"Rebecca" to the Editor of the Sangamo Journal, 27 August 18421
Letter from the Lost Townships.2
LOST TOWNSHIPS, Aug. 27, 1842.Dear Mr. Printer:I see you printed that long letter I sent you a spell ago3—I’m quite encouraged by it, and can’t keep from writing again. I think the printing
of my letters will be a good thing all round, —it will give me the benefit of being
known by the world, and give the world the advantage of knowing what’s going on in
the Lost Townships, and give your paper respectability besides. So here come another.—Yesterday
afternoon I hurried through cleaning up the dinner dishes, and stepped over to neighbor
S—to see if his wife Peggy was as well as mought be expected, and hear what they called the baby. Well, when I got there, and just
turned round the corner of his log cabin, there he was setting on the door-step reading
a newspaper.
‘How are you Jeff,’ says I,—he sorter started when he heard me, for he hadn’t seen
me before. ‘Why,’ says he, ‘I’m mad as the devil, aunt Becca.’
‘What about,’ says I, ‘aint its hair the right color? None of that nonsense, Jeff—there
aint an honester woman in the Lost Township than—’
‘Than who?’ says he, ‘what the mischief are you about?’
I began to see I was running the wrong trail, and so says I, ‘O nothing, I guess I
was mistaken a little, that’s all. But what is it you’re mad about?’
‘Why,’ says he, ‘I’ve been tugging ever since harvest getting out wheat and hauling
it to the river, to raise State Bank paper enough to pay my tax this year, and a little school debt I owe; and now just
as I’ve got it, here I open this infernal Extra Register, expecting to find it full of “glorious democratic victories,” and “High Comb’d Cocks,”
when, lo and behold, I find a set of fellows calling themselves officers of State, have forbidden the tax collectors and school commissioners to receive State paper
at all; and so here it is, dead on my hands.4 I don’t now believe all the plunder I’ve got will fetch ready cash enough to pay
my taxes and that school debt.’
I was a good deal thunderstruck myself; for that was the first I had heard of the
proclamation, and my old man was pretty much in the same fix with Jeff. We both stood
a moment, staring at one another without knowing what to say. At last says I, ‘Mr.
S—let me look at that paper.’ He handed it to me, when I read the proclamation over.
‘There now,’ says he, ‘did you ever see such a piece of impudence and imposition as
that?’ I saw Jeff was in a good tune for saying some ill-natured things, and so I
tho’t[thought] I would just argue a little on the contrary side, and make him rant a spell if I
could.
‘Why,’ says I, looking as dignified and thoughtful as I could, ‘it seems pretty tough
to be sure, to have to raise silver where there’s none to be raised; but then you
see “there will be danger of loss” if it aint done.’5
‘Loss, damnation!’ says he, ‘I defy Daniel Webster, I defy King Solomon, I defy the world, —I defy—I defy—yes, I defy even you, aunt Becca, to show how the
people can lose any thing by paying their taxes in State paper.’ ‘Well,’ says I, ‘you see what the officers of State say about it, and they are a desarnin set of men.’ ‘But,’ says I, ‘I guess you’re
mistaken about what the proclamation says; it don’t say the people will lose any thing by the paper money being taken for taxes. It only says “there will be danger of loss,” and though it is tolerable plain that the people can’t lose by paying their taxes
in something they can get easier than silver, instead of having to pay silver; and
though it is just as plain, that the State can’t lose by taking State Bank paper,
however low it may be, while she owes the Bank more than the whole revenue, and can
pay that paper over on her debt, dollar for dollar; still there is danger of loss to the “officers of State,” and you know Jeff, we can’t get along without officers of State.
‘Damn officers of State,’ says he, ‘that’s what you whigs are always hurraing[hurrahing] for.’ ‘Now don’t swear so Jeff,’ says I, ‘you know I belong to the meetin, and swearin
hurts my feelins.’6 ‘Beg pardon, aunt Becca,’ says he, ‘but I do say its enough to make Dr. Goddard swear, to have tax to pay in silver, for nothing only that Ford may get his two thousand a year, and Shields his twenty four hundred a year, and Carpenter his sixteen hundred a year, and all without ‘danger of loss’ by taking it in State
paper.’ 7‘Yes, yes, it’s plain enough now what these officers of State mean by ‘danger of loss.’ ‘Wash, I ‘spose, actually lost fifteen hundred dollars out of the three thousand that two
of these ‘officers of State’ let him steal from the Treasury, by [being?] [c]ompelled to take it in State paper.’—[‘W]onder if we don’t have a proclamation before long, commanding us to make up this loss
to Wash in silver.’8
And so he went on, till his breath run out, and he had to stop. I couldn’t think
of any thing to say just then: and so I begun to look over the paper again. ‘Aye!
here’s another proclamation, or something like it.’ ‘Another!’ says Jeff, ‘and whose
egg is it, pray?’ I looked to the bottom of it, and read aloud, ‘Your obedient servant,
‘Jas Shields, Auditor.’
‘Aha!’ says Jeff, ‘one of them same three fellows again. Well read it, and let’s hear
what of it.’ I read on till I came to where it says, “The object of this measure is to suspend the collection of the revenue for the current
year.’9 ‘Now stop, now stop,’ says he, ‘that’s a lie aready, and I don’t want to hear of it.’ ‘O may be not,’ says I.
‘I sayit—is—a—lie.—Suspend the collection, indeed! Will the collectors that have taken their oaths
to make the collection dare to suspend it? Is there any thing in the law requiring them to perjure themselves
at the bidding of Jas.[James] Shields? Will the greedy gullet of the penitentiary be satisfied with swallowing
him instead of all them if they should venture to obey him? And would he not discover some ‘danger of loss’
and be off, about the time it came to taking their places?’
‘And suppose the people attempt to suspend by refusing to pay, what then? The collectors
would just jerk up their horses, and cows, and the like, and sell them to the highest
bidder for silver in hand, without valuation or redemption. Why, Shields didn’t believe
that story himself—it was never meant for the truth. If it was true, why was it not
writ till five days after the proclamation? Why didn’t Carlin and Carpenter sign it as well as Shields?10 Answer me that, aunt Becca. I say its a lie, and not a well told one at that. It
grins out like a copper dollar. Shields is a fool as well as a liar. With him truth
is out of the question, and as for getting a good bright passable lie out of him,
you might as well try to strike fire from a cake of tallow. I stick to it, its all
an infernal whig lie.’
‘A whig lie,—Highty! Tighty!!’
‘Yes, a whig lie; and its just like every thing the cursed British whigs do. First they’ll do
some devilment, and then they’ll tell a lie to hide it. And they don’t care how plain
a lie it is; they think they can cram any sort of a one down the throats of the ignorant
loco focos, as they call the democrats.’
‘Why, Jeff, you’re crazy—you don’t mean to say Shields is a whig.’
‘Yes I do.’
“Why, look here, the proclamation is in your own democratic paper as you call it.’
‘I know it, and what of that? They only printed it to let us democrats see the deviltry
the whigs are at.’
‘Well, but Shields is the Auditor of this loco—I mean this democratic State.’
‘Tyler appointed him?’
‘Yes (if you must chaw it over) Tyler appointed him, or if it wasn’t him it was old
granny Harrison, and that’s all one. I tell you, aunt Becca, there’s no mistake about his being
a whig—why his very looks shows it—every thing about him shows it—if I was deaf and
blind I could tell him by the smell. I seed him when I was down in Springfield last winter. They had a sort of a gatherin there one night, among the grandees,
they called a fair. All the galls about town was there, and all the handsome widows,
and married women, finickin about, trying to look like galls, tied as tight in the
middle, and puffed out at both ends like bundles of fodder that hadn’t been stacked
yet, but wanted stackin pretty bad. And then they had tables all round the house
kivered over with baby caps, and pin-cushions, and ten thousand such little nick-nacks,
tryin to sell ‘em to the fellows that were bowin and scrapin, and kungeerin about
‘em. They wouldn’t let no democrats in, for fear they’d disgust the ladies, or scare
the little galls, or dirty the floor. I looked in at the window, and there was this
same fellow Shields floatin about on the air, without heft or earthly substance, just
like a lock of cat-fur where cats had been fightin.
‘He was paying his money to this one and that one, and tother one, and sufferin great
loss because it wasn’t silver instead of State paper; and the sweet distress he seemed
to be in,—his very features, in the exstatic agony of his soul, spoke audibly and distinctly—‘Dear girls, it is distressing, but I cannot marry you all. Too well I know how much you suffer; but do, do remember, it is not my fault that I am so handsome and so interesting.’
‘As this last was expressed by a most exquisite contortion of his face, he seized
hold of one of their hands and squeezed, and held on to it about a quarter of an hour.
O, my good fellow, says I to myself, if that was one of our democratic galls in the
Lost Township, the way you’d get a brass pin let into you, would be about up to the
head. He a democrat! Fiddle-sticks! I tell you, aunt Becca, he’s a whig, and no mistake:
nobody but a whig could make such a conceity dunce of himself.’
‘Well, says I, may be he is, but if he is, I’m mistaken the worst sort.’
‘May be so; may be so; but if I am I’ll suffer by it; I’ll be a democrat if it turns
out that Shields is a whig; considerin you shall be a whig if he turns out a democrat.’
‘A bargain, by jingoes,’ says he, ‘but how will we find out.’
‘Why,’ says I, ‘we’ll just write and ax the printer.’ ‘Agreed again,’ says he, ‘and
by thunder if it does turn out that Shields is a democrat, I never will—’
‘Jefferson,—Jefferson—’
‘What do you want, Peggy.’
‘Do get through your everlasting clatter some time, and bring me a gourd of water;
the child’s been crying for a drink this live-long hour.’
‘Let it die then, it may as well die for water as to be taxed to death to fatten officers of State.’
Jeff run off to get the water though, just like he hadn’t been sayin any thing spiteful;
for he’s a raal good hearted fellow, after all, once you get at the foundation of
him.
I walked into the house, and ‘why Peggy,’ says I, ‘I declare, we like to forgot you
altogether.’ ‘O yes,’ says she, ‘when a body can’t help themselves, every body soon
forgets ‘em; but thank God by day after to-morrow I shall be well enough to milk the
cows and pen the calves, and wring the contrary one’s tails for ‘em, and no thanks
to nobody.’ ‘Geod evening, Peggy,’ says I, and so I sloped, for I [seed?] she was mad at me, for [mak?]ing Jeff neglect her so long.
And now Mr. Printer, will you be sure to let us know in your next paper whether this
Shields is a whig or a democrat? I don’t care about it for myself, for I know well
enough how it is already, but I want to convince Jeff. It may do some good to let
him, and others like him, know who and what these officers of State are. It may help to send the present hypocritical set to where they belong, and
to fill the places they now disgrace with men who will do more work, for less pay,
and take a fewer airs while they are doing it. It aint sensible to think that the
same men who get us into trouble will change their course; and yet its pretty plain,
if some change for the better is not made, its not long that neither Peggy, or I,
or any of us, will have a cow left to milk, or a calf’s tail to wring.
Yours, truly,Rebecca—.2In 1838, the Sangamo Journal printed at least one anonymous letter from the “Lost Township,” the name of which
alluded to political issues caused by the creation of new counties. In 1842, the
concept was revived in a series of letters purporting to be from a woman named “Rebecca”
from the Lost Townships. The first, dated August 10, 1842 and published on August
19, bemoaned the failure of the State Bank of Illinois and the subsequent depreciation of its printed paper money. On August 26, 1842, the
Democratic administration, including State Auditor James Shields, decreed that the state would not accept its own money as payment for taxes. A widely
unpopular decision, it was lambasted immediately by Whigs like Abraham Lincoln, who wrote this pseudonymous editorial as a scathing rebuke of Shields. Shields’
offense and Lincoln’s response to it nearly resulted in a duel between the two men.
Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 5 May 1838, 2:5; 19 August 1842, 3:1-3; Roy P. Basler, “The Authorship
of the ‘Rebecca’ Letters,” Abraham Lincoln Quarterly (June 1942), 80-82; Douglas L. Wilson, Honor’s Voice: The Transformation of Abraham Lincoln (New York: Vintage Books, 1999), 266, n5, 266-69; Abraham Lincoln to James Shields; James Shields to Abraham Lincoln; Memorandum of Duel Instructions to Elias H. Merryman.
4On August 26, 1842, the Springfield Democratic newspaper, the Illinois State Register, published the government’s proclamation prohibiting State Bank money as payment
for state taxes.
Illinois Register (Springfield), 26 August 1842, 2:3.
5The proclamation stated that the administration were “of opinion that there will be
danger of loss by receiving the bills of the State Bank of Illinois...in payment of
the revenue of the State and of the different counties in the State for the year 1842,
and in payment of college, school and seminary debts...”
Illinois Register (Springfield), 26 August 1842, 2:3.
6“Belonging to the meeting” likely refers to her being a regular churchgoer, likely
participating in evangelical revival activities.
7On August 1, 1842, Democrat Thomas Ford had been elected governor to succeed Thomas Carlin. Reference to the salaries of state officials. In the act making appropriations for the years 1841 and 1842, the governor was to receive $2,000,
the auditor $4,800, and the treasurer $3,200.
Theodore C. Pease, ed., Illinois Election Returns, 1818-1848, vol. 18 of Collections of the Illinois State Historical Library (Springfield: Illinois State Historical Library, 1923), 126.
8In July 1842, Milton H. Wash was suspected of embezzling $1,161 from the state auditor’s office, where he had
worked as a clerk for several years. Whigs blamed the Democratic administration for
lax oversight and accused the Democratic press of playing down the seriousness of
the charges. In 1845, the state treasurer reported the total amount stolen as $3,309.27.
Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 22 July 1842, 3:2; Illinois House Journal. 1844. 14th G. A., 343, 368.
9Following the proclamation printed in the newspaper was a letter from State Auditor
Shields addressed to all revenue collectors, which stated “The object of and intention
of the present notification is to suspend the collection of the revenue for the year
1842 until the meeting of the Legislature, at which time that body can provide for the payment of taxes in such funds as it
may deem advisable, and effect such reduction in the amount of revenue as it may deem
practicable.”
Illinois Register (Springfield), 26 August 1842, 2:3.
10The proclamation prohibiting the use of State Bank money in payment for state debts
was signed by Governor Thomas Carlin, Auditor Shields, and Treasurer Milton Carpenter. The letter to the individual collectors containing the purported purpose of the
measure was signed only by Shields.
Illinois Register (Springfield), 26 August 1842, 2:3.
Printed Transcription, 1 page(s), Sangamo Journal (Springfield, IL), 2 September 1842, 4:1-2.