![]() Subscriptions can be obtained by going to, click on Subscribe! If you do not have a Quiltster account already, you will need to subscribe and log in before these links will work. Quiltster will even provide you with yardage! You can also purchase kits designed by Quiltster Sellers right in the application!Ĭlick on the Project button to access the pattern templates and begin coloring with fabrics uploaded from your stash and/or fabric collections from across the industry! A Quiltster account is required to use the coloring tool. This pattern is available in Quiltster! This means you can color the quilt with your favorite fabric collections in Quiltster before you make it. This project was designed to be Fat-Quarter friendly, using a combination of (4) light and (4) dark fabrics! The Lincoln Log Cabin table topper is a fun, easy, and quick project for teaching or learning the basic steps to foundation paper piecing and curved piecing. The cut-a-way sections are then replaced with a secondary design element referred to as the circling geese units. The Log Cabin foundation paper units are designed using a technique in which part of the pieced block units are cut away after the paper piecing is completed. The Lincoln Log Cabin is part of a series of patterns designed using Log Cabin blocks. This article was published by the National Park Service.Judy and Bradley Niemeyer, from, designed the foundation blocks used to make the Lincoln Log Cabin Table Topper. The family left Knob Creek and Kentucky in December 1816 moving to Spencer County, Indiana. Austin, with a keen sense of pioneer knowledge, grabbed a long tree limb from the bank and held it out like a strong arm to the struggling Lincoln.Ībraham spoke of the incident after he became President. Had it not been for Austin Gollaher, a friend, Abraham would probably have drowned. Likewise, he never forgot the time he fell in the swollen Knob Creek while playing on a foot log near his home. Free schools did not come to Kentucky until the 1830s. ![]() These were subscription schools and lasted only a few months. Lincoln once wrote that while living on Knob Creek he and his sister, Sarah, were sent for short periods to an A, B, C school - the first kept by Zachariah Riney, and the second by Caleb Hazel. ![]() It was also at Knob Creek that Abraham first saw African - Americans being taken south along the Bardstown - Green River Turnpike, part of the old Cumberland Road, to be sold as slaves. The following night a big rain in the hills sent water rushing into the creek, the creek flooded the fields and washed away their garden. He remembered one occasion when he and his sister, Sarah, had planted the garden Abraham said he planted pumpkin seeds in every other hill and every other row while Sarah and others planted the corn. Lincoln could also remember the baby brother who was born and died on the Knob Creek Farm. He could remember how he stayed by his mother's side and watched her face while listening to her read the Bible. Abraham recalled in later years numerous memories of his childhood here a stone house he had passed while taking corn to Hodgen's Mill a certain big tree that had attracted his boyish fancy the old homestead the clear stream where he fished, and the surrounding hills where he picked berries were all impressed on his mind. ![]() Here he learned to talk and soon grew big enough to run errands, such as carrying water and gathering wood for the fires. The Lincoln family lived on 30 acres of the 228 acre Knob Creek Farm from the time Abraham was two and a half until he was almost eight years old. ![]() Haycraft had invited the future President to visit his childhood home in Kentucky. So wrote Abraham Lincoln on June 4, 1860, to Samuel Haycraft of Elizabethtown, Kentucky. "My earliest recollection is of the Knob Creek place." Photo courtesy of the National Park Service ![]()
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