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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13WL_lorado-taft-1860-1936_Quincy-IL.html
Best remembered for his spectacular fountains, Lorado Taft was the creator of some of our nation's outstanding monuments. Some of his most significant include Blackhawk (Oregon, IL, 1911), The Columbus Memorial (Washington, D.C., 1912), The Founta…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13WK_lincoln-douglas-debate_Quincy-IL.html
On October 13 1858, two candidates for U.S. Senate met in this public square for a sixth debate. Quincy, in the west-central portion of the state, was a true battleground area where both candidates saw reasonable prospects of victory. Quincy had b…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13WJ_political-campaigning-in-1858_Quincy-IL.html
Quincy was in a festive mood for the all-day event with bands, banners, and thousands of people in attendance. Historian E.B. Long said, "It was a carnival time in Illinois. Mobs of thousands journeyed by wagon, horseback, boat and train to stand …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13W3_lincoln-promoter_Quincy-IL.html
"You are one of my most valued friends" (Lincoln letter to Abraham Jonas, 1860). Their friendship began in 1843 in Springfield when Lincoln and Jonas served together in the Illinois House of Representatives. Jonas became an early and ardent suppor…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13W0_quincys-judge-douglas_Quincy-IL.html
"His name fills the nation; and is not unknown, even in foreign lands" (A. Lincoln, 1856). Stephen A. Douglas, a Jacksonian Democrat, arrived in Quincy in 1841, at twenty-seven the youngest Supreme Court Judge in Illinois history. In 1843 he defea…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13VZ_douglas-disciple_Quincy-IL.html
"I regard (Richardson) as one of the truest men that ever lived; he 'sticks to judge Douglas through thick and thin" (A. Lincoln, 1860). Douglas composed the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act. William A. Richardson, another Quincyan and Douglas' political …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13VY_downtown-quincy-in-1858_Quincy-IL.html
Sixteen days of rain had laid a coat of mud over the macadam streets that wrapped the city's square. Called the "Model City" because of its beautiful setting on the bluffs, Quincy in 1858 occupied about five square miles within its corporate limit…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13VU_lincolns-quincy_Quincy-IL.html
With a population of nearly 13,000 in 1858, Quincy was the Adams County seat and the third largest city in Illinois. Quincy boasted a strong, growing economy based on its transportation, milling, pork packing, and light industry. In 1853 the city …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13VS_lincoln-correspondent_Quincy-IL.html
"The points you propose to press upon Douglas, he will be very hard to get up to" ):Lincoln letter to Henry Asbury, 1858). Originally a Kentucky Whig, Henry Asbury was one of the founders of the Republican Party in Illinois along with Abraham Jona…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13VH_warm-sincere-friendship_Quincy-IL.html
Quincy's Orville Hickman Browning was Lincoln's friend, advisor, and confidant. According to historian David Donald, Lincoln considered Browning an old friend "whom he could absolutely trust. He knew the Illinois senator would never betray a confi…