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  1. Hi! I’m Nancy Lincoln. I love giving massages. I am an artist & I bring my creative force to all that I do. I've been a professional massage therapist since 1995 and I consider it an honor to participate in the healing journey of others. Nancy Lincoln Therapeutic Massage, top Iowa City & Cedar Rapids area massage therapist.

  2. 10 de abr. de 2015 · Nancy Hanks Lincoln was born in Virginia in 1784. Her family later moved to Kentucky where, on June 12, 1806, she married Thomas Lincoln. She gave birth to three children: Sarah (February 10, 1807), Abraham (February 12, 1809), and Thomas (1812), who died in infancy. In 1816, the Lincoln family migrated to what is today Spencer County, Indiana.

  3. Nancy M Keating Obituary. It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Nancy M Keating of Lincoln, Nebraska, who passed away on February 18, 2024, at the age of 71, leaving to mourn family and friends. Leave a sympathy message to the family on the memorial page of Nancy M Keating to pay them a last tribute.

  4. View the profiles of people named Nancy Lincoln. Join Facebook to connect with Nancy Lincoln and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to...

  5. 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 ...

  6. Nancy Hanks (1784-1818), born in Amelia County, Virginia, was the daughter of Joseph Hanks and Nancy Shipley Hanks. Her family later moved to Nelson County, Kentucky where she married Thomas Lincoln in 1806 at Beechland, Kentucky. They later moved to Indiana, where Abraham Lincoln was born. Also available on microfilm.

  7. 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.