Some accounts have Lincoln “throwing” Armstrong and winning the match; others say Lincoln lost; still others say they wrestled to a stalemate. Either way, he acquitted himself well, earning the respect of Armstrong and his followers and establishing himself high in the male hierarchy of the community.
“After this wresting match Jack Armstrong and his crowd became the warmest friends and staunchest supporters of Mr. Lincoln,” recalled New Salem resident Robert B. Rutledge.
Abraham Lincoln: Bowler and Billiards Player
Professional sports other than horse racing were non-existent in the Civil War era. But recreation at the time did include baseball and other games that flourish today with professional leagues, including bowling and billiards.
Lincoln was known to have spent some recreation time bowling “ten pins,” The sport began to take root in American in the early 19th century and was growing in popularity in the 1830s and 1840s, with the earliest indoor bowling lanes that still survive today dating to 1846.
He also was known to have played billiards. In the best-known match, it is said that the stories Lincoln told while playing entertained his onlookers more than his skill with the cue.
Did Abraham Lincoln Really Play Baseball?
Lincoln’s connection to baseball, however, is indirect. And a hallmark of American mythology is the notion that Lincoln was a patriarch of “America’s pastime.”
After all, even before he became president, Lincoln was depicted in an 1860 Currier and Ives political cartoon depicting him and three adversaries with baseball bats. The title reads: “The National Game. Three ‘Outs’ and One ‘Run.’ Abraham Winning the Ball.”
Lincoln stands on “Home Base,” holding a bat almost twice the size of a regular bat that carries the words, “Equal Rights and Free Territory.” Lincoln is shown reminding the other men that “you must have ‘a good bat’ and stroke a ‘fair ball’ to make a ‘clean score’ & a ‘home run.’”
Lincoln, however, never wrote or spoke about baseball and there is no documented record of him ever playing the game. But the most outlandish of the mythological tales about Lincoln and sports has him playing baseball, not “Fives,” in that vacant lot in Springfield when word arrived of his nomination. As the myth goes, Lincoln was literally at bat when word arrived and told the news bearer to wait while he finished his turn at the plate.
In any event, Lincoln was physically strong throughout his life, Holzer said.
“My favorite story of Lincoln’s athleticism dates to his final voyage back to Washington after a visit to the military front in the spring of 1865,” Holzer says. “Sitting on the deck of his steamboat for the return voyage with a group of friends and observers, the president spied an axe lying nearby, which was there for emergency use in case of fire, took hold of it and extended his right arm parallel to the deck while holding the axe at its tip with two fingers.
“Bringing it down with a thud, he asked if anyone else could equal the feat. Not even the young men on board could do it. This was a trick Lincoln performed on several occasions as President when, if you believe rumors and myths, he was fading, or even dying from an assortment of alleged diseases.”
In fact, says Holzer, Lincoln was “what we would describe today as ‘ripped’”—even if he didn't excel at multiple sports.