- Arnold Kunst
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Lincoln and Words 19
Lincoln had a voracious curiosity.
Since he had virtually no formal schooling he learned early in life that
satisfying his curiosity was going to be his job and his job alone.
Consequently, as a child he taught himself to read and write; he also taught himself
Euclidean geometry, then surveying, then the law. He was a lifelong student of
literature having memorized long passages from both Shakespeare and the Bible.
As if all that were not enough, in 1849 he applied for a patent on his design
for ‘a new and improved manner of combining adjustable buoyant chambers with
steam boats’ [these chambers were designed to lift steam boats above sand
bars]. He is the only president in American history to have been granted a
patent. Then as President he taught himself how to be a Commander in Chief.
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