Kentucky 1809-1811 Type: log cabin Location: Sinking Spring, near Hodgenville Description: one-room, sixteen by eighteen feet, dirt floor, no glass windows Occupation: None 1811-1816 Type: log cabin Location: on Knob Creek Description: one-room, dirt floor, no glass windows Occupation: helped father with farm work
Indiana 1816 - Spring, 1830 Type: log house Location: Southern Indiana Description: one-room, sleeping loft reached by pegs in the wall, first dirt floor later wooden floor, no glass windows Occupation: helped father with farmwork
Illinois March 15, 1830 - March, 1831 Type: log house Location: near Decatur, Illinois Occupation: helped father with farm work July, 1831 - April 15, 1837 Type: lived in several log houses Location: New Salem, Illinois Occupations: postmaster, clerk, surveyor, store keeper, Illinois state legislator
1837-1841 Type: two-story wooden building Location: Springfield, Illinois, at corner of Fifth and Adams Street Description: Joshua Speed's general store Occupation: lawyer, Illinois state legislator
1841-1842 Type: wooden building Location: Springfield, Illinois, location uncertain Description: William Butler's home Occupation: lawyer
November, 1842 - 1843 Type: two-story wooden inn Location: Springfield, Illinois, on Adams Street Description: Globe Tavern Occupation: lawyer
1843-1844 Type: wooden cottage Location: Springfield, Illinois, on Fourth Street Occupation: lawyer 1844-1861 Type: purchased as a one-and-a-half story cottage with six rooms; enlarged in 1855-56 to two stories with twelve rooms Description: wooden structure, carpeted in several rooms, first and only home he ever owned Location: Springfield, Illinois, corner of Eighth and Jackson Streets Occupation: lawyer
Washington, D.C. 1847-1849 Type: two-story house Location: Washington, D.C., on Capitol Hill Description: Ann G. Sprigg's boardinghouse Occupation: United States Congressman from Illinois 1861-1865 Type: multiple story stone house Location: Washington, D.C., on Pennsylvania Avenue Description: The White House, thirty-one rooms, carpeted Occupation: President of the United States
Summers 1862, 1863, 1864 Type: two-story brick house Location: Washington, D.C., four miles north of the Capitol Description: Soldiers Home, also known as the Riggs House (renamed Anderson Cottage in 1888), twelve rooms Occupation: President of the United States ______________________________ |
Last updated: April 10, 2015