Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Life of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. 2: Drawn From Original Sources and Containing Many Speeches, Letters, and Telegrams Hitherto Unpublished and Illustrated; With Many Reproductions From Original Paintings, Photographs, Etc
The larger number of memberslived in messes, a species of boarding-club, over which the owner of the house occupied usually presided. The National Intelligencer of the day is sprinkled with announcements of persons prepared to ac commodate a mess of members. Lincoln went to live in one ofthe best known of these clubs, Mrs. Spriggs's, in Duff Green's Row, on Capitol Hill. This famous row has now entirely disappeared, the ground on which it stood being oc cupied by the Congressional Library.
At Mrs. Spr1ggs's, Lincoln had as mess - mates several congressmen: A. R. Mcilvaine, James Pollock, John Strohm, and John Blanchard, all Of Pennsylvania, Patrick Tompkins of'mississippi, Joshua R. Giddings of Oh1o, and Elisha Em bree of Indiana. Among his neighbors in messes on Capitol Hill were Andrew Johnson of 'tennessee, Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia, and Jefferson Davis of Mississippi. One of the members of the mess at Mrs. Spriggs' s in the win ter of 1847-1848 was Dr. S. C. Busey Of Washington, D. C.
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