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Abraham Lincoln
Sixteenth President of the United States
Born in 1809 - Died in 1865
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Abraham Lincoln was born in a log cabin in Kentucky to Thomas and
Nancy Lincoln. The family moved to Indiana and 8 year old Abe helped
his father build another log house. A year later his mother died and
the house was very empty. His father remarried and in addition to his
sister Sarah, who was 3 years older, there were now 3 more children in
the family.
Lincoln had less than a year of schooling. Books were scarce and so
was paper. He worked his arithmetic problems on a board and cleaned
the board with a knife so he could use it again.
The family owned a Bible and he spent many hours reading it. He would
copy parts of it in order to memorize it. Sometimes
he would walk for miles to borrow a book. One of his favorite books was
"The Life of George Washington".
By the time he was 17, he knew he wanted to be a lawyer. He would
walk 17 miles to the county courthouse in order to watch the lawyers work.
He sat in the back of the courtroom and watched them as they shook
their fists and became red in the face. Then he would go home and think
about what he had seen.
When he was 21 years old he moved to Illinois and spent a year laboring on
a farm. It is said that he and his fellow-laborer split 3,000 rails in that year 1830.
He also managed a flat-boat on the Ohio River
Every time he got a new job he would try to work on a skill which would
help him when he became a lawyer. When he was a shopkeeper he tried to
be honest and fair. Once he
shortchanged a woman by 6 cents, and he
followed her home so he could give the money back to her.
When he was a postmaster, he tried to learn how to get along with people
well.
When he was a surveyor; a person who measured land, he tried to always
be accurate in his measurements.
He still wanted to be a lawyer. He would go without sleep in order to
study. He would borrow books from a neighbor in the evening, read them by the light of the fireplace, and take them back in the morning. In 1836 he passed the test and became a lawyer.
It was during this time he was he was elected to the Illinois legislature. by the Whig party. He became good at debating and public speaking. He had many debates with John Calhoun regarding the tariff question. They spoke before large audiences, sometimes as long as four hours.
Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas participated in several
debates concerning the question of slavery. They had a previous encounter at the State Fair in Springfield, Illinois. Lincoln would lose the senate race, but would win over Douglas in the 1860 presidential race.
Once a woman wrote an article containing some ridiculing remarks about General James Shields. The editor spoke to Lincoln about it and Lincoln said, "Tell him I wrote it." That's what he did and Shield challenged Lincoln to a duel with Lincoln's choice of weapons. On the appointed day Lincoln arrived with a sword in one hand and a hatchet in the other. A man, John J. Hardin, stopped the fight before it started. The event possibly changed the course of the nation's history.
He was inaugurated president in March of 1861. Five weeks later the
Civil War began. It was a fight about slavery. Lincoln wanted the United States to remain one nation. It was in danger of being divided into two nations; the North and the South.
In his 1860 inaugural address, he
said: "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the
institution of slavery in the states where it exists. I believe I have
no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so."
Two years later, President Lincoln wrote: "My paramount object in this struggle is
to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I
could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it; and if I
could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do
that. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I
believe it helps to save the Union (Letter to Horace Greeley, August 22, 1862)."
He quoted from the Bible, " A house divided against itself cannot stand." He was able to
realize both of his goals. In 1863 he issued the Emancipation Proclamation freeing the slaves in the Southern states, and the country was able to remain
a united nation. Eventually all the slaves in the United States became free.
We get an insight into the life of Abraham Lincoln when we read an
article which appeared in an Athens, Ohio newspaper June 8, 1860.
On April 14, 1865 President Lincoln and Mrs. Lincoln were attending a play at Ford's Theater in Washington D.C. While there he was assassinated by
John Wilkes Booth, an actor
with extremist views concerning politics and slavery. There had been a conspiracy by Booth and his cohorts to not only kill the president, but also William Henry Seward, and Andrew Johnson, the vice-president. The attack on Seward failed and the one on Johnson was never carried out.
The president, after being shot, was carried to a house across the street from the theater and died nine hours later. Booth was killed by one of the men trying to apprehend him.
Of all the presidents, Abraham Lincoln is the one in whom there is the greatest continuing interest. School children study him, historians debate his life and legacy, and people collect memorabilia about him.
This biography by Patsy Stevens, a retired teacher, was written in 2001.
Vietnamese translation of this article.
Portuguese translation of this article.
Spanish translation of this article.
Activities
Other Activities
Play an Online Game at Quia
Dictionary
From
Word Central's Student Dictionary
by Merriam - Webster
(Pronunciation note: the schwa sound is shown by ə)
surveyor
Pronunciation: sər-'vA-ər
Function: noun
: one that surveys;
especially : one whose occupation is
surveying land...
shortchange
Pronunciation: -'chAnj
Function: verb
1 : to give less than the correct amount of change to
2 : to give less than expected : CHEAT ...
legislature
Pronunciation: 'lej-ə-"slA-chər
Function: noun
: an organized body of persons having the authority to make laws...
inauguration, inaugurate
Pronunciation: in-'o-g(y)ə-"rAt
Function: verb
1 : to introduce into office with suitable ceremonies : such as to inaugurate a president
2 : to celebrate the opening of as inaugurate a new gym
emancipation, emancipate
Pronunciation: i-'man(t)-sə-"pAt
Function: verb
: to free from someone else's control or power; especially : to
free from slavery...
Research Links
American Civil Warwritten accounts from Eye Witness to History
Portraits of Abraham LincolnLibrary of Congress
Abraham Lincoln Research Site
Timeline of Abraham Lincoln's lifefrom The History Place
The Gettysburg Addressphotographs and text
Words as Politics at Gettysburg (audio)Engines of Our Ingenuity.
Poem by Rosemary Benetwritten about Nancy Hanks, Abe's mother.
Civil War and Reconstruction
at Kid Info
Abraham Lincoln Printables
Presidential Coloring Pages
Abraham Lincolnonline play by John Drinkwater
Abolition of Slaveryvideo lesson
(Click on the topics "Interactive Media Files", be sure volume is turned up.)
The Civil Warvideo lesson
(Click on the topics "Interactive Media Files" )
Ramifications of the Civil Warvideo lesson
(Click on the topics "Interactive Media Files" )
Abraham Lincolnonline movie produced in 1930, 1 hour 24 minutes
Abraham Lincoln Lesson PlanLesson Snips.com
(You must register to access lessons.)
American Civil War Lesson PlanLesson Snips.com
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates Lesson PlanLesson Snips.com
A Story About Abraham LincolnThe Lincoln Readers Book 4
Abraham Lincolnfrom Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography 1888
At biography.com search for Abraham Lincoln.
Scroll the panel for the "Video & Audio Results".
Videos
Books
Press "Go" to search for books about Abraham Lincoln.
Library
A LIBRARY OF
ONLINE BOOKS and BOOK PREVIEWS
Abraham Lincolnby BreAnn Rumsch (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln: Lawyer, President, Emancipatorby Pamela Hill Nettleton (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincolnby Cassie Mayer (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln, Photo-illustrated Biographiesby T. M. Usel (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincolnby Lola M. Schaefer, Gail Saunders-Smith (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincolnby Lora Polack Oberle (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincolnby Kekla Magoon (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln (Presidential Leaders)by Jeremy Roberts (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln, Presidents and Their Timesby Billy Aronson (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln (Pull Ahead Books)by Sheila Rivera (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln (Graphic Biography)by Saddleback Educational Publishing (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln (Bio Graphics)by Joe Dunn (selected pages) Order
here
Abraham Lincoln (Drama)by John Drinkwater (selected pages) Order
here
The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln (Graphic History)by Kay Melchisedech Olson, Otha Zackariah Edward Lohse (selected pages) Order
here
A Short Life of Abraham Lincolnby John G. Nicolay (public domain, 1902, full view)
Order
here
Abraham Lincoln: the true story of a great lifeby By William Osborn Stoddard (public domain, 1885, full view)
Abraham Lincolnby By Wilbur Fisk Gordy (public domain, 1917, full view)
Abraham Lincoln, the Boy and the Manby By James Morgan (public domain, 1908, full view)
Abraham Lincoln, a Character Sketch(with pictures) by By Robert Dickinson Sheppard (public domain, 1899, full view)
Quotes and Images From Abraham Lincolnedited by David Widger
Preview these Amazon books using the links below.
Abraham Lincoln, Friend of the Peopleby Clara Ingram Judson (selected pages)
Abraham Lincoln, Great American Presidentby Brenda Haugen (selected pages)
Abraham Lincoln, First Biographiesby Barbara Knox (selected pages)
Abraham Lincoln, From Pioneer to Presidentby Ellen Blue Phillips (selected pages)
Abraham Lincoln, Life of the Sixteenth Presidentby Gary Jeffrey, Kate Petty (selected pages)
Abraham Lincoln and His Family, Paper Dollsby Tom Tierney (selected pages)
Abraham Lincolnby Jean F. Blashfield (selected pages)
Credits and Solutions
The picture of Abraham Lincoln and his fourth son, Tad may be used without permission.
It is in the public domain and was found at the Library of Congress.
Lincoln political cartoons at
Wikipedia.
Puzzles on these pages courtesy of
Songs of Praise and
Armored Penguin
* Word Match Solution
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