- Joshua Fry Speed
Joshua Fry Speed (
November 14 ,1814 -May 29 ,1882 ) was a close friend ofAbraham Lincoln from his days inSpringfield, Illinois , where Speed was a partner in ageneral store . Later, Speed was afarmer and areal estate investor in Kentucky, and also served one term in the Kentuckylegislature .Family
Joshua Fry Speed was born at Farmington, the estate of the Speed family in
Louisville, Kentucky . He was the fifth son of Judge John Speed and Lucy Gilmer Fry Speed, both of prominent slave-holding families.Joshua Speed's father, Judge John Speed (
May 17 ,1772 -March 30 ,1840 ) was born in Charlotte County,Virginia . John was first married to Abby Lemaster (d. July, 1807). They had three children who probably died young.*Mary Speed (born 1802).
*Eliza Speed (born 1804).
*James Speed.John was then married to Lucy Gilmer Fry (
March 23 ,1788 -January 27 ,1874 ). Lucy was born inAlbemarle County , Virginia. They had eleven children.*Thomas Speed (
September 15 ,1809 - 1812).
*Lucy Fry Speed (bornFebruary 26 ,1811 ). Later married to James D. Breckinridge
*James Speed (March 11 ,1812 -June 12 ,1887 ).
*Peachy Walker Speed (May 4 ,1813 -January 18 ,1891 ).
*Joshua Fry Speed.
*William Pope Speed (April 26 ,1816 -June 28 ,1863 ).
*Susan Fry Speed (bornSeptember 30 ,1817 ).
*Major Philip Speed (April 12 ,1819 -November 1 ,1882 ).
*John Smith Speed (bornJanuary 1 ,1821 ).
*Martha Bell Speed (bornSeptember 8 ,1822 ).
*Ann Pope Speed (November 5 ,1831 - 1838).Early adulthood
Young Joshua Speed attended St. Joseph's Academy in
Bardstown , like the sons of many wealthy families in Kentucky. He was apparently not content to follow in the footsteps of his father. Speed set out in 1835 for Springfield, Illinois to try his fortune of theMidwest . At the time Springfield was atown with a population of fewer than 1,500 people. Almost upon arriving in Springfield, Speed engaged inmerchandising and assisted inediting a localnewspaper .peed and Lincoln
Speed had heard the young Lincoln speak on the stump when Lincoln was running for election to the Illinois legislature. On
April 15 ,1837 , Lincoln arrived at Springfield, the new state capital, in order to seek his fortune as a younglawyer .On
March 30 ,1840 , Judge John Speed died. Joshua announced plans to sell the store and return to his parent's largeplantation home, Farmington, nearLouisville, Kentucky . Lincoln, though notoriously awkward and shy around women, was at the time engaged toMary Todd , a vivacious, if temperamental, society girl. As the dates approached Speed's departure and his own marriage, Lincoln apparently cracked. Lincoln broke the engagement on the planned day of the wedding (January 1 ,1841 ). Speed departed as planned soon after, leaving Lincoln mired in depression andguilt .Seven months later, in July 1841, Lincoln visited Speed in Kentucky. Speed welcomed Lincoln to his paternal house where the latter spent a month regaining his health. During his stay in Farmington, Lincoln rode into Louisville almost daily to discuss legal matters of the day with attorney
James Speed , Joshua's older brother. Joshua Speed began a courtship withFanny Henning and married onFebruary 15 ,1841 .Lincoln, during his presidential administration (
March 4 ,1861 –April 15 ,1865 ), several times offered Speed a government appointment. Speed refused each time, choosing to help in other ways. Speed disagreed with Lincoln on theslavery question but remained loyal, and coordinated Union activities in Kentucky during theAmerican Civil War . His brother,James Speed , however, did serve asUnited States Attorney General beginning in November 1864. In explaining the nomination to Congress, Lincoln acknowledged that he did not know James as well as he knew Joshua. [Goodwin, Doris Kearns (2005), "Team of Rivals". New York: Simon & Schuster, 676. ISBN 978-0-684-82490-1.]Later activities
Following the
assassin ation of Lincoln byJohn Wilkes Booth , Speed organized a memorial service in Louisville for the departed leader. He also pledged his support to the administration of succeeding PresidentAndrew Johnson (termApril 15 ,1865 -March 3 ,1869 ). Sixty members of the Speed family gave money for a monument to honor Lincoln in Springfield. Joshua Speed also wrote lengthy letters to William Herndon, a former law partner of Lincoln who had set about to write a biography of Lincoln.Joshua Speed died on
May 29 ,1882 , in Louisville, Kentucky. He is interred inCave Hill Cemetery in Louisville.Ancestry
Joshua Speed was a seventh generation descendant of
antiquarian cartographer andhistorian John Speed (1552 -July 28 ,1629 ) and his wife Susanna Draper. He was born in Farndon,Cheshire , England to an even older John Speed. His further origin is unknown. He settled inLondon and was a member of the Merchant Taylor's Company. His surviving maps compiled originally in books have been largely broken up and dispersed as well as his writings notably the genealogies in the king James bible inLatin . His last will and testament mention him having twelve sons and six daughters.He was a sixth generation descendant of an elder Dr. John Speed,
M.D. (1595 - May, 1640) and his wife Margaret Warner. John enteredMerchant Taylors' School in January, 1603/1604. He became aScholar ofSt John's College, Oxford in October, 1612. He received aBachelor of Arts onMay 3 ,1620 . He was named aFellow of St John's College and becameM.D. onJune 20 ,1628 .He was a fifth generation descendant of Dr. John Speed, M.D. (
November 4 ,1628 -September 21 ,1711 ). John was born inOxford ,Oxfordshire ,England . He entered Merchant Taylors' School in September, 1640. He was elected Fellow of St John's College, Oxford in June, 1644. He received a Bachelor of Arts onFebruary 1 ,1647 /1648. He was expelled from theUniversity of Oxford onMay 15 ,1648 and was dismissed from his Fellowship in October of the same year. He was reinstated in 1660 following the Restoration ofCharles II of England to the throne. He received aMaster's degree onSeptember 20 ,1660 and became M.D. onJune 19 ,1666 . He settled inSouthampton around 1667. He served twice as Mayor of Southampton (1681 - 1682, 1693 - 1694).He was a fourth generation descendant of James Bernard Speed (
September 28 ,1679 -March 15 ,1719 ). James was born inSouthampton ,Hampshire , England and immigrated toSurry County, Virginia in 1695. OnSeptember 6 ,1711 , James was married to Mary Pulley (born c. 1693).He was a great-grandson of a senior John Speed (
February 5 ,1714 -March 8 ,1785 ) and his wife Mary Mintrey (c.1706 -July 1 ,1782 ). He was also a great-grandson ofMilitia Colonel John Fry (son ofJoshua Fry and Mary Micou Hill) and his wife Sarah Adams. Sarah was younger sister to Thomas Adams.His paternal grandfather was
Captain James Speed (March 4 ,1740 -September 3 ,1811 ), aveteran of theAmerican Revolutionary War . His paternal grandmother was Mary Spencer (October 20 ,1742 -March 5 ,1829 ), daughter of Thomas Spencer, Sr and Elizabeth Julia Flourney. His maternal grandfather wasLieutenant Joshua Fry, another veteran of the American Revolutionary War. His namesake also representedAlbemarle County in theVirginia House of Delegates from 1785 to 1786. His maternal grandmother was Peachy Walker, daughter of Dr. Thomas Walker and Mildred Thornton Meriwether of Castle Hill.References
Further reading
*cite book
first = Bryan S.
last = Bush
year = 2008
title = Lincoln and the Speeds: The Untold Story of a Devoted and Enduring Friendship
publisher = Acclaim Press
location =Morley, Missouri
id = ISBN 978-0-9798802-6-1ee also
*
List of Louisvillians
*Louisville in the American Civil War
*Sexuality of Abraham Lincoln External links
* [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~speedo/john/d1.htm A genealogy of the Speed family since the 16th century]
* [http://www.virginians.com/redirect.htm?topics&6868 A genealogy of his maternal ancestors since the 17th century]
* [http://www.kygenweb.net/history/ff_louisville/c7.htm The Speed Family]
* [http://showcase.netins.net/web/creative/lincoln/speeches/speed.htm Lincoln 1855 letter to Joshua Speed]
* [http://www.mrlincolnandfriends.org/inside.asp?pageID=38&subjectID=2 Mr. Lincoln and Friends: Joshua F. Speed]
* [http://www.historicfarmington.org/index.html Farmington Historic Home]
* [http://www.bryansbush.com/hub.php?page=articles&layer=a0710 "Joshua and James Speed"] — Article by Civil War historian/author Bryan S. Bush
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.