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細節
LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph letter signed ("A..Lincoln"), to Jason D. McBride, Springfield, Il., 4 June 1860. 1 page, 8vo, surface soiling and slight abrasion of paper in lower blank portion, neatly backed.
LINCOLN: RECENTLY NOMINATED REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT. Only two weeks after his nomination for president by the Republican National Convention in Chicago, Lincoln responds to a letter from Jason McBride of Ohio. Lincoln writes, "Yours of the 1st is received. Allow me to thank you for the information it communicates, and also the clubs mentioned, for the good work they are doing..." Not in Collected Works, and apparently unpublished. In the days following the nomination, Lincoln was deluged by well-wishers and swamped with letters of a political and congratulatory nature and undertook the tedious task of replying. When the correspondance became overwhelming, Lincoln secured the governor's room of the statehouse as an office and employed the young John Nicolay, who Lincoln admired for his "punctual and fastidious ways," as a private secretary (Oates, With Malice Toward None, p. 195).
LINCOLN: RECENTLY NOMINATED REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT. Only two weeks after his nomination for president by the Republican National Convention in Chicago, Lincoln responds to a letter from Jason McBride of Ohio. Lincoln writes, "Yours of the 1st is received. Allow me to thank you for the information it communicates, and also the clubs mentioned, for the good work they are doing..." Not in Collected Works, and apparently unpublished. In the days following the nomination, Lincoln was deluged by well-wishers and swamped with letters of a political and congratulatory nature and undertook the tedious task of replying. When the correspondance became overwhelming, Lincoln secured the governor's room of the statehouse as an office and employed the young John Nicolay, who Lincoln admired for his "punctual and fastidious ways," as a private secretary (Oates, With Malice Toward None, p. 195).