John Hanks
John Hanks was Abraham Lincoln's first cousin, once removed, his mother's cousin. He was the son of William, Nancy Hanks Lincoln's uncle and grandson of Joseph Hanks.
Early years and marriage
John Hanks was born near Beardstown, and near the Falls at Rough Creek, in Nelson County, Kentucky, on February 9, 1802. Four years later his family moved to Hardin County, Kentucky. Hanks married Susan Malinda Wilson in Kentucky in 1826. She was born on February 14, 1804, and died on March 11, 1863. Their children were William, Louis, Jane, Phelix, Emily, Mary Ellen and Levi.Thomas Lincoln family
Hanks lived in Indiana with Thomas Lincoln for four years from 1822 or 1823. While there, he and Abraham farmed corn and were hired out to split rails. He then traveled to Kentucky for a year or two. In 1828 settled in Macon County, Illinois, after having built the first house in Decatur, Illinois. It was he who persuaded Thomas to move to Illinois in 1830.He worked alongside Abraham at his first job after he left home. Hanks and Abraham together went to New Orleans in 1831, as hired hands on a flatboat owned by Denton Offutt, Lincoln being hired at Hanks' recommendation. Hanks claims that he initiated the first speech for Lincoln, believing that he would deliver a better speech than the candidate running for office. Having heard the speech, the candidate urged Lincoln to continue giving speeches.
Black Hawk war
Hanks served four or six months during the Black Hawk War of 1832, during which time he helped build a fort at Ottawa.1860 Republican presidential campaign
Rail splitter campaign
When Abraham Lincoln was campaigning for the Republican nomination for the 1860 presidential election, Richard J. Oglesby sought a populist symbol to attach to Lincoln, and approached Hanks about the matter. Hanks told Oglesby, in response to being asked what kind of work Lincoln had been good at in his early years, "not much of any kind but dreaming, but he did help me split a lot of rails when we made a clearing twelve miles west of here". The men went to the old Lincoln farm and retrieved some split fence rails.On May 9, 1860, the opening day of the Republican convention in Decatur, Illinois, Oglesby addressed the crowd, announcing that "An old Democrat of Macon county desire to make a contribution to the Convention". At this cue, Hanks and Isaac Jennings carried two of the fence railings into the convention hall, which were tagged with a banner that read "Abraham Lincoln, the Rail Candidate for President in 1860. Two rails from a lot of three thousand made in 1830 by John Hanks and Abe Lincoln."
This election stunt had the side-effect of making Hanks into somewhat of a national celebrity. Supporters requested "genuine Lincoln rails" split by Hanks and Lincoln. Oglesby wrote certificates of authenticity of 72 "genuine" Lincoln rails that were dispatched on Hanks' behalf.