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https://www.facebook.com/LincolnCollection/To have a little fun this holiday season, we wanted to share with our wonderful Tumblr followers our 12 Days of Lincoln countdown a bit early! We know the 12 days of Christmas traditionally refer to the days between Christmas and New Year’s but this year, we’d like to use them as a Lincoln Collection Countdown! Join us for the next 12 days as we highlight interesting items in the collection to a well-loved holiday tune.  

On the twelfth day of Christmas, Mr. Lincoln gave to me

Twelve Grants a-coming, 

Eleven fifers fifing,

 Ten songs of weeping, 

Nine ladies dancing,

Eight Tads a-marching, 

Seven soldiers singing, 

Six McClellans staying,

Five blanket pins,

Four cartoon birds,

Three Dahlgrens,

Two pall bearer gloves


and a Thomas Nast Christmas tree.

For more detailed information about these items and images, check us out this December on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/LincolnCollection/).

Happy Holidays from the Lincoln Collection! 


During nineteenth-century presidential campaigns, small metal tokens that could be carried in a pocket or sewn onto a jacket provided individual voters with a simple, inexpensive way to advertise their support for a candidate. Many tokens simply featured a profile of the candidate on one side and a patriotic image—the “president’s house” or a flag or an eagle—on the reverse.

But some tokens carried a more specific campaign message about an issue or idea. Here are some examples of “issue” tokens from the Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection for the presidential elections of 1860 and 1864.

The central issues of the 1860 presidential campaign revolved around slavery—the institution’s expansion into federal territories, the right of slaveholders to transport slaves into free territory, the status of escaped slaves in the free states, the requirement that citizens of free states return escaped slaves to their masters, the status of free labor in a slave society. Campaign tokens like these expressed the voter’s stand on those issues.

This copper token features Lincoln’s profile, name, and birth date on the front, and proclaims the Republican position on the slavery issue on the reverse—“No More Slave Territory.”

The front of this brass token displays only the candidate’s profile and name. The reverse delivers the message: “The People’s Choice” is Lincoln and Hamlin, who stand for “Freedom & Protection” (that is, protective tariffs).

This brass token supports “Hon. Abram Lincoln,” who is pictured on the front and touted on the reverse as “The man that can split rails or guide the ship of state.” Republican candidates for “Freedom & Protection” are “Lincoln & Hamlin.”

Partisans of Democrat Stephen Douglas could also carry tokens proclaiming their candidate’s views. A token bearing a full-face portrait of Douglas on the front states “Intervention Is Disunion” on the reverse, asserting any interference with the institution of slavery will result in national division. The solution is M.Y.O.B.—a message to free soil and antislavery partisans to “mind your own business.”

Another Douglas token features the candidate’s profile on the front and the assertion on the reverse that “Popular Sovereignty” will assure “National Unity.”

The 1864 presidential election was in one sense a referendum on the Civil War—would the North continue to fight to defeat the Confederacy, restore the Union, and guarantee emancipation; or would there be peace at any price? The Republican platform supported the war’s continuation; the Democratic platform supported peace. Some campaign tokens reflected those stands.

On this token the president’s profile is surrounded by 34 stars, for the 34 states that would make up a restored Union. (Nevada would be added as the 35th state on October 31, 1864, just days before the election.) The reverse features the American eagle and shield and proclaims “Lincoln and Union.”

This copper token also supports Lincoln and “Our Union.”

This copper token takes a more aggressive stance. It features the profile of “President Abm. Lincoln” on the front and asserts “No Compromise with Traitors” on the reverse.

Democratic candidate Gen. George B. McClellan is pictured in uniform on the front of this campaign token. The reverse proclaims “The Union Must and Shall Be Preserved,” though the terms of that preservation are unclear.

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