Description:

Lincoln Abraham 1809 - 1865 A 16pp record being a docket of the "Peoples (and "Chancery") Cases, May Term 1844" from the chambers of Judge Lockett. The lined ledger sheets, 7.5 x 12, chronicle six separate appearances before the court by Lincoln under entries for "Logan and Lincoln". Columns also list corollary information ranging from the names of the parties involved to the "Action" taken such "On Appeal".

Before Abraham Lincoln became the Great Emancipator, the War President, the Savior of the Union, he was Lincoln the Prairie lawyer: a man who spent months of every year traveling, often in heat and dust or rain and mud, to a string of country courthouses. There, he tended to legal matters of every conceivable stripe for an array of clients that usually consisted of simple farmers, storekeepers tradesmen and mechanics, widows, wives and orphans. As routine as his cases were, it was in that moveable arena of pioneer Illinois courts that he honed his logic, his intellect and his language. It was there that he was afforded field and scope for his wit, his wisdom, his common sense and his compassion; in brief, for all of the aspects of that human understanding which would so well serve a nation when it came to be tried by Civil War. It was there, too, that the common perception of the homespun, folksy, humorous Lincoln blossomed into legend. In 1844, Lincoln was beginning to accumulate a sizable number of "billable hours." While in partnership with Logan at this time, it would just be a few more months when William Herndon was admitted to the bar and the firm of Lincoln & Herndon was formed. And, just two months after this session, the Lincoln family moved into their home on Eighth and Jackson in Springfield . . . where the successful attorney would reside until moving to the White House. A wonderful association document from Abe's early career.

Provenance: Hostick Historical Documents.

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