<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Flatboat—New Salem—Election
Clerk—Store and Mill—Kirkham's
"Grammar"</i>—"<i>Sangamo Journal</i>"—<i>The
Talisman—Lincoln's Address, March 9,
1832—Black Hawk War—Lincoln Elected
Captain—Mustered out May 27,
1832—Reënlisted in Independent Spy
Battalion—Finally Mustered out, June 16,
1832—Defeated for the
Legislature—Blacksmith or Lawyer</i>?—<i>The
Lincoln-Berry Store—Appointed Postmaster, May 7,
1833—National Politics</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>The life of Abraham Lincoln, or that part of it which will
interest readers for all future time, properly begins in March,
1831, after the winter of the "deep snow." According to frontier
custom, being then twenty-one years old, he left his father's cabin
to make his own fortune in the world. A man named Denton Offutt,
one of a class of local traders and speculators usually found about
early Western settlements, had probably heard something of young
Lincoln's Indiana history, particularly that he had made a voyage
on a flatboat from Indiana to New Orleans, and that he was strong,
active, honest, and generally, as would be expressed in Western
phrase, "a smart young fellow." He was therefore just the sort of
man Offutt needed for one of his trading enterprises, and Mr.
Lincoln himself relates somewhat in detail how Offutt engaged him
and the beginning of the venture:</p>
<p>"Abraham, together with his stepmother's son, John D. Johnston,
and<SPAN name="page22" id="page22"></SPAN> John Hanks, yet residing in Macon County,
hired themselves to Denton Offutt to take a flatboat from
Beardstown, Illinois [on the Illinois River], to New Orleans; and
for that purpose were to join him—Offutt—at
Springfield, Illinois, so soon as the snow should go off. When it
did go off, which was about the first of March, 1831, the county
was so flooded as to make traveling by land impracticable, to
obviate which difficulty they purchased a large canoe, and came
down the Sangamon River in it. This is the time and the manner of
Abraham's first entrance into Sangamon County. They found Offutt at
Springfield, but learned from him that he had failed in getting a
boat at Beardstown. This led to their hiring themselves to him for
twelve dollars per month each, and getting the timber out of the
trees and building a boat at Old Sangamon town on the Sangamon
River, seven miles northwest of Springfield, which boat they took
to New Orleans, substantially upon the old contract."</p>
<p>It needs here to be recalled that Lincoln's father was a
carpenter, and that Abraham had no doubt acquired considerable
skill in the use of tools during his boyhood and a practical
knowledge of the construction of flatboats during his previous New
Orleans trip, sufficient to enable him with confidence to undertake
this task in shipbuilding. From the after history of both Johnston
and Hanks, we know that neither of them was gifted with skill or
industry, and it becomes clear that Lincoln was from the first
leader of the party, master of construction, and captain of the
craft.</p>
<p>It took some time to build the boat, and before it was finished
the Sangamon River had fallen so that the new craft stuck midway
across the dam at Rutledge's Mill, at New Salem, a village of
fifteen or twenty houses. The inhabitants came down to the bank,
and exhibited great<SPAN name="page23" id="page23"></SPAN> interest in the fate of the boat, which,
with its bow in the air and its stern under water, was half bird
and half fish, and they probably jestingly inquired of the young
captain whether he expected to dive or to fly to New Orleans. He
was, however, equal to the occasion. He bored a hole in the bottom
of the boat at the bow, and rigged some sort of lever or derrick to
lift the stern, so that the water she had taken in behind ran out
in front, enabling her to float over the partly submerged dam; and
this feat, in turn, caused great wonderment in the crowd at the
novel expedient of bailing a boat by boring a hole in her
bottom.</p>
<p>This exploit of naval engineering fully established Lincoln's
fame at New Salem, and grounded him so firmly in the esteem of his
employer Offutt that the latter, already looking forward to his
future usefulness, at once engaged him to come back to New Salem,
after his New Orleans voyage, to act as his clerk in a store.</p>
<p>Once over the dam and her cargo reloaded, partly there and
partly at Beardstown, the boat safely made the remainder of her
voyage to New Orleans; and, returning by steamer to St. Louis,
Lincoln and Johnston (Hanks had turned back from St. Louis)
continued on foot to Illinois, Johnston remaining at the family
home, which had meanwhile been removed from Macon to Coles County,
and Lincoln going to his employer and friends at New Salem. This
was in July or August, 1831. Neither Offutt nor his goods had yet
arrived, and during his waiting he had a chance to show the New
Salemites another accomplishment. An election was to be held, and
one of the clerks was sick and failed to come. Scribes were not
plenty on the frontier, and Mentor Graham, the clerk who was
present, looking around for a properly qualified colleague,
noticed<SPAN name="page24" id="page24"></SPAN> Lincoln, and asked him if he could write,
to which he answered, in local idiom, that he "could make a few
rabbit tracks," and was thereupon immediately inducted into his
first office. He performed his duties not only to the general
satisfaction, but so as to interest Graham, who was a schoolmaster,
and afterward made himself very useful to Lincoln.</p>
<p>Offutt finally arrived with a miscellaneous lot of goods, which
Lincoln opened and put in order in a room that a former New Salem
storekeeper was just ready to vacate, and whose remnant stock
Offutt also purchased. Trade was evidently not brisk at New Salem,
for the commercial zeal of Offutt led him to increase his venture
by renting the Rutledge and Cameron mill, on whose historic dam the
flatboat had stuck. For a while the charge of the mill was added to
Lincoln's duties, until another clerk was engaged to help him.
There is likewise good evidence that in addition to his duties at
the store and the mill, Lincoln made himself generally
useful—that he cut down trees and split rails enough to make
a large hog-pen adjoining the mill, a proceeding quite natural when
we remember that his hitherto active life and still growing muscles
imperatively demanded the exercise which measuring calico or
weighing out sugar and coffee failed to supply.</p>
<p>We know from other incidents that he was possessed of ample
bodily strength. In frontier life it is not only needed for useful
labor of many kinds, but is also called upon to aid in popular
amusement. There was a settlement in the neighborhood of New Salem
called Clary's Grove, where lived a group of restless, rollicking
backwoodsmen with a strong liking for various forms of frontier
athletics and rough practical jokes. In the progress of American
settlement there has always been a<SPAN name="page25" id="page25"></SPAN> time, whether the frontier was
in New England or Pennsylvania or Kentucky, or on the banks of the
Mississippi, when the champion wrestler held some fraction of the
public consideration accorded to the victor in the Olympic games of
Greece. Until Lincoln came, Jack Armstrong was the champion
wrestler of Clary's Grove and New Salem, and picturesque stories
are told how the neighborhood talk, inflamed by Offutt's fulsome
laudation of his clerk, made Jack Armstrong feel that his fame was
in danger. Lincoln put off the encounter as long as he could, and
when the wrestling match finally came off neither could throw the
other. The bystanders became satisfied that they were equally
matched in strength and skill, and the cool courage which Lincoln
manifested throughout the ordeal prevented the usual close of such
incidents with a fight. Instead of becoming chronic enemies and
leaders of a neighborhood feud, Lincoln's self-possession and good
temper turned the contest into the beginning of a warm and lasting
friendship.</p>
<p>If Lincoln's muscles were at times hungry for work, not less so
was his mind. He was already instinctively feeling his way to his
destiny when, in conversation with Mentor Graham, the schoolmaster,
he indicated his desire to use some of his spare moments to
increase his education, and confided to him his "notion to study
English grammar." It was entirely in the nature of things that
Graham should encourage this mental craving, and tell him: "If you
expect to go before the public in any capacity, I think it the best
thing you can do." Lincoln said that if he had a grammar he would
begin at once. Graham was obliged to confess that there was no such
book at New Salem, but remembered that there was one at Vaner's,
six miles away. Promptly after breakfast the next
morning<SPAN name="page26" id="page26"></SPAN> Lincoln walked to Vaner's and procured the
precious volume, and, probably with Graham's occasional help, found
no great difficulty in mastering its contents. While tradition does
not mention any other study begun at that time, we may fairly infer
that, slight as may have been Graham's education, he must have had
other books from which, together with his friendly advice,
Lincoln's intellectual hunger derived further stimulus and
nourishment.</p>
<p>In his duties at the store and his work at the mill, in his
study of Kirkham's "Grammar," and educational conversations with
Mentor Graham, in the somewhat rude but frank and hearty
companionship of the citizens of New Salem and the exuberant boys
of Clary's Grove, Lincoln's life for the second half of the year
1831 appears not to have been eventful, but was doubtless more
comfortable and as interesting as had been his flatboat building
and New Orleans voyage during the first half. He was busy in useful
labor, and, though he had few chances to pick up scraps of
schooling, was beginning to read deeply in that book of human
nature, the profound knowledge of which rendered him such immense
service in after years.</p>
<p>The restlessness and ambition of the village of New Salem was
many times multiplied in the restlessness and ambition of
Springfield, fifteen or twenty miles away, which, located
approximately near the geographical center of Illinois, was already
beginning to crave, if not yet to feel, its future destiny as the
capital of the State. In November of the same year that aspiring
town produced the first number of its weekly newspaper, the
"Sangamo Journal," and in its columns we begin to find recorded
historical data. Situated in a region of alternating spaces of
prairie and forest, of attractive natural scenery and rich soil, it
was<SPAN name="page27" id="page27"></SPAN> nevertheless at a great disadvantage in
the means of commercial transportation. Lying sixty miles from
Beardstown, the nearest landing on the Illinois River, the
peculiarities of soil, climate, and primitive roads rendered travel
and land carriage extremely difficult—often entirely
impossible—for nearly half of every year. The very first
number of the "Sangamo Journal" sounded its strongest note on the
then leading tenet of the Whig party—internal improvements by
the general government, and active politics to secure them. In
later numbers we learn that a regular Eastern mail had not been
received for three weeks. The tide of immigration which was pouring
into Illinois is illustrated in a tabular statement on the commerce
of the Illinois River, showing that the steamboat arrivals at
Beardstown had risen from one each in the years 1828 and 1829, and
only four in 1830, to thirty-two during the year 1831. This
naturally directed the thoughts of travelers and traders to some
better means of reaching the river landing than the frozen or muddy
roads and impassable creeks and sloughs of winter and spring. The
use of the Sangamon River, flowing within five miles of Springfield
and emptying itself into the Illinois ten or fifteen miles from
Beardstown, seemed for the present the only solution of the
problem, and a public meeting was called to discuss the project.
The deep snows of the winter of 1830-31 abundantly filled the
channels of that stream, and the winter of 1831-32 substantially
repeated its swelling floods. Newcomers in that region were
therefore warranted in drawing the inference that it might remain
navigable for small craft. Public interest on the topic was greatly
heightened when one Captain Bogue, commanding a small steamer then
at Cincinnati, printed a letter in the "Journal" of January
26,<SPAN name="page28" id="page28"></SPAN> 1832, saying: "I intend to try to ascend
the river [Sangamo] immediately on the breaking up of the ice." It
was well understood that the chief difficulty would be that the
short turns in the channels were liable to be obstructed by a gorge
of driftwood and the limbs and trunks of overhanging trees. To
provide for this, Captain Bogue's letter added: "I should be met at
the mouth of the river by ten or twelve men, having axes with long
handles under the direction of some experienced man. I shall
deliver freight from St. Louis at the landing on the Sangamo River
opposite the town of Springfield for thirty-seven and a half cents
per hundred pounds." The "Journal" of February 16 contained an
advertisement that the "splendid upper-cabin steamer
<i>Talisman</i>" would leave for Springfield, and the paper of
March 1 announced her arrival at St. Louis on the 22d of February
with a full cargo. In due time the citizen committee appointed by
the public meeting met the <i>Talisman</i> at the mouth of the
Sangamon, and the "Journal" of March 29 announced with great
flourish that the "steamboat <i>Talisman</i>, of one hundred and
fifty tons burden, arrived at the Portland landing opposite this
town on Saturday last." There was great local rejoicing over this
demonstration that the Sangamon was really navigable, and the
"Journal" proclaimed with exultation that Springfield "could no
longer be considered an inland town."</p>
<p>President Jackson's first term was nearing its close, and the
Democratic party was preparing to reëlect him. The Whigs, on
their part, had held their first national convention in December,
1831, and nominated Henry Clay to dispute the succession. This
nomination, made almost a year in advance of the election,
indicates an unusual degree of political activity in the East, and
voters in the new State of Illinois were<SPAN name="page29" id="page29"></SPAN> fired with
an equal party zeal. During the months of January and February,
1832, no less than six citizens of Sangamon County announced
themselves in the "Sangamo Journal" as candidates for the State
legislature, the election for which was not to occur until August;
and the "Journal" of March 15 printed a long letter, addressed "To
the People of Sangamon County," under date of the ninth, signed A.
Lincoln, and beginning:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"FELLOW-CITIZENS: Having become a candidate for the honorable
office of one of your representatives in the next general assembly
of this State, in accordance with an established custom and the
principles of true republicanism, it becomes my duty to make known
to you, the people whom I propose to represent, my sentiments with
regard to local affairs." He then takes up and discusses in an
eminently methodical and practical way the absorbing topic of the
moment—the Whig doctrine of internal improvements and its
local application, the improvement of the Sangamon River. He
mentions that meetings have been held to propose the construction
of a railroad, and frankly acknowledges that "no other improvement
that reason will justify us in hoping for can equal in utility the
railroad," but contends that its enormous cost precludes any such
hope, and that, therefore, "the improvement of the Sangamon River
is an object much better suited to our infant resources." Relating
his experience in building and navigating his flatboat, and his
observation of the stage of the water since then, he draws the very
plausible conclusion that by straightening its channel and clearing
away its driftwood the stream can be made navigable "to vessels of
from twenty-five to thirty tons burden for at least one half of all
common years, and to vessels of much greater burden a part of the
time,"</p>
</div>
<p>His<SPAN name="page30" id="page30"></SPAN> letter very modestly touches a few other
points of needed legislation—a law against usury, laws to
promote education, and amendments to estray and road laws. The main
interest for us, however, is in the frank avowal of his personal
ambition.</p>
<p>"Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether it be
true or not, I can say, for one, that I have no other so great as
that of being truly esteemed of my fellow-men by rendering myself
worthy of their esteem. How far I shall succeed in gratifying this
ambition is yet to be developed. I am young, and unknown to many of
you. I was born, and have ever remained, in the most humble walks
of life. I have no wealthy or popular relations or friends to
recommend me. My case is thrown exclusively upon the independent
voters of the country, and if elected they will have conferred a
favor upon me for which I shall be unremitting in my labors to
compensate. But if the good people in their wisdom shall see fit to
keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with
disappointments to be very much chagrined."</p>
<p>This written and printed address gives us an accurate measure of
the man and the time. When he wrote this document he was
twenty-three years old. He had been in the town and county only
about nine months of actual time. As Sangamon County covered an
estimated area of twenty-one hundred and sixty square miles, he
could know but little of either it or its people. How dared a
"friendless, uneducated boy, working on a flatboat at twelve
dollars a month," with "no wealthy or popular friends to recommend"
him, aspire to the honors and responsibilities of a legislator? The
only answer is that he was prompted by that intuition of genius,
that consciousness of powers which justify their claims by their
achievements. When we scan the circumstances more closely, we
find<SPAN name="page31" id="page31"></SPAN> distinct evidence of some reason for his
confidence. Relatively speaking, he was neither uneducated nor
friendless. His acquirements were already far beyond the simple
elements of reading, writing, and ciphering. He wrote a good,
clear, serviceable hand; he could talk well and reason cogently.
The simple, manly style of his printed address fully equals in
literary ability that of the average collegian in the twenties. His
migration from Indiana to Illinois and his two voyages to New
Orleans had given him a glimpse of the outside world. His natural
logic readily grasped the significance of the railroad as a new
factor in transportation, although the first American locomotive
had been built only one year, and ten to fifteen years were yet to
elapse before the first railroad train was to run in Illinois.</p>
<p>One other motive probably had its influence. He tells us that
Offutt's business was failing, and his quick judgment warned him
that he would soon be out of a job as clerk. This, however, could
be only a secondary reason for announcing himself as a candidate,
for the election was not to occur till August, and even if he were
elected there would be neither service nor salary till the coming
winter. His venture into politics must therefore be ascribed to the
feeling which he so frankly announced in his letter, his ambition
to become useful to his fellow-men—the impulse that
throughout history has singled out the great leaders of
mankind.</p>
<p>In this particular instance a crisis was also at hand,
calculated to develop and utilize the impulse. Just about a month
after the publication of Lincoln's announcement the "Sangamo
Journal" of April 19 printed an official call from Governor
Reynolds, directed to General Neale of the Illinois militia, to
organize six hundred volunteers of his brigade for military service
in a campaign against the Indians under<SPAN name="page32" id="page32"></SPAN> Black Hawk,
the war chief of the Sacs, who, in defiance of treaties and
promises, had formed a combination with other tribes during the
winter, and had now crossed back from the west to the east side of
the Mississippi River with the determination to reoccupy their old
homes in the Rock River country toward the northern end of the
State.</p>
<p>In the memoranda which Mr. Lincoln furnished for a campaign
biography, he thus relates what followed the call for troops:</p>
<p>"Abraham joined a volunteer company, and, to his own surprise,
was elected captain of it. He says he has not since had any success
in life which gave him so much satisfaction. He went to the
campaign, served near three months, met the ordinary hardships of
such an expedition, but was in no battle." Official documents
furnish some further interesting details. As already said, the call
was printed in the "Sangamo Journal" of April 19. On April 21 the
company was organized at Richland, Sangamon County, and on April 28
was inspected and mustered into service at Beardstown and attached
to Colonel Samuel Thompson's regiment, the Fourth Illinois Mounted
Volunteers. They marched at once to the hostile frontier. As the
campaign shaped itself, it probably became evident to the company
that they were not likely to meet any serious fighting, and, not
having been enlisted for any stated period, they became clamorous
to return home. The governor therefore had them and other companies
mustered out of service, at the mouth of Fox River, on May 27. Not,
however, wishing to weaken his forces before the arrival of new
levies already on the way, he called for volunteers to remain
twenty days longer. Lincoln had gone to the frontier to perform
real service, not<SPAN name="page33" id="page33"></SPAN> merely to enjoy military rank or reap
military glory. On the same day, therefore, on which he was
mustered out as captain, he reënlisted, and became Private
Lincoln in Captain Iles's company of mounted volunteers, organized
apparently principally for scouting service, and sometimes called
the Independent Spy Battalion. Among the other officers who
imitated this patriotic example were General Whiteside and Major
John T. Stuart, Lincoln's later law partner. The Independent Spy
Battalion, having faithfully performed its new term of service, was
finally mustered out on June 16, 1832. Lincoln and his messmate,
George M. Harrison, had the misfortune to have their horses stolen
the day before, but Harrison relates:</p>
<p>"I laughed at our fate and he joked at it, and we all started
off merrily. The generous men of our company walked and rode by
turns with us, and we fared about equal with the rest. But for this
generosity our legs would have had to do the better work; for in
that day this dreary route furnished no horses to buy or to steal,
and, whether on horse or afoot, we always had company, for many of
the horses' backs were too sore for riding."</p>
<p>Lincoln must have reached home about August 1, for the election
was to occur in the second week of that month, and this left him
but ten days in which to push his claims for popular indorsement.
His friends, however had been doing manful duty for him during his
three months' absence, and he lost nothing in public estimation by
his prompt enlistment to defend the frontier. Successive
announcements in the "Journal" had by this time swelled the list of
candidates to thirteen. But Sangamon County was entitled to only
four representatives and when the returns came in Lincoln was among
those defeated. Nevertheless, he made a very respectable showing in
the race. The list of successful and<SPAN name="page34" id="page34"></SPAN> unsuccessful aspirants and
their votes was as follows:</p>
<br/>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="votes">
<tr>
<td align='left'>E.D. Taylor</td>
<td align='right'>1127</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>John T. Stuart</td>
<td align='right'>991</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>Achilles Morris</td>
<td align='right'>945</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>Peter Cartwright</td>
<td align='right'>815</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>Under the plurality rule, these four had been elected. The
unsuccessful candidates were:</p>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="votes">
<tr>
<td align='left'>A.G. Herndon</td>
<td align='right'>806</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>W. Carpenter</td>
<td align='right'>774</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>J. Dawson</td>
<td align='right'>717</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>A. Lincoln</td>
<td align='right'>657</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>T.M. Neale</td>
<td align='right'>571</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>R. Quinton</td>
<td align='right'>485</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>Z. Peter</td>
<td align='right'>214</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>E. Robinson</td>
<td align='right'>169</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align='left'>—— Kirkpatrick</td>
<td align='right'>44</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>The returns show that the total vote of the county was about
twenty-one hundred and sixty-eight. Comparing this with the vote
cast for Lincoln, we see that he received nearly one third of the
total county vote, notwithstanding his absence from the canvass,
notwithstanding the fact that his acquaintanceship was limited to
the neighborhood of New Salem, notwithstanding the sharp
competition. Indeed, his talent and fitness for active practical
politics were demonstrated beyond question by the result in his
home precinct of New Salem, which, though he ran as a Whig, gave
two hundred and seventy-seven votes for him and only three against
him. Three months later it gave one hundred and eighty-five for the
Jackson and only seventy for the<SPAN name="page35" id="page35"></SPAN> Clay electors, proving
Lincoln's personal popularity. He remembered for the remainder of
his life with great pride that this was the only time he was ever
beaten on a direct vote of the people.</p>
<p>The result of the election brought him to one of the serious
crises of his life, which he forcibly stated in after years in the
following written words:</p>
<p>"He was now without means and out of business, but was anxious
to remain with his friends, who had treated him with so much
generosity, especially as he had nothing elsewhere to go to. He
studied what he should do; thought of learning the blacksmith
trade, thought of trying to study law, rather thought he could not
succeed at that without a better education."</p>
<p>The perplexing problem between inclination and means to follow
it, the struggle between conscious talent and the restraining
fetters of poverty, has come to millions of young Americans before
and since, but perhaps to none with a sharper trial of spirit or
more resolute patience. Before he had definitely resolved upon
either career, chance served not to solve, but to postpone his
difficulty, and in the end to greatly increase it.</p>
<p>New Salem, which apparently never had any good reason for
becoming a town, seems already at that time to have entered on the
road to rapid decay. Offutt's speculations had failed, and he had
disappeared. The brothers Herndon, who had opened a new store,
found business dull and unpromising. Becoming tired of their
undertaking, they offered to sell out to Lincoln and Berry on
credit, and took their promissory notes in payment. The new
partners, in that excess of hope which usually attends all new
ventures, also bought two other similar establishments that were in
extremity, and for these likewise gave their notes. It is evident
that the confidence which Lincoln had inspired while he was
<SPAN name="page36" id="page36"></SPAN>
a clerk in Offutt's store, and the enthusiastic support he had
received as a candidate, were the basis of credit that sustained
these several commercial transactions.</p>
<p>It turned out in the long run that Lincoln's credit and the
popular confidence that supported it were as valuable both to his
creditors and himself as if the sums which stood over his signature
had been gold coin in a solvent bank. But this transmutation was
not attained until he had passed through a very furnace of
financial embarrassment. Berry proved a worthless partner, and the
business a sorry failure. Seeing this, Lincoln and Berry sold out
again on credit—to the Trent brothers, who soon broke up and
ran away. Berry also departed and died, and finally all the notes
came back upon Lincoln for payment. He was unable to meet these
obligations, but he did the next best thing. He remained, promised
to pay when he could, and most of his creditors, maintaining their
confidence in his integrity, patiently bided their time, till, in
the course of long years, he fully justified it by paying, with
interest every cent of what he learned to call, in humorous satire
upon his own folly, the "national debt."</p>
<p>With one of them he was not so fortunate. Van Bergen, who bought
one of the Lincoln-Berry notes, obtained judgment, and, by
peremptory sale, swept away the horse, saddle, and surveying
instruments with the daily use of which Lincoln "procured bread and
kept body and soul together," to use his own words. But here again
Lincoln's recognized honesty was his safety. Out of personal
friendship, James Short bought the property and restored it to the
young surveyor, giving him time to repay. It was not until his
return from Congress, seventeen years after the purchase of the
store, that he finally relieved himself of the last instalments of
his "national debt." But by these seventeen <SPAN name="page37" id="page37"></SPAN>years of
sober industry, rigid economy, and unflinching faith to his
obligations he earned the title of "Honest old Abe," which proved
of greater service to himself and his country than if he had gained
the wealth of Croesus.</p>
<p>Out of this ill-starred commercial speculation, however, Lincoln
derived one incidental benefit, and it may be said it became the
determining factor in his career. It is evident from his own
language that he underwent a severe mental struggle in deciding
whether he would become a blacksmith or a lawyer. In taking a
middle course, and trying to become a merchant, he probably kept
the latter choice strongly in view. It seems well established by
local tradition that during the period while the Lincoln-Berry
store was running its fore-doomed course from bad to worse, Lincoln
employed all the time he could spare from his customers (and he
probably had many leisure hours) in reading and study of various
kinds. This habit was greatly stimulated and assisted by his being
appointed, May 7, 1833, postmaster at New Salem, which office he
continued to hold until May 30, 1836, when New Salem partially
disappeared and the office was removed to Petersburg. The
influences which brought about the selection of Lincoln are not
recorded, but it is suggested that he had acted for some time as
deputy postmaster under the former incumbent, and thus became the
natural successor. Evidently his politics formed no objection, as
New Salem precinct had at the August election, when he ran as a
Whig, given him its almost solid vote for representative
notwithstanding the fact that it was more than two thirds
Democratic. The postmastership increased his public consideration
and authority, broadened his business experience, and the
newspapers he handled provided him an abundance of reading matter
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on topics of both local and national importance up to the latest
dates.</p>
<p>Those were stirring times, even on the frontier. The "Sangamo
Journal" of December 30, 1832, printed Jackson's nullification
proclamation. The same paper, of March 9, 1833, contained an
editorial on Clay's compromise and that of the 16th had a notice of
the great nullification debate in Congress. The speeches of Clay,
Calhoun, and Webster were published in full during the following
month, and Mr. Lincoln could not well help reading them and joining
in the feelings and comments they provoked.</p>
<p>While the town of New Salem was locally dying, the county of
Sangamon and the State of Illinois were having what is now called a
boom. Other wide-awake newspapers, such as the "Missouri
Republican" and "Louisville Journal," abounded in notices of the
establishment of new stage lines and the general rush of
immigration. But the joyous dream of the New Salemites, that the
Sangamon River would become a commercial highway, quickly faded.
The <i>Talisman</i> was obliged to hurry back down the rapidly
falling stream, tearing away a portion of the famous dam to permit
her departure. There were rumors that another steamer, the
<i>Sylph</i>, would establish regular trips between Springfield and
Beardstown, but she never came. The freshets and floods of 1831 and
1832 were succeeded by a series of dry seasons, and the navigation
of the Sangamon River was never afterward a telling plank in the
county platform of either political party.</p>
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