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© 2007 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
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712 october 1888 608. Elizabeth Sawyer to JWW 1 CHICAGO, Oct. 12th, 1888. Dear Sir: My father was born in Keene, N.H., in 1790, entered Williams College, 1807, and removed to Chicago in 1835. After the re-accession of the Whigs to power he was on the 21st of June in 1849 appointed Commissioner of the Land Of‚ce by President Taylor. A competitor for the position at that time was Abraham Lincoln, who was beaten, it was said, by ¿the superior dispatch of Butter‚eld in reaching Washington by the Northern route,î but more correctly by the paramount in‚‚uence of his friend Daniel Webster. He held the position of Land Commissioner until disabled by paralysis in 1852. After lingering for three years in a disabled and enfeebled condition. he died at his home in Chicago, October 23d, 1855, in his sixty-third year. Very respectfully, ELIZABETH SAWYER. H&W (1889), 301n 1. Printed as a footnote, this letter is prefaced: ¿The following letter by Butter‚eld's daughter is not without interest,î referring to Illinois politician Justin Butter‚eld. No manuscript of this letter has been found.