“At the same time John Alvary, Peter Syburt, Christopher Boston, and William [John (?)] Stuck, or any three of them, were appointed appraisers.

“March 10, 1789, the appraisers made the following return:

£.s.d.
1Sorrel horse8
1Black horse910
1Red cow and calf410
1Brindle cow and calf410
1Red cow and calf5
1Brindle bull yearling1
1Brindle heifer yearling1
Bar spear-plough and tackling25
3Weeding hoes76
Flax wheel 6
Pair smoothing-irons 15
1Dozen pewter plates110
2Pewter dishes 176
Dutch oven and cule, weighing 15 pounds 15
Small iron kettle and cule, weighing 12 pounds 12
Tool adds 10
Handsaw 5
One-inch auger 6
Three-quarter auger 46
Half-inch auger 3
Drawing-knife 3
Currying-knife 10
Currier’s knife and barking-iron 6
Old smooth-bar gun 10
Rifle gun 55
Rifle gun310
2Pott trammels 14
1Feather bed and furniture510
Ditto85
1Bed and turkey feathers and furniture110
Steeking-iron 16
Candle-stick 16
One axe 9
£6816s.6d.

Peter Syburt,

Christopher Boston,

John Stuck.”

THE REV. JESSE HEAD.
From an original drawing in the possession of R. T. Durrett, LL.D., of Louisville, Kentucky. The Rev. Jesse Head was a Methodist preacher of Washington County, Kentucky, who married Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks. Christopher Columbus Graham, who was at the wedding, and who knew Mr. Head well, says: “Jesse Head, the good Methodist preacher who married them, was also a carpenter or cabinet-maker by trade, and, as he was then a neighbor, they were good friends. He had a quarrel with the bishops, and was an itinerant for several years, but an editor and county judge afterwards in Harrodsburg.... The preacher, Jesse Head, often talked to me on religion and politics, for I always liked the Methodists. I have thought it might have been as much from his free-spoken opinions as from Henry Clay’s American-African colonization scheme, in 1817, that I lost a likely negro man, who was leader of my musicians.... But Jesse Head never encouraged any runaway, nor had any ‘underground railroad.’ He only talked freely and boldly, and had plenty of true Southern men with him, such as Clay.”—See Appendix.

Soon after the death of Abraham Lincoln, his widow moved from Jefferson County to Washington County. The eldest son, Mordecai, who inherited nearly all of the large estate, became a well-to-do and popular citizen. The deed-book of Washington County still contains a number of records of lands bought and sold by him. At one time he was sheriff of his county, and, again, its representative in the legislature of the State. Mordecai Lincoln is remembered especially for his sporting tastes and his bitter hatred of the Indians. General U. F. Linder of Illinois, who, as a boy, lived near Mordecai Lincoln in Kentucky, says: “I knew him from my boyhood, and he was naturally a man of considerable genius; he was a man of great drollery, and it would almost make you laugh to look at him. I never saw but one other man whose quiet, droll laugh excited in me the same disposition to laugh, and that was Artemus Ward. He was quite a story-teller. He was an honest man, as tender-hearted as a woman, and, to the last degree, charitable and benevolent.

“Lincoln had a very high opinion of his uncle, and on one occasion said to me: ‘Linder, I have often said that Uncle Mord had run off with all the talents of the family.’