1850s, Address before the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society (1859)
Abraham Lincoln: Frases en inglés (página 24)
Abraham Lincoln era decimosexto presidente de los Estados Unidos. Frases en inglés.1860s, First Inaugural Address (1861)
1860s, Last public address (1865)
1860s, Fourth of July Address to Congress (1861)
Fuente: Reply to Missouri Committee of Seventy (30 September 1864)
1860s, Speech at Hartford (1860)
p, 125
1860s, A Short Autobiography (1860)
1860s, Speeches to Ohio Regiments (1864), Speech to the One Hundred Sixty-fourth Ohio Regiment
1860s, Allow the humblest man an equal chance (1860)
1860s, First Inaugural Address (1861)
Attributed in 1861, as quoted in The Life of Abraham Lincoln: Drawn from Original Sources https://books.google.com/books?id=3WMDAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA124&dq=%22What+must+he+think+of+us%22 (1900), Volume 3, New York: Lincoln History Society, p. 124
Posthumous attributions
Manuscript poem, as a teenager (ca. 1824–1826), in "Lincoln as Poet" at Library of Congress : Presidents as Poets http://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/prespoetry/al.html, as published in The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln (1953) edited by Roy. P. Basler, Vol. 1
1820s
“I hope to have God on my side, but I must have Kentucky!”
See, for example, Albert D. Richardson (1865), The Secret Service, the Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape. The quotation is based on a comment by Rev. Moncure D. Conway about the progress of the Civil War.
It is evident that the worthy President would like to have God on his side: he must have Kentucky.
Moncure D. Conway (1862), The Golden Hour
Misattributed
This is from a fictional speech by Lincoln which occurs in The Clansman : An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan (1905) by Thomas Dixon, Jr.. On some sites this has been declared to be something Lincoln said "soon after signing" the Emancipation Proclamation, but without any date or other indications of to whom it was stated, and there are no actual historical records of Lincoln ever saying this.
Misattributed
1860s, Speech at Hartford (1860)
1860s, Speech at Hartford (1860)
1860s, Fourth of July Address to Congress (1861)
1860s, Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction (1863)