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"Abe Lincoln was 28 years old and wholly self-taught. He had almost no formal education at all. He never attended high school, college or law school, and was never apprenticed to a lawyer," he added.
On Dec. 3, 1839, Lincoln was one of six lawyers admitted to practice in federal courts. Among others were Stephen A. Douglas and Samuel H. Treat, both of whom later served on the Supreme Court.
Treat also was a U.S. District Court judge, and Douglas, the "Little Giant" who debated with Lincoln, left the bench to serve in the U.S. House and Senate.
Mills spoke of David Davis, admitted in 1839 to federal practice at age 24. As president in 1862, Lincoln appointed Davis to the U.S. Supreme Court, where he served until 1877 and was elected to the Senate. In 1884, Davis became the seventh president of the Illinois State Bar Association.
"Abraham Lincoln has, in sum, left a legacy of superb and incomparable legal ability," Mills said. Davis said Lincoln "had few equals," and Breeze regarded him as "the finest lawyer I ever knew."