Illinois may be known as the Land of Lincoln, but Abraham Lincoln
spent the formative years from the age of 7 until he turned 21 in
southwestern Indiana, living with his family on a farmstead in the
rolling hills of this beautiful rural area.
The Lincoln family moved from Kentucky, crossing the Ohio River and
settling in an area known as Little Pigeon Creek in December 1816. Now
known as Lincoln City, the town is just one of several stops on a back
roads tour that takes wanderers through many historic sites,
representing important moments in the life of a great man. Lincoln's
mother, Nancy Hanks Lincoln, is buried here, and the cabin where his
cousin lived and Lincoln spent the night still stands. Those who want to
retrace Lincoln's life in southern Indiana can do so easily by following
the narrow roads that traverse the 20-mile area where he lived and
traveled during those 14 years when he called Indiana home. The people
of the region still claim Lincoln as one of their own.