U.S. President – Abraham Lincoln was the Postmaster in New Salem, IL (1833-1836)




Lincoln’s postal career is one of the most charming and humanizing chapters of his early life — and it played a real role in shaping his reputation for honesty and public service. Lincoln, like Washington and Franklin, has appeared on over 1,000 stamps worldwide.
🏤 Appointment & Service
- Lincoln was appointed Postmaster of New Salem, Illinois on May 7, 1833, at age 24.
- He served until the post office closed on May 30, 1836.
- This was his first federal job, long before his political rise.
📮 What the Job Looked Like
Mail service in frontier Illinois was sparse and informal:
- Mail arrived only once a week in New Salem
- If residents didn’t pick up their letters, Lincoln would deliver the mail himself, often carrying letters in his stovepipe hat for chance encounters with recipients
- As Postmaster, he could send and receive personal letters for free and received one free newspaper — a valuable perk for a young man hungry for knowledge
💵 Pay & Practical Benefits
Postal records show Lincoln earned:
- $55.70 in fiscal year 1835
- $19.48 for one quarter in fiscal year 1837
The job didn’t make him wealthy, but it gave him:
- A steady income
- Access to news and information
- A respected role in the community
🧭 Why It Mattered
Lincoln’s time as Postmaster helped shape his public image and character:
- It reinforced his reputation as “Honest Abe”, since he was known for safeguarding people’s mail and delivering it personally.
- It gave him early experience in federal service, handling money, records, and community trust.
- He is the only U.S. president who actually served as a town postmaster (Harry Truman held the title but delegated the work).
🧒 Earlier Postal Connection
Before New Salem, Lincoln also worked as a clerk in a store that housed the Gentry Store Post Office in Indiana, giving him early exposure to postal operations.



