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Manuscripts

Material related to Lincoln


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    Abraham Lincoln collection

    Manuscripts

    This collection contains correspondence and documents of Abraham Lincoln dating from 1813 to 1865, especially relating to his presidency and the election of 1864, and to the Civil War, including appointments, military commissions, instructions and orders to generals, pardons, and passes. Several items pertain to slavery, including letters and notes, documents regarding gradual emancipation in Delaware, and signed copies of the 13th Amendment. There is a small amount of material for the Lincoln and Todd families. Also present are legal documents, 1838 to 1860, primarily relating to various cases handled by Lincoln during his law partnerships, especially with William H. Herndon. In addition, the collection includes items dating from 1865 to 1911 that concern Lincoln's assassination and the conspirators, his funeral, and his legacy.

    mssLincoln

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    William H. Seward, Washington, D.C., certified copy of Emancipation Proclamation

    Manuscripts

    Document signed. Printed certification form filled in by Seward, with black seal of the United States and mourning ribbon attached to printed copy of the Proclamation. (1 page)

    HM 3179

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    Correspondence and documents

    Manuscripts

    Pre-1860 correspondence pertains to Lincoln's work in the Illinois state legislature, Whig Party politics, presidential elections, national politics in the 1850s, Lincoln's law practice, the Republican Party, Stephen A. Douglas and the 1858 Illinois race for U.S. Senate, and Lincoln's 1860 presidential campaign and election. Items relating to the Civil War concern troops and troop movements, the mustering of companies and regiments, military commissions, the situation in border states and in Missouri, instructions and orders to generals, military intelligence, pardons and discharges for soldiers, and passes. Two of Lincoln's letters to generals—to Nathaniel Banks, 1863 March 29, and to David Hunter, 1863 April 1—discuss the importance of recruiting Black soldiers. Also present is a condolence letter written by Lincoln to the parents of a soldier killed in battle, see letter to Ephraim D. and Phoebe Ellsworth, 1861 May 25. Other letters and documents from Lincoln's presidency pertain to appointments, import duties and taxes, recommendations of and requests for work for individuals, politics and elections in various states, and the 1864 presidential election, particularly the "blind memorandum" of 1864 August 23 and Lincoln's electoral vote estimate, 1864 October 13. In addition, this series contains a small amount of family material, including letters from Lincoln to his father Thomas Lincoln and stepbrother John D. Johnston, 1848 December 24, and to Mary Todd Lincoln, 1862 November 9, as well as Todd family items. Several items in this series concern slavery, including its potential expansion, fugitive enslaved persons, and emancipation—see letters to: Owen Lovejoy, 1855 August 11; Lyman Trumbull, 1860 December 10 and 17; Alexander H. Stephens, 1860 December 22; John M. Schofield, 1863 June 22; and Mary Tyler Peabody Mann, 1864 April 5; as well as a note of Lincoln's dated 1864 March 22. This series also includes Lincoln's drafts and a printed copy of the 1861 act for the gradual emancipation of slaves in the state of Delaware, and three copies of the U.S. Congress resolution to amend the constitution (13th Amendment) dated 1864 December 5, one with Lincoln's signature attached.

    mssLincoln

  • William H. Seward, Washington, D.C., certified copy of Emancipation Proclamation

    William H. Seward, Washington, D.C., certified copy of Emancipation Proclamation

    Manuscripts

    Document signed. Printed certification form filled in by Seward, with black seal of the United States and mourning ribbon attached to printed copy of the Proclamation.

    mssLincoln

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    Legal records

    Manuscripts

    This series contains legal documents primarily pertaining to various cases handled by Lincoln during his law partnerships, especially with William H. Herndon. Also present is Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln indenture of land in Illinois to Lincoln's stepbrother, John D. Johnston, 1851 August 12. Autograph and signature status for Lincoln is noted at the item level. Some correspondence in series 1 relates to Lincoln's legal cases.

    mssLincoln

  • Dining room and table of Lincoln

    Dining room and table of Lincoln

    Visual Materials

    Image of table with a ewer and two glasses. Hanging on the wall, draped in black, is a framed broadside entitle, Facsimile Emancipation Proclamation.

    photST Glover (21)