Emily
Hanks Loomis (1837-1911)
Emily Hanks Loomis was born October 18,
1837 on a farm in Hickory Point Township,
four miles northwest of Decatur, Illinois, in Macon County. She was the fifth of eight children born to
John Hanks and Susan Wilson Hanks.
Emily, like her father, was a cousin of Abraham Lincoln. They were related to Lincoln through his real mother,
Nancy Hanks
Lincoln.
The Hanks’, like the Lincolns,
were from Kentucky. Emily’s father moved his wife and two
children from Kentucky to Illinois in the
fall of 1828. They first settled along the
Sangamon River.
However, he was unable to “break the thick prairie sod with the
ox or
horse power at hand” and was forced to move to land that was easier to
farm. So in 1829, he chose nearby Hickory Point Township
for their new
home. After building a cabin and
settling on this new land, John wrote to his relatives back in Indiana, telling them that they should come to Illinois. In this letter he told his family about the
“fine woods and prairies,” encouraging them to “pull up stakes and come
to Illinois.” One of those relatives he wrote to was Lincoln’s
father,
Thomas.
John had lived near or with the Lincolns in Spencer
County, Indiana when he moved there in 1822.
This is how John got to know the young Abraham Lincoln, who was
just ten
years old when John came to Indiana. John spent four years total in Indiana,
working as a
farm hand, doing odd jobs, and also as a rail splitter.
Some of this work he did with young Abe. Then,
in 1826, he moved back to Kentucky
where he
married his wife Susan. In 1828, John
and his family moved to Illinois
by way of Spencer County, Indiana.
Thomas Lincoln told John to write to him and let him know what
kind of
“country he found and if it was better than Indiana.”
If it was, then he and his family would move to Illinois. John’s letter did entice Thomas and his
family to come. So in March of 1830,
Thomas Lincoln and twelve other members of his family loaded their
wagons and
began the journey to Illinois. It took them two weeks to travel 225 miles to
Macon County.
Lincoln
had just turned 21 at this time.
Lincoln and his family settled about 10
miles southwest of Decatur in Macon County. They
lived in John Hanks’s first cabin,
located on the Sangamon
River, until they
could
build their own. During the time that Lincoln lived in Macon County,
he worked as a farm hand and split wooden rails with John Hanks. Hanks and Lincoln chopped innumerable cords of
wood and
divided the profits equally between each other. After
a year, Lincoln
then moved to Sangamon County, but continued working with Hanks
splitting
rails and also made several flat boat trips to New Orleans with Hanks to deliver
goods.
Emily was not born yet when Lincoln
lived in Macon
County. However, while Lincoln
was a lawyer on the Eighth Judicial Circuit, he would often visit or
stay with
the Hanks’ while he was in Decatur
when court was in session. Emily would
have gotten to know Lincoln
when he visited or stayed with her family during his days traveling the
Circuit. Emily also would have grown up
hearing her father, aunts, and uncles telling stories about Lincoln over the
years. The Hanks family loved to pass down
stories
about their association with Lincoln
in his younger years. Where as some
members of the Hanks family may have been guilty of embellishment,
Emily’s
father, John, was considered to be generally truthful in his
reminiscences of Lincoln.
In her later years, Emily would recount some
of the stories she grew up hearing from her father.
On one occasion, she was interviewed by The
Daily Pantagraph in Bloomington
in February of 1909. During that
interview, she told some of her favorite stories from her childhood
about Lincoln. One such story was about Lincoln’s clothing.
She remembered that when he was a young man,
“he was not one of the five best dressed in the country.
One article of his clothing consisted of
suspenders made from bed ticking and fastened to his trousers with
wooden
pegs.” Her father also loved to tell
another story
about how Lincoln
would barter for clothing with Hanks women who could weave because he
had no
money to pay for new clothing. Especially prized to Lincoln were pants called jeans made
of a
material called linsey-woolsey (flax linen and wool).
He would split 400 wooden rails for each yard
of this homespun material. It would take
3 yards of linsey-woolsey to make one pair of pants for him. The Hanks’ often called him “Long Legged Abe”
because of this.
Another story Emily’s father was fond of
telling was about the fact that he was the only family member invited
to Lincoln’s
wedding, (which
is thought to be genuinely true). In
October of 1842, Hanks received a letter from Lincoln inviting him to his wedding
on
November fourth of that same year. In the
letter Lincoln
said that he was to be married to “Miss [Mary] Todd and I hope you will
come
over. Be sure to be on deck by early
candle light. Yours, A. Lincoln.”
Emily was also proud of the fact that her
father was the only Hanks family member who voted for Lincoln in the
presidential election of 1860. Up until
that point, all Hanks family members
had voted against Lincoln
in elections prior to this, including John.
However, when Lincoln announced
his
candidacy for President in the election of 1860, Emily’s father left
the
Democratic Party to vote for Lincoln
as a Republican. For the rest of his
life, he said this was a decision he never regretted.
John Hanks was a staunch supporter of Lincoln,
particularly when Lincoln
was seeking the nomination of his
party in early 1860. Hanks attended the
Illinois
State Republican Convention in Decatur
and when he arrived at the hall, he carried in a banner between two
rails. He said that these rails were ones
which he
and Lincoln had made during their rail splitting days.
On the banner, it stated that “Abraham
Lincoln, the Rail Splitter candidate for President in 1860. Two rails from a lot of 3,000 made in 1830 by
John Hanks and Abe Lincoln.” The crowd
went wild. It
was said that Lincoln then stood up and
examined the rails. Lincoln stated he
knew nothing about this, but added in a jocular tone that his “dear old
friend,
John Hanks, will remember I used to shirk splitting all the hard cuts. But if those two are honey locust rails, I
have no doubt I cut and split them.” The
crowd went wild again and thus the rail
splitter image of Lincoln was born.
Hanks also made “genuine” Lincoln canes out of more rail fence
pieces made
by Lincoln and sold them for $1.00 each.
Emily herself also had a piece of a “genuine” Lincoln split
rail, which
was her most prized possession. It was a
picture frame made out of one of those rails.
One final story which Emily was fond of
telling was about her father accompanying Lincoln to his inauguration
in
1861. Emily said that the way Lincoln
dressed was very plain overall. Hanks
had just gotten a “brand new suit of [grey] jeans.”
Lincoln saw this suit and wanted one just
like it for himself. Lincoln was finally
persuaded, after some argument, to get a black suit that would be more
befitting
for such an occasion.
On December 28, 1860, the same year which
Lincoln had been elected President of the United States, Emily married
a school
teacher from Decatur by the name of Elijah I. Loomis.
Elijah was born in Herkimez County, New York
on July 26, 1832. After living in both
Michigan and Ohio, he came to Decatur where he took up teaching school,
a
career which spanned twenty-five years.
He taught in both Macon and Livingston counties.
Emily and her family returned to Decatur in
1880, (after living in Livingston County for about ten years) and lived
there
until they moved to Bloomington, Illinois in 1888.
There, her husband went into the Livery
business with their son-in-law, William Mahaffey, (who had married
their only
daughter, Minnie). While living in
Bloomington, Elijah was also a township tax collector.
The couple also had three sons: Alexandria,
Jesse, (who died at a young age),
and John, who died of tuberculosis in 1910.
Emily led a relatively quiet life, other
than the occasional interview by The Daily
Pantagraph about her family memories about Abraham Lincoln. One such interview was published on February
6, 1909, around the time of Lincoln’s birthday.
Emily was also a member of the Congregational Church and was
well known
and liked by all in Bloomington. Sadly,
on Sunday, February 12, 1911, at the age of 73, Emily died quietly at
her home
located at 707 E. Douglas Street in Bloomington. For
the past year, she had been in failing
healthy, but it was said that she did not let that keep her down,
remaining
active in her home regardless of her illnesses.
She was buried in Evergreen Memorial Cemetery.
Less than a year later, her husband Elijah
would follow her in death and was buried next to her.