Tuesday, October 23, 1860.Springfield, IL.
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Lincoln writes to David Turnham, friend of Indiana days: "I well
remember when you and I last met, after a separation of fourteen
years, at the cross-road voting place, in the fall of 1844. It is now
sixteen years more and we are both no longer young men. I suppose you
are a grandfather; and I, though married much later in life, have a
son nearly grown." He tells William S. Speer of Tennessee that
anything he might write disclaiming intention of interfering with
slaves in slave states "would do no good." He has already many times
said that in print.
Abraham Lincoln to David Turnham, 23 October 1860, CW, 4:130-31; Abraham Lincoln to William S. Speer, 23 October 1860, CW, 4:130. Mrs. Lincoln buys cloth and buttons which come to $16.35.
Pratt, Personal Finances, 150. |