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Honest, Abe?
Charlotte Observer ^ | 01 Feb 2010 | John Bordsen

Posted on 02/01/2010 9:16:30 AM PST by Palter

Local folklore has it that this overgrown N.C. hilltop is the real birthplace of Lincoln

BOSTIC Note to aspiring saints and office-holders: You'll know you've achieved "legendary" status when whispered tales are attached to your life story with question marks. The higher you rise, the more there are.

Consider Abraham Lincoln. There are tales about him in Washington, where the 16th president saved the Union and was assassinated. Likewise in Springfield, Ill., the closest to a normal "home" the self-made Lincoln had.

Likewise in this Rutherford County crossroads where some say he was born atop Lincoln Hill, just east of larger and more rugged Cherry Mountain.

The world at large believes he was born Feb. 12, 1809, in a cabin near Hodgenville, Ky. At least once, Lincoln himself put this in writing. It's where the National Park Service oversees the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park.

The Bostic Lincoln Center holds otherwise. According to its research, what remains of his birthplace is about an hour west of Charlotte, a ruined foundation in a thicket of trees above a creek. It's on private land to which the center has access. Call in advance, and Keith Price or another member will walk you up there on a short run of trails that vanishes in a maze of chestnut oak and pine saplings.

Before or after you make the easy climb, you'll hear why they believe the American Moses was the illegitimate son of Nancy Hanks - and that a ne'er-do-well named Thomas Lincoln was hired to take her and her infant to Kentucky, where Lincoln married her and claimed the child as his own.

Among the reasons Price was disinclined attend a Lincoln birth bicentennial last year in Raleigh: "It was probably his 205th birthday."

Parental mysteries

The standard bio: Thomas Lincoln crossed into Kentucky and married fellow Virginian Nancy Hanks in 1806. Abe was their only child to live past 21. Nancy Hanks died in 1816.

Lincoln acknowledged his humble beginnings - his "Rail Splitter" nickname plays off his workingman past - but didn't discuss his parents much. Nancy Hanks was herself probably illegitimate, a factor that could've been lethal in the highly charged 1860 presidential campaign.

The election and bitter war that followed brought more scandal-mongering. With his assassination came a flood of recollections about a man with an obscure past. Various accounts had Lincoln born at 15 sites in three states.

At the Bostic Lincoln Center, you're likely to run into Keith Price and Lydia Clontz, its president and vice president, respectively. Price, born and raised in Rutherford County, was a contractor in Gastonia; Virginia-born Clontz lived in various states before retiring in Bostic.

They gradually became involved in a time-honored legend built into a cause by Tom Melton, a local school principal whose passion was proving Lincoln's Bostic origins. Melton died in 2008. The center, which opened that year, acquired his books and files. "He revered Lincoln for a lot of reasons," recalls Price, Melton's friend. "He wanted the president's greatness equally attributed to where he came from."

In the early 1900s, three rail lines crossed at Bostic; trains no longer stop there. The center is the former Seaboard depot, moved back from the tracks and spruced up with volunteer elbow grease. The main chamber, the onetime freight area, is the size of a living room. It is dominated by a trio of wall-mounted storyboards, each 4 by 5 feet, that spell out the Bostic case.

Points, counterpoints

Lincoln scholar Edward Steers says 16 men have been named as the president's father, a list that started as an 1860 smear and continues to this day. In an essay posted at Abraham Lincoln Online, the distinguished historian presents the case that the N.C. Lincoln argument is "spurious." He convincingly points out that there were multiple women named Nancy Hanks living in Western North Carolina in the early 1800s, that the Rutherford County servant girl was not the president's mother and why place-specific records show it was impossible for Thomas Lincoln to have passed through the Bostic area.

Price and Clontz counter that much of the official-line documentation turned up after Lincoln's death.

Adherents of the official and Bostic arguments poke holes in each other's time lines and sources - an easy task, given the rarity of frontier records.

Price believes that what inches the Bostic claim above any paper chase is oral tradition: When Lincoln was alive and Rutherford County was decidedly Confederate, there is no sensible reason area people would invent a tale of Lincoln's being a native son. Bostic tales persisted and made their way into books. Among the three authors who transcribed first-person, N.C.-origin stories was Judge William Herndon, Lincoln's law partner from Illinois.

Price is no ax-grinder. He comes across as thoughtful and well-read. He knows the objections of the "official" side inside and out and discusses them dispassionately. Price cites the diary of future assassin John Wilkes Booth, whom he says wrote of passing through Rutherford County and visiting Amos Owens' tavern atop Cherry Mountain - and hearing there that the despised Lincoln was home-grown.

Price isn't aware of any Hanks descendants in the area now, but there were Hanks families in the area back then.

The Bostic story goes that Nancy was bound-out as a servant girl to Abraham Enloe, a backwoods grandee whose rustic plantation house was atop what's now called Lincoln Hill. Whether she became pregnant by him or someone else depends on which piece of folklore is considered.

"We agree with the Kentucky story on two points," Price says. "First, the marriage of Tom Lincoln and Nancy Hanks in Kentucky by Deacon Jesse Head in 1806. Head wrote that she had with her a 'black-haired boy.' Second, that in his stepmother's Bible, Abraham Lincoln wrote his birthdate as Feb. 12, 1809. This is what he was told; it is an honest mistake."

DNA could be the key

The Bostic Lincoln Center says truth is what its members seek - and it could all be easily sorted out, one way or the other, with DNA matching.

There were rumors for centuries that Thomas Jefferson was also the parent of the children of Sally Hemings, one of his slaves. DNA from Jefferson's descendants and that of Hemings descendants was compared. The results are still being debated - but are conclusive enough for the Monticello-based Thomas Jefferson Foundation to say the Founding Father likely sired her children.

All agree that Abe Lincoln's only blood sibling, a sister, died young and without issue. Also, that his last direct descendant died in 1985.

But the Bostic Lincoln Center has programs from time to time, and one speaker was Ernest Lincoln III, a descendant of Thomas Lincoln and the woman he married after Nancy Hanks died. This Lincoln believes Abe is his relative but is willing, Price says, to donate DNA material to help put the paternity issue to rest.

Descendants of Abraham Enloe are still around, and are petitioning the government for DNA analysis.

Both Lincoln and Enloe samples need to be compared with an authenticated sample of Lincoln's DNA.

That would be found in Washington, at the National Museum of Health and Medicine, which has pieces of Lincoln's hair and skull and the blood-stained shirt cuffs of the surgeon who conducted the president's autopsy. You can see those items, by the way: They're part of "Abraham Lincoln: The Final Casualty of the War," an exhibit that opened last year.

What if DNA tests prove the people in Bostic are wrong?

Price waves his hands in an over-and-done-with motion. "That's it. Speculation is over."

What if DNA proves Thomas Lincoln was not Abraham's father?

"Research moves over to the Enloes and others."

That would also change the travel plans of anyone headed to Lincoln's birthplace. The ruins atop Lincoln Hill would be professionally excavated and preserved. A historic photo in the Bostic Lincoln Center shows the site in the 1920s. There clearly was more of it around. Time, nature and souvenir hunters have been at work.

The way to the ruins would be better marked; the gravel road up the 750-foot hill would be redone, as well as the two-lane bridge over the fast-moving stream.

It's called Puzzle Creek.


One of the candidates for father of Abraham Lincoln, Richard Martin (left) and his wife Nancy.


A marker in Bostic points the way to what some say is the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln.


Inside the Bostic Lincoln Center are a set of Victorian women's clothing, a 19th-century spinning wheel and several cases holding books and curios. Unquestionably Abe's: Framed on one wall is an original Civil War certificate, signed by the president and by Secretary of State Edwin Stanton. From the Lincoln Hill ruins: the leg of a cooking pot, a chunk of graphite used for writing, and metal fragments from a pie safe. Related to the Bostic case: a photograph portrait of Richard Martin - shown at left - one of several area men who have been suggested as Lincoln's actual father.

Bostic Lincoln Center, 112 Depot St., Bostic. From Charlotte, take Interstate 85 South to U.S. 74 (Kings Mountain area); take U.S. 74 Bypass West. West of Shelby, near Mooresboro, take the exit for U.S. 74 Business West; turn right on Bostic Sunshine Road and continue north into Bostic. The drive is roughly 70 miles. Hours: 1-4 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Friday-Saturday. Admission: free (donations accepted). Details: 828-245-9800; www.bosticlincolncenter.com.

Group visits to Lincoln Hill are by appointment only.

A Cherry Bounce Trail highlights points of interest in the Bostic area. Details: www.cherrybouncetrail.com. Its name comes from "Cherry bounce," a brandy made on Cherry Mountain by Amos Owens at his tavern. A marker will eventually be placed on the trail where the tavern was located.

"Abraham Lincoln: The Final Casualty of the War," on display at the National Museum of Health and Medicine, 6900 Georgia Ave. (at Elder Street NW), Building 54, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC. Hours: 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. daily. Admission: free (photo ID required for adults). Details: 202-782-2200; http://nmhm.washingtondc.museum.

The Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Park, Hodgenville, Ky. Hours: 8 a.m.-4:45 p.m. daily. Admission: free. Note: The park's memorial building is currently closed for major renovation. Details: 270-358-3137; www.nps.gov/abli.

Abraham Lincoln Online: showcase.netins.net/web/ creative/lincoln.html . To read the Edward Steers critique of the Bostic claims, go to "Education," then "Biographical Information," then "Lincoln's Paternity."


TOPICS: History; Travel
KEYWORDS: abrahamlincoln; andlincolnwasgay; godsgravesglyphs; greatestpresident; lincoln; northcarolina

1 posted on 02/01/2010 9:16:30 AM PST by Palter
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bump


2 posted on 02/01/2010 9:20:51 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Palter

Free the Long Form!


3 posted on 02/01/2010 9:21:51 AM PST by ClearCase_guy (We have the 1st so that we can call on people to rebel. We have 2nd so that they can.)
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To: ClearCase_guy

LOL I was going to suggest that he was really a secret muslim.


4 posted on 02/01/2010 9:22:47 AM PST by cripplecreek (Seniors, the new shovel ready project under socialized medicine.)
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To: Palter

Retro-birthers bump

Note that more details are provided in this article than any of the controversies over Barack Hussein Obama’s birth/school paperwork and claims of being a lifelong Christian.


5 posted on 02/01/2010 9:23:19 AM PST by a fool in paradise (Keep on truckin', Senator Brown.)
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To: Palter

Lordy what a looker! But then again, considering what Lincoln looked like?

6 posted on 02/01/2010 9:28:09 AM PST by red tie
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To: red tie

Perhaps women were hard to come by on the frontier. Beggers can’t be choosers. lol.


7 posted on 02/01/2010 9:31:36 AM PST by Palter (Kilroy was here.)
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To: Palter

She must have been a hell of a cook. It looks like she took her teeth out for the family photo op.


8 posted on 02/01/2010 9:37:31 AM PST by red tie
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To: Palter

My mother is from this area and we lived there while Dad was in Vietnam. I heard this story all my life and have been to the site.


9 posted on 02/01/2010 9:38:23 AM PST by doodad
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To: Southside_Chicago_Republican

Later


10 posted on 02/01/2010 9:40:31 AM PST by Southside_Chicago_Republican ("During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act." --Orwell)
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To: Palter
Another replace they could get Lincoln's DNA is in Greenwich village museum in Dearborn, Mi. They have the chair that he was carried on to the house where he died. It is on display and it is covered with his blood. In fact they might consider to use both artifacts in case on of them is a fraud.
11 posted on 02/01/2010 9:57:13 AM PST by bilhosty (Don' t tax people tax newsprint)
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To: Palter
While this is not new to me, it lacks the same credence as the alleged Abraham Enloe/Nancy Hanks legends.

Way, way back in time, I remember one of my great grand mothers singing an old ballad “The legend of Poor Nancy Hanks”. That was probably over sixty five years ago. No I don't remember the words but Miss Hanks was taken to Kaintuk and Tom Lincoln was paid to marry her. You might access this legend through the writings of a John Parris. He was a spinner of yarns and was fond of preserving old tales.

Do I believe the attempts to sully our 16th president? Who knows, bastard or not he along with Washington did what had to be done and did it very, very well. Here is to Mr. Lincoln.

Caddis the Elder

12 posted on 02/01/2010 10:06:16 AM PST by palmerizedCaddis (There is a place left on earth where some folks can still walk on water!!!!)
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To: Palter

· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic · subscribe ·

 
Gods
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Glyphs
Thanks Palter. Just adding to the catalog, not sending a general distribution.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list.
GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother, and Ernest_at_the_Beach
 

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13 posted on 02/01/2010 8:26:37 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Happy New Year! Freedom is Priceless.)
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