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Abraham LincolnAbraham Lincoln, photograph by Anthony Berger of the Mathew Brady Studio, February 9, 1864.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.Abraham Lincoln is born in a one-room cabin in the woods near Hodgenville, Kentucky, the son of Thomas and Nancy Hanks Lincoln. He is one of three children, but his brother dies as an infant.
1816
The family moves to Indiana, where Lincoln’s father builds them a cabin. The family farms, fishes, and hunts.
1818–19
Lincoln’s mother dies when he is nine years old. His father remarries the next year, and Abraham gets along well with his stepmother. Neither his father nor his stepmother can read much, but his stepmother encourages him to learn. He is rarely able to attend school, but he loves reading.
1830
Lincoln's New Salem State Historic SiteThe Berry-Lincoln general store is located at Lincoln's New Salem State Historic Site. The site offers a reconstruction of the former village of New Salem, Illinois, where Abraham Lincoln spent his early adulthood.
Lincoln runs for his first political office, in the Illinois state legislature, and loses. He wins election in his second attempt, in 1834, and then wins reelection three times thereafter.
1836
Lincoln becomes a lawyer, taking on cases involving everything from small disputes to murder. During a murder trial a witness says that he could see Lincoln’s client commit the crime in the bright moonlight. Lincoln wins the case by proving that the Moon had set on that date and time, and therefore it was too dark for the witness to see anything.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (neg. no. LC USZ 62 15325)At age 33, Lincoln marries 23-year-old Mary Todd after a long courtship and a broken engagement. They go on to have four sons, only one of whom lives to adulthood.
1846–49
Lincoln wins election to the U.S. House of Representatives. During his two-year term, he introduces legislation to end slavery in the District of Columbia.
1854
The Kansas-Nebraska Act, which proposes allowing settlers in Kansas and Nebraska to decide whether they will allow slavery in their territories, brings Lincoln back into politics.
1858
Lincoln runs for the U.S. Senate and holds a series of debates with Senator Stephen A. Douglas. Although Douglas holds on to his Senate seat, Lincoln becomes well-known for his speeches and beliefs.
1860
Lincoln wins the presidency on November 6, defeating three other candidates. Alarm spreads through the Southern states. They fear that Lincoln will abolish slavery. They decide to secede from, or leave, the Union. South Carolina becomes the first state to secede from the Union on December 20.
1861–64
Abraham Lincoln: Gettysburg AddressThe dedication ceremony for the National Cemetery at Gettysburg Battlefield was held in November 1863. Abraham Lincoln, hatless, is seated left of center.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.The American Civil War rages, claiming as many as 850,000 lives from battle and disease. Although the Union has more people and more soldiers, the Confederates win military victories early in the war. Eventually, the Union prevails. Lincoln earns the nickname “The Great Emancipator” for his role in bringing about the emancipation of the slaves. He also wins reelection in 1864.
April 14, 1865
Abraham Lincoln: deathbedAbraham Lincoln on his deathbed, surrounded by friends and colleagues, hand-colored lithograph, c. 1865.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (LC-DIG-ppmsca-07755)Pro-slavery advocate John Wilkes Booth shoots Lincoln during a theater performance. Lincoln dies the next morning. “Now he belongs to the ages,” his secretary of war, Edwin Stanton, reportedly says.
Republican Party, in the United States, one of the two major political parties, the other being the Democratic Party. During the 19th century the Republican Party stood against the extension of slavery to the country’s new territories and, ultimately, for slavery’s complete abolition. During the
President, in government, the officer in whom the chief executive power of a nation is vested. The president of a republic is the head of state, but the actual power of the president varies from country to country; in the United States, Africa, and Latin America the presidential office is charged