Whig editor shared love of poetry with Lincoln

Lawyer Andrew Johnston found his way to Quincy from his native Richmond, Va., in 1837. Like several men who with him would become brothers in the law in Adams County, Johnston was attracted to Western Illinois by booming sales in Illinois Military Tract land.
The tract was a wedge of 3.5 million acres between the Illinois and Mississippi rivers that Congress had set aside as bounty land for veterans of the War of 1812. The federal land office at Quincy in 1836 recorded the sale of 569,376 acres of land, more than the other nine land offices in Illinois. Legal work in titles and transfers was a brisk business for lawyers.
An adherent of Kentucky's U.S. Sen. Henry Clay, a founder of the national Whig Party, Johnston aligned himself with like-minded politicians in Illinois. In Quincy, he formed a law partnership with Whig Archibald Williams, a recent Kentucky transplant to Quincy. And the next year, Johnston and Nehemiah Bushnell, a Yale- and Harvard-educated lawyer from Connecticut, became editors of the weekly Quincy Whig.
When the town board organized in 1838, John Wood was elected president and Johnston was named attorney. At the November meeting, the board directed Johnston to draft petitions to be presented to the General Assembly for the incorporation of Quincy as a city.
By 1839, Johnston's Whig politics took him to Springfield, where he was nominated by Williams, now a state representative, for clerk of the House of Representatives. He lost to Stephen A. Douglas's protege, Springfield Democrat John Calhoun, but later became assistant clerk. Abraham Lincoln, a third-term representative and leader of the Whig Party statewide, voted for Johnston. Although politics was their first bond, Johnston and Lincoln shared an interest in poetry.
Johnston was from a well-known family. His father, Robert, a native of Scotland, owned a coal business in Richmond and was a partner in Johnston, Pickett and Pollard, a mercantile and legal firm. Andrew Johnston's sister Mary and her husband, Robert Pickett, son of one of the firm's partners, were the parents of George Pickett. In the years ahead, the boy would live with his Uncle Andrew in Quincy, where he developed an interest in the theater and enjoyed playing women's roles. Johnston helped Pickett obtain an appointment by Congressman John Todd Stuart to West Point. Pickett allied himself with the South during the Civil War and gained his place in military history for leading the Confederate forces' last charge at Gettysburg in 1863.
As a boy, Andrew Johnston was a schoolmate of another Richmond lad, Edgar Allan Poe. Years later, Johnston would contribute his recollections for a biography of Poe: "I went to school at Mr. Burke's on the 1st of October, 1823, and found Edgar A. Poe there. I knew him before, but not well, there being two, if not three, years difference in our ages. For a considerable part of the time, Poe was in the same class with myself ... and even then wrote verses, very clever for a boy of his years, and sometimes satirical. We all recognized and admired his great and varied talents, and were proud of him as the most distinguished school-boy of the town."
Johnston did not say whether it was Poe who kindled his interest in poetry. His friend Lincoln was interested, too. Johnston sent to Lincoln a parody he wrote of Poe's "The Raven." Lincoln biographer Benjamin Thomas writes that "Lincoln got several hearty laughs" from Johnston's substitution of a polecat for Poe's raven.
Johnston and Lincoln corresponded about poetry. Lincoln replied to Johnston on April 18, 1846, that he did not know the author of his favorite poem, whose first lines were, "Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" But, Lincoln wrote, "I would give all I am worth, and go in debt, to be able to write so fine a piece as I think that is."
Lincoln enclosed the first part of a poem he wrote that was inspired by a visit to his boyhood home in Indiana. His sister and mother were buried there. As the first and last stanza evoke, the poem, titled "Reflection," bespoke a darkness in Lincoln:
My childhood's home I see again, And sadden with the view;
And still, as memory crowds my brain, There's pleasure in it too.
I range the fields with pensive tread, And pace the hollow rooms:
And feel -- companion of the dead-- I'm living in their tombs.
In September, Lincoln sent Johnston the poem's second part, "The Maniac," inspired by the same trip, about schoolmate Matthew Gentry, three years older, who had gone insane. "At the age of nineteen," Lincoln wrote Johnston, "he unaccountably became furiously mad, from which condition he settled down into harmless insanity."
The first stanzas reflect the impression Gentry's insanity stirred in Lincoln:
But here's an object more of dread.
Than ought the grave contains;
A human form, with reason fled,
While wretched life remains.
Poor Matthew! Once of genius bright, A fortune-favored child --
Now locked for aye, in mental night, A haggard mad-man wild.
Poor Matthew! I have ne'er forgot, When first, with maddened will,
Yourself you maimed, your father fought, And mother strove to kill...."
Johnston responded with a request that Lincoln allow him to publish "The Return" in The Whig, which regularly printed poetry from other newspapers. "I am not at all displeased with your proposal to publish the poetry, or doggerel, or whatever else it may be called, which I sent you," Lincoln answered. Yet he feared criticism and asked that the verses be published anonymously.
Johnston published Lincoln's "Reflection" on the front page of the May 7, 1847, Quincy Whig.
Johnston returned to Richmond in 1857. President Lincoln in early 1865 granted Johnston's request for the release of a Confederate relative from a Union prison. Johnston's request of April 11, 1865, for a letter of protection went unanswered. The assassination of his friend, President Lincoln, on April 14 intervened.
Never married, Andrew Johnston died in Richmond on Nov. 9, 1886.
Reg Ankrom is a member of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County, and a local historian. He is a member of several history-related organizations, the author of a history of Stephen A. Douglas, and a frequent speaker on pre-Civil War history.
Sources
"Andrew Johnston," at
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=9908592
Basler, Roy P., Ed. Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, Vol 1. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 19563.
Davis, James E. Frontier Illinois. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998.
F.M.H., "The Life of Edgar Allen Poe," The Poetical Works of Edgar Allen Poe. London: Ward, Lock, & Co., 1884.
Genosky, The Rev. Landry O.F.M., Ed., The People's History of Quincy and Adams County. Quincy, Ill.: Jost and Kiefer Printing Co., 1973.
Journal of the Illinois House of Representatives, Eleventh General Assembly. State of Illinois, Dec. 9, 1839.
Knox, William, "Mortality," in "Lincoln to Johnston, April 18, 1846, Tremont." Basler. Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. Vol. 1.
Lincoln, Abraham, "Letters to Andrew Johnston," Collected Works. Springfield, Feb. 24, 1846, September 6, 1984, Feb. 25, 1847; Tremont, April 18, 1846.
Lincoln, Abraham. "The Return," Quincy Whig, May 5, 1847.
"Mary Johnston Pickett" at
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7018607
Miers, Earl Schenck, Ed. Lincoln Day by Day: A Chronology, Vol. 1. Washington: Lincoln Sesquicentennial Committee, 1960.
Thomas, Benjamin. Abraham Lincoln: A Biography. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986.
Tillson, John Jr. History of Quincy. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905. "Unsigned Verses in Quincy Whig in 1847 Authored by Emancipator in His Youth," Quincy Herald-Whig, Feb. 8, 1959.





