- 253
Lincoln, Abraham
Description
- Lincoln, Abraham
- Photograph signed ("A. Lincoln") as sixteenth President
- ink on photograph
Literature
Catalogue Note
Westerman suggested that should Lincoln want to find out if she was "an imposter or not," he could inquire of John Albert Jones, a childhood friend of hers "who is in some office in the Treasury department I disremember which." She further tells the President. "What you send will have to be done immediately as our San fair commences on the 18th Oct." She also reminded him in a postscript that "by so doing you will be rewarded from above." In order to support the Tazewell Fair—and perhaps to forestall any further entreaties from Mrs. Westerman—Lincoln had at least three signed carte-de-visite size prints sent to the Pekin Soldiers Aid Society (Hamilton & Ostendorf record two others in Lincoln in Photographs, p. 252).
The endorsement on the verso of the photograph is accurate apart from the date of the Fair. Not only do we know from Mrs. Westerman's letter that the Fair was held in October 1864, but Lincoln did not sit for this portrait until August 9, 1863, when he agreed to be Alexander Gardner's first sitter at the photographer's new gallery. John Hay, one of Lincoln's private secretaries, recorded the visit in his diary: "I went down with the President to have his picture taken at Gardner's. He was in very good spirits" (quoted in Mark Katz, Witness to an Era: The Life and Photographs of Alexander Gardner, p. 112). Lincoln is depicted sitting by a small marble-topped table, holding his reading glasses in his right hand and a Sunday newspaper in his left.