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allthingslincoln · 4 years
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allthingslincoln · 4 years
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Happy Birthday, Mr. Lincoln!
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Know a teacher or a student?
Then you might want to share this!
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Lincoln the Rail Splitter—The Postcard Image
One of the most enduring images of Abraham Lincoln is Lincoln the Rail Splitter—the tall, strong young man wielding his ax or maul splitting fence rails on the Illinois frontier. Lincoln was nicknamed the Rail Splitter by his supporters at the 1860 Republican National Convention, where they were touting their relatively unknown candidate for the party’s presidential nomination. Marching though the Chicago Wigwam carrying two fence rails that they claimed were “from a lot of 3,000 made in 1830 by Thos. Hanks and Abe Lincoln,” they cheered Lincoln as “The Rail Candidate.” The “rail candidate” won the nomination—and the presidency—and the rail splitter image became part of Lincoln iconography.
The popularity of Lincoln as rail splitter is reflected in the pictures gracing that very popular 20th-century souvenir item, the picture postcard.
Some postcards focused solely on Lincoln’s rail splitting prowess. This one shows young Lincoln working under the watchful eyes of an older man and a dog. According to printing on the reverse, it was a souvenir card offered by “Boston’s Newest Commercial Hotel.”
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On this souvenir postcard the Rail Splitter is equipped with both a maul and an ax.
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The design on this postcard is embossed for a three-dimensional look. 
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The same image of young Lincoln at work appears below a portrait of President Lincoln on this postcard.
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This embossed postcard was created for the Lincoln centennial in 1909. The Rail Splitter appears much older than the 20-something youth who split fence rails in Illinois, and he sports a post-1860 beard.
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“Abraham Lincoln as a Rail Splitter” includes inset images of “Lincoln’s Broadaxe,” with a note on the reverse saying it was then owned by a man in Petersburg, Illinois, and of an Ox-Yoke made by young Lincoln and owned by the University of Illinois.
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In 1996, the Chicago Historical Society produced this postcard reproducing a painting from its collection, “The Railsplitter, 1860” by an unknown artist.
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This Lincoln centennial souvenir postcard shows the Rail Splitter at work but links that work to young Lincoln’s well-known determination to read and write. The text reads, “Never idle, performing the humblest labor with the same enthusiasm that he pursued under the light of a tallow dip the learning that eventually entitled him to a place in the front rank as orator and a writer of English.”
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The link between Lincoln’s rail splitting and learning is clear in other postcard images of the young Rail Splitter as well. This postcard, a reproduction of a painting by J.L.G. Ferris, is captioned “The Rail Splitter – 1830 – Lincoln clearing land in Illinois.” Ferris portrays Lincoln with an ax and a maul and also with an open book, which Lincoln will return to at his next rest.
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The illustration on this postcard—a 1916 New Year’s greeting card sent to customers of the St. Paul Mutual Telephone Company—shows Lincoln resting his hand on his ax and his foot on an unsplit log while he reads.
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This postcard reproduces Norman Rockwell’s 1964 painting “Abraham Lincoln, Age 22.” Originally titled “The Young Woodcutter,” the painting shows Lincoln reading as he walks away from his rail splitting duties.
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All these postcards, and hundreds of others, are held by the Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection. You can browse through all the collection’s postcards here.
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Can’t wait to see it in Springfield!
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Today, May 5, in 1847 Abraham Lincoln was involved in – and ultimately lost –a nasty divorce case.
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Laura Philbrick had sued Samuel Philbrick for divorce on the grounds of bigamy and of extreme and repeated cruelty.  
Samuel Philbrick retained Lincoln and answered that he did not beat his wife, but he did refuse to sleep or have sexual relations with her because her health and opium addiction made her "so filthy, loathsome, and disgusting in her person, as to render such connection impossible."  
However, the jury granted the divorce after discovering that Philbrick had a wife living in New Hampshire.  
The bill for divorce has survived:
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Not THEY did - he simply was... As a friend, William G. Greene of New Salem, noted: “His thighs were as perfect as a human being could be”
I am very pleased that this statue is making the rounds again!
Why…. Why did they make him look so damn fine
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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The Partisan Press — Republican Campaign Newspapers in the 1860 Election
The 1860 presidential campaign, which pitted Republican Abraham Lincoln against Southern Democrat John C. Breckinridge, Northern Democrat Stephen A. Douglas, and Constitutional Unionist John Bell, was a brief affair by 21st-century standards. The campaign began after the party conventions in May and June and ended with the election on November 6th. The candidates did not campaign for themselves—with the tradition-breaking exception of Douglas’s “visits to his mother”—so it was up to the candidates’ supporters to bring their man to the voters’ attention and whip up the enthusiasm that would produce success at the polls. Lincoln’s supporters got to work, producing biographies of the candidate; political cartoons; campaign flags, tokens, and buttons; and songs to be sung at rallies.
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And they published campaign newspapers—entirely partisan weeklies that supported the Republican Party and lauded its candidate while criticizing and sometimes demeaning the opposition. The Chicago Rail Splitter is a prime example. The paper made its debut on June 23, 1860, and published 18 regular issues, ending on October 27th.
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In addition, it published a special “pictorial” issue on September 30th that featured a series of cartoons lampooning Democrat Stephen Douglas.
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The paper’s editor, Charles Leib, was a man with a somewhat shifting (or shifty) political history, but with his appointment as editor of the Rail Splitter, he became a vociferous Republican partisan. An advertisement for the paper promised to “handle the Split Tail Democracy without Gloves.”
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And in his introduction to the first issue, Leib promised to “earnestly advocate the principles of Republicanism because they are founded in right” and to “expose the double-dealing…and…villainous schemes” of the Democrats. “There will,” he proclaimed, “be a great deal of crimination and recrimination.” And he concluded somewhat pugnaciously, “if we should incur the displeasure of any of the Democracy [Democratic Party] for telling the truth, and they should feel aggrieved, they can call at our office, at 66 Randolph Street, up stairs, where we will be most happy to give them any satisfaction they may desire. We will not, however, take back any statement we make, of the truth of which we are satisfied.”
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The Republicans of Cincinnati also published a Rail Splitter, independent of the Chicago paper. The Cincinnati paper published every Wednesday from August 1st through October 17th, with a final issue on October 27th, under the editorship of J.H Jordan and J.B. McKeehan.
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The Cincinnati Rail Splitter advertised itself as “devoted to facts, arguments, and incidents, which will be of great service to the Republican cause throughout the United States” in order to “take the ‘starch’ out of the ‘Little Giant’ and other Democratic ‘Dough Faces,’ and show them up in their true colors.” In fulfilling that goal, the paper would “stir up the young men of the country to activity and vigilance, and light up the watch-fires of ‘LINCOLN and HAMLIN’ on every hill.”
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Unlike the Chicago and Cincinnati campaign papers, each of which cost 50 cents per issue, the Wide-Awake and Central Campaign Club Bulletin was distributed in New York City for free. 
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New York City was home to numerous Wide-Awake clubs—groups of young men who supported Lincoln and the Republicans with well-organized torch-light parades featuring marching units dressed in helmets or caps and shiny caped uniforms made of enameled cloth. Parades usually ended with nighttime rallies. The clubs also sponsored indoor meetings with well-known speakers. The October 5th issue of the Wide-Awake and Central Campaign Club Bulletin details a meeting held at the Cooper Union where Thaddeus Stevens was the primary speaker.
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It also includes advertisements for Wide-Awake supplies like torches, “oils for torch lights and signal lanterns,” and printed membership certificates.
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While the Wide-Awake Clubs were new organizations formed for the 1860 election, the Young Men’s Republican Union of the City of New York was a more experienced group, having been formed in 1856 to support Republican candidate John C. Frémont. The Union sponsored a reading room and met regularly to hear speakers—it was, in fact, the sponsor for Abraham Lincoln’s speech at Cooper Union on February 27, 1860. The Union published a series of tracts or campaign papers between June 19th and October 2nd titled “Lincoln and Liberty!!!” The papers published excerpts from speeches and newspapers and reported on the campaign’s progress across the North.
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The Union was, however, a self-proclaimed young men’s movement and formed its own Wide-Awake unit, the Rail-Splitter’s Battalion.
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In Tract No. 2, the Union proclaimed that “Young Men are rallying, in great numbers and with unbounded enthusiasm, to the support of ‘Honest Old Abe’…the Young Men have every confidence in the Illinois rail-splitter, knowing that one competent to raise himself from the humblest and most obscure, to the most elevated and influential position in society, is fit to be entrusted with the reins of government, and will not hold them amiss. Lincoln is, emphatically, the choice of the Young Men, and their earnest enthusiasm will contribute largely to his inevitable success.”
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Whether Lincoln’s success in 1860 was inevitable was an open question, of course, but the Republican campaign papers did their best to make it so.
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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I was alerted about this statue a few times today (thanks y’all - you are AWESOME!) and am now understanding why ;-) We have talked about it here before and I think I recognize some of the quotes...
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Great news!
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Finally, someone picked up on the idea of getting those back!
:-)
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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A most happy 210th birthday to a wonderful human being! 
Thank you Abraham Lincoln for all you did and do!
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For all the lessons you teach and for being so accessible and open that even those of us who might have started out not having clue what you were talking about, can understand you. 
Thank you for all the friendships, that span centuries and distances alike, that you create and the many hours of conversation, debate,  laughter and joy you build. 
And books – thank you for the books!
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Fido, the Lincoln family dog, the early 1860s; he stayed in Springfield, IL, with friends when the Lincolns moved to DC.
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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You're not an American citizen, right? So, I'm just curious how you came to be so enamored by President Lincoln, another country's leader? What are your favorite things about him? :)
Thank you for your question!
Indeed, I am not an American citizen but German. However, I do not believe that character traits like kindness, a need to care and the want for equality are tied to a certain nationality.
Abraham Lincoln does not primarily appeal to me as a “another country’s leader” but simply as a human being. That is how I met him – not as the 16thPresident of the United States but as a young boy who grew up to be a man and happened to occupy the highest office of ... “another country”.
I cannot simply sum up my “favorite things” about him in a single post; he is way too much for that – that is why this tumblr exists. While I understand the need for quick responses, a little reading on my blog should answer that question easily.
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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Now here is a real throwback Thursday. 
Was just sitting at the computer and organizing pictures for a near future use when I came across a visit to Hodgenville, KY in 2013. I got totally lost in the experience of this great day when I was on my first Lincoln roadtrip six years ago.
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I did not expect much from Hodgenville and yet, we ended up spending almost the whole day.
The beautiful statue set on the traffic circle consists of a seated Lincoln figure that was unveiled on Mai 31 in 1909 and a second, more recent one. Robert Lincoln attended the ceremony and apparently loved the statue – but hated the heat on that particular day.
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The sculptor was German-born Adolph Alexander Weinman, who came to the United States at the age of 14, attended evening classes at Cooper Union and later studied at the Art Students League of New York with sculptors Augustus Saint-Gaudens and later served as an assistant to Daniel Chester French, among others. He also created the Lincoln statue in the Kentucky State Capitol at Frankfort.
On the day I visited I learned that the statue is maintained by the local Rotary Club and therefore is in pristine condition.
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Right across from the seated adult Lincoln sits a lil’ Abe, a dog by his side and a book in his hands, staring longingly…maybe into his own future. The mini Lincoln was added in 2008.
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The set of statues is spectacular and well worth a visit. But it gets even BETTER. There is a small but beautiful Lincoln museum across the street  that held me in Hodgenville for hours. 
Pictures, figures, lots of information and the kindest staff on could imagine. At the time we were there, there was an exhibit from, I believe, local artist who had created fantastic pieces from tiny statues to beautiful pictures. 
I’ll add one in which there important stages his life are hidden in Lincoln’s face. 
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For example there is his mother in his nose, his parents bent over his cradle on his cheek and a log cabin on his upper lip. 
There is more but I think I’m stretching the unwritten text rules for a tumblr post.
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In short – it was a beautiful day and I hope every Lincoln lover gets to experience Hodgenville on day!
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allthingslincoln · 5 years
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