Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. See Park files, Lincoln Related Organizations: Commissioners of Nancy Hanks Lincoln Burial Ground, 1907-1925, Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial, Lincoln City, Indiana. The commission's first attempt to acquire land for the state, the forty-six-acre Patmore farm near Lincoln City, raised a sticky issue: The sixteen-and-one-half-acre park formerly managed by the Board of Commissioners was not ...

  2. In the fall of 1816, Thomas and Nancy Lincoln packed their belongings and their two children, Sarah, 9, and Abraham, 7, and left their Kentucky home bound for the new frontier of southern Indiana. Arriving at his 160-acre claim near the Little Pigeon Creek in December, Thomas quickly set about building a cabin for his family and carving a new life out of the largely unsettled wilderness.

  3. 5 de feb. de 2017 · Added: Feb 6, 2000. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 8381. Source citation. Mother of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. She was a Virginia native, moving to Kentucky, where she met and married Thomas Lincoln. She gave birth to three children. The Lincolns moved to Spencer County in southern Indiana in 1816 and constructed a cabin on Little Pigeon Creek.

  4. 21 de feb. de 2024 · Nancy A. Keating June 28, 1952 – February 18, 2024 Nancy M Keating, 71, of Lincoln, passed away February 18, 2024. She was born on June 28, 1952, in Omaha, Nebraska, to Henry Burianek and Lillian

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › Nancy_Hanks_LincolnNancy Lincoln - Wikiwand

    Nancy Hanks Lincoln was the mother of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. Her marriage to Thomas Lincoln also produced a daughter, Sarah, and a son, Thomas Jr. When Nancy and Thomas had been married for just over 10 years, the family moved from Kentucky to western Perry County, Indiana, in 1816.

  6. Nancy Royce, nroyce49@gmail.com, December 2019 NANCY HANKS (Thomas Lincoln) Daughter of Lucy Hanks and unknown father According to Abraham Lincoln, his mother Nancy Hanks Lincoln was born 5 February 1784. Dennis Hanks, the illegitimate son of Nancy Hanks and Charles Friend, lived with the Lincolns and gave

  7. Two years after Abraham Lincoln’s father, Thomas Lincoln, moved his family to the Little Pigeon Creek settlement in Southern Indiana, the family faced tragedy. Abraham was just nine years old when his mother, Nancy Hanks Lincoln, became gravely ill. Just two weeks later, on October 5, 1818, he lost his mother to “Milk Sickness.”