he wanted to sell out and go to Missouri, dis- posing of the quarter-section of land Abe had bought with his first five-hundred-dollar lawyer's fee to provide for his good stepmother in her old age. Lincoln had to write the following letter to protect her from her own son: Dear Brother : Vour letter of the 22nd is just received. Your proposal about selling the east forty acres of land is all that I want or could claim for myself, but I am not satisfied with it on Mother's ac- count. I want her to have her living, and I feel that it is my duty, to some extent, to see that she is not wronged. She had a right of dower in the other two forties, but it seems she has already let you take that, hook and line. You propose to sell the rest for three hundred dollars, take one hundred away with you, and leave her two hundred at 8 per cent., making her the enormous sum of sixteen dollars a year I Now, if you are satisfied with treating her in that way, I am not. . . . Yours, etc., A. Lincoln. Not a word of boasting or of reproach because he bought and gave her the whole one hundred and sixty acres in the first place, for that would have hurt his stepmother's kind old heart! The house ID which Thoinu Lincoln died I9IO AUGUST 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. 14 15 16 17 18 19 SAT. 20 % THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR LINCOLN AND HIS NEIGHBORS ETURNING from his single term in Congress (he would not consider re-election because he believed in "giving the other boys a chance"), Lincoln thought his public career vyas ended for good and all. So he returned to his law practice with greater zeal than ever. Many characteristic stories are told of him in this period of his career. The Lincolns had three living sons, Robert, William and Thomas, whom his father nicknamed "Tadpole," which was afterward shortened to "Tad." Little Eddie, another son, had died in infancy. William died in the White House, in February, 1862, and "Tad" lived six years after his father's death, until 1871, when he was eighteen years old. Robert Todd Lincoln, the eldest son, now lives in Chicago, having served his country as Secretary of War under President Garfield and as Minister to England during Ben- jamin Harrison's administration. While at home it was a common thing to see indulgent Mr. Lincoln striding up the street with a boy on each shoulder and one clinging to the skirts of his long coat. One neighbor told of rushing to the street door of his own house to see what the matter was, for there was a loud out- cry. Looking out he saw Mr. Lincoln passing, followed by two of his boys, both of whom were crying loudly. "Why, Mr. Lincoln, what is the matter with them?" exclaimed the neighbor. "Just what's the matter with the whole world," laughed Mr. Lincoln. "I've got three walnuts and each wants two." A Springfield lady told of the following experience she had with their tall neighbor when she was a little girl in the following words (as related in Miss Tarbell's "Life of Lincoln."): My first strong impression of Mr. Lincoln was made by one of his kind deeds. I was going with a little friend for my first trip on the railroad cars. It was an epoch of my life. I had planned for it and dreamed of it for weeks. The day I was to go came, but as the hour of the train approached, the hackman. through some neglect. / -i^' 1 failed to call for my trunk. As the minutes went on, I realized, in a panic of grief, that /^^/'fi' I should miss the train. I was standing by the gate, my hat and gloves on, sobbing as if my heart would break, when Mr. Lincoln came by. "Why, what's the matter?" he asked, and I poured out all my story. "How big's the trunk? There's still time, if it isn't too big," and he pushed through the gate and up to the door. My mother and I took him up to my room, where my little old-fashioned trunk stood, locked and tied. '*Oh, ho !" he cried ; "wipe your eyes and come on quick." And before I knew what he was going to do, he had shouldered the trunk, was down stairs, and striding out of the yard. Down the street he went, fast as his long legs could carry him ; I trotting behind, drying my tears as I went. We reached the station in time. Mr. Lincoln put me on the train, kissed me good-bye, and told me to have a good time. It was just like him. "It wu ju« like him" I9IO AUGUST 1910 SUN. MON. 21 22 TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 23 24 25 26 27 %«•' THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR STORIES OF LINCOLN WHILE "OUT ON THE CIRCUIT ' HILE Lincoln was always full of fun and appreciated wit or humor wherever he found it, he was no clown or court fool. He held the highest respect of the courts in which he practised, and won some great cases. Many are the stories UJma^^L»S[(ll *°''^ °^ ''™ while on the Eighth Judicial Circuit of Illinois. One was about )fHlV9l»\\f ^^^ meaning of the word "demonstrate." One winter he studied geometry far into the night for weeks, until he had mastered the first six books of Euclid before he was satisfied that he knew the real meaning of that word. One day he and a certain judge were talking about horse trades. The judge said he could beat Mr. Lincoln in swapping horses. It resulted in an agreement between the two lawyers to meet next morning at nine where they were to trade under forfeit of twenty-five dollars. Lincoln came to the place at the appointed time with a sawhorse on his shoulder. The judge and a group of spectators were already there with the sorriest, flee-bitten, spavined old crowbate ever seen in those parts. It was too much for Lincoln, who took one look at the blind, bony, corrugated creature, gave a gasp, and sat down on his sawhorse to exclaim: "Well, Judge, that's the worst I was ever beaten in a horse trade!" Many stories are told of his kindness of heart toward the humblest of creatures — how he hunted up a bird's nest to restore little fallen fledglings to the mother bird. The story of his rescuing a pig from the mire is told with several variations. The following is chosen because it illus- trates the unselfishness of Lincoln's Ufe, and because it refers also to his friend Edward D. Baker, to whose rescue Lincoln once came down through the ceiling: They were riding over a rough corduroy road, in an old "mud-wagon" coach, Lincoln and Baker were discussing the subject of "selfishness." Lin- coln maintained that people do good from selfish motives. Crossing a shaky bridge over a slough, they looked out and espied an old razorbaek sow on the bank of the big mudhole making a terrible noise because her pigs had got in and were in danger of drowning in the deep puddle. Lincoln called out : "Driver, can't you stop just a minute ?" "Yes," replied the driver, "if the other feller don't object." The "other feller" didn't object, so Mr. Lincoln jumped out, ran back to the slough, began to lift the little pigs out of the mud and water, ar»d place them on the bank. When he returned to the muddy stage. Colonel Baker remarked : "Now, Lincoln, will you tell me where does selfishness come in in this little episode?" "Why, bless your soul. Baker, that was the very essence of selfishness. I should have had no peace of mind all day if I had gone on and left that suffering old sow worrying over those pigs. I did it to get peace of mind, "The worrt I wai ever beoten in don't you see ?" a hone trade ! " I9IO SUN. AUGUST— SEPTEMBER MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. I9IO SAT. 28 29 30 31 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR BACK IN THE POLITICAL ARENA UT the slavery question "would not down." The passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill virtually repealed the Missouri Compromise Act, and North and South struggled for the mastery in Kansas, through much bitterness and bloodshed. The South tried to make it a slave State and the North, aided by such aboli- tionists on the ground as John Brown, was determined that it should be a free State, and "Bleeding Kansas" was the result. As his former rival, Senator Stephen A. Douglas, of Illinois, called "The Little Giant," was responsible for the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, Lin- coln found it necessary to enter the political arena again to fight against slavery. "Judge" Douglas, as he was commonly called, speaking in central Illinois, said once that he would trust in Provi- dence for a certain slavery issue. Lincoln laughingly referred to the Judge's "trust" in a speech in reply, as follows: The Judge's trusting in Providence reminds me of the old woman who had been run away with by a fractious horse. She said she "trusted in Providence till the breechin' broke — then she didn't know what on airth to do I" And I guess that's the way it will be with the Judge, in this case. Then it was that Lincoln went up and down Illinois making his famous speeches against sla- very. In a masterly effort at Peoria, in 1854, he summed up the whole situation. Some of his expressions were seized upon and became the watchwords of antislavery: "Slavery is wrong and should be dealt with as wrong"; "A house divided against itself cannot stand — and this nation cannot exist half slave and half free — it must be all one or all the other." To-day these state- ments are self-evident truths, but when uttered they were advance signals of humanity. Then the Bloomington Convention, in 1856, met to organize the forces of antislavery. They worked along the lines laid down in other parts of the country for the new Republican party. But there was no fire, no harmony, no solidarity, until "Lincoln! Lincoln!" was called. Rising and coming to the front, he made a speech of such electric eloquence that it, like the "Lost Chord," "linked all perplexed meanings into one perfect peace." It was said to be "the greatest speech ever made in Illinois and puts Lincoln on the track for the presidency." This speech so entranced the reporters, as well as the audience, that the newspaper correspondents who came to make verbatim reports of it for the New York and Chicago papers forgot themselves, and no one made a note beyond the opening sentences. It came to be known as "Lincoln's Lost Speech." - ^,■■'*?.>s^•<^Mi!w4.^^'-^^*«i^ * Trusted in Providence till the breechin* broke ** I9IO SEPTEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. 8 FRI. SAT. 10 m^ THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR "BATTLES OF THE GIANTS N a few weeks after the "Lost Speech," while Lincoln was "out on the Circuit," at Urbana, Illinois, word was brought to him that he had just received one hun- dred and ten votes at the Republican Convention, assembled in Philadelphia, for the vice-presidential nomination. He looked incredulous and shrugged his shoulders, saying he did not think the votes were for him. "There's another great man named Lincoln down in Massachusetts. I guess he's the man," he explained. In 1858 Lincoln was nominated to represent Illinois in the Senate, in Douglas's place. He and Senator Douglas made the most memorable senatorial canvass in history. The question of slavery was discussed everywhere. Lincoln chal- lenged Douglas to join in a series of debates, and the "Little Giant" reluctantly accepted. Seven towns, in all sections of the State, were chosen, and the dates ranged from August to October. The average attendance at these debates was estimated at ten thousand. Debate day was a holi- day for each region. Thousands of people came scores of miles; many migrated from adjoining counties and States, and encamped round about the places where the debates were held. There were demonstrations in favor of each of the rival candidates, and all over Illinois there were pro- cessions, picnics, fairs, barbecues, floral parades, bands, and so on. Senator Douglas was a skilled and polished speaker, and he was among his friends. The rail- roads placed special cars and even trains at his disposal. He had everything to lose and Lincoln had everything to win. Douglas began with a domineering, if not in- sulting, demeanor toward his almost unknown antagonist. Lincoln's best friends thought his challenging Douglas was a grand blunder. But Lincoln was deeply, thoroughly, in earnest. He told but few stories. His voice rang, high and clear, to the outer edges of the great throngs, but Douglas soon became hoarse, speaking with great difficulty, some- times barking like a dog. Lincoln's sincerity, logic, quick-wittedness and good nature won the day. He often parried and turned back Douglas's savage blows upon himself like a boomerang. Douglas propounded a set of questions for Lincoln to answer. Lincoln answered these and asked Douglas several questions. Among them was one which forced Douglas to interpret the Dred Scott decision. Lincoln's friends said, "If you ask that you will lose the senatorship." Lincoln replied, "Yes; but the fight of i860 will be worth a hundred of this." Douglas walked right into Lincoln's trap. He answered "the Freeport question" to suit his hearers in Illinois, but offended the South — for the whole country, through the newspapers, was now breathlessly watching the struggle. Douglas was elected to the Senate, though a greater popular vote was polled for Lincoln principles. Lincoln took his defeat gracefully. He did not pretend that he was not disappointed. He said he was "like the boy that stumped his toe — hurt too bad to laugh, and too big to cry." Lincola auwered theie I9IO SEPTEMBER 1910 SUN. II MON. 12 TUE^S. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 13 14 15 16 17 w i THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR LINCOLN'S OWN LIFE-STORY FTER the Lincoln-Douglas debates Abraham Lincoln was known all over the country. Calls came for the wonderful speaker who had coped with Stephen A. Douglas to address mass meetings in Kansas, in Ohio, and in New England. Lincoln was invited to speak at Cooper Institute, New York City. That speech delighted the great political leaders and, with the photograph he had taken that day, convinced the country that he was not the wild Hoosier his enemies had painted him. Ever since the "Lost Speech" and his receiving the votes for the vice-presidential nomination, many Illinois men talked of him as a presidential possibility. But Lincoln himself scouted the idea as absurd. The idea of men- tioning him with Seward, Chase and other leaders! It was foolish. But after his trip to New York and New England he was convinced that it was his duty to aid the movement in his behalf in his own State. So he wrote out the following brief story of his life for a friend: J. W. Fell, Esq., Springfield, December 20, 1S59. My Dear Sir: Herewith is a little sketch, as you requested. There is not much of it, for the reason, I suppose, that there is not much of me. If anything be made of it, I wish it to be modest, and not to go beyond the material. ... I was born February 12, i8og, in Hardin County, Kentucky. My parents were both born in Virginia, of undistinguished families — second families, perhaps I should say. My mother, who died in my tenth year, was of a family of the name of Hanks. My paternal grandfather, Abraham Lincoln, emigrated to Kentucky about 1781 or 17S2, where, a year or two later, he was killed by the Indians, not in battle, but by stealth, when he was laboring to open a farm in the forest. His ancestors, who were Quakers, went to Virginia from Berks County. Pennsylvania. . . . My father, at the death of his father, was but six years of age, and grew up literally without education. He removed from Kentucky to what is now Spencer County, Indiana, in my eighth year. . . . There I grew up. There were some schools so called but no qualification was ever required of a teacher beyond "readin'. writin' and cipherin' " to the rule of three. ... I have not been to school since. The little advance I now have upon this store of education I have picked up from time to time under the pressure of necessity. . . . I was raised to farm work, which I continued till I was twenty-two. At twenty- one I came to Illinois, Macon County. Then I got to New Salem, where I re- mained a year as a sort of clerk, in a store. Then came the Black Hawk War ; and I was elected a captain of volunteers, which gave me more pleasure than any I have had since. I . . . ran for the Legislature the same year (1832) and was beaten — the only time I was ever beaten by the people. The next and three suc- ceeding biennial elections I was elected to the Legislature. I was not a candidate afterward. During this legislative period I had studied law, and removed to Spring- field to practise it. In 1846 I was elected to the lower House of Congress. Was not a candidate for re-election. From 1849 to 1854. both inclusive, practised law more assiduously than ever before. ... I was losing interest in politics when the repeal of the Missouri Compromise aroused me again. What I have done since is pretty well known. If any personal description is thought desirable, it may be said I am, in height, six feet four inches, nearly ; lean in flesh, weighing on an average, one hundred and eighty pounds, dark complexion, with coarse black hair and gray eyes. "No other marks and brands recollected." Yours truly, A. Lincoln. The Cooper Institute porUait I9IO SEPTEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. 1$ 19 TUES. 20 WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 21 22 23 24 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR THE "RAIL-SPUTTER" CAMPAIGN T was at the Republican State convention, held at Decatur. Illinois, that John Hanks marched in with two rails he and Abe Lincoln had split thirty years before, that electrified the convention and stampeded it for the "Rail-splitter" candidate. The men of Illinois carried their "passionate enthusiasm" to the Republican National Convention, a week later, in the specially built Wigwam, at Chicago, in the middle of May, i860. This convention nominated Abraham Lincoln and gave over to frenzied demonstrations of joy, which caught like wild-fire. As Douglas said, there wasn't "a tar-barrel left in the whole State" The Rail-splitter campaign was one of thrilling enthusiasm. The "Wide Awakes" of '60 were organized. A committee notified the candidate in his plain home in Springfield. Friends offered to supply liquors for refreshment on that occasion, but Lincoln said: "No, we have never had such things in our home and I am not going to begin now." A native of England, a Springfield neighbor of Lincoln, was astonished when he heard of the nomination, and exclaimed: "What! Abe Lincoln nominated for President of the United States? A man that buys a ten- cent beefsteak for breakfast, and carries it home himself! Can it be possible?" The opposition made no end of fun of such a candidate — "a nullity," "a third-rate country lawyer" who had succeeded only as a "rail-splitter" aivd in getting himself called "Honest Abe," but had been defeated for the Senate. They sneered at his "coarse, clumsy jokes," and said he did not know how to wear clothes, and often sat in his shirt sleeves. He was of no family, did not know Latin and Greek, and had never traveled. Manufacturers all over the country made him presents of hats and other articles of apparel. Mr. Lincoln laughed at these gifts and, one day, exclaimed: "Well, wife, if nothing else comes out of this scrape, we are going to have some clothes, aren't we?" He used to laugh over the apology of a newsboy who was selling his photograph — one taken with tousled hair, which was his best-known portrait at that time. Lincoln liked to imitate the boy's shrill, nasal treble: "Here's your old Abe! He'll look better when we gets his hair combed!" Lincoln's chief concern seemed to be lest his home town should go against him, and was deeply grieved be- cause so many Springfield ministers were using their in- fluence in favor of his opponents and slavery! He said: ' "These men will find they have not read their Bibles aright." y Election day fell on the 6th of November. Lincoln voted the ticket with the "President" cut off. He spent the evening in the telegraph office. He seemed gratified when he heard New York had gone for him — but expressed keener satisfaction over the vote of his own precinct. About mid- night he went home and, finding his wife asleep, roused her with: "He'll look better when he gets hii hiir "Mary! Mary! Mary! mje're elected!" combed!" 1910 SEPTEMBER— OCTOBER 19 lO SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 25 26 27 2S 29 30 I THE LINCO'LN STORY-CALENDAR PRESIDENT-ELECT LINCOLN (A NEW LINCOLN STORY) ILLIAM H. HERNDON, Lincoln's partner and biographer, relates that, as Lin- coln was leaving their office for the last time, his eye caught their little old rusty sign, LINCOLN & HERNDON, he said, with emotion: Let it hane there Billy. Give our clients to understand that the election of a Presi- dent makes no difference in the firm. ... If I live, I'm coming back some time, and then we'll go right on practising law as if nothing had ever happened. Lincoln had "found" Billy Herndon, a boy in his friend Speed's store. As soon as Mr. Lincoln was alone in business he took Billy into his office, to keep it when he was away, especially while "out on the circuit." Though the young man s earning cao^citv never amounted to much, he soon made Billy an equal partner religioiisly dividing wi h hta every fee and collection, even when Billy had "nothing to do with the case.'' When Lincoln had lued the Rock-Island railroad and collected his largest fee, of $5,000, Herndon told that he handed over-Mly's half" as coolly as if he were giving him a few cents to buy a newspaper. Herndon made great use of all these chances for intimate knowledge in writing The Life of Lincoln "whic"con?arns certain misstatements concerning his great partner. Besides "making Herndon Tnd leaving him with the prestige of being "the President's partner." Lincoln showed him ?r;H-r\inHn^f^es The writer was told of one of these by another guest at the Lincoln Cerenraf^el'ebrS^at Iprinlfiefd, lUinois, last February. This story, in brief, was as follows: Mr Lincoln had collected a hopeless and difficult _ account of one thousand doUors for a Springfield merchant -"^ :^^^:^,:'ttltLri^ot!"t^Z^^^^^^^ need it Then I'll come and get the 'big slice.' " The Clin seefngtC' Mr Lincoln -was in a great hurry, did not insist on h.s lie Client, ="="='"«"'"'•, ^-Hcrpd the hookkeeoer to hand him one hundred accepting proper P^Xit^nd strode right across toAe Court House, still clutching fhfbnis "-"He used""' all ^o sive three'young scapegraces, who had been on a spree '"^ ■8fe'o''f'^\°he'ras°cals^raf ^B°i,r'ie^rnd^r'^finc'^o°n%a"d'\ftt:tried to get Bill to ,ton drinkUe and had often helped him out of these scrapes. The poor fellow went from bad J!f' worse He hung around Springfield, after Lincoln's death, for years. ^ '^'"^hl'l^T'un^r^beca-l'greirde'nt -^irasred for a fat office but. of course Lincoln could not do for him what he had done as a private citizen H^ndon failed to Appear It his own wedding, and innuendoes against Mrs. Lincoln Thai^ was Bill Herndon's revenge. Of course, he said much '" pra.se of Lincoln. He "'^^ ^^lY^'Jt.^^ tTeTnlrV^udrfnf da^atle treachery lurking beneath his pretended praise, I declare .1 can't help being reminded of that other Judas who betrayed his Master with a kiss. I9IO SUN. 2 MON. 3 OCTOBER TUES. WED. THUR- FRI. 7 1910 SAT. 8 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR AT THE HELM OF STATE A FAMILIAR STORY CORRECTED MMEDIATELY after Lincoln's election, seven Southern States had called a convention and issued orders of secession, South Carolina leading, to the extent of publishing news from other States of the Union under the heading, "Foreign Intelligence." I he first capital of the Confederate States of America was Montgomery, Alabama, and Jefferson Davis was elected their President. Members of Buchanan's Cabinet were doing all in their power to aid the South and destroy the National Government. President Lmcoln looked on in helpless alarm. Observing Buchanan's weak and foolish admissions and in- action he said to a friend, "Buchanan is giving the case away and I can't help it.' Almost the last thing he did was to take the journey across the country, fording swollen rivers, to visit his father's grave and say good-by to his dear old stepmother, who survived him. On February nth, 1861, the day before his fifty-second birthday, he bade farewell to Springfield, making the following speech at the station ; "My Frifnds: No one not in my position can appreciate the sadness I feel at this parting. To this people I owe all that I am. Here I have lived more than a quarter of a century : here my children were horn, and here one of them lies buried. I know not how soon I shall see you again. A duty devolves upon me which is perhaps, greater than that which has devolved upon any other man since the days of Washington, He would never have succeeded except for the aid of Divine Providence, upon which he at all times rel-ed. I feel that I cannot succeed without the same Divine aid which sustained him, and in the same Almighty Being place my reliance for support : and I hope you, my friends, will pray that I. may receive thf'D.v.ne assist- ance, without which I cannot succeed, but with which success is certain. Again, I bid you all an affectionate farewell." He made many speeches on his winding way to Washington. Perhaps the most important of these was that in Tatsing a flag over Independence Hall. Philadelphia, when he said he "would rather be assassinated on thi^ spot'" than surrender the principle of union and liberty for which the fathers had given their lives Beinr nformed by two groups of friends, independently of each other, that there was a we 1-laid plot to murder him whTle passing through Baltimore, he left Harrisburg and went through Baltimore in the night, arriving in Washington, to the surprise of the country, on the morning of the 23d of February. The story so often told of the President-elect losing his valise containing his inaugural address, is wrong in several particulars. Robert, Lincoln s eldest son, did really mislay the bag, but it happened in Indianapolis, not in Harrisburg. and Mr. Lincoln did not put it in his pocket and carry it the rest of the way himself, as is always Published, but as soon as the "grip sack " as he called it, was found, he turned to Robert, handed it back to him and said gently, "Now, Bob, see if you can't take better care of it. It was in keeping with the character of Abraham Lincoln to give his son another chance; and Robert faithfully guarded his precious charge the rest of the way. The week before his inauguration the President-elect spent in conferring with members of his prospective Cabinet. Mr. Seward, after accepting the portfolio of Secretary of State, tried to withdraw, but Mr. Lincoln urged him to retain '•■...,, ., , „„„„ When President Buchanan escorted Mr. Lincoln to the Capitol to take the oath of office, the old President was bowed nearly double with age. This made Lincoln seem a giant in stature beside him. He was introduced by his old friend Baker, to w^iose aid he had come down through the ceiling many years before, and who was now Senator f"^™ 0_^^Som Lincoln's "ancient enemy," Stephen A. Douglas, held his hat while he was delivering his inaugural which was oflfered to the South as an olive branch and was received like a firebrand. It closed with the following conciliatory message : "I am loath to close. We are not enemies but friends. We niust not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. 1 he mystic chordfoT memory .Stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature. Deliverin£ the loaugural I9IO OCTOBER 1910 SUN. MON. 10 TUBS. II WED. 12 THUR. FRl. SAT. 13 14 15 w THE LINCOLN 3 STORY-CALENDAR "THE WAR HAS ACTUALLY BEGUN" EFORE Lincoln's Cabinet had begun to understand that he was greater than any of them. Fort Sumter was fired on and its brave little garrison was forced to surrender, April 14th, 1861. This act roused the North to action. When the President called for seventy-five thousand men the response was prompt. Five days later, April 19th, the Sixth Regiment was mobbed and the first blood of the Civil War was shed in the streets of Baltimore. Leading men came from Baltimore to protest against troops crossing Maryland soil on their way to the national Capital. President Lincoln replied with one of his first characteristic speeches as President: "We must have troops; and as they can neither crawl under Maryland, nor fly over it, they must come across it." , a j r Washington was in danger of attack any day and rumors were nfe. Many people tied trom the city and Mrs. Lincoln was urged to seek safety with her three boys. She stoutly replied: "I am as safe as Mr. Lincoln, and I shall not leave him." The first battles were defeats for the North. The battle of Bull Run, so near the Capital, was a crushing blow and a great discouragement. President Lincoln had to call again and again for Two Confederate commissioners, Mason and Slidell, were on their way to England on the English steamship "Trent " when Captain Wilkes captured them. The country was delirious with joy over this bold stroke, and members of the President's Cabinet even opposed returning the commissioners. But Lincoln saw that a vital principle was involved, for which the United States had gone into the War of 181 2 with England. Lowell explained the case when he made his Hosea Biglow say: "We give the critters back, John, 'Cause Abra'm thought 'twas right; It warn't your bullyin' clack, John, Provokin' us to fight." While his Cabinet members were insulting him by patronizing him. the newspapers, even of his owm party, including the "New York Tribune" were ridiculing him. Wendell Phillips and other abolitionists were sneering at him, and battle after battle was going against him. The South was calling him an ogre, a mulatto and a fiend incarnate. President Lincoln's faith and patience were put to a painful test. Besides, he had to dispose of his Secretary of War Simon Cameron, for conduct which was certainly open to question. He believed Kdwin M. Stanton was the best man for the responsible place, though Stanton had always grossly abused him. The other members of the Cabinet de- murred for Stanton was a very opinionated, disagreeable man but the President, in the grandeur of his character, forgave and forgot Stanton s insults and allowed for his peculiar temperament as in the following story: "We may have to treat Stanton," the President went on, ' as they are sometimes obliged to treat a minister I know out West. He gets wrought up to so high a pitch of excitement in his prayers and exhortations that they have to put bricks into his pockets to keep him down. We may have to serve Stanton the same way, but I guess we'll let him jump awhile first. Mrs. Mnrj- Todd Lincoln I9IO OCTOBER 1910 SUN. MON. tue:s. WED. THUR. FRI. 16 17 18 19 20 21 SAT. 22 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR MANY SORROWS IN THE WHITE HOUSE S far as possible to a President in time of war, Lincoln lived the simple life in the White House which was, for four years, a kind of grand army headquarters. Many are the stories told of mothers, wives, sisters and sweethearts who found easy access to the President, and left his benignant and sympathetic presence, smiling through their tears, clutching precious little papers that were to give life or liberty to their loved ones. If men deserted, it was their "cowardly legs" that "ran away with them." Lincoln called his collection of desertions his "leg cases." All this seemed like trifling to the official martinets who had to preserve discipline in the army. One old man, begging the life of his son who was really a "bummer," and deserved shooting, if ever a deserter should have been shot, received from the President this telegram: "Job Smith is not to be shot until further orders from me." The old man was disappointed. The penalty seemed to be only post- poned. Lincoln laid his hand tenderly on the aged father's trembling shoulder and said: "Well, my old friend, I see you are not very well acquainted with me; if your son never looks on death till further orders come from me to shoot him he will live to be a great deal older than Methuselah." . , , r Nothing seemed to please President Lincoln more than a joke at the expense ot some P?"*- pous officer's dignity or vanity, unless, perhaps, a good story of the grim humor of the soldiers in the midst of danger and death. A congressman, one day, took it upon himself to ask the Presi- dent how he could joke and be "reminded of a story" in the midst of so many cares, anxieties and sorrows. Lincoln replied, in deep fervor: t u- "You cannot be more anxious than I am; but I tell you now that if it were not for this vent At this very time disaster was following on the heels of disaster. The President's secretaries told, afterwards, of the ashy pallor that overspread his kind face when the news of Bull Run, Fred- ericksburg, and Chancellorsville came over the wire, and how he wrung his hands in despair, cry- ing out, at different times, from his almost broken heart: "What will the Country say! will the Country say!" "Will this terrible war never end?" "I can't bear any more and live!" "If there's a man out of hell that suffers more than I do, I pity him!" . , . , ,. In his own home a great grief came upon him. Willie, his darling companion, about twelve years old, was ill and taken alarmingly worse during a grand White House reception which the doctor had advised Mrs. Lincoln to go on and give, saying the boy's condition was not even critical. Willie died two or three days afterward, in February, 1862. In addition to national disasters, sneering editors and orators, and this private sorrow, the President feared that his bright little wife would lose her reason. Her girlish ambition to be mistress of the White House had been fulfilled as not one woman in a million has her child-dreams come true, but Mrs. Lincoln's devoted soul was "pierced through with many sorrows." A faith- ful nurse thus describes the father's emotion at the time of Willies death: Mr Lincoln came in. I never saw a man so bowed down with grief. . . . Great sobs choked him. He bowed his head in his hands, and his tall frame was convulsed with emotion. I stood at the foot of the bed, my eyes full of tears looking .-.t the man in silent, awestricken wonder. His grief unnerved him and made him a weak, passive child. I did not dream that his rugged nature could be so moved ; 1 sh.ill never forget those solemn moments. O, what Willie Lincoln I9IO SUN. 23 MON. 24 OCTOBER TUES. WED. THUR. 25 26 27 FRI. 28 I9IO SAT. 29 1^ m THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR "WE'VE GOT TO SAVE THE UNION" HAT night I footed it up to the Soldiers' Home, where Mr. Lincoln was livin' then, right among the sick soldiers in their tents. There was lots of people settin' around in a little room, waitin' fer him. There wan't anybody there I knowed and I was feelin' a little funny when a door opened and out come little John Nicolay. Well, John didn't seem over glad to see me. 'Have you an ap- pointment with Mr. Lincoln?' he says. 'No, sir,' I says; 'I ain't, and it ain't necessary. . . . Tell him Billy Brown's here and see what he says.' In about two minutes the door popped open and out come Mr. Lincoln, his face all lit up. He saw me first thing, and he laid hold of me, and just shook my hands fit to kill. 'Billy,' he says, 'now I am glad to see you. Come right in. You're goin" to stay to supper with Mary an' me.' He had a right smart of people to see, but as soon as he got through we went out on the back stoop and set down and talked and talked. He asked me about pretty nigh everybody in Springfield. I just let loose and told him about the weddin's and births and the funerals, and the buildin', and I guess there wan't a yarn I'd heard in the three years and a half he had been away that I didn't spin fer him. Laugh— you ought to ha' heard him laugh— just did my heart good, fer I could see what they'd been doin' to him. Always a thin man, but Lordy, he was thinner'n ever now, and his face was kind o' drawn and gray— enough to make you cry. Well, we had supper and then talked some more, and about ten o'clock I started down town. Wanted me to stay all night, but I said, 'Nope Mr. Lincoln, can't; goin' back to Springfield to-morrow.' 'Billy,' he says, 'what did you come down here for?' 'I come to see you, Mr. Lincoln.' 'But you ain't asked me for anything, Billy. What is it? Out with it. Want a post office?' 'No, Mr. Lincoln, just wanted to see you— felt kind o' lonesome— been so long since I'd seen you.' Well, sir, you ought to seen his face as he looked at me. 'Billy Brown,' he says, slow-like, 'do you mean to tell me you come all the way from Springfield, Illinois, just to have a visit with me?' 'Yes, sir,' says I, 'that's about it, and I'll be durned if I wouldn't go to Europe to see you, if I couldn't do it no other way, Mr. Lincoln.' Well, sir, I never was so aston- ished in my life. He just grabbed my hand and shook it nearly off, and the tears just poured down his face, and he says: 'Billy, you never'll know what good you've done me. I'm homesick, Billy, just plumb homesick, and it seems as if this war would never be over. Many a night I can see the boys a-dyin' on the fields and can hear their mothers cryin' for 'em at home, and I can't help 'em, Billy. I have to send them down there. We've got to save the Union, Billy, we've got to.' " .. ^„ „, j^^ ^j ,jked From "He Knew Lincoln," by Ida M. Tarbell. and talked" I9IO OCTOBER— NOVEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. 30 31 SAT. w^ THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR THE QUAKER AND THE DRAFT HEN the draft was made my name was one that was drawn along with those of several other young Friends (Quakers), two others in our little meeting. It created a good deal of excitement among us. The two others paid their three hundred dollars each, but I felt it right to do nothing, feeling that I could not go myself nor give money to hire others to go. The proper military officer came out and notified me that I would be expected to report in the mili- tary camp at Lafayette, Indiana, for training, on a certain day. I told him that I could not conscientiously be there, that as I could not fight it would not do any good for me to report. Then he demanded the three hundred dollars. To this I replied: "If I believed that war is right I would prefer to go myself than to hire some one else to be shot in my place." He told me I would either have to come or pay the three hundred dollars, or he would be forced to sell my property. As I was firm in my decision ... he went out and looked over the farm, selected the stock that he proposed to sell and then sat down and commenced writing bills for the public sale of our horses, cattle and hogs. While he was writing, dinner was ready, and when we sat down to the table we insisted on his eating with us. We tried to keep up a pleasant conversation on various subjects, making no reference to the work he was engaged in. After dinner he turned to me and said: "If you would get mad and order me out of the house, I could do this work much easier, but here you are, feeding me and my horse while I am arranging to take your property from you. I tell you it's hard work." We told him we had no unkind feelings toward him as we sup- posed he was only obeying the orders of those who were superior to him. I went out again to my work and, when he had prepared the sale bills, he placed one on a large tree by the roadside in front of the house, and then rode around and placed the others in different places in the neighborhood. A few days before the time had arrived for the sale I was at Lafa- yette. The officer came to me and said: "The sale is postponed. I don't know when it will be. You can go on using your horses." I heard nothing more about it for several years. After the War closed I learned that Governor Morton, who was in Washington about that time, spoke to President Lincoln about it, and he ordered the sale to be stopped. From the Autobiography of Allen Jay, by permission of The John C. m>uton Company, publishers, also. of Wayne Whipple's "Story-Life of IJttcoln." ^'^^^^^A I9IO NOVEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. 8 WED. THUR. 10 FRI. II SAT. 12 m THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR LINCOLN AND HIS GENERALS RESIDENT LINCOLN spent nearly three years of the war searching for a gen- eral who was better able to manage the military campaigns than himself. After the first battle of Bull Run he appointed McClellan to the chief command. Mc- Clellan was a great military engineer and tactician, but was wanting in aggres- siveness. Lincoln treated this general with the utmost patience and even long- sufTering, for McClellan began to look upon himself as the savior of the country, and the President and his Cabinet as "geese" — one of his names for them! Mc- Clellan never appreciated the true greatness of Abraham Lincoln, nor, of course, what a pigmy he was himself, in comparison with the chief he took upon himself to slight and snub. Lincoln treated McCIellan's insults with large-minded charity, saying: "I will hold McCIellan's horse if he will win us a battle." In spite of the clamor on the part of the country the President patiently waited for McClellan to do something, then reluctantly removed him and appointed General Burnside, who did but little if any better. Then Halleck, Hooker and Meade failed. Battle after battle was lost until the war reached its "high water mark" at Gettysburg. To the great grief of the President, Lee was allowed to escape back into Virginia. During the bickering and temporizing of the generals in the East, Grant was winning victories in the West. He had earned the name, associating his initials with one of his ultimatums, of "Unconditional Surrender" Grant. While Gettysburg, so well planned and heroically fought, became only a drawn battle. Grant was winning an unmistakable victory at Vicksburg and received the surrender of Pemberton's army. In March, 1864, Grant was made commander of the armies, and the brilliant deeds of Sher- man and Sheridan were added to the bright pages of the history of the war. At last, the North had generals able to cope with such brave and chivalrous leaders as Generals Robert E. Lee and "Stonewall" Jackson. There were petty jealousies, and self-appointed commissions called upon the President in vain attempts to secure the removal of General Grant. One band of malcontents complained that Grant drank whisky. "Find out what brand," retorted Lincoln, "and I'll send a barrel of it to each of my other generals." "No," said the President, "I can't spare Grant. He fights." Lincoln had sub- lime confidence in Grant. He said he could sleep nights after Grant took command; if anything should or could be done. Grant would do it, he said. When the presidential campaign of 1864 came round. President Lincoln was naturally anxious to "finish this big job." McClellan was nominated by the Democrats to run against him. Stanton — loyal, trusty, ugly, disagreeable Stanton — discharged an officer for appearing at a McClellan mass meeting. Lincoln reinstated the man, saying he had a perfect right to vote against himself if he so wished. He said, "I'm the longest, but McCIellan's better looking." There was great thanksgiving throughout the North after Lin- coln's almost unanimous election, and throughout that winter the war was manifestly drawing to a close. The second Inaugural was of a very different tenor from the first. The burden of the first was to appease the South, and, if possible, avert a war. The second was j.|j to reconcile the North and arrange for a charitable and peaceable ijjl! adjustment of many difficulties brought about by the war. The second Inaugural closed with the following noble sentiments: With malice toward none ; with charity for all ; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds ; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, .and for his widow and his orphan — to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations. Gen. U. S. Cr&nt I9IO NOVEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 13 14 15 16 17 IS 19 THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR A NEW STORY OF LINCOLN'S GETTYSBURG ADDRESS YDIA," said good old Jacob of Ephrata, "let's go over to Gettysburg and hear Mr. Everett at the dedication of the battle-ground for a cemetery, day after to-morrow. We'll go to-morrow so as to be there bright and early the next day, in time to get a good place to see and hear all that's going on." It was a long drive from Ephrata to Gettysburg, but to hear Edward Everett's oration would be the privilege of a lifetime. Early in the morning of the 19th of November, 1863, Jacob and Lydia took their places near the front of the special platform erected on the great battle-field. There was a long, wearying delay. The sun shone unusually warm for November. At last the little procession arrived. President Lincoln was there with an escort from Washington, for he had been invited, as a matter of form, to make a few per- functory remarks at the close of the exercises. Edward Everett, for whose convenience the date had been postponed about a month, did not arrive on the field until after the hour set for him to begin his address. There were diplomats and other dignitaries. Jacob pointed out Secretary Seward, who, he thought, should have been made President instead of Mr. Lincoln. Lydia felt as if she could not stand there much longer, though the crowd was so dense she could not fall. Everything began to turn black, and she grew dizzy and weak; she felt herself going — sinking! There was confusion, crowding, and a man called out: "A woman has fainted!" In all their official foresight no provision had been made for a faintmg woman. The crowd pressed tighter. She heard a voice out of the vague spaces above the chaos around her, commanding: "Here, hand that woman to me." .,,.,. 1 » Lydia felt strong yet gentle hands lifting her, it seemed, out of all her troubles— then she lost herself. ^ ^ ^ When she came to herself again she was sitting on that high platform chair with thousands of eyes upon her, and who should be sitting by, fanning her tenderly, but the President of the United States! All this was more than modest Lydia could bear. She gasped, hoarsely: "I— feel— better now. I want — to go — back." "O, no, madam," said Mr. Lincoln cheerily, "you stay right where ^ ^ you are. It was hard enough to pull you out of there, and we couldn't 'V^i'^^ stick you back into that crowd again." ' '^*^^ So this is why, in some old pictures of Abraham Lincoln dehvermg his immortal address at Gettysburg, a little, shrinking old lady in plain garb — not Lucretia Mott, but humble Lydia of Ephrata — is shown sit- ting near him. During that long two hours, while Everett was deliver- ing his brilliant and scholarly oration, poor Lydia could not forget her embarrassing position. But she forgot herself and everythmg save the speaker and his wonderful words when her gallant attendant began his brief address. On their way home next day, Jacob, after a long silence, remarked: "Mr. Everett's oration was grand, wasn't it? But, do you know, Lydia. that little speech of 'Father Abraham's' was the best of all; yes, I think it was the best fee ever heard." ,-, , , c Written from the account given by Lydia herself to Dr. Josefh i. Walton, George School, Pennsylvania. in Mr . Li * * ncoln's easy I9IO SUN. 20 MON. 21 NOVEMBER TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. 22 23 24 25 1910 SAT. 26 THE LINCOLN STORYXALCNDAR LINCOLN, STANTON, AND THE "BOYS IN BLUE" T seems strange now that Stanton, of all men, was among the very first to appre- ciate the simple grandeur of the Gettysburg Address — Stanton, rude, sneering, caustic, contemptuous, obstinate Stanton — who took pleasure in insulting Lin- coln when they first met, eight years earlier, in the great McCormick reaper case; Stanton, who had always called Lincoln a gorilla, an imbecile and a fool — with many profane expletives! Mind could never have conquered the ob- durate soul of Secretary Stanton. It was Lincoln's heart alone that wrought this greatest miracle of his life. In spite of Stanton's atrocious treatment of him. President Lincoln recognized the sterling worth and patriotism of his snarling enemy, and said that he was glad to bear Stanton's wrath for the good he could do the nation. People, at home and abroad, freely criticised the President for allowing his Secre- tary of War to oppose and stultify him in so many trivial ways. But, little by little, as a trainer breaks in a fractious horse, Lincoln tightened the curb, until one day, in utter kindness, yet with adamantine firmness, the President came to say, "Mr. Secretary, it will ha've to be done." And it was done. After that last Cabinet meeting on the fatal fourteenth of April (Good Friday), 1865, Stanton remarked, in his devoted pride, to the Attorney-General, "Didn't our chief look grand to-day!" . . . Lincoln appreciated the Southern leaders, and had all charity and tenderness for the South. Once, seeing a photograph of General Robert E. Lee, he looked at it long and tenderly, saying, "It is the face of a noble, noble, brave man." At another time he was heard to say of General "Stonewall" Jackson, before his own discovery of Grant: "He is a brave, Presbyterian soldier. If we, in the North, had ';^ such generals, this war would not drag along so." A large part of the patriotism of the soldiers was their love for Abraham Lincoln. He seemed to be the personification of their country, threatened and wronged. He meant more to the people than "Uncle Sam"— /le was "Father Abraham!" When President Lincoln reluctantly issued call after call for soldiers, and more and more sol- diers, the people seemed never to tire of responding: "We are coming. Father Abraham, Three hundred thousand more." The soldiers said among themselves: "He cares for us! he loves us!" and they cheerfully, gladly, even humorously — to be like him— marched into the jaws of death for his dear sake. It was far different i\^ from the love Napoleon inspired in his troopers, for their loyalty flagged |V and finally failed. It was Napoleon's selfish heartlessness that made him a colossal failure. It was Lincoln's self-giving heart which crowned his life with immortal success. From early boyhood he had lived his life, a burning and shining illustration of his own words: "With malice toward none; with charity for all.' Secretary Stanton I9IO NOVEMBER— DECEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. 27 28 29 30 THUR. I FRI. SAT. THE LINCOLN STORY-CALENDAR LINCOLN AND LITTLE TAD R. LINCOLN seldom spoke of Willie. Robert was away at Harvard College, and later at the front, as one of General Grant's aides. Thus the President's wealth of love was lavished on Tad, "the pet of the nation." The boy was passionately affectionate — his father's inseparable companion. A word from Mr. Lincoln would make him laugh gleefully or melt him to tears. In the solemn Cabinet meetings he played about, sometimes falling asleep on the floor or in his father's lap. He accompanied the President to Fortress Monroe, and clung to his father's hand when Lincoln strode through the streets of Richmond. While the President was making his last speech, from the northern portico of the White House, little Tad stood by, catching the leaves of his father's manu- script as they floated down to him. When they came too slowly to suit the boy, he demanded, in a piping voice: "Papa-day, give me another paper." (Tad's pet name for his father was "Papa-day.' ) The little fellow had a nasal impediment which affected his speech so that strangers could not well understand him. But the father understood his afflicted boy — yes, every word! No matter who was in conference with the President, nor what grave matters might be under discussion, whether with Seward, Stanton or Sumner— if little Tad spoke, his father's face bent tenderly over him. Senators and secretaries were often annoyed by Tad's interruptions. All these things combined to intensify Lincoln's yearning devotion to little Tad. This passionate tenderness was more than mere doting indulgence. , , ,t j As for the boy himself, he did not care for any other playmate. One of Lmcoln s life-guard has recorded the statement that the only times President Lincoln ever seemed genuinely happy were while they were romping through the stately old rooms of the Executive Mansion together, both whooping like wild Indians, playing horse or father carrying boy pickaback, or holding him high on his shoulders where Mr. Lincoln had always been in the habit of carrying the little boys, when Willie was playing too — Willie on one shoulder and Tad on the other. At such times Tad's small cup of joy was brimful, and he could give no better expression to it than by chuckhng and shouting: "O Papa-day! — Papa-day!" Where Tad had been the night of Lincoln's assassination no one knew exactly, but Thomas Pendel, the faithful old doorkeeper at the White House, relates that the little boy came in at the basement door very late, and clambered up the lower stairway with heartbroken cries of: "Tom Pen! Tom Pen! They've killed Papa-day! They've killed Papa-day!" * « * * * * * * * * They brought Mrs. Lincoln home in a state of collapse. The only wonder is that the horrible scene of which she had been a witness did not then and there dethrone her reason. During the gusts of grief to which she gave way, in spite of herself, little Tad would look up at her in terror and cry out: "Don't cry so. Mamma, or you will break my heart!" Then the horror-stricken mother would clasp the child in a passionate embrace, and cover his little upturned face with kisses and tears, summoning all the resolution of which she was capable, for the sake of her little boy. Between the two — his little mother and his little brother — poor Robert Lincoln had need of all the manly tenderness of his nature — "so like his father's," they all said. ... The terrific strain was too great for the desolate little woman who had been widowed by hideous cruelty, and she lay for many weeks, utterly prostrated, unable to go to the burial of her husband and Willie. Little Tsd Lincoln I9IO DECEMBER 1910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. 8 FRI. SAT. 10 THE LINCOLN # STORY-CALENDAR THE GRANDEST GRIEF OF HISTORY FTER Lincoln was gone a compartment in a private cabinet was found crammed with threats of assassination. He never referred to these except to say that there was no use in taking precautions or being afraid. "If they want to kill me," he remarked, "they'll do it somehow." He lived constantly in the spirit which breathed out its love for all man- kind on that first Good Friday, long ago, saying: "Forgive them, they know not what they do." Wednesday, April 19th, was the day set for the funeral. It was the fourth anniversary of the first bloodshed of the Civil War, at Baltimore. "It was the grandest funeral That ever passed on earth," for, while the simple services were being held in the White House and Lincoln's body lay in state under the majestic dome of the Capitol at Washington, it is estimated that more than twenty-five millions of people in the United States and Canada, and all over the civilized world, gathered in their places and "Wept with the passion of an angry grief" over the noblest martyrdom of humanity. On Friday, April 21st, the funeral train started from the capital on that long, sad journey of two thousand miles, to Springfield, Illinois, reversing the route which Lincoln, as President-elect, had traversed on his triumphal way to Washington. In the cities where he had stopped to speak, his body was laid in state, and many thousands passed by "in silence and in tears." Across the open country the people stood with bared heads, even in the rain, while the solemn procession swept by. Watch-fires blazed at night along the route, and everything was done to express the bitter sorrow of his people, loving and beloved. William Cullen Bryant, who had been one of the first newspaper men to champion the cause of the "Rail-splitter" candidate amid the sneers and snobbery of the unfriendly press, with a strong editorial on Lincoln, "A Real Representative Man," now wrote the following funeral ode for the services in New York City: "O, slow to smite and swift to spare. Gentle and merciful and just! Who in the fear of God didst bear The sword of power, a nation's trust. "In sorrow by thy bier we stand. Amid the awe that husheth all. And speak the anguish of a land That shook with horror at thy fall. "Thy task is done, the bonds are free; We bear thee to an honored grave. Whose proudest monument shall be The broken fetters of the slave. "Pure was thy life; its bloody close Has placed thee with the Sons of Light Among the noble hearts of those Who perished in the cause of Right." I9IO DECEMBER 1910 SUN. II MON, 12 TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 13 14 15 16 17 mmmmmmmmm- THC LINCOLN // »^ ^CJ \\ STORY-CALENDAR eJJ (Th^ it-itJL, ^irU«^, 0\m4^ -^:S:.>A^ >L-U.tfa^-d c/w .Z:^ -^tjutU. (yf -^njtptfj. ,^yjy,^^ U~^.U^ J^^i^Xo^ oMl^IJZZr ;t, ■£&a.,,Jj^^y y„w /^tr>- -t^ ^ ^^,,^ -U.*.o^.>J:, a^-o^ ■^«-*-*- ;«5^ -^ "^ c-t.r'^.U.^^ f The above letter is hanging on the wall of Oxford University, England, as a model of pure and exquisite English. After receiving this letter, three of Mrs. Bixby's sons, reported killed in battle, came home to her alive and well! There had been confusion in the records so all Mrs. Bixby's five sons were reported dead. This great joy was almost too much for that poor mother's heart. 1910 DECEMBER '910 SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 # THE LINCOLN J STORY-CALENDAR ABRAHAM LINCOLN Richard Henry Stoddard HIS man, whose homely face you look upon, Was one of Nature's masterful, great men; Born with strong arms, that unfought battles won. Direct of speech, and cunning with the pen. Chosen for large designs he had the art Of winning with his humor, and he went Straight to his mark which was the human heart! Wise, too, for what he could not break he bent. Upon his back a more than Atlas-load, The burden of the Commonwealth, was laid; He stooped and rose up to it, though the road Shot suddenly downwards, not a whit disi. '^ye'' Hold, warriors, councillors, kings! All now j^ve place To this dead Benefactor of the race ! I9IO SUN. DECEMBER MON. TUES. WED. THUR. FRI. I9IO SAT. 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 \