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  1. It is certain that by 1806 Nancy Hanks was living in Kentucky, where on 12 June 1806 she married Thomas Lincoln, a barely literate homesteader with North Carolina connections. They lived first in Elizabethtown, Ky., where she bore a daughter, Sarah, on 10 Feb. 1807. In May 1808 they moved from Elizabethtown to a nearby farm, then to another ...

  2. 11 de abr. de 2006 · Among them was Nancy Hanks Lincoln, who died in 1818 leaving behind her family, including 9-year-old Abraham. In the March issue of the Indiana Magazine of History, Dr. Walter J. Daly, dean emeritus of the Indiana University School of Medicine, tells how milk sickness began to appear among early 19th-century Midwestern pioneers.

  3. Biografía Imagen de Lincoln en su juventud. Nació el 12 de febrero de 1809 en una granja situada cerca de la ciudad de Hodgenville, en el actual condado de LaRue, Kentucky, lugar que en la actualidad es parque histórico nacional.Sus padres, Thomas Lincoln y Nancy Hanks, habían nacido en Virginia y como tantos pioneros agricultores se habían trasladado al oeste.

  4. 31 de mar. de 2016 · Nancy Hanks Lincoln Little Pigeon Creek Settlement, Spencer County . February 5, 1784 – October 5, 1818 . Nancy Hanks Lincoln is best known as Abraham Lincoln’s mother. Although she had no formal education, Nancy stressed the importance of learning and reading, shaping the man who would become the sixteenth United States President. She

  5. 31 de oct. de 2015 · Historians have debated for more than a century about Lincoln's lineage, with many siding with Lincoln biographer William Barton, who concluded in the 1920s that Nancy Hanks Lincoln was the ...

  6. In the fall of 1816, Thomas and Nancy Lincoln packed their belongings and their two children, Sarah, 9, and Abraham, 7, and left their Kentucky home bound for the new frontier of southern Indiana. Arriving at his 160-acre claim near the Little Pigeon Creek in December, Thomas quickly set about building a cabin for his family and carving a new life out of the largely unsettled wilderness.

  7. 10 de may. de 2014 · In the summer of 1818, when Abraham Lincoln was nine years old, his mother, Nancy, caught “the milk-sick,” a then-mysterious disease caused by drinking the milk of cows that had eaten white ...

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