A Guide for Emigrants Containing Sketches of Illinois, Missouri, and the Adjacent Parts.

https://exhibits.library.duke.edu/uploads/lincoln/3_peck_guide.jpg
 
Creator(s):
Peck, J.M.
Title:
A Guide for Emigrants Containing Sketches of Illinois, Missouri, and the Adjacent Parts.
Description:
In Lincoln’s telling, another reason for his family’s move to Indiana was their repudiation of slavery. His immediate family opposed slavery but were not part of the abolition movement. The appeal of a free state was as likely practical as moral. Farmers like Thomas Lincoln could not compete financially with plantation owners who had an enslaved workforce. Throughout his life, Lincoln connected free labor with “a fair chance, in the race of life.” The federal government encouraged white Americans and recent immigrants from other countries to populate the new states in what is now the Midwest. Guides such as the one seen here promoted this emigration. This one was published the year after the Lincoln family migrated from Indiana to Illinois.
Source:
Photograph by Vincent Dilio. Courtesy of David M. Rubenstein.
Citation:
Peck, J.M. A Guide for Emigrants Containing Sketches of Illinois, Missouri, and the Adjacent Parts. Boston: Lincoln and Edmands, 1831.