The Life of Abraham Lincoln | Page 3

Henry Ketcham
in Indiana was constructed in 1847, and
it was, to say the least, a very primitive affair. As to carriages, there
may have been some, but a good carriage would be only a waste on
those roads and in that forest.
The only pen was the goose-quill, and the ink was home-made. Paper
was scarce, expensive, and, while of good material, poorly made.
Newspapers were unknown in that virgin forest, and books were like
angels' visits, few and far between.
There were scythes and sickles, but of a grade that would not be salable
to-day at any price. There were no self-binding harvesters, no mowing
machines. There were no sewing or knitting machines, though there
were needles of both kinds. In the woods thorns were used for pins.
Guns were flint-locks, tinder-boxes were used until the manufacture of
the friction match. Artificial light came chiefly from the open fireplace,
though the tallow dip was known and there were some housewives who
had time to make them and the disposition to use them. Illumination by
means of molded candles, oil, gas, electricity, came later. That was
long before the days of the telegraph.
In that locality there were no mills for weaving cotton, linen, or woolen
fabrics. All spinning was done by means of the hand loom, and the

common fabric of the region was linsey-woolsey, made of linen and
woolen mixed, and usually not dyed.
Antiseptics were unknown, and a severe surgical operation was
practically certain death to the patient. Nor was there ether, chloroform,
or cocaine for the relief of pain.
As to food, wild game was abundant, but the kitchen garden was not
developed and there were no importations. No oranges, lemons,
bananas. No canned goods. Crusts of rye bread were browned, ground,
and boiled; this was coffee. Herbs of the woods were dried and steeped;
this was tea. The root of the sassafras furnished a different kind of tea,
a substitute for the India and Ceylon teas now popular. Slippery elm
bark soaked in cold water sufficed for lemonade. The milk-house, when
there was one, was built over a spring when that was possible, and the
milk vessels were kept carefully covered to keep out snakes and other
creatures that like milk.
Whisky was almost universally used. Indeed, in spite of the
constitutional "sixteen-to-one," it was locally used as the standard of
value. The luxury of quinine, which came to be in general use
throughout that entire region, was of later date.
These details are few and meager. It is not easy for us, in the midst of
the luxuries, comforts, and necessities of a later civilization, to realize
the conditions of western life previous to 1825. But the situation must
be understood if one is to know the life of the boy Lincoln.
Imagine this boy. Begin at the top and look down him--a long look, for
he was tall and gaunt. His cap in winter was of coon-skin, with the tail
of the animal hanging down behind. In summer he wore a misshapen
straw hat with no hat-band. His shirt was of linsey-woolsey, above
described, and was of no color whatever, unless you call it "the color of
dirt." His breeches were of deer-skin with the hair outside. In dry
weather these were what you please, but when wet they hugged the skin
with a clammy embrace, and the victim might sigh in vain for sanitary
underwear. These breeches were held up by one suspender. The
hunting shirt was likewise of deer-skin. The stockings,--there weren't

any stockings. The shoes were cow-hide, though moccasins made by
his mother were substituted in dry weather. There was usually a space
of several inches between the breeches and the shoes, exposing a
tanned and bluish skin. For about half the year he went barefoot.
There were schools, primitive and inadequate, indeed, as we shall
presently see, but "the little red schoolhouse on the hill," with the stars
and stripes floating proudly above it, was not of that day. There were
itinerant preachers who went from one locality to another, holding
"revival meetings." But church buildings were rare and, to say the least,
not of artistic design. There were no regular means of travel, and even
the "star route" of the post-office department was slow in reaching
those secluded communities.
Into such circumstances and conditions Lincoln was born and grew into
manhood.
CHAPTER II.
THE LINCOLN FAMILY.
When one becomes interested in a boy, one is almost certain to ask,
Whose son is he? And when we study the character of a great man, it is
natural and right that we should be interested in his family. Where did
he come from? who were his parents? where did they come from?
These questions will engage our attention in this chapter.
But it
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