Tuesday, 23 April 2024

Lincoln's surprising skill

Politics and professional wrestling are more alike than most of us care to admit, a connection that traces back to a time before the "professional" part even existed.

Abraham Lincoln was a champion wrestler.

Famous Figures

P olitics and professional wrestling are more alike than most of us care to admit, a connection that traces back to a time before the "professional" part even existed. Case in point: Abraham Lincoln was an accomplished wrestler prior to his political career. He spent more than a decade competing in matches as a young man, winning nearly every one — a harbinger of his future electoral success, perhaps. His most famous bout occurred when one Jack Armstrong, leader of a group of tough guys known as the "Clary's Grove gang," called out the 6-foot-4 future commander in chief. Lincoln was just 22 at the time, and though accounts differ as to how the conflict went down — some say Honest Abe threw Armstrong and won, while others claim Armstrong emerged victorious — it's widely accepted that Lincoln earned the respect of everyone involved. 

Lincoln posthumously earned the National Wrestling Hall of Fame's Outstanding American award in 1992, and a mural of him can be found in the organization's lobby. "In the rough and ready style of the frontier, 'catch as catch can' wrestling was more hand-to-hand combat than sport," reads the NWHOF's biography of Lincoln, which also notes that the 16th President of the United States was "widely known for his wrestling skills and had only one recorded defeat in a dozen years." His trash-talking skills were on point as well, with Lincoln once egging on an opponent by reportedly proclaiming himself "the big buck of this lick," and saying, "If any of you want to try it, come on and whet your horns." It may not have been the Gettysburg Address, but it got the job done.

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By the Numbers

Lincoln's height (in inches), making him the tallest U.S. President

76

Words in the Gettysburg Address

272

Term served by Lincoln in the U.S. House of Representatives

1

Vice Presidents who served under Lincoln (Hannibal Hamlin and Andrew Johnson)

2

Did you know?

John Wilkes Booth's brother saved the life of Lincoln's son.

John Wilkes Booth will forever be infamous for assassinating the man widely regarded as the greatest President in American history, but not all Lincoln-Booth relations were strained. A year or two prior to Honest Abe's death, in fact, Edwin Booth — the older brother of John, and a well-regarded actor in his own right — saved the life of Lincoln's son Robert Todd Lincoln, who was then in his early 20s. (The precise date is unknown, but the event is believed to have taken place in either 1863 or 1864.) The younger Lincoln found himself on a crowded train platform in Jersey City, New Jersey, and was accidentally pushed off the platform as a train departed. "In this situation the train began to move, and by the motion I was twisted off my feet, and had dropped somewhat, with feet downward, into the open space, and was personally helpless," Robert Todd Lincoln later wrote of the event. It was then that Booth grabbed him by the coat collar, saving him. Booth was well known enough as an actor for Lincoln to recognize his rescuer and even thank him by name.

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