Confirmed: Lincoln could count

Published 5:00 am Sunday, June 9, 2013

And then some. The 16th president’s wisdom belied a lack of formal education, but notebook pages authenticated as his suggest he may have spent more time in school than usually thought.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Two notebook pages recently authenticated as belonging to Abraham Lincoln show that the 16th president, who was known to downplay his formal education, was no slouch.

Illinois State University math professors Nerida Ellerton and Ken Clements said Friday that they’d recently confirmed that the two pages were part of a previously known math notebook from Lincoln’s childhood. It was found in the archives of Houghton Library at Harvard University, where it remains.

This cyphering book, as it was called back then, is now the oldest known Lincoln manuscript.

Based on the difficulty of the problems involved and dates on some of the pages — 1824 and, on the recently authenticated pages, 1826, when Lincoln was 17 — Lincoln likely worked in the book intermittently over several years while his family lived in Indiana, the professors said. They think he could have started as early as age 10 and believe his work happened while he was in school.

“Most people say he went to school for anything between three months and nine months” over the course of his life, Clements said. “We think he went to school (up to) two years.”

And very little of the work is wrong, he added.

“He made very few errors, and he always knew what he was trying to do,” Clements said. “We’ve studied thousands of these cyphering books. You don’t always get the feeling that ‘this guy knew what he was doing.’”

The professors’ find suggests Lincoln may have gone to school over as many as three to five winters, according to historian Daniel Stowell, director of the Papers of Abraham Lincoln project at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield. The library owns one previously identified page of the book.

“They are arguing with some merit that a cyphering book would have been created in a school setting,” Stowell said. “It does at least open the possibility that he may have had more formal schooling than originally thought. Not a whole lot more, but still more.”

The pages, attached as a single leaf, include word problems that are the equivalent of roughly eighth-grade modern work, Clements said. “If 100 dollars in one year gain 3 1/2 dollars interest, what sum will gain $38.50 cents in one year and a quarter?” one reads.

Any student doing such work in the 1820s would have been more advanced than most on the frontier in Indiana, Clements said.

“If you got to that stage, you’d sort of done well,” he said.

Lincoln is known to have later studied trigonometry and geometry on his own.

The pages have been in the Harvard library’s archives since 1954. They were known as Lincoln documents, but their origin wasn’t known, the professors said. The Illinois State professors, who are married, looked at the documents as they researched a book they’ve written on math books from the period.

A letter from former Lincoln law partner William Herndon from 1875 that accompanied the papers, describing them, made the authentication relatively straightforward, Clements said.

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