Abraham Lincoln's Birth
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On June 10, 1806, Thomas Lincoln of Hardin County, Kentucky, traveled to the Washington County Courthouse to obtain a bond to marry Nancy Hanks. Two days later the wedding took place in Richard Berry’s cabin located close to Beechland in Washington County, Kentucky. Reverend Jesse Head, a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church, performed the ceremony in the evening after a day of festivities. Dr. Christopher Columbus Graham, who attended the wedding, stated that the food included bear meat, venison, wild turkey and ducks, eggs, maple sugar strung on a string to bite off for coffee and whiskey, syrup in big gourds, peach and honey, and a sheep that two families barbecued over coals and wood burned in a pit. The Lincolns settled in Elizabethtown, and they celebrated the birth of their first child, Sarah, on February 10, 1807. In 1808 the Lincolns moved to the Sinking Spring Farm located on the south fork of Nolin Creek, around two and a half miles from Hodgenville, Kentucky. Their cabin measured approximately 16 by 18 feet. The logs were oak and chestnut and numbered approximately 143. They were chinked with clay. Rough wooden shingles covered the roof. There was a stone fireplace, one door which swung on leather hinges, and one window (without glass) which was once covered with greased paper or thin animal skin. There was a small box-like stick and clay chimney. The floor was dirt. In 1808 Nancy became pregnant for the second time. During the afternoon of Saturday, February 11, 1809, Nancy told Thomas that the time was getting close. She asked Thomas to get a midwife. Thomas left the cabin, and when he reached the road he saw a neighbor, Abraham Enlow (then 16 years old). Enlow's mother was a local midwife. Enlow told Thomas to go back and wait with his wife, and he promised to send his mother, and if she couldn't come, he would get his half-sister Margaret "Peggy" La Rue Walters (wife of Conrad Walters). As it turned out, Peggy Walters was the one who returned to the Lincolns' cabin. Abraham Enlow took Peggy Walters to the Lincolns' cabin. Peggy was only 20 years old, but she had assisted her mother with other births in the area. Many years later, in the summer of 1864, a neighborhood picnic took place near the location of the old Sinking Spring Farm. The picnic was on the property of a man named Richard Creal. During the picnic the conversation turned to the fact that President Abraham Lincoln had been born on the very land where the picnic was being held. One of the older women, Peggy Walters, mentioned she was present when Abraham Lincoln was born. She told the following story of the birth:
In 1906 author William E. Barton interviewed Judge Richard W. Creal who had been present at the picnic where Peggy Walters told her story of the birth. Creal was 11 years old at the time of the picnic. Barton took notes of his interview with Judge Creal, and Peggy Walters' words are from the notes Barton took during the interview. Creal said Peggy had a broken hip and was on crutches at the time of the picnic. She died later that same year. Other families, including the Enlows and Gollahers, claimed they had members present during the birth. Some accounts indicate Abraham Enlow returned to the Lincolns' cabin with his mother, Mary Brooks LaRue Enlow. In truth, the actual facts of Abraham Lincoln's birth are as much tradition as anything else. I have chosen to use Peggy Walters' version because William E. Barton stated, "It constitutes the only reliable narrative we have of the birth of Abraham Lincoln." In an 1886 interview with Jesse W. Weik, Dennis Hanks, a cousin of Nancy Hanks Lincoln, said:
Sarah Lincoln, Abraham's sister, married Aaron Grigsby on August 2, 1826, at the Little Pigeon Creek Baptist Church. Sarah and Aaron built their own cabin on a tract of land they owned. Sadly, during childbirth on January 20, 1828, Sarah died. Sarah was buried with her stillborn baby in her arms. The burial took place in the churchyard of the Little Pigeon Creek Baptist Church. Sarah was 20 years old when she passed away. Around 1812, a second son was born to Thomas and Nancy Lincoln. The infant, named for his father, died in infancy. Dr. Daniel Potter, an Elizabethtown physician, may have tried to save the baby's life. Thomas Lincoln Jr. was buried in the Redmon family cemetery on a knoll overlooking the Lincolns' farm. A Boy Scout troop donated a new marker for the child in 1959. The original grave marker for Thomas Lincoln Jr. is on display at the Nancy Lincoln Inn adjacent to the Sinking Spring Farm. The inscription on Peggy Walters' tombstone in the old South Fork burying ground, which stands beside that of her husband, Conrad Walters, on the south side of the creek, shows that Peggy Walters was born December 11, 1789 and died October 16, 1864. Documentary evidence of the Lincolns' marriage was discovered in 1878. William F. Booker, clerk of the court in Washington County, found the June 10, 1806, marriage bond signed by Thomas Lincoln and Richard Berry. Booker also discovered a 'marriage return' signed by Reverend Jesse Head that certified he performed the marriage. Sources: The Women Lincoln Loved by William E. Barton (Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1927), The Paternity of Abraham Lincoln by William E. Barton (New York, George H. Doran Company, 1920), Nancy Hanks Lincoln: A Frontier Portrait by Harold and Ernestine Briggs (New York, Bookman Associates, 1952), The Life of Abraham Lincoln by Ida M. Tarbell (New York, Doubleday Page & Co., 1895), Abraham Lincoln and His Ancestors by Ida M. Tarbell (New York, Harper and Brothers, 1924), Following Abraham Lincoln 1809-1865 by Bernhardt Wall (New York, Wise-Parslow Company, 1943), Lincoln's Parentage and Childhood by Louis A. Warren (New York, Century Books, 1926), Herndon's Informants edited by Douglas L. Wilson and Rodney O. Davis (Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 1998) and The Women in Lincoln's Life by H. Donald Winkler (Nashville, Rutledge Hill Press, 2001). Top: The drawing of the Richard Berry cabin came from p. 30 of Bernhardt Wall's Following Abraham Lincoln 1809-1865. The photo of the reassembled replica of the cabin is from the Library of Congress. Below: The painting of Nancy Hanks Lincoln came from the Summer 1998 edition of the Lincoln Herald. The photograph of Thomas Lincoln is from the Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee.
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