Results for C
Lincoln and Agriculture
Agricultural life has defined the very essence of H...
Lincoln in Hancock County
Hancock County was off the beaten track for Abraham...
Historic Carthage Jail
Alexander Sympson knew Lincoln when they were small...
Masonic Lodge Building of 1887
This building was constructed by N. P. McKee and th...
Lincoln's Failed Murder Case
Abraham Lincoln lost a murder case here in April, 1...
Holsey Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
Side 1:
In 1884, a group of black c...
The Beardstown Women's Club
Erected this tablet
February 12, 1909
In memo...
Lincoln the Candidate
People in Cass County knew Abraham Lincoln not only...
Lincoln and the River
When Abraham Lincoln sought election to the Illinoi...
Black Dog Trail Campsite
[Title is the text]
Marker is on 4th Avenue n...
Results for C
Lincoln and Agriculture
Agricultural life has defined the very essence of Hancock County from the earliest days of its Anglo-American settlement. Lincoln, however, seemed indifferent to agriculture. Once he left his father's home, Lincoln never farmed again. But he came to respect the ...
Lincoln in Hancock County
Hancock County was off the beaten track for Abraham Lincoln. County residents were more familiar with his senatorial opponent, Stephen A. Douglas. In October 1858, Lincoln addressed an enthusiastic audience on the Carthage square. Afterward, he walked a few blocks ...
Historic Carthage Jail
Alexander Sympson knew Lincoln when they were small boys in Kentucky. Like Lincoln, he moved to Illinois in the 1830's, and arrived in Carthage in early 1844, just as contention with the Mormons was peaking. In 1858 Sympson was the ...
Masonic Lodge Building of 1887
This building was constructed by N. P. McKee and the Hancock Masonic Lodge in 1887. It was designed by Geo. W. Payne, a nationally renowned architect, with a large arched window and pyramid-shaped roof. in 1924 the building was purchased ...
Lincoln's Failed Murder Case
Abraham Lincoln lost a murder case here in April, 1839 A drunken Irish deckhand, William Fraim, killed a shipmate while their steamboat was docked at Frederick on the Illinois River in Schuyler County. When the shipmate blew cigar smoke in ...
Holsey Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
Side 1:
In 1884, a group of black citizens banded together to organize a church. They appealed to the Commissioners of Columbus, Georgia, and obtained a lot on Eighth Street. The first church was completed in 1886 and called ...
The Beardstown Women's Club
Erected this tablet
February 12, 1909
In memory of
Abraham Lincoln
who, for the sake of a mother in distress, cleared her son Duff Armstrong of the charge of murder in this hall of justice.
May 7 1858
Marker is on West 3rd Street just ...
Lincoln the Candidate
People in Cass County knew Abraham Lincoln not only as a lawyer but also as a candidate for the Illinois legislature and U.S. Congress. Those earlier campaigns allowed Lincoln to hone his political skills for the 1858 senatorial content that ...
Lincoln and the River
When Abraham Lincoln sought election to the Illinois legislature in 1832, his platform focused on his belief that improvements should be made to the Sangamon River, which he said would be "vastly important and highly desirable to the people of ...
Black Dog Trail Campsite
[Title is the text]
Marker is on 4th Avenue near Ridgeway Street, on the right when traveling east.
Courtesy hmdb.org