Honest Abe: Lincoln taught himself the three R's--and more. (Education Matters to me).Where did Abraham Lincoln get his moral compass? He certainly did not have parents like those of John Quincy Adams. There was no equivalent of Abigail Adams, reading great history books to her young son and teaching him patriotic poems. The poetry that Lincoln could quote (of which there was quite a bit) he had learned on his own. He surely did not learn much from his father. Tom Lincoln did not understand or support his extraordinary son; he disapproved of Abe's constant reading and made him go to work. Lincoln attended five one-room schools in Kentucky and Illinois. Of his teachers, he could not say, "All that I have become I owe to that man" -- as James Madison said about his tutor Donald Robinson. There was, Lincoln wrote, "absolutely nothing to excite ambition for education" in the cluster of cabins in the Indiana woods called Little Pigeon Creek Pigeon Creek refers to the following places:
Did he receive instruction in morals from the Little Pigeon Creek Baptist Church? His father, stepmother, and sister joined the church -- but not Abraham. Instead, the 15-year-old boy mimicked the sermons with his own presentations from a tree stump. One reviewer of my biography, Lincoln's Virtues, suggested that I should have emphasized the importance of women--of his mother and stepmother, Some who knew Nancy Hanks
Truth is, nothing was more important in shaping Lincoln than the printing press. Only a few texts made their way to the newly formed little settlements in the western woods, and on the whole they tended to be publications with some lasting merit. Lincoln's knowledge of the Bible was probably nor surpassed by an American statesman, The plays--particularly the tragedies--of Shakespeare were read first in snippets in pedagogical ped·a·gog·ic also ped·a·gog·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of pedagogy. 2. Characterized by pedantic formality: a haughty, pedagogic manner. readers. Those readers--like Scott's Lessons in Elocution--had selections from eminent writers across the past of English and classical literature, all chosen with an unembarrassed attention to moral development. There was American history, too: Parson PARSON, eccl. law. One who has full possession of all the rights of a parochial church. 2. He is so called because by his person the church, which is an invisible body, is represented: in England he is himself a body corporate it order to protect and defend the Weems's famous life of Washington, William Grimshaw's History of the United States “American history” redirects here. For the history of the continents, see History of the Americas. The United States of America is located in the middle of the North American continent, with Canada to the north and the United Mexican States to the south. . You might not think an energetic teenager would be much interested in a book called Revised Statutes A body of statutes that have been revised, collected, arranged in order, and reenacted as a whole. The legal title of the collection of compiled laws of the United States, as well as some of the individual states. of Indiana, but young Lincoln borrowed it from a neighbor. In it he found not only technical legal materials, but also the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. In New Salem New Salem is the name of several towns in the United States:
From these disciplined beginnings sprouted a lifetime of self-education: teaching himself grammar when he was 23; teaching himself how to be a surveyor; borrowing Blackstone's law dictionary A law dictionary is a dictionary that is designed and compiled to give information about terms used in the field of law. A distinction is made between different types of law dictionaries. A monolingual law dictionary covers one language, a bilingual covers two. and teaching himself to be a lawyer. As president, he got books on military science from the Library of Congress so he could deal with the generals. These habits of intense study appear in his speeches. His greatest speeches are short, compressed, and eloquent. But he also gave longer speeches, and often their preparation included arduous historical research: You would have a hard time composing a better summary of early American history than the first half of the Cooper Institute Address. William Lee William Lee may refer to:
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