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Nancy Lincoln

Nancy Hanks Lincoln (February 5, 1784 – October 5, 1818) was the mother of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. Her marriage to Thomas Lincoln also produced a daughter, Sarah, and a son, Thomas Jr. When Nancy and Thomas had been married for just over 10 years, the family moved from Kentucky to western Perry County, Indiana, in 1816. When Spencer County was formed in 1818, the Lincoln Homestead lay within its current boundaries. Nancy Lincoln died from milk sickness or consumption in 1818 at the Little Pigeon Creek Community in Spencer County when Abraham was nine years old.

Nancy Lincoln
Born
Nancy Hanks

February 5, 1784
DiedOctober 5, 1818(1818-10-05) (aged 34)
Cause of deathMilk sickness
NationalityAmerican
Known forMother of Abraham Lincoln
Spouse
(m. 1806)
Children
ParentLucy Hanks
Relatives

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

 
Early home of Nancy Hanks Lincoln in Springfield, Kentucky

Nancy's mother, by popular theory among historians and genealogists, and supported by a mtDNA study in 2015,[1][2] was Lucy Hanks, who later married Henry Sparrow in 1790 in Mercer County, Kentucky.[3][4][5][nb 1]

Abraham Lincoln's law partner William Herndon reported that Lincoln told him that his maternal grandfather was "a well-bred Virginia farmer or planter."[8] According to William E. Barton in The Life of Abraham Lincoln and Michael Burkhimer in 100 Essential Lincoln Books, Nancy was most likely born illegitimate and her family created stories to lead Abraham to believe he was a legitimate member of the Sparrow family.[9]

It is believed that Nancy Hanks' grandparents were Ann and Joseph Hanks and that they raised her from infancy until her grandfather died when she was about nine years old.[10][11] At the time of Nancy's birth, Joseph and his wife and children were all living on 108 acres near Patterson Creek in then-Hampshire County, Virginia (now Mineral County, West Virginia). In March 1784, Joseph Hanks sold his property via a mortgage and moved his wife, eight children and young granddaughter Nancy to Kentucky.[12][13]

The family lived on land along Pottinger's Creek, in a settlement called Rolling Fork in Nelson County, Kentucky, until patriarch Joseph's death in 1793. Nancy's grandmother, who was called by the more formal name Ann rather than the common nickname of Nancy, decided to return to her homeland, Farnham parish in Virginia. At that time, Nancy went to live with her mother, now Lucy Hanks Sparrow,[14] having married Henry Sparrow in Harrodsburg, Kentucky two or three years earlier.[11][15][16][17][18][19][20]

After Lucy's sister Elizabeth Hanks married Henry Sparrow's brother Thomas in Mercer County, Kentucky in 1796, Nancy, now about age 12, went to live with the couple, whom she called mother and father. She was known as Nancy Sparrow[11][15][17][18][19][20] and was described as "intelligent, deeply religious, kindly and affectionate." Lucy's sister gave birth to an illegitimate son in 1799 named Dennis Friend Hanks, who was also raised by Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow.[21]

At the home of Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow, Nancy would have learned the skills and crafts a woman needed on the frontier to cultivate crops and clothe and feed her family. She learned to read the Bible and became an excellent seamstress, working at the Richard Berry home before her marriage.[22]

Lucy's marriage to Henry Sparrow produced eight children, and Lucy had a reputation as a "fine Christian woman." Two sons were loyal to the Union during the Civil War and were preachers.[10][18]

Timeline of events and relationships edit


Grandparents Joseph and Ann Hanks
Mother Lucy
Sparrow
Eliz. & Thomas
Sparrow
Sparrow and/or Berry home
Married to Thomas Lincoln
While grandfather is alive
Unclear (1)
"Adopted"
Unclear (2)
Marriage until death
1784
1785
1786
1787
1788
1789
1790
1791
1792
1793
1794
1795
1796
1797
1798
1799
1800
1801
1802
1803
1804
1805
1806
1807
1808
1809
1810
1811
1812
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817
1818
(1) It is unclear whether Nancy Hanks lived the entire three years (1793–1796) with her mother prior to moving in with her aunt, Elizabeth Hanks, and newly married uncle, Thomas Sparrow; (2) It is unclear when Nancy went to work for the Berrys.

Marriage and family edit

 
Rear of the Lincoln Marriage Temple, which shelters the cabin in which Thomas Lincoln married Nancy Hanks. Built in 1931, it is part of Old Fort Harrod State Park in Harrodsburg, Kentucky.

On June 12, 1806, Hanks married Thomas Lincoln at Beechland,[23] the home of Richard Berry, by Reverend Jesse Head.[15][16] Nancy was brought to the home to work as a seamstress by her friend Polly Ewing Berry, the wife of Richard Berry Jr. since October 10, 1794. Polly was a friend of Nancy's from Mercer County, Kentucky, and Richard Berry Jr. was a good friend of Thomas Lincoln.[24][25] Lincoln proposed to her in his childhood home at what is now Lincoln Homestead State Park[26] or in the Francis Berry house in front of the fireplace.[27]

Nancy's marriage bond was signed by Richard Berry Jr., who identified himself as her guardian.[10][15] Per Warren, "The title had no legal significance, Berry having never been so appointed, and Nancy Hanks was then of age. But to him to call himself 'guardian' was a courtesy customary under such circumstances [no father able to sign the marriage bond]."[24] A record of their marriage license is held at the county courthouse.

They had three children:

  • Sarah Lincoln (February 10, 1807 – January 20, 1828)
  • Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865)
  • Thomas Lincoln Jr. (died in infancy, 1812)

The young family lived in what was then Hardin County, Kentucky, (now LaRue) on the Knob Creek Farm. Neighbors reported[28] that Nancy Hanks Lincoln was "superior" to her husband, a mild yet strong personality who taught young Abraham his letters as well as the extraordinary sweetness and forbearance for which he was later known.[29] In 1816, the year that Indiana became the 19th state, the Lincoln family moved to Spencer County in southern Indiana and proceeded to homestead at Little Pigeon Creek Settlement (now Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial). Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow and Dennis Hanks settled at Little Pigeon Creek the following fall, having lived in a shelter in which the Lincolns had lived until they built their cabin. While Abraham was ten years younger than his second cousin Dennis, the boys were good friends.[30][31]

Description edit

William Herndon, author of Life of Lincoln, describes Nancy Hanks Lincoln:

She was above the ordinary height in stature, weighed about 130 pounds, was slenderly built, and had much the appearance of one inclined to consumption. Her skin was dark; hair dark brown; eyes gray and small; forehead prominent; face sharp and angular, with a marked expression for melancholy which fixed itself in the memory of all who ever saw or knew her. Though her life was clouded by a spirit of sadness, she was in disposition amiable and generally cheerful.[32][nb 2]

Nancy was also described as "a bold, reckless, daredevil kind of woman, stepping on to the very verge of propriety."[33]

Abraham Lincoln inherited his mother's appearance[33] and manner. She was "mild, tender, and intellectually inclined."[34]

Death edit

 
Nancy Hanks Lincoln Gravestone

While living at Little Pigeon Creek Settlement, Nancy Hanks Lincoln died on October 5, 1818, age 34. Her nine-year-old son Abraham assisted his father in the making of her coffin by whittling the wooden pegs that held the planks together. Eleven-year-old Sarah cared for Abraham until their father remarried the next year.[35][36]

There are two views as to the cause of Nancy Hanks Lincoln's death. One view is that she died of "milk sickness." Several people had died that fall from the illness, including Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow, who raised her and then lived with her on the Lincolns' property at the Little Pigeon Creek settlement. The Sparrows died in September, weeks before Nancy's death, and Dennis moved in with the Lincolns.[36][37][38][nb 3] The illness was caused by drinking the milk or eating the meat of cows that had eaten white snakeroot. The plant contains the potent toxin tremetol, which is passed through the milk.[40] The migrants from the East were unfamiliar with the Midwestern plant and its effects. In the 19th century before people understood the cause of the illness, thousands in the Midwest died of milk sickness.[41]

The second view is that Nancy died of consumption. In 1870 Lincoln's law partner and biographer, William Herndon, wrote to fellow Lincoln biographer Ward Lamon saying that "Mrs. Lincoln died as said by some with the milk sickness, some with a galloping quick consumption",[42] i.e. a wasting disease[43] or tuberculosis. It has also been theorized that Nancy Lincoln had a marfanoid body habitus (or a marfanoid type of physique) with the same unusual facial features as her son.[44] This theory suggests that she died of cancer (which is a wasting disease) related to multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2b (MEN2B), and that she passed the gene for this syndrome to her son (see Medical and mental health of Abraham Lincoln).[44]

Nancy's grave is located in what has been named the Pioneer Cemetery,[45] also known as the Nancy Hanks Lincoln Cemetery.[46] Her headstone was purchased by Peter Studebaker, an industrialist from South Bend, in 1878.[47] At least 20 unmarked and eight marked graves are at the site; Nancy Lincoln is buried next to Nancy Rusher Brooner, a neighbor who died a week before Nancy from milk sickness. Henry Brooner, Nancy Brooner's son and best childhood friend of Abraham Lincoln, later recalled, "I remember very distinctly that when Mrs. Lincoln's grave was filled, my father, Peter Brooner, extended his hand to Thomas Lincoln and said, 'We are brothers now', meaning that they were brothers in the same kind of sorrow. The bodies of my mother and Mrs. Lincoln were conveyed to their graves on sleds."[46][48] Her aunt and uncle Elizabeth (Hanks) and Thomas Sparrow, also her childhood caregivers, are buried nearby.[46] The cemetery is located on the grounds of the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial, a National Historic Landmark District managed by the National Park Service in present-day Lincoln City, Indiana.[47]

Honors edit

 
Memorial to Nancy Hanks in Mineral County, West Virginia, at the site of her birth.

If Nancy Hanks
Came back as a ghost,
Seeking news
Of what she loved most,
She'd ask first
"Where's my son?
What's happened to Abe?
What's he done?"... ...
"You wouldn't know
About my son?
Did he grow tall?
Did he have fun?
Did he learn to read?
Did he get to town?
Do you know his name?
Did he get on?"[52]

  • North Spencer School Corporation, in Spencer County, Indiana, opened the Nancy Hanks Elementary School around 1990.[53]
  • In November 2008, the Mineral County Historical Society and the Mineral County Historic Landmarks Commission officially recognized the researched site of the birthplace of Nancy Hanks in Mineral County, West Virginia, which was first identified in 1929. They had a memorial placed at the site.[54]
  • On February 12, 2009, on the bicentennial of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, the West Virginia House of Delegates passed a resolution recognizing Nancy Hanks Lincoln for her contributions and her birth site in Mineral County.[54]
  • A rest area along Interstate 64 in Dale, Indiana is named for Nancy Hanks. In January 2019, the Indiana Department of Transportation announced plans to shut down the rest area because of low usage.[55] As reported in February 2023, the Hanks rest stations were slated for east-bound closure and west-bound conversion to truck parking in fiscal year 2025.[56]

Notable relatives edit

  • Nancy Hanks is a second cousin five times removed of actor, producer, writer and director Tom Hanks.[57]
  • Through his mother's Hanks bloodline, George Clooney is related to Nancy Hanks through Lucy Hanks Sparrow and Henry Sparrow's daughter, Mary Ann Sparrow, a half-sister to Nancy Hanks. Mary Ann Sparrow was Clooney's fourth great-grandmother.[58]
  • Camille Cosby, wife of Bill Cosby, was born Camille Olivia Hanks, a distant cousin of Nancy Hanks.[citation needed]

Portrayals edit

The Hanks–Lincoln wedding was portrayed in a play called Dearly Beloved: The Vows of a Lincoln Legacy to kick off a three-year bicentennial celebration of Abraham Lincoln's life. The play was held at the Lincoln Homestead State Park in Springfield, Kentucky.[59][60]

Nancy is portrayed by Maria Hill in the Daniel Boone episode "Before the Tall Man."

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Independent researchers determined in 2015 that Nancy Hanks Lincoln was the daughter of Lucey Hanks, the daughter of farmers Anna Lee and Joseph Hanks from the Nancy Hanks Lincoln mtDNA Study.[6] The information was published in For the People, a newsletter of the Abraham Lincoln Association. Gene By Gene Ltd. in Houston, Texas performed the lab testing using mtDNA from five matrilineal descendants of Joseph and Ann Lee Hanks. However, it has not been published in a peer-reviewed scholarly scientific journal.[7] The article states, "Because there are no living descendants in the Nancy Hanks Lincoln / Abraham Lincoln / Robert T. Lincoln line, nor any extant DNA chain for them, it is possible only to analyze data from daughters, sisters, or aunts of Sarah Hanks, Lucey Hanks, or Ann Lee Hanks."[7]
  2. ^ William Herndon's accounts of Nancy Hanks Lincoln are based upon interviews with Dennis Hanks, who lived near and with the Lincolns in his childhood, John Hanks and Sara Bush Johnson Lincoln.[32]
  3. ^ Dennis married one of Abraham's stepmother's daughters named Sara Elizabeth in 1821.[39]

References edit

  1. ^ Murr, J. Edward (2022). Abraham Lincoln's Wilderness Years: Collected Works of J. Edward Murr. Indiana University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-253-06269-7.
  2. ^ "Lincoln". The Reporter. November 2, 2015. pp. A4. Retrieved 2023-05-22.
  3. ^ Edward Steers (2007). Lincoln Legends: Myths, Hoaxes, and Confabulations Associated with Our Greatest President. University Press of Kentucky. p. 26. ISBN 978-0813172750.
  4. ^ David Herbert Donald (1995). Lincoln. New York: Touchstone. pp. 20, 23.
  5. ^ Burlingame, Michael (April 2013). Abraham Lincoln: A Life. JHU Press. pp. 12–14. ISBN 978-1-4214-0973-3.
  6. ^ Kent, David J. (2022-09-01). Lincoln: The Fire of Genius: How Abraham Lincoln's Commitment to Science and Technology Helped Modernize America. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4930-6388-8.
  7. ^ a b "DNA Tests: Nancy Hanks is Daughter of Lucey Hanks" (PDF). For the People. Vol. 17, no. 4. Springfield, Illinois. Winter 2015.
  8. ^ David Herbert Donald (1995). Lincoln. New York: Touchstone. pp. 20, 23.Wayne Soini (2022). Abraham Lincoln, American Prince; Ancestry, Ambition and the Anti-Slavery Cause. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 47–56].
  9. ^ Michael Burkhimer (2003). 100 Essential Lincoln Books. Cumberland House Publishing. pp. 52, 54–55, 63–64. ISBN 158182369X.
  10. ^ a b c Ralph Gary (2001). Following in Lincoln's Footsteps. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers. pp. 207–209.
  11. ^ a b c Doug Wead (2005). The Raising of a President: The Mothers and Fathers of Our Nation's Leaders. Simon and Schuster. p. 110. ISBN 1416513078.
  12. ^ Clara McCormack Sage; Laura Elizabeth Sage Jones (1939). Early Records, Hampshire County, Virginia: Now West Virginia, Including at the Start Most of Known Va. Aside from Augusta District. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 23. ISBN 0806303050.
  13. ^ William H. Herndon (2008). Herndon's Life of Lincoln. Wildside Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-1434476524.
  14. ^ William E. Barton (article); Henry Ford (book) (2003). W. J. Cameron (ed.). Nancy Hanks, the Mother of Lincoln. Dearborn Independent Magazine January 1927-October 1927. Kessinger Publishing. pp. 15–19. ISBN 0766159914.
  15. ^ a b c d Carl Sandburg (2007). Edward C. Goodman (ed.). Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years and The War Years. Sterling Publishing Company. pp. 12–14. ISBN 978-1402742880.
  16. ^ a b William Eleazar Barton (2005) [1920]. The Soul of Abraham Lincoln. University of Illinois Press. p. 48. ISBN 025207291X.
  17. ^ a b Carl Sandburg (1975) [1928]. Abe Lincoln Grows Up. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 25. ISBN 0156026155.
  18. ^ a b c Jesse W. Weik (1922). The Real Lincoln; a portrait. Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 43.
  19. ^ a b Lowell H. Harrison (2010). Lincoln of Kentucky. University Press of Kentucky. pp. PT23. ISBN 978-0813139371.
  20. ^ a b Appendix: Brief Outline of the Joseph Hanks Family, Book published by the University of Illinois. Northern Illinois University Libraries. Archived from the original on 2013-04-09.
  21. ^ Don Davenport (2002). In Lincoln's Footsteps: A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky Trails Books Guide. Big Earth Publishing. p. 6. ISBN 193159905X.
  22. ^ Doug Wead (2005). The Raising of a President: The Mothers and Fathers of Our Nation's Leaders. Simon and Schuster. p. 111. ISBN 1416513078.
  23. ^ Connelley, William Elsey; Coulter, E. M. (1922). History of Kentucky, Volume 5. Chicago and New York: American Historical Society. p. 607. ISBN 9780598572943. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  24. ^ a b Raymond Warren (2004). The Prairie President: Living Through The Years With Lincoln 1809 To 1861 (reprint ed.). Kessinger Publishing. pp. 5–6. ISBN 1417913347.
  25. ^ Louis Austin Warren (1933). The Shipley ancestry of Lincoln's mother. Lincolniana Publishers. pp. 204–205. (Reprint from Indiana Magazine of History, September 1933.)
  26. ^ DuPont-Ewing, Annette C. (2007). Washington County. Arcadia Publishing. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-7385-5299-6.
  27. ^ (PDF). Kentucky State Parks. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 31, 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  28. ^ Doris Kearns Goodwin (2006). Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. Simon & Schuster Paperbacks. p. 47.
  29. ^ David Hackett Fischer (1991). Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press paperback. p. 491.
  30. ^ Don Davenport (2002). In Lincoln's Footsteps: A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky Trails Books Guide. Big Earth Publishing. pp. 29, 32. ISBN 193159905X.
  31. ^ . Center for History. 1816. Archived from the original on October 27, 2012. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  32. ^ a b William Eleazar Barton (1920). The Paternity of Abraham Lincoln: Was He the Son of Thomas Lincoln? An Essay on the Chastity of Nancy Hanks. New York: George H. Doran Company. pp. 273–274, 275.
  33. ^ a b Thomas Keneally (2003). Abraham Lincoln. New York: Penguin Group. p. 1. ISBN 0-670-03175-5.
  34. ^ Philip B. Kunhardt Jr.; Philip B. Kunhardt, III; Peter W. Kunhardt (1992). Lincoln. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 34. ISBN 0-679-40862-2.
  35. ^ Carl Sandburg (2007). Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years and the War Years. Sterling Publishing Company. p. 22. ISBN 9781402742880. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  36. ^ a b Don Davenport (2002). In Lincoln's Footsteps: A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky Trails Books Guide. Big Earth Publishing. pp. 32–33. ISBN 193159905X.
  37. ^ Carl Sandburg (2007). Edward C. Goodman (ed.). Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years and The War Years. Sterling Publishing Company. p. 22. ISBN 978-1402742880.
  38. ^ Organization of American Historians (2009). Sean Wilentz; Organization of American Historians (eds.). The Best American History Essays on Lincoln Best American History Essays. Macmillan. p. 89. ISBN 978-0230609143.
  39. ^ Don Davenport (2002). In Lincoln's Footsteps: A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky Trails Books Guide. Big Earth Publishing. p. 38. ISBN 193159905X.
  40. ^ . Biography.com. Archived from the original on April 18, 2010. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  41. ^ Walter J. Daly (March 2006). "'The Slows', The Torment of Milk Sickness on the Midwest Frontier". Indiana Magazine of History. 102 (1): 29–40. JSTOR 27792690.
  42. ^ Herndon, William (1940). Emanuel Hertz (ed.). The Hidden Lincoln. New York, New York: Blue Ribbon Books. p. 74. (Quoted letter to Ward Lamon written in 1870.)
  43. ^ John G. Sotos (2008). The Physical Lincoln Sourcebook. Mount Vernon, VA: Mt. Vernon Book Systems. pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-0-9818193-3-4.
  44. ^ a b John G. Sotos (2012). "Abraham Lincoln's marfanoid mother: the earliest known case of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2B?". Clinical Dysmorphology. 21 (3): 131–136. doi:10.1097/MCD.0b013e328353ae0c. PMID 22504423. S2CID 26805372.
  45. ^ "Pioneer Cemetery, Nancy Hanks gravestone, photo 3 of 8". Graveyards of Illinois. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  46. ^ a b c "Nancy Hanks Lincoln Cemetery". National Park Service. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  47. ^ a b Don Davenport (2002). In Lincoln's Footsteps: A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky Trails Books Guide. Big Earth Publishing. pp. 38–39. ISBN 193159905X.
  48. ^ Richard Lawrence Miller (2006). Lincoln and His World. Stackpole Books. p. 41. ISBN 9780811701877.
  49. ^ Catalog of copyright entries: Musical compositions, Part 3. Library of Congress, Copyright office. 1941. p. 959. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  50. ^ "A Book of Americans". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  51. ^ Monaco, James (1992). The Movie Guide. Perigee Books. p. 1093. ISBN 9780399517808. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  52. ^ Gallagher, Tag (1986). John Ford: The Man and His Films. University of California Press. p. 163. ISBN 9780520063341.
  53. ^ . Nspencer.k12.in.us. 2005-09-01. Archived from the original on 2013-11-05. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  54. ^ a b "House Resolution No". West Virginia Legislature.
  55. ^ Laman, Allen (January 14, 2019). "With usage low, Dale-area rest stops to close". The Herald. Retrieved January 16, 2019.
  56. ^ Garrett, Jana (February 21, 2023). "INDOT improvement plan to upgrade local rest areas". WEHT. Retrieved December 27, 2023.
  57. ^ "Tom Hanks related to President Abraham Lincoln". ANI. September 23, 2012. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  58. ^ "Names Friday 110212." Bangor Daily News (Bangor, ME). McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. 2012. HighBeam Research. March 31, 2013.
  59. ^ "LINCOLN BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION ENDORSES JUNE 3 LINCOLN-HANKS WEDDING EVENT." US Fed News Service, Including US State News. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd. 2006. HighBeam Research. March 29, 2013.
  60. ^ "LINCOLN-HANKS WEDDING PART OF WASHINGTON COUNTY HISTORY." US Fed News Service, Including US State News. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd. 2006. HighBeam Research. March 29, 2013.

nancy, lincoln, nancy, hanks, redirects, here, other, uses, nancy, hanks, disambiguation, nancy, hanks, lincoln, february, 1784, october, 1818, mother, president, abraham, lincoln, marriage, thomas, lincoln, also, produced, daughter, sarah, thomas, when, nancy. Nancy Hanks redirects here For other uses see Nancy Hanks disambiguation Nancy Hanks Lincoln February 5 1784 October 5 1818 was the mother of U S President Abraham Lincoln Her marriage to Thomas Lincoln also produced a daughter Sarah and a son Thomas Jr When Nancy and Thomas had been married for just over 10 years the family moved from Kentucky to western Perry County Indiana in 1816 When Spencer County was formed in 1818 the Lincoln Homestead lay within its current boundaries Nancy Lincoln died from milk sickness or consumption in 1818 at the Little Pigeon Creek Community in Spencer County when Abraham was nine years old Nancy LincolnBornNancy HanksFebruary 5 1784Hampshire County Virginia U S now Mineral County West Virginia U S DiedOctober 5 1818 1818 10 05 aged 34 Spencer County Indiana U S Cause of deathMilk sicknessNationalityAmericanKnown forMother of Abraham LincolnSpouseThomas Lincoln m 1806 wbr ChildrenAbraham Lincoln Sarah Lincoln Grigsby Thomas Lincoln Jr ParentLucy HanksRelativesJoseph Hanks grandfather John Hanks cousin Tom Hanks distant cousin Jim Hanks distant cousin Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 1 1 Timeline of events and relationships 1 2 Marriage and family 1 3 Description 1 4 Death 2 Honors 3 Notable relatives 4 Portrayals 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBiography editEarly life and education edit nbsp Early home of Nancy Hanks Lincoln in Springfield Kentucky Nancy s mother by popular theory among historians and genealogists and supported by a mtDNA study in 2015 1 2 was Lucy Hanks who later married Henry Sparrow in 1790 in Mercer County Kentucky 3 4 5 nb 1 Abraham Lincoln s law partner William Herndon reported that Lincoln told him that his maternal grandfather was a well bred Virginia farmer or planter 8 According to William E Barton in The Life of Abraham Lincoln and Michael Burkhimer in 100 Essential Lincoln Books Nancy was most likely born illegitimate and her family created stories to lead Abraham to believe he was a legitimate member of the Sparrow family 9 It is believed that Nancy Hanks grandparents were Ann and Joseph Hanks and that they raised her from infancy until her grandfather died when she was about nine years old 10 11 At the time of Nancy s birth Joseph and his wife and children were all living on 108 acres near Patterson Creek in then Hampshire County Virginia now Mineral County West Virginia In March 1784 Joseph Hanks sold his property via a mortgage and moved his wife eight children and young granddaughter Nancy to Kentucky 12 13 The family lived on land along Pottinger s Creek in a settlement called Rolling Fork in Nelson County Kentucky until patriarch Joseph s death in 1793 Nancy s grandmother who was called by the more formal name Ann rather than the common nickname of Nancy decided to return to her homeland Farnham parish in Virginia At that time Nancy went to live with her mother now Lucy Hanks Sparrow 14 having married Henry Sparrow in Harrodsburg Kentucky two or three years earlier 11 15 16 17 18 19 20 After Lucy s sister Elizabeth Hanks married Henry Sparrow s brother Thomas in Mercer County Kentucky in 1796 Nancy now about age 12 went to live with the couple whom she called mother and father She was known as Nancy Sparrow 11 15 17 18 19 20 and was described as intelligent deeply religious kindly and affectionate Lucy s sister gave birth to an illegitimate son in 1799 named Dennis Friend Hanks who was also raised by Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow 21 At the home of Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow Nancy would have learned the skills and crafts a woman needed on the frontier to cultivate crops and clothe and feed her family She learned to read the Bible and became an excellent seamstress working at the Richard Berry home before her marriage 22 Lucy s marriage to Henry Sparrow produced eight children and Lucy had a reputation as a fine Christian woman Two sons were loyal to the Union during the Civil War and were preachers 10 18 Timeline of events and relationships edit Grandparents Joseph and Ann Hanks Mother LucySparrow Eliz amp ThomasSparrow Sparrow and or Berry home Married to Thomas LincolnWhile grandfather is aliveUnclear 1 Adopted Unclear 2 Marriage until death 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789 1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1 It is unclear whether Nancy Hanks lived the entire three years 1793 1796 with her mother prior to moving in with her aunt Elizabeth Hanks and newly married uncle Thomas Sparrow 2 It is unclear when Nancy went to work for the Berrys Marriage and family edit nbsp Rear of the Lincoln Marriage Temple which shelters the cabin in which Thomas Lincoln married Nancy Hanks Built in 1931 it is part of Old Fort Harrod State Park in Harrodsburg Kentucky On June 12 1806 Hanks married Thomas Lincoln at Beechland 23 the home of Richard Berry by Reverend Jesse Head 15 16 Nancy was brought to the home to work as a seamstress by her friend Polly Ewing Berry the wife of Richard Berry Jr since October 10 1794 Polly was a friend of Nancy s from Mercer County Kentucky and Richard Berry Jr was a good friend of Thomas Lincoln 24 25 Lincoln proposed to her in his childhood home at what is now Lincoln Homestead State Park 26 or in the Francis Berry house in front of the fireplace 27 Nancy s marriage bond was signed by Richard Berry Jr who identified himself as her guardian 10 15 Per Warren The title had no legal significance Berry having never been so appointed and Nancy Hanks was then of age But to him to call himself guardian was a courtesy customary under such circumstances no father able to sign the marriage bond 24 A record of their marriage license is held at the county courthouse They had three children Sarah Lincoln February 10 1807 January 20 1828 Abraham Lincoln February 12 1809 April 15 1865 Thomas Lincoln Jr died in infancy 1812 The young family lived in what was then Hardin County Kentucky now LaRue on the Knob Creek Farm Neighbors reported 28 that Nancy Hanks Lincoln was superior to her husband a mild yet strong personality who taught young Abraham his letters as well as the extraordinary sweetness and forbearance for which he was later known 29 In 1816 the year that Indiana became the 19th state the Lincoln family moved to Spencer County in southern Indiana and proceeded to homestead at Little Pigeon Creek Settlement now Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow and Dennis Hanks settled at Little Pigeon Creek the following fall having lived in a shelter in which the Lincolns had lived until they built their cabin While Abraham was ten years younger than his second cousin Dennis the boys were good friends 30 31 See also Thomas Lincoln Description edit William Herndon author of Life of Lincoln describes Nancy Hanks Lincoln She was above the ordinary height in stature weighed about 130 pounds was slenderly built and had much the appearance of one inclined to consumption Her skin was dark hair dark brown eyes gray and small forehead prominent face sharp and angular with a marked expression for melancholy which fixed itself in the memory of all who ever saw or knew her Though her life was clouded by a spirit of sadness she was in disposition amiable and generally cheerful 32 nb 2 Nancy was also described as a bold reckless daredevil kind of woman stepping on to the very verge of propriety 33 Abraham Lincoln inherited his mother s appearance 33 and manner She was mild tender and intellectually inclined 34 Death edit nbsp Nancy Hanks Lincoln Gravestone While living at Little Pigeon Creek Settlement Nancy Hanks Lincoln died on October 5 1818 age 34 Her nine year old son Abraham assisted his father in the making of her coffin by whittling the wooden pegs that held the planks together Eleven year old Sarah cared for Abraham until their father remarried the next year 35 36 There are two views as to the cause of Nancy Hanks Lincoln s death One view is that she died of milk sickness Several people had died that fall from the illness including Elizabeth and Thomas Sparrow who raised her and then lived with her on the Lincolns property at the Little Pigeon Creek settlement The Sparrows died in September weeks before Nancy s death and Dennis moved in with the Lincolns 36 37 38 nb 3 The illness was caused by drinking the milk or eating the meat of cows that had eaten white snakeroot The plant contains the potent toxin tremetol which is passed through the milk 40 The migrants from the East were unfamiliar with the Midwestern plant and its effects In the 19th century before people understood the cause of the illness thousands in the Midwest died of milk sickness 41 The second view is that Nancy died of consumption In 1870 Lincoln s law partner and biographer William Herndon wrote to fellow Lincoln biographer Ward Lamon saying that Mrs Lincoln died as said by some with the milk sickness some with a galloping quick consumption 42 i e a wasting disease 43 or tuberculosis It has also been theorized that Nancy Lincoln had a marfanoid body habitus or a marfanoid type of physique with the same unusual facial features as her son 44 This theory suggests that she died of cancer which is a wasting disease related to multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2b MEN2B and that she passed the gene for this syndrome to her son see Medical and mental health of Abraham Lincoln 44 Nancy s grave is located in what has been named the Pioneer Cemetery 45 also known as the Nancy Hanks Lincoln Cemetery 46 Her headstone was purchased by Peter Studebaker an industrialist from South Bend in 1878 47 At least 20 unmarked and eight marked graves are at the site Nancy Lincoln is buried next to Nancy Rusher Brooner a neighbor who died a week before Nancy from milk sickness Henry Brooner Nancy Brooner s son and best childhood friend of Abraham Lincoln later recalled I remember very distinctly that when Mrs Lincoln s grave was filled my father Peter Brooner extended his hand to Thomas Lincoln and said We are brothers now meaning that they were brothers in the same kind of sorrow The bodies of my mother and Mrs Lincoln were conveyed to their graves on sleds 46 48 Her aunt and uncle Elizabeth Hanks and Thomas Sparrow also her childhood caregivers are buried nearby 46 The cemetery is located on the grounds of the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial a National Historic Landmark District managed by the National Park Service in present day Lincoln City Indiana 47 Honors edit nbsp Memorial to Nancy Hanks in Mineral County West Virginia at the site of her birth In 1941 Katherine K Davis who co wrote the lyrics to The Little Drummer Boy wrote the music for the ballad Nancy Hanks as a tribute to Lincoln s mother 49 The song uses as its lyrics the Rosemary Benet poem Nancy Hanks originally published in Stephen Vincent Benet s A Book of Americans 50 An edited version of the poem was used by John Ford in the beginning 51 of his 1939 movie Young Mr Lincoln If Nancy Hanks Came back as a ghost Seeking news Of what she loved most She d ask first Where s my son What s happened to Abe What s he done You wouldn t know About my son Did he grow tall Did he have fun Did he learn to read Did he get to town Do you know his name Did he get on 52 North Spencer School Corporation in Spencer County Indiana opened the Nancy Hanks Elementary School around 1990 53 In November 2008 the Mineral County Historical Society and the Mineral County Historic Landmarks Commission officially recognized the researched site of the birthplace of Nancy Hanks in Mineral County West Virginia which was first identified in 1929 They had a memorial placed at the site 54 On February 12 2009 on the bicentennial of the birth of Abraham Lincoln the West Virginia House of Delegates passed a resolution recognizing Nancy Hanks Lincoln for her contributions and her birth site in Mineral County 54 A rest area along Interstate 64 in Dale Indiana is named for Nancy Hanks In January 2019 the Indiana Department of Transportation announced plans to shut down the rest area because of low usage 55 As reported in February 2023 the Hanks rest stations were slated for east bound closure and west bound conversion to truck parking in fiscal year 2025 56 Notable relatives editNancy Hanks is a second cousin five times removed of actor producer writer and director Tom Hanks 57 Through his mother s Hanks bloodline George Clooney is related to Nancy Hanks through Lucy Hanks Sparrow and Henry Sparrow s daughter Mary Ann Sparrow a half sister to Nancy Hanks Mary Ann Sparrow was Clooney s fourth great grandmother 58 Camille Cosby wife of Bill Cosby was born Camille Olivia Hanks a distant cousin of Nancy Hanks citation needed Portrayals editThe Hanks Lincoln wedding was portrayed in a play called Dearly Beloved The Vows of a Lincoln Legacy to kick off a three year bicentennial celebration of Abraham Lincoln s life The play was held at the Lincoln Homestead State Park in Springfield Kentucky 59 60 Nancy is portrayed by Maria Hill in the Daniel Boone episode Before the Tall Man See also editAbraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park Lincoln family treeNotes edit Independent researchers determined in 2015 that Nancy Hanks Lincoln was the daughter of Lucey Hanks the daughter of farmers Anna Lee and Joseph Hanks from the Nancy Hanks Lincoln mtDNA Study 6 The information was published in For the People a newsletter of the Abraham Lincoln Association Gene By Gene Ltd in Houston Texas performed the lab testing using mtDNA from five matrilineal descendants of Joseph and Ann Lee Hanks However it has not been published in a peer reviewed scholarly scientific journal 7 The article states Because there are no living descendants in the Nancy Hanks Lincoln Abraham Lincoln Robert T Lincoln line nor any extant DNA chain for them it is possible only to analyze data from daughters sisters or aunts of Sarah Hanks Lucey Hanks or Ann Lee Hanks 7 William Herndon s accounts of Nancy Hanks Lincoln are based upon interviews with Dennis Hanks who lived near and with the Lincolns in his childhood John Hanks and Sara Bush Johnson Lincoln 32 Dennis married one of Abraham s stepmother s daughters named Sara Elizabeth in 1821 39 References edit Murr J Edward 2022 Abraham Lincoln s Wilderness Years Collected Works of J Edward Murr Indiana University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 253 06269 7 Lincoln The Reporter November 2 2015 pp A4 Retrieved 2023 05 22 Edward Steers 2007 Lincoln Legends Myths Hoaxes and Confabulations Associated with Our Greatest President University Press of Kentucky p 26 ISBN 978 0813172750 David Herbert Donald 1995 Lincoln New York Touchstone pp 20 23 Burlingame Michael April 2013 Abraham Lincoln A Life JHU Press pp 12 14 ISBN 978 1 4214 0973 3 Kent David J 2022 09 01 Lincoln The Fire of Genius How Abraham Lincoln s Commitment to Science and Technology Helped Modernize America Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4930 6388 8 a b DNA Tests Nancy Hanks is Daughter of Lucey Hanks PDF For the People Vol 17 no 4 Springfield Illinois Winter 2015 David Herbert Donald 1995 Lincoln New York Touchstone pp 20 23 Wayne Soini 2022 Abraham Lincoln American Prince Ancestry Ambition and the Anti Slavery Cause Jefferson N C McFarland amp Company Inc pp 47 56 Michael Burkhimer 2003 100 Essential Lincoln Books Cumberland House Publishing pp 52 54 55 63 64 ISBN 158182369X a b c Ralph Gary 2001 Following in Lincoln s Footsteps New York Carroll amp Graf Publishers pp 207 209 a b c Doug Wead 2005 The Raising of a President The Mothers and Fathers of Our Nation s Leaders Simon and Schuster p 110 ISBN 1416513078 Clara McCormack Sage Laura Elizabeth Sage Jones 1939 Early Records Hampshire County Virginia Now West Virginia Including at the Start Most of Known Va Aside from Augusta District Genealogical Publishing Com p 23 ISBN 0806303050 William H Herndon 2008 Herndon s Life of Lincoln Wildside Press p 10 ISBN 978 1434476524 William E Barton article Henry Ford book 2003 W J Cameron ed Nancy Hanks the Mother of Lincoln Dearborn Independent Magazine January 1927 October 1927 Kessinger Publishing pp 15 19 ISBN 0766159914 a b c d Carl Sandburg 2007 Edward C Goodman ed Abraham Lincoln The Prairie Years and The War Years Sterling Publishing Company pp 12 14 ISBN 978 1402742880 a b William Eleazar Barton 2005 1920 The Soul of Abraham Lincoln University of Illinois Press p 48 ISBN 025207291X a b Carl Sandburg 1975 1928 Abe Lincoln Grows Up Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 25 ISBN 0156026155 a b c Jesse W Weik 1922 The Real Lincoln a portrait Houghton Mifflin Company p 43 a b Lowell H Harrison 2010 Lincoln of Kentucky University Press of Kentucky pp PT23 ISBN 978 0813139371 a b Appendix Brief Outline of the Joseph Hanks Family Book published by the University of Illinois Northern Illinois University Libraries Archived from the original on 2013 04 09 Don Davenport 2002 In Lincoln s Footsteps A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois Indiana and Kentucky Trails Books Guide Big Earth Publishing p 6 ISBN 193159905X Doug Wead 2005 The Raising of a President The Mothers and Fathers of Our Nation s Leaders Simon and Schuster p 111 ISBN 1416513078 Connelley William Elsey Coulter E M 1922 History of Kentucky Volume 5 Chicago and New York American Historical Society p 607 ISBN 9780598572943 Retrieved October 23 2018 a b Raymond Warren 2004 The Prairie President Living Through The Years With Lincoln 1809 To 1861 reprint ed Kessinger Publishing pp 5 6 ISBN 1417913347 Louis Austin Warren 1933 The Shipley ancestry of Lincoln s mother Lincolniana Publishers pp 204 205 Reprint from Indiana Magazine of History September 1933 DuPont Ewing Annette C 2007 Washington County Arcadia Publishing p 117 ISBN 978 0 7385 5299 6 Lincoln Homestead State Historic Site Historic Pocket Brochure PDF Kentucky State Parks Archived from the original PDF on October 31 2013 Retrieved March 22 2013 Doris Kearns Goodwin 2006 Team of Rivals The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln Simon amp Schuster Paperbacks p 47 David Hackett Fischer 1991 Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America Oxford University Press paperback p 491 Don Davenport 2002 In Lincoln s Footsteps A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois Indiana and Kentucky Trails Books Guide Big Earth Publishing pp 29 32 ISBN 193159905X Indiana History Indiana the Nineteenth State Center for History 1816 Archived from the original on October 27 2012 Retrieved March 20 2013 a b William Eleazar Barton 1920 The Paternity of Abraham Lincoln Was He the Son of Thomas Lincoln An Essay on the Chastity of Nancy Hanks New York George H Doran Company pp 273 274 275 a b Thomas Keneally 2003 Abraham Lincoln New York Penguin Group p 1 ISBN 0 670 03175 5 Philip B Kunhardt Jr Philip B Kunhardt III Peter W Kunhardt 1992 Lincoln New York Alfred A Knopf p 34 ISBN 0 679 40862 2 Carl Sandburg 2007 Abraham Lincoln The Prairie Years and the War Years Sterling Publishing Company p 22 ISBN 9781402742880 Retrieved July 1 2011 a b Don Davenport 2002 In Lincoln s Footsteps A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois Indiana and Kentucky Trails Books Guide Big Earth Publishing pp 32 33 ISBN 193159905X Carl Sandburg 2007 Edward C Goodman ed Abraham Lincoln The Prairie Years and The War Years Sterling Publishing Company p 22 ISBN 978 1402742880 Organization of American Historians 2009 Sean Wilentz Organization of American Historians eds The Best American History Essays on Lincoln Best American History Essays Macmillan p 89 ISBN 978 0230609143 Don Davenport 2002 In Lincoln s Footsteps A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois Indiana and Kentucky Trails Books Guide Big Earth Publishing p 38 ISBN 193159905X Abraham Lincoln Biography Biography com Archived from the original on April 18 2010 Retrieved April 28 2010 Walter J Daly March 2006 The Slows The Torment of Milk Sickness on the Midwest Frontier Indiana Magazine of History 102 1 29 40 JSTOR 27792690 Herndon William 1940 Emanuel Hertz ed The Hidden Lincoln New York New York Blue Ribbon Books p 74 Quoted letter to Ward Lamon written in 1870 John G Sotos 2008 The Physical Lincoln Sourcebook Mount Vernon VA Mt Vernon Book Systems pp 108 109 ISBN 978 0 9818193 3 4 a b John G Sotos 2012 Abraham Lincoln s marfanoid mother the earliest known case of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2B Clinical Dysmorphology 21 3 131 136 doi 10 1097 MCD 0b013e328353ae0c PMID 22504423 S2CID 26805372 Pioneer Cemetery Nancy Hanks gravestone photo 3 of 8 Graveyards of Illinois Retrieved March 19 2013 a b c Nancy Hanks Lincoln Cemetery National Park Service Retrieved July 1 2011 a b Don Davenport 2002 In Lincoln s Footsteps A Historical Guide to the Lincoln Sites in Illinois Indiana and Kentucky Trails Books Guide Big Earth Publishing pp 38 39 ISBN 193159905X Richard Lawrence Miller 2006 Lincoln and His World Stackpole Books p 41 ISBN 9780811701877 Catalog of copyright entries Musical compositions Part 3 Library of Congress Copyright office 1941 p 959 Retrieved July 1 2011 A Book of Americans Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved July 1 2011 Monaco James 1992 The Movie Guide Perigee Books p 1093 ISBN 9780399517808 Retrieved December 14 2016 Gallagher Tag 1986 John Ford The Man and His Films University of California Press p 163 ISBN 9780520063341 Welcome to Nancy Hanks Elementary School Nspencer k12 in us 2005 09 01 Archived from the original on 2013 11 05 Retrieved 2013 11 05 a b House Resolution No West Virginia Legislature Laman Allen January 14 2019 With usage low Dale area rest stops to close The Herald Retrieved January 16 2019 Garrett Jana February 21 2023 INDOT improvement plan to upgrade local rest areas WEHT Retrieved December 27 2023 Tom Hanks related to President Abraham Lincoln ANI September 23 2012 Retrieved September 30 2012 Names Friday 110212 Bangor Daily News Bangor ME McClatchy Tribune Information Services 2012 HighBeam Research March 31 2013 LINCOLN BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION ENDORSES JUNE 3 LINCOLN HANKS WEDDING EVENT US Fed News Service Including US State News The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd 2006 HighBeam Research March 29 2013 LINCOLN HANKS WEDDING PART OF WASHINGTON COUNTY HISTORY US Fed News Service Including US State News The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd 2006 HighBeam Research March 29 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nancy Lincoln amp oldid 1219357250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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