PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN - ENGRAVING UNSIGNED - HFSID 175387
Price: $380.00
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
Unsigned 8¾x11 b/w engraved oval vignette of President Abraham
Lincoln in a suit and bow tie
Unsigned engraving. Pencil notations in unknown hand in upper right
corner and on verso. B/w, 1½x4½ engraved vignette on 8¾x11 page, one surface.
Captioned: "President Abraham Lincoln". Future American president
Lincoln (1809-1865, born near Hodgenville, Kentucky), on the advice of
Whig legislator (and future law partner) John Todd Stuart, became a lawyer in
1836. In 1837, Lincoln moved to Springfield, where he became a partner in
Stuart's law firm. From 1834 until he left for Washington, D.C. as
President-elect, Lincoln's law offices were located above Seth Tinsley's store
in Springfield. Lincoln, who became one of the most respected and
successful lawyers in Illinois, handled some 5,100 cases and appeared before the
Illinois State Supreme Court over 400 times over his 23-year legal career,
which also included a long association (1844-1865) with another partner,
William Henry Herndon. Before being elected President, Lincoln also served
in the Illinois State Legislature (1834-1841) and one term (1847-1849) as
a U.S. Congressman. He's best known, of course, as the 16th president
of the United States (1861-1865), and especially as the Union's president
during the Civil War (1861-1865) and writer of the Emancipation Proclamation.
He was actively involved in military planning, swapping generals to find an
aggressive commander of the Union army. Though his involvement cost the Union an
early loss at the First Battle of Bull Run, his policies of blockading and
overwhelming the Confederate army with superior numbers would eventually win the
day. His primary objective was to reunite the United States, not end
slavery. However, he signed the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 in response
to rising abolition feelings in the Union. He was shot while sitting in
Ford's Theatre in Washington, DC by John Wilkes Booth on April 14, 1965, only a
few months after being sworn in for his second term as president and only two
days after the Confederate Army's official surrender, and died the next day. He
was succeeded by vice-president Andrew Johnson. Lightly toned, foxed, soiled and
creased, otherwise in fine condition.
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