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Wilson, Douglas L., ed.; Davis, Rodney O., ed.; Jonas, Annie E. 'Annie E. Jonas to William H. Herndon' in 'Herndon's Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements About Abraham Lincoln' . Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1998. [format: book], [genre: letter]. Permission: University of Illinois Press
Quincy Ills Oct 28th 1866. Dear Sir I am ashamed to confess the error I made in copying the letter I forwarded to you marked "Confidential"; of course the letter was dated, as the contents (for availability before the election) would indicate 1860. [1] My apology for apparent careleness, is must also extenuate the seeming negligence of not having replied to your enquiry before my time is not at my own command, and consequently I copied; as I now write in a room full of talkers I shall be only too happy to do any-thing in my limited power to aid you, in your labor of love; but if your request was made in the principal papers, of the largest circulation, in the cities; unheard of letters might be brought to light In our locality we have only seen your request once in the NY Tribune I delayed sending you copies of the letters I had, in order to obtain a couple from New Orleans; having failed to obtain them, I will at least tell you the story of them; which you can make use of, if you like E[i]ther in the winter of 1856, or the spring of /57 some colored man from Springfield, went to St Louis, and hired himself (for what special service I forget ) as a hand on a lower Missisippi boat arriving at New Orleans, without free papers; he having been born free he was subjected to the tyranny of the black code all the more stringently enforced, because of the late excitement attendant upon the Fremont campaign, and thrown into prison until the boat left; Then, as no one was especially interested in him, he was forgotten. After a certain length of time, established by law, he would inevitably have been sold into slavery to defray prison expenses had not Mr [L]incoln heard of it, and written to a brother of mine, a young lawyer to get him out, and charge the expense incurred to him; My brother did so, but he now writes me that the only person who accepted remuneration for his services, was the now "radical" Col A. P. Field. My brother was a rebel, and upon my asking for Mr Lincoln's letters for you answered that with other papers they were stolen from his office by some U.S. Quarter-master, whom he hoped to discover through his forwarding the letters to you. I too hope the letters will find their way to you, though as they were in the office of the Lt Gov (Hyams) of the state, I should [s]ay both Office, and papers were [ta]ken "possession of." Pardon me, if I have been waarisome, but if the letters come to you, you will know their story, I am afraid they were destroyed. You are not kind in denying us letter forwarders the privalege of paying our own postage, Respectfully Annie E. Jonas Illinois State Historical Library: Weik Papers, box 1; Huntington Library: LN2408, 2:316 17
Wilson, Douglas L., ed.; Davis, Rodney O., ed.; Jonas, Annie E. 'Annie E. Jonas to William H. Herndon' in 'Herndon's Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements About Abraham Lincoln' . Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1998. [format: book], [genre: letter]. Permission: University of Illinois Press Persistent link to this document: http://lincoln.lib.niu.edu/file.php?file=herndon379.html |
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