Note: This article is an excerpt from a
chapter of Dale Thomas’s book, still a work in progress, Lincoln’s Old
Friends of Menard, Kindred Families: Abell, Owens, Graham, and Greene.
After his failure to win the Whig nomination for Congress in 1843, Lincoln
wrote to a political associate: “It is truly gratifying to me to learn
that while the people of Sangamon [County] have cast me off, my old friends
of Menard [County] who have known me longest and best of any, still retain
their confidence in me.” (1)
On April 7, 1832, fife and drum announced the
spring muster of militiamen around the region of New Salem. All white males
from eighteen to forty-five, according to state law, had to assemble four
times a year, but the regulation was often ignored in favor of a yearly
muster. William G. Greene, twenty years old, stood in a casual formation with
his cousins, Bennet Abell and Mentor Graham, along with Lincoln and the other
men who were part of the Thirty-first Regiment of Illinois. A militiaman was
supposed to “provide himself with a good musket or rifle with proper
accoutrements.” (2) But these citizen soldiers did not look like a military
unit with “some sitting, some lying, some standing on one foot, some on both
-- every variety of weapon, the cornstalk, the umbrella and riding whip
predominating.” (3)
Nine days later, Governor John Reynolds of
Illinois called for mounted volunteers to reinforce federal troops opposing
Black Hawk, chief of the Sauks and Foxes, who had led his braves across the
Mississippi River, one hundred miles northwest of New Salem. Black Hawk,
sixty-seven at the time, had violated an agreement to stay out of Illinois,
but his initial purpose was planting corn until some local militiamen fired
the first shots in what became known as the Black Hawk War. Most of the
fighting would take place near the northern border of Illinois. If there had
been a true emergency in the state, Reynolds could have called up the entire
militia of one hundred and fifty thousand, but the Indians only numbered
between four and five hundred braves. (4)
Volunteers to fight Black Hawk eventually
totaled around nine thousand men, most of whom were motivated by an intense
hatred of Native Americans. Less than twenty years earlier, the Territorial
Government of Illinois had given a fifty dollar bounty for a “hostile”
Indian's scalp and only two dollars for a wolf's pelt. “An antipathy since
childhood,” wrote an Englishman traveling through Illinois, “they should
not mind shooting an Indian than a wild cat or raccoon.” (5)
According to a biography written in 1863,
Lincoln had a somber conversation with Greene after hearing of Reynolds’s
request for volunteers. (6) “I shall enlist,” he said, “Black Hawk is
one of the most treacherous Indians there is, and I hope he will be
shot."
“Just like an Indian,” Greene said. “The
only way to keep them in their place is to show them no quarter.”
“I don't know about that,” Lincoln said,
“though I am certain we have got to fight Black Hawk to save ourselves. He
is a cunning, artful warrior, and determined to massacre all the whites he
can.”
Twenty-three years old and nearly out of
work, Lincoln may have seen the political advantages of being a war veteran,
as he was considering a run for state representative. “In less than a year,”
he later wrote, “Offutt's business was failing -- had almost failed -- when
the Black Hawk war of 1832 -- broke out.” New Salem swelled with “military
ardor. Enlistments progressed rapidly.” (7) On April 21, Lincoln, Greene,
John Rutledge, Royal Clary, William F. Berry, and Jack Armstrong joined the
other young men of the region, who were mostly in their early twenties or late
teens, traveling to Richland and volunteering for thirty days. They were
assigned to Company A of the first division of Illinois forces to fight the
“British Band” as Black Hawk's warriors were called. (8)
Before leaving New Salem, Greene, now a
private, claimed his father had spoken to the men without Lincoln's knowledge:
“There's no question about it, Abe is altogether the best man for captain.”
They were in agreement, but many of them believed Lincoln was too modest to be
a candidate. “Well then, you must keep the matter close, but have a fair
understanding among yourselves. Whisper the matter about, so that every vote
will be right.” (9)
“We will press him into service,” Pvt.
Greene said. After the election, he humorously greeted him: “Captain
Lincoln, your honor!”
“None of your fun at my expense,” Lincoln
answered, knowing Greene was kidding and showing respect at the same time.
(10) Lincoln later wrote that he “joined a volunteer company, and to his own
surprise, was elected captain of it,.. [and] has not since had any success in
life which gave him so much satisfaction.”(11)
The New Salem Company rode to Beardstown,
joining the other volunteers who awaited orders to move north. “The whole
time that I was out,” an enlistee from St. Clair County said, “I never
witnessed a company drill.... I never heard a roll-call in the whole Brigade.”
He felt like the men were “going on some frivolous holiday excursion, and
not to encounter hostile Indians.” (12) On the last day of April, the
citizen army left for Yellow Banks on the Mississippi River. The carnival
atmosphere soon turned into a nightmare of cold rain, swollen streams, and
prairie mud. Motivated by promises of food and whiskey at the end of the
journey, the army found neither as it rode into Yellow Banks on the night of
May 3. Hungry volunteers openly cursed Governor Reynolds, army commander, as
they waited for two days before steamers arrived with supplies. In the mean
time, local farmers suffered the foraging of militiamen, unlike Black Hawk's
braves who had passed through the region a month earlier. Reynolds’ militia
met the federal troops at Fort Armstrong on May 7, and the two armies moved
northeast from the mouth of Rock River in pursuit of Black Hawk. After the
thirty day enlistment expired, the New Salem Company was disbanded, and most
of the men returned home without seeing any action. Lincoln, however,
reenlisted twice as a private, serving until a month before the war ended with
the Battle of Bad Axe on August 2, 1832. (13)
Speaking on the floor of Congress in 1848,
Lincoln joked about his militia days in which he had never seen any fighting:
“By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military Hero? Yes sir; in the
days of the Black Hawk war, I fought, bled, and came away.... I had a good
many bloody struggles with the mosquitoes; and, although I never fainted from
loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry.” (14)
Greene was impressed with his company
commander, especially when an “old Indian came to camp & delivered
himself up, showing us an old paper written by Lewis Cass, stating that the
Indian was a good & true man. Many of the men of the Army said, 'we have
come out to fight the Indians and by God we intend to do so.' Mr. Lincoln in
the goodness & kindness and humanity & justice of his nature stood --
got between the Indian and the outraged men -- saying -- 'Men this must not be
done -- he must not be shot and killed by us.' Some of the men remarked - -
'The Indian is a damned Spy.' Still Lincoln stood between the Indian & the
vengeance of the outraged soldiers... Some of the men said to Mr. Lincoln --
'This is cowardly on your part Lincoln.' Lincoln remarked, 'If any man thinks
I am a coward let him test it,' rising to an unusual height. One of the
Regiment made this reply to Mr. Lincoln last remarks --'Lincoln -- you are
larger & heavier than we are.' 'This you can guard against -- Choose your
weapons,' replied Mr. Lincoln somewhat sourly. This soon put to silence
quickly all charges of the cowardice of Lincoln.” (15)
Prior to Lincoln saving the Indian's life,
Royal Clary, who told the same story as Greene, said they came upon the scene
of a battle that had just taken place: “Whites lost 12 killed -- found 11 --
25 were wounded. They were horribly mangled -- heads cut off -- hearts taken
out – disfigured in every way... [And some time later, the] Indians had
committed depredations on Fox River -- had killed some men, women &
children... We saw the scalps they had taken [at the Pottawatomie camp] --
scalps of old women & children.” (16)
Two weeks before the August election, Lincoln
returned to New Salem. “Having lost his horse, near where the town of
Janesville, Wisconsin, now stands,” Greene recalled, “he went down Rock
River to Dixon in a canoe. Thence he crossed the country on foot to Peoria,
where he again took [a] canoe to a point on the Illinois River, within forty
miles of home. The latter distance he accomplished on foot.”(17)
While campaigning, Lincoln stayed with the
Abells, whose cousin later took most of the credit for suggesting he enter
politics. “Going to send you to the Legislature," Greene supposedly had
said to Lincoln, who thought he was joking: "You are crazy, William, and
all the rest of you who entertain such a thought. What! Run me, nothing but a
strapping boy, against such men of experience and wisdom!” (18) In the end,
though, Lincoln agreed, but he was not optimistic about his chances of being
successful. "That is impossible. I should not expect to be
elected..."(19)
A mile north of the Abell farm that summer,
Lincoln spoke in the new town which would soon outgrow and eclipse New Salem.
Greene stood in the crowd as Lincoln “addressed the people in the town of
Petersburg on the election and the causes which he advocated. It was what the
world would call an awkward speech, but it was a powerful one, cutting the
center every shot."(20)
On August 6, 1832, the voters of Sangamon
County selected four state legislators from a list of thirteen. Even though
New Salem precinct gave him 277 out of 300 votes cast, Lincoln finished eighth
in the county where he was generally not known. Grateful for the support given
him, Lincoln "was now without means and out of business, but was anxious
to remain with his friends who had treated him with so much generosity,
especially as he had nothing elsewhere to go."(21)
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Abraham Lincoln about
the time of the Black Hawk War
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William G. Greene
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Black Hawk
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Governor John Reynolds
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FOOTNOTES:
-
Don E. Fehrenbacher, ed., Abraham
Lincoln, Speeches and Writings,1832-1858 (New York: The Library of
America, 1989) Vol. I, 106.
-
Albert J. Beveridge, Abraham Lincoln,
1809 -1858 (Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1928) Vol. I,
120.
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"Independent Military Companies of
Sangamon County," (Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society,
3:23).
-
William H. Herndon and Jesse W. Weik,
Herndon's Life of Lincoln (New York: Da Capo Press, 1983), 76.
-
Cecil Eby, That Disgraceful Affair, the
Black Hawk War (New York: W.W. Norton and Co., 1973) 99 -100.
-
William M. Thayer, The Pioneer Boy and
How He Became President (Boston: Walker, Wise and Co., 1863) 245.
-
Don E. Fehrenbacher, Abraham Lincoln,
Speeches and Writings 1859 -1865 (New York: The Library of America, 1989)
Vol. II, 164.
-
Database of Illinois Black Hawk War
Veterans on website of the Illinois State Archives. (www.sos.state.il.us/depts/
archives/blkhawk.html)
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Thayer, 247 -249.
-
Ibid.
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Fehrenbacher, Vol. II, 164. Lincoln may
have been originally elected captain on April 7, 1832 and reelected two
weeks later on the farm of Greene’s father. Eby, 108.
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Eby, 106.
-
Ibid., 110 -112. Thayer, 252 -253.
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Fehrenbacher, Vol.I, 214.
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Douglas L. Wilson and Rodney O. Davis,
ed., Herndon's Informants (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois
Press, 1998) 18-19.
-
Ibid., 371-372.
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Thayer, 253.
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Michael Burlingame, ed., An Oral History
of Abraham Lincoln, John G. Nicolay’s Interviews and Essays (Carbondale
and Edwardsville, IL: Southern University Illinois Press, 1996) 19.
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Trayer, 254 -255.
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Wilson and Davis, 20. President Lincoln
appointed William Graham Greene the collector of internal revenue for
Illinois.
-
Fehrenbacher, Vol.II, 164.
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