Portrait Gallery

Lincoln's Yarns and Stories, 1903

by Alexander McClure

LINCOLN PLAYED BALL

Frank P. Blair, of Chicago, tells an incident, showing Mr. Lincoln's love for children and how thoroughly he entered into all of their sports:

“During the war my grandfather, Francis P. Blair, Sr., lived at Silver Springs, north of Washington, seven miles from the White House. It was a magnificent place of four or five hundred acres, with an extensive lawn in the rear of the house. The grandchildren gathered there frequently. There were eight or ten of us, our ages ranging from eight to twelve years. Although I was but seven or eight years of age, Mr. Lincoln's visits were of such importance to us boys as to leave a clear impression on my memory. He drove out to the place quite frequentIy. We boys, for hours at a time, played town ball on the vast lawn, and Mr. Lincoln would join ardently in the sport. I remember vividly how he ran with the children; how long were his strides, and how far his coat-tails stuck out behind, and how we tried to hit him with the ball, as he ran the bases. He entered into the spirit of the play as completely as any of us, and we invariably hailed his coming with delight.”

Lincoln Played Ball, Lincoln's Yarns and Stories, 1903, by Alexander K. McClure, Page 201. (PDF)

The Life of Abraham Lincoln by Ida M. Tarbell, Vol. II, 1902, Page 88.(PDF)

This anecdote appeared earlier as Lincoln Plays Ball with the Boys, in an article by Ida Tarbell entitled Lincoln's Method of Dealing with Men, in McClure's Magazine Vol. XII, No. 5, March 1899, Page 453. Tarbell footnotes an interview by J. McCan Davis.(PDF)

Jerry McCoy traced this anecdote down from Allen C. Clark's Abraham Lincoln in the National Capital, 1925, which references Tarbell, 1902. Clark's work also appeared in The Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Vol. 27, 1925. (PDF)

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